1

I know, there's the boto library for Python, however, all I'd like to do is uploading a lot of image files including metadata to a public S3 bucket. The images should go into various sub-directories inside the bucket.

With cURL, this is supposed to be working:

curl -v -F "key=test/test.jpg" -F "[email protected]" http://my-public-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/

So I figure that should be doable with urllib, urllib2 and/or Python requests only. But how? I'm totally new to Amazon S3 ... and cURL.

Also what's the best way for storing some meta data along with the images? An additional JSON-string file?

3
  • What's the reason why you want to go around boto? Just because you don't know it maybe? It will be a much shorter and more readable solution if done using that library. Unless you have a good reason to not use it of course ...
    – Alfe
    Jan 8, 2014 at 22:44
  • boto is a rather huge package and AFAIK no request signature is required for uploading to public buckets. So why using a whole library instead of a simple requests call ...? Jan 8, 2014 at 23:03
  • To get all the additional stuff for free you'd have to do otherwise manually like error checking etc.
    – Alfe
    Jan 8, 2014 at 23:07

4 Answers 4

2

Your cURL string translates into roughly the following:

import requests

url = 'http://my-public-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/'
files = {
    'key': ('', 'test/test.jpg'),
    'file': open('test.jpg', 'rb'),
}

r = requests.post(url, files=files)

The general form of Requests' multipart upload syntax is found in this StackOverflow answer.

1
  • 1
    how to add metadata to the image? I am using presigned post url and I have tried adding metadata fields starting with x-amz-meta in headers but though the upload is successful the metadata is not updated. Feb 3, 2019 at 12:22
1

Using boto (version 2.6.0) you'd do it like this:

import boto

connection = boto.connect_s3()
bucket = connection.get_bucket('mybucket')
key = bucket.new_key('myimage.jpg')
key.set_contents_from_filename('myimage.jpg')
key.set_metadata(...)

Make sure you've got the credentials in the environment variables AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY.

That's it.

5
  • Thanks ... The thing is: we don't have the credentials. It's not our bucket, but we need to fill it with content needed by our partner - that's why the bucket is public/open. Jan 8, 2014 at 23:04
  • If the bucket access is not limited, then I guess also without credentials you won't get an error.
    – Alfe
    Jan 8, 2014 at 23:08
  • Thx, I'll give it a try tomorrow - late here in Germany now ;-) Out of interest: still would like to know how sending a file is done via Python Requests :) Jan 8, 2014 at 23:18
  • Greetings from Berlin ;-)
    – Alfe
    Jan 8, 2014 at 23:19
  • Nope - won't work without credentials. I got it working with pure Requests, though. Jan 9, 2014 at 9:22
1

Works with Python Requests only:

import requests
r = requests.post('my_public_bucket', files={'file': open('/path/test.txt', 'rb')}, data={'key': 'test/test.txt'})
0

To upload to a signed url and requests I had to do this:

with open('photo_1.jpg', 'rb') as content_file:
    content = content_file.read()
result = requests.put(url=upload_url, headers={}, data=content)

This is bad because it loads everything into memory, but it should get you past the initial hump.

Also when using curl I had to use the a different option:

curl -X PUT --upload-file photo_1.jpg <url>

Note: When I created the url at my server with boto I set headers=None so that headers would not be an issue.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.