100

I need to list all files contained in a certain folder contained in my S3 bucket.

The folder structure is the following

/my-bucket/users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>

I have files related to users and files related to a certain user's contact. I need to list both.

To list files I'm using this code:

ListObjectsRequest listObjectsRequest = new ListObjectsRequest().withBucketName("my-bucket")
                .withPrefix("some-prefix").withDelimiter("/");
ObjectListing objects = transferManager.getAmazonS3Client().listObjects(listObjectsRequest);

To list a certain user's files I'm using this prefix:

users/<user-id>/

and I'm correctly getting all files in the directory excluding contacts subdirectory, for example:

users/<user-id>/file1.txt
users/<user-id>/file2.txt
users/<user-id>/file3.txt

To list a certain user contact's files instead I'm using this prefix:

users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/

but in this case I'm getting also the directory itself as a returned object:

users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/file1.txt
users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/file2.txt
users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/

Why am I getting this behaviour? What's different beetween the two listing requests? I need to list only files in the directory, excluding sub-directories.

6
  • 4
    This behavior would be expected if you actually created the "empty folder" in the console, because that action actually creates an empty object with the key path/to/my/folder/ so the console has a placeholder. Did you do that, while testing? Jun 27, 2016 at 12:47
  • @Michael-sqlbot I didn't create any empty folder. Infact all files are uploaded by the application using the folder structure I reported as prefix for the file key.
    – davioooh
    Jun 27, 2016 at 12:50
  • You might want to try a GET on the apparent object with trailing slash, then, because if you didn't create a folder and you did use the / delimiter withDelimiter("/") when listing the objects, this should mean that you do in fact have an object named with a trailing slash, possibly due to a bug in your code that created one that way. Such an object would likely be invisible in the console. Jun 27, 2016 at 13:02
  • 3
    Here is the code: codeflex.co/get-list-of-objects-from-s3-directory Apr 11, 2018 at 8:19
  • Indeed Michael is right, there is an object with that key in your bucket. Run this command to remove it aws s3api delete-object --bucket X --key path/to/my/folder/. And make sure your code doesn't create that object again. Jan 22, 2020 at 22:00

7 Answers 7

71

While everybody say that there are no directories and files in s3, but only objects (and buckets), which is absolutely true, I would suggest to take advantage of CommonPrefixes, described in this answer. So, you can do following to get list of "folders" (commonPrefixes) and "files" (objectSummaries):

ListObjectsV2Request req = new ListObjectsV2Request().withBucketName(bucket.getName()).withPrefix(prefix).withDelimiter(DELIMITER);
ListObjectsV2Result listing = s3Client.listObjectsV2(req);
for (String commonPrefix : listing.getCommonPrefixes()) {
        System.out.println(commonPrefix);
}
for (S3ObjectSummary summary: listing.getObjectSummaries()) {
    System.out.println(summary.getKey());
}

In your case, for objectSummaries (files) it should return (in case of correct prefix):
users/user-id/contacts/contact-id/file1.txt
users/user-id/contacts/contact-id/file2.txt

for commonPrefixes:
users/user-id/contacts/contact-id/

Reference: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_ListObjectsV2.html

3
54

Everything in S3 is an object. To you, it may be files and folders. But to S3, they're just objects.

Objects that end with the delimiter (/ in most cases) are usually perceived as a folder, but it's not always the case. It depends on the application. Again, in your case, you're interpretting it as a folder. S3 is not. It's just another object.

In your case above, the object users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/ exists in S3 as a distinct object, but the object users/<user-id>/ does not. That's the difference in your responses. Why they're like that, we cannot tell you, but someone made the object in one case, and didn't in the other. You don't see it in the AWS Management Console because the console is interpreting it as a folder and hiding it from you.

Since S3 just sees these things as objects, it won't "exclude" certain things for you. It's up to the client to deal with the objects as they should be dealt with.

Your Solution

Since you're the one that doesn't want the folder objects, you can exclude it yourself by checking the last character for a /. If it is, then ignore the object from the response.

1
  • May I get same list with http Post Request?
    – efirat
    Mar 27, 2018 at 15:35
5

If your goal is only to take the files and not the folder, the approach I made was to use the file size as a filter. This property is the current size of the file hosted by AWS. All the folders return 0 in that property. The following is a C# code using linq but it shouldn't be hard to translate to Java.

var amazonClient = new AmazonS3Client(key, secretKey, region);
var listObjectsRequest= new ListObjectsRequest
            {
                BucketName = 'someBucketName',
                Delimiter = 'someDelimiter',
                Prefix = 'somePrefix'
            };
var objects = amazonClient.ListObjects(listObjectsRequest);
var objectsInFolder = objects.S3Objects.Where(file => file.Size > 0).ToList();
1
  • 4
    A reasonable answer although the purist in me says a file is a file even if it is zero bytes. File names can't end with a '/' and file names cannot be zero length - I think they are better decision makers than size
    – Oly Dungey
    Mar 11, 2022 at 11:03
3

you can check the type. s3 has a special application/x-directory

bucket.objects({:delimiter=>"/", :prefix=>"f1/"}).each { |obj| p obj.object.content_type }
1

As other have already said, everything in S3 is an object. To you, it may be files and folders. But to S3, they're just objects.

If you don't need objects which end with a '/' you can safely delete them e.g. via REST api or AWS Java SDK (I assume you have write access). You will not lose "nested files" (there no files, so you will not lose objects whose names are prefixed with the key you delete)

AmazonS3 amazonS3 = AmazonS3ClientBuilder.standard().withCredentials(new ProfileCredentialsProvider()).withRegion("region").build();
amazonS3.deleteObject(new DeleteObjectRequest("my-bucket", "users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/"));

Please note that I'm using ProfileCredentialsProvider so that my requests are not anonymous. Otherwise, you will not be able to delete an object. I have my AWS keep key stored in ~/.aws/credentials file.

-1

S3 does not have directories, while you can list files in a pseudo directory manner like you demonstrated, there is no directory "file" per-se.
You may of inadvertently created a data file called users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/.

1
  • I can't see any users/<user-id>/contacts/<contact-id>/ file in my management console. but, if it exists, how can I exclude this?
    – davioooh
    Jun 27, 2016 at 10:57
-3

Based on @davioooh answer. This code is worked for me.

ListObjectsRequest listObjectsRequest = new ListObjectsRequest().withBucketName("your-bucket")
            .withPrefix("your/folder/path/").withDelimiter("/");

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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