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I was downloading a file using awscli:

$ aws s3 cp s3://mybucket/myfile myfile

But the download was interrupted (computer went to sleep). How can I continue the download? S3 supports the Range header, but awscli s3 cp doesn't let me specify it.

The file is not publicly accessible so I can't use curl to specify the header manually.

1
  • Isn't there anything like the wget --continue or rsync for aws s3? That is surprising
    – devssh
    Jun 13, 2018 at 11:39

2 Answers 2

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There is a "hidden" command in the awscli tool which allows lower level access to S3: s3api.† It is less user friendly (no s3:// URLs and no progress bar) but it does support the range specifier on get-object:

   --range  (string) Downloads the specified range bytes of an object. For
   more   information   about   the   HTTP    range    header,    go    to
   http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.35.

Here's how to continue the download:

$ size=$(stat -f%z myfile) # assumes OS X. Change for your OS
$ aws s3api get-object \
            --bucket mybucket \
            --key myfile \
            --range "bytes=$size-" \
            /dev/fd/3 3>>myfile

You can use pv for a rudimentary progress bar:

$ aws s3api get-object \
            --bucket mybucket \
            --key myfile \
            --range "bytes=$size-" \
            /dev/fd/3 3>&1 >&2 | pv >> myfile

(The reason for this unnamed pipe rigmarole is that s3api writes a debug message to stdout at the end of the operation, polluting your file. This solution rebinds stdout to stderr and frees up the pipe for regular file contents through an alias. The version without pv could technically write to stderr (/dev/fd/2 and 2>), but if an error occurs s3api writes to stderr, which would then get appended to your file. Thus, it is safer to use a dedicated pipe there, as well.)

† In git speak, s3 is porcelain, and s3api is plumbing.

9
  • 1
    Using /dev/stdout in this case is wrong as the command itself (aws s3api get-object) writes to stdout. One has to sacrifice the conveniency of pv and write simply: size=$(stat --printf="%s" myfile); aws s3api get-object --bucket mybucket --key myfile --range "bytes=$size-" myfile.part ; cat myfile.part >> myfile
    – random
    Oct 23, 2018 at 10:51
  • If I don't specify outfile, I get: aws: error: the following arguments are required: outfile. Version 1.16.30. "Cosmic rays, man" :)
    – hraban
    Oct 23, 2018 at 20:08
  • 1
    Yes you do need to specify outfile -- it's myfile.part above. Apologies, I posted multiline code in one line, can't do it otherwise in comment apparently.
    – random
    Oct 24, 2018 at 21:12
  • Ah, I get your point now! Sorry, my bad. Thanks for that, I'll edit the post :)
    – hraban
    Oct 31, 2018 at 11:31
  • 1
    @hraban I couldn't get 3>&1 >&2 >> myfile to work (it printed the file to stdout), but I found that /dev/fd/3 3>>myfile worked well under OS X for me (file goes to myfile, stdout goes to screen)
    – nonagon
    Jan 14, 2019 at 2:47
10

Use s3cmd it has a --continue function built in. Example:

# Start a download
> s3cmd get s3://yourbucket/yourfile ./
download: 's3://yourbucket/yourfile' -> './yourfile' [1 of 1]
    123456789 of 987654321     12.5% in 235s   0.5 MB/s

[ctrl-c] interrupt

# Pick up where you left off
> s3cmd --continue get s3://yourbucket/yourfile ./

Note that S3 cmd is not multithreaded where awscli is multithreaded, e.g. awscli is faster. A currently maintained fork of s3cmd, called s4cmd appears to provide the multi-threaded capabilities while maintaining the usability features of s3cmd:

https://github.com/bloomreach/s4cmd

2
  • 1
    s4cmd (still) doesn’t support —continue Mar 18, 2022 at 6:53
  • That's a great point Aleksandr, thanks for the comment. s4cmd doesn't have that feature. I failed to realize that when I last updated this question with the reference to s4cmd. Mar 18, 2022 at 14:56

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