8

I'm using the 2.x AWS Java SDK (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-java/index.html). I need to get an S3 object using the friendly HTTP URL (e.g. https://bucket.s3.region.amazonaws.com/key or https://s3.region.amazonaws.com/bucket/key).

The old SDK included an AmazonS3URI class that could parse a URL and extract the bucket and key. Does the 2.x SDK include similar functionality, or should I use Java's URI class to parse the URL?

6 Answers 6

8

This is what I did using URI from java.net:

URI uri = new URI(s3Url);

String bucketName = uri.getHost();

// remove the first "/"
String prefix = uri.getPath().substring(1);
4
  • That should work if the bucket name is in the host. You'll have to add some more logic if you want to handle the case where the bucket name is in the path.
    – mrog
    Mar 2, 2020 at 17:17
  • 1
    This is the use case for me: s3://bucketName/path1/path2/path3/
    – Bao Pham
    Mar 2, 2020 at 19:41
  • 1
    Using give lib from Amazon lib, docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaSDK/latest/javadoc/com/amazonaws/…
    – kidnan1991
    Jan 27, 2021 at 2:56
  • 1
    @kidnan1991 AmazonS3URI does not exist in AWS SDK v2 Feb 3, 2022 at 18:01
6

There isn't a way to do it with the SDK yet, but it might be available in the future. In the meantime, you can write your own code using Java's URI class, or use AmazonS3URI from the old SDK and hope it keeps working.

1

This pull request adds this functionality to the SDK version 2.

0

If you want all the functionality of AmazonS3URI, but don't want to import the entire library, you can also copy the source code. It's apache licensed

https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-java/blob/master/aws-java-sdk-s3/src/main/java/com/amazonaws/services/s3/AmazonS3URI.java

0

What you want is the S3Uri class. This allows you to extract the S3-specific elements of an S3 or HTTPS URI that identifies the S3 Bucket. It's pretty simple. In one of my projects, I needed to pass the S3 URI of a CDK S3 Asset to the S3 Transfer Manager in a CDK custom resource. The S3Uri class made it simple:

S3Client s3Client = S3Client.create();
S3Utilities s3Utilities = s3Client.utilities();
S3Uri s3Uri = s3Utilities.parseUri(URI.create("s3://bucket/key"));
DownloadFileRequest downloadFileRequest =
            DownloadFileRequest.builder()
                    .getObjectRequest(b -> 
                           b.bucket(s3Uri.bucket().orElseThrow())
                            .key(s3Uri.key().orElseThrow()))
                    .destination(downloadLocation)
                    .build();

You can find more details here.

-1

Expanding upon @Bao Pham's answer, using new URI(s3Url) requires adding a try/catch, while if you use URI.create(s3Url), you don't need it. I also found it useful to use a S3ObjectId out of the parsed parts for re-usability.

public class S3Url {
    public static S3ObjectId decode(String urlStr) {
        URI uri = URI.create(urlStr);
        return new S3ObjectId(uri.getHost(), uri.getPath().substring(1));
    }
}
1
  • Unfortunately, S3ObjectId isn't available in version 2.x of the API. And this solution assumes that the host name contains the bucket, which isn't always the case.
    – mrog
    Jun 22, 2020 at 16:57

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