I've got 200k files in a bucket which I need to move into a sub folder within the same bucket, whats the best approach?
6 Answers
I recently encountered the same problem. I solved it using the command line API.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/index.html http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/s3/mv.html
aws s3 mv s3://BUCKETNAME/myfolder/photos/ s3://BUCKETNAME/myotherfolder/photos/ --recursive
I had a need for the objects to be publicly viewable, so I added the --acl public-read
option.
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3IIRC, you will be charged for each command copy and delete that the mv will make in the background, as AWS do not have a "move" command, aws script will fakes that using the copy and then delete for each file recursively– higuitaJan 26, 2016 at 17:46
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@higuita As per my understanding, there is no way out of this. Move/Rename is not provided by AWS. Sep 20, 2016 at 17:19
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1This saved my day for moving 700,000 files to another directory! Aug 25, 2017 at 9:04
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8Copy/delete is no problem, since delete requests are free. PUT, COPY, POST, or LIST cost $0.005 per 1,000 requests (standard). So e.g. moving 700,000 objects is $3.50 (same as only copying them).– joxNov 26, 2017 at 11:52
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4I've edited this answer for security reasons. Putting
--acl public-read
in the main code body is problematic for people that don't know AWS or its security model and tend to rapidly copy/paste and try code without understanding it (many, many people). It also doesn't answer the question which doesn't mention public ACL so I put that option code at the end with the comment.– rjurneyNov 12, 2020 at 17:22
Recently was able to do this with one command. Went much faster than individual requests for each file too.
Running a snippet like this:
aws s3 mv s3://bucket-name/ s3://bucket-name/subfolder --recursive --exclude "*" --include "*.txt"
Use the --include
flag to selectively pick up the files you want
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5
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8A word of warning: This can cause objects to be made in your bucket with a key composed of 'deeply-nested' subfolders, e.g. s3://bucket-name/subfolder/subfolder/subfolder/blah.txt. Circumvent this problem by adding an additional exclude: $ aws s3 mv s3://bucket-name/ s3://bucket-name/subfolder --recursive --exclude "" --include ".txt" --exclude "subfolder/*"– Joshua TJun 25, 2020 at 15:00
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Great comment by @JoshuaT ! The other answer doesn't have this issue since it is moving files to another folder on the same hierarchical level as the source folder. But this one is really moving to a subfolder (like the question asks). Adding --recursive acts on all objects in the folder, but also objects in all subfolders. So it could move one to the subfolder, and then move it again to an extra nested subfolder. And if you have files already in the subfolder they would be moved one level deeper. The extra --exclude in his comment prevents that. Sep 22, 2023 at 16:49
There is no 'Rename' operation though it would be great if there was.
Instead, you need to loop through each item that you want to rename, perform a copy to a new object and then a delete on the old object.
- http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectCOPY.html
- http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectDELETE.html
Note: for simplistic purposes I'm assuming you don't have versioning enabled on your bucket.
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3that sounds very painful! API seems to be optimized for making money, not for being convenient.– TiloAug 2, 2013 at 1:18
I had this same problem and I ended up using aws s3 mv
along with a bash for
loop.
I did aws ls bucket_name
to get all of the files in the bucket. Then I decided which files I wanted to move and added them to file_names.txt
.
Then I ran the following snippet to move all of the files:
for f in $(cat file_names.txt)
do
aws s3 mv s3://bucket-name/$f s3://bucket-name/subfolder/$f
done
if your files are in a folder, you can use s3cmd tool
s3cmd cp --recursive s3://bucket/folder/ s3://bucket/sub_folder/
Ps: I'm assuming you have already installed and configured s3cmd
The below script works perfectly to me without any issues
for i in `cat s3folders`
do
aws s3 mv s3://Bucket_Name/"$i"/ s3://Another_Bucket_Name/ --recursive
done
It also delete the empty folder from source once the files moved to the target.
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1How does Another_Bucket_Name meet the "same bucket" requirement? Where does s3folders come from?– StevkoJun 11, 2020 at 8:09