Adding an Amazon resource tag to a Storage Lens group - Amazon Simple Storage Service
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Adding an Amazon resource tag to a Storage Lens group

The following examples demonstrate how to add Amazon resource tags to an Amazon S3 Storage Lens group. You can add resource tags by using the Amazon S3 console, Amazon Command Line Interface (Amazon CLI), and Amazon SDK for Java.

To add an Amazon resource tag to a Storage Lens group
  1. Sign in to the Amazon Web Services Management Console and open the Amazon S3 console at https://console.amazonaws.cn/s3/.

  2. In the left navigation pane, choose Storage Lens groups.

  3. Under Storage Lens groups, choose the Storage Lens group that you want to update.

  4. Under Amazon resource tags, choose Add tags.

  5. On the Add tags page, add the new key-value pair.

    Note

    Adding a new tag with the same key as an existing tag overwrites the previous tag value.

  6. (Optional) To add more than one new tag, choose Add tag again to continue adding new entries. You can add up to 50 Amazon resource tags to your Storage Lens group.

  7. (Optional) If you want to remove a newly added entry, choose Remove next to the tag that you want to remove.

  8. Choose Save changes.

The following example Amazon CLI command adds two resource tags to an existing Storage Lens group named marketing-department. To use this example command, replace the user input placeholders with your own information.

aws s3control tag-resource --account-id 111122223333 \ --resource-arn arn:aws-cn:s3:us-east-1:111122223333:storage-lens-group/marketing-department \ --region us-east-1 --tags Key=k1,Value=v1 Key=k2,Value=v2

The following Amazon SDK for Java example adds two Amazon resource tags to an existing Storage Lens group. To use this example, replace the user input placeholders with your own information.

package aws.example.s3control; import com.amazonaws.AmazonServiceException; import com.amazonaws.SdkClientException; import software.amazon.awssdk.auth.credentials.ProfileCredentialsProvider; import software.amazon.awssdk.regions.Region; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.s3control.S3ControlClient; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.s3control.model.Tag; import software.amazon.awssdk.services.s3control.model.TagResourceRequest; public class TagResource { public static void main(String[] args) { String resourceARN = "Resource_ARN"; String accountId = "111122223333"; try { Tag resourceTag1 = Tag.builder() .key("resource-tag-key-1") .value("resource-tag-value-1") .build(); Tag resourceTag2 = Tag.builder() .key("resource-tag-key-2") .value("resource-tag-value-2") .build(); TagResourceRequest tagResourceRequest = TagResourceRequest.builder() .resourceArn(resourceARN) .tags(resourceTag1, resourceTag2) .accountId(accountId) .build(); S3ControlClient s3ControlClient = S3ControlClient.builder() .region(Region.US_WEST_2) .credentialsProvider(ProfileCredentialsProvider.create()) .build(); s3ControlClient.tagResource(tagResourceRequest); } catch (AmazonServiceException e) { // The call was transmitted successfully, but Amazon S3 couldn't process // it and returned an error response. e.printStackTrace(); } catch (SdkClientException e) { // Amazon S3 couldn't be contacted for a response, or the client // couldn't parse the response from Amazon S3. e.printStackTrace(); } } }