MediaStore examples using Amazon CLI - Amazon Command Line Interface
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MediaStore examples using Amazon CLI

The following code examples show you how to perform actions and implement common scenarios by using the Amazon Command Line Interface with MediaStore.

Actions are code excerpts from larger programs and must be run in context. While actions show you how to call individual service functions, you can see actions in context in their related scenarios and cross-service examples.

Scenarios are code examples that show you how to accomplish a specific task by calling multiple functions within the same service.

Each example includes a link to GitHub, where you can find instructions on how to set up and run the code in context.

Topics

Actions

The following code example shows how to use create-container.

Amazon CLI

To create a container

The following create-container example creates a new, empty container.

aws mediastore create-container --container-name ExampleContainer

Output:

{ "Container": { "AccessLoggingEnabled": false, "CreationTime": 1563557265, "Name": "ExampleContainer", "Status": "CREATING", "ARN": "arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:111122223333:container/ExampleContainer" } }

For more information, see Creating a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-container-policy.

Amazon CLI

To delete a container policy

The following delete-container-policy example deletes the policy that is assigned to the specified container. When the policy is deleted, Amazon Elemental MediaStore automatically assigns the default policy to the container.

aws mediastore delete-container-policy \ --container-name LiveEvents

This command produces no output.

For more information, see DeleteContainerPolicy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore API reference.

The following code example shows how to use delete-container.

Amazon CLI

To delete a container

The following delete-container example deletes the specified container. You can delete a container only if it has no objects.

aws mediastore delete-container \ --container-name=ExampleLiveDemo

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Deleting a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-cors-policy.

Amazon CLI

To delete a CORS policy

The following delete-cors-policy example deletes the cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) policy that is assigned to the specified container.

aws mediastore delete-cors-policy \ --container-name ExampleContainer

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Deleting a CORS Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-lifecycle-policy.

Amazon CLI

To delete an object lifecycle policy

The following delete-lifecycle-policy example deletes the object lifecycle policy attached to the specified container. This change can take up to 20 minutes to take effect.

aws mediastore delete-lifecycle-policy \ --container-name LiveEvents

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Deleting an Object Lifecycle Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-container.

Amazon CLI

To view the details of a container

The following describe-container example displays the details of the specified container.

aws mediastore describe-container \ --container-name ExampleContainer

Output:

{ "Container": { "CreationTime": 1563558086, "AccessLoggingEnabled": false, "ARN": "arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:111122223333:container/ExampleContainer", "Status": "ACTIVE", "Name": "ExampleContainer", "Endpoint": "https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com" } }

For more information, see Viewing the Details for a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-object.

Amazon CLI

To view a list of objects and folders in a specific container

The following describe-object example displays items (objects and folders) stored in a specific container.

aws mediastore-data describe-object \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com \ --path /folder_name/file1234.jpg

Output:

{ "ContentType": "image/jpeg", "LastModified": "Fri, 19 Jul 2019 21:32:20 GMT", "ContentLength": "2307346", "ETag": "2aa333bbcc8d8d22d777e999c88d4aa9eeeeee4dd89ff7f555555555555da6d3" }

For more information, see Viewing the Details of an Object in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see DescribeObject in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use get-container-policy.

Amazon CLI

To view a container policy

The following get-container-policy example displays the resource-based policy of the specified container.

aws mediastore get-container-policy \ --container-name ExampleLiveDemo

Output:

{ "Policy": { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "PublicReadOverHttps", "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "AWS": "arn:aws:iam::111122223333:root" }, "Action": [ "mediastore:GetObject", "mediastore:DescribeObject" ], "Resource": "arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:111122223333:container/ExampleLiveDemo/", "Condition": { "Bool": { "aws:SecureTransport": "true" } } } ] } }

For more information, see Viewing a Container Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use get-cors-policy.

Amazon CLI

To view a CORS policy

The following get-cors-policy example displays the cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) policy that is assigned to the specified container.

aws mediastore get-cors-policy \ --container-name ExampleContainer \ --region us-west-2

Output:

{ "CorsPolicy": [ { "AllowedMethods": [ "GET", "HEAD" ], "MaxAgeSeconds": 3000, "AllowedOrigins": [ "" ], "AllowedHeaders": [ "" ] } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a CORS Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see GetCorsPolicy in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use get-lifecycle-policy.

Amazon CLI

To view an object lifecycle policy

The following get-lifecycle-policy example displays the object lifecycle policy attached to the specified container.

aws mediastore get-lifecycle-policy \ --container-name LiveEvents

Output:

{ "LifecyclePolicy": { "rules": [ { "definition": { "path": [ { "prefix": "Football/" }, { "prefix": "Baseball/" } ], "days_since_create": [ { "numeric": [ ">", 28 ] } ] }, "action": "EXPIRE" } ] } }

For more information, see Viewing an Object Lifecycle Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use get-object.

Amazon CLI

To download an object

The following get-object example download an object to the specified endpoint.

aws mediastore-data get-object \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com \ --path=/folder_name/README.md README.md

Output:

{ "ContentLength": "2307346", "ContentType": "image/jpeg", "LastModified": "Fri, 19 Jul 2019 21:32:20 GMT", "ETag": "2aa333bbcc8d8d22d777e999c88d4aa9eeeeee4dd89ff7f555555555555da6d3", "StatusCode": 200 }

To download part of an object

The following get-object example downloads a portion an object to the specified endpoint.

aws mediastore-data get-object \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com \ --path /folder_name/README.md \ --range="bytes=0-100" README2.md

Output:

{ "StatusCode": 206, "ContentRange": "bytes 0-100/2307346", "ContentLength": "101", "LastModified": "Fri, 19 Jul 2019 21:32:20 GMT", "ContentType": "image/jpeg", "ETag": "2aa333bbcc8d8d22d777e999c88d4aa9eeeeee4dd89ff7f555555555555da6d3" }

For more information, see Downloading an Object in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see GetObject in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use list-containers.

Amazon CLI

To view a list of containers

The following list-containers example displays a list of all containers that are associated with your account.

aws mediastore list-containers

Output:

{ "Containers": [ { "CreationTime": 1505317931, "Endpoint": "https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "ACTIVE", "ARN": "arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:111122223333:container/ExampleLiveDemo", "AccessLoggingEnabled": false, "Name": "ExampleLiveDemo" }, { "CreationTime": 1506528818, "Endpoint": "https://fffggghhhiiijj.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "ACTIVE", "ARN": "arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:111122223333:container/ExampleContainer", "AccessLoggingEnabled": false, "Name": "ExampleContainer" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a List of Containers in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see ListContainers in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use list-items.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To view a list of objects and folders in a specific container

The following list-items example displays items (objects and folders) stored in the specified container.

aws mediastore-data list-items \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com

Output:

{ "Items": [ { "ContentType": "image/jpeg", "LastModified": 1563571859.379, "Name": "filename.jpg", "Type": "OBJECT", "ETag": "543ab21abcd1a234ab123456a1a2b12345ab12abc12a1234abc1a2bc12345a12", "ContentLength": 3784 }, { "Type": "FOLDER", "Name": "ExampleLiveDemo" } ] }

Example 2: To view a list of objects and folders in a specific folder

The following list-items example displays items (objects and folders) stored in a specific folder.

aws mediastore-data list-items \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com

Output:

{ "Items": [ { "ContentType": "image/jpeg", "LastModified": 1563571859.379, "Name": "filename.jpg", "Type": "OBJECT", "ETag": "543ab21abcd1a234ab123456a1a2b12345ab12abc12a1234abc1a2bc12345a12", "ContentLength": 3784 }, { "Type": "FOLDER", "Name": "ExampleLiveDemo" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a List of Objects in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see ListItems in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use list-tags-for-resource.

Amazon CLI

To list tags for a container

The following list-tags-for-resource example displays the tag keys and values assigned to the specified container.

aws mediastore list-tags-for-resource \ --resource arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:1213456789012:container/ExampleContainer

Output:

{ "Tags": [ { "Value": "Test", "Key": "Environment" }, { "Value": "West", "Key": "Region" } ] }

For more information, see ListTagsForResource in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore API Reference.

The following code example shows how to use put-container-policy.

Amazon CLI

To edit a container policy

The following put-container-policy example assigns a different policy to the specified container. In this example, the updated policy is defined in a file named LiveEventsContainerPolicy.json.

aws mediastore put-container-policy \ --container-name LiveEvents \ --policy file://LiveEventsContainerPolicy.json

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Editing a Container Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use put-cors-policy.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To add a CORS policy

The following put-cors-policy example adds a cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) policy to the specified container. The contents of the CORS policy are in the file named corsPolicy.json.

aws mediastore put-cors-policy \ --container-name ExampleContainer \ --cors-policy file://corsPolicy.json

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Adding a CORS Policy to a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

Example 2: To edit a CORS policy

The following put-cors-policy example updates the cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) policy that is assigned to the specified container. The contents of the updated CORS policy are in the file named corsPolicy2.json.

For more information, see Editing a CORS Policy in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see PutCorsPolicy in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use put-lifecycle-policy.

Amazon CLI

To create an object lifecycle policy

The following put-lifecycle-policy example attaches an object lifecycle policy to the specified container. This enables you to specify how long the service should store objects in your container. MediaStore deletes objects in the container once they reach their expiration date, as indicated in the policy, which is in the file named LiveEventsLifecyclePolicy.json.

aws mediastore put-lifecycle-policy \ --container-name ExampleContainer \ --lifecycle-policy file://ExampleLifecyclePolicy.json

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Adding an Object Lifecycle Policy to a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use put-object.

Amazon CLI

To upload an object

The following put-object example uploads an object to the specified container. You can specify a folder path where the object will be saved within the container. If the folder already exists, Amazon Elemental MediaStore stores the object in the folder. If the folder doesn't exist, the service creates it, and then stores the object in the folder.

aws mediastore-data put-object \ --endpoint https://aaabbbcccdddee.data.mediastore.us-west-2.amazonaws.com \ --body README.md \ --path /folder_name/README.md \ --cache-control "max-age=6, public" \ --content-type binary/octet-stream

Output:

{ "ContentSHA256": "74b5fdb517f423ed750ef214c44adfe2be36e37d861eafe9c842cbe1bf387a9d", "StorageClass": "TEMPORAL", "ETag": "af3e4731af032167a106015d1f2fe934e68b32ed1aa297a9e325f5c64979277b" }

For more information, see Uploading an Object in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

  • For API details, see PutObject in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use start-access-logging.

Amazon CLI

To enable access logging on a container

The following start-access-logging example enable access logging on the specified container.

aws mediastore start-access-logging \ --container-name LiveEvents

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Enabling Access Logging for a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use stop-access-logging.

Amazon CLI

To disable access logging on a container

The following stop-access-logging example disables access logging on the specified container.

aws mediastore stop-access-logging \ --container-name LiveEvents

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Disabling Access Logging for a Container in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use tag-resource.

Amazon CLI

To add tags to a container

The following tag-resource example adds tag keys and values to the specified container.

aws mediastore tag-resource \ --resource arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:123456789012:container/ExampleContainer \ --tags '[{"Key": "Region", "Value": "West"}, {"Key": "Environment", "Value": "Test"}]'

This command produces no output.

For more information, see TagResource in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore API Reference.

  • For API details, see TagResource in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use untag-resource.

Amazon CLI

To remove tags from a container

The following untag-resource example removes the specified tag key and its associated value from a container.

aws mediastore untag-resource \ --resource arn:aws:mediastore:us-west-2:123456789012:container/ExampleContainer \ --tag-keys Region

This command produces no output.

For more information, see UntagResource in the Amazon Elemental MediaStore API Reference..

  • For API details, see UntagResource in Amazon CLI Command Reference.