Let\'s say that I have a machine that I want to be able to write to a certain log file stored on an S3 bucket.
So, the machine needs to have writing abilities to tha
In case anyone wants to append data to an object with an S3-like service, the Alibaba Cloud OSS (Object Storage Service) supports this natively.
OSS provides append upload (through the AppendObject API), which allows you to directly append content to the end of an object. Objects uploaded by using this method are appendable objects, whereas objects uploaded by using other methods are normal objects. The appended data is instantly readable.
As others have stated previously, S3 objects are not append-able.
However, another solution would be to write out to CloudWatch logs and then export the logs you want to S3. This would also prevent any attackers who access your server from deleting from your S3 bucket, since Lambda wouldn't require any S3 permissions.
As the accepted answer states, you can't. The best solution I'm aware of is to use:
https://aws.amazon.com/kinesis/firehose/
Their code sample looks complicated but yours can be really simple. You keep performing PUT (or BATCH PUT) operations onto a Kinesis Firehose delivery stream in your application (using the AWS SDK), and you configure the Kinesis Firehose delivery stream to send your streamed data to an AWS S3 bucket of your choice (in the AWS Kinesis Firehose console).
It's still not as convenient as >>
from the Linux command line, because once you've created a file on S3 you again have to deal with downloading, appending, and uploading the new file but you only have to do it once per batch of lines rather than for every line of data so you don't need to worry about huge charges because of the volume of append operations. Maybe it can be done but I can't see how to do it from the console.
I had the similar issue and this is what I had asked
how to Append data in file using AWS Lambda
Here's What I come up with to solve the above problem:
Use getObject to retrive from the existing file
s3.getObject(getParams, function(err, data) {
if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
else{
console.log(data); // successful response
var s3Projects = JSON.parse(data.Body);
console.log('s3 data==>', s3Projects);
if(s3Projects.length > 0) {
projects = s3Projects;
}
}
projects.push(event);
writeToS3(); // Calling function to append the data
});
Write function to append in the file
function writeToS3() {
var putParams = {
Body: JSON.stringify(projects),
Bucket: bucketPath,
Key: "projects.json",
ACL: "public-read"
};
s3.putObject(putParams, function(err, data) {
if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
else console.log(data); // successful response
callback(null, 'Hello from Lambda');
});
}
Hope this help!!
Unfortunately, you can't.
S3 doesn't have an "append" operation.* Once an object has been uploaded, there is no way to modify it in place; your only option is to upload a new object to replace it, which doesn't meet your requirements.
*: Yes, I know this post is a couple of years old. It's still accurate, though.
Objects on S3 are not append-able. You have 2 solutions in this case:
function writeToS3(input) { var content; var getParams = { Bucket: 'myBucket', Key: "myKey" }; s3.getObject(getParams, function(err, data) { if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); else { content = new Buffer(data.Body).toString("utf8"); content = content + '\n' + new Date() + '\t' + input; var putParams = { Body: content, Bucket: 'myBucket', Key: "myKey", ACL: "public-read" }; s3.putObject(putParams, function(err, data) { if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred else { console.log(data); // successful response } }); } }); }
function writeToS3(input) { var content = "\n" + new Date() + "\t" + input; var params = { DeliveryStreamName: 'myDeliveryStream', /* required */ Record: { /* required */ Data: new Buffer(content) || 'STRING_VALUE' /* Strings will be Base-64 encoded on your behalf */ /* required */ } }; firehose.putRecord(params, function(err, data) { if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred else console.log(data); // successful response }); }