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1 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
2 # Copyright (c) 2012 Mitch Garnaat http://garnaat.org/
3 # Copyright (c) 2012 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved
4 #
5 # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
6 # copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
7 # "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
8 # without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, dis-
9 # tribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit
10 # persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the fol-
11 # lowing conditions:
12 #
13 # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
14 # in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
15 #
16 # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
17 # OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABIL-
18 # ITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT
19 # SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
20 # WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
21 # OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
22 # IN THE SOFTWARE.
23 #
24
25 import os
26
27 import boto.glacier
28 from boto.compat import json
29 from boto.connection import AWSAuthConnection
30 from boto.glacier.exceptions import UnexpectedHTTPResponseError
31 from boto.glacier.response import GlacierResponse
32 from boto.glacier.utils import ResettingFileSender
33
34
35 class Layer1(AWSAuthConnection):
36 """
37 Amazon Glacier is a storage solution for "cold data."
38
39 Amazon Glacier is an extremely low-cost storage service that
40 provides secure, durable and easy-to-use storage for data backup
41 and archival. With Amazon Glacier, customers can store their data
42 cost effectively for months, years, or decades. Amazon Glacier
43 also enables customers to offload the administrative burdens of
44 operating and scaling storage to AWS, so they don't have to worry
45 about capacity planning, hardware provisioning, data replication,
46 hardware failure and recovery, or time-consuming hardware
47 migrations.
48
49 Amazon Glacier is a great storage choice when low storage cost is
50 paramount, your data is rarely retrieved, and retrieval latency of
51 several hours is acceptable. If your application requires fast or
52 frequent access to your data, consider using Amazon S3. For more
53 information, go to `Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3)`_.
54
55 You can store any kind of data in any format. There is no maximum
56 limit on the total amount of data you can store in Amazon Glacier.
57
58 If you are a first-time user of Amazon Glacier, we recommend that
59 you begin by reading the following sections in the Amazon Glacier
60 Developer Guide :
61
62
63 + `What is Amazon Glacier`_ - This section of the Developer Guide
64 describes the underlying data model, the operations it supports,
65 and the AWS SDKs that you can use to interact with the service.
66 + `Getting Started with Amazon Glacier`_ - The Getting Started
67 section walks you through the process of creating a vault,
68 uploading archives, creating jobs to download archives, retrieving
69 the job output, and deleting archives.
70 """
71 Version = '2012-06-01'
72
73 def __init__(self, aws_access_key_id=None, aws_secret_access_key=None,
74 account_id='-', is_secure=True, port=None,
75 proxy=None, proxy_port=None,
76 proxy_user=None, proxy_pass=None, debug=0,
77 https_connection_factory=None, path='/',
78 provider='aws', security_token=None,
79 suppress_consec_slashes=True,
80 region=None, region_name='us-east-1',
81 profile_name=None):
82
83 if not region:
84 for reg in boto.glacier.regions():
85 if reg.name == region_name:
86 region = reg
87 break
88
89 self.region = region
90 self.account_id = account_id
91 super(Layer1, self).__init__(region.endpoint,
92 aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key,
93 is_secure, port, proxy, proxy_port,
94 proxy_user, proxy_pass, debug,
95 https_connection_factory,
96 path, provider, security_token,
97 suppress_consec_slashes,
98 profile_name=profile_name)
99
100 def _required_auth_capability(self):
101 return ['hmac-v4']
102
103 def make_request(self, verb, resource, headers=None,
104 data='', ok_responses=(200,), params=None,
105 sender=None, response_headers=None):
106 if headers is None:
107 headers = {}
108 headers['x-amz-glacier-version'] = self.Version
109 uri = '/%s/%s' % (self.account_id, resource)
110 response = super(Layer1, self).make_request(verb, uri,
111 params=params,
112 headers=headers,
113 sender=sender,
114 data=data)
115 if response.status in ok_responses:
116 return GlacierResponse(response, response_headers)
117 else:
118 # create glacier-specific exceptions
119 raise UnexpectedHTTPResponseError(ok_responses, response)
120
121 # Vaults
122
123 def list_vaults(self, limit=None, marker=None):
124 """
125 This operation lists all vaults owned by the calling user's
126 account. The list returned in the response is ASCII-sorted by
127 vault name.
128
129 By default, this operation returns up to 1,000 items. If there
130 are more vaults to list, the response `marker` field contains
131 the vault Amazon Resource Name (ARN) at which to continue the
132 list with a new List Vaults request; otherwise, the `marker`
133 field is `null`. To return a list of vaults that begins at a
134 specific vault, set the `marker` request parameter to the
135 vault ARN you obtained from a previous List Vaults request.
136 You can also limit the number of vaults returned in the
137 response by specifying the `limit` parameter in the request.
138
139 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
140 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
141 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
142 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
143 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
144 Management (IAM)`_.
145
146 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
147 `Retrieving Vault Metadata in Amazon Glacier`_ and `List
148 Vaults `_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
149
150 :type marker: string
151 :param marker: A string used for pagination. The marker specifies the
152 vault ARN after which the listing of vaults should begin.
153
154 :type limit: string
155 :param limit: The maximum number of items returned in the response. If
156 you don't specify a value, the List Vaults operation returns up to
157 1,000 items.
158 """
159 params = {}
160 if limit:
161 params['limit'] = limit
162 if marker:
163 params['marker'] = marker
164 return self.make_request('GET', 'vaults', params=params)
165
166 def describe_vault(self, vault_name):
167 """
168 This operation returns information about a vault, including
169 the vault's Amazon Resource Name (ARN), the date the vault was
170 created, the number of archives it contains, and the total
171 size of all the archives in the vault. The number of archives
172 and their total size are as of the last inventory generation.
173 This means that if you add or remove an archive from a vault,
174 and then immediately use Describe Vault, the change in
175 contents will not be immediately reflected. If you want to
176 retrieve the latest inventory of the vault, use InitiateJob.
177 Amazon Glacier generates vault inventories approximately
178 daily. For more information, see `Downloading a Vault
179 Inventory in Amazon Glacier`_.
180
181 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
182 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
183 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
184 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
185 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
186 Management (IAM)`_.
187
188 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
189 `Retrieving Vault Metadata in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Describe
190 Vault `_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
191
192 :type vault_name: string
193 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
194 """
195 uri = 'vaults/%s' % vault_name
196 return self.make_request('GET', uri)
197
198 def create_vault(self, vault_name):
199 """
200 This operation creates a new vault with the specified name.
201 The name of the vault must be unique within a region for an
202 AWS account. You can create up to 1,000 vaults per account. If
203 you need to create more vaults, contact Amazon Glacier.
204
205 You must use the following guidelines when naming a vault.
206
207
208
209 + Names can be between 1 and 255 characters long.
210 + Allowed characters are a-z, A-Z, 0-9, '_' (underscore), '-'
211 (hyphen), and '.' (period).
212
213
214
215 This operation is idempotent.
216
217 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
218 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
219 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
220 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
221 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
222 Management (IAM)`_.
223
224 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
225 `Creating a Vault in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Create Vault `_ in
226 the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
227
228 :type vault_name: string
229 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
230 """
231 uri = 'vaults/%s' % vault_name
232 return self.make_request('PUT', uri, ok_responses=(201,),
233 response_headers=[('Location', 'Location')])
234
235 def delete_vault(self, vault_name):
236 """
237 This operation deletes a vault. Amazon Glacier will delete a
238 vault only if there are no archives in the vault as of the
239 last inventory and there have been no writes to the vault
240 since the last inventory. If either of these conditions is not
241 satisfied, the vault deletion fails (that is, the vault is not
242 removed) and Amazon Glacier returns an error. You can use
243 DescribeVault to return the number of archives in a vault, and
244 you can use `Initiate a Job (POST jobs)`_ to initiate a new
245 inventory retrieval for a vault. The inventory contains the
246 archive IDs you use to delete archives using `Delete Archive
247 (DELETE archive)`_.
248
249 This operation is idempotent.
250
251 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
252 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
253 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
254 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
255 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
256 Management (IAM)`_.
257
258 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
259 `Deleting a Vault in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Delete Vault `_ in
260 the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
261
262 :type vault_name: string
263 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
264 """
265 uri = 'vaults/%s' % vault_name
266 return self.make_request('DELETE', uri, ok_responses=(204,))
267
268 def get_vault_notifications(self, vault_name):
269 """
270 This operation retrieves the `notification-configuration`
271 subresource of the specified vault.
272
273 For information about setting a notification configuration on
274 a vault, see SetVaultNotifications. If a notification
275 configuration for a vault is not set, the operation returns a
276 `404 Not Found` error. For more information about vault
277 notifications, see `Configuring Vault Notifications in Amazon
278 Glacier`_.
279
280 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
281 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
282 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
283 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
284 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
285 Management (IAM)`_.
286
287 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
288 `Configuring Vault Notifications in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Get
289 Vault Notification Configuration `_ in the Amazon Glacier
290 Developer Guide .
291
292 :type vault_name: string
293 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
294 """
295 uri = 'vaults/%s/notification-configuration' % vault_name
296 return self.make_request('GET', uri)
297
298 def set_vault_notifications(self, vault_name, notification_config):
299 """
300 This operation configures notifications that will be sent when
301 specific events happen to a vault. By default, you don't get
302 any notifications.
303
304 To configure vault notifications, send a PUT request to the
305 `notification-configuration` subresource of the vault. The
306 request should include a JSON document that provides an Amazon
307 SNS topic and specific events for which you want Amazon
308 Glacier to send notifications to the topic.
309
310 Amazon SNS topics must grant permission to the vault to be
311 allowed to publish notifications to the topic. You can
312 configure a vault to publish a notification for the following
313 vault events:
314
315
316 + **ArchiveRetrievalCompleted** This event occurs when a job
317 that was initiated for an archive retrieval is completed
318 (InitiateJob). The status of the completed job can be
319 "Succeeded" or "Failed". The notification sent to the SNS
320 topic is the same output as returned from DescribeJob.
321 + **InventoryRetrievalCompleted** This event occurs when a job
322 that was initiated for an inventory retrieval is completed
323 (InitiateJob). The status of the completed job can be
324 "Succeeded" or "Failed". The notification sent to the SNS
325 topic is the same output as returned from DescribeJob.
326
327
328 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
329 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
330 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
331 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
332 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
333 Management (IAM)`_.
334
335 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
336 `Configuring Vault Notifications in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Set
337 Vault Notification Configuration `_ in the Amazon Glacier
338 Developer Guide .
339
340 :type vault_name: string
341 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
342
343 :type vault_notification_config: dict
344 :param vault_notification_config: Provides options for specifying
345 notification configuration.
346
347 The format of the dictionary is:
348
349 {'SNSTopic': 'mytopic',
350 'Events': [event1,...]}
351 """
352 uri = 'vaults/%s/notification-configuration' % vault_name
353 json_config = json.dumps(notification_config)
354 return self.make_request('PUT', uri, data=json_config,
355 ok_responses=(204,))
356
357 def delete_vault_notifications(self, vault_name):
358 """
359 This operation deletes the notification configuration set for
360 a vault. The operation is eventually consistent;that is, it
361 might take some time for Amazon Glacier to completely disable
362 the notifications and you might still receive some
363 notifications for a short time after you send the delete
364 request.
365
366 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
367 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
368 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
369 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
370 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
371 Management (IAM)`_.
372
373 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
374 `Configuring Vault Notifications in Amazon Glacier`_ and
375 `Delete Vault Notification Configuration `_ in the Amazon
376 Glacier Developer Guide.
377
378 :type vault_name: string
379 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
380 """
381 uri = 'vaults/%s/notification-configuration' % vault_name
382 return self.make_request('DELETE', uri, ok_responses=(204,))
383
384 # Jobs
385
386 def list_jobs(self, vault_name, completed=None, status_code=None,
387 limit=None, marker=None):
388 """
389 This operation lists jobs for a vault, including jobs that are
390 in-progress and jobs that have recently finished.
391
392
393 Amazon Glacier retains recently completed jobs for a period
394 before deleting them; however, it eventually removes completed
395 jobs. The output of completed jobs can be retrieved. Retaining
396 completed jobs for a period of time after they have completed
397 enables you to get a job output in the event you miss the job
398 completion notification or your first attempt to download it
399 fails. For example, suppose you start an archive retrieval job
400 to download an archive. After the job completes, you start to
401 download the archive but encounter a network error. In this
402 scenario, you can retry and download the archive while the job
403 exists.
404
405
406 To retrieve an archive or retrieve a vault inventory from
407 Amazon Glacier, you first initiate a job, and after the job
408 completes, you download the data. For an archive retrieval,
409 the output is the archive data, and for an inventory
410 retrieval, it is the inventory list. The List Job operation
411 returns a list of these jobs sorted by job initiation time.
412
413 This List Jobs operation supports pagination. By default, this
414 operation returns up to 1,000 jobs in the response. You should
415 always check the response for a `marker` at which to continue
416 the list; if there are no more items the `marker` is `null`.
417 To return a list of jobs that begins at a specific job, set
418 the `marker` request parameter to the value you obtained from
419 a previous List Jobs request. You can also limit the number of
420 jobs returned in the response by specifying the `limit`
421 parameter in the request.
422
423 Additionally, you can filter the jobs list returned by
424 specifying an optional `statuscode` (InProgress, Succeeded, or
425 Failed) and `completed` (true, false) parameter. The
426 `statuscode` allows you to specify that only jobs that match a
427 specified status are returned. The `completed` parameter
428 allows you to specify that only jobs in a specific completion
429 state are returned.
430
431 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
432 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
433 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
434 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
435 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
436 Management (IAM)`_.
437
438 For the underlying REST API, go to `List Jobs `_
439
440 :type vault_name: string
441 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
442
443 :type limit: string
444 :param limit: Specifies that the response be limited to the specified
445 number of items or fewer. If not specified, the List Jobs operation
446 returns up to 1,000 jobs.
447
448 :type marker: string
449 :param marker: An opaque string used for pagination. This value
450 specifies the job at which the listing of jobs should begin. Get
451 the marker value from a previous List Jobs response. You need only
452 include the marker if you are continuing the pagination of results
453 started in a previous List Jobs request.
454
455 :type statuscode: string
456 :param statuscode: Specifies the type of job status to return. You can
457 specify the following values: "InProgress", "Succeeded", or
458 "Failed".
459
460 :type completed: string
461 :param completed: Specifies the state of the jobs to return. You can
462 specify `True` or `False`.
463
464 """
465 params = {}
466 if limit:
467 params['limit'] = limit
468 if marker:
469 params['marker'] = marker
470 if status_code:
471 params['statuscode'] = status_code
472 if completed is not None:
473 params['completed'] = 'true' if completed else 'false'
474 uri = 'vaults/%s/jobs' % vault_name
475 return self.make_request('GET', uri, params=params)
476
477 def describe_job(self, vault_name, job_id):
478 """
479 This operation returns information about a job you previously
480 initiated, including the job initiation date, the user who
481 initiated the job, the job status code/message and the Amazon
482 SNS topic to notify after Amazon Glacier completes the job.
483 For more information about initiating a job, see InitiateJob.
484
485
486 This operation enables you to check the status of your job.
487 However, it is strongly recommended that you set up an Amazon
488 SNS topic and specify it in your initiate job request so that
489 Amazon Glacier can notify the topic after it completes the
490 job.
491
492
493 A job ID will not expire for at least 24 hours after Amazon
494 Glacier completes the job.
495
496 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
497 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
498 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
499 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
500 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
501 Management (IAM)`_.
502
503 For information about the underlying REST API, go to `Working
504 with Archives in Amazon Glacier`_ in the Amazon Glacier
505 Developer Guide .
506
507 :type vault_name: string
508 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
509
510 :type job_id: string
511 :param job_id: The ID of the job to describe.
512 """
513 uri = 'vaults/%s/jobs/%s' % (vault_name, job_id)
514 return self.make_request('GET', uri, ok_responses=(200,))
515
516 def initiate_job(self, vault_name, job_data):
517 """
518 This operation initiates a job of the specified type. In this
519 release, you can initiate a job to retrieve either an archive
520 or a vault inventory (a list of archives in a vault).
521
522 Retrieving data from Amazon Glacier is a two-step process:
523
524
525 #. Initiate a retrieval job.
526 #. After the job completes, download the bytes.
527
528
529 The retrieval request is executed asynchronously. When you
530 initiate a retrieval job, Amazon Glacier creates a job and
531 returns a job ID in the response. When Amazon Glacier
532 completes the job, you can get the job output (archive or
533 inventory data). For information about getting job output, see
534 GetJobOutput operation.
535
536 The job must complete before you can get its output. To
537 determine when a job is complete, you have the following
538 options:
539
540
541 + **Use Amazon SNS Notification** You can specify an Amazon
542 Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic to which Amazon
543 Glacier can post a notification after the job is completed.
544 You can specify an SNS topic per job request. The notification
545 is sent only after Amazon Glacier completes the job. In
546 addition to specifying an SNS topic per job request, you can
547 configure vault notifications for a vault so that job
548 notifications are always sent. For more information, see
549 SetVaultNotifications.
550 + **Get job details** You can make a DescribeJob request to
551 obtain job status information while a job is in progress.
552 However, it is more efficient to use an Amazon SNS
553 notification to determine when a job is complete.
554
555
556
557 The information you get via notification is same that you get
558 by calling DescribeJob.
559
560
561 If for a specific event, you add both the notification
562 configuration on the vault and also specify an SNS topic in
563 your initiate job request, Amazon Glacier sends both
564 notifications. For more information, see
565 SetVaultNotifications.
566
567 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
568 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
569 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
570 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
571 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
572 Management (IAM)`_.
573
574 **About the Vault Inventory**
575
576 Amazon Glacier prepares an inventory for each vault
577 periodically, every 24 hours. When you initiate a job for a
578 vault inventory, Amazon Glacier returns the last inventory for
579 the vault. The inventory data you get might be up to a day or
580 two days old. Also, the initiate inventory job might take some
581 time to complete before you can download the vault inventory.
582 So you do not want to retrieve a vault inventory for each
583 vault operation. However, in some scenarios, you might find
584 the vault inventory useful. For example, when you upload an
585 archive, you can provide an archive description but not an
586 archive name. Amazon Glacier provides you a unique archive ID,
587 an opaque string of characters. So, you might maintain your
588 own database that maps archive names to their corresponding
589 Amazon Glacier assigned archive IDs. You might find the vault
590 inventory useful in the event you need to reconcile
591 information in your database with the actual vault inventory.
592
593 **About Ranged Archive Retrieval**
594
595 You can initiate an archive retrieval for the whole archive or
596 a range of the archive. In the case of ranged archive
597 retrieval, you specify a byte range to return or the whole
598 archive. The range specified must be megabyte (MB) aligned,
599 that is the range start value must be divisible by 1 MB and
600 range end value plus 1 must be divisible by 1 MB or equal the
601 end of the archive. If the ranged archive retrieval is not
602 megabyte aligned, this operation returns a 400 response.
603 Furthermore, to ensure you get checksum values for data you
604 download using Get Job Output API, the range must be tree hash
605 aligned.
606
607 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
608 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
609 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
610 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
611 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
612 Management (IAM)`_.
613
614 For conceptual information and the underlying REST API, go to
615 `Initiate a Job`_ and `Downloading a Vault Inventory`_
616
617 :type account_id: string
618 :param account_id: The `AccountId` is the AWS Account ID. You can
619 specify either the AWS Account ID or optionally a '-', in which
620 case Amazon Glacier uses the AWS Account ID associated with the
621 credentials used to sign the request. If you specify your Account
622 ID, do not include hyphens in it.
623
624 :type vault_name: string
625 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
626
627 :type job_parameters: dict
628 :param job_parameters: Provides options for specifying job information.
629 The dictionary can contain the following attributes:
630
631 * ArchiveId - The ID of the archive you want to retrieve.
632 This field is required only if the Type is set to
633 archive-retrieval.
634 * Description - The optional description for the job.
635 * Format - When initiating a job to retrieve a vault
636 inventory, you can optionally add this parameter to
637 specify the output format. Valid values are: CSV|JSON.
638 * SNSTopic - The Amazon SNS topic ARN where Amazon Glacier
639 sends a notification when the job is completed and the
640 output is ready for you to download.
641 * Type - The job type. Valid values are:
642 archive-retrieval|inventory-retrieval
643 * RetrievalByteRange - Optionally specify the range of
644 bytes to retrieve.
645 * InventoryRetrievalParameters: Optional job parameters
646 * Format - The output format, like "JSON"
647 * StartDate - ISO8601 starting date string
648 * EndDate - ISO8601 ending date string
649 * Limit - Maximum number of entries
650 * Marker - A unique string used for pagination
651
652 """
653 uri = 'vaults/%s/jobs' % vault_name
654 response_headers = [('x-amz-job-id', u'JobId'),
655 ('Location', u'Location')]
656 json_job_data = json.dumps(job_data)
657 return self.make_request('POST', uri, data=json_job_data,
658 ok_responses=(202,),
659 response_headers=response_headers)
660
661 def get_job_output(self, vault_name, job_id, byte_range=None):
662 """
663 This operation downloads the output of the job you initiated
664 using InitiateJob. Depending on the job type you specified
665 when you initiated the job, the output will be either the
666 content of an archive or a vault inventory.
667
668 A job ID will not expire for at least 24 hours after Amazon
669 Glacier completes the job. That is, you can download the job
670 output within the 24 hours period after Amazon Glacier
671 completes the job.
672
673 If the job output is large, then you can use the `Range`
674 request header to retrieve a portion of the output. This
675 allows you to download the entire output in smaller chunks of
676 bytes. For example, suppose you have 1 GB of job output you
677 want to download and you decide to download 128 MB chunks of
678 data at a time, which is a total of eight Get Job Output
679 requests. You use the following process to download the job
680 output:
681
682
683 #. Download a 128 MB chunk of output by specifying the
684 appropriate byte range using the `Range` header.
685 #. Along with the data, the response includes a checksum of
686 the payload. You compute the checksum of the payload on the
687 client and compare it with the checksum you received in the
688 response to ensure you received all the expected data.
689 #. Repeat steps 1 and 2 for all the eight 128 MB chunks of
690 output data, each time specifying the appropriate byte range.
691 #. After downloading all the parts of the job output, you have
692 a list of eight checksum values. Compute the tree hash of
693 these values to find the checksum of the entire output. Using
694 the Describe Job API, obtain job information of the job that
695 provided you the output. The response includes the checksum of
696 the entire archive stored in Amazon Glacier. You compare this
697 value with the checksum you computed to ensure you have
698 downloaded the entire archive content with no errors.
699
700
701 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
702 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
703 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
704 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
705 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
706 Management (IAM)`_.
707
708 For conceptual information and the underlying REST API, go to
709 `Downloading a Vault Inventory`_, `Downloading an Archive`_,
710 and `Get Job Output `_
711
712 :type account_id: string
713 :param account_id: The `AccountId` is the AWS Account ID. You can
714 specify either the AWS Account ID or optionally a '-', in which
715 case Amazon Glacier uses the AWS Account ID associated with the
716 credentials used to sign the request. If you specify your Account
717 ID, do not include hyphens in it.
718
719 :type vault_name: string
720 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
721
722 :type job_id: string
723 :param job_id: The job ID whose data is downloaded.
724
725 :type byte_range: string
726 :param byte_range: The range of bytes to retrieve from the output. For
727 example, if you want to download the first 1,048,576 bytes, specify
728 "Range: bytes=0-1048575". By default, this operation downloads the
729 entire output.
730 """
731 response_headers = [('x-amz-sha256-tree-hash', u'TreeHash'),
732 ('Content-Range', u'ContentRange'),
733 ('Content-Type', u'ContentType')]
734 headers = None
735 if byte_range:
736 headers = {'Range': 'bytes=%d-%d' % byte_range}
737 uri = 'vaults/%s/jobs/%s/output' % (vault_name, job_id)
738 response = self.make_request('GET', uri, headers=headers,
739 ok_responses=(200, 206),
740 response_headers=response_headers)
741 return response
742
743 # Archives
744
745 def upload_archive(self, vault_name, archive,
746 linear_hash, tree_hash, description=None):
747 """
748 This operation adds an archive to a vault. This is a
749 synchronous operation, and for a successful upload, your data
750 is durably persisted. Amazon Glacier returns the archive ID in
751 the `x-amz-archive-id` header of the response.
752
753 You must use the archive ID to access your data in Amazon
754 Glacier. After you upload an archive, you should save the
755 archive ID returned so that you can retrieve or delete the
756 archive later. Besides saving the archive ID, you can also
757 index it and give it a friendly name to allow for better
758 searching. You can also use the optional archive description
759 field to specify how the archive is referred to in an external
760 index of archives, such as you might create in Amazon
761 DynamoDB. You can also get the vault inventory to obtain a
762 list of archive IDs in a vault. For more information, see
763 InitiateJob.
764
765 You must provide a SHA256 tree hash of the data you are
766 uploading. For information about computing a SHA256 tree hash,
767 see `Computing Checksums`_.
768
769 You can optionally specify an archive description of up to
770 1,024 printable ASCII characters. You can get the archive
771 description when you either retrieve the archive or get the
772 vault inventory. For more information, see InitiateJob. Amazon
773 Glacier does not interpret the description in any way. An
774 archive description does not need to be unique. You cannot use
775 the description to retrieve or sort the archive list.
776
777 Archives are immutable. After you upload an archive, you
778 cannot edit the archive or its description.
779
780 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
781 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
782 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
783 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
784 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
785 Management (IAM)`_.
786
787 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
788 `Uploading an Archive in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Upload
789 Archive`_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
790
791 :type vault_name: str
792 :param vault_name: The name of the vault
793
794 :type archive: bytes
795 :param archive: The data to upload.
796
797 :type linear_hash: str
798 :param linear_hash: The SHA256 checksum (a linear hash) of the
799 payload.
800
801 :type tree_hash: str
802 :param tree_hash: The user-computed SHA256 tree hash of the
803 payload. For more information on computing the
804 tree hash, see http://goo.gl/u7chF.
805
806 :type description: str
807 :param description: The optional description of the archive you
808 are uploading.
809 """
810 response_headers = [('x-amz-archive-id', u'ArchiveId'),
811 ('Location', u'Location'),
812 ('x-amz-sha256-tree-hash', u'TreeHash')]
813 uri = 'vaults/%s/archives' % vault_name
814 try:
815 content_length = str(len(archive))
816 except (TypeError, AttributeError):
817 # If a file like object is provided, try to retrieve
818 # the file size via fstat.
819 content_length = str(os.fstat(archive.fileno()).st_size)
820 headers = {'x-amz-content-sha256': linear_hash,
821 'x-amz-sha256-tree-hash': tree_hash,
822 'Content-Length': content_length}
823 if description:
824 headers['x-amz-archive-description'] = description
825 if self._is_file_like(archive):
826 sender = ResettingFileSender(archive)
827 else:
828 sender = None
829 return self.make_request('POST', uri, headers=headers,
830 sender=sender,
831 data=archive, ok_responses=(201,),
832 response_headers=response_headers)
833
834 def _is_file_like(self, archive):
835 return hasattr(archive, 'seek') and hasattr(archive, 'tell')
836
837 def delete_archive(self, vault_name, archive_id):
838 """
839 This operation deletes an archive from a vault. Subsequent
840 requests to initiate a retrieval of this archive will fail.
841 Archive retrievals that are in progress for this archive ID
842 may or may not succeed according to the following scenarios:
843
844
845 + If the archive retrieval job is actively preparing the data
846 for download when Amazon Glacier receives the delete archive
847 request, the archival retrieval operation might fail.
848 + If the archive retrieval job has successfully prepared the
849 archive for download when Amazon Glacier receives the delete
850 archive request, you will be able to download the output.
851
852
853 This operation is idempotent. Attempting to delete an already-
854 deleted archive does not result in an error.
855
856 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
857 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
858 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
859 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
860 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
861 Management (IAM)`_.
862
863 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
864 `Deleting an Archive in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Delete Archive`_
865 in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
866
867 :type vault_name: string
868 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
869
870 :type archive_id: string
871 :param archive_id: The ID of the archive to delete.
872 """
873 uri = 'vaults/%s/archives/%s' % (vault_name, archive_id)
874 return self.make_request('DELETE', uri, ok_responses=(204,))
875
876 # Multipart
877
878 def initiate_multipart_upload(self, vault_name, part_size,
879 description=None):
880 """
881 This operation initiates a multipart upload. Amazon Glacier
882 creates a multipart upload resource and returns its ID in the
883 response. The multipart upload ID is used in subsequent
884 requests to upload parts of an archive (see
885 UploadMultipartPart).
886
887 When you initiate a multipart upload, you specify the part
888 size in number of bytes. The part size must be a megabyte
889 (1024 KB) multiplied by a power of 2-for example, 1048576 (1
890 MB), 2097152 (2 MB), 4194304 (4 MB), 8388608 (8 MB), and so
891 on. The minimum allowable part size is 1 MB, and the maximum
892 is 4 GB.
893
894 Every part you upload to this resource (see
895 UploadMultipartPart), except the last one, must have the same
896 size. The last one can be the same size or smaller. For
897 example, suppose you want to upload a 16.2 MB file. If you
898 initiate the multipart upload with a part size of 4 MB, you
899 will upload four parts of 4 MB each and one part of 0.2 MB.
900
901
902 You don't need to know the size of the archive when you start
903 a multipart upload because Amazon Glacier does not require you
904 to specify the overall archive size.
905
906
907 After you complete the multipart upload, Amazon Glacier
908 removes the multipart upload resource referenced by the ID.
909 Amazon Glacier also removes the multipart upload resource if
910 you cancel the multipart upload or it may be removed if there
911 is no activity for a period of 24 hours.
912
913 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
914 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
915 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
916 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
917 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
918 Management (IAM)`_.
919
920 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
921 `Uploading Large Archives in Parts (Multipart Upload)`_ and
922 `Initiate Multipart Upload`_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer
923 Guide .
924
925 The part size must be a megabyte (1024 KB) multiplied by a power of
926 2, for example, 1048576 (1 MB), 2097152 (2 MB), 4194304 (4 MB),
927 8388608 (8 MB), and so on. The minimum allowable part size is 1 MB,
928 and the maximum is 4 GB (4096 MB).
929
930 :type vault_name: str
931 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
932
933 :type description: str
934 :param description: The archive description that you are uploading in
935 parts.
936
937 :type part_size: int
938 :param part_size: The size of each part except the last, in bytes. The
939 last part can be smaller than this part size.
940 """
941 response_headers = [('x-amz-multipart-upload-id', u'UploadId'),
942 ('Location', u'Location')]
943 headers = {'x-amz-part-size': str(part_size)}
944 if description:
945 headers['x-amz-archive-description'] = description
946 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads' % vault_name
947 response = self.make_request('POST', uri, headers=headers,
948 ok_responses=(201,),
949 response_headers=response_headers)
950 return response
951
952 def complete_multipart_upload(self, vault_name, upload_id,
953 sha256_treehash, archive_size):
954 """
955 You call this operation to inform Amazon Glacier that all the
956 archive parts have been uploaded and that Amazon Glacier can
957 now assemble the archive from the uploaded parts. After
958 assembling and saving the archive to the vault, Amazon Glacier
959 returns the URI path of the newly created archive resource.
960 Using the URI path, you can then access the archive. After you
961 upload an archive, you should save the archive ID returned to
962 retrieve the archive at a later point. You can also get the
963 vault inventory to obtain a list of archive IDs in a vault.
964 For more information, see InitiateJob.
965
966 In the request, you must include the computed SHA256 tree hash
967 of the entire archive you have uploaded. For information about
968 computing a SHA256 tree hash, see `Computing Checksums`_. On
969 the server side, Amazon Glacier also constructs the SHA256
970 tree hash of the assembled archive. If the values match,
971 Amazon Glacier saves the archive to the vault; otherwise, it
972 returns an error, and the operation fails. The ListParts
973 operation returns a list of parts uploaded for a specific
974 multipart upload. It includes checksum information for each
975 uploaded part that can be used to debug a bad checksum issue.
976
977 Additionally, Amazon Glacier also checks for any missing
978 content ranges when assembling the archive, if missing content
979 ranges are found, Amazon Glacier returns an error and the
980 operation fails.
981
982 Complete Multipart Upload is an idempotent operation. After
983 your first successful complete multipart upload, if you call
984 the operation again within a short period, the operation will
985 succeed and return the same archive ID. This is useful in the
986 event you experience a network issue that causes an aborted
987 connection or receive a 500 server error, in which case you
988 can repeat your Complete Multipart Upload request and get the
989 same archive ID without creating duplicate archives. Note,
990 however, that after the multipart upload completes, you cannot
991 call the List Parts operation and the multipart upload will
992 not appear in List Multipart Uploads response, even if
993 idempotent complete is possible.
994
995 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
996 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
997 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
998 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
999 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
1000 Management (IAM)`_.
1001
1002 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
1003 `Uploading Large Archives in Parts (Multipart Upload)`_ and
1004 `Complete Multipart Upload`_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer
1005 Guide .
1006
1007 :type checksum: string
1008 :param checksum: The SHA256 tree hash of the entire archive. It is the
1009 tree hash of SHA256 tree hash of the individual parts. If the value
1010 you specify in the request does not match the SHA256 tree hash of
1011 the final assembled archive as computed by Amazon Glacier, Amazon
1012 Glacier returns an error and the request fails.
1013
1014 :type vault_name: str
1015 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
1016
1017 :type upload_id: str
1018 :param upload_id: The upload ID of the multipart upload.
1019
1020 :type sha256_treehash: str
1021 :param sha256_treehash: The SHA256 tree hash of the entire archive.
1022 It is the tree hash of SHA256 tree hash of the individual parts.
1023 If the value you specify in the request does not match the SHA256
1024 tree hash of the final assembled archive as computed by Amazon
1025 Glacier, Amazon Glacier returns an error and the request fails.
1026
1027 :type archive_size: int
1028 :param archive_size: The total size, in bytes, of the entire
1029 archive. This value should be the sum of all the sizes of
1030 the individual parts that you uploaded.
1031 """
1032 response_headers = [('x-amz-archive-id', u'ArchiveId'),
1033 ('Location', u'Location')]
1034 headers = {'x-amz-sha256-tree-hash': sha256_treehash,
1035 'x-amz-archive-size': str(archive_size)}
1036 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads/%s' % (vault_name, upload_id)
1037 response = self.make_request('POST', uri, headers=headers,
1038 ok_responses=(201,),
1039 response_headers=response_headers)
1040 return response
1041
1042 def abort_multipart_upload(self, vault_name, upload_id):
1043 """
1044 This operation aborts a multipart upload identified by the
1045 upload ID.
1046
1047 After the Abort Multipart Upload request succeeds, you cannot
1048 upload any more parts to the multipart upload or complete the
1049 multipart upload. Aborting a completed upload fails. However,
1050 aborting an already-aborted upload will succeed, for a short
1051 time. For more information about uploading a part and
1052 completing a multipart upload, see UploadMultipartPart and
1053 CompleteMultipartUpload.
1054
1055 This operation is idempotent.
1056
1057 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
1058 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
1059 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
1060 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
1061 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
1062 Management (IAM)`_.
1063
1064 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
1065 `Working with Archives in Amazon Glacier`_ and `Abort
1066 Multipart Upload`_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
1067
1068 :type vault_name: string
1069 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
1070
1071 :type upload_id: string
1072 :param upload_id: The upload ID of the multipart upload to delete.
1073 """
1074 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads/%s' % (vault_name, upload_id)
1075 return self.make_request('DELETE', uri, ok_responses=(204,))
1076
1077 def list_multipart_uploads(self, vault_name, limit=None, marker=None):
1078 """
1079 This operation lists in-progress multipart uploads for the
1080 specified vault. An in-progress multipart upload is a
1081 multipart upload that has been initiated by an
1082 InitiateMultipartUpload request, but has not yet been
1083 completed or aborted. The list returned in the List Multipart
1084 Upload response has no guaranteed order.
1085
1086 The List Multipart Uploads operation supports pagination. By
1087 default, this operation returns up to 1,000 multipart uploads
1088 in the response. You should always check the response for a
1089 `marker` at which to continue the list; if there are no more
1090 items the `marker` is `null`. To return a list of multipart
1091 uploads that begins at a specific upload, set the `marker`
1092 request parameter to the value you obtained from a previous
1093 List Multipart Upload request. You can also limit the number
1094 of uploads returned in the response by specifying the `limit`
1095 parameter in the request.
1096
1097 Note the difference between this operation and listing parts
1098 (ListParts). The List Multipart Uploads operation lists all
1099 multipart uploads for a vault and does not require a multipart
1100 upload ID. The List Parts operation requires a multipart
1101 upload ID since parts are associated with a single upload.
1102
1103 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
1104 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
1105 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
1106 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
1107 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
1108 Management (IAM)`_.
1109
1110 For conceptual information and the underlying REST API, go to
1111 `Working with Archives in Amazon Glacier`_ and `List Multipart
1112 Uploads `_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
1113
1114 :type vault_name: string
1115 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
1116
1117 :type limit: string
1118 :param limit: Specifies the maximum number of uploads returned in the
1119 response body. If this value is not specified, the List Uploads
1120 operation returns up to 1,000 uploads.
1121
1122 :type marker: string
1123 :param marker: An opaque string used for pagination. This value
1124 specifies the upload at which the listing of uploads should begin.
1125 Get the marker value from a previous List Uploads response. You
1126 need only include the marker if you are continuing the pagination
1127 of results started in a previous List Uploads request.
1128 """
1129 params = {}
1130 if limit:
1131 params['limit'] = limit
1132 if marker:
1133 params['marker'] = marker
1134 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads' % vault_name
1135 return self.make_request('GET', uri, params=params)
1136
1137 def list_parts(self, vault_name, upload_id, limit=None, marker=None):
1138 """
1139 This operation lists the parts of an archive that have been
1140 uploaded in a specific multipart upload. You can make this
1141 request at any time during an in-progress multipart upload
1142 before you complete the upload (see CompleteMultipartUpload.
1143 List Parts returns an error for completed uploads. The list
1144 returned in the List Parts response is sorted by part range.
1145
1146 The List Parts operation supports pagination. By default, this
1147 operation returns up to 1,000 uploaded parts in the response.
1148 You should always check the response for a `marker` at which
1149 to continue the list; if there are no more items the `marker`
1150 is `null`. To return a list of parts that begins at a specific
1151 part, set the `marker` request parameter to the value you
1152 obtained from a previous List Parts request. You can also
1153 limit the number of parts returned in the response by
1154 specifying the `limit` parameter in the request.
1155
1156 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
1157 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
1158 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
1159 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
1160 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
1161 Management (IAM)`_.
1162
1163 For conceptual information and the underlying REST API, go to
1164 `Working with Archives in Amazon Glacier`_ and `List Parts`_
1165 in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
1166
1167 :type vault_name: string
1168 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
1169
1170 :type upload_id: string
1171 :param upload_id: The upload ID of the multipart upload.
1172
1173 :type marker: string
1174 :param marker: An opaque string used for pagination. This value
1175 specifies the part at which the listing of parts should begin. Get
1176 the marker value from the response of a previous List Parts
1177 response. You need only include the marker if you are continuing
1178 the pagination of results started in a previous List Parts request.
1179
1180 :type limit: string
1181 :param limit: Specifies the maximum number of parts returned in the
1182 response body. If this value is not specified, the List Parts
1183 operation returns up to 1,000 uploads.
1184 """
1185 params = {}
1186 if limit:
1187 params['limit'] = limit
1188 if marker:
1189 params['marker'] = marker
1190 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads/%s' % (vault_name, upload_id)
1191 return self.make_request('GET', uri, params=params)
1192
1193 def upload_part(self, vault_name, upload_id, linear_hash,
1194 tree_hash, byte_range, part_data):
1195 """
1196 This operation uploads a part of an archive. You can upload
1197 archive parts in any order. You can also upload them in
1198 parallel. You can upload up to 10,000 parts for a multipart
1199 upload.
1200
1201 Amazon Glacier rejects your upload part request if any of the
1202 following conditions is true:
1203
1204
1205 + **SHA256 tree hash does not match**To ensure that part data
1206 is not corrupted in transmission, you compute a SHA256 tree
1207 hash of the part and include it in your request. Upon
1208 receiving the part data, Amazon Glacier also computes a SHA256
1209 tree hash. If these hash values don't match, the operation
1210 fails. For information about computing a SHA256 tree hash, see
1211 `Computing Checksums`_.
1212 + **Part size does not match**The size of each part except the
1213 last must match the size specified in the corresponding
1214 InitiateMultipartUpload request. The size of the last part
1215 must be the same size as, or smaller than, the specified size.
1216 If you upload a part whose size is smaller than the part size
1217 you specified in your initiate multipart upload request and
1218 that part is not the last part, then the upload part request
1219 will succeed. However, the subsequent Complete Multipart
1220 Upload request will fail.
1221 + **Range does not align**The byte range value in the request
1222 does not align with the part size specified in the
1223 corresponding initiate request. For example, if you specify a
1224 part size of 4194304 bytes (4 MB), then 0 to 4194303 bytes (4
1225 MB - 1) and 4194304 (4 MB) to 8388607 (8 MB - 1) are valid
1226 part ranges. However, if you set a range value of 2 MB to 6
1227 MB, the range does not align with the part size and the upload
1228 will fail.
1229
1230
1231 This operation is idempotent. If you upload the same part
1232 multiple times, the data included in the most recent request
1233 overwrites the previously uploaded data.
1234
1235 An AWS account has full permission to perform all operations
1236 (actions). However, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
1237 users don't have any permissions by default. You must grant
1238 them explicit permission to perform specific actions. For more
1239 information, see `Access Control Using AWS Identity and Access
1240 Management (IAM)`_.
1241
1242 For conceptual information and underlying REST API, go to
1243 `Uploading Large Archives in Parts (Multipart Upload)`_ and
1244 `Upload Part `_ in the Amazon Glacier Developer Guide .
1245
1246 :type vault_name: str
1247 :param vault_name: The name of the vault.
1248
1249 :type linear_hash: str
1250 :param linear_hash: The SHA256 checksum (a linear hash) of the
1251 payload.
1252
1253 :type tree_hash: str
1254 :param tree_hash: The user-computed SHA256 tree hash of the
1255 payload. For more information on computing the
1256 tree hash, see http://goo.gl/u7chF.
1257
1258 :type upload_id: str
1259 :param upload_id: The unique ID associated with this upload
1260 operation.
1261
1262 :type byte_range: tuple of ints
1263 :param byte_range: Identifies the range of bytes in the assembled
1264 archive that will be uploaded in this part. Amazon Glacier uses
1265 this information to assemble the archive in the proper sequence.
1266 The format of this header follows RFC 2616. An example header is
1267 Content-Range:bytes 0-4194303/*.
1268
1269 :type part_data: bytes
1270 :param part_data: The data to be uploaded for the part
1271 """
1272 headers = {'x-amz-content-sha256': linear_hash,
1273 'x-amz-sha256-tree-hash': tree_hash,
1274 'Content-Range': 'bytes %d-%d/*' % byte_range}
1275 response_headers = [('x-amz-sha256-tree-hash', u'TreeHash')]
1276 uri = 'vaults/%s/multipart-uploads/%s' % (str(vault_name), upload_id)
1277 return self.make_request('PUT', uri, headers=headers,
1278 data=part_data, ok_responses=(204,),
1279 response_headers=response_headers)