53 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
This special remote type stores file contents in a bucket in Amazon S3
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or a similar service.
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See [[tips/using_Amazon_S3]] and
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[[tips/Internet_Archive_via_S3]] for usage examples.
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## configuration
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The standard environment variables `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` and
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`AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY` are used to supply login credentials
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for Amazon. You need to set these only when running
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`git annex initremote`, as they will be cached in a file only you
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can read inside the local git repository.
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A number of parameters can be passed to `git annex initremote` to configure
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the S3 remote.
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* `encryption` - One of "none", "hybrid", "shared", or "pubkey".
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See [[encryption]].
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* `keyid` - Specifies the gpg key to use for [[encryption]].
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* `embedcreds` - Optional. Set to "yes" embed the login credentials inside
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the git repository, which allows other clones to also access them. This is
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the default when gpg encryption is enabled; the credentials are stored
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encrypted and only those with the repository's keys can access them.
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It is not the default when using shared encryption, or no encryption.
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Think carefully about who can access your repository before using
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embedcreds without gpg encryption.
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* `datacenter` - Defaults to "US". Other values include "EU",
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"us-west-1", and "ap-southeast-1".
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* `storageclass` - Default is "STANDARD". If you have configured git-annex
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to preserve multiple [[copies]], consider setting this to "REDUCED_REDUNDANCY"
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to save money.
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* `host` and `port` - Specify in order to use a different, S3 compatable
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service.
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* `bucket` - S3 requires that buckets have a globally unique name,
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so by default, a bucket name is chosen based on the remote name
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and UUID. This can be specified to pick a bucket name.
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* `fileprefix` - By default, git-annex places files in a tree rooted at the
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top of the S3 bucket. When this is set, it's prefixed to the filenames
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used. For example, you could set it to "foo/" in one special remote,
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and to "bar/" in another special remote, and both special remotes could
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then use the same bucket.
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* `x-amz-*` are passed through as http headers when storing keys
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in S3.
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