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(Android™) S3 List Objects in Bucket FolderSee more Amazon S3 ExamplesDemonstrates how to retrieve the XML listing of the objects (i.e. files) stored in an Amazon S3 bucket, but just within a particular folder.
// Important: Don't forget to include the call to System.loadLibrary // as shown at the bottom of this code sample. package com.test; import android.app.Activity; import com.chilkatsoft.*; import android.widget.TextView; import android.os.Bundle; public class SimpleActivity extends Activity { private static final String TAG = "Chilkat"; // Called when the activity is first created. @Override public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); // This example assumes the Chilkat HTTP API to have been previously unlocked. // See Global Unlock Sample for sample code. // In Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service), there is a distinction between buckets and folders, // which are both used for organizing and storing data. // Bucket: A bucket is the top-level container in Amazon S3. It is similar to a directory or folder // at the root level and acts as a unique namespace for your objects (files). Each bucket must have a globally // unique name across all of Amazon S3. Buckets are created at the AWS account level and are used to store objects. // Folder (Prefix): In Amazon S3, folders are not actual physical entities but are virtual constructs called prefixes. // They are part of the object keys used to organize and group objects within a bucket. Object keys are essentially the // full path or name of an object, including the folder structure. For example, if you have an object named // "my-image.jpg" inside a folder named "photos," the object key would be "photos/my-image.jpg." // Folders are helpful for organizing objects within a bucket and creating a hierarchical structure. // In reality, S3 does not have a true folder structure. It stores objects in a flat structure with unique keys. // However, the keys can include slashes ("/") to create a visual separation that resembles a folder structure. // Various tools and S3 clients interpret the slashes as folder separators and display them accordingly. CkHttp http = new CkHttp(); // Insert your access key here: http.put_AwsAccessKey("AWS_ACCESS_KEY"); // Insert your secret key here: http.put_AwsSecretKey("AWS_SECRET_KEY"); // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- // List the objects having prefix "images/" // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- String strXml = http.s3_ListBucketObjects("chilkat100?prefix=images/"); if (http.get_LastMethodSuccess() != true) { Log.i(TAG, http.lastErrorText()); return; } Log.i(TAG, "Response status code = " + String.valueOf(http.get_LastStatus())); CkXml xml = new CkXml(); boolean success = xml.LoadXml(strXml); if (success != true) { Log.i(TAG, xml.lastErrorText()); return; } // If the response status code was not 200, then the XML response is not a // listing of objects, but instead contains error information. if (http.get_LastStatus() != 200) { Log.i(TAG, xml.getXml()); Log.i(TAG, "Failed."); return; } // A sample response is shown below. Log.i(TAG, xml.getXml()); Log.i(TAG, "----"); // Use this online tool to generate parsing code from sample XML: // Generate Parsing Code from XML // Iterate over the bucket items and get information for each.. int numItems = xml.NumChildrenHavingTag("Contents"); Log.i(TAG, "Number of bucket items = " + String.valueOf(numItems)); String itemKey; String itemSizeDecimalStr; String lastModTimestamp; CkDateTime dt = new CkDateTime(); int i = 0; while (i < numItems) { xml.put_I(i); itemKey = xml.getChildContent("Contents[i]|Key"); itemSizeDecimalStr = xml.getChildContent("Contents[i]|Size"); lastModTimestamp = xml.getChildContent("Contents[i]|LastModified"); dt.SetFromRfc822(lastModTimestamp); // Get a local date/time. boolean bLocal = true; CkDtObj dtObj = dt.GetDtObj(bLocal); Log.i(TAG, String.valueOf(i) + ": " + itemKey + ", " + itemSizeDecimalStr + ", " + String.valueOf(dtObj.get_Day()) + "-" + String.valueOf(dtObj.get_Month()) + "-" + String.valueOf(dtObj.get_Year()) + ":" + String.valueOf(dtObj.get_Hour()) + ":" + String.valueOf(dtObj.get_Minute())); i = i + 1; } // Sample output from the above loop: // 0: images/africa/, 0, 11-6-2020:20:18 // 1: images/africa/giraffe.jpg, 262769, 11-6-2020:20:20 // 2: images/africa/lion.jpg, 1026769, 11-6-2020:20:20 // 3: images/sea_creatures/starfish123.jpg, 6229, 19-1-2017:10:45 // 4: images/sea_creatures/starfish.jpg, 6229, 19-1-2017:12:7 } static { System.loadLibrary("chilkat"); // Note: If the incorrect library name is passed to System.loadLibrary, // then you will see the following error message at application startup: //"The application <your-application-name> has stopped unexpectedly. Please try again." } } |
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