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A way to recursively request S3 objects to be transfered out of the Glacier storage type.

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GlacierThaw

A way to recursively request S3 objects to be transfered out of the Glacier storage tier.

Warning: AWS S3 and Glacier cost $$ to use. We are not responsible for any charges you incur through use of this software!

By downloading and using this software you hereby indemnify the author and all contributors from any and all responsibilities and liabilities regarding costs, and fees associated with the use of any AWS services. It's your account, you pay for it. So use it wisely and carefully.

Any changes to this software under the MIT License terms does not terminate the License terms nor the indemnity heretofore described.

Installation:

This project is not yet released so you basically clone it and then use pip to install boto3, the AWS sdk for python.

$ git clone https://github.com/cfurst/GlacierThaw.git
$ pip install -r requriements.txt

Synopsis:

usage: GlacierThaw.py [-h] --bucket BUCKET [--prefix PREFIX] [--request-tier {Bulk,Standard,Expedited}] [--duration DURATION] [--queue-name QUEUE_NAME] [--restore-to-tier {STANDARD,REDUCED_REDUNDANCY,STANDARD_IA,ONEZONE_IA,INTELLIGENT_TIERING,GLACIER,DEEP_ARCHIVE}]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --bucket BUCKET       The name of the s3 bucket that is to be the root of your request. Ex. if your files live at s3://my-awesome-bucket/foo/bar the bucket name would be 'my-awsome-bucket'
  --prefix PREFIX       A prefix or key to use as the base URL for your request. Ex. if your files live in the 'foo/bar' directory, then 'foo/bar' is the prefix. If you want to just request one file to be moved, use the path of the file as the prefix Ex.
                        foo/bar/myFile.txt. If you leave out a prefix, you will make a request for the entire bucket. Please be careful. Ctrl-C is your friend.
  --request-tier {Bulk,Standard,Expedited}
                        The type of glacier request you would like to make, Choices are 'Standard', 'Expedited' and 'Bulk' (default). Each has purposes and limitations, please consult the AWS documentation for more information
  --duration DURATION   The number of days you wish to have the object available before being returned to Glacier storage; defaults to two weeks.
  --queue-name QUEUE_NAME
                        The name of the queue you have set up to receive restore notifications. Only one message per request will be displayed. It is recommended to just use the Object Restore notification. If you configure your bucket to send 'Restore initiated' and
                        'Restore complete' messages, you might not get both read for every object
  --restore-to-tier {STANDARD,REDUCED_REDUNDANCY,STANDARD_IA,ONEZONE_IA,INTELLIGENT_TIERING,GLACIER,DEEP_ARCHIVE}
                        Permanently transfer all objects restored to this storage tier. You need to specify a queue name to use this by setting '--queue-name'

Will create a bulk request to move all objects in BUCKET with PREFIX from the glacier storage tier to standard tier temporarily for DURATION number of days, defaults to 14.

If you leave out the PREFIX option, it will make a request for all objects in the bucket. Please use carefully.

If you wish to just make a request for one file you can specify the prefix as the file name. In this case, since its only one file you might want to expedite the request:

$ python GlacierThaw.py --bucket bucket_name --prefix path/to/file.txt --request-tier Expedite

Please review the AWS S3 documentation for more information about the limitations and capabilities of expedited requests.

For accurate notifications from your queue, it is recommended that you use a dedicated queue for this purpose and have the queue be the only queue your bucket writes to. The queue implementation is still beta, YMMV.

Retreiving files from s3

From the console:

Once the transfer request has been expedited, your files will be ready to view. The timing as to when the request completes depends on what type of request you make using the --request-tier option (default is Bulk). You can find out more about the type of Glacier restore requests and their timing here.

If you go to the console and select a file that was transfered from the Glacier tier, you will see that you can now open the file and download it. You should see a Restore Expiration date and time when viewing the file's details. You will be able to download the file until that date, after which the file will be returned to the Glacier storage tier.

AWS CLI

If you would like to recursively download your files that you've just moved out of Glacier you can try the following command:

$ aws cli s3 cp --recursive --force-glacier-transfer s3://bucket-name/prefix/name .

You will need the --force-glacier-transfer option because of an issue with the s3 api as documented here

Restoring an object to the standard storage tier

If you want to move an object out of Glacier and back into the standard tier (or any other storage tier, really) you can review this blog post for more information. You basically have to use a method of s3 copying to basically copy the file in place. Via the api, you can use Meta-data to set the storage tier, see the AWS S3 documentation for more information.

Restoring an object to an alternate storage tier using GlacierThaw

If you like you can use the --restore-to-tier option to move your restored glacier object to an alternative storage tier. To do this you will need to set up a queue in the same region that you created your bucket. Once the queue is set up, make sure you configure your bucket to send restore complete notifications to the queue. GlacierThaw will read from the queue and copy the file in place using the new storage tier as specified in the above blog post. Make sure you specify the name of the queue using the --queue-name option.

Examples

Like the above make a request for one file using the expedited request tier:

$ python GlacierThaw.py --bucket bucket_name --prefix path/to/file.txt --request-tier Expedite

Make a request for a directory and have notifications of restoration printed to STDOUT:

 $ python GlacierThaw.py --bucket bucket_name --prefix path/to/directory --queue-name my-notification-sqs-queue

This will make a request for every file in path/to/directory and display a notification when the individual files are ready.

Note: You need to have the Restore Complete event configured on your bucket to send notifications to my-notification-sqs-queue. It is recommended that you use an sqs-queue dedicated for this purpose. We do not support FIFO queues at the moment.

Make a request to have a file removed from Glacier and transfered back to STANDARD storage class:

$ python GlacierThaw.py --bucket bucket_name --prefix path/to/file.txt --request-tier Expedite --queue-name my-notification-queue --restore-to-tier STANDARD

The script will crash if you provide a --restore-to-tier option without a --queue-name option.

Please keep in mind that while your file is restored, you will be paying double for the storage. You pay for the Glacier and for the temporary Standard storage tiers. Please see the S3 pricing documentation page for further information on Glacier pricing.

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A way to recursively request S3 objects to be transfered out of the Glacier storage type.

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