htslib-s3-plugin(7) | Bioinformatics tools | htslib-s3-plugin(7) |
htslib-s3-plugin - htslib AWS S3 plugin
The S3 plugin allows htslib file functions to communicate with servers that use the AWS S3 protocol. Files are identified by their bucket and object key in a URL format e.g.
s3://mybucket/path/to/file
With path/to/file being the object key.
Necessary security information can be provided in as part of the URL, in environment variables or from configuration files.
The full URL format is:
s3[+SCHEME]://[ID[:SECRET[:TOKEN]]@]BUCKET/PATH
The elements are:
The environment variables below will be used if the user ID is not set.
In the absence of an ID from the previous two methods the credential/config files will be used. The default file locations are either ~/.aws/credentials or ~/.s3cfg (in that order).
Entries used in aws style credentials file are aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key, aws_session_token, region, addressing_style and expiry_time (unofficial, see SHORT-LIVED CREDENTIALS below). Only the first two are usually needed.
Entries used in s3cmd style config files are access_key, secret_key, access_token, host_base, bucket_location and host_bucket. Again only the first two are usually needed. The host_bucket option is only used to set a path-style URL, see below.
Some cloud identity and access management (IAM) systems can make short-lived credentials that allow access to resources. These credentials will expire after a time and need to be renewed to give continued access. To enable this, the S3 plugin allows an expiry_time entry to be set in the .aws/credentials file. The value for this entry should be the time when the token expires, following the format in RFC3339 section 5.6, which takes the form:
2012-04-29T05:20:48Z
That is, year - month - day, the letter "T", hour : minute : second. The time can be followed by the letter "Z", indicating the UTC timezone, or an offset from UTC which is a "+" or "-" sign followed by two digits for the hours offset, ":", and two digits for the minutes.
The S3 plugin will attempt to re-read the credentials file up to 1 minute before the given expiry time, which means the file needs to be updated with new credentials before then. As the exact way of doing this can vary between services and IAM providers, the S3 plugin expects this to be done by an external user-supplied process. This may be achieved by running a program that replaces the file as new credentials become available. The following script shows how it might be done for AWS instance credentials:
#!/bin/sh instance='http://169.254.169.254' tok_url="$instance/latest/api/token" ttl_hdr='X-aws-ec2-metadata-token-ttl-seconds: 10' creds_url="$instance/latest/meta-data/iam/security-credentials" key1='aws_access_key_id = \(.AccessKeyId)\n' key2='aws_secret_access_key = \(.SecretAccessKey)\n' key3='aws_session_token = \(.Token)\n' key4='expiry_time = \(.Expiration)\n' while true; do token=`curl -X PUT -H "$ttl_hdr" "$tok_url"` tok_hdr="X-aws-ec2-metadata-token: $token" role=`curl -H "$tok_hdr" "$creds_url/"` expires='now' ( curl -H "$tok_hdr" "$creds_url/$role" \ | jq -r "\"${key1}${key2}${key3}${key4}\"" > credentials.new ) \ && mv -f credentials.new credentials \ && expires=`grep expiry_time credentials | cut -d ' ' -f 3-` if test $? -ne 0 ; then break ; fi expiry=`date -d "$expires - 3 minutes" '+%s'` now=`date '+%s'` test "$expiry" -gt "$now" && sleep $((($expiry - $now) / 2)) sleep 30 done
Note that the expiry_time key is currently only supported for the .aws/credentials file (or the file referred to in the AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE environment variable).
In most cases this plugin transforms the given URL into a virtual host-style format e.g. https://bucket.host/path/to/file. A path-style format is used where the URL is not DNS compliant or the bucket name contains a dot e.g. https://host/bu.cket/path/to/file.
Path-style can be forced by setting one either HTS_S3_ADDRESS_STYLE, addressing_style or host_bucket. The first two can be set to path while host_bucket must not include the %(bucket).s string.
htsfile(1) samtools(1)
RFC 3339: <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3339#section-5.6>
htslib website: <http://www.htslib.org/>
15 April 2024 | htslib-1.20 |