Provided by: libnet-amazon-s3-perl_0.80-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::Amazon::S3::Client::Object - An easy-to-use Amazon S3 client object

VERSION

       version 0.80

SYNOPSIS

         # show the key
         print $object->key . "\n";

         # show the etag of an existing object (if fetched by listing
         # a bucket)
         print $object->etag . "\n";

         # show the size of an existing object (if fetched by listing
         # a bucket)
         print $object->size . "\n";

         # to create a new object
         my $object = $bucket->object( key => 'this is the key' );
         $object->put('this is the value');

         # to get the vaue of an object
         my $value = $object->get;

         # to see if an object exists
         if ($object->exists) { ... }

         # to delete an object
         $object->delete;

         # to create a new object which is publically-accessible with a
         # content-type of text/plain which expires on 2010-01-02
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'this is the public key',
           acl_short    => 'public-read',
           content_type => 'text/plain',
           expires      => '2010-01-02',
         );
         $object->put('this is the public value');

         # return the URI of a publically-accessible object
         my $uri = $object->uri;

         # to store a new object with server-side encryption enabled
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key        => 'my secret',
           encryption => 'AES256',
         );
         $object->put('this data will be stored using encryption.');

         # upload a file
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           content_type => 'image/jpeg',
         );
         $object->put_filename('hat.jpg');

         # upload a file if you already know its md5_hex and size
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           content_type => 'image/jpeg',
           etag         => $md5_hex,
           size         => $size,
         );
         $object->put_filename('hat.jpg');

         # download the value of the object into a file
         my $object = $bucket->object( key => 'images/my_hat.jpg' );
         $object->get_filename('hat_backup.jpg');

         # use query string authentication
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           expires      => '2009-03-01',
         );
         my $uri = $object->query_string_authentication_uri();

DESCRIPTION

       This module represents objects in buckets.

METHODS

   etag
         # show the etag of an existing object (if fetched by listing
         # a bucket)
         print $object->etag . "\n";

   delete
         # to delete an object
         $object->delete;

   exists
         # to see if an object exists
         if ($object->exists) { ... }

   get
         # to get the vaue of an object
         my $value = $object->get;

   get_decoded
         # get the value of an object, and decode any Content-Encoding and/or
         # charset; see decoded_content in HTTP::Response
         my $value = $object->get_decoded;

   get_filename
         # download the value of the object into a file
         my $object = $bucket->object( key => 'images/my_hat.jpg' );
         $object->get_filename('hat_backup.jpg');

   key
         # show the key
         print $object->key . "\n";

   put
         # to create a new object
         my $object = $bucket->object( key => 'this is the key' );
         $object->put('this is the value');

         # to create a new object which is publically-accessible with a
         # content-type of text/plain
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'this is the public key',
           acl_short    => 'public-read',
           content_type => 'text/plain',
         );
         $object->put('this is the public value');

       You may also set Content-Encoding using "content_encoding", and Content-Disposition using
       "content_disposition".

       You may specify the S3 storage class by setting "storage_class" to either "standard" or
       "reduced_redundancy"; the default is "standard".

   put_filename
         # upload a file
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           content_type => 'image/jpeg',
         );
         $object->put_filename('hat.jpg');

         # upload a file if you already know its md5_hex and size
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           content_type => 'image/jpeg',
           etag         => $md5_hex,
           size         => $size,
         );
         $object->put_filename('hat.jpg');

       You may also set Content-Encoding using "content_encoding", and Content-Disposition using
       "content_disposition".

       You may specify the S3 storage class by setting "storage_class" to either "standard" or
       "reduced_redundancy"; the default is "standard".

       User metadata may be set by providing a non-empty hashref as "user_metadata".

   query_string_authentication_uri
         # use query string authentication
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key          => 'images/my_hat.jpg',
           expires      => '2009-03-01',
         );
         my $uri = $object->query_string_authentication_uri();

   size
         # show the size of an existing object (if fetched by listing
         # a bucket)
         print $object->size . "\n";

   uri
         # return the URI of a publically-accessible object
         my $uri = $object->uri;

   initiate_multipart_upload
         #initiate a new multipart upload for this object
         my $object = $bucket->object(
           key         => 'massive_video.avi'
         );
         my $upload_id = $object->initiate_multipart_upload;

   put_part
         #add a part to a multipart upload
         my $put_part_response = $object->put_part(
            upload_id      => $upload_id,
            part_number    => 1,
            value          => $chunk_content,
         );
         my $part_etag = $put_part_response->header('ETag')

         Returns an L<HTTP::Response> object. It is necessary to keep the ETags for
         each part, as these are required to complete the upload.

   complete_multipart_upload
         #complete a multipart upload
         $object->complete_multipart_upload(
           upload_id       => $upload_id,
           etags           => [$etag_1, $etag_2],
           part_numbers    => [$part_number_1, $part_number2],
         );

         The etag and part_numbers parameters are ordered lists specifying the part
         numbers and ETags for each individual part of the multipart upload.

   user_metadata
         my $object = $bucket->object(key => $key);
         my $content = $object->get; # or use $object->get_filename($filename)

         # return the user metadata downloaded, as a hashref
         my $user_metadata = $object->user_metadata;

       To upload an object with user metadata, set "user_metadata" at construction time to a
       hashref, with no "x-amz-meta-" prefixes on the key names.  When downloading an object, the
       "get", "get_decoded" and "get_filename" ethods set the contents of "user_metadata" to the
       same format.

AUTHOR

       Rusty Conover <rusty@luckydinosaur.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Amazon Digital Services, Leon Brocard, Brad
       Fitzpatrick, Pedro Figueiredo, Rusty Conover.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.