A Ruby gem for all Amazon Web Services.
http://groups.google.com/group/ruby-aws
http://appoxy.lighthouseapp.com/projects/38441-aws/overview
http://rdoc.info/projects/appoxy/aws
Published by Appoxy LLC, under the MIT License. Special thanks to RightScale from which this project is forked.
THEN (you should have http://gemcutter.org in your sources and it MUST be above rubyforge.org):
gem install aws
The RightScale AWS gems have been designed to provide a robust, fast, and secure interface to Amazon EC2, EBS, S3, SQS, SDB, and CloudFront. These gems have been used in production by RightScale since late 2006 and are being maintained to track enhancements made by Amazon. The RightScale AWS gems comprise:
- Aws::Ec2 -- interface to Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) and the associated EBS (Elastic Block Store)
- Aws::S3 and Aws::S3Interface -- interface to Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service)
- Aws::Sqs and Aws::SqsInterface -- interface to Amazon SQS (Simple Queue Service)
- Aws::SdbInterface and Aws::ActiveSdb -- interface to Amazon SDB (SimpleDB)
- Aws::AcfInterface -- interface to Amazon CloudFront, a content distribution service
- Aws::ElbInterface -- interface to Amazon Load Balancing service
- Aws::MonInterface -- interface to Amazon CloudWatch monitoring service
- Full programmmatic access to EC2, EBS, S3, SQS, SDB, ELB, and CloudFront.
- Complete error handling: all operations check for errors and report complete error information by raising an AwsError.
- Persistent HTTP connections with robust network-level retry layer using RightHttpConnection). This includes socket timeouts and retries.
- Robust HTTP-level retry layer. Certain (user-adjustable) HTTP errors returned by Amazon's services are classified as temporary errors. These errors are automaticallly retried using exponentially increasing intervals. The number of retries is user-configurable.
- Fast REXML-based parsing of responses (as fast as a pure Ruby solution allows).
- Uses libxml (if available) for faster response parsing.
- Support for large S3 list operations. Buckets and key subfolders containing many (> 1000) keys are listed in entirety. Operations based on list (like bucket clear) work on arbitrary numbers of keys.
- Support for streaming GETs from S3, and streaming PUTs to S3 if the data source is a file.
- Support for single-threaded usage, multithreaded usage, as well as usage with multiple AWS accounts.
- Support for both first- and second-generation SQS (API versions 2007-05-01 and 2008-01-01). These versions of SQS are not compatible.
- Support for signature versions 0, 1 and 2 on all services.
- Interoperability with any cloud running Eucalyptus (http://eucalyptus.cs.ucsb.edu)
- Test suite (requires AWS account to do "live" testing).
All AWS interfaces offer three threading options:
- Use a single persistent HTTP connection per process. :single
- Use a persistent HTTP connection per Ruby thread. :per_thread
- Open a new connection for each request. :per_request
Either way, it doesn't matter how many (for example) Aws::S3 objects you create, they all use the same per-program or per-thread connection. The purpose of sharing the connection is to keep a single persistent HTTP connection open to avoid paying connection overhead on every request. However, if you have multiple concurrent threads, you may want or need an HTTP connection per thread to enable concurrent requests to AWS. The way this plays out in practice is:
- If you have a non-multithreaded Ruby program, use the non-multithreaded setting.
- If you have a multi-threaded Ruby program, use the multithreaded setting to enable concurrent requests to S3 (or SQS, or SDB, or EC2).
- For running under Mongrel/Rails, use the non-multithreaded setting even though mongrel is multithreaded. This is because only one Rails handler is invoked at time (i.e. it acts like a single-threaded program)
Note that due to limitations in the I/O of the Ruby interpreter you may not get the degree of parallelism you may expect with the multi-threaded setting.
By default, EC2/S3/SQS/SDB/ACF interface instances are created in single-threaded mode. Set params[:connection_mode] to :per_thread in the initialization arguments to use multithreaded mode.
-
For EC2 read Aws::Ec2 and consult the Amazon EC2 API documentation at http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=87
-
For S3 read Aws::S3 and consult the Amazon S3 API documentation at http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=48
-
For SQS read Aws::Sqs and consult the Amazon SQS API documentation at http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=31
Amazon's Migration Guide for moving from first to second generation SQS is avalable at: http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/entry.jspa?externalID=1148
-
For SDB read Aws::SdbInterface, Aws::ActiveSdb, and consult the Amazon SDB API documentation at http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=141
-
For CloudFront (ACF) read Aws::AcfInterface and consult the Amazon CloudFront API documentation at http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=213
-
7/08: A user has reported that uploads of large files on Windows may be broken on some Win platforms due to a buggy File.lstat.size. Use the following monkey-patch at your own risk, as it has been proven to break Rails 2.0 on Windows:
require 'win32/file' class File def lstat self.stat end end
-
Attempting to use the Gibberish plugin (used by the Beast forum app) will break right_aws as well as lots of other code. Gibberish changes the semantics of core Ruby (specifically, the String class) and thus presents a reliability problem for most Ruby programs.
-
2/11/08: If you use Aws in conjunction with attachment_fu, the right_aws gem must be included (using the require statement) AFTER attachment_fu. If right_aws is loaded before attachment_fu, you'll encounter errors similar to:
s3.amazonaws.com temporarily unavailable: (wrong number of arguments (5 for 4))
or
'incompatible Net::HTTP monkey-patch'
This is due to a conflict between the right_http_connection gem and another gem required by attachment_fu. It may be possible to require right_aws (and thus right_http_connection) in the .after_initialize method of the config object in environment.rb (check the docs for Rails::Configuration.after_initialize).
-
8/07: Amazon has changed the semantics of the SQS service. A new queue may not be created within 60 seconds of the destruction of any older queue with the same name. Certain methods of Aws::Sqs and Aws::SqsInterface will fail with the message: "AWS.SimpleQueueService.QueueDeletedRecently: You must wait 60 seconds after deleting a queue before you can create another with the same name."
Aws requires REXML and the right_http_connection gem. If libxml and its Ruby bindings (distributed in the libxml-ruby gem) are present, Aws can be configured to use them: Aws::AwsParser.xml_lib = 'libxml' Any error with the libxml installation will result in Aws failing-safe to REXML parsing.
== LICENSE:
Copyright (c) 2007-2009 RightScale, Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.