• Stars
    star
    189
  • Rank 204,649 (Top 5 %)
  • Language
    JavaScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 8 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Download selected files from an Amazon S3 bucket as a zip file

s3-zip

npm version Build Status Coverage Status JavaScript Style Guide

Download selected files from an Amazon S3 bucket as a zip file.

Install

npm install s3-zip

AWS Configuration

Refer to the AWS SDK for authenticating to AWS prior to using this plugin.

Usage

Zip specific files

const fs = require('fs')
const join = require('path').join
const s3Zip = require('s3-zip')

const region = 'bucket-region'
const bucket = 'name-of-s3-bucket'
const folder = 'name-of-bucket-folder/'
const file1 = 'Image A.png'
const file2 = 'Image B.png'
const file3 = 'Image C.png'
const file4 = 'Image D.png'

const output = fs.createWriteStream(join(__dirname, 'use-s3-zip.zip'))

s3Zip
  .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket}, folder, [file1, file2, file3, file4])
  .pipe(output)

You can also pass a custom S3 client. For example if you want to zip files from a S3 compatible storage:

const aws = require('aws-sdk')

const s3Client = new aws.S3({
  signatureVersion: 'v4',
  s3ForcePathStyle: 'true',
  endpoint: 'http://localhost:9000',
})

s3Zip
  .archive({ s3: s3Client, bucket: bucket }, folder, [file1, file2])
  .pipe(output)

Zip files with AWS Lambda

Example of s3-zip in combination with AWS Lambda.

Zip a whole bucket folder

const fs = require('fs')
const join = require('path').join
const AWS = require('aws-sdk')
const s3Zip = require('s3-zip')
const XmlStream = require('xml-stream')

const region = 'bucket-region'
const bucket = 'name-of-s3-bucket'
const folder = 'name-of-bucket-folder/'
const s3 = new AWS.S3({ region: region })
const params = {
  Bucket: bucket,
  Prefix: folder
}

const filesArray = []
const files = s3.listObjects(params).createReadStream()
const xml = new XmlStream(files)
xml.collect('Key')
xml.on('endElement: Key', function(item) {
  filesArray.push(item['$text'].substr(folder.length))
})

xml
  .on('end', function () {
    zip(filesArray)
  })

function zip(files) {
  console.log(files)
  const output = fs.createWriteStream(join(__dirname, 'use-s3-zip.zip'))
  s3Zip
   .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket, preserveFolderStructure: true }, folder, files)
   .pipe(output)
}

Tar format support

s3Zip
  .setFormat('tar')
  .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket }, folder, [file1, file2])
  .pipe(output)

Zip a file with protected password

s3Zip
  .setRegisterFormatOptions('zip-encrypted', require("archiver-zip-encrypted"))
  .setFormat('zip-encryptable')
  .setArchiverOptions({zlib: {level: 8}, encryptionMethod: 'aes256', password: '123'})
  .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket }, folder, [file1, file2])
  .pipe(output)

Archiver options

We use archiver to create archives. To pass your options to it, use setArchiverOptions method:

s3Zip
  .setFormat('tar')
  .setArchiverOptions({ gzip: true })
  .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket }, folder, [file1, file2])

Organize your archive with custom paths and permissions

You can pass an array of objects with type EntryData to organize your archive.

const files = ['flower.jpg', 'road.jpg']
const archiveFiles = [
  { name: 'newFolder/flower.jpg' },

  /* _rw_______ */
  { name: 'road.jpg', mode: parseInt('0600', 8)  }
];
s3Zip.archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket }, folder, files, archiveFiles)

Using with ExpressJS

s3-zip works with any framework which leverages on NodeJS Streams including ExpressJS.

const s3Zip = require('s3-zip')

app.get('/download', (req, res) => {
  s3Zip
    .archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket }, '', 'abc.jpg')
    .pipe(res)
})

Above should stream out the file in the response of the request.

Debug mode

Enable debug mode to see the logs:

s3Zip.archive({ region: region, bucket: bucket, debug: true }, folder, files)

Testing

Tests are written in Node Tap, run them like this:

npm t

If you would like a more fancy coverage report:

npm run coverage