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AWS JavaScript S3 Explorer

AWS JavaScript S3 Explorer is a JavaScript application that uses AWS's JavaScript SDK and S3 APIs to make the contents of an S3 bucket easy to browse via a web browser. We've created this to enable easier sharing of objects and data via Amazon S3.

The index.html file in this bucket contains the entire application. A visitor to the index.html page is prompted to enter the name of an Amazon S3 bucket. Upon adding the bucket name, the contents of the bucket will be rendered on the page.

Setting Bucket Permissions and Enabling CORS

In order for JavaScript to display the contents of an Amazon S3 bucket, the bucket must be readable by anyone and may need to have the proper Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) configuration. You can do this by going to the Amazon S3 console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/s3 and selecting your bucket.

Setting Bucket Permissions

To share the contents of an Amazon S3 bucket, you will need to create a policy that allows anyone to see and access the contents of your bucket. To do this, you need to update the bucket policy.

Select your bucket in the buckets panel and click to reveal Permissions in the Properties pane. Click Edit Bucket Policy. The Bucket Policy Editor panel will open up with a field where you can enter a policy for your bucket. Enter the following policy, but replace BUCKET-NAME with the name of your bucket:

{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Sid": "PublicListGet",
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Principal": "*",
      "Action": [
        "s3:List*",
        "s3:Get*"
      ],
      "Resource": [
        "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET-NAME",
        "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET-NAME/*"
      ]
    }
  ]
}

Note that this policy will allow anyone to list the contents of your bucket and to get any file from within the bucket. It will not allow them to upload, modify, or delete files in your bucket.

CORS Configuration

You may need to enable Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS). CORS defines a way for client web applications that are loaded in one domain to interact with resources in a different domain.

There are two URLs you can typically use to access your index.html file:

  1. https://s3.amazonaws.com/BUCKET-NAME/index.html (path-style URL)
  2. https://BUCKET-NAME.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html (virtual-hosted-style URL)

If you decide to access your index.html file via a virtual-hosted-style URL (#2 above) then you should not need to enable CORS and you can skip this section. We recommend that you use this form of URL.

If you decide to access your index.html file via a path-style URL (#1 above) then you will need to enable CORS. This is because the web page is served up from s3.amazonaws.com but the AWS JavaScript SDK makes requests to BUCKET-NAME.s3.amazonaws.com.

For security reasons, browsers normally block requests by JavaScript code to access URLs that are unrelated to the source of the code (such as the contents of your bucket), but with CORS, we can configure your bucket to explicitly enable JavaScript to do this.

To configure your bucket to allow cross-origin requests, you create a CORS configuration, which is an XML document with rules that identify the origins that you will allow to access your bucket, the operations (HTTP methods) will support for each origin, and other operation-specific information.

To do this, select your bucket in the buckets panel within the Amazon S3 Console and click to reveal Permissions in the Properties pane. Click Edit CORS Configuration. The CORS Configuration Editor panel will open up with a field where you can enter a CORS Configuration. Enter the following configuration:

<CORSConfiguration xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/">
  <CORSRule>
    <AllowedOrigin>https://s3.amazonaws.com</AllowedOrigin>
    <AllowedMethod>HEAD</AllowedMethod>
    <AllowedMethod>GET</AllowedMethod>
    <AllowedHeader>*</AllowedHeader>
    <ExposeHeader>ETag</ExposeHeader>
    <ExposeHeader>x-amz-meta-custom-header</ExposeHeader>
  </CORSRule>
</CORSConfiguration>

Note that this does not authorize the user to perform any actions on the bucket, it simply enables the browser's security model to allow a request to S3. Actual permissions for the user must be configured either via bucket permissions, or IAM role level permissions.

Static Website Hosting

Above, we indicated that users can access your index.html via one of two URLs:

  1. https://s3.amazonaws.com/BUCKET-NAME/index.html (path-style URL)
  2. https://BUCKET-NAME.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html (virtual-hosted-style URL)

You also have the option to enable 'Static Website Hosting' on your S3 bucket. If you do this with a bucket in the US East (N. Virginia) region then your user will additionally be able to use:

  1. http://BUCKET-NAME.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/

If you choose to do this, then you will also need to modify the CORS configuration above to include:

  <AllowedOrigin>http://BUCKET-NAME.s3.amazonaws.com</AllowedOrigin>

Display Options

This application allows visitors to view the contents of a bucket via its folders or by listing out all objects in a bucket. The default view is by folder, but users can click on “Bucket” toward the top-right of the page to display all objects in the bucket. Note clicking on “Bucket” will load all objects in the bucket into the browser. If your bucket contains many objects, this could overwhelm the browser. We’ve successfully tested this application on a bucket with over 30,000 objects, but keep in mind that trying to load too many objects in a browser could lead to a poor user experience.

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