296 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
296 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
[[repository-s3]]
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=== S3 Repository Plugin
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The S3 repository plugin adds support for using S3 as a repository for
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{ref}/modules-snapshots.html[Snapshot/Restore].
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*If you are looking for a hosted solution of Elasticsearch on AWS, please visit http://www.elastic.co/cloud.*
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:plugin_name: repository-s3
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include::install_remove.asciidoc[]
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[[repository-s3-usage]]
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==== Getting started with AWS
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The plugin provides a repository type named `s3` which may be used when creating a repository.
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The repository defaults to using
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http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/iam-roles-for-amazon-ec2.html[IAM Role]
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credentials for authentication. The only mandatory setting is the bucket name:
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[source,js]
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----
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PUT _snapshot/my_s3_repository
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{
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"type": "s3",
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"settings": {
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"bucket": "my_bucket"
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}
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}
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----
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[skip:we don't have s3 setup while testing this]
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[[repository-s3-client]]
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==== Client Settings
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The client used to connect to S3 has a number of settings available. Client setting names are of
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the form `s3.client.CLIENT_NAME.SETTING_NAME` and specified inside `elasticsearch.yml`. The
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default client name looked up by a `s3` repository is called `default`, but can be customized
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with the repository setting `client`. For example:
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[source,js]
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----
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PUT _snapshot/my_s3_repository
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{
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"type": "s3",
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"settings": {
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"bucket": "my_bucket",
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"client": "my_alternate_client"
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}
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}
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----
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[skip:we don't have s3 setup while testing this]
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Some settings are sensitive and must be stored in the {ref}/secure-settings.html[elasticsearch keystore].
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For example, to use explicit AWS access keys:
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[source,sh]
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----
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bin/elasticsearch-keystore add s3.client.default.access_key
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bin/elasticsearch-keystore add s3.client.default.secret_key
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----
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The following are the available client settings. Those that must be stored in the keystore
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are marked as `Secure`.
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`access_key`::
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An s3 access key. The `secret_key` setting must also be specified. (Secure)
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`secret_key`::
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An s3 secret key. The `access_key` setting must also be specified. (Secure)
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`endpoint`::
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The s3 service endpoint to connect to. This will be automatically
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figured out by the s3 client based on the bucket location, but
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can be specified explicitly. See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html#s3_region.
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`protocol`::
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The protocol to use to connect to s3. Valid values are either `http`
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or `https`. Defaults to `https`.
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`proxy.host`::
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The host name of a proxy to connect to s3 through.
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`proxy.port`::
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The port of a proxy to connect to s3 through.
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`proxy.username`::
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The username to connect to the `proxy.host` with. (Secure)
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`proxy.password`::
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The password to connect to the `proxy.host` with. (Secure)
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`read_timeout`::
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The socket timeout for connecting to s3. The value should specify the unit. For example,
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a value of `5s` specifies a 5 second timeout. The default value is 50 seconds.
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`max_retries`::
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The number of retries to use when an s3 request fails. The default value is 3.
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`use_throttle_retries`::
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Whether retries should be throttled (ie use backoff). Must be `true` or `false`. Defaults to `true`.
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[[repository-s3-repository]]
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==== Repository Settings
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The `s3` repository type supports a number of settings to customize how data is stored in S3.
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These can be specified when creating the repository. For example:
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[source,js]
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----
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PUT _snapshot/my_s3_repository
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{
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"type": "s3",
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"settings": {
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"bucket": "my_bucket_name",
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"another_setting": "setting_value"
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}
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}
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----
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[skip:we don't have s3 set up while testing this]
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The following settings are supported:
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`bucket`::
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The name of the bucket to be used for snapshots. (Mandatory)
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`client`::
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The name of the s3 client to use to connect to S3. Defaults to `default`.
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`base_path`::
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Specifies the path within bucket to repository data. Defaults to
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value of `repositories.s3.base_path` or to root directory if not set.
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Previously, the base_path could take a leading `/` (forward slash).
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However, this has been deprecated and setting the base_path now should
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omit the leading `/`.
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`chunk_size`::
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Big files can be broken down into chunks during snapshotting if needed.
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The chunk size can be specified in bytes or by using size value notation,
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i.e. `1gb`, `10mb`, `5kb`. Defaults to `1gb`.
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`compress`::
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When set to `true` metadata files are stored in compressed format. This
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setting doesn't affect index files that are already compressed by default.
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Defaults to `false`.
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`server_side_encryption`::
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When set to `true` files are encrypted on server side using AES256
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algorithm. Defaults to `false`.
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`buffer_size`::
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Minimum threshold below which the chunk is uploaded using a single
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request. Beyond this threshold, the S3 repository will use the
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http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/uploadobjusingmpu.html[AWS Multipart Upload API]
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to split the chunk into several parts, each of `buffer_size` length, and
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to upload each part in its own request. Note that setting a buffer
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size lower than `5mb` is not allowed since it will prevent the use of the
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Multipart API and may result in upload errors. It is also not possible to
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set a buffer size greater than `5gb` as it is the maximum upload size
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allowed by S3. Defaults to the minimum between `100mb` and `5%` of the heap size.
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`canned_acl`::
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The S3 repository supports all http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/acl-overview.html#canned-acl[S3 canned ACLs]
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: `private`, `public-read`, `public-read-write`, `authenticated-read`, `log-delivery-write`,
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`bucket-owner-read`, `bucket-owner-full-control`. Defaults to `private`.
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You could specify a canned ACL using the `canned_acl` setting. When the S3 repository
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creates buckets and objects, it adds the canned ACL into the buckets and objects.
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`storage_class`::
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Sets the S3 storage class type for the backup files. Values may be
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`standard`, `reduced_redundancy`, `standard_ia`. Defaults to `standard`.
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Due to the extra complexity with the Glacier class lifecycle, it is not
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currently supported by the plugin. For more information about the
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different classes, see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/storage-class-intro.html[AWS Storage Classes Guide]
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[[repository-s3-permissions]]
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===== Recommended S3 Permissions
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In order to restrict the Elasticsearch snapshot process to the minimum required resources, we recommend using Amazon
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IAM in conjunction with pre-existing S3 buckets. Here is an example policy which will allow the snapshot access to an
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S3 bucket named "snaps.example.com". This may be configured through the AWS IAM console, by creating a Custom Policy,
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and using a Policy Document similar to this (changing snaps.example.com to your bucket name).
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[source,js]
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----
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{
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"Statement": [
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{
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"Action": [
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"s3:ListBucket",
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"s3:GetBucketLocation",
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"s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads",
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"s3:ListBucketVersions"
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],
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"Effect": "Allow",
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"Resource": [
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"arn:aws:s3:::snaps.example.com"
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]
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},
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{
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"Action": [
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"s3:GetObject",
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"s3:PutObject",
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"s3:DeleteObject",
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"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
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"s3:ListMultipartUploadParts"
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],
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"Effect": "Allow",
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"Resource": [
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"arn:aws:s3:::snaps.example.com/*"
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]
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}
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],
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"Version": "2012-10-17"
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}
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----
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// NOTCONSOLE
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You may further restrict the permissions by specifying a prefix within the bucket, in this example, named "foo".
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[source,js]
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----
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{
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"Statement": [
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{
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"Action": [
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"s3:ListBucket",
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"s3:GetBucketLocation",
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"s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads",
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"s3:ListBucketVersions"
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],
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"Condition": {
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"StringLike": {
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"s3:prefix": [
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"foo/*"
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]
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}
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},
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"Effect": "Allow",
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"Resource": [
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"arn:aws:s3:::snaps.example.com"
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]
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},
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{
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"Action": [
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"s3:GetObject",
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"s3:PutObject",
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"s3:DeleteObject",
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"s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
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"s3:ListMultipartUploadParts"
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],
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"Effect": "Allow",
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"Resource": [
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"arn:aws:s3:::snaps.example.com/foo/*"
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]
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}
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],
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"Version": "2012-10-17"
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}
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----
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// NOTCONSOLE
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The bucket needs to exist to register a repository for snapshots. If you did not create the bucket then the repository
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registration will fail.
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[[repository-s3-aws-vpc]]
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[float]
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==== AWS VPC Bandwidth Settings
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AWS instances resolve S3 endpoints to a public IP. If the Elasticsearch instances reside in a private subnet in an AWS VPC then all traffic to S3 will go through that VPC's NAT instance. If your VPC's NAT instance is a smaller instance size (e.g. a t1.micro) or is handling a high volume of network traffic your bandwidth to S3 may be limited by that NAT instance's networking bandwidth limitations.
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Instances residing in a public subnet in an AWS VPC will connect to S3 via the VPC's internet gateway and not be bandwidth limited by the VPC's NAT instance.
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