ListObjectVersions - Amazon Simple Storage Service

ListObjectVersions

Note

This operation is not supported by directory buckets.

Returns metadata about all versions of the objects in a bucket. You can also use request parameters as selection criteria to return metadata about a subset of all the object versions.

Important

To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the s3:ListBucketVersions action. Be aware of the name difference.

Note

A 200 OK response can contain valid or invalid XML. Make sure to design your application to parse the contents of the response and handle it appropriately.

To use this operation, you must have READ access to the bucket.

The following operations are related to ListObjectVersions:

Request Syntax

GET /?versions&delimiter=Delimiter&encoding-type=EncodingType&key-marker=KeyMarker&max-keys=MaxKeys&prefix=Prefix&version-id-marker=VersionIdMarker HTTP/1.1 Host: Bucket.s3.amazonaws.com x-amz-expected-bucket-owner: ExpectedBucketOwner x-amz-request-payer: RequestPayer x-amz-optional-object-attributes: OptionalObjectAttributes

URI Request Parameters

The request uses the following URI parameters.

Bucket

The bucket name that contains the objects.

Required: Yes

delimiter

A delimiter is a character that you specify to group keys. All keys that contain the same string between the prefix and the first occurrence of the delimiter are grouped under a single result element in CommonPrefixes. These groups are counted as one result against the max-keys limitation. These keys are not returned elsewhere in the response.

encoding-type

Requests Amazon S3 to encode the object keys in the response and specifies the encoding method to use. An object key can contain any Unicode character; however, the XML 1.0 parser cannot parse some characters, such as characters with an ASCII value from 0 to 10. For characters that are not supported in XML 1.0, you can add this parameter to request that Amazon S3 encode the keys in the response.

Valid Values: url

key-marker

Specifies the key to start with when listing objects in a bucket.

max-keys

Sets the maximum number of keys returned in the response. By default, the action returns up to 1,000 key names. The response might contain fewer keys but will never contain more. If additional keys satisfy the search criteria, but were not returned because max-keys was exceeded, the response contains <isTruncated>true</isTruncated>. To return the additional keys, see key-marker and version-id-marker.

prefix

Use this parameter to select only those keys that begin with the specified prefix. You can use prefixes to separate a bucket into different groupings of keys. (You can think of using prefix to make groups in the same way that you'd use a folder in a file system.) You can use prefix with delimiter to roll up numerous objects into a single result under CommonPrefixes.

version-id-marker

Specifies the object version you want to start listing from.

x-amz-expected-bucket-owner

The account ID of the expected bucket owner. If the account ID that you provide does not match the actual owner of the bucket, the request fails with the HTTP status code 403 Forbidden (access denied).

x-amz-optional-object-attributes

Specifies the optional fields that you want returned in the response. Fields that you do not specify are not returned.

Valid Values: RestoreStatus

x-amz-request-payer

Confirms that the requester knows that they will be charged for the request. Bucket owners need not specify this parameter in their requests. If either the source or destination S3 bucket has Requester Pays enabled, the requester will pay for corresponding charges to copy the object. For information about downloading objects from Requester Pays buckets, see Downloading Objects in Requester Pays Buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide.

Note

This functionality is not supported for directory buckets.

Valid Values: requester

Request Body

The request does not have a request body.

Response Syntax

HTTP/1.1 200 x-amz-request-charged: RequestCharged <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult> <IsTruncated>boolean</IsTruncated> <KeyMarker>string</KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker>string</VersionIdMarker> <NextKeyMarker>string</NextKeyMarker> <NextVersionIdMarker>string</NextVersionIdMarker> <Version> <ChecksumAlgorithm>string</ChecksumAlgorithm> ... <ETag>string</ETag> <IsLatest>boolean</IsLatest> <Key>string</Key> <LastModified>timestamp</LastModified> <Owner> <DisplayName>string</DisplayName> <ID>string</ID> </Owner> <RestoreStatus> <IsRestoreInProgress>boolean</IsRestoreInProgress> <RestoreExpiryDate>timestamp</RestoreExpiryDate> </RestoreStatus> <Size>long</Size> <StorageClass>string</StorageClass> <VersionId>string</VersionId> </Version> ... <DeleteMarker> <IsLatest>boolean</IsLatest> <Key>string</Key> <LastModified>timestamp</LastModified> <Owner> <DisplayName>string</DisplayName> <ID>string</ID> </Owner> <VersionId>string</VersionId> </DeleteMarker> ... <Name>string</Name> <Prefix>string</Prefix> <Delimiter>string</Delimiter> <MaxKeys>integer</MaxKeys> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>string</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> ... <EncodingType>string</EncodingType> </ListVersionsResult>

Response Elements

If the action is successful, the service sends back an HTTP 200 response.

The response returns the following HTTP headers.

x-amz-request-charged

If present, indicates that the requester was successfully charged for the request.

Note

This functionality is not supported for directory buckets.

Valid Values: requester

The following data is returned in XML format by the service.

ListVersionsResult

Root level tag for the ListVersionsResult parameters.

Required: Yes

CommonPrefixes

All of the keys rolled up into a common prefix count as a single return when calculating the number of returns.

Type: Array of CommonPrefix data types

DeleteMarker

Container for an object that is a delete marker.

Type: Array of DeleteMarkerEntry data types

Delimiter

The delimiter grouping the included keys. A delimiter is a character that you specify to group keys. All keys that contain the same string between the prefix and the first occurrence of the delimiter are grouped under a single result element in CommonPrefixes. These groups are counted as one result against the max-keys limitation. These keys are not returned elsewhere in the response.

Type: String

EncodingType

Encoding type used by Amazon S3 to encode object key names in the XML response.

If you specify the encoding-type request parameter, Amazon S3 includes this element in the response, and returns encoded key name values in the following response elements:

KeyMarker, NextKeyMarker, Prefix, Key, and Delimiter.

Type: String

Valid Values: url

IsTruncated

A flag that indicates whether Amazon S3 returned all of the results that satisfied the search criteria. If your results were truncated, you can make a follow-up paginated request by using the NextKeyMarker and NextVersionIdMarker response parameters as a starting place in another request to return the rest of the results.

Type: Boolean

KeyMarker

Marks the last key returned in a truncated response.

Type: String

MaxKeys

Specifies the maximum number of objects to return.

Type: Integer

Name

The bucket name.

Type: String

NextKeyMarker

When the number of responses exceeds the value of MaxKeys, NextKeyMarker specifies the first key not returned that satisfies the search criteria. Use this value for the key-marker request parameter in a subsequent request.

Type: String

NextVersionIdMarker

When the number of responses exceeds the value of MaxKeys, NextVersionIdMarker specifies the first object version not returned that satisfies the search criteria. Use this value for the version-id-marker request parameter in a subsequent request.

Type: String

Prefix

Selects objects that start with the value supplied by this parameter.

Type: String

Version

Container for version information.

Type: Array of ObjectVersion data types

VersionIdMarker

Marks the last version of the key returned in a truncated response.

Type: String

Examples

Sample Request

The following request returns all of the versions of all of the objects in the specified bucket.

GET /?versions HTTP/1.1 Host: BucketName.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:32:00 +0000 Authorization: authorization string (see Authenticating Requests (AWS Signature Version 4))

Sample Response

This example illustrates one usage of ListObjectVersions.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01"> <Name>bucket</Name> <Prefix>my</Prefix> <KeyMarker/> <VersionIdMarker/> <MaxKeys>5</MaxKeys> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <Version> <Key>my-image.jpg</Key> <VersionId>3/L4kqtJl40Nr8X8gdRQBpUMLUo</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-10-12T17:50:30.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"fba9dede5f27731c9771645a39863328"</ETag> <Size>434234</Size> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> <DisplayName>mtd@amazon.com</DisplayName> </Owner> </Version> <DeleteMarker> <Key>my-second-image.jpg</Key> <VersionId>03jpff543dhffds434rfdsFDN943fdsFkdmqnh892</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-11-12T17:50:30.000Z</LastModified> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> <DisplayName>mtd@amazon.com</DisplayName> </Owner> </DeleteMarker> <Version> <Key>my-second-image.jpg</Key> <VersionId>QUpfdndhfd8438MNFDN93jdnJFkdmqnh893</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-10-10T17:50:30.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"9b2cf535f27731c974343645a3985328"</ETag> <Size>166434</Size> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> <DisplayName>mtd@amazon.com</DisplayName> </Owner> </Version> <DeleteMarker> <Key>my-third-image.jpg</Key> <VersionId>03jpff543dhffds434rfdsFDN943fdsFkdmqnh892</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-10-15T17:50:30.000Z</LastModified> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> <DisplayName>mtd@amazon.com</DisplayName> </Owner> </DeleteMarker> <Version> <Key>my-third-image.jpg</Key> <VersionId>UIORUnfndfhnw89493jJFJ</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-10-11T12:50:30.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"772cf535f27731c974343645a3985328"</ETag> <Size>64</Size> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> <DisplayName>mtd@amazon.com</DisplayName> </Owner> </Version> </ListVersionsResult>

Sample Request

The following request returns objects in the order that they were stored, returning the most recently stored object first, starting with the value for key-marker.

GET /?versions&key-marker=key2 HTTP/1.1 Host: s3.amazonaws.com Pragma: no-cache Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg, */* Date: Thu, 10 Dec 2009 22:46:32 +0000 Authorization: signatureValue

Sample Response

This example illustrates one usage of ListObjectVersions.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>mtp-versioning-fresh</Name> <Prefix/> <KeyMarker>key2</KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker/> <MaxKeys>1000</MaxKeys> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <Version> <Key>key3</Key> <VersionId>I5VhmK6CDDdQ5Pwfe1gcHZWmHDpcv7gfmfc29UBxsKU.</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-09T00:19:04.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> <DeleteMarker> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>qDhprLU80sAlCFLu2DWgXAEDgKzWarn-HS_JU0TvYqs.</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:38:11.000Z</LastModified> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> </DeleteMarker> <Version> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>wxxQ7ezLaL5JN2Sislq66Syxxo0k7uHTUpb9qiiMxNg.</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:37:44.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> </ListVersionsResult>

Sample Request Using the prefix Parameter

This example returns objects whose keys begin with source.

GET /?versions&prefix=source HTTP/1.1 Host: bucket.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:32:00 +0000 Authorization: authorization string

Sample Response

This example illustrates one usage of ListObjectVersions.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>mtp-versioning-fresh</Name> <Prefix>source</Prefix> <KeyMarker/> <VersionIdMarker/> <MaxKeys>1000</MaxKeys> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <DeleteMarker> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>qDhprLU80sAlCFLu2DWgXAEDgKzWarn-HS_JU0TvYqs.</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:38:11.000Z</LastModified> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> </DeleteMarker> <Version> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>wxxQ7ezLaL5JN2Sislq66Syxxo0k7uHTUpb9qiiMxNg.</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:37:44.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> </ListVersionsResult>

Sample Request: Using the key-marker and version-id-marker Parameters

The following example returns objects starting at the specified key (key-marker) and version ID (version-id-marker).

GET /?versions&key-marker=key3&version-id-marker=t46ZenlYTZBnj HTTP/1.1 Host: bucket.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:32:00 +0000 Authorization: signatureValue

Sample Response

This example illustrates one usage of ListObjectVersions.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>mtp-versioning-fresh</Name> <Prefix/> <KeyMarker>key3</KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker>t46ZenlYTZBnj</VersionIdMarker> <MaxKeys>1000</MaxKeys> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <DeleteMarker> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>qDhprLU80sAlCFLu2DWgXAEDgKzWarn-HS_JU0TvYqs.</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:38:11.000Z</LastModified> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> </DeleteMarker> <Version> <Key>sourcekey</Key> <VersionId>wxxQ7ezLaL5JN2Sislq66Syxxo0k7uHTUpb9qiiMxNg.</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-10T16:37:44.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> </ListVersionsResult>

Sample Request: Using the key-marker, version-id-marker, and max-keys Parameters

The following request returns up to three (the value of max-keys) objects starting with the key specified by key-marker and the version ID specified by version-id-marker.

GET /?versions&key-marker=key3&version-id-marker=t46Z0menlYTZBnj&max-keys=3 Host: bucket.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 22:32:00 +0000 Authorization: authorization string

Sample Response

This example illustrates one usage of ListObjectVersions.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>mtp-versioning-fresh</Name> <Prefix/> <KeyMarker>key3</KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker>null</VersionIdMarker> <NextKeyMarker>key3</NextKeyMarker> <NextVersionIdMarker>d-d309mfjFrUmoQ0DBsVqmcMV15OI.</NextVersionIdMarker> <MaxKeys>3</MaxKeys> <IsTruncated>true</IsTruncated> <Version> <Key>key3</Key> <VersionId>8XECiENpj8pydEDJdd-_VRrvaGKAHOaGMNW7tg6UViI.</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-09T00:18:23.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> <Version> <Key>key3</Key> <VersionId>d-d309mfjFri40QYukDozqBt3UmoQ0DBsVqmcMV15OI.</VersionId> <IsLatest>false</IsLatest> <LastModified>2009-12-09T00:18:08.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"396fefef536d5ce46c7537ecf978a360"</ETag> <Size>217</Size> <Owner> <ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> </ListVersionsResult>

Sample Request: Using the delimiter and prefix Parameters

Assume you have the following keys in your bucket, example-bucket.

photos/2006/January/sample.jpg

photos/2006/February/sample.jpg

photos/2006/March/sample.jpg

videos/2006/March/sample.wmv

sample.jpg

The following GET versions request specifies the delimiter parameter with the value /.

GET /?versions&delimiter=/ HTTP/1.1 Host: example-bucket.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 02 Feb 2011 20:34:56 GMT Authorization: authorization string

Sample Response

The list of keys from the specified bucket is shown in the following response.

The response returns the sample.jpg key in a Version element. However, because all the other keys contain the specified delimiter, a distinct substring, from the beginning of the key to the first occurrence of the delimiter, from each of these keys is returned in a CommonPrefixes element. The key substrings, photos/ and videos/, in the CommonPrefixes element indicate that there are one or more keys with these key prefixes.

This is a useful scenario if you use key prefixes for your objects to create a logical folder-like structure. In this case, you can interpret the result as the folders photos/ and videos/ have one or more objects.

<ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>mvbucketwithversionon1</Name> <Prefix></Prefix> <KeyMarker></KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker></VersionIdMarker> <MaxKeys>1000</MaxKeys> <Delimiter>/</Delimiter> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <Version> <Key>Sample.jpg</Key> <VersionId>toxMzQlBsGyGCz1YuMWMp90cdXLzqOCH</VersionId> <IsLatest>true</IsLatest> <LastModified>2011-02-02T18:46:20.000Z</LastModified> <ETag>"3305f2cfc46c0f04559748bb039d69ae"</ETag> <Size>3191</Size> <Owner> <ID>852b113e7a2f25102679df27bb0ae12b3f85be6f290b936c4393484be31bebcc</ID> <DisplayName>display-name</DisplayName> </Owner> <StorageClass>STANDARD</StorageClass> </Version> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>photos/</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>videos/</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> </ListVersionsResult>

Example

In addition to the delimiter parameter, you can filter results by adding a prefix parameter as shown in the following request.

GET /?versions&prefix=photos/2006/&delimiter=/ HTTP/1.1 Host: example-bucket.s3.<Region>.amazonaws.com Date: Wed, 02 Feb 2011 19:34:02 GMT Authorization: authorization string

Example

In this case, the response will include only object keys that start with the specified prefix. The value returned in the CommonPrefixes element is a substring from the beginning of the key to the first occurrence of the specified delimiter after the prefix.

Note

If you created folders by using the Amazon S3 console, you will see an additional 0-byte object with a key of photos/2006/. This object is created because of the way that the console supports folder structures. For more information, see Organizing objects in the Amazon S3 console using folders in the Amazon S3 User Guide.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ListVersionsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"> <Name>example-bucket</Name> <Prefix>photos/2006/</Prefix> <KeyMarker></KeyMarker> <VersionIdMarker></VersionIdMarker> <MaxKeys>1000</MaxKeys> <Delimiter>/</Delimiter> <IsTruncated>false</IsTruncated> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>photos/2006/February/</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>photos/2006/January/</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> <CommonPrefixes> <Prefix>photos/2006/March/</Prefix> </CommonPrefixes> </ListVersionsResult>

See Also

For more information about using this API in one of the language-specific AWS SDKs, see the following: