AWS CLI S3 get object tags





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I need to get object tags by AWS CLI. Is it possible to display all object tags? Or even display the value of a specific key from tags.










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    I need to get object tags by AWS CLI. Is it possible to display all object tags? Or even display the value of a specific key from tags.










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      I need to get object tags by AWS CLI. Is it possible to display all object tags? Or even display the value of a specific key from tags.










      share|improve this question














      I need to get object tags by AWS CLI. Is it possible to display all object tags? Or even display the value of a specific key from tags.







      amazon-web-services amazon-s3






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      asked Nov 24 '18 at 12:11









      xfilokoloxfilokolo

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          You can do this with the command aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket bucketname --key objectkey. For example



          ➜  ~ aws s3 ls helloworld-20181029141519-deployment
          2018-11-24 07:19:11 0 hello.world

          ➜ ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world
          {
          "TagSet": [
          {
          "Value": "1",
          "Key": "tagged"
          },
          {
          "Value": "bar",
          "Key": "foo"
          }
          ]
          }


          You can use a JMESPath expression to filter the result set.



          ➜  ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world --query "TagSet[?Key=='foo']"
          [
          {
          "Value": "bar",
          "Key": "foo"
          }
          ]





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            1 Answer
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            You can do this with the command aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket bucketname --key objectkey. For example



            ➜  ~ aws s3 ls helloworld-20181029141519-deployment
            2018-11-24 07:19:11 0 hello.world

            ➜ ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world
            {
            "TagSet": [
            {
            "Value": "1",
            "Key": "tagged"
            },
            {
            "Value": "bar",
            "Key": "foo"
            }
            ]
            }


            You can use a JMESPath expression to filter the result set.



            ➜  ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world --query "TagSet[?Key=='foo']"
            [
            {
            "Value": "bar",
            "Key": "foo"
            }
            ]





            share|improve this answer






























              2














              You can do this with the command aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket bucketname --key objectkey. For example



              ➜  ~ aws s3 ls helloworld-20181029141519-deployment
              2018-11-24 07:19:11 0 hello.world

              ➜ ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world
              {
              "TagSet": [
              {
              "Value": "1",
              "Key": "tagged"
              },
              {
              "Value": "bar",
              "Key": "foo"
              }
              ]
              }


              You can use a JMESPath expression to filter the result set.



              ➜  ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world --query "TagSet[?Key=='foo']"
              [
              {
              "Value": "bar",
              "Key": "foo"
              }
              ]





              share|improve this answer




























                2












                2








                2







                You can do this with the command aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket bucketname --key objectkey. For example



                ➜  ~ aws s3 ls helloworld-20181029141519-deployment
                2018-11-24 07:19:11 0 hello.world

                ➜ ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world
                {
                "TagSet": [
                {
                "Value": "1",
                "Key": "tagged"
                },
                {
                "Value": "bar",
                "Key": "foo"
                }
                ]
                }


                You can use a JMESPath expression to filter the result set.



                ➜  ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world --query "TagSet[?Key=='foo']"
                [
                {
                "Value": "bar",
                "Key": "foo"
                }
                ]





                share|improve this answer















                You can do this with the command aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket bucketname --key objectkey. For example



                ➜  ~ aws s3 ls helloworld-20181029141519-deployment
                2018-11-24 07:19:11 0 hello.world

                ➜ ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world
                {
                "TagSet": [
                {
                "Value": "1",
                "Key": "tagged"
                },
                {
                "Value": "bar",
                "Key": "foo"
                }
                ]
                }


                You can use a JMESPath expression to filter the result set.



                ➜  ~ aws s3api get-object-tagging --bucket helloworld-20181029141519-deployment --key hello.world --query "TagSet[?Key=='foo']"
                [
                {
                "Value": "bar",
                "Key": "foo"
                }
                ]






                share|improve this answer














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                edited Nov 24 '18 at 16:13

























                answered Nov 24 '18 at 15:33









                bwestbwest

                7,05631847




                7,05631847
































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