S3rver is a NodeJs port of the excellent Fake S3 server.
S3rver is a lightweight server that responds to the some of the same calls Amazon S3 responds to. It is extremely useful for testing S3 in a sandbox environment without actually making calls to Amazon.
The goal of S3rver is to minimise runtime dependencies and be more of a development tool to test S3 calls in your code rather than a production server looking to duplicate S3 functionality.
- Create bucket
- Delete bucket
- List buckets
- List content of buckets (prefix, delimiter and max keys all work)
- Put object
- Delete object
- Get object (including using the HEAD method)
- Get dummy ACLs for an object
- Copy object
Install s3rver:
npm install s3rver -g
You will now have a command on your path called s3rver
Executing this command for the various options:
s3rver --help
Currently multipart uploads is not supported. It's fairly complex and cumbersome to implement, however, if there is strong support from the community for it, then it will be implemented, or if you would like to implement it yourself, please go ahead and send a pull request : )
Please see Fake S3s wiki page for a list of supported clients.
Please test, if you encounter any problems please do not hesitate to open an issue :)
If you specify an indexDocument then get
requests will serve the indexDocument if it is found, simulating the static website mode of AWS S3. An errorDocument can also be set, to serve a custom 404 page.
By default a bucket name needs to be given. So for a bucket called mysite.local
, with an indexDocument of index.html
. Visiting http://localhost:4568/mysite.local/
in your browser will display the index.html
file uploaded to the bucket.
However you can also setup a local hostname in your /etc/hosts file pointing at 127.0.0.1
localhost 127.0.0.1
mysite.local 127.0.0.1
Now you can access the served content at http://mysite.local:4568/
When running the tests with node v0.10.0 the following error is encountered. This is resolved by running the tests with v0.11.*. I recommend using NVM to manage your node versions.
To run the test suite, first install the dependencies, then run npm test
:
$ npm install
$ npm test
You can also run s3rver programmatically.
This is particularly useful if you want to integrate s3rver into another projects tests that depends on access to an s3 environment
Example in mocha:
before(function (done) {
var S3rver = require('s3rver');
var s3rver = new S3rver();
s3rver.setHostname('localhost')
.setPort(4568)
.setDirectory('/tmp/s3rver')
.setSilent(false)
.run(function (err, host, port) {
if(err) {
return done(err);
}
done();
});
});