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Lyve Cloud allows you to store objects (like files) in buckets (like folders). Before you add or store any object, you must create a bucket. When you create a bucket, you must specify the region where you want to create the bucket.
Bucket access levels are defined by the user roles. The following table describes console access to bucket features based on the user's role:
Actions | Admin | Storage Admin | Auditor (Read only) |
---|---|---|---|
Create bucket | ✓ | ✓ | × |
Edit bucket | ✓ | ✓ | × |
Delete | ✓ | ✓ | × |
List and View | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
To create a bucket:
Remember the following while creating a bucket name:
If Object Immutability is not enabled when a bucket is created, you cannot turn it on later. However, if you switch it on while creating a bucket, you can later switch it off and on again as needed.
If you enable Object Immutability, you can also set a duration to retain the objects. For more information, see Setting duration.
The Buckets page displays the bucket list. It also displays the labels for each bucket, such as Immutable, Versioned, and Logged. For more information on the labels, see Using object immutability and Administrator's Guide - Audit Log Management.
To edit a bucket:
Before deleting a bucket, please make sure to:
To view the bucket list:
By default, the Buckets page displays 10 buckets at a time. To increase or decrease the number of buckets per page, select the Rows per page arrow and select 10, 25, 50, or All.
The following table displays the description to the column names of the bucket list.
Column Name | Description |
---|---|
Name | Displays the name of the bucket. |
Region | Displays the region where the bucket is residing. You can select the region while creating a bucket. For more information, see Creating buckets. |
Usage | Displays the total amount of data stored in the bucket in KiB, MiB, or GiB. |
Created On | Displays when the bucket was created in YYYY-MM-DD format. |
Immutable, Versioned, Logged | Displays the bucket labels.
For more information on these labels, see Using object immutability and Administrator's Guide - Audit Log Management. |
Seagate on Vimeo: Lyve Cloud - How to Create a Bucket
Object immutability prevents objects from being deleted or overwritten by any user or application for a specified retention duration. This is especially useful when you want to meet regulatory data requirements or other scenarios where it is imperative that data cannot be changed or deleted. Object immutability must be used when you are certain that you do not want anyone, including the Administrator, to delete the objects during their retention duration. When you switch on object immutability, you must also set the duration and specify the defaretention period.
Seagate on Vimeo: Lyve Cloud - How to Create a Bucket
Versioning allows saving multiple variants of an object in the same bucket. It allows you to preserve, retrieve, and restore every version of an object stored in the bucket. Versioning enables the recovery of objects from any unintended or accidental user actions and application failures.
After switching on object immutability for a bucket, versioning is automatically enabled, Lyve Cloud automatically creates and stores an object version each time when:
For example, if you accidentally delete an object, instead of removing it permanently from Lyve Cloud, this deleted object becomes the current object version. You can then restore the previously available version.
When you create a bucket and switch on object immutability, you can switch off object immutability afterwards. However, versioning cannot be suspended for that bucket.
For example, if you accidentally delete an object, instead of removing it permanently from Lyve Cloud, this deleted object becomes the current object version. You can then restore the previously available version.
When you create a bucket and switch on object immutability, you can switch off object immutability afterwards. However, versioning cannot be suspended for that bucket.
The duration for immutability can be specified in days or years at the object level. When you set the duration, objects remain locked and cannot be overwritten or deleted. By default, the duration is set to 30 days. Setting the duration applies to individual object versions, and different versions of a single object can have different durations set.
For example, if you set duration to 10 days and then create an object A, object A will have its retention duration set to 10 days. If you later change the duration to 20 days and upload an object A again, in that case:
When you place an object in the bucket, Lyve Cloud calculates the retention duration for an object version by adding the specified duration to the object version's creation timestamp. The calculated date is stored in an object's metadata and protects the object version until the retention duration ends. When retention duration ends for an object, you can retain or manually delete an object.
By default, object immutability is switched off, and you can switch it on only while creating a bucket. Once object immutability is switched on, Lyve Cloud automatically enables versioning for the bucket. For step-by-step instructions see below.
To set object immutability:
Permissions are used to control access to buckets and define which actions the service accounts are allowed for a bucket. Bucket permission and Policy permission are two options available for granting permission to your buckets.
The following table describes access to permission management features based on your role.
Actions | Admin | Storage Admin | Auditor (Read only) |
---|---|---|---|
Create permission | ✓ | ✓ | × |
Edit | ✓ | ✓ | × |
Delete | ✓ | ✓ | × |
Status | ✓ | ✓ | × |
List and view | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
You can create bucket permissions without any buckets in the account only if you apply permission to all buckets in the account or all buckets with a prefix.
To create bucket permissions:
The bucket names must use the same few initial characters. For example, if four unique buckets for customer01 are created, such as customer01rawdata, customer01zipdata, customer01media and customer01, enter a prefix of the bucket names to assign and apply the permission. In this case, use the same beginning characters for each bucket for our prefix, customer01.
Once you select the desired options, the description of the permissions is displayed for that bucket permission.
The permissions list page displays all permissions. To manage permissions, see Editing bucket permissions and Deleting bucket permissions.
Lyve Cloud allows the migration of AWS IAM policy files to the Lyve Cloud policy permission, making it simple to start working with service accounts based on existing policies. A policy file uses a JSON file format that is compatible with an AWS IAM policy.
Working with policy files allows you to specify the Condition element. Query the exact request values to determine when a policy is in effect, or list specific actions such as Action: ["s3:GetObject","s3:PuObject"]
and specify the Resource element for several buckets and objects. For more information, see Example policy permission file.
You must manually copy policy permission details from AWS IAM policy to use in Lyve Cloud:
The following table lists the mandatory, optional, and invalid elements in a policy permission file.
Elements | Mandatory/Optional/Invalid | Description |
---|---|---|
Statement | Mandatory | Contains a single statement or an array of individual statements. |
Resource | Mandatory | Specifies object(s) or bucket(s) that is related to the statement. |
Effect | Mandatory | Allows or denies access to the resource. |
Action | Mandatory | Describes specific action(s) that will be allowed or denied. |
Version | Mandatory | It defines the version of the policy language and specifies the language syntax rules that are to be used to process a policy file. |
Condition | Optional | Allows you to specify conditions when a policy is in effect. The Condition element includes expressions that match the condition keys and values in the policy file against keys and values in the request. Specifying invalid condition keys returns an error. For more information, see Known Issues. |
Sid | Optional | A statement ID. The statement ID must be unique when assigned to statements in the statement array. This value is used as sub ID for policy document's ID. |
Id | Optional | A policy identifier, such as UUID (GUID). |
Principal | Invalid | Specifies the service account that is allowed or denied to access a resource. |
NotPrincipal | Invalid | The service accounts that are not specified, are allowed or denied access to the resource. |
NotAction | Invalid | Specifies that it matches everything except the specified list of actions. If this element is part of the permission file, you need to replace it with the Action element. |
NotResource | Invalid | Specifies that it matches every resource except the available specified list. If this element is part of the permission file, you need to replace it with the resource element. |
In the following example, the policy permission has three statements:
Statement1
: Allows object listing with a prefix David
in the bucket mybucket
. It is done using a Condition element.Statement2
: Allows read and write operations for objects with the prefix David
in bucket mybucket
.Statement3
: Denies delete object operation for two resources:mybucket/David/*
mycorporatebucket/share/marketing/*
{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "statement1", "Action": ["s3:ListBucket"], "Effect": "Allow", "Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::mybucket"], "Condition": {"StringLike": {"s3:prefix": ["David/*"]}} }, { "Sid": "statement2", "Action": [ "s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject" ], "Effect": "Allow", "Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/David/*"] }, { "Sid": "statement3", "Action": ["s3:DeleteObject"], "Effect": "Deny", "Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/David/*", "arn:aws:s3:::mycorporatebucket/share/marketing/*"] } ] }
Use the following policy to limit the bucket access to specific IP's:
{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "Sid-1", "Action": ["s3:*"], "Effect": "Deny", "Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::mybucket"], "Condition": {"NotIpAddress": {"aws:SourceIp": ["134.204.220.36/32"]}} }, { "Sid": "Sid-2", "Action": [ "s3:*" ], "Effect": "Allow", "Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::mybucket", "arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/*"] } ] }
To create policy permission:
[ INSERT create-policy-permission-01.png ]
You might encounter errors if the policy permission file (JSON) has any additional or missing elements. The following is the list of possible error messages. Read them carefully and update the policy permission file accordingly.
Error Message | Resolution |
---|---|
File Import Failed: Invalid JSON file. | Check the JSON file structure. |
File Import Failed: Effect field is required. | Add this element to the policy permission file. |
File Import Failed: Resource field is required. | |
File Import Failed: Action field is required. | |
File Import Failed: Statement is required. | |
File Import Failed: Version field value is empty. |
Add a value to this element. |
File Import Failed: Action canot be empty. | |
File Import Failed: Resource canot be empty. | |
File Import Failed: Condition canot be empty. | |
File Import Failed: Effect value is invalid. | Add a valid value to this element. |
File Import Failed: Action value < action> is not valid. | |
File Import Failed: Resource value < resource> is not valid. | |
File Import Failed: Condition name is not valid: <condition entered> . | Choose a valid condition name, such as StringLike . |
File Import Failed: Condition key is not valid: <condition key entered> . | Choose a valid condition key, such as s3:prefix . |
Edit existing permissions to change selected buckets and their associated actions.
To edit permissions:
To modify Policy Permission-type permissions:
In the Edit Policy Permission dialog, edit the following:
To modify Bucket Permission-type permissions:
In the Edit Policy Permission dialog, edit the following:
These changes take effect as soon as the updated permission is saved, and any subsequent application API calls will be affected.
To delete permissions:
After you delete a permission, you cannot restore. However, you can create a new permission and reuse that permission name.
By default, the Permissions page displays 10 permissions at a time. You can sort the columns in the table.
To view all permissions:
The following table describes the columns used to list permissions.
Column Name | Description |
---|---|
Name | Displays name of the permission. |
Description | Displays the permission description. |
Type | Displays the type of permission created. The type can be Policy permission and Bucket permission. |
Service Accounts | Displays the number of service accounts using that specific permission. You can hover the mouse on the number to view the names of the attached service account and the question mark icon to view the tooltip. |
Creation On | Displays the date and time when the permission was created in the year, day, month YY:DD:MM AM/PM format. |