The following actions are supported by Amazon S3:| docs.aws.amazon.com
Returns some or all (up to 1,000) of the objects in a bucket with each request. You can use the request parameters as selection criteria to return a subset of the objects in a bucket. 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. For more information about listing objects, see| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn how to create customer managed policies in IAM to define permissions for identities and resources using the AWS Management Console, AWS CLI, or API.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Lists all of the available service-specific resources, actions, and condition keys that can be used in IAM policies to control access to Amazon S3.| docs.aws.amazon.com
How to specify permissions of Amazon S3 actions in a policy for Amazon S3 API operations| docs.aws.amazon.com
Enable Amazon S3 server access logging to track requests for access to your S3 buckets.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Adds an object to a bucket.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Describes the Principal element of the AWS JSON policy language.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn how to set up live replication for Amazon S3.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Describes resource names (friendly names, identifiers, unique IDs, paths, and ARNs) for AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) resources such as users, IAM groups, roles, policies, and certificates.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn how and when to use IAM roles.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Set up and configure notifications so that key events on buckets cause a message to be sent to an Amazon SNS topic.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn what Amazon S3 Inventory is and how to use it to manage your storage.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Describes each of the AWS global condition keys available to use in IAM policies.| docs.aws.amazon.com