public class S3Action
extends java.lang.Object
implements java.io.Serializable
When included in a receipt rule, this action saves the received message to an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) bucket and, optionally, publishes a notification to Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS).
To enable Amazon SES to write emails to your Amazon S3 bucket, use an AWS KMS key to encrypt your emails, or publish to an Amazon SNS topic of another account, Amazon SES must have permission to access those resources. For information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
When you save your emails to an Amazon S3 bucket, the maximum email size (including headers) is 30 MB. Emails larger than that will bounce.
For information about specifying Amazon S3 actions in receipt rules, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
Constructor and Description |
---|
S3Action() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
equals(java.lang.Object obj) |
java.lang.String |
getBucketName()
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
|
java.lang.String |
getKmsKeyArn()
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails
before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
java.lang.String |
getObjectKeyPrefix()
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
java.lang.String |
getTopicArn()
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
int |
hashCode() |
void |
setBucketName(java.lang.String bucketName)
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
|
void |
setKmsKeyArn(java.lang.String kmsKeyArn)
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails
before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
void |
setObjectKeyPrefix(java.lang.String objectKeyPrefix)
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
void |
setTopicArn(java.lang.String topicArn)
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
java.lang.String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of this object; useful for testing and
debugging.
|
S3Action |
withBucketName(java.lang.String bucketName)
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
|
S3Action |
withKmsKeyArn(java.lang.String kmsKeyArn)
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails
before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
S3Action |
withObjectKeyPrefix(java.lang.String objectKeyPrefix)
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
S3Action |
withTopicArn(java.lang.String topicArn)
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket.
|
public java.lang.String getTopicArn()
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is
arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
. For more
information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon
SNS Developer Guide.
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is
saved to the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS topic
ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
.
For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
public void setTopicArn(java.lang.String topicArn)
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is
arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
. For more
information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon
SNS Developer Guide.
topicArn
-
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is
saved to the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS
topic ARN is
arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
. For
more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
public S3Action withTopicArn(java.lang.String topicArn)
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to
the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is
arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
. For more
information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon
SNS Developer Guide.
Returns a reference to this object so that method calls can be chained together.
topicArn
-
The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is
saved to the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS
topic ARN is
arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic
. For
more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
public java.lang.String getBucketName()
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
public void setBucketName(java.lang.String bucketName)
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
bucketName
- The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
public S3Action withBucketName(java.lang.String bucketName)
The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
Returns a reference to this object so that method calls can be chained together.
bucketName
- The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
public java.lang.String getObjectKeyPrefix()
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
public void setObjectKeyPrefix(java.lang.String objectKeyPrefix)
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
objectKeyPrefix
- The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
public S3Action withObjectKeyPrefix(java.lang.String objectKeyPrefix)
The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
Returns a reference to this object so that method calls can be chained together.
objectKeyPrefix
- The key prefix of the Amazon S3 bucket. The key prefix is similar to a directory name that enables you to store similar data under the same directory in a bucket.
public java.lang.String getKmsKeyArn()
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
.
For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you want to use
the default master key in the US West (Oregon) region, the ARN of the
default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
. If you use
the default master key, you don't need to perform any extra steps to give
Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
. For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you
want to use the default master key in the US West (Oregon)
region, the ARN of the default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
. If
you use the default master key, you don't need to perform any
extra steps to give Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
public void setKmsKeyArn(java.lang.String kmsKeyArn)
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
.
For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you want to use
the default master key in the US West (Oregon) region, the ARN of the
default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
. If you use
the default master key, you don't need to perform any extra steps to give
Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
kmsKeyArn
- The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
. For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you
want to use the default master key in the US West (Oregon)
region, the ARN of the default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
.
If you use the default master key, you don't need to perform
any extra steps to give Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
public S3Action withKmsKeyArn(java.lang.String kmsKeyArn)
The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
.
For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you want to use
the default master key in the US West (Oregon) region, the ARN of the
default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
. If you use
the default master key, you don't need to perform any extra steps to give
Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
Returns a reference to this object so that method calls can be chained together.
kmsKeyArn
- The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows:
To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of
arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses
. For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you
want to use the default master key in the US West (Oregon)
region, the ARN of the default master key would be
arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses
.
If you use the default master key, you don't need to perform
any extra steps to give Amazon SES permission to use the key.
To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails.
Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
public java.lang.String toString()
toString
in class java.lang.Object
Object.toString()
public int hashCode()
hashCode
in class java.lang.Object
public boolean equals(java.lang.Object obj)
equals
in class java.lang.Object
Copyright © 2018 Amazon Web Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.