The Arrow C++ library includes a generic filesystem interface and specific implementations for some cloud storage systems. This setup allows various parts of the project to be able to read and write data with different storage backends. In the arrow R package, support has been enabled for AWS S3 and Google Cloud Storage (GCS). This vignette provides an overview of working with S3 and GCS data using Arrow.

In Windows and macOS binary packages, S3 and GCS support are included. On Linux when installing from source, S3 and GCS support is not always enabled by default, and it has additional system requirements. See vignette("install", package = "arrow") for details.

Creating a FileSystem object

One way of working with filesystems is to create ?FileSystem objects. ?S3FileSystem objects can be created with the s3_bucket() function, which automatically detects the bucket’s AWS region. Similarly, ?GcsFileSystem objects can be created with the gs_bucket() function. The resulting FileSystem will consider paths relative to the bucket’s path (so for example you don’t need to prefix the bucket path when listing a directory).

With a FileSystem object, you can point to specific files in it with the $path() method and pass the result to file readers and writers (read_parquet(), write_feather(), et al.). For example, to read a parquet file from the example NYC taxi data (used in vignette("dataset", package = "arrow")):

bucket <- s3_bucket("voltrondata-labs-datasets")
# Or in GCS (anonymous = TRUE is required if credentials are not configured):
bucket <- gs_bucket("voltrondata-labs-datasets", anonymous = TRUE)
df <- read_parquet(bucket$path("nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet"))

Note that this will be slower to read than if the file were local, though if you’re running on a machine in the same AWS region as the file in S3, the cost of reading the data over the network should be much lower.

You can list the files and/or directories in a bucket or subdirectory using the $ls() method:

bucket$ls("nyc-taxi")
# Or recursive:
bucket$ls("nyc-taxi", recursive = TRUE)

NOTE: in GCS, you should always use recursive = TRUE as directories often don’t appear in $ls() results.

See help(FileSystem) for a list of options that s3_bucket()/S3FileSystem$create() and gs_bucket()/GcsFileSystem$create() can take.

The object that s3_bucket() and gs_bucket() return is technically a SubTreeFileSystem, which holds a path and a file system to which it corresponds. SubTreeFileSystems can be useful for holding a reference to a subdirectory somewhere (on S3, GCS, or elsewhere).

One way to get a subtree is to call the $cd() method on a FileSystem

june2019 <- bucket$cd("nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6")
df <- read_parquet(june2019$path("part-0.parquet"))

SubTreeFileSystem can also be made from a URI:

june2019 <- SubTreeFileSystem$create("s3://voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6")

URIs

File readers and writers (read_parquet(), write_feather(), et al.) also accept a URI as the source or destination file, as do open_dataset() and write_dataset(). An S3 URI looks like:

s3://[access_key:secret_key@]bucket/path[?region=]

A GCS URI looks like:

gs://[access_key:secret_key@]bucket/path
gs://anonymous@bucket/path

For example, one of the NYC taxi data files used in vignette("dataset", package = "arrow") is found at

s3://voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet
# Or in GCS (anonymous required on public buckets):
gs://anonymous@voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet

Given this URI, you can pass it to read_parquet() just as if it were a local file path:

df <- read_parquet("s3://voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet")
# Or in GCS:
df <- read_parquet("gs://anonymous@voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet")

URI options

URIs accept additional options in the query parameters (the part after the ?) that are passed down to configure the underlying file system. They are separated by &. For example,

s3://voltrondata-labs-datasets/?endpoint_override=https%3A%2F%2Fstorage.googleapis.com&allow_bucket_creation=true

is equivlant to:

fs <- S3FileSystem$create(
  endpoint_override="https://storage.googleapis.com",
  allow_bucket_creation=TRUE
)
fs$path("voltrondata-labs-datasets/")

Both tell the S3FileSystem that it should allow the creation of new buckets and to talk to Google Storage instead of S3. The latter works because GCS implements an S3-compatible API–see File systems that emulate S3 below–but for better support for GCS use the GCSFileSystem with gs://. Also note that parameters in the URI need to be percent encoded, which is why :// is written as %3A%2F%2F.

For S3, only the following options can be included in the URI as query parameters are region, scheme, endpoint_override, access_key, secret_key, allow_bucket_creation, and allow_bucket_deletion. For GCS, the supported parameters are scheme, endpoint_override, and retry_limit_seconds.

In GCS, a useful option is retry_limit_seconds, which sets the number of seconds a request may spend retrying before returning an error. The current default is 15 minutes, so in many interactive contexts it’s nice to set a lower value:

gs://anonymous@voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/?retry_limit_seconds=10

Authentication

S3 Authentication

To access private S3 buckets, you need typically need two secret parameters: a access_key, which is like a user id, and secret_key, which is like a token or password. There are a few options for passing these credentials:

  • Include them in the URI, like s3://access_key:secret_key@bucket-name/path/to/file. Be sure to URL-encode your secrets if they contain special characters like “/” (e.g., URLencode("123/456", reserved = TRUE)).

  • Pass them as access_key and secret_key to S3FileSystem$create() or s3_bucket()

  • Set them as environment variables named AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, respectively.

  • Define them in a ~/.aws/credentials file, according to the AWS documentation.

  • Use an AccessRole for temporary access by passing the role_arn identifier to S3FileSystem$create() or s3_bucket().

GCS Authentication

The simplest way to authenticate with GCS is to run the gcloud command to setup application default credentials:

gcloud auth application-default login

To manually configure credentials, you can pass either access_token and expiration, for using temporary tokens generated elsewhere, or json_credentials, to reference a downloaded credentials file.

If you haven’t configured credentials, then to access public buckets, you must pass anonymous = TRUE or anonymous as the user in a URI:

bucket <- gs_bucket("voltrondata-labs-datasets", anonymous = TRUE)
fs <- GcsFileSystem$create(anonymous = TRUE)
df <- read_parquet("gs://anonymous@voltrondata-labs-datasets/nyc-taxi/year=2019/month=6/part-0.parquet")

Using a proxy server

If you need to use a proxy server to connect to an S3 bucket, you can provide a URI in the form http://user:password@host:port to proxy_options. For example, a local proxy server running on port 1316 can be used like this:

bucket <- s3_bucket("voltrondata-labs-datasets", proxy_options = "http://localhost:1316")

File systems that emulate S3

The S3FileSystem machinery enables you to work with any file system that provides an S3-compatible interface. For example, MinIO is and object-storage server that emulates the S3 API. If you were to run minio server locally with its default settings, you could connect to it with arrow using S3FileSystem like this:

minio <- S3FileSystem$create(
  access_key = "minioadmin",
  secret_key = "minioadmin",
  scheme = "http",
  endpoint_override = "localhost:9000"
)

or, as a URI, it would be

s3://minioadmin:minioadmin@?scheme=http&endpoint_override=localhost%3A9000

(note the URL escaping of the : in endpoint_override).

Among other applications, this can be useful for testing out code locally before running on a remote S3 bucket.

Disabling the use of environment variables

As mentioned above, it is possible to make use of environment variables to configure access. However, if you wish to pass in connection details via a URI or alternative methods but also have existing AWS environment variables defined, these may interfere with your session. For example, you may see an error message like:

You can unset these environment variables using Sys.unsetenv(), for example:

Sys.unsetenv("AWS_DEFAULT_REGION")
Sys.unsetenv("AWS_S3_ENDPOINT")

By default, the AWS SDK tries to retrieve metadata about user configuration, which can cause conficts when passing in connection details via URI (for example when accessing a MINIO bucket). To disable the use of AWS environment variables, you can set environment variable AWS_EC2_METADATA_DISABLED to TRUE.

Sys.setenv(AWS_EC2_METADATA_DISABLED = TRUE)