Creates a new S3 bucket. To create a bucket, you must register with Amazon S3 and have a valid Amazon Web Services Access Key ID to authenticate requests. Anonymous requests are never allowed to create buckets. By creating the bucket, you become the bucket owner.
Not every string is an acceptable bucket name. For information about bucket naming restrictions, see Bucket naming rules .
If you want to create an Amazon S3 on Outposts bucket, see Create Bucket .
By default, the bucket is created in the US East (N. Virginia) Region. You can optionally specify a Region in the request body. You might choose a Region to optimize latency, minimize costs, or address regulatory requirements. For example, if you reside in Europe, you will probably find it advantageous to create buckets in the Europe (Ireland) Region. For more information, see Accessing a bucket .
Note
If you send your create bucket request to the
s3.amazonaws.com
endpoint, the request goes to the us-east-1 Region. Accordingly, the signature calculations in Signature Version 4 must use us-east-1 as the Region, even if the location constraint in the request specifies another Region where the bucket is to be created. If you create a bucket in a Region other than US East (N. Virginia), your application must be able to handle 307 redirect. For more information, see Virtual hosting of buckets .
Access control lists (ACLs)
When creating a bucket using this operation, you can optionally configure the bucket ACL to specify the accounts or groups that should be granted specific permissions on the bucket.
Warning
If your CreateBucket request sets bucket owner enforced for S3 Object Ownership and specifies a bucket ACL that provides access to an external Amazon Web Services account, your request fails with a 400
error and returns the InvalidBucketAclWithObjectOwnership
error code. For more information, see Controlling object ownership in the Amazon S3 User Guide .
There are two ways to grant the appropriate permissions using the request headers.
Specify a canned ACL using the x-amz-acl
request header. Amazon S3 supports a set of predefined ACLs, known as canned ACLs . Each canned ACL has a predefined set of grantees and permissions. For more information, see Canned ACL .
Specify access permissions explicitly using the x-amz-grant-read
, x-amz-grant-write
, x-amz-grant-read-acp
, x-amz-grant-write-acp
, and x-amz-grant-full-control
headers. These headers map to the set of permissions Amazon S3 supports in an ACL. For more information, see Access control list (ACL) overview . You specify each grantee as a type=value pair, where the type is one of the following:
id
– if the value specified is the canonical user ID of an Amazon Web Services account
uri
– if you are granting permissions to a predefined group
emailAddress
– if the value specified is the email address of an Amazon Web Services account
Note
Using email addresses to specify a grantee is only supported in the following Amazon Web Services Regions:
US East (N. Virginia)
US West (N. California)
US West (Oregon)
Asia Pacific (Singapore)
Asia Pacific (Sydney)
Asia Pacific (Tokyo)
Europe (Ireland)
South America (São Paulo)
For a list of all the Amazon S3 supported Regions and endpoints, see Regions and Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
For example, the following x-amz-grant-read
header grants the Amazon Web Services accounts identified by account IDs permissions to read object data and its metadata:
x-amz-grant-read: id="11112222333", id="444455556666"
Note
You can use either a canned ACL or specify access permissions explicitly. You cannot do both.
Permissions
In addition to s3:CreateBucket
, the following permissions are required when your CreateBucket includes specific headers:
ACLs - If your CreateBucket
request specifies ACL permissions and the ACL is public-read, public-read-write, authenticated-read, or if you specify access permissions explicitly through any other ACL, both s3:CreateBucket
and s3:PutBucketAcl
permissions are needed. If the ACL the CreateBucket
request is private or doesn’t specify any ACLs, only s3:CreateBucket
permission is needed.
Object Lock - If ObjectLockEnabledForBucket
is set to true in your CreateBucket
request, s3:PutBucketObjectLockConfiguration
and s3:PutBucketVersioning
permissions are required.
S3 Object Ownership - If your CreateBucket request includes the the x-amz-object-ownership
header, s3:PutBucketOwnershipControls
permission is required.
The following operations are related to CreateBucket
:
See also: AWS API Documentation
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
create-bucket
[--acl <value>]
--bucket <value>
[--create-bucket-configuration <value>]
[--grant-full-control <value>]
[--grant-read <value>]
[--grant-read-acp <value>]
[--grant-write <value>]
[--grant-write-acp <value>]
[--object-lock-enabled-for-bucket | --no-object-lock-enabled-for-bucket]
[--object-ownership <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
--acl
(string)
The canned ACL to apply to the bucket.
Possible values:
private
public-read
public-read-write
authenticated-read
--bucket
(string)
The name of the bucket to create.
--create-bucket-configuration
(structure)
The configuration information for the bucket.
LocationConstraint -> (string)
Specifies the Region where the bucket will be created. If you don’t specify a Region, the bucket is created in the US East (N. Virginia) Region (us-east-1).
Shorthand Syntax:
LocationConstraint=string
JSON Syntax:
{
"LocationConstraint": "af-south-1"|"ap-east-1"|"ap-northeast-1"|"ap-northeast-2"|"ap-northeast-3"|"ap-south-1"|"ap-southeast-1"|"ap-southeast-2"|"ca-central-1"|"cn-north-1"|"cn-northwest-1"|"EU"|"eu-central-1"|"eu-north-1"|"eu-south-1"|"eu-west-1"|"eu-west-2"|"eu-west-3"|"me-south-1"|"sa-east-1"|"us-east-2"|"us-gov-east-1"|"us-gov-west-1"|"us-west-1"|"us-west-2"
}
--grant-full-control
(string)
Allows grantee the read, write, read ACP, and write ACP permissions on the bucket.
--grant-read
(string)
Allows grantee to list the objects in the bucket.
--grant-read-acp
(string)
Allows grantee to read the bucket ACL.
--grant-write
(string)
Allows grantee to create new objects in the bucket.
For the bucket and object owners of existing objects, also allows deletions and overwrites of those objects.
--grant-write-acp
(string)
Allows grantee to write the ACL for the applicable bucket.
--object-lock-enabled-for-bucket
| --no-object-lock-enabled-for-bucket
(boolean)
Specifies whether you want S3 Object Lock to be enabled for the new bucket.
--object-ownership
(string)
The container element for object ownership for a bucket’s ownership controls.
BucketOwnerPreferred - Objects uploaded to the bucket change ownership to the bucket owner if the objects are uploaded with the
bucket-owner-full-control
canned ACL.ObjectWriter - The uploading account will own the object if the object is uploaded with the
bucket-owner-full-control
canned ACL.BucketOwnerEnforced - Access control lists (ACLs) are disabled and no longer affect permissions. The bucket owner automatically owns and has full control over every object in the bucket. The bucket only accepts PUT requests that don’t specify an ACL or bucket owner full control ACLs, such as the
bucket-owner-full-control
canned ACL or an equivalent form of this ACL expressed in the XML format.Possible values:
BucketOwnerPreferred
ObjectWriter
BucketOwnerEnforced
--cli-input-json
| --cli-input-yaml
(string)
Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton
. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml
.
--generate-cli-skeleton
(string)
Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input
, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json
. Similarly, if provided yaml-input
it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml
. If provided with the value output
, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
Note
To use the following examples, you must have the AWS CLI installed and configured. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.
Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide .
Example 1: To create a bucket
The following create-bucket
example creates a bucket named my-bucket
:
aws s3api create-bucket \
--bucket my-bucket \
--region us-east-1
Output:
{
"Location": "/my-bucket"
}
For more information, see Creating a bucket in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Example 2: To create a bucket with owner enforced
The following create-bucket
example creates a bucket named my-bucket
that uses the bucket owner enforced setting for S3 Object Ownership.
aws s3api create-bucket \
--bucket my-bucket \
--region us-east-1 \
--object-ownership BucketOwnerEnforced
Output:
{
"Location": "/my-bucket"
}
For more information, see Controlling ownership of objects and disabling ACLs in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Example 3: To create a bucket outside of the ``us-east-1`` region
The following create-bucket
example creates a bucket named my-bucket
in the
eu-west-1
region. Regions outside of us-east-1
require the appropriate
LocationConstraint
to be specified in order to create the bucket in the
desired region.
aws s3api create-bucket \
--bucket my-bucket \
--region eu-west-1 \
--create-bucket-configuration LocationConstraint=eu-west-1
Output:
{
"Location": "http://my-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/"
}
For more information, see Creating a bucket in the Amazon S3 User Guide.