Compose Objects

Overview

This page shows you how to compose Cloud Storage objects into a single object. A compose request takes between 1 and 32 objects and creates a new, composite object. The composite object is a concatenation of the source objects in the order they were specified in the request.

Note the following when composing objects:

  • The source objects are unaffected by the composition process. If they are meant to be temporary, you must delete them once you've successfully completed the composition.

Required roles

To get the permissions that you need to compose objects, ask your administrator to grant you the Storage Object User (roles/storage.objectUser) IAM role on the bucket. This predefined role contains the permissions required to compose objects. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:

Required permissions

  • storage.objects.create
  • storage.objects.delete
    • This permission is only required if you want to give the object you compose the same name as an object that already exists in the bucket.
  • storage.objects.get
  • storage.objects.list
    • This permission is only required if you want to use wildcards to compose objects with a common prefix without having to list each object separately in your Google Cloud CLI command.

If you want to set a retention configuration for the object you compose, you'll also need the storage.objects.setRetention permission. To get this permission, ask your administrator to grant you the Storage Object Admin (roles/storage.objectAdmin) role instead of the Storage Object User (roles/storage.objectUser) role.

You can also get these permissions with other predefined roles or custom roles.

For information about granting roles on buckets, see Use IAM with buckets.

Create a composite object

Command line

Use the gcloud storage objects compose command:

gcloud storage objects compose gs://BUCKET_NAME/SOURCE_OBJECT_1 gs://BUCKET_NAME/SOURCE_OBJECT_2 gs://BUCKET_NAME/COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME

Where:

  • BUCKET_NAME is the name of the bucket that contains the source objects.
  • SOURCE_OBJECT_1 and SOURCE_OBJECT_2 are the names of the source objects to use in the object composition.
  • COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME is the name you are giving to the result of the object composition.

Client libraries

C++

For more information, see the Cloud Storage C++ API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

namespace gcs = ::google::cloud::storage;
using ::google::cloud::StatusOr;
[](gcs::Client client, std::string const& bucket_name,
   std::string const& destination_object_name,
   std::vector<gcs::ComposeSourceObject> const& compose_objects) {
  StatusOr<gcs::ObjectMetadata> composed_object = client.ComposeObject(
      bucket_name, compose_objects, destination_object_name);
  if (!composed_object) throw std::move(composed_object).status();

  std::cout << "Composed new object " << composed_object->name()
            << " in bucket " << composed_object->bucket()
            << "\nFull metadata: " << *composed_object << "\n";
}

C#

For more information, see the Cloud Storage C# API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.


using Google.Apis.Storage.v1.Data;
using Google.Cloud.Storage.V1;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;

public class ComposeObjectSample
{
    public void ComposeObject(
        string bucketName = "your-bucket-name",
        string firstObjectName = "your-first-object-name",
        string secondObjectName = "your-second-object-name",
        string targetObjectName = "new-composite-object-name")
    {
        var storage = StorageClient.Create();

        var sourceObjects = new List<ComposeRequest.SourceObjectsData>
        {
            new ComposeRequest.SourceObjectsData { Name = firstObjectName },
            new ComposeRequest.SourceObjectsData { Name = secondObjectName }
        };
        //You could add as many sourceObjects as you want here, up to the max of 32.

        storage.Service.Objects.Compose(new ComposeRequest
        {
            SourceObjects = sourceObjects,
            Destination = new Google.Apis.Storage.v1.Data.Object { ContentType = "text/plain" }
        }, bucketName, targetObjectName).Execute();

        Console.WriteLine($"New composite file {targetObjectName} was created in bucket {bucketName}" +
            $" by combining {firstObjectName} and {secondObjectName}.");
    }
}

Go

For more information, see the Cloud Storage Go API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"io"
	"time"

	"cloud.google.com/go/storage"
)

// composeFile composes source objects to create a composite object.
func composeFile(w io.Writer, bucket, object1, object2, toObject string) error {
	// bucket := "bucket-name"
	// object1 := "object-name-1"
	// object2 := "object-name-2"
	// toObject := "object-name-3"

	ctx := context.Background()
	client, err := storage.NewClient(ctx)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("storage.NewClient: %w", err)
	}
	defer client.Close()

	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(ctx, time.Second*10)
	defer cancel()

	src1 := client.Bucket(bucket).Object(object1)
	src2 := client.Bucket(bucket).Object(object2)
	dst := client.Bucket(bucket).Object(toObject)

	// ComposerFrom takes varargs, so you can put as many objects here
	// as you want.
	_, err = dst.ComposerFrom(src1, src2).Run(ctx)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("ComposerFrom: %w", err)
	}
	fmt.Fprintf(w, "New composite object %v was created by combining %v and %v\n", toObject, object1, object2)
	return nil
}

Java

For more information, see the Cloud Storage Java API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

import com.google.cloud.storage.Blob;
import com.google.cloud.storage.BlobInfo;
import com.google.cloud.storage.Storage;
import com.google.cloud.storage.StorageOptions;

public class ComposeObject {
  public static void composeObject(
      String bucketName,
      String firstObjectName,
      String secondObjectName,
      String targetObjectName,
      String projectId) {
    // The ID of your GCP project
    // String projectId = "your-project-id";

    // The ID of your GCS bucket
    // String bucketName = "your-unique-bucket-name";

    // The ID of the first GCS object to compose
    // String firstObjectName = "your-first-object-name";

    // The ID of the second GCS object to compose
    // String secondObjectName = "your-second-object-name";

    // The ID to give the new composite object
    // String targetObjectName = "new-composite-object-name";

    Storage storage = StorageOptions.newBuilder().setProjectId(projectId).build().getService();

    // Optional: set a generation-match precondition to avoid potential race
    // conditions and data corruptions. The request returns a 412 error if the
    // preconditions are not met.
    Storage.BlobTargetOption precondition;
    if (storage.get(bucketName, targetObjectName) == null) {
      // For a target object that does not yet exist, set the DoesNotExist precondition.
      // This will cause the request to fail if the object is created before the request runs.
      precondition = Storage.BlobTargetOption.doesNotExist();
    } else {
      // If the destination already exists in your bucket, instead set a generation-match
      // precondition. This will cause the request to fail if the existing object's generation
      // changes before the request runs.
      precondition =
          Storage.BlobTargetOption.generationMatch(
              storage.get(bucketName, targetObjectName).getGeneration());
    }

    Storage.ComposeRequest composeRequest =
        Storage.ComposeRequest.newBuilder()
            // addSource takes varargs, so you can put as many objects here as you want, up to the
            // max of 32
            .addSource(firstObjectName, secondObjectName)
            .setTarget(BlobInfo.newBuilder(bucketName, targetObjectName).build())
            .setTargetOptions(precondition)
            .build();

    Blob compositeObject = storage.compose(composeRequest);

    System.out.println(
        "New composite object "
            + compositeObject.getName()
            + " was created by combining "
            + firstObjectName
            + " and "
            + secondObjectName);
  }
}

Node.js

For more information, see the Cloud Storage Node.js API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

/**
 * TODO(developer): Uncomment the following lines before running the sample.
 */
// The ID of your GCS bucket
// const bucketName = 'your-unique-bucket-name';

// The ID of the first GCS file to compose
// const firstFileName = 'your-first-file-name';

// The ID of the second GCS file to compose
// const secondFileName = 'your-second-file-name';

// The ID to give the new composite file
// const destinationFileName = 'new-composite-file-name';

// Imports the Google Cloud client library
const {Storage} = require('@google-cloud/storage');

// Creates a client
const storage = new Storage();

async function composeFile() {
  const bucket = storage.bucket(bucketName);
  const sources = [firstFileName, secondFileName];

  // Optional:
  // Set a generation-match precondition to avoid potential race conditions
  // and data corruptions. The request to compose is aborted if the object's
  // generation number does not match your precondition. For a destination
  // object that does not yet exist, set the ifGenerationMatch precondition to 0
  // If the destination object already exists in your bucket, set instead a
  // generation-match precondition using its generation number.
  const combineOptions = {
    ifGenerationMatch: destinationGenerationMatchPrecondition,
  };
  await bucket.combine(sources, destinationFileName, combineOptions);

  console.log(
    `New composite file ${destinationFileName} was created by combining ${firstFileName} and ${secondFileName}`
  );
}

composeFile().catch(console.error);

PHP

For more information, see the Cloud Storage PHP API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

use Google\Cloud\Storage\StorageClient;

/**
 * Compose two objects into a single target object.
 *
 * @param string $bucketName The name of your Cloud Storage bucket.
 *        (e.g. 'my-bucket')
 * @param string $firstObjectName The name of the first GCS object to compose.
 *        (e.g. 'my-object-1')
 * @param string $secondObjectName The name of the second GCS object to compose.
 *        (e.g. 'my-object-2')
 * @param string $targetObjectName The name of the object to be created.
 *        (e.g. 'composed-my-object-1-my-object-2')
 */
function compose_file(string $bucketName, string $firstObjectName, string $secondObjectName, string $targetObjectName): void
{
    $storage = new StorageClient();
    $bucket = $storage->bucket($bucketName);

    // In this example, we are composing only two objects, but Cloud Storage supports
    // composition of up to 32 objects.
    $objectsToCompose = [$firstObjectName, $secondObjectName];

    $targetObject = $bucket->compose($objectsToCompose, $targetObjectName, [
        'destination' => [
            'contentType' => 'application/octet-stream'
        ]
    ]);

    if ($targetObject->exists()) {
        printf(
            'New composite object %s was created by combining %s and %s',
            $targetObject->name(),
            $firstObjectName,
            $secondObjectName
        );
    }
}

Python

For more information, see the Cloud Storage Python API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

from google.cloud import storage


def compose_file(bucket_name, first_blob_name, second_blob_name, destination_blob_name):
    """Concatenate source blobs into destination blob."""
    # bucket_name = "your-bucket-name"
    # first_blob_name = "first-object-name"
    # second_blob_name = "second-blob-name"
    # destination_blob_name = "destination-object-name"

    storage_client = storage.Client()
    bucket = storage_client.bucket(bucket_name)
    destination = bucket.blob(destination_blob_name)
    destination.content_type = "text/plain"

    # Note sources is a list of Blob instances, up to the max of 32 instances per request
    sources = [bucket.blob(first_blob_name), bucket.blob(second_blob_name)]

    # Optional: set a generation-match precondition to avoid potential race conditions
    # and data corruptions. The request to compose is aborted if the object's
    # generation number does not match your precondition. For a destination
    # object that does not yet exist, set the if_generation_match precondition to 0.
    # If the destination object already exists in your bucket, set instead a
    # generation-match precondition using its generation number.
    # There is also an `if_source_generation_match` parameter, which is not used in this example.
    destination_generation_match_precondition = 0

    destination.compose(sources, if_generation_match=destination_generation_match_precondition)

    print(
        "New composite object {} in the bucket {} was created by combining {} and {}".format(
            destination_blob_name, bucket_name, first_blob_name, second_blob_name
        )
    )
    return destination

Ruby

For more information, see the Cloud Storage Ruby API reference documentation.

To authenticate to Cloud Storage, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for a local development environment.

def compose_file bucket_name:, first_file_name:, second_file_name:, destination_file_name:
  # The ID of your GCS bucket
  # bucket_name = "your-unique-bucket-name"

  # The ID of the first GCS object to compose
  # first_file_name = "your-first-file-name"

  # The ID of the second GCS object to compose
  # second_file_name = "your-second-file-name"

  # The ID to give the new composite object
  # destination_file_name = "new-composite-file-name"

  require "google/cloud/storage"

  storage = Google::Cloud::Storage.new
  bucket = storage.bucket bucket_name, skip_lookup: true

  destination = bucket.compose [first_file_name, second_file_name], destination_file_name do |f|
    f.content_type = "text/plain"
  end

  puts "Composed new file #{destination.name} in the bucket #{bucket_name} " \
       "by combining #{first_file_name} and #{second_file_name}"
end

REST APIs

JSON API

  1. Have gcloud CLI installed and initialized, in order to generate an access token for the Authorization header.

    Alternatively, you can create an access token using the OAuth 2.0 Playground and include it in the Authorization header.

  2. Create a JSON file that contains the following information:

    {
      "sourceObjects": [
        {
          "name": "SOURCE_OBJECT_1"
        },
        {
          "name": "SOURCE_OBJECT_2"
        }
      ],
      "destination": {
        "contentType": "COMPOSITE_OBJECT_CONTENT_TYPE"
      }
    }

    Where:

    • SOURCE_OBJECT_1 and SOURCE_OBJECT_2 are the names of the source objects to use in the object composition.
    • COMPOSITE_OBJECT_CONTENT_TYPE is the Content-Type of the resulting composite object.
  3. Use cURL to call the JSON API with a POST Object request:

    curl -X POST --data-binary @JSON_FILE_NAME \
      -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
      -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
      "https://storage.googleapis.com/storage/v1/b/BUCKET_NAME/o/COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME/compose"

    Where:

    • JSON_FILE_NAME is the name of the file you created in the previous step.
    • BUCKET_NAME is the name of the bucket that contains the source objects.
    • COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME is the name you are giving to the result of the object composition.

If successful, the response is an object resource for the resulting composite object.

XML API

  1. Have gcloud CLI installed and initialized, in order to generate an access token for the Authorization header.

    Alternatively, you can create an access token using the OAuth 2.0 Playground and include it in the Authorization header.

  2. Create an XML file that contains the following information:

      <ComposeRequest>
        <Component>
          <Name>SOURCE_OBJECT_1</Name>
        </Component>
        <Component>
          <Name>SOURCE_OBJECT_2</Name>
        </Component>
      </ComposeRequest>

    Where:

    • SOURCE_OBJECT_1 and SOURCE_OBJECT_2 are the names of the source objects to use in the object composition.
  3. Use cURL to call the XML API with a PUT Object request and compose query string parameter:

    curl -X PUT --data-binary @XML_FILE_NAME \
      -H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
      -H "Content-Type: COMPOSITE_OBJECT_CONTENT_TYPE" \
      "https://storage.googleapis.com/BUCKET_NAME/COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME?compose"

    Where:

    • XML_FILE_NAME is the name of the file you created in the previous step.
    • COMPOSITE_OBJECT_CONTENT_TYPE is the Content-Type of the resulting composite object.
    • BUCKET_NAME is the name of the bucket that contains the source objects.
    • COMPOSITE_OBJECT_NAME is the name you are giving to the result of the object composition.

If successful, an empty response body is returned.

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