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@azure/storage-blob
Advanced tools
The @azure/storage-blob npm package is designed for working with Azure Blob Storage. It provides a comprehensive set of features to interact with Azure Blob Storage, including uploading and downloading blobs, managing containers, and handling blob metadata and properties. This package is part of the Azure SDK for JavaScript.
Uploading blobs
This code sample demonstrates how to upload data to a blob in Azure Blob Storage. It involves creating a BlobServiceClient, getting a reference to a container, and then uploading data to a blob within that container.
const { BlobServiceClient } = require('@azure/storage-blob');
const blobServiceClient = BlobServiceClient.fromConnectionString(process.env.AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING);
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient('my-container');
const blockBlobClient = containerClient.getBlockBlobClient('my-blob');
await blockBlobClient.upload(data, data.length);
Downloading blobs
This code sample shows how to download the content of a blob. It involves creating a BlobServiceClient, getting a container client, and then downloading the blob's content using the block blob client.
const { BlobServiceClient } = require('@azure/storage-blob');
const blobServiceClient = BlobServiceClient.fromConnectionString(process.env.AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING);
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient('my-container');
const blockBlobClient = containerClient.getBlockBlobClient('my-blob');
const downloadBlockBlobResponse = await blockBlobClient.download(0);
const downloadedContent = await streamToString(downloadBlockBlobResponse.readableStreamBody);
Listing blobs in a container
This example demonstrates how to list all blobs in a specific container. It involves creating a BlobServiceClient, obtaining a container client, and iterating over the blobs in the container, printing out their names.
const { BlobServiceClient } = require('@azure/storage-blob');
const blobServiceClient = BlobServiceClient.fromConnectionString(process.env.AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING);
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient('my-container');
for await (const blob of containerClient.listBlobsFlat()) {
console.log(`Blob name: ${blob.name}`);
}
The AWS SDK for JavaScript allows developers to interact with AWS services, including Amazon S3 for object storage, which is similar to Azure Blob Storage. Compared to @azure/storage-blob, aws-sdk supports a broader range of AWS services but is specific to AWS infrastructure.
Azure Storage Blob is Microsoft's object storage solution for the cloud. Blob storage is optimized for storing massive amounts of unstructured data. Unstructured data is data that does not adhere to a particular data model or definition, such as text or binary data.
This project provides a client library in JavaScript that makes it easy to consume Microsoft Azure Storage Blob service.
Use the client libraries in this package to:
Key links
See our support policy for more details.
The preferred way to install the Azure Storage Blob client library for JavaScript is to use the npm package manager. Type the following into a terminal window:
npm install @azure/storage-blob
Azure Storage supports several ways to authenticate. In order to interact with the Azure Blob Storage service you'll need to create an instance of a Storage client - BlobServiceClient
, ContainerClient
, or BlobClient
for example. See samples for creating the BlobServiceClient
to learn more about authentication.
The Azure Blob Storage service supports the use of Azure Active Directory to authenticate requests to its APIs. The @azure/identity
package provides a variety of credential types that your application can use to do this. Please see the README for @azure/identity
for more details and samples to get you started.
This library is compatible with Node.js and browsers, and validated against LTS Node.js versions (>=8.16.0) and latest versions of Chrome, Firefox and Edge.
This library requires certain DOM objects to be globally available when used in the browser, which web workers do not make available by default. You will need to polyfill these to make this library work in web workers.
For more information please refer to our documentation for using Azure SDK for JS in Web Workers
This library depends on following DOM APIs which need external polyfills loaded when used in web workers:
There are differences between Node.js and browsers runtime. When getting started with this library, pay attention to APIs or classes marked with "ONLY AVAILABLE IN NODE.JS RUNTIME" or "ONLY AVAILABLE IN BROWSERS".
gzip
or deflate
format and its content encoding is set accordingly, downloading behavior is different between Node.js and browsers. In Node.js storage clients will download the blob in its compressed format, while in browsers the data will be downloaded in de-compressed format.StorageSharedKeyCredential
generateAccountSASQueryParameters()
generateBlobSASQueryParameters()
BlockBlobClient.uploadData()
is available in both Node.js and browsers.
BlockBlobClient.uploadFile()
BlockBlobClient.uploadStream()
BlobClient.downloadToBuffer()
BlobClient.downloadToFile()
BlockBlobClient.uploadBrowserData()
To use this client library in the browser, first you need to use a bundler. For details on how to do this, please refer to our bundling documentation.
You need to set up Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) rules for your storage account if you need to develop for browsers. Go to Azure portal and Azure Storage Explorer, find your storage account, create new CORS rules for blob/queue/file/table service(s).
For example, you can create following CORS settings for debugging. But please customize the settings carefully according to your requirements in production environment.
Blob storage is designed for:
Blob storage offers three types of resources:
BlobServiceClient
ContainerClient
BlobClient
To use the clients, import the package into your file:
const AzureStorageBlob = require("@azure/storage-blob");
Alternatively, selectively import only the types you need:
const { BlobServiceClient, StorageSharedKeyCredential } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
The BlobServiceClient
requires an URL to the blob service and an access credential. It also optionally accepts some settings in the options
parameter.
DefaultAzureCredential
from @azure/identity
packageRecommended way to instantiate a BlobServiceClient
Setup : Reference - Authorize access to blobs and queues with Azure Active Directory from a client application - https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/storage/common/storage-auth-aad-app
Register a new AAD application and give permissions to access Azure Storage on behalf of the signed-in user
API permissions
section, select Add a permission
and choose Microsoft APIs
.Azure Storage
and select the checkbox next to user_impersonation
and then click Add permissions
. This would allow the application to access Azure Storage on behalf of the signed-in user.Grant access to Azure Blob data with RBAC in the Azure Portal
Access control (IAM)
tab (in the left-side-navbar of your storage account in the azure-portal).Environment setup for the sample
CLIENT ID
and TENANT ID
. In the "Certificates & Secrets" tab, create a secret and note that down.const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
// Enter your storage account name
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
See the Azure AD Auth sample for a complete example using this method.
[Note - Above steps are only for Node.js]
Alternatively, you can instantiate a BlobServiceClient
using the fromConnectionString()
static method with the full connection string as the argument. (The connection string can be obtained from the azure portal.) [ONLY AVAILABLE IN NODE.JS RUNTIME]
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const connStr = "<connection string>";
const blobServiceClient = BlobServiceClient.fromConnectionString(connStr);
StorageSharedKeyCredential
Alternatively, you instantiate a BlobServiceClient
with a StorageSharedKeyCredential
by passing account-name and account-key as arguments. (The account-name and account-key can be obtained from the azure portal.)
[ONLY AVAILABLE IN NODE.JS RUNTIME]
const { BlobServiceClient, StorageSharedKeyCredential } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
// Enter your storage account name and shared key
const account = "<account>";
const accountKey = "<accountkey>";
// Use StorageSharedKeyCredential with storage account and account key
// StorageSharedKeyCredential is only available in Node.js runtime, not in browsers
const sharedKeyCredential = new StorageSharedKeyCredential(account, accountKey);
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
sharedKeyCredential
);
Also, You can instantiate a BlobServiceClient
with a shared access signatures (SAS). You can get the SAS token from the Azure Portal or generate one using generateAccountSASQueryParameters()
.
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account name>";
const sas = "<service Shared Access Signature Token>";
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net${sas}`);
Use BlobServiceClient.getContainerClient()
to get a container client instance then create a new container resource.
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
async function main() {
// Create a container
const containerName = `newcontainer${new Date().getTime()}`;
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient(containerName);
const createContainerResponse = await containerClient.create();
console.log(`Create container ${containerName} successfully`, createContainerResponse.requestId);
}
main();
Use BlobServiceClient.listContainers()
function to iterate the containers,
with the new for-await-of
syntax:
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
async function main() {
let i = 1;
let containers = blobServiceClient.listContainers();
for await (const container of containers) {
console.log(`Container ${i++}: ${container.name}`);
}
}
main();
Alternatively without using for-await-of
:
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
async function main() {
let i = 1;
let iter = blobServiceClient.listContainers();
let containerItem = await iter.next();
while (!containerItem.done) {
console.log(`Container ${i++}: ${containerItem.value.name}`);
containerItem = await iter.next();
}
}
main();
In addition, pagination is supported for listing too via byPage()
:
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
async function main() {
let i = 1;
for await (const response of blobServiceClient.listContainers().byPage({ maxPageSize: 20 })) {
if (response.containerItems) {
for (const container of response.containerItems) {
console.log(`Container ${i++}: ${container.name}`);
}
}
}
}
main();
For a complete sample on iterating containers please see samples/v12/typescript/src/listContainers.ts.
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
const containerName = "<container name>";
async function main() {
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient(containerName);
const content = "Hello world!";
const blobName = "newblob" + new Date().getTime();
const blockBlobClient = containerClient.getBlockBlobClient(blobName);
const uploadBlobResponse = await blockBlobClient.upload(content, content.length);
console.log(`Upload block blob ${blobName} successfully`, uploadBlobResponse.requestId);
}
main();
Similar to listing containers.
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
const containerName = "<container name>";
async function main() {
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient(containerName);
let i = 1;
let blobs = containerClient.listBlobsFlat();
for await (const blob of blobs) {
console.log(`Blob ${i++}: ${blob.name}`);
}
}
main();
For a complete sample on iterating blobs please see samples/v12/typescript/src/listBlobsFlat.ts.
const { DefaultAzureCredential } = require("@azure/identity");
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account>";
const defaultAzureCredential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(
`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net`,
defaultAzureCredential
);
const containerName = "<container name>";
const blobName = "<blob name>";
async function main() {
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient(containerName);
const blobClient = containerClient.getBlobClient(blobName);
// Get blob content from position 0 to the end
// In Node.js, get downloaded data by accessing downloadBlockBlobResponse.readableStreamBody
const downloadBlockBlobResponse = await blobClient.download();
const downloaded = (
await streamToBuffer(downloadBlockBlobResponse.readableStreamBody)
).toString();
console.log("Downloaded blob content:", downloaded);
// [Node.js only] A helper method used to read a Node.js readable stream into a Buffer
async function streamToBuffer(readableStream) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
const chunks = [];
readableStream.on("data", (data) => {
chunks.push(data instanceof Buffer ? data : Buffer.from(data));
});
readableStream.on("end", () => {
resolve(Buffer.concat(chunks));
});
readableStream.on("error", reject);
});
}
}
main();
Please refer to the JavaScript Bundle section for more information on using this library in the browser.
const { BlobServiceClient } = require("@azure/storage-blob");
const account = "<account name>";
const sas = "<service Shared Access Signature Token>";
const containerName = "<container name>";
const blobName = "<blob name>";
const blobServiceClient = new BlobServiceClient(`https://${account}.blob.core.windows.net${sas}`);
async function main() {
const containerClient = blobServiceClient.getContainerClient(containerName);
const blobClient = containerClient.getBlobClient(blobName);
// Get blob content from position 0 to the end
// In browsers, get downloaded data by accessing downloadBlockBlobResponse.blobBody
const downloadBlockBlobResponse = await blobClient.download();
const downloaded = await blobToString(await downloadBlockBlobResponse.blobBody);
console.log("Downloaded blob content", downloaded);
// [Browsers only] A helper method used to convert a browser Blob into string.
async function blobToString(blob) {
const fileReader = new FileReader();
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fileReader.onloadend = (ev) => {
resolve(ev.target.result);
};
fileReader.onerror = reject;
fileReader.readAsText(blob);
});
}
}
main();
A complete example of simple scenarios is at samples/v12/typescript/src/sharedKeyAuth.ts.
Enabling logging may help uncover useful information about failures. In order to see a log of HTTP requests and responses, set the AZURE_LOG_LEVEL
environment variable to info
. Alternatively, logging can be enabled at runtime by calling setLogLevel
in the @azure/logger
:
const { setLogLevel } = require("@azure/logger");
setLogLevel("info");
More code samples:
If you'd like to contribute to this library, please read the contributing guide to learn more about how to build and test the code.
Also refer to Storage specific guide for additional information on setting up the test environment for storage libraries.
FAQs
Microsoft Azure Storage SDK for JavaScript - Blob
We found that @azure/storage-blob demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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