To determine whether your Object Storage system supports this feature, see Manage objects and containers. Alternatively, check with your service provider.
Scheduling an object for deletion is helpful for managing objects that you do not want to permanently store, such as log files, recurring full backups of a dataset, or documents or images that become outdated at a specified time.
To schedule an object for deletion, include one of these headers with
the PUT
or POST
request on the object:
1348691905
represents Wed, 26 Sept 2012 20:38:25 GMT
. It specifies the time you
want the object to expire, no longer be served, and be deleted completely
from the object store.X-Delete-At
header that is set to
the sum of the X-Delete-After
value plus the current time, in
seconds.Note
Use http://www.epochconverter.com/ to convert dates to and from epoch timestamps and for batch conversions.
Use the POST method to assign expiration headers to existing objects that you want to expire.
In this example, the X-Delete-At
header is assigned a UNIX epoch
timestamp in integer form for Mon, 11 Jun 2012 15:38:25 GMT
.
$ curl -i publicURL/marktwain/goodbye -X PUT -H "X-Auth-Token: token" \
-H "X-Delete-At: 1390581073" -H "Content-Length: 14" -H \
"Content-Type: application/octet-stream"
In this example, the X-Delete-After
header is set to 864000 seconds.
The object expires after this time.
PUT /<api version>/<account>/<container>/<object> HTTP/1.1
Host: storage.example.com
X-Auth-Token: eaaafd18-0fed-4b3a-81b4-663c99ec1cbb
Content-Type: image/jpeg
X-Delete-After: 864000
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