This module allows you to read and write images from Amazon S3 instead of storing them locally.
After installing, new images that you save will use an absolute URL to S3. Any
requests to /content/images/
will be proxied to S3, so that any previous
images in your blog will not be affected.
You will need to have a the custom storage module directly in your project directory, the easiest way to do this is:
$ npm install ghost-s3-compat
$ mkdir content/storage
$ cp -r node_modules/ghost-s3-compat content/storage/ghost-s3-compat
Create new IAM User with permissions to get object from that bucket. Save the
ACCESS_KEY
and ACCESS_SECRET_KEY
.
In config.js
, add a storage
block for each environment.
storage: {
active: 'ghost-s3',
'ghost-s3': {
accessKeyId: 'Put_your_access_key_here',
secretAccessKey: 'Put_your_secret_key_here',
bucket: 'Put_your_bucket_name_here',
region: 'Put_your_bucket_region_here'
}
},
You can add assetHost
to your config to specify a virtual host url. This is
most frequently used with a content delivery network (CDN) such as CloudFront,
CloudFlare, or others. The modified storage
block would be:
storage: {
active: 'ghost-s3',
'ghost-s3': {
accessKeyId: 'ACCESS_KEY',
secretAccessKey: 'SECRET_ACCESS_KEY',
bucket: 'S3_BUCKET_NAME',
region: 'S3_REGION',
assetHost: 'https://cdn.yourdomain.com/'
}
}
You can add assetHost
to your config to specify a virtual host url. For more
information, read this section
in the AWS docs.
- Original work Copyright (c) 2015 Hoang Pham Huu [email protected]
- Modified work Copyright (c) 2016 Curiosity Media, Inc.
Released under the MIT license.