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Azure Blob Storage List All Python example

This folder contains a Python application example that handles Blob storage on Microsoft Azure.

List information about all Blob Storage containers and the blobs they contain in an Azure storage account.

Requirements

  • You must have a Microsoft Azure subscription.

  • You must have the following installed:

    • Python 3
    • Azure CLI
  • The code was written for:

    • Python 3
    • Azure SDK for Python: New Client Libraries (Azure Blob Storage library v12)
  • You install individual Azure library packages on a per-project basis depending on your needs. It is recommended using Python virtual environments for each project. There is no standalone "SDK" installer for Python.

  • Install the specified python packages.

    pip install -r requirements.txt

Using the code

  • Sign in Azure (Interactively).

    The Azure CLI's default authentication method for logins uses a web browser and access token to sign in.

    1. Run the Azure CLI login command.

      az login

      If the CLI can open your default browser, it will do so and load an Azure sign-in page.

      Otherwise, open a browser page at https://aka.ms/devicelogin and enter the authorization code displayed in your terminal.

      If no web browser is available or the web browser fails to open, use device code flow with az login --use-device-code.

    2. Sign in with your account credentials in the browser.

    Make sure you select your subscription by:

    az account set --subscription <name or id>
  • Create a storage account.

    An Azure storage account contains all of your Azure Storage data objects: blobs, file shares, queues, tables, and disks. The storage account provides a unique namespace for your Azure Storage data that's accessible from anywhere in the world over HTTP or HTTPS. Data in your storage account is durable and highly available, secure, and massively scalable.

    An storage account can content containers and every container can content blobs.

    Storage Account
                ├── Container_1/
                │   ├── Blob_1_1/
                │   └── Blob_1_2/
                │
                └── Container_2/
                    ├── Blob_2_1/
                    ├── Blob_2_2/
                    └── Blob_2_3/

    Create a storage account using the Azure portal:

    1. Select the Storage account option and choose Create.
    2. Select the Subscription in which you want to create the new storage account.
    3. Select the Resource Group for your storage account.
    4. Enter a name for your storage account.
    5. Select the Region for your storage account.
    6. Select the Performance to be used.
    7. Select the Redundancy to be used.
    8. Click Create to create the storage account.
  • Configure your application.

    A connection string includes the authentication information required for your application to access data in an Azure Storage account at runtime.

    Your application needs to access the connection string at runtime to authorize requests made to Azure Storage.

    You can find your storage account's connection strings in the Azure portal:

    1. Navigate to Storage Account.
    2. Select your storage account.
    3. Select Access keys and you can see your Storage account connection string.

    The connection string looks like this:

    DefaultEndpointsProtocol=https;AccountName=<ACCOUNT_NAME>;AccountKey=<ACCOUNT_KEY>;EndpointSuffix=core.windows.net

    The application configuration is stored in the app.cfg file. The file content is:

    [Configuration]
    StorageAccountConnectionString=<STORAGE_ACCOUNT_CONNECTION_STRING>

    You must edit the app.cfg file and replace the value of:

    • <STORAGE_ACCOUNT_CONNECTION_STRING> by the connection string of your storage account.

    The application uses this information for accessing your Azure storage account.

  • Run the code.

    Run application:

    python blobstoragelistall.py
  • Test the application.

    You should see the list of blobs in all Blob Storage containers in an Azure storage account.