I have uploaded several files into the same folder on Google Cloud Storage using the Google Cloud Console. I would now like to move several of the files to a newly created folder in Google Cloud Storage and I cannot see how to do that via the Google Cloud Console. I found instructions to move the files via command prompt instructions on gsutil
. However, I am not comfortable with command line interfaces and have not been able to get gsutil
to work on my machine.
Is there a way to move files in Google Cloud Storage from one folder to another via the Google Cloud Console?
Update: Google Cloud Shell provides a terminal within the Google Cloud Console site without having to manually create VMs; it comes with gsutil
and Google Cloud SDK pre-installed and pre-authenticated.
Prior answer: If you're having issues installing gsutil
on your computer, consider the following approach:
Spin up an f1-micro
instance with the Google-provided Debian image which will have gsutil
preinstalled.
Use the SSH button to connect to it using the browser interface (you can also use gcutil
or gcloud
commands, if you have those installed and available).
Run gcloud auth login --no-launch-browser
within the instance. It will give you a URL to open with your browser. Once you open it, grant the OAuth permissions, and it will display a code. Paste that code back into the command-line window where you ran the command so that it gets the authentication token.
Run the gsutil mv
command, as suggested by Travis Hobrla:
gsutil mv gs://bucket/source-object gs://bucket/dest-object
Once you're done with gsutil
, delete the instance by clicking on the Delete
button at the top of the VM instance detail page. Make sure that the box marked "Delete boot disk when instance is deleted" on the same VM instance page is checked, so that you don't leave an orphaned disk around, which you will be charged for.
You can also browse your persistent disks on the "Disks" tab right below the "VM instances" tab, and delete disks manually there, or make sure there aren't an orphaned disks in the future.
Given the current price of $0.013/hr for an f1-micro
instance, this should cost you less than a penny to do this, as you'll only be charged while the instance exists.