Digital Ocean Spaces compared to Amazon S3

Digital Ocean Spaces
Versus
Amazon S3

Features

Storage Features of Digital Ocean Spaces compared to Amazon S3
Digital Ocean SpacesFeaturesAmazon S3
Cloud based
GDPR Compliant
On premise
Open source
Versioned files
Cross Region Replication
API
S3 Compatible API
Portal, REST apiManagement interfacesPortal, CLI, REST api
Event hooks/pubsub
SLABest effort. Credits below 99.9%. That is 43 minutes of downtime allowed per month without having to issue credits
250 GBMaximum object filesize5 TB
Files smaller than 1MB are not optimally stored on DO’s Spaces.Minimum object filesizeA 0 byte file has 8 KB of chargeable overhead for metadata.
unlimitedRecommended max file count per bucketunlimited
250 GBMax filesize for a bucketunlimited
unlimited. Note that a price is calculated per ‘Space’.Maximum amount of buckets500 - upgradable if you need it.
Logs
Authentication / ACLAmazon has designed their very own PreSigned URL mechanism which is now used globally across providers
Spaces leverages Digital Ocean’s built in CDN, which is a mix of two CDNs depending on the region your traffic is servedCDN integrationS3 integrates seamlessly into Amazon’s CloudFront CDN, as well as other CDNs
Centurylink is the backbone provider for large parts of the globePeering & interconnect
Unsupported Paid Feature Supported Unknown

Descriptions


Digital Ocean Spaces


Digital Ocean is one of the few companies that grew over time and actually made it to the champions leage of Cloud Hosting Providers. It’s only logical DO should offer an object storage solution.

Digital Ocean has established itself over the years as being developer friendly, posting an abundance of useful Sysadmin/developer articles. The value and quality of their blog closely represents their product, which is clean, has good concise documentation, and works great.

Their clients include InfluxDB and Edge Compute company Section; (see our srvrlss profile on them).


Amazon S3


World’s biggest Cloud Storage Provider. Amazon, traditionally an online book store, has put a target on the cloud compute space when it shifted its focus to Amazon Web Services (AWS) in 2006. E-Commerce competition was tough, but public cloud companies back then were scarce, and usability and user friendly products were a long way from being invented.

Amazon’s reign on cloud computing has left its mark in public cloud-land. Competitors have trouble keeping up, if they even get to a point of feature-parity at all. With Amazon’s S3 storage being one of the first, it has basically dictated a standard for the public cloud’s blob storage protocol.

Needless to say, Amazon invented the S3 (Simple Storage Service) standard.