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Blob Storage

Azure Blob Storage is a highly scalable object storage solution optimized for storing massive volumes of unstructured data, such as text and binary content. It supports block blobs, append blobs, and page blobs, and is commonly used for serving documents, images, and streaming media. For more information, see Introduction to Azure Blob Storage.

LocalStack for Azure provides a local environment for building and testing applications that make use of Azure Blob Storage. The supported APIs are available on our API Coverage section, which provides information on the extent of Blob Storage’s integration with LocalStack.

This guide is designed for users new to Blob Storage and assumes basic knowledge of the Azure CLI and our azlocal wrapper script.

Start your LocalStack container using your preferred method. For more information, see Introduction to LocalStack for Azure.

Create a resource group to contain your storage resources:

Terminal window
azlocal group create \
--name rg-blob-demo \
--location westeurope
Output
{
"id": "/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000/resourceGroups/rg-blob-demo",
"location": "westeurope",
"managedBy": null,
"name": "rg-blob-demo",
"properties": {
"provisioningState": "Succeeded"
},
"tags": null,
"type": "Microsoft.Resources/resourceGroups"
}

Create a storage account in the resource group:

Terminal window
azlocal storage account create \
--name stblobdemols \
--resource-group rg-blob-demo \
--location westeurope \
--sku Standard_LRS \
--only-show-errors
Output
{
...
"id": "/subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000/resourceGroups/rg-blob-demo/providers/Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/stblobdemols",
...
"name": "stblobdemols",
...
"placement": null,
"primaryEndpoints": {
"blob": "https://stblobdemolsblob.localhost.localstack.cloud:4566",
...
"container": "https://stblobdemolscontainer.localhost.localstack.cloud:4566",
...
},
....
}

There are three ways to authenticate storage container commands against the emulator:

Retrieve the account key and pass it with --account-name and --account-key:

Terminal window
ACCOUNT_KEY=$(azlocal storage account keys list \
--account-name stblobdemols \
--resource-group rg-blob-demo \
--query "[0].value" \
--output tsv)
azlocal storage container list \
--account-name stblobdemols \
--account-key "$ACCOUNT_KEY"

Use --auth-mode login to authenticate with the current session credentials:

Terminal window
azlocal storage container list \
--account-name stblobdemols \
--auth-mode login

Bundle the account name and key into a single value:

Terminal window
CONNECTION_STRING=$(azlocal storage account show-connection-string \
--name stblobdemols \
--resource-group rg-blob-demo \
--query connectionString -o tsv)
azlocal storage container list \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"

The remaining examples in this guide use connection strings for brevity.

Create a container in the storage account:

Terminal window
azlocal storage container create \
--name documents \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"
Output
{
"created": true
}

Verify the container exists:

Terminal window
azlocal storage container exists \
--name documents \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"
Output
{
"exists": true
}

List containers in the storage account:

Terminal window
azlocal storage container list \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"
Output
[
{
...
"name": "documents",
"properties": {
...
"lease": {
...
},
...
},
...
}
]

Upload a local file as a block blob:

Terminal window
echo "Hello from LocalStack" > /tmp/hello.txt
azlocal storage blob upload \
--container-name documents \
--name hello.txt \
--file /tmp/hello.txt \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"
Output
{
"client_request_id": "...",
"content_md5": "...",
"date": "...",
"etag": "...
...
}

List blobs in the container:

Terminal window
azlocal storage blob list \
--container-name documents \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING" \
--output table

Download the blob to a local file:

Terminal window
azlocal storage blob download \
--container-name documents \
--name hello.txt \
--file /tmp/hello-downloaded.txt \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"
Output
Finished[#############################################################] 100.0000%
{
"container": "documents",
...
}

Delete the blob:

Terminal window
azlocal storage blob delete \
--container-name documents \
--name hello.txt \
--connection-string "$CONNECTION_STRING"

The Blob Storage emulator supports the following features:

  • Data plane REST API: Blob CRUD, message operations (put, peek, get, delete), container metadata, stored access policies, and SAS token generation.
  • Control plane REST API: Create, update, delete, and get containers, get and set container service properties via Azure Resource Manager.
  • Multiple authentication modes: Storage account key, login credentials, and connection strings.
  • No data persistence across restarts: Blob data is not persisted and is lost when the LocalStack emulator is stopped or restarted.
  • Blob service properties: set_service_properties is a no-op and get_service_properties returns empty defaults, unlike Azure where CORS, logging, and metrics settings are persisted and applied.
  • Storage account keys: Keys are emulator-generated rather than managed by Azure.
  • Header validation: Unsupported request headers or parameters are silently accepted instead of being rejected.
  • API version enforcement: The emulator does not validate the x-ms-version header; all API versions are accepted.

The following samples demonstrate how to use Blob Storage with LocalStack for Azure:

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