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Downloading Large Files with Lambda

Lambda functions (regardless of size) have 512MB of disk space in the /tmp directory. Which means downloading and uploading files less than 512MB is a simple task.

But what if you need more? In this repo, we'll show you how to download a 1.3GB file into an S3 bucket using lambda. The solution can be expanded to files of nearly any size, provided the lambda has sufficient time to download it.

Setup

$ cd terraform
$ terraform apply --auto-approve
$ cd ../serverless
$ sls deploy

First we have to setup our s3 bucket and lambda function. For the bucket, we'll use Terraform. Terraform has a few advantages over Cloudformation here, namely:

  • We can more easily setup advance settings like lifecycle policy and kms encryption
  • We can set force-destroy on a bucket, to allow us easily cleanup afterwards
  • I just prefer here...don't @ me :)

Once our bucket is created, we then deploy the lambda function. For this, we use Serverless Framework, which has advantages over Terraform namely:

  • It's far more opionated, which means we have to tinker less
  • It's more suited for Lambda than Terraform
  • I just prefer it over Terraform for lambdas ... don't @ me :)

What we installed

Now, once we setup everything -- we'll have:

  • Randomly named bucket that begins with multipart-test, which has
    • KMS encryption turned on with the default aws/S3 CMK
    • A lifecycle policy, that expires all multi-part uploads that haven't completed after 1 day
    • Versioining turned on
  • Two SSM parameters, holding the bucket name and bucket arn values
  • A lambda function that can access the internet, and:
    • s3:PutObject on the bucket
    • multiple kms permissions for the default aws/s3 key

How it works

Lambda only has 512MB of space on disk, so we have two options, download the file to memory (which can be expanded to 3008MB) or download the file incrementally in chunks.

We choose the chunk option, effectively downloading in chunks at a time, and using s3 multipart upload to upload those chunks to S3. We then complete the multi-part upload, and voila, our small lambda can downloads Gigabytes from the internet, and store it in S3.

The real magic comes from this bit of code, which uses the Python Requests library, to download stream the file in configurable sized chunks, and for every chunks upload it as a 'part' to S3. This way, the lambda only has to support the size of the part at the time, and not the entire file.

def download_and_upload(url, upload_id, key, bucket, chunk_size_in_MB):
    parts = []

    # stream
    with requests.get(url, stream=True) as r:
        r.raise_for_status()
        logger.info({"headers": r.headers})

        # download & upload chunks
        for part_number, chunk in enumerate(r.iter_content(chunk_size=chunk_size_in_MB * 1024 * 1024)):
            response = client.upload_part(
                Bucket=bucket,
                Key=key,
                UploadId=upload_id,
                PartNumber=part_number + 1,
                Body=chunk,
            )
            logger.debug({"UploadID": upload_id, "part_number": part_number + 1, "status": "uploaded"})
            parts.append({
                "ETag": response['ETag'],
                "PartNumber": part_number + 1,
            })
    logger.debug(parts)
    return parts

KMS Encryption

KMS encryption for S3 is pretty straightforward, and should be the default setting for all your production buckets.

But KMS encryption with multi-part upload is a slightly different beast, as it requires additional permissions, as can be gleaned from the boto3 documentation:

To perform a multipart upload with encryption using an AWS KMS CMK, the requester must have permission to the kms:Encrypt , kms:Decrypt , kms:ReEncrypt* , kms:GenerateDataKey* , and kms:DescribeKey actions on the key. These permissions are required because Amazon S3 must decrypt and read data from the encrypted file parts before it completes the multipart upload.

So in order to grant our Lambda the right permission, we provide the following:

  iamRoleStatements:
  - Effect: Allow
    Action: s3:PutObject
    Resource: ${ssm:${self:custom.ssm_prefix}/${self:custom.bucket_logical_name}/arn}/*
  - Effect: Allow
    Action:
      - kms:Encrypt
      - kms:Decrypt
      - kms:ReEncrypt*
      - kms:GenerateDataKey*
      - kms:DescribeKey
    Resource:
      Fn::Join:
        - ":"
        - - arn:aws:kms
          - ${self:provider.region}  
          - Ref: AWS::AccountId
          - alias/aws/s3 #default aws/S3 key

In the above, we grant the lambda s3:PutObject for the bucket, but also access to the KMS encryption key. For this, we reference the key alias of the default S3 CMK (aws/s3), but you can swap that out for any alias or key you wish.

Getting the big file

By default, the lambda will try to download a ~10MB file from wikipedia, this is mostly for testing purposes. The file is downloaded in chunks of 5MB (the smallest chunk size possible), and multi-part uploaded to S3.

For a larger file, we can use the following command for serverless framework:

$ sls invoke -f download_big_file -d '{"url":"https://pricing.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/offers/v1.0/aws/AmazonEC2/current/index.json", "chunk_size": 256}'

This downloads a ~1.3GB file from aws in us-east-1 (hence why I default the region to us-east-1), totally in memory, via multi-part upload with parts of size 256. The operation typically takes 20-30 seconds to complete, and the final result is the 1.3GB file in your S3 bucket (with default KMS encryption turned on)

Uninstall

To uninstall

$ cd serverless
$ serverless remove
$ cd terraform
$ terraform destroy

Nothing will be left in your account! :)

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