Tools for streaming data to and from S3.
A fork and new home of the now unmaintained Gilt Foundation Classes (com.gilt.gfc
), now called the GFC Collective, maintained by some of the original authors.
The latest version is 1.0.0, released on 21/Jan/2020 and cross-built against Scala 2.12.x and 2.13.x.
If you're using SBT, add the following line to your build file:
libraryDependencies += "org.gfccollective" %% "gfc-aws-s3" % "1.0.0"
For Maven and other build tools, you can visit search.maven.org. (This search will also list other available libraries from the GFC Collective.)
The library provides tools to integrate akka-streams with Amazon S3 storage service. The library contains akka-stream Sources and Sinks to Stream data from and to S3.
Allows uploading data to S3 in a streaming manner. The underlying implementation uses S3 Multipart upload API. Due to the API requirements the size of the part could not be less than 5Mb. You are to provide the size of the chunk on Source creation, the internals will automatically slice the incoming data into the chunks of the given size and upload those chunks to S3.
To create the source:
import org.gfccollective.aws.s3.akka.S3MultipartUploaderSink._
val bucketName = "test-bucket"
val fileKey = "test-file"
val s3Client = AmazonS3ClientBuilder.standard()
.withRegion("us-east-1")
.build
val chunkSize = 6 * 1024 * 1024 // 6 Megabytes
val sink = Sink.s3MultipartUpload(s3Client, bucketName, fileKey, chunkSize)
The sink could also be created in different style manner:
import org.gfccollective.aws.s3.akka.S3MultipartUploaderSink
val sink = S3MultipartUploaderSink(s3Client, bucketName, fileKey, chunkSize)
The materialized value of the sink is the total length of the uploaded file in case of successful uploads.
Please, bear in mind, that incomplete uploads eat S3 space (meaning cost you some money) but are not shown in AWS S3 UI. Probably the best idea is to configure S3 so that it will delete parts of the incomplete uploads automatically after given amount of time (docs)
Allows accessing S3 objects as a stream source in two different manners - by parts and by chunks. The difference is subtle but important:
- accessing by parts means that you know or assume that the file was uploaded using S3 multipart API. If the was not uploaded using multipart API it would be downloaded in a single chunk. This will not eat memory, as the source does real streaming, and allows to control the buffer size for download, but could lead to some problems with very large files, as S3 tends to drop long-lasting connections sometimes.
To do that, use:
import org.gfccollective.aws.s3.akka.S3DownloaderSource._
val bucketName = "test-bucket"
val fileKey = "test-file"
val s3Client = AmazonS3ClientBuilder.standard()
.withRegion("us-east-1")
.build
val memoryBufferSize = 128 * 1024 // 128 Kb buffer
val source = Source.s3MultipartDownload(s3Client, bucketName, fileKey, memoryBufferSize)
- accessing by chunks means that you provide a size of the part to download, and the source will ultimately use
Range
header to access file in "seek-and-read" manner. This approach could be used with any S3 object, regardless of whether it was uploaded using multipart API or not. The size of the chunk will affect the number of the requests sent to S3.
To do that use:
import org.gfccollective.aws.s3.akka.S3DownloaderSource._
val bucketName = "test-bucket"
val fileKey = "test-file"
val s3Client = AmazonS3ClientBuilder.standard()
.withRegion("us-east-1")
.build
val chunkSize = 1024 * 1024 // 1 Mb chunks to request from S3
val memoryBufferSize = 128 * 1024 // 128 Kb buffer
val source = Source.s3ChunkedDownload(s3Client, bucketName, fileKey, chunkSize, memoryBufferSize)
The pieces of code above will crease a Source[ByteString], where each ByteString represents a part of the file.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.