Awesome
AWS Node Signed Uploads
Requirements
- Node.js (
nvm use
to usecarbon
suggested by project's.nvmrc
) - npm which comes with Node.js
Introduction
If you have landed to this project out of curiosity for the technologies behind the service, you can see implementation details in this article.
The approach implemented in this service is useful when you want to use Amazon API Gateway and you want to solve the 10MB payload limit.
The service is based on the serverless framework. The service is uploading objects to a specific S3 bucket using a pre-signed URL. Implemented in node.js runtime using getSignedUrl method.
The package is targeting the latest runtime of AWS Lambda. (8.10)
Settings
If you prefer to use a different region or stage, change these:
$ export AWS_STAGE=
$ export AWS_REGION=
Defaults are dev
and eu-central-1
.
Change name of upload bucket:
bucketName: testBucket
File name to sign
The file you want to upload is signed via x-amz-meta-filekey
header.
How to use
Get dependencies with yarn
or npm install
. The following examples will assume the usage of yarn
.
Issue a GET
request to get the signed URL:
curl --request GET \
--url https://{serviceID}.execute-api.{region}.amazonaws.com/dev/upload \
--header 'x-amz-meta-filekey: the-road-to-graphql.pdf'
If your bucket is called foo
, and you upload the-road-to-graphql
, after receiving the signed URL, issue a PUT
request with the information you have signed:
curl --request PUT \
--url 'https://foo.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/the-road-to-graphql.pdf?X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=the-signature&X-Amz-Security-Token=the-token&X-Amz-Expires=30&X-Amz-Date=20181210T113015Z&X-Amz-Credential=something10%2Feu-central-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256' \
--data 'somemething-awesome'
Integrations
Here's a short list of possible integrations I found making a quick Google search:
Tests
Running all tests:
$ yarn test
Developing tests:
$ npx jest --watch
Develop locally
Starting a local dev server and its endpoint for receiving uploads:
$ yarn start
Linter
Starting the linter tasks:
$ yarn lint
Deployment
Run the following the fire the deployment:
$ yarn deploy