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A fastify plugin to accept TUS uploads and send them to S3 in multipart chunks

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Fastify plugin for TUS uploads direct to S3

This plugin adds support for TUS uploads that are sent directly to S3 as multi part uploads.

Install

npm install -i @paradisec-platform/fastify-tus-s3-plugin

Example Usage

Required metadata on your files

This plugin requires some metadata on your files in order to operate:

  • filename: (required) The Key to use when uploading to S3. Say you want to upload a local file (test.txt) to somewhere in your bucket, then filename: /path/to/file/test.txt.
  • bucket: (required) The bucket to which to upload this file. Obviously the keys you provide must be able to access this bucket!
  • overwrite: (optional, default: false). Whether or not to overwrite the file in the bucket if it already exists.

In the Vue app example the metadata is added to each file using the onBeforeFileAdded event.

Supported TUS extensions

This plugin implements the creation, expiration and termination tus extensions.

CORS

If your UI is at a different URI to your API you will need to setup CORS. Look at ./api/server.js for the methods and headers you will need to configure somewhere (your web proxy or fastify itself as this example shows) to enable all of this to work.

Frontend proxy server configuration

Setting X-Forwarded-Host

More than likely, your fastify instance will be behind a web server like nginx or some other front end proxy. In that case, you will need some extra configuration on the webserver.

Say your webserver (nginx) URL is https://your.webserver.com and it has configuration to proxy to the API as http://your.webserver.com/api. In the location block that proxies back to the api you need to define the full path of the TUS endpoint on the frontend server:

proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host 'http://your.webserver.com/api/files';

If you setup tus to run at /uploads then it would be http://your.webserver.com/api/uploads.

Gzip and buffering

You don't want the proxy zipping or buffering the content in any way. If you have gzip enabled at the server level, turn it off in the relevant location configuration. Also ensure the proxy is not buffering content. Have a look in ./nginx.conf for a detailed, and working example.

Configure the body size on your webserver

Be sure to set the max body size of the webserver or proxy in front of fastify. Look up the docs for your server on how to do that. In the nginx example noted above we have client_max_body_size 0; which allows an unlimited body size. But if you don't like that, make sure it's at least as much as bodyLimit discussed in the next section.

Use it in your fastify server

To integrate it into your server register it as you would any other fastify plugin:

import fastifyTusS3Plugin from "@paradisec-platform/fastify-tus-s3-plugin"

const fastify = Fastify({
    logger: envToLogger[process.env.NODE_ENV],
    bodyLimit: 256 * 1024 * 1024,
});

fastify.register(tusS3Uploader, {
    awsAccessKeyId: process.env.awsAccessKeyId,
    awsSecretAccessKey: process.env.awsSecretAccessKey,
    region: 'us-east-1',
    endpoint: "http://minio:9000",
    forcePathStyle: true,
    cachePath: "./.cache",
    uploadRoutePath: "/files",
    defaultUploadExpiration: { hours: 6 },
});

As this is a normal fastify plugin, you can use hooks to run middleware that do things like checking auth tokens and such. (Just remember to set the headers as required in the client you choose - read the docs for the client).

Setting max body size on the fastify instance

Note the bodyLimit property on the Fastify instance above. Without this you will not be able to send data to Fastify. As to what you set it to, that really depends on the specs of your machine and how you configure TUS (explained further below: How it works). In this instance we are allowing a maximum body size of 256MB.

Plugin configuration options.

  • awsAccessKeyId: (required) The AWS key for access to the bucket.
  • awsSecretAccessKey: (required) The AWS secret key used for access to the bucket.
  • region: (optional, default: 'us-east-1') The AWS region for your bucket. (Leave as is if using MinIO, it has no effect anyway.)

If you are using MinIO or some other S3 like system then you will also need to set:

  • endpoint: The URL to the service.
  • forcePathStyle: (default: false) MinIO (and likely others) use paths rather than DNS named buckets; set this to true for those services.

In order to save required info between requests and cache uploaded data until enough has been buffered to send to S3:

  • cachePath: (default: './.cache') The path on the server where info and file parts are cached
  • uploadRoutePath: (default: '/files') The route path where TUS uploads are sent.
  • defaultUploadExpiration: (default: 6 hours). The default, maximum time an upload is allowed to run for. To set a different time follow the docs at https://date-fns.org/v2.29.3/docs/add.

Essential client side configuration

Tou want the maximum body limit on the fastify server to be at least 128MB but you also need to tell the TUS client that the maximum chunk size it can send is 128MB. Note that the chunkSize can be smaller than the maximum body limit configured on the fastify instance.

Set the chunkSize on the client - @uppy/tus plugin

The docs for the @uppy/tus plugin defines a chunkShize config property.

Set the chunkSize on the client - tus node-js-client

The docs for the tus-node-js-client describe a chunkSize config property.

(Testing revealed that if you don't set it, the client will try to buffer as much as it can before sending to the server. That means the max body size on fastify needs to be (potentially) up to 1.2TB to handle uploading a file that big.)

How it works

Multipart uploads to S3 must operate in a specific way: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/qfacts.html. Basically:

  • a multipart upload cannot have a part size smaller than 5MB unless it's a single part;
  • all parts except for the last must be the same size;
  • there can't be more than 10,000 parts in a given multipart upload;
  • with a maximum file size of 5TB.

This plugin accepts data blob uploads from a TUS client and then caches them locally until the minimum part size is reached; at which point that part is uploaded to S3. Once all of the data has been received, the multipart upload is completed. The default configuration specifies the following limits:

  • maximumFileSize: (default: 1.2TB) The maximum size of file this server will accept (this is not the maximum body request size defined above.
  • preferredPartSize: (default: 128MB) The amount of data cached locally before a part upload to S3 is performed. 128MB * 10,000 equals a maximum file size of 1TB in S3 which === maximumFileSize.
  • maximumParts: (default: 10,000) This is the AWS maximum number of parts limit.

So, you want the maximum body limit on the fastify server to be at least 128MB but you also need to tell the TUS client that the maximum chunk size it can send is 128MB.

In the example UI / API you can see examples where TUS is given a maximum chunk size of 64MB and 128MB respectively. That means chunks of that size will be uploaded and when there's enough data buffered (more than preferredPartSize), a multi part upload will happen.

If the file size is smaller than preferred size, a single upload will occur when the data has been received, regardless of the number of chunks it was sent it.

All of this magic happens in the file ./src/tus-patch-handler.js. Look there to understand what happens.

Final thought: node streams are used throughout (to save a chunk to the local file buffer; to remove the uploaded part from the buffer). This means the code (should be - hopefully!) is memory efficient as it never tries to load a full file chunk into memory. Not even when it does the part upload as that happens using a stream as well.

Cleaning up the cache

When an upload completes successfully, any data in the server file cache is automatically cleaned up. However, if an upload fails, cache files and previous data blobs are left lying around. This is because the TUS protocol does not require TUS clients to send a request back to the server on failure so that cleanup can occur. In this case, you will need to have some kind of recurring task that purges files older than the expires lifetime you set for the server (e.g. if uploads expire after 6 hours then maybe cleanup anything older than 1 day).

Develop the plugin

You will need docker:

  • start the containers: docker compose up
  • docker exec into the API container and run jest test: npm run test:watch
  • Go for it

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A fastify plugin to accept TUS uploads and send them to S3 in multipart chunks

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