I'm trying to build a lazy seq which pulls its data from aws S3 as needed, (via the amazonica library). I've got the following code which almost does what I want, but makes one more network call than needed. (If there is more data available, it always realizes one more recursive call)
Edit: Thanks Alex, for pointing out that my println was in a place where it would be called even if the network call wasn't realized. This code performs as desired now. So that just leaves the question is there a better way to do it?
(defn chunked-list-objects-seq
"Returns a listing of objects in a bucket, with given prefix. These
are lazily chunked, to avoid unneeded network calls.
opts are :bucket-name :prefix :next-marker"
[cred opts]
(lazy-seq
(let [response (s3/list-objects cred opts)
chunk-size (count (:object-summaries response))]
(println "pulling from network")
(chunk-cons
(let [buffer (chunk-buffer chunk-size)]
(dotimes [i chunk-size]
(chunk-append buffer (nth (:object-summaries response) i)))
(chunk buffer))
(if (:truncated? response)
(chunked-list-objects-seq cred (assoc opts :next-marker (:next-marker response)))
nil)))))
Above code was adapted from "Clojure High Performance Programming" pg. 28 (custom chunking)
Calling it looks like this:
user> (time (pprint (count (take 990 (chunked-list-objects-seq cred {:bucket-name "bucket-name" :prefix "path-prefix/"})))))
=> pulling from network
990
"Elapsed time: 2009.723 msecs"
(AWS seems to like returning 1k chunks, when there are more than 1k items in a bucket)
There are certainly other ways to do this, (an atom & future implementation comes to mind), but this seems to fit the interface of a seq the best.
So basically, can this code be fixed to not make unnecessary network calls, and is this a good way to do this?
list-objects
is the function call actually making the network request. Yourprintln
happens outside the call to lazy-seq to get the next chunk, so how do you know it's actually making an unneeded network call?