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I have an s3 bucket in account A with millions of files that take up many GBs

I want to migrate all this data into a new bucket in account B

So far, I've given account B permissions to run s3 commands on the bucket in account A.

I am able to get some results with the aws s3 sync command with the setting aws configure set default.s3.max_concurrent_requests 100

its fast but it only does a speed of some 20,000 parts per minute.

Is there an approach to sync/move data across aws buckets in different accounts REALLY fast?

I tried to do aws transfer acceleration but it seems that that is good for uploading and downloading from the buckets and I think it works within an aws account.

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20,000 parts per minute.

That's > 300/sec, so, um... that's pretty fast. It's also 1.2 million per hour, which is also pretty respectable.

S3 Request Rate and Performance Considerations implies that 300 PUT req/sec is something of a default performance threshold.

At some point, make too many requests too quickly and you'll overwhelm your index partition and you'll start encountering 503 Slow Down errors -- though hopefully aws-cli will handle that gracefully.

The idea, though, seems to be that that S3 will scale up to accommodate the offered workload, so if you leave this process running, you may find that it actually does get faster with time.

Or...

If you expect a rapid increase in the request rate for a bucket to more than 300 PUT/LIST/DELETE requests per second or more than 800 GET requests per second, we recommend that you open a support case to prepare for the workload and avoid any temporary limits on your request rate.

http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/request-rate-perf-considerations.html

Note, also, that it says "temporary limits." This is where I come to the conclusion that, all on its own, S3 will -- at some point -- provision more index capacity (presumably this means a partition split) to accommodate the increased workload.

You might also find that you get away a much higher aggregate trx/sec if you run multiple separate jobs, each handling a different object prefix (e.g. asset/1, asset/2, asset/3, etc. depending on how the keys are designed in your bucket, because you're not creating such a hot spot in the object index.


The copy operation going on here is an internal S3-to-S3 copy. It isn't download + upload. Transfer acceleration is only used for actual downloads.

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