44

I am using serverless framework. My Lambda function connects to DynamoDB table for updating item in table. Read & Write capacity units of table are 5 & auto_scaling is disabled. AWS Lambda function has 128MB memory allocated.

I have used Jmeter for performance testing.I have sent 1000 requests concurrently and some response giving me perfect output while other giving internal server error(502 Bad Gateway). i have also analyzed cloudwatch for logs and only get Task Timeout error. can anyone suggest me why i am getting this error and how to solve it?

6
  • 1
    How many connections are there in your pool? Maybe pool does not have enough connections and some tasks are timing out? Dec 1, 2017 at 14:56
  • @Mike Dinescu has a pretty thorough answer, but just in case, what runtime are you using? If in node, you may need to set the context.callbackWaitsForEmptyEventLoop = false docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/… Dec 14, 2017 at 17:07
  • Yes @JustinKruse i am using nodejs Dec 15, 2017 at 4:50
  • Were you able to resolve this? We had to set context.callbackWaitsForEmptyEventLoop so we didn't wait for things like network events or db connections to be cleaned up before returning, otherwise we were always hitting this 6 second timeout Dec 15, 2017 at 23:15
  • 1
    Yes @JustinKruse i have resolved this by increasing read and write capacity units of DynamoDB. Dec 18, 2017 at 5:13

2 Answers 2

78

The default timeout for AWS Lambda functions when using the Serverless framework is 6 seconds. Simply change that to a higher value as noted in the documentation:

functions:
  hello:
    ...
    timeout: 10 # optional, in seconds, default is 6
2
  • This only addresses (or sidesteps) part of the problem - answer by Mike Dinescu is more thorough: stackoverflow.com/a/47605576/1357094
    – cellepo
    Dec 28, 2019 at 20:38
  • @Dunedan, thanks! I was struggling with this.
    – Gru
    Aug 17, 2021 at 5:04
12

Since you mentioned that your DynamoDB table is provisioned with only 5 WCU this means that only 5 writes are allowed per second.

DynamoDB does offer burst capacity allowing you to use 300 seconds worth of accumulated capacity (which at 5 WCU it is equivalent to 1500 total write requests) but as soon as those are exhausted it will start to throttle.

The DynamoDB client has automatic retries built in, with exponential backoff and it is smart enough to recognize throttling so it will slow down the retries to the point that a single write can easily take several seconds to complete successfully if it is being repeatedly throttled.

Your Lambda function is very likely timing out at 6 seconds because the function is waiting on retries to Dynamo.

So, when doing load testing make sure that your dependencies are all scaled appropriately. At 1000 requests per second you should make sure to scale the Read/Write capacity allocation for your DynamoDB table(s) and/or Index(s) accordingly.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.