AKX
Mar 12 11:09
Back now. Looking at Wireshark, I'm seeing lots of retransmissions and partial reads... Maybe see if you can change some settings (firewall? MTU?) in your router (a TP-Link device, I'm guessing?)
AKX
Mar 12 09:42
Anyway, I've got to head off for the time being. Good luck!
AKX
Mar 12 09:41
If you're willing to spend €3.79 a month on this project, you can get a VPS from Hetzner. hetzner.com/cloud
AKX
Mar 12 09:39
(Which would also handily rule out Express being slow.)
AKX
Mar 12 09:39
And since you say you're using Caddy, you should be using it to serve static files instead of Express
AKX
Mar 12 09:38
Right, that's not it then. Since you're evidently using a Telenor customer broadband connection, it's possible they're throttling inbound connections so people wouldn't use a customer connection to host servers.
AKX
Mar 12 09:37
Since you say it's really fast locally, it's not the Pi being awful. Again, run a speed test, e.g. speedtest.net
AKX
Mar 12 09:36
When you use the DNS name (or your external IP 213.112.***.***) you're roundtripping through the internet and back to your home
AKX
Mar 12 09:35
Yes, because you're not going through the Internet and back to your Pi.
AKX
Mar 12 09:34
The DNS is not exactly fast, but that lookup is only done once, it doesn't affect the stream speed.
AKX
Mar 12 09:32
(You had left the actual DNS name in one of the screenshots so I could reproduce this – yep, it's slow 😁)
AKX
Mar 12 09:31
Well, have you run a speed test to see if it's just not the upload bandwidth from "my ip" that's being slow?
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
What do you mean with "using the http-address" c.f. "direct connection to the pi"?
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
Or, in other words: How is the Raspberry Pi exposed to the internet? What's the whole stack here?
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
Well, hard to say from this then. Could be a network thing. I'd bet you can't reproduce this when running the Node app on the same machine you're developing on.
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
Right, you should have mentioned (a) you're using a resource-constrained device (Raspberry Pi) (b) not using just Express, from the get-go. What does htop on the Raspberry Pi say while you're waiting for that data? What's consuming resources on there?
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
Well, I just tried your code (with the required requires added) and measuring with ab, it takes approximately 27 milliseconds to serve a 1.5 megabyte file at 50 concurrent requests. Please show the measurements from your network inspector.
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
I tried the same in my Chrome – fetch()ing that 1.5 megabyte data 50 times in series, and I get 5 milliseconds each.
AKX
Mar 12 09:28
How did you measure the time? What have you actually tried (what's the "exact same thing")?
 
AKX
Feb 14 15:04
And as I mentioned above, the encryption scheme you've written is likely not secure.
AKX
Feb 14 15:04
But since the Cognito information presumably isn't secret (the user should know who they are, right?), you don't need a brittle encryption scheme, but just JWT to sign the tokens. Better yet, you should just use Cognito's JWTs. docs.aws.amazon.com/cognito/latest/developerguide/…
AKX
Feb 14 15:02
I didn't close your question. I already gave you a solution: Fernet. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/57099658#57099658
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Right. Sounds like you'll want those claims to be signed, not encrypted. See jwt.io instead.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
"For security reasons" is just hand-waving and not an actual reason. What's in the token that shouldn't be readable by the frontend?
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Can you tell me why your backend server needs to encrypt the token when it passes it to the frontend?
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Do not separately encrypt the token you pass in the header, and you don't need to decrypt it. Since your communications are over a secure, encrypted channel, you do not need to encrypt the header.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Great! To quote myself: "Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this."
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
You will need to explain what "of course I want to secure it also" means to you.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Why is the token encrypted? To my best knowledge, AWS API Gateway does not support plain (non-secure) HTTP, only HTTPS, so all traffic is already encrypted.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
How are you passing the data to the lambda? Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
No, you do not want to "somehow encrypt data". You'll need to have an explicit security goal in mind first. Only then you can choose which encryption scheme (and you shouldn't roll your own from low-level primitives as you've now done; you're importing from cryptography.hazmat – hazardous materials).
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
Now that that's out of the way, the Fernet symmetric encryption scheme is available for both JS and Python. Naturally, since it's symmetric encryption, the moment your encryption key becomes public, so do all communications encrypted with it, past or future. Whether or not that's an issue is a matter of your security goal (as discussed in the previous comment).
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
For one, your Python code is using CFB encryption mode, and your JS code is using CBC. Your scheme has no authentication tags that I could see, so you can probably never be sure you've decrypted the correct message either.
AKX
Feb 14 14:31
The "Demo" link you've posted can't be run unless I sign up for Replit, which I'm not going to do. Please add the error you're getting into your question.
 
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
Do not separately encrypt the token you pass in the header, and you don't need to decrypt it. Since your communications are over a secure, encrypted channel, you do not need to encrypt the header.
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
Great! To quote myself: "Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this."
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
Why is the token encrypted? To my best knowledge, AWS API Gateway does not support plain (non-secure) HTTP, only HTTPS, so all traffic is already encrypted.
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
You will need to explain what "of course I want to secure it also" means to you.
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
How are you passing the data to the lambda? Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this.
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
Now that that's out of the way, the Fernet symmetric encryption scheme is available for both JS and Python. Naturally, since it's symmetric encryption, the moment your encryption key becomes public, so do all communications encrypted with it, past or future. Whether or not that's an issue is a matter of your security goal (as discussed in the previous comment).
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
No, you do not want to "somehow encrypt data". You'll need to have an explicit security goal in mind first. Only then you can choose which encryption scheme (and you shouldn't roll your own from low-level primitives as you've now done; you're importing from cryptography.hazmat – hazardous materials).
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
For one, your Python code is using CFB encryption mode, and your JS code is using CBC. Your scheme has no authentication tags that I could see, so you can probably never be sure you've decrypted the correct message either.
AKX
Feb 14 14:17
The "Demo" link you've posted can't be run unless I sign up for Replit, which I'm not going to do. Please add the error you're getting into your question.
 
AKX
Apr 4, 2023 22:07
@Super-intelligentShade Sure, that'll cause more work for mods, and certainly make you super popular.
AKX
Apr 4, 2023 22:07
@GrafiCode See this search for examples; with a quick eyeballing the 10 newest answers are likely all ChatGPT.
AKX
Apr 4, 2023 22:07
There are some "tells": It looks like the issue/There are a few problems ... To fix this,/Here is an example of, and the answer nearly always ends with I hope this helps! unless it's been cropped out.
 
AKX
Mar 8, 2023 02:48
Oh, and by the way, @ARK1375, please show the ctypes code you're using too – are you sure it's not e.g. taking copies of that data?
AKX
Mar 8, 2023 02:48
No, because I don't know the specifics of all of the things Pandas does to be that fast.
AKX
Mar 8, 2023 02:48
There's a whole lot of optimization going on in Pandas, but a hash table will certainly be one in this situation.
AKX
Mar 8, 2023 02:48
Well, sure, you're using groupby, so that's going to be a hash table.