/serverless-plugin-typescript

Serverless plugin for zero-config Typescript support

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Warning! This is a patched version of the original package. Use at own risk!!

This package differs from the original in the following ways...

  1. This will avoid compiling any functions that are not marked with the node runtime.
  2. Package now copies over a python_code directory to the updated staging area. This ensures that any functions in that directory will be packaged correctly during the serverless package artifact step.

This package is for a very specific use case. If it does not serve your purpose please use the original

serverless-plugin-typescript

serverless npm version Build Status

Serverless plugin for zero-config Typescript support

Features

  • Zero-config: Works out of the box without the need to install any other compiler or plugins
  • Supports ES2015 syntax + features (export, import, async, await, Promise, ...)
  • Supports sls package, sls deploy and sls deploy function
  • Supports sls invoke local + --watch mode
  • Integrates nicely with serverless-offline

Install

yarn add --dev serverless-plugin-typescript typescript
# or
npm install -D serverless-plugin-typescript typescript

Add the following plugin to your serverless.yml:

plugins:
  - serverless-plugin-typescript

Configure

See example folder for a minimal example.

tsconfig.json

The default tsconfig.json file used by the plugin looks like this:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "preserveConstEnums": true,
    "strictNullChecks": true,
    "sourceMap": true,
    "allowJs": true,
    "target": "es5",
    "outDir": ".build",
    "moduleResolution": "node",
    "lib": ["es2015"],
    "rootDir": "./"
  }
}

Note 1: The outDir and rootDir options cannot be overwritten.

Note 2: Don't confuse the tsconfig.json in this repository with the one mentioned above.

Including extra files

All files from package/include will be included in the final build file. See Exclude/Include

Usage

Google Cloud Functions

When using with Google Cloud Functions via the serverless-google-cloudfunctions plugin, you simply have to provide a main field in your package.json:

{
  // ...
  "main": "handler.js",
  // ..
}

And this plugin will automatically compile your typescript correctly. Note that the field must refer to the compiled file name, namely, ending with a .js extension.

If a main field was not found, then this plugin will use index.js. Before compilation begins, it will check to see that the file indicated exists with a .ts extension before actually trying to compile it.

Automatic compilation

The normal Serverless deploy procedure will automatically compile with Typescript:

  • Create the Serverless project with serverless create -t aws-nodejs
  • Install Serverless Typescript as above
  • Deploy with serverless deploy

Usage with serverless-offline

The plugin integrates very well with serverless-offline to simulate AWS Lambda and AWS API Gateway locally.

Add the plugins to your serverless.yml file and make sure that serverless-plugin-typescript precedes serverless-offline as the order is important:

  plugins:
    ...
    - serverless-plugin-typescript
    ...
    - serverless-offline
    ...

Run serverless offline or serverless offline start to start the Lambda/API simulation.

In comparison to serverless offline, the start command will fire an init and a end lifecycle hook which is needed for serverless-offline and e.g. serverless-dynamodb-local to switch off resources (see below)

serverless-dynamodb-local

Configure your service the same as mentioned above, but additionally add the serverless-dynamodb-local plugin as follows:

  plugins:
    - serverless-plugin-typescript
    - serverless-dynamodb-local
    - serverless-offline

Run serverless offline start.

Other useful options

You can reduce the clutter generated by serverless-offline with --dontPrintOutput and disable timeouts with --noTimeout.

Run a function locally

To run your compiled functions locally you can:

$ serverless invoke local --function <function-name>

Options are:

  • --function or -f (required) is the name of the function to run
  • --watch - recompile and run a function locally on source changes
  • --path or -p (optional) path to JSON or YAML file holding input data
  • --data or -d (optional) input data

Enabling source-maps

You can easily enable support for source-maps (making stacktraces easier to read) by installing and using the following plugin:

yarn add --dev source-map-support
// inside of your function
import 'source-map-support/register'

If you are using webpack (most likely). Add devtool: 'source-map' to webpack.config.js:

module.exports = {
  .... snip ....
  devtool: 'source-map',
  .... snip ....

}

Help & Community

Join our Spectrum community if you run into issues or have questions. We love talking to you!

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