/node-lambda

Command line tool to locally run and deploy your node.js application to Amazon Lambda

Primary LanguageJavaScriptBSD 2-Clause "Simplified" LicenseBSD-2-Clause

node-lambda

node-lambda

Command line tool to locally run and deploy your node.js application to Amazon Lambda.

BuildStatus NPM version

node-lambda run

Installation

npm install -g node-lambda

Example App

The node-lambda-template example app makes it easy to get up and running.

Usage

There are 4 available commands.

node-lambda setup
node-lambda run
node-lambda package
node-lambda deploy

Commands

setup

Initializes the event.json, context.json, .env, deploy.env files, and event_sources.json files. event.json is where you mock your event. context.json is where you can add additional mock data to the context passed to your lambda function. .env is where you place your deployment configuration. deploy.env has the same format as .env, but is used for holding any environment/config variables that you need to be deployed with your code to Lambda but you don't want in version control (e.g. DB connection info). event_sources.json is used to set the event source of the Labmda function (Not all event sources available in Lambda are supported).

$ node-lambda setup --help

  Usage: setup [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                     output usage information

After running setup, it's a good idea to gitignore the generated event.json and .env files.

echo -e ".env\ndeploy.env\nevent.json" >> .gitignore

run

Runs your Amazon Lambda index.js file locally. Passes event.json data to the Amazon Lambda event object.

$ node-lambda run --help

  Usage: run [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                          Output usage information
    -H, --handler [index.handler]       Lambda Handler {index.handler}
    -j, --eventFile [event.json]        Event JSON File
    -f, --configFile []                 Path to file holding secret environment variables (e.g. "deploy.env")
    -u, --runtime [nodejs6.10]          Lambda Runtime {nodejs6.10, nodejs4.3}
    -t, --timeout [3]                   Lambda Timeout in seconds (max of 300)
    -x, --contextFile [context.json]    Context JSON file

package

Bundles your application into a local zip file.

$ node-lambda package --help

  Usage: package [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                          output usage information
    -A, --packageDirectory [build]      Local Package Directory
    -n, --functionName [node-lambda]    Lambda FunctionName
    -H, --handler [index.handler]       Lambda Handler {index.handler}
    -e, --environment [staging]         Choose environment {development, staging, production}
    -f, --configFile []                 Path to file holding secret environment variables (e.g. "deploy.env")
    -x, --excludeGlobs []               Add a space separated list of file(type)s to ignore (e.g. "*.json .env")
    -D, --prebuiltDirectory []          Prebuilt directory

deploy

Bundles and deploys your application up to Amazon Lambda.

$ node-lambda deploy --help

  Usage: deploy [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                                 output usage information
    -e, --environment [staging]                Choose environment {development, staging, production}
    -a, --accessKey [your_key]                 AWS Access Key
    -s, --secretKey [your_secret]              AWS Secret Key
    -P, --profile [your_profile]               AWS Profile
    -k, --sessionToken [your_token]            AWS Session Token
    -r, --region [us-east-1]                   AWS Region(s)
    -n, --functionName [node-lambda]           Lambda FunctionName
    -H, --handler [index.handler]              Lambda Handler {index.handler}
    -o, --role [your_role]                     Amazon Role ARN
    -m, --memorySize [128]                     Lambda Memory Size
    -t, --timeout [3]                          Lambda Timeout
    -d, --description [missing]                Lambda Description
    -u, --runtime [nodejs6.10]                 Lambda Runtime {nodejs6.10, nodejs4.3}
    -p, --publish [false]                      This boolean parameter can be used to request AWS Lambda to create the Lambda function and publish a version as an atomic operation
    -L, --lambdaVersion [custom-version]       Lambda Version
    -f, --configFile []                        Path to file holding secret environment variables (e.g. "deploy.env")
    -b, --vpcSubnets []                        VPC Subnet ID(s, comma separated list) for your Lambda Function, when using this, the below param is also required
    -g, --vpcSecurityGroups []                 VPC Security Group ID(s, comma separated list) for your Lambda Function, when using this, the above param is also required
    -Q, --deadLetterConfigTargetArn []         Lambda DLQ resource
    -A, --packageDirectory []                  Local package directory
    -S, --eventSourceFile [event_sources.json] Path to file holding event source mapping variables (e.g. "event_sources.json")
    -x, --excludeGlobs []                      Add a space separated list of file(type)s to ignore (e.g. "*.json .env")
    -D, --prebuiltDirectory []                 Prebuilt directory
    -z, --deployZipfile []                     Deploy zipfile

Custom Environment Variables

AWS Lambda will let you set environment variables for your function. Use the sample deploy.env file in combination with the --configFile flag to set values which will be added to the lambda configuration upon deploy. Environment variables will also be set when running locally using the same flag

Node.js Runtime Configuration

AWS Lambda now supports Node.js 6.10 and Node.js 4.3. Please also check the Programming Model (Node.js) page.

Post install script

When running node-lambda deploy if you need to do some action after npm install --production and before deploying to AWS Lambda (e.g. replace some modules with precompiled ones or download some libraries, replace some config file depending on environment) you can create post_install.sh script. If the file exists the script will be executed (and output shown after execution) if not it is skipped. Environment string is passed to script as first parameter so you can use it if needed. Make sure that the script is executable.

Example post_install.sh:

printf "\n\n######  Post install script  ###### \n"
ENV="production";
if [ ! -z $1 ]
  then
    ENV=$1;
fi
cp -v "config_$ENV.js" "config.js" \
&& printf "######  DONE!  ###### \n\n"

Prebuilt packages

The --prebuiltDirectory flag is useful for working with Webpack for example. It skips npm install --production and post_install.sh and simply packages the specified directory.

Handling npm link and Dependencies With Local Paths

Perhaps the easiest way to handle these cases is to bundle the code using Webpack and use the --prebuiltDirectory flag to package the output for deployment.

Running node-lambda as an NPM script

Strangely, NPM overwrites the TMPDIR environment variable (and therefore the result of os.tmpDir()) to the current working directory. This means when running node-lambda deploy as a NPM script in package.json, it fails on the rsync step as the destination directory exists in the folder you're synchronising (causing heaps of file has vanished: type errors).

You can resolve this by explicitly setting the TMPDIR variable as you deploy, something like:

"scripts": {
  "deploy-stage": "TMPDIR=/tmp node-lambda deploy"
}

Other AWS Lambda Tools Projects

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Running tests

npm install
npm test