Serverless now supports custom response headers and status codes. As such, this plugin is deprecated and no longer maintained. For more information on the API Gateway proxy integration, please see serverless/serverless#2174
This plugin is now deprecated and no longer supported. It was originally a plugin for the early versions of the Serverless framework intended to address the issues outlined at serverless/serverless#2046 (and in my - jthomerson - comments there).
Since you can now use the API Gateway proxy integration and have full control over response headers and status codes, you should no longer need this plugin. See serverless/serverless#2174 for more information.
The basic principle is that instead of adding a response
attribute to your
HTTP event config, you will add a responses
attribute.
The responses attribute is a key/value pair where the key is the status code of the response (e.g. 200, 404, etc). The value can be:
false
- which means "remove the default response configured by SLS (or another plugin) for this response code"- an object with the following attributes:
headers
- just the same as the SLSheaders
attributetemplates
- similar to request templates, this is keyed by the response content typeproperties
- any other properties to directly add to the CloudFormation template for this API method- typically this is used to add
SelectionPattern
for the error responses
- typically this is used to add
NOTE: leaving one response without a selection pattern attribute makes it the default response.
Below we will show two examples: a standard example where 200 is what your function returns for a successful completion, and another example where it needs to return a 302 as its default (non-error) response. The 302 response example would be used if your were building a bit.ly-like endpoint, for example.
# I recommend using variables to define your responses since they tend
# to be the same across all of your API gateway functions, but you
# certainly don't have to.
custom:
defaultRegion: us-east-1
region: ${opt:region, self:custom.defaultRegion}
stage: ${opt:stage, env:USER}
standardRequest:
template:
application/json: ${file(templates/standard-request.tpl)}
standardResponseHeaders:
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': "'*'"
'Content-Type': 'integration.response.body.headers.Content-Type'
'Expires': 'integration.response.body.headers.Expires'
'Cache-Control': 'integration.response.body.headers.Cache-Control'
'Pragma': "'no-cache'"
standardResponseTemplate: "$input.path('$.body')"
errorResponseHeaders:
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': "'*'"
'Expires': "'Thu, 19 Nov 1981 08:52:00 GMT'"
'Cache-Control': "'no-cache, max-age=0, must-revalidate'"
'Pragma': "'no-cache'"
errorResponseTemplate: "$input.path('$.errorMessage')"
# Here we are defining what would be under "responses" in your HTTP event
# if you were not using the custom variables.
standardResponses:
200:
headers: ${self:custom.standardResponseHeaders}
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': ${self:custom.standardResponseTemplate}
404:
headers: ${self:custom.errorResponseHeaders}
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': ${self:custom.errorResponseTemplate}
properties:
SelectionPattern: '.*\"status\":404.*'
500:
headers: ${self:custom.errorResponseHeaders}
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': ${self:custom.errorResponseTemplate}
properties:
SelectionPattern: '.*\"status\":500.*'
redirectResponses:
# Since we want to return 302 upon a successful completion, we remove the
# built-in default of 200
200: false
302:
headers:
Location: "integration.response.body.headers.Location"
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
'text/html;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
404:
headers: ${self:custom.errorResponseHeaders}
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
'text/html;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
properties:
SelectionPattern: '.*\"status\":404.*'
500:
headers: ${self:custom.errorResponseHeaders}
templates:
'application/json;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
'text/html;charset=UTF-8': "$input.path('$.body')"
properties:
SelectionPattern: '.*\"status\":500.*'
# Tell your service that you want to use this plugin:
# (you'll need to `npm install` it first)
plugins:
- serverless-plugin-multiple-responses
# In the function's http event configuration you see where
# we have `responses` instead of the normal `response`.
functions:
ping:
name: ${self:service}-${self:provider.stage}-ping
handler: src/ping/Ping.handler
memorySize: 128
timeout: 2
events:
- http:
method: GET
path: ping
request: ${self:custom.standardRequest}
responses: ${self:custom.standardResponses}
redirector:
name: ${self:service}-${self:provider.stage}-redirector
handler: src/redirector/Redirector.handler
memorySize: 128
timeout: 2
events:
- http:
method: GET
path: redirector
request: ${self:custom.standardRequest}
responses: ${self:custom.redirectResponses}
Easy! Pull requests are welcome! Just do the following:
- Clone the code
- Install the dependencies with
npm install
- Create a feature branch (e.g.
git checkout -b my_new_feature
) - Make your changes and commit them with a reasonable commit message
- Make sure the code passes our standards with
grunt standards
- Make sure all unit tests pass with
npm test
Our goal is 100% unit test coverage, with good and effective tests (it's easy to hit 100% coverage with junk tests, so we differentiate). We will not accept pull requests for new features that do not include unit tests. If you are submitting a pull request to fix a bug, we may accept it without unit tests (we will certainly write our own for that bug), but we strongly encourage you to write a unit test exhibiting the bug, commit that, and then commit a fix in a separate commit. This greatly increases the likelihood that we will accept your pull request and the speed with which we can process it.
This software is released under the MIT license. See the license file for more details.