RubyLambda is a toolset for developing and deploying serverless Ruby apps in AWS Lambda.
$ gem install ruby_lambda
The main available commands.
$ ruby-lambda init # Within the current directory scaffold files needed for a baisc lambda function
$ ruby-lambda execute # Invokes the function locally offline
$ ruby-lambda build # Build your function into a local ready to deploy zip file
$ ruby-lambda deploy
$ ruby-lambda init
Initializes the .gitignore
, config.yml
, env
, event.json
, lambda_function.rb
, Gemfile
, .ruby-version
files.
event.json
is where you keep mock data that will be passed to your function when theexecute
command runs.config.yml
contains some default configuration for your function.env
will be renamed to.env
after the init command runs, it will containAWS_ACCESS_KEY
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
. You will need these to be able to deploy your function.
Please have a read of the config.yml
and update any of the default configuration to better suit your function to AWS.
$ ruby-lambda execute
This command is used to invoke / run the function locally
Options:
-c, --config=CONFIG # Default: config.yml
-H, --handler=HANDLER
Examples
$ ruby-lambda execute -c=config.yml
$ ruby-lambda execute -H=lambda_function.handler
The handler function is the function AWS Lambda will invoke / run in response to an event. AWS Lambda uses the event argument to pass in event data to the handler. If the handler
flag is passed with execute, this will take precedence over the handler function defined within the config.yml
def handler(event:, context:)
{ statusCode: 200, body: JSON.generate('Hello from Ruby Lambda') }
end
The execute
command gets the values stored in the event.json
file and passes them to your handler function.
$ ruby-lambda build
This command will create a zipped file ready to be published on Lambda
Options:
-n, --native-extensions
-q, --quiet
All output zipped will in the builds folder within the project root - the build folder will be created if one does not already exists.
Native Extensions
This article covers what native extensions are and a lot more information about how they work. Basically, building native extensions are nothing but compiling C code into the platform and environment specific machine language code. So, if you run bundle install — deployment on your local machine running MacOS, the C code is compiled for MacOS and stored in vendor/bundle. As AWS lambda is a Ubuntu machine, not MacOs it won’t work.
To build gems with Native extensions use -n
flag when you run this command. Doing so will run a dockerized bundle with deployment flag within a Lambda image – this will download the gems to the local directory instead of to the local systems Ruby directory, using the same OS environment as Lambda so that it installs the correct native extensions. This ensures that all our dependencies are included in the function deployment package and the correct native extensions will be called.
$ ruby-lambda deploy
The deploy command will either bundle install your project and package it in a zip or accept a zip file passed to it then uploads it to AWS Lambda.
Options:
-n, --native-extensions flag to pass build gems with native extensions
-c, --config=CONFIG path to the config file, defalt is config.yml
-p, --publish if the function should be published, default is true
-u, --update default to true, update the function
-z, --zip-file=ZIP_FILE path to zip file to create or update your function
-q, --quiet
By default the deploy
command will attepmt to create the function with your config, if the function already exists an error will be thrown. To update an existing function simply pass the -u
flag.
When you publish a version, AWS Lambda makes a snapshot copy of the Lambda function code (and configuration) in the $LATEST version. A published version is immutable. That is, you can't change the code or configuration information. The new version has a unique ARN that includes a version number suffix. AWS recommends that you publish a version at the same time that you create your Lambda function or update your Lambda function code. So by default all deploy will be versioned, if you do not want this, use -p=false
flag.
When you run the deploy command we will prepare the latest state of your function and zip it up, basically running the build command. If you have already built your zip, use the -z
flag to set the path to it.
- Add an option to add APIGate way to allow functions to have an end point
- Add the ability to deploy different ruby versions using layers
- Add an options to choose zip uploaded to s3
- Add option to allow deploy to use value passed through the flags
- Add more deploy options
- Add environment variables to be passed in deploying
- Add a way to deploy and update Lambda functions
- Add ablility to execute the function offline
- Add json file or options to be passed to execute function
- Add a way to build files in to zips ready to be deployed to lambda
- Add the building and zipping of native extentions ready for the lambda environment using docker
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/cookieshq/ruby_lambda. This project is intended to be a welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Everyone interacting in the RubyLambda project’s codebases and issue trackers is expected to follow the code of conduct.