Amazon API Gateway Construct Library
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This is a developer preview (public beta) module. Releases might lack important features and might have
future breaking changes.
Amazon API Gateway is a fully managed service that makes it easy for developers
to publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale. Create an API to
access data, business logic, or functionality from your back-end services, such
as applications running on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), code
running on AWS Lambda, or any web application.
Defining APIs
APIs are defined as a hierarchy of resources and methods. addResource
and
addMethod
can be used to build this hierarchy. The root resource is
api.root
.
For example, the following code defines an API that includes the following HTTP
endpoints: ANY /, GET /books
, POST /books
, GET /books/{book_id}
, DELETE /books/{book_id}
.
const api = new apigateway.RestApi(this, 'books-api');
api.root.addMethod('ANY');
const books = api.root.addResource('books');
books.addMethod('GET');
books.addMethod('POST');
const book = books.addResource('{book_id}');
book.addMethod('GET');
book.addMethod('DELETE');
AWS Lambda-backed APIs
A very common practice is to use Amazon API Gateway with AWS Lambda as the
backend integration. The LambdaRestApi
construct makes it easy:
The following code defines a REST API that routes all requests to the
specified AWS Lambda function:
const backend = new lambda.Function(...);
new apigateway.LambdaRestApi(this, 'myapi', {
handler: backend,
});
You can also supply proxy: false
, in which case you will have to explicitly
define the API model:
const backend = new lambda.Function(...);
const api = new apigateway.LambdaRestApi(this, 'myapi', {
handler: backend,
proxy: false
});
const items = api.root.addResource('items');
items.addMethod('GET');
items.addMethod('POST');
const item = items.addResource('{item}');
item.addMethod('GET');
item.addMethod('DELETE', new apigateway.HttpIntegration('http://amazon.com'));
Integration Targets
Methods are associated with backend integrations, which are invoked when this
method is called. API Gateway supports the following integrations:
MockIntegration
- can be used to test APIs. This is the default
integration if one is not specified.LambdaIntegration
- can be used to invoke an AWS Lambda function.AwsIntegration
- can be used to invoke arbitrary AWS service APIs.HttpIntegration
- can be used to invoke HTTP endpoints.
The following example shows how to integrate the GET /book/{book_id}
method to
an AWS Lambda function:
const getBookHandler = new lambda.Function(...);
const getBookIntegration = new apigateway.LambdaIntegration(getBookHandler);
book.addMethod('GET', getBookIntegration);
Integration options can be optionally be specified:
const getBookIntegration = new apigateway.LambdaIntegration(getBookHandler, {
contentHandling: apigateway.ContentHandling.ConvertToText,
credentialsPassthrough: true,
});
Method options can optionally be specified when adding methods:
book.addMethod('GET', getBookIntegration, {
authorizationType: apigateway.AuthorizationType.IAM,
apiKeyRequired: true
});
The following example shows how to use an API Key with a usage plan:
const hello = new lambda.Function(this, 'hello', {
runtime: lambda.Runtime.NodeJS810,
handler: 'hello.handler',
code: lambda.Code.asset('lambda')
});
const api = new apigateway.RestApi(this, 'hello-api', { });
const integration = new apigateway.LambdaIntegration(hello);
const v1 = api.root.addResource('v1');
const echo = v1.addResource('echo');
const echoMethod = echo.addMethod('GET', integration, { apiKeyRequired: true });
const key = api.addApiKey('ApiKey');
const plan = api.addUsagePlan('UsagePlan', {
name: 'Easy',
apiKey: key
});
plan.addApiStage({
stage: api.deploymentStage,
throttle: [
{
method: echoMethod,
throttle: {
rateLimit: 10,
burstLimit: 2
}
}
]
});
Working with models
When you work with Lambda integrations that are not Proxy integrations, you
have to define your models and mappings for the request, response, and integration.
const hello = new lambda.Function(this, 'hello', {
runtime: lambda.Runtime.Nodejs10x,
handler: 'hello.handler',
code: lambda.Code.asset('lambda')
});
const api = new apigateway.RestApi(this, 'hello-api', { });
const resource = api.root.addResource('v1');
You can define more parameters on the integration to tune the behavior of API Gateway
const integration = new LambdaIntegration(hello, {
proxy: false,
requestParameters: {
"integration.request.querystring.who": "method.request.querystring.who"
},
allowTestInvoke: true,
requestTemplates: {
"application/json": '{ "action": "sayHello", "pollId": "$util.escapeJavaScript($input.params(\'who\'))" }'
},
passthroughBehavior: PassthroughBehavior.Never,
integrationResponses: [
{
statusCode: "200",
responseTemplates: {
"application/json": '{ "state": "ok", "greeting": "$util.escapeJavaScript($input.body)" }'
},
responseParameters: {
'method.response.header.Content-Type': "'application/json'",
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Origin': "'*'",
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': "'true'"
}
},
{
selectionPattern: '(\n|.)+',
statusCode: "400",
responseTemplates: {
"application/json": '{ "state": "error", "message": "$util.escapeJavaScript($input.path(\'$.errorMessage\'))" }'
},
responseParameters: {
'method.response.header.Content-Type': "'application/json'",
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Origin': "'*'",
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': "'true'"
}
}
]
});
You can define validation models for your responses (and requests)
const responseModel = api.addModel('ResponseModel', {
contentType: "application/json",
modelName: 'ResponseModel',
schema: { "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "pollResponse", "type": "object", "properties": { "state": { "type": "string" }, "greeting": { "type": "string" } } }
});
const errorResponseModel = api.addModel('ErrorResponseModel', {
contentType: "application/json",
modelName: 'ErrorResponseModel',
schema: { "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#", "title": "errorResponse", "type": "object", "properties": { "state": { "type": "string" }, "message": { "type": "string" } } }
});
And reference all on your method definition.
const validator = api.addRequestValidator('DefaultValidator', {
validateRequestBody: false,
validateRequestParameters: true
});
resource.addMethod('GET', integration, {
requestParameters: {
"method.request.querystring.who": true
},
requestValidator: validator,
methodResponses: [
{
statusCode: "200",
responseParameters: {
'method.response.header.Content-Type': true,
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Origin': true,
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': true
},
responseModels: {
"application/json": responseModel
}
},
{
statusCode: "400",
responseParameters: {
'method.response.header.Content-Type': true,
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Origin': true,
'method.response.header.Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': true
},
responseModels: {
"application/json": errorResponseModel
}
}
]
});
Default Integration and Method Options
The defaultIntegration
and defaultMethodOptions
properties can be used to
configure a default integration at any resource level. These options will be
used when defining method under this resource (recursively) with undefined
integration or options.
If not defined, the default integration is MockIntegration
. See reference
documentation for default method options.
The following example defines the booksBackend
integration as a default
integration. This means that all API methods that do not explicitly define an
integration will be routed to this AWS Lambda function.
const booksBackend = new apigateway.LambdaIntegration(...);
const api = new apigateway.RestApi(this, 'books', {
defaultIntegration: booksBackend
});
const books = new api.root.addResource('books');
books.addMethod('GET');
books.addMethod('POST');
const book = books.addResource('{book_id}');
book.addMethod('GET');
Proxy Routes
The addProxy
method can be used to install a greedy {proxy+}
resource
on a path. By default, this also installs an "ANY"
method:
const proxy = resource.addProxy({
defaultIntegration: new LambdaIntegration(handler),
anyMethod: true
});
Deployments
By default, the RestApi
construct will automatically create an API Gateway
Deployment and a "prod" Stage which represent the API configuration you
defined in your CDK app. This means that when you deploy your app, your API will
be have open access from the internet via the stage URL.
The URL of your API can be obtained from the attribute restApi.url
, and is
also exported as an Output
from your stack, so it's printed when you cdk deploy
your app:
$ cdk deploy
...
books.booksapiEndpointE230E8D5 = https://6lyktd4lpk.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/prod/
To disable this behavior, you can set { deploy: false }
when creating your
API. This means that the API will not be deployed and a stage will not be
created for it. You will need to manually define a apigateway.Deployment
and
apigateway.Stage
resources.
Use the deployOptions
property to customize the deployment options of your
API.
The following example will configure API Gateway to emit logs and data traces to
AWS CloudWatch for all API calls:
By default, an IAM role will be created and associated with API Gateway to
allow it to write logs and metrics to AWS CloudWatch unless cloudWatchRole
is
set to false
.
const api = new apigateway.RestApi(this, 'books', {
deployOptions: {
loggingLevel: apigateway.MethodLoggingLevel.Info,
dataTraceEnabled: true
}
})
Deeper dive: invalidation of deployments
API Gateway deployments are an immutable snapshot of the API. This means that we
want to automatically create a new deployment resource every time the API model
defined in our CDK app changes.
In order to achieve that, the AWS CloudFormation logical ID of the
AWS::ApiGateway::Deployment
resource is dynamically calculated by hashing the
API configuration (resources, methods). This means that when the configuration
changes (i.e. a resource or method are added, configuration is changed), a new
logical ID will be assigned to the deployment resource. This will cause
CloudFormation to create a new deployment resource.
By default, old deployments are deleted. You can set retainDeployments: true
to allow users revert the stage to an old deployment manually.
Custom Domains
To associate an API with a custom domain, use the domainName
configuration when
you define your API:
const api = new apigw.RestApi(this, 'MyDomain', {
domainName: {
domainName: 'example.com',
certificate: acmCertificateForExampleCom,
},
});
This will define a DomainName
resource for you, along with a BasePathMapping
from the root of the domain to the deployment stage of the API. This is a common
set up.
To route domain traffic to an API Gateway API, use Amazon Route 53 to create an alias record. An alias record is a Route 53 extension to DNS. It's similar to a CNAME record, but you can create an alias record both for the root domain, such as example.com, and for subdomains, such as www.example.com. (You can create CNAME records only for subdomains.)
new route53.ARecord(this, 'CustomDomainAliasRecord', {
zone: hostedZoneForExampleCom,
target: route53.AddressRecordTarget.fromAlias(new route53_targets.ApiGateway(api))
});
You can also define a DomainName
resource directly in order to customize the default behavior:
new apigw.DomainName(this, 'custom-domain', {
domainName: 'example.com',
certificate: acmCertificateForExampleCom,
endpointType: apigw.EndpointType.EDGE
});
Once you have a domain, you can map base paths of the domain to APIs.
The following example will map the URL https://example.com/go-to-api1
to the api1
API and https://example.com/boom to the api2
API.
domain.addBasePathMapping(api1, { basePath: 'go-to-api1' });
domain.addBasePathMapping(api2, { basePath: 'boom' });
NOTE: currently, the mapping will always be assigned to the APIs
deploymentStage
, which will automatically assigned to the latest API
deployment. Raise a GitHub issue if you require more granular control over
mapping base paths to stages.
If you don't specify basePath
, all URLs under this domain will be mapped
to the API, and you won't be able to map another API to the same domain:
domain.addBasePathMapping(api);
This can also be achieved through the mapping
configuration when defining the
domain as demonstrated above.
If you wish to setup this domain with an Amazon Route53 alias, use the route53_targets.ApiGatewayDomain
:
new route53.ARecord(this, 'CustomDomainAliasRecord', {
zone: hostedZoneForExampleCom,
target: route53.AddressRecordTarget.fromAlias(new route53_targets.ApiGatewayDomain(domainName))
});
This module is part of the AWS Cloud Development Kit project.