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@fastify/aws-lambda
Advanced tools
Inspired by aws-serverless-express to work with Fastify with inject functionality.
Inspired by the AWSLABS aws-serverless-express library tailor made for the Fastify web framework.
No use of internal sockets, makes use of Fastify's inject function.
Seems faster (as the name implies) than aws-serverless-express and aws-serverless-fastify 😉
$ npm install aws-lambda-fastify
aws-lambda-fastify can take options by passing them with : awsLambdaFastify(app, options)
property | description | default value |
---|---|---|
binaryMimeTypes | Array of binary MimeTypes to handle | [] |
serializeLambdaArguments | Activate the serialization of lambda Event and Context in http header x-apigateway-event x-apigateway-context | false (was true for <v2.0.0) |
decorateRequest | Decorates the fastify request with the lambda Event and Context request.awsLambda.event request.awsLambda.context | true |
decorationPropertyName | The default property name for request decoration | awsLambda |
callbackWaitsForEmptyEventLoop | See: Official Documentation | undefined |
const awsLambdaFastify = require('aws-lambda-fastify')
const app = require('./app')
const proxy = awsLambdaFastify(app)
// or
// const proxy = awsLambdaFastify(app, { binaryMimeTypes: ['application/octet-stream'], serializeLambdaArguments: false /* default is true */ })
exports.handler = proxy
// or
// exports.handler = (event, context, callback) => proxy(event, context, callback)
// or
// exports.handler = (event, context) => proxy(event, context)
// or
// exports.handler = async (event, context) => proxy(event, context)
const fastify = require('fastify')
const app = fastify()
app.get('/', (request, reply) => reply.send({ hello: 'world' }))
if (require.main === module) {
// called directly i.e. "node app"
app.listen({ port: 3000 }, (err) => {
if (err) console.error(err)
console.log('server listening on 3000')
})
} else {
// required as a module => executed on aws lambda
module.exports = app
}
When executed in your lambda function we don't need to listen to a specific port,
so we just export the app
in this case.
The lambda.js
file will use this export.
When you execute your Fastify application like always,
i.e. node app.js
(the detection for this could be require.main === module
),
you can normally listen to your port, so you can still run your Fastify function locally.
The original lambda event and context are passed via Fastify request and can be used like this:
app.get('/', (request, reply) => {
const event = request.awsLambda.event
const context = request.awsLambda.context
// ...
})
If you do not like it, you can disable this by setting the decorateRequest
option to false
.
Alternatively the original lambda event and context are passed via headers and can be used like this, if setting the serializeLambdaArguments
option to true
:
app.get('/', (request, reply) => {
const event = JSON.parse(decodeURIComponent(request.headers['x-apigateway-event']))
const context = JSON.parse(decodeURIComponent(request.headers['x-apigateway-context']))
// ...
})
Since AWS Lambda now enables the use of ECMAScript (ES) modules in Node.js 14 runtimes, you could lower the cold start latency when used with Provisioned Concurrency thanks to the top-level await functionality.
We can use this by calling the fastify.ready()
function outside of the Lambda handler function, like this:
import awsLambdaFastify from 'aws-lambda-fastify'
import app from './app.js'
export const handler = awsLambdaFastify(app)
await app.ready() // needs to be placed after awsLambdaFastify call because of the decoration: https://github.com/fastify/aws-lambda-fastify/blob/master/index.js#L9
Here you can find the approriate issue discussing this feature.
aws-lambda-fastify (decorateRequest : false) x 56,892 ops/sec ±3.73% (79 runs sampled)
aws-lambda-fastify x 56,571 ops/sec ±3.52% (82 runs sampled)
aws-lambda-fastify (serializeLambdaArguments : true) x 56,499 ops/sec ±3.56% (76 runs sampled)
serverless-http x 45,867 ops/sec ±4.42% (83 runs sampled)
aws-serverless-fastify x 17,937 ops/sec ±1.83% (86 runs sampled)
aws-serverless-express x 16,647 ops/sec ±2.88% (87 runs sampled)
Fastest is aws-lambda-fastify (decorateRequest : false), aws-lambda-fastify
The logos displayed in this page are property of the respective organisations and they are not distributed under the same license as aws-lambda-fastify (MIT).
FAQs
Inspired by aws-serverless-express to work with Fastify with inject functionality.
We found that @fastify/aws-lambda demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 21 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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