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@kasadev/serverless-sns-sqs-lambda
Advanced tools
serverless plugin to make serverless-sns-sqs-lambda events
This is a Serverless Framework plugin for AWS lambda Functions. Currently, it
is possible to subscribe directly to an SNS topic. However, if you want to
provide retry capability and error handling, you need to write a whole lot of
boilerplate to add a Queue and a Dead Letter Queue between the Lambda and the
SNS topic. This plugin allows you to define an sns subscriber with a batchSize
and a maxRetryCount
as simply as subscribing directly to the sns topic.
Run npm install
in your Serverless project.
$ npm install --save-dev @agiledigital/serverless-sns-sqs-lambda
Add the plugin to your serverless.yml file
plugins:
- "@agiledigital/serverless-sns-sqs-lambda"
Provide the lambda function with the snsSqs event, the plugin will add the AWS SNS topic and subscription, SQS queue and dead letter queue, and the role need for the lambda.
functions:
processEvent:
handler: handler.handler
events:
- snsSqs:
name: TestEvent # Required - choose a name prefix for the event queue
topicArn: !Ref Topic # Required - SNS topic to subscribe to
omitPhysicalId: true # Optional - default value is false but recommended to be set to true for new deployments (see below)
batchSize: 2 # Optional - default value is 10
maximumBatchingWindowInSeconds: 10 # optional - default is 0 (no batch window)
maxRetryCount: 2 # Optional - default value is 5
kmsMasterKeyId: !GetAtt SQSQueueKey.Arn # optional - default is none (no encryption) - see Notes on Encryption section below
kmsDataKeyReusePeriodSeconds: 600 # optional - AWS default is 300 seconds
deadLetterMessageRetentionPeriodSeconds: 1209600 # optional - AWS default is 345600 secs (4 days)
deadLetterQueueEnabled: true # optional - default is true
visibilityTimeout: 120 # optional (in seconds) - AWS default is 30 secs
rawMessageDelivery: true # Optional - default value is true
enabled: true # Optional - default value is true
filterPolicy: # Optional - filter messages that are handled
pets:
- dog
- cat
# Overrides for generated CloudFormation templates
# Mirrors the CloudFormation docs but uses camel case instead of title case
#
# https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-properties-sqs-queues.html
mainQueueOverride:
maximumMessageSize: 1024
...
deadLetterQueueOverride:
maximumMessageSize: 1024
...
# https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-resource-lambda-eventsourcemapping.html
eventSourceMappingOverride:
sourceAccessConfigurations:
- Type: SASL_SCRAM_256_AUTH
URI: arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-east-1:01234567890:secret:MyBrokerSecretName
# https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-resource-sns-subscription.html
subscriptionOverride:
region: ap-southeast-2
resources:
Resources:
Topic:
Type: AWS::SNS::Topic
Properties:
TopicName: TestTopic
plugins:
- "@agiledigital/serverless-sns-sqs-lambda"
AWS allows you to omit the physical ID (queue name) for SQS resources.
In this case, the name is automatically generated by AWS based on the logical ID (the CloudFormation resource name).
This provides some benefits such as the ability to perform updates that require replacement, and not having to worry about the 80 character maximum length for queue names.
However, if you need to refer to the queue by name (which should be rare), rather than a CloudFormation reference, you might have to switch this off so that the name is stable.
This would be set to 'true' by default if this was the first version of the plugin. However, since the plugin is already in use and it could break existing stacks and may not be backwards compatible we have set this to 'false' by default. Switching this to 'true' on an existing stack has been tested and it seems to work OK, although it does create new queues and deletes the old ones. Switch the option on an existing stack at your own risk.
See also: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-properties-name.html
If you choose to encrypt your SQS queue, the SNS topic will not be able to send it any messages if you use a managed key (alias/aws/sqs). This is due to an AWS limitation.
See: https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/sns-topic-sqs-queue-sse-kms-key-policy/
You will need to create a CMK like the following:
# To allow SNS to push messages to an encrypted queue, a CMK must be used
SQSQueueCMK:
Type: AWS::KMS::Key
Properties:
KeyPolicy:
Version: "2012-10-17"
Id: key-default-1
Statement:
- Sid: Enable IAM User Permissions
Effect: Allow
Principal:
AWS: !Join
- ""
- - "arn:aws:iam::"
- !Ref "AWS::AccountId"
- ":root"
Action: "kms:*"
Resource: "*"
- Sid: Allow SNS publish to SQS
Effect: Allow
Principal:
Service: sns.amazonaws.com
Action:
- kms:GenerateDataKey
- kms:Decrypt
Resource: "*"
and then reference it in the snsSqs
config with the kmsMasterKeyId
attribute.
functions:
processEvent:
handler: handler.handler
events:
- snsSqs:
# ...
kmsMasterKeyId: !GetAtt SQSQueueKey.Arn
# ...
kmsMasterKeyId
can either be a key ID (simple string) or an ARN or reference to to ARN. Using !Ref on a key will return a key ID and is invalid, so you'll need to use GetAtt and reference the Arn property.
If you would like to override a part of the CloudFormation template that is generated by this plugin, you can pass raw CloudFormation to the override config options outlined above.
The configuration must be provided with camel case keys, but apart from that, you can use the CloudFormation config as specified by AWS.
For example, if you wanted to override the maximumMessageSize for the main queue you could find the "MaximumMessageSize" config option in the AWS documentation make the key camel case ("maximumMessageSize") and pass it into the override section:
events:
- snsSqs:
name: Example
...
mainQueueOverride:
maximumMessageSize: 1024
FAQs
serverless plugin to make serverless-sns-sqs-lambda events
We found that @kasadev/serverless-sns-sqs-lambda demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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