FaaS Node.js Runtime Framework
This module provides a Node.js framework for executing a function that
exists in a user provided directory path as an index.js
file. The
directory may also contain an optional package.json
file which can
be used to declare runtime dependencies for the function.
The function is loaded, and then invoked for incoming HTTP requests
at localhost:8080
. The incoming request may be a
Cloud Event or
just a simple HTTP GET request. In either case, the function will receive
a Context
object instance that has an event
property. For a raw HTTP
request, the incoming request is converted to a Cloud Event.
The invoked user function can be async
but that is not required.
TBD: What format should the function response be? Should it also be a Cloud
Event? But where is the event emitted? To some Knative Channel? Much is
still to be determined.
Usage
In my current working directory, I have an index.js
file like this.
const framework = require('faas-js-runtime');
const options = {
logLevel: 'info'
}
framework(require(`${__dirname}/function-dir/`), server => {
console.log('Server listening');
server.close();
}, options);
In ./function-dir
, there is an index.js
file that looks
like this.
module.exports = async function myFunction(context) {
const ret = 'This is a test function for Node.js FaaS. Success.';
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(_ => {
context.log.info('sending response to client')
resolve(ret);
}, 500);
});
};
You can use curl
to POST
to the endpoint:
$ curl -X POST -d 'hello=world' \
-H'Content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' http://localhost:8080
You can use curl
to POST
JSON data to the endpoint:
$ curl -X POST -d '{"hello": "world"}' \
-H'Content-type: application/json' \
http://localhost:8080
You can use curl
to POST
an event to the endpoint:
$ curl -X POST -d '{"hello": "world"}' \
-H'Content-type: application/json' \
-H'Ce-id: 1' \
-H'Ce-source: cloud-event-example' \
-H'Ce-type: dev.knative.example' \
-H'Ce-specversion: 0.2' \
http://localhost:8080
Sample
You can see this in action, executing the function at test/fixtures/async
by running node hack/run.js
.
Tests
Just run npm test
.