Skip to main content

Deploy Bash Lambda Functions with AWS CDK

Project description

NPM version PyPI version Release

cdk-lambda-bash

Deploy Bash Lambda Functions with AWS CDK

Why

AWS Lambda has the docker container image support since AWS re:Invent 2020 which allows you to run your Lambda code in a custom container image. Inspired by nikovirtala/cdk-eks-experiment, cdk-lambda-bash allows you to specify a local shell script and bundle it up as a custom resource in your cdk stack. On cdk deployment, your shell script will be executed in a Lambda container environment.

BashExecFunction

At this moment, we are offering BashExecFunction construct class which is a high-level abstraction of lambda.Function. By defining the script property which poins to your local shell script, on cdk deploy, this script will be bundled into a custom docker image and published as a lambda.DockerImageFunction.

If you fn.run(), a custom resource will be created and the lambda.DockerImageFunction will be executed on deployment.

Install

Use the npm dist tag to opt in CDKv1 or CDKv2:

// for CDKv2
npm install cdk-lambda-bash
or
npm install cdk-lambda-bash@latest

// for CDKv1
npm install cdk-lambda-bash@cdkv1

Sample

const app = new cdk.App();

const stack = new cdk.Stack(app, 'my-stack');

// bundle your Lambda function to execute the local demo.sh in container
const fn = new BashExecFunction(stack, 'Demo', {
  script: path.join(__dirname, '../demo.sh'),
})

// run it as custom resource on deployment
fn.run();

Re-execution on assets update

By default, if you update your shell script or Dockerfile and re-deploy your CDK application, the BashExecFunction will not be re-executed. Use runOnUpdate to enable the re-execution on update.

fn.run({ runOnUpdate: true });

Custom Dockerfile

In some cases, you may customize your own Dockerfile, for instances:

  1. You need extra tools or utilities such as kubectl or helm
  2. You need build from your own base image

In these cases, create a custom Dockerfile as below and add extra utilities i.e. kubectl:

click and view custom Dockerfile sample
FROM public.ecr.aws/lambda/provided:al2

RUN yum install -y unzip jq

# install aws-cli v2
RUN curl "https://awscli.amazonaws.com/awscli-exe-linux-x86_64.zip" -o "awscliv2.zip" && \
  unzip awscliv2.zip && \
  ./aws/install

# install kubectl
RUN curl -o kubectl https://amazon-eks.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.19.6/2021-01-05/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl && \
  chmod +x kubectl && \
  mv kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl

COPY bootstrap /var/runtime/bootstrap
COPY function.sh /var/task/function.sh
COPY main.sh /var/task/main.sh
RUN chmod +x /var/runtime/bootstrap /var/task/function.sh /var/task/main.sh

WORKDIR /var/task
CMD [ "function.sh.handler" ]

Specify your own Dockerfile with the dockerfile property.

new BashExecFunction(stack, 'Demo', {
  script: path.join(__dirname, '../demo.sh'),
  dockerfile: path.join(__dirname, '../Dockerfile'),
});

Conditional Execution

In the user script(e.g. demo.sh), you are allowed to determine the event type and act accordingly.

For example

const installArgoCD = new BashExecFunction(...)

installArgoCD.run({runOnUpdate: true});

When you run this sample, demo.sh will receive onCreate event and you can run your custom logic to "install ArgoCD" like kubectl apply -f URL. However, if you comment it off and deploy again:

const installArgoCD = new BashExecFunction(...)

//installArgoCD.run({runOnUpdate: true});

Under the hood, demo.sh will receive onDelete event and you can run your custom logic to "uninstall ArgoCD" like kubectl delete -f URL.

Check the full sample code below:

Click and view the sample code
#!/bin/bash

# implement your business logic below
function onCreate() {
  echo "running kubectl apply -f ..."
}

function onUpdate() {
  echo "do nothing on update"
}

function onDelete() {
  echo "running kubectl delete -f ..."
}

function getRequestType() {
  echo $1 | jq -r .RequestType
}

function conditionalExec() {
  requestType=$(getRequestType $EVENT_DATA)

  # determine the original request type
  case $requestType in
    'Create') onCreate $1 ;;
    'Update') onUpdate $1 ;;
    'Delete') onDelete $1 ;;
  esac
}

echo "Hello cdk lambda bash!!"

conditionalExec

exit 0

In Action

See this tweet

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

cdk-lambda-bash-2.0.133.tar.gz (40.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

cdk_lambda_bash-2.0.133-py3-none-any.whl (39.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file cdk-lambda-bash-2.0.133.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: cdk-lambda-bash-2.0.133.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 40.4 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.10.6

File hashes

Hashes for cdk-lambda-bash-2.0.133.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 277137d7bb73e48a7c95fbc0ebba895e7c7885e9d97e60e68290c037cefa6b8b
MD5 47a24b99da2879fbe6a340a184d7b277
BLAKE2b-256 acf1c4465f0dbeac5eac8a8211469acd04efde45ade97632475d5e195964baab

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file cdk_lambda_bash-2.0.133-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for cdk_lambda_bash-2.0.133-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1d699f565e2e2aaab3ddc5a3edf976fb2ad941f5e9f8901b9df3f49bf638da20
MD5 bcded57a0f03128ba9a2cb7502f395e7
BLAKE2b-256 287a18f7927860bb7d7e2eef1ac84739b8979da6719b4e6c2d1338e0f8211f99

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page