AGW transforms AWS lambda event message to the standard http.Request which can make it easy to work with the existing http routers and chaining libraries. With AWS's native support for golang wrapper, shims like nodejs or python is no longer needed.
In short, the usage is
//your standard http handler
func testhandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Header().Add("test", "test header")
w.(*agw.LPResponse).WriteBody(map[string]string{
"test": "test body",
"funcArn": agw.LambdaContext.InvokedFunctionArn, //can access context as global variable
"event": string(agw.RawMessage), //can access RawMessage as global variable
}, false)
}
func main() {
//use any exsiting router supporting the standard http.Handler
//like "github.com/gorilla/mux"
mux := mux.NewRouter()
mux.HandleFunc("/test1/hello", testhandler)
//lambda is from official sdk "https://github.com/aws/aws-lambda-go"
lambda.Start(agw.Handler(mux))
}
To use it in the real project it might need some more setups
- AWS APIGateway must be configured with lambda proxy mode, typically {/proxy+} here's the doc from aws
- Using any http router such as lightning fast Bone or popular and feature rich Gorilla Mux and even with chaining libraries like Alice to write your middlewares
You can deploy this code to aws lambda and link it to apigateway to see how it works in the test console of aws apigateway.
func handler1(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
p1 := bone.GetValue(r, "var")
bd := string(r.Context().Value(agw.ContextKeyBody).([]byte))
w.(*agw.LPResponse).WriteBody(map[string]string{
"agent": r.UserAgent(),
"var": p1,
"bd": bd,
}, false)
}
func main() {
mux := bone.New()
cors := alice.New(agw.Logging, agw.EnableCORS, agw.ParseBodyBytes)
mux.Post("/test1/:var", cors.ThenFunc(handler1))
lambda.Start(func() agw.GatewayHandler {
return func(ctx context.Context, event json.RawMessage) (interface{}, error) {
//might be useful to store ctx and event as global variable here
agp := agw.NewAPIGateParser(event)
lctx, _ := lambdacontext.FromContext(ctx)
//deal with the different ctx and event,such as connecting to different db endpoint
//or setting up global variables
log.Printf("init here with method %s, req ctx: %+v", agp.Method(), lctx)
return agw.Process(agp, mux), nil
}
}())
}
It is a common scenario that debugging programs with local servers. However, aws lambda and apigateway have limited this possibility. We must upload the code and wait for the logs coming out in the cloudwatch, which is slow and inconvenient. This library provides a little wrapper func to write back data that can help to identify the real type of http.ResponseWriter and invoke corresponding write function.
func handlerTest(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { //you can pass this handler to a standard local http server
//your code...
agw.WriteResponse(w, ret, false) //corresponding Write function will be invoked
})
Firstly, build the standard http router
func buildMux() http.Handler {
mux := bone.New()
cors := alice.New(agw.Logging, agw.EnableCORS)
mux.Get("/test", cors.ThenFunc(handlerTest))
mux.Options("/*", cors.ThenFunc(handlerDummy)) //handle option requests to support POST/PATCH.. requests
}
Typically, there are 2 entry points, one for local or standard server which looks like this:
func DevHTTPEntry() {
srv := &http.Server{
Handler: buildMux(),
Addr: "localhost:9090",
WriteTimeout: 15 * time.Second,
ReadTimeout: 15 * time.Second,
}
log.Fatal(srv.ListenAndServe())
}
and there's another one for lambda:
func LambdaHTTPEntry() {
lambda.Start(func() agw.GatewayHandler {
return func(ctx context.Context, event json.RawMessage) (interface{}, error) {
agp := agw.NewAPIGateParser(event)
return agw.Process(agp, buildMux()), nil
}
}())
}
then switch them according to the environment variable
func HTTPEntry() {
plat, ok := os.LookupEnv("APP_PLATFORM")
if !ok || plat != "Lambda" {
DevHTTPEntry()
} else {
LambdaHTTPEntry()
}
}
- The ResponseWriter.Write([]byte) (int, error) is not going to work as normal http response due to the way how lambda and aws apigateway work
- You need to type assert ResponseWriter as (*agw.LPResponse) and use WriteBody(out, false|true) to set the return body
- Information about aws's base64 support is here
func MyHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
//your logic ....
w.(*agw.LPResponse).WriteBody(out, false)//false|true indicates whether the body is encoded with base64 or not
}
BSD licensed. See the LICENSE file for details.