This project provides a working, open source based, AWS Lambda handler skeleton Python code including DEPLOYMENT code with CDK and a pipeline.
This project can serve as a template for new Serverless services - CDK deployment code, pipeline and handler are covered.
📜Documentation | Blogs website
Contact details | ran.isenberg@ranthebuilder.cloud
You can start with a clean service out of this template repository without using the 'Template' button on GitHub.
You can use Cookiecutter.
- Cookiecutter - install with pip/brew
brew install cookiecutter
or ``pip install cookiecutter`
Then run:
cookiecutter gh:ran-isenberg/cookiecutter-serverless-python
Answer the questions to select repo name, service name, etc.:
That's it, your developer environment has been set! you are ready to deploy the service:
cd {new repo folder}
poetry shell
make deploy
You can also run 'make pr' will run all checks, synth, file formatters , unit tests, deploy to AWS and run integration and E2E tests.
Starting a Serverless service can be overwhelming. You need to figure out many questions and challenges that have nothing to do with your business domain:
- How to deploy to the cloud? What IAC framework do you choose?
- How to write a SaaS-oriented CI/CD pipeline? What does it need to contain?
- How do you handle observability, logging, tracing, metrics?
- How do you write a Lambda function?
- How do you handle testing?
- What makes an AWS Lambda handler resilient, traceable, and easy to maintain? How do you write such a code?
This project aims to reduce cognitive load and answer these questions for you by providing a skeleton Python Serverless service template that implements best practices for AWS Lambda, Serverless CI/CD, and AWS CDK in one template project.
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This project provides a working orders service where customers can create orders of items.
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The project deploys an API GW with an AWS Lambda integration under the path POST /api/orders/ and stores data in a DynamoDB table.
- Python Serverless service with a recommended file structure.
- CDK infrastructure with infrastructure tests and security tests.
- CI/CD pipelines based on Github actions that deploys to AWS with python linters, complexity checks and style formatters.
- CI/CD pipeline deploys to dev/staging and production environments with different gates between each environment
- Makefile for simple developer experience.
- The AWS Lambda handler embodies Serverless best practices and has all the bells and whistles for a proper production ready handler.
- AWS Lambda handler uses AWS Lambda Powertools.
- AWS Lambda handler 3 layer architecture: handler layer, logic layer and data access layer
- Features flags and configuration based on AWS AppConfig
- Idempotent API
- REST API protected by WAF with four AWS managed rules in production deployment
- CloudWatch dashboards - High level and low level including CloudWatch alarms
- Unit, infrastructure, security, integration and end to end tests.
The CDK code create an API GW with a path of /api/orders which triggers the lambda on 'POST' requests.
The AWS Lambda handler uses a Lambda layer optimization which takes all the packages under the [packages] section in the Pipfile and downloads them in via a Docker instance.
This allows you to package any custom dependencies you might have, just add them to the Pipfile under the [packages] section.
The AWS Lambda handler will implement multiple best practice utilities.
Each utility is implemented when a new blog post is published about that utility.
The utilities cover multiple aspect of a production-ready service, including:
- Logging
- Observability: Monitoring and Tracing
- Observability: Business KPIs Metrics
- Environment Variables
- Input Validation
- Dynamic Configuration & feature flags
- Start Your AWS Serverless Service With Two Clicks
- CDK Best practices
- Serverless Monitoring
- API Idempotency
Head over to the complete project documentation pages at GitHub pages at https://ran-isenberg.github.io/aws-lambda-handler-cookbook
Code contributions are welcomed. Read this guide.
Read our code of conduct here.
- Email: ran.isenberg@ranthebuilder.cloud
- Blog Website RanTheBuilder
- LinkedIn: ranisenberg
- Twitter: IsenbergRan
This library is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file.