This template demonstrates how to develop and deploy a simple Node Express API service, backed by DynamoDB database, running on AWS Lambda using the traditional Serverless Framework.
This template configures a single function, api
, which is responsible for handling all incoming requests thanks to the httpApi
event. To learn more about httpApi
event configuration options, please refer to httpApi event docs. As the event is configured in a way to accept all incoming requests, express
framework is responsible for routing and handling requests internally. Implementation takes advantage of serverless-http
package, which allows you to wrap existing express
applications. To learn more about serverless-http
, please refer to corresponding GitHub repository. Additionally, it also handles provisioning of a DynamoDB database that is used for storing data about users. The express
application exposes two endpoints, POST /users
and GET /user/{userId}
, which allow to create and retrieve users.
Install dependencies with:
npm install
and then deploy with:
serverless deploy
After running deploy, you should see output similar to:
Deploying aws-node-express-dynamodb-api-project to stage dev (us-east-1)
✔ Service deployed to stack aws-node-express-dynamodb-api-project-dev (196s)
endpoint: ANY - https://xxxxxxxxxx.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com
functions:
api: aws-node-express-dynamodb-api-project-dev-api (766 kB)
Note: In current form, after deployment, your API is public and can be invoked by anyone. For production deployments, you might want to configure an authorizer. For details on how to do that, refer to httpApi
event docs. Additionally, in current configuration, the DynamoDB table will be removed when running serverless remove
. To retain the DynamoDB table even after removal of the stack, add DeletionPolicy: Retain
to its resource definition.
After successful deployment, you can create a new user by calling the corresponding endpoint:
curl --request POST 'https://xxxxxx.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/users' --header 'Content-Type: application/json' --data-raw '{"name": "John", "userId": "someUserId"}'
Which should result in the following response:
{"userId":"someUserId","name":"John"}
You can later retrieve the user by userId
by calling the following endpoint:
curl https://xxxxxxx.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/users/someUserId
Which should result in the following response:
{"userId":"someUserId","name":"John"}
If you try to retrieve user that does not exist, you should receive the following response:
{"error":"Could not find user with provided \"userId\""}
It is also possible to emulate DynamoDB, API Gateway and Lambda locally using the serverless-dynamodb-local
and serverless-offline
plugins. In order to do that, run:
serverless plugin install -n serverless-dynamodb-local
serverless plugin install -n serverless-offline
It will add both plugins to devDependencies
in package.json
file as well as will add it to plugins
in serverless.yml
. Make sure that serverless-offline
is listed as last plugin in plugins
section:
plugins:
- serverless-dynamodb-local
- serverless-offline
You should also add the following config to custom
section in serverless.yml
:
custom:
(...)
dynamodb:
start:
migrate: true
stages:
- dev
Additionally, we need to reconfigure AWS.DynamoDB.DocumentClient
to connect to our local instance of DynamoDB. We can take advantage of IS_OFFLINE
environment variable set by serverless-offline
plugin and replace:
const dynamoDbClient = new AWS.DynamoDB.DocumentClient();
with the following:
const dynamoDbClientParams = {};
if (process.env.IS_OFFLINE) {
dynamoDbClientParams.region = 'localhost'
dynamoDbClientParams.endpoint = 'http://localhost:8000'
}
const dynamoDbClient = new AWS.DynamoDB.DocumentClient(dynamoDbClientParams);
After that, running the following command with start both local API Gateway emulator as well as local instance of emulated DynamoDB:
serverless offline start
To learn more about the capabilities of serverless-offline
and serverless-dynamodb-local
, please refer to their corresponding GitHub repositories: