Using sam remote invoke - Amazon Serverless Application Model
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Using sam remote invoke

Use the Amazon Serverless Application Model Command Line Interface (Amazon SAM CLI) sam remote invoke command to interact with supported Amazon resources in the Amazon Web Services Cloud. You can use sam remote invoke to invoke the following resources:

  • Amazon Kinesis Data Streams – Send data records to Kinesis Data Streams applications.

  • Amazon Lambda – Invoke and pass events to your Lambda functions.

  • Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS) – Send messages to Amazon SQS queues.

  • Amazon Step Functions – Invoke Step Functions state machines to start execution.

For an introduction to the Amazon SAM CLI, see What is the Amazon SAM CLI?.

For an example of using sam remote invoke during a typical development workflow, see Step 5: Interact with your function in the Amazon Web Services Cloud.

To use sam remote invoke, install the Amazon SAM CLI by completing the following:

We also recommend upgrading to the latest version of the Amazon SAM CLI. To learn more, see Upgrading the Amazon SAM CLI.

Before using sam remote invoke, we recommend a basic understanding of the following:

Using the sam remote invoke command

Before using this command, your resource must be deployed to the Amazon Web Services Cloud.

Use the following command structure and run from your project's root directory:

$ sam remote invoke <arguments> <options>
Note

This page will show options being provided at the command prompt. You can also configure options in your project’s configuration file instead of passing them at the command prompt. To learn more, Configure project settings.

For a description of sam remote invoke arguments and options, see sam remote invoke.

Using with Kinesis Data Streams

You can send data records to a Kinesis Data Streams application. The Amazon SAM CLI will send your data record and return a shard ID and sequence number. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example --event hello-world Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream Auto converting value 'hello-world' into JSON '"hello-world"'. If you don't want auto-conversion, please provide a JSON string as event { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980850790050483811301135051202232322" }%
To send a data record
  1. Provide a resource ID value as an argument for your Kinesis Data Streams application. For information on valid resource IDs, see Resource ID.

  2. Provide the data record as an event to send to your Kinesis Data Streams application. You can provide the event at the command line using the --event option, or from a file using --event-file. If you don’t provide an event, the Amazon SAM CLI sends an empty event.

Using with Lambda functions

You can invoke a Lambda function in the cloud and pass an empty event or provide an event at the command line or from a file. The Amazon SAM CLI will invoke your Lambda function and return its response. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: d5ef494b-5f45-4086-86fd-d7322fa1a1f9 Version: $LATEST END RequestId: d5ef494b-5f45-4086-86fd-d7322fa1a1f9 REPORT RequestId: d5ef494b-5f45-4086-86fd-d7322fa1a1f9 Duration: 6.62 ms Billed Duration: 7 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB Init Duration: 164.06 ms {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello world\"}"}%
To invoke a Lambda function
  1. Provide a resource ID value as an argument for your Lambda function. For information on valid resource IDs, see Resource ID.

  2. Provide an event to send to your Lambda function. You can provide the event at the command line using the --event option, or from a file using --event-file. If you don’t provide an event, the Amazon SAM CLI sends an empty event.

Lambda functions configured with response streaming

The sam remote invoke command supports Lambda functions that are configured to stream responses. You can configure a Lambda function to stream responses using the FunctionUrlConfig property in your Amazon SAM templates. When you use sam remote invoke, the Amazon SAM CLI will automatically detect your Lambda configuration and invoke with response streaming.

For an example, see Invoke a Lambda function configured to stream responses.

Pass shareable test events to a Lambda function in the cloud

Shareable test events are test events that you can share with others in the same Amazon Web Services account. To learn more, see Shareable test events in the Amazon Lambda Developer Guide.

Accessing and managing shareable test events

You can use the Amazon SAM CLI sam remote test-event command to access and manage shareable test events. For example, you can use sam remote test-event to do the following:

  • Retrieve shareable test events from the Amazon EventBridge schema registry.

  • Modify shareable test events locally and upload them to the EventBridge schema registry.

  • Delete shareable test events from the EventBridge schema registry.

To learn more, see Using sam remote test-event.

Pass a shareable test event to a Lambda function in the cloud

To pass a shareable test event from the EventBridge schema registry to your Lambda function in the cloud, use the --test-event-name option and provide the name of the shareable test event. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --test-event-name demo-event

If you save the shareable test event locally, you can use the --event-file option and provide the file path and name of the local test event. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --event-file demo-event.json

Using with Amazon SQS

You can send messages to Amazon SQS queues. The Amazon SAM CLI returns the following:

  • Message ID

  • MD5 of message body

  • Response metadata

The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke MySqsQueue --stack-name sqs-example -event hello Sending message to SQS queue MySqsQueue { "MD5OfMessageBody": "5d41402abc4b2a76b9719d911017c592", "MessageId": "05c7af65-9ae8-4014-ae28-809d6d8ec652" }%
To send a message
  1. Provide a resource ID value as an argument for the Amazon SQS queue. For information on valid resource IDs, see Resource ID.

  2. Provide an event to send to your Amazon SQS queue. You can provide the event at the command line using the --event option, or from a file using --event-file. If you don’t provide an event, the Amazon SAM CLI sends an empty event.

Using with Step Functions

You can invoke a Step Functions state machine to start execution. The Amazon SAM CLI will wait for the state machine workflow to complete and return an output of the last step in the execution. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldStateMachine --stack-name state-machine-example --event '{"is_developer": true}' Invoking Step Function HelloWorldStateMachine "Hello Developer World"%
To invoke a state machine
  1. Provide a resource ID value as an argument for the Step Functions state machine. For information on valid resource IDs, see Resource ID.

  2. Provide an event to send to your state machine. You can provide the event at the command line using the --event option, or from a file using --event-file. If you don’t provide an event, the Amazon SAM CLI sends an empty event.

Using sam remote invoke command options

This section covers some of the main options that you can use with the sam remote invoke command. For a full list of options, see sam remote invoke.

Pass an event to your resource

Use the following options to pass events to your resources in the cloud:

  • --event – Pass an event at the command line.

  • --event-file – Pass an event from a file.

Lambda examples

Use --event to pass an event at the command line as a string value:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --event '{"message": "hello!"}' Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: b992292d-1fac-4aa2-922a-c9dc5c6fceab Version: $LATEST END RequestId: b992292d-1fac-4aa2-922a-c9dc5c6fceab REPORT RequestId: b992292d-1fac-4aa2-922a-c9dc5c6fceab Duration: 16.41 ms Billed Duration: 17 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB Init Duration: 185.96 ms {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello!\"}"}%

Use --event-file to pass an event from a file and provide the path to the file:

$ cat event.json {"message": "hello from file"}% $ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --event-file event.json Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 3bc71f7d-153a-4b1e-8c9a-901d91b1bec9 Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 3bc71f7d-153a-4b1e-8c9a-901d91b1bec9 REPORT RequestId: 3bc71f7d-153a-4b1e-8c9a-901d91b1bec9 Duration: 21.15 ms Billed Duration: 22 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello from file\"}"}%

Pass an event using stdin:

$ cat event.json {"message": "hello from file"}% $ cat event.json | sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --event-file - Reading event from stdin (you can also pass it from file with --event-file) Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 85ecc902-8ad0-4a2b-a8c8-9bb4f65f5a7a Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 85ecc902-8ad0-4a2b-a8c8-9bb4f65f5a7a REPORT RequestId: 85ecc902-8ad0-4a2b-a8c8-9bb4f65f5a7a Duration: 1.36 ms Billed Duration: 2 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello from file\"}"}%

Configure the Amazon SAM CLI response output

When you invoke a supported resource with sam remote invoke, the Amazon SAM CLI returns a response that contains the following:

  • Request metadata – Metadata associated with the request. This includes a request ID and request start time.

  • Resource response – The response from your resource after being invoked in the cloud.

You can use the --output option to configure the Amazon SAM CLI output response. The following option values are available:

  • json – Metadata and resource response are returned in a JSON structure. The response contains the full SDK output.

  • text – Metadata is returned in text structure. The resource response is returned in the output format of the resource.

The following is an example of a json output:

$ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app --output json Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction { "ResponseMetadata": { "RequestId": "3bdf9a30-776d-4a90-94a6-4cccc0fc7b41", "HTTPStatusCode": 200, "HTTPHeaders": { "date": "Mon, 19 Jun 2023 17:15:46 GMT", "content-type": "application/json", "content-length": "57", "connection": "keep-alive", "x-amzn-requestid": "3bdf9a30-776d-4a90-94a6-4cccc0fc7b41", "x-amzn-remapped-content-length": "0", "x-amz-executed-version": "$LATEST", "x-amz-log-result": "U1RBUlQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiAzYmRmOWEzMC03NzZkLTRhOTAtOTRhNi00Y2NjYzBmYzdiNDEgVmVyc2lvbjogJExBVEVTVApFTkQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiAzYmRmOWEzMC03NzZkLTRhOTAtOTRhNi00Y2NjYzBmYzdiNDEKUkVQT1JUIFJlcXVlc3RJZDogM2JkZjlhMzAtNzc2ZC00YTkwLTk0YTYtNGNjY2MwZmM3YjQxCUR1cmF0aW9uOiA4LjIzIG1zCUJpbGxlZCBEdXJhdGlvbjogOSBtcwlNZW1vcnkgU2l6ZTogMTI4IE1CCU1heCBNZW1vcnkgVXNlZDogNjggTUIJCg==", "x-amzn-trace-id": "root=1-64908d42-17dab270273fcc6b527dd6b8;sampled=0;lineage=2301f8dc:0" }, "RetryAttempts": 0 }, "StatusCode": 200, "LogResult": "U1RBUlQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiAzYmRmOWEzMC03NzZkLTRhOTAtOTRhNi00Y2NjYzBmYzdiNDEgVmVyc2lvbjogJExBVEVTVApFTkQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiAzYmRmOWEzMC03NzZkLTRhOTAtOTRhNi00Y2NjYzBmYzdiNDEKUkVQT1JUIFJlcXVlc3RJZDogM2JkZjlhMzAtNzc2ZC00YTkwLTk0YTYtNGNjY2MwZmM3YjQxCUR1cmF0aW9uOiA4LjIzIG1zCUJpbGxlZCBEdXJhdGlvbjogOSBtcwlNZW1vcnkgU2l6ZTogMTI4IE1CCU1heCBNZW1vcnkgVXNlZDogNjggTUIJCg==", "ExecutedVersion": "$LATEST", "Payload": "{\"statusCode\":200,\"body\":\"{\\\"message\\\":\\\"hello world\\\"}\"}" }%

When you specify a json output, the entire response is returned to stdout. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app --output json 1> stdout.log Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction $ cat stdout.log { "ResponseMetadata": { "RequestId": "d30d280f-8188-4372-bc94-ce0f1603b6bb", "HTTPStatusCode": 200, "HTTPHeaders": { "date": "Mon, 19 Jun 2023 17:35:56 GMT", "content-type": "application/json", "content-length": "57", "connection": "keep-alive", "x-amzn-requestid": "d30d280f-8188-4372-bc94-ce0f1603b6bb", "x-amzn-remapped-content-length": "0", "x-amz-executed-version": "$LATEST", "x-amz-log-result": "U1RBUlQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiBkMzBkMjgwZi04MTg4LTQzNzItYmM5NC1jZTBmMTYwM2I2YmIgVmVyc2lvbjogJExBVEVTVApFTkQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiBkMzBkMjgwZi04MTg4LTQzNzItYmM5NC1jZTBmMTYwM2I2YmIKUkVQT1JUIFJlcXVlc3RJZDogZDMwZDI4MGYtODE4OC00MzcyLWJjOTQtY2UwZjE2MDNiNmJiCUR1cmF0aW9uOiA0LjE2IG1zCUJpbGxlZCBEdXJhdGlvbjogNSBtcwlNZW1vcnkgU2l6ZTogMTI4IE1CCU1heCBNZW1vcnkgVXNlZDogNjcgTUIJSW5pdCBEdXJhdGlvbjogMTU4LjM5IG1zCQo=", "x-amzn-trace-id": "root=1-649091fc-771473c7778689627a6122b7;sampled=0;lineage=2301f8dc:0" }, "RetryAttempts": 0 }, "StatusCode": 200, "LogResult": "U1RBUlQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiBkMzBkMjgwZi04MTg4LTQzNzItYmM5NC1jZTBmMTYwM2I2YmIgVmVyc2lvbjogJExBVEVTVApFTkQgUmVxdWVzdElkOiBkMzBkMjgwZi04MTg4LTQzNzItYmM5NC1jZTBmMTYwM2I2YmIKUkVQT1JUIFJlcXVlc3RJZDogZDMwZDI4MGYtODE4OC00MzcyLWJjOTQtY2UwZjE2MDNiNmJiCUR1cmF0aW9uOiA0LjE2IG1zCUJpbGxlZCBEdXJhdGlvbjogNSBtcwlNZW1vcnkgU2l6ZTogMTI4IE1CCU1heCBNZW1vcnkgVXNlZDogNjcgTUIJSW5pdCBEdXJhdGlvbjogMTU4LjM5IG1zCQo=", "ExecutedVersion": "$LATEST", "Payload": "{\"statusCode\":200,\"body\":\"{\\\"message\\\":\\\"hello world\\\"}\"}" }%

The following is an example of a text output:

$ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app --output text Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 4dbacc43-1ec6-47c2-982b-9dc4620144d6 Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 4dbacc43-1ec6-47c2-982b-9dc4620144d6 REPORT RequestId: 4dbacc43-1ec6-47c2-982b-9dc4620144d6 Duration: 9.13 ms Billed Duration: 10 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB Init Duration: 165.50 ms {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello world\"}"}%

When you specify a text output, the Lambda function runtime output (for example, logs) is returned to stderr. The Lambda function payload is returned to stdout. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app --output text 2> stderr.log {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello world\"}"}% $ cat stderr.log Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 82273c3b-aa3a-4d16-8f1c-1d2ad3ace891 Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 82273c3b-aa3a-4d16-8f1c-1d2ad3ace891 REPORT RequestId: 82273c3b-aa3a-4d16-8f1c-1d2ad3ace891 Duration: 40.62 ms Billed Duration: 41 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 68 MB $ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app --output text 1> stdout.log Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 74acaa9f-5b80-4a5c-b3b8-ffaccb84cbbd Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 74acaa9f-5b80-4a5c-b3b8-ffaccb84cbbd REPORT RequestId: 74acaa9f-5b80-4a5c-b3b8-ffaccb84cbbd Duration: 2.31 ms Billed Duration: 3 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 67 MB $ cat stdout.log {"statusCode":200,"body":"{\"message\":\"hello world\"}"}%

Customize Boto3 parameters

For sam remote invoke, the Amazon SAM CLI utilizes the Amazon SDK for Python (Boto3) to interact with your resources in the cloud. You can use the --parameter option to customize Boto3 parameters. For a list of supported parameters that you can customize, see --parameter.

Examples

Invoke a Lambda function to validate parameter values and verify permissions:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --parameter InvocationType="DryRun"

Use the --parameter option multiple times in a single command to provide multiple parameters:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app --parameter InvocationType="Event" --parameter LogType="None"

Other options

For a full list of sam remote invoke options, see sam remote invoke.

Configure your project configuration file

To configure sam remote invoke in your configuration file, use remote_invoke in your table. The following is an example of a samconfig.toml file that configures default values for the sam remote invoke command.

...
version =0.1

[default]
...
[default.remote_invoke.parameters]
stack_name = "cloud-app"
event = '{"message": "Hello!"}'

Examples

For a basic example of using sam remote invoke, see Testing Amazon Lambda functions with Amazon SAM remote in the Amazon Compute Blog.

Kinesis Data Streams examples

Basic examples

Send a data record to a Kinesis Data Streams application from a file. The Kinesis Data Streams application is identified by providing an ARN for the resource ID:

$ sam remote invoke arn:aws:kinesis:us-west-2:01234567890:stream/kinesis-example-KinesisStream-BgnLcAey4xUQ --event-file event.json

Send an event provided at the command line to a Kinesis Data Streams application:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example --event hello-world Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream Auto converting value 'hello-world' into JSON '"hello-world"'. If you don't want auto-conversion, please provide a JSON string as event { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980903986194508740483329854174920706" }%

Obtain the physical ID of the Kinesis Data Streams application. Then, provide an event at the command line:

$ sam list resources --stack-name kinesis-example --output json [ { "LogicalResourceId": "KinesisStream", "PhysicalResourceId": "kinesis-example-KinesisStream-ZgnLcQey4xUQ" } ] $ sam remote invoke kinesis-example-KinesisStream-ZgnLcQey4xUQ --event hello Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream Auto converting value 'hello' into JSON '"hello"'. If you don't want auto-conversion, please provide a JSON string as event { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980904340716841045751814812900261890" }%

Provide a JSON string at the command line as an event:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example --event '{"method": "GET", "body": ""}' Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980904492868617924990209230536441858" }%

Send an empty event to the Kinesis Data Streams application:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980904866469008589597168190416224258" }%

Return the Amazon SAM CLI response in JSON format:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example --event '{"hello": "world"}' --output json Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980905078409420803696667195489648642", "ResponseMetadata": { "RequestId": "ebbbd307-3e9f-4431-b67c-f0715e9e353e", "HTTPStatusCode": 200, "HTTPHeaders": { "x-amzn-requestid": "ebbbd307-3e9f-4431-b67c-f0715e9e353e", "x-amz-id-2": "Q3yBcgTwtPaQTV26IKclbECmZikUYOzKY+CzcxA84ZHgCkc5T2N/ITWg6RPOQcWw8Gn0tNPcEJBEHyVVqboJAPgCritqsvCu", "date": "Thu, 09 Nov 2023 18:13:10 GMT", "content-type": "application/x-amz-json-1.1", "content-length": "110" }, "RetryAttempts": 0 } }%

Return the JSON output to stdout:

$ sam remote invoke KinesisStream --stack-name kinesis-example --event '{"hello": "world"}' --output json 1> stdout.log Putting record to Kinesis data stream KinesisStream $ cat stdout.log { "ShardId": "shardId-000000000000", "SequenceNumber": "49646251411914806775980906397777867595039988349006774274", "ResponseMetadata": { "RequestId": "f4290006-d84b-b1cd-a9ee-28306eeb2939", "HTTPStatusCode": 200, "HTTPHeaders": { "x-amzn-requestid": "f4290006-d84b-b1cd-a9ee-28306eeb2939", "x-amz-id-2": "npCqz+IBKpoL4sQ1ClbUmxuJlbeA24Fx1UgpIrS6mm2NoIeV2qdZSN5AhNurdssykXajBrXaC9anMhj2eG/h7Hnbf+bPuotU", "date": "Thu, 09 Nov 2023 18:33:26 GMT", "content-type": "application/x-amz-json-1.1", "content-length": "110" }, "RetryAttempts": 0 } }%

Lambda examples

Basic examples

Invoke a Lambda function by providing the ARN as a resource ID:

$ sam remote invoke arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:012345678910:function:sam-app-HelloWorldFunction-ohRFEn2RuAvp

Invoke a Lambda function by providing the logical ID as a resource ID:

You must also provide the Amazon CloudFormation stack name using the --stack-name option. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldFunction --stack-name sam-app

If your application contains a single Lambda function, you don’t have to specify it’s logical ID. You can provide the --stack-name option only. The following is an example:

$ sam remote invoke --stack-name sam-app

Invoke a Lambda function by providing the physical ID as a resource ID:

The physical ID gets created when you deploy using Amazon CloudFormation.

$ sam remote invoke sam-app-HelloWorldFunction-TZvxQRFNv0k4

Invoke a Lambda function of a child stack:

For this example, our application contains the following directory structure:

lambda-example
├── childstack
│   ├── function
│   │   ├── __init__.py
│   │   ├── app.py
│   │   └── requirements.txt
│   └── template.yaml
├── events
│   └── event.json
├── samconfig.toml
└── template.yaml

To invoke the Lambda function of our childstack, we run the following:

$ sam remote invoke ChildStack/HelloWorldFunction --stack-name lambda-example Invoking Lambda Function HelloWorldFunction START RequestId: 207a864b-e67c-4307-8478-365b004d4bcd Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 207a864b-e67c-4307-8478-365b004d4bcd REPORT RequestId: 207a864b-e67c-4307-8478-365b004d4bcd Duration: 1.27 ms Billed Duration: 2 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 36 MB Init Duration: 111.07 ms {"statusCode": 200, "body": "{\"message\": \"Hello\", \"received_event\": {}}"}%

Invoke a Lambda function configured to stream responses

In this example, we use the Amazon SAM CLI to initialize a new serverless application that contains a Lambda function configured to stream its response. We deploy our application to the Amazon Web Services Cloud and use the sam remote invoke to interact with our function in the cloud.

We start by running the sam init command to create a new serverless application. We select the Lambda Response Streaming quick start template and name our application lambda-streaming-nodejs-app.

$ sam init You can preselect a particular runtime or package type when using the `sam init` experience. Call `sam init --help` to learn more. Which template source would you like to use? 1 - AWS Quick Start Templates 2 - Custom Template Location Choice: 1 Choose an AWS Quick Start application template 1 - Hello World Example ... 9 - Lambda Response Streaming ... 15 - Machine Learning Template: 9 Which runtime would you like to use? 1 - go (provided.al2) 2 - nodejs18.x 3 - nodejs16.x Runtime: 2 Based on your selections, the only Package type available is Zip. We will proceed to selecting the Package type as Zip. Based on your selections, the only dependency manager available is npm. We will proceed copying the template using npm. Would you like to enable X-Ray tracing on the function(s) in your application? [y/N]: ENTER Would you like to enable monitoring using CloudWatch Application Insights? For more info, please view https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/monitoring/cloudwatch-application-insights.html [y/N]: ENTER Project name [sam-app]: lambda-streaming-nodejs-app ----------------------- Generating application: ----------------------- Name: lambda-streaming-nodejs-app Runtime: nodejs18.x Architectures: x86_64 Dependency Manager: npm Application Template: response-streaming Output Directory: . Configuration file: lambda-streaming-nodejs-app/samconfig.toml Next steps can be found in the README file at lambda-streaming-nodejs-app/README.md Commands you can use next ========================= [*] Create pipeline: cd lambda-streaming-nodejs-app && sam pipeline init --bootstrap [*] Validate SAM template: cd lambda-streaming-nodejs-app && sam validate [*] Test Function in the Cloud: cd lambda-streaming-nodejs-app && sam sync --stack-name {stack-name} --watch

The Amazon SAM CLI creates our project with the following structure:

lambda-streaming-nodejs-app
	├── README.md
	├── __tests__
	│   └── unit
	│       └── index.test.js
	├── package.json
	├── samconfig.toml
	├── src
	│   └── index.js
	└── template.yaml

The following is an example of our Lambda function code:

exports.handler = awslambda.streamifyResponse( async (event, responseStream, context) => { const httpResponseMetadata = { statusCode: 200, headers: { "Content-Type": "text/html", "X-Custom-Header": "Example-Custom-Header" } }; responseStream = awslambda.HttpResponseStream.from(responseStream, httpResponseMetadata); // It's recommended to use a `pipeline` over the `write` method for more complex use cases. // Learn more: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/configuration-response-streaming.html responseStream.write("<html>"); responseStream.write("<p>First write!</p>"); responseStream.write("<h1>Streaming h1</h1>"); await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 1000)); responseStream.write("<h2>Streaming h2</h2>"); await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 1000)); responseStream.write("<h3>Streaming h3</h3>"); await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 1000)); // Long strings will be streamed const loremIpsum1 = "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque vitae mi tincidunt tellus ultricies dignissim id et diam. Morbi pharetra eu nisi et finibus. Vivamus diam nulla, vulputate et nisl cursus, pellentesque vehicula libero. Cras imperdiet lorem ante, non posuere dolor sollicitudin a. Vestibulum ipsum lacus, blandit nec augue id, lobortis dictum urna. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia curae; Morbi auctor orci eget tellus aliquam, non maximus massa porta. In diam ante, pulvinar aliquam nisl non, elementum hendrerit sapien. Vestibulum massa nunc, mattis non congue vitae, placerat in quam. Nam vulputate lectus metus, et dignissim erat varius a."; responseStream.write(`<p>${loremIpsum1}</p>`); await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 1000)); responseStream.write("<p>DONE!</p>"); responseStream.write("</html>"); responseStream.end(); } );

The following is an example of our template.yaml file. Response streaming for our Lambda function is configured using the FunctionUrlConfig property.

AWSTemplateFormatVersion: '2010-09-09' Transform: AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31 Description: > Sample SAM Template for lambda-streaming-nodejs-app Resources: StreamingFunction: Type: AWS::Serverless::Function Properties: CodeUri: src/ Handler: index.handler Runtime: nodejs18.x Architectures: - x86_64 Timeout: 10 FunctionUrlConfig: AuthType: AWS_IAM InvokeMode: RESPONSE_STREAM Outputs: StreamingFunction: Description: "Streaming Lambda Function ARN" Value: !GetAtt StreamingFunction.Arn StreamingFunctionURL: Description: "Streaming Lambda Function URL" Value: !GetAtt StreamingFunctionUrl.FunctionUrl

Typically, you can use sam build and sam deploy --guided to build and deploy a production application. In this example, we’ll assume a development environment and use the sam sync command to build and deploy our application.

Note

The sam sync command is recommended for development environments. To learn more, see Using sam sync.

Before running sam sync, we verify that our project is configured correctly in our samconfig.toml file. Most importantly, we verify the values for stack_name and watch. With these values specified in our configuration file, we don't have to provide them at the command line.

version = 0.1
	
	[default]
	[default.global.parameters]
	stack_name = "lambda-streaming-nodejs-app"
	
	[default.build.parameters]
	cached = true
	parallel = true
	
	[default.validate.parameters]
	lint = true
	
	[default.deploy.parameters]
	capabilities = "CAPABILITY_IAM"
	confirm_changeset = true
	resolve_s3 = true
	s3_prefix = "lambda-streaming-nodejs-app"
	region = "us-west-2"
	image_repositories = []
	
	[default.package.parameters]
	resolve_s3 = true
	
	[default.sync.parameters]
	watch = true
	
	[default.local_start_api.parameters]
	warm_containers = "EAGER"
	
	[default.local_start_lambda.parameters]
	warm_containers = "EAGER"

Next, we run sam sync to build and deploy our application. Since the --watch option is configured in our configuration file, the Amazon SAM CLI will build our application, deploy our application, and watch for changes.

$ sam sync The SAM CLI will use the AWS Lambda, Amazon API Gateway, and AWS StepFunctions APIs to upload your code without performing a CloudFormation deployment. This will cause drift in your CloudFormation stack. **The sync command should only be used against a development stack**. Queued infra sync. Waiting for in progress code syncs to complete... Starting infra sync. Building codeuri: /Users/.../lambda-streaming-nodejs-app/src runtime: nodejs18.x metadata: {} architecture: x86_64 functions: StreamingFunction package.json file not found. Continuing the build without dependencies. Running NodejsNpmBuilder:CopySource Build Succeeded Successfully packaged artifacts and wrote output template to file /var/folders/45/5ct135bx3fn2551_ptl5g6_80000gr/T/tmpavrzdhgp. Execute the following command to deploy the packaged template sam deploy --template-file /var/folders/45/5ct135bx3fn2551_ptl5g6_80000gr/T/tmpavrzdhgp --stack-name <YOUR STACK NAME> Deploying with following values =============================== Stack name : lambda-streaming-nodejs-app Region : us-west-2 Disable rollback : False Deployment s3 bucket : aws-sam-cli-managed-default-samclisourcebucket-1a4x26zbcdkqr Capabilities : ["CAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM", "CAPABILITY_AUTO_EXPAND"] Parameter overrides : {} Signing Profiles : null Initiating deployment ===================== 2023-06-20 12:11:16 - Waiting for stack create/update to complete CloudFormation events from stack operations (refresh every 0.5 seconds) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ResourceStatus ResourceType LogicalResourceId ResourceStatusReason ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::CloudFormation::St lambda-streaming- Transformation ack nodejs-app succeeded CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::IAM::Role StreamingFunctionRole - CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::CloudFormation::St AwsSamAutoDependencyLay - ack erNestedStack CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::IAM::Role StreamingFunctionRole Resource creation Initiated CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::CloudFormation::St AwsSamAutoDependencyLay Resource creation ack erNestedStack Initiated CREATE_COMPLETE AWS::IAM::Role StreamingFunctionRole - CREATE_COMPLETE AWS::CloudFormation::St AwsSamAutoDependencyLay - ack erNestedStack CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::Lambda::Function StreamingFunction - CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::Lambda::Function StreamingFunction Resource creation Initiated CREATE_COMPLETE AWS::Lambda::Function StreamingFunction - CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::Lambda::Url StreamingFunctionUrl - CREATE_IN_PROGRESS AWS::Lambda::Url StreamingFunctionUrl Resource creation Initiated CREATE_COMPLETE AWS::Lambda::Url StreamingFunctionUrl - CREATE_COMPLETE AWS::CloudFormation::St lambda-streaming- - ack nodejs-app ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CloudFormation outputs from deployed stack ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Outputs ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Key StreamingFunction Description Streaming Lambda Function ARN Value arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:012345678910:function:lambda-streaming-nodejs-app- StreamingFunction-gUmhO833A0vZ Key StreamingFunctionURL Description Streaming Lambda Function URL Value https://wxgkcc2dyntgtrwhf2dgdcvylu0rnnof.lambda-url.us-west-2.on.aws/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Stack creation succeeded. Sync infra completed. Infra sync completed.

Now that our function is deployed to the cloud, we can use sam remote invoke to interact with our function. The Amazon SAM CLI automatically detects that our function is configured for response streaming and immediately begins outputting a streamed response of our function in real time.

$ sam remote invoke StreamingFunction Invoking Lambda Function StreamingFunction {"statusCode":200,"headers":{"Content-Type":"text/html","X-Custom-Header":"Example-Custom-Header"}}<html><p>First write!</p><h1>Streaming h1</h1><h2>Streaming h2</h2><h3>Streaming h3</h3><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque vitae mi tincidunt tellus ultricies dignissim id et diam. Morbi pharetra eu nisi et finibus. Vivamus diam nulla, vulputate et nisl cursus, pellentesque vehicula libero. Cras imperdiet lorem ante, non posuere dolor sollicitudin a. Vestibulum ipsum lacus, blandit nec augue id, lobortis dictum urna. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia curae; Morbi auctor orci eget tellus aliquam, non maximus massa porta. In diam ante, pulvinar aliquam nisl non, elementum hendrerit sapien. Vestibulum massa nunc, mattis non congue vitae, placerat in quam. Nam vulputate lectus metus, et dignissim erat varius a.</p><p>DONE!</p></html>START RequestId: 1e4cdf04-60de-4769-b3a2-c1481982deb4 Version: $LATEST END RequestId: 1e4cdf04-60de-4769-b3a2-c1481982deb4 REPORT RequestId: 1e4cdf04-60de-4769-b3a2-c1481982deb4 Duration: 4088.66 ms Billed Duration: 4089 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 68 MB Init Duration: 168.45 ms

When we modify our function code, the Amazon SAM CLI instantly detects and immediately deploys our changes. Here is an example of the Amazon SAM CLI output after changes are made to our function code:

Syncing Lambda Function StreamingFunction...                                             
	Building codeuri:                                                                        
	/Users/.../lambda-streaming-nodejs-app/src runtime: nodejs18.x metadata: {} architecture:    
	x86_64 functions: StreamingFunction                                                      
	package.json file not found. Continuing the build without dependencies.                  
	Running NodejsNpmBuilder:CopySource                                                      
	Finished syncing Lambda Function StreamingFunction.                                      
	Syncing Layer StreamingFunctione9cfe924DepLayer...                                       
	SyncFlow [Layer StreamingFunctione9cfe924DepLayer]: Skipping resource update as the      
	content didn't change                                                                    
	Finished syncing Layer StreamingFunctione9cfe924DepLayer. 

We can now use sam remote invoke again to interact with our function in the cloud and test our changes.

SQS examples

Basic examples

Invoke an Amazon SQS queue by providing the ARN as a resource ID:

$ sam remote invoke arn:aws:sqs:us-west-2:01234567890:sqs-example-4DonhBsjsW1b --event '{"hello": "world"}' --output json Sending message to SQS queue MySqsQueue { "MD5OfMessageBody": "49dfdd54b01cbcd2d2ab5e9e5ee6b9b9", "MessageId": "4f464cdd-15ef-4b57-bd72-3ad225d80adc", "ResponseMetadata": { "RequestId": "95d39377-8323-5ef0-9223-ceb198bd09bd", "HTTPStatusCode": 200, "HTTPHeaders": { "x-amzn-requestid": "95d39377-8323-5ef0-9223-ceb198bd09bd", "date": "Wed, 08 Nov 2023 23:27:26 GMT", "content-type": "application/x-amz-json-1.0", "content-length": "106", "connection": "keep-alive" }, "RetryAttempts": 0 } }%

Step Functions examples

Basic examples

Invoke a state machine by providing its physical ID as a resource ID:

First, we use sam list resources to obtain our physical ID:

$ sam list resources --stack-name state-machine-example --output json [ { "LogicalResourceId": "HelloWorldStateMachine", "PhysicalResourceId": "arn:aws:states:us-west-2:513423067560:stateMachine:HelloWorldStateMachine-z69tFEUx0F66" }, { "LogicalResourceId": "HelloWorldStateMachineRole", "PhysicalResourceId": "simple-state-machine-HelloWorldStateMachineRole-PduA0BDGuFXw" } ]

Next, we invoke our state machine using the physical ID as a resource ID. We pass in an event at the command line with the --event option:

$ sam remote invoke arn:aws:states:us-west-2:01234567890:stateMachine:HelloWorldStateMachine-z69tFEUx0F66 --event '{"is_developer": true}' Invoking Step Function arn:aws:states:us-west-2:01234567890:stateMachine:HelloWorldStateMachine-z69tFEUx0F66 "Hello Developer World"%

Invoke a state machine by passing an empty event:

$ sam remote invoke HelloWorldStateMachine --stack-name state-machine-example Invoking Step Function HelloWorldStateMachine "Hello World"%

For documentation related to sam remote invoke and using the Amazon SAM CLI, see the following: