Serverless
Run serverless applications and REST APIs using your existing Fastify application.
Contents
Attention Readers:
Fastify is not designed to run on serverless environments. The Fastify framework is designed to make implementing a traditional HTTP/S server easy. Serverless environments requests differently than a standard HTTP/S server; thus, we cannot guarantee it will work as expected with Fastify. Regardless, based on the examples given in this document, it is possible to use Fastify in a serverless environment. Again, keep in mind that this is not Fastify's intended use case and we do not test for such integration scenarios.
AWS Lambda
The sample provided allows you to easily build serverless web applications/services and RESTful APIs using Fastify on top of AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway.
Note: Using aws-lambda-fastify is just one possible way.
app.js
const fastify = require('fastify');
function init() {
const app = fastify();
app.get('/', (request, reply) => reply.send({ hello: 'world' }));
return app;
}
if (require.main === module) {
// called directly i.e. "node app"
init().listen(3000, (err) => {
if (err) console.error(err);
console.log('server listening on 3000');
});
} else {
// required as a module => executed on aws lambda
module.exports = init;
}
When executed in your lambda function we don't need to listen to a specific port, so we just export the wrapper function init
in this case. The lambda.js
file will use this export.
When you execute your Fastify application like always, i.e. node app.js
(the detection for this could be require.main === module
), you can normally listen to your port, so you can still run your Fastify function locally.
lambda.js
const awsLambdaFastify = require('aws-lambda-fastify')
const init = require('./app');
const proxy = awsLambdaFastify(init())
// or
// const proxy = awsLambdaFastify(init(), { binaryMimeTypes: ['application/octet-stream'] })
exports.handler = proxy;
// or
// exports.handler = (event, context, callback) => proxy(event, context, callback);
// or
// exports.handler = (event, context) => proxy(event, context);
// or
// exports.handler = async (event, context) => proxy(event, context);
We just require aws-lambda-fastify (make sure you install the dependency npm i —save aws-lambda-fastify
) and our app.js
file and call the exported awsLambdaFastify
function with the app
as the only parameter. The resulting proxy
function has the correct signature to be used as lambda handler
function. This way all the incoming events (API Gateway requests) are passed to the proxy
function of aws-lambda-fastify.
Example
An example deployable with claudia.js can be found here.
Considerations
- API Gateway doesn't support streams yet, so you're not able to handle streams.
- API Gateway has a timeout of 29 seconds, so it's important to provide a reply during this time.
Google Cloud Run
Unlike AWS Lambda or Google Cloud Functions, Google Cloud Run is a serverless container environment. It's primary purpose is to provide an infrastructure-abstracted environment to run arbitrary containers. As a result, Fastify can be deployed to Google Cloud Run with little-to-no code changes from the way you would write your Fastify app normally.
Follow the steps below to deploy to Google Cloud Run if you are already familiar with gcloud or just follow their quickstart.
Adjust Fastify server
In order for Fastify to properly listen for requests within the container, be sure to set the correct port and address:
function build() {
const fastify = Fastify({ trustProxy: true })
return fastify
}
async function start() {
// Google Cloud Run will set this environment variable for you, so
// you can also use it to detect if you are running in Cloud Run
const IS_GOOGLE_CLOUD_RUN = process.env.K_SERVICE !== undefined
// You must listen on the port Cloud Run provides
const port = process.env.PORT || 3000
// You must listen on all IPV4 addresses in Cloud Run
const address = IS_GOOGLE_CLOUD_RUN ? "0.0.0.0" : undefined
try {
const server = build()
const address = await server.listen(port, address)
console.log(`Listening on ${address}`)
} catch (err) {
console.error(err)
process.exit(1)
}
}
module.exports = build
if (require.main === module) {
start()
}
Add a Dockerfile
You can add any valid Dockerfile
that packages and runs a Node app. A basic Dockerfile
can be found in the official gcloud docs.
# Use the official Node.js 10 image.
# https://hub.docker.com/_/node
FROM node:10
# Create and change to the app directory.
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
# Copy application dependency manifests to the container image.
# A wildcard is used to ensure both package.json AND package-lock.json are copied.
# Copying this separately prevents re-running npm install on every code change.
COPY package*.json ./
# Install production dependencies.
RUN npm install --only=production
# Copy local code to the container image.
COPY . .
# Run the web service on container startup.
CMD [ "npm", "start" ]
Add a .dockerignore
To keep build artifacts out of your container (which keeps it small and improves build times), add a .dockerignore
file like the one below:
Dockerfile
README.md
node_modules
npm-debug.log
Submit build
Next, submit your app to be built into a Docker image by running the following command (replacing PROJECT-ID
and APP-NAME
with your GCP project id and an app name):
gcloud builds submit --tag gcr.io/PROJECT-ID/APP-NAME
Deploy Image
After your image has built, you can deploy it with the following command:
gcloud beta run deploy --image gcr.io/PROJECT-ID/APP-NAME --platform managed
Your app will be accessible from the URL GCP provides.
Zeit Now
now provides zero configuration deployment for Node.js applications. In order to use now, it is as simple as configuring your now.json
file like the following:
{
"version": 2,
"builds": [
{
"src": "api/serverless.js",
"use": "@now/node",
"config": {
"helpers": false
}
}
],
"routes": [
{ "src": "/.*", "dest": "/api/serverless.js"}
]
}
Then, write a api/serverless.js
like so:
'use strict'
const build = require('./index')
const app = build()
module.exports = async function (req, res) {
await app.ready()
app.server.emit('request', req, res)
}
And a api/index.js
file:
'use strict'
const fastify = require('fastify')
function build () {
const app = fastify({
logger: true
})
app.get('/', async (req, res) => {
const { name = 'World' } = req.query
req.log.info({ name }, 'hello world!')
return `Hello ${name}!`
})
return app
}
module.exports = build
Note that you'll need to use Node 10 by setting it in package.json
:
"engines": {
"node": "10.x"
},