This project is a decorator and validation system that takes the drudgery out of writing custom resources. You still have access to the context and event as normal, but the decorator handles serializing your response and communicating results to CloudFormation.
See cfn-lambda from Andrew Templeton if you're looking to write your custom resources in Node.js.
- Copy
cfn_resource.py
into the directory of your lambda function handler.py - Use the
cfn_resource.Resource
event decorators to decorate your handler like inexample.py
- Zip up the contents and upload to Lambda
Once the function is up, copy its ARN and use it as the ServiceToken for your custom resource. For more on the requests you may receive, see this document
{
"AWSTemplateFormatVersion": "2010-09-09",
"Resources": {
"FakeThing": {
"Type": "Custom::MyResource",
"Properties": {
"ServiceToken": "arn:aws:lambda:SOME-REGION:ACCOUNT:function:FunctionName",
"OtherThing": "foobar",
"AnotherThing": 2
}
}
}
}
For more on how custom resources work, see the AWS docs
For this example, you need to have your handler in Lambda set as
filename.handler
where filename has the below contents.
import cfn_resource
# set `handler` as the entry point for Lambda
handler = cfn_resource.Resource()
@handler.create
def create_thing(event, context):
# do some stuff
return {"PhysicalResourceId": "arn:aws:fake:myID"}
@handler.update
def update_thing(event, context):
# do some stuff
return {"PhysicalResourceId": "arn:aws:fake:myID"}
To run the tests locally, you need Python 2.7 and pip
. Ideally, you
should use a virtualenv.
$ pip install -r test-requirements.txt
$ py.test
The tests use mock
and py.test
and will give you a terminal
coverage report. Currently the tests cover ~90% of the (very small)
codebase.
This code is released under the MIT software license, see LICENSE.txt for details. No warranty of any kind is included, and the copyright notice must be included in redistributions.