serverless-offline-sns-np
v0.68.0
Published
Serverless plugin to run a local SNS server and call lambdas with events notifications with minor adjustments.
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serverless-offline-sns
A serverless plugin to listen to offline SNS and call lambda fns with events.
Docs
For an example of a working application please see serverless-offline-sns-example
Prerequisites
This plugin provides an SNS server configured automatically without you specifying an endpoint.
If you'd rather use your own endpoint, e.g. from your AWS account or a localstack SNS server endpoint, you can put it in the custom config. See below for details.
Installation
Install the plugin
npm install serverless-offline-sns --save
Let serverless know about the plugin
plugins:
- serverless-offline-sns
Note that ordering matters when used with serverless-offline and serverless-webpack. serverless-webpack must be specified at the start of the list of plugins.
Configure the plugin with your offline SNS endpoint, host to listen on, and a free port the plugin can use.
custom:
serverless-offline-sns:
port: 4002 # a free port for the sns server to run on
debug: false
# host: 0.0.0.0 # Optional, defaults to 127.0.0.1 if not provided to serverless-offline
# sns-endpoint: http://127.0.0.1:4567 # Optional. Only if you want to use a custom endpoint
# accountId: 123456789012 # Optional
In normal operation, the plugin will use the same --host option as provided to serverless-offline. The host parameter as shown above overrides this setting.
If you are using the serverless-offline plugin serverless-offline-sns will start automatically. If you are not using this plugin you can run the following command instead:
serverless offline-sns start
Configure
Configure your function handlers with events as described in the Serverless SNS Documentation
Here's an example serverless.yml
config which calls a function on an SNS notifcation. Note that the offline-sns plugin will automatically pick up this config, subscribe to the topic and call the handler on an SNS notification.
functions:
pong:
handler: handler.pong
events:
- sns: test-topic
Or you can use the exact ARN of the topic, in 2 ways:
functions:
pong:
handler: handler.pong
events:
- sns:
arn: "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:test-topic" # 1st way
- sns: "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:test-topic-two" # 2nd way
Here's a demo of some code that will trigger this handler:
var AWS = require("aws-sdk"); // must be npm installed to use
var sns = new AWS.SNS({
endpoint: "http://127.0.0.1:4002",
region: "us-east-1",
});
sns.publish({
Message: "hello!",
MessageStructure: "json",
TopicArn: "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:test-topic",
}, () => {
console.log("ping");
});
Note the region that offline-sns will listen on is what is configured in your serverless.yml provider.
Localstack docker configuration
In order to listen to localstack SNS event, if localstack is started with docker, you need the following:
custom:
serverless-offline-sns:
host: 0.0.0.0 # Enable plugin to listen on every local address
sns-subscribe-endpoint: 192.168.1.225 #Host ip address
sns-endpoint: http://localhost:4575 # Default localstack sns endpoint
What happens is that the container running localstack will execute a POST request to the plugin, but to reach outside the container, it needs to use the host ip address.
Hosted AWS SNS configuration
In order to listen to a hosted SNS on AWS, you need the following:
custom:
serverless-offline-sns:
localPort: ${env:LOCAL_PORT}
remotePort: ${env:SNS_SUBSCRIBE_REMOTE_PORT}
host: 0.0.0.0
sns-subscribe-endpoint: ${env:SNS_SUBSCRIBE_ENDPOINT}
sns-endpoint: ${env:SNS_ENDPOINT}```
If you want to unsubscribe when you stop your server, then call sls offline-sns cleanup
when the script exits.
Usage
If you use serverless-offline this plugin will start automatically.
However if you don't use serverless-offline you can start this plugin manually with -
serverless offline-sns start
Subscribing
serverless-offline-sns
supports http
, https
, and sqs
subscriptions. email
, email-json
,
sms
, application
, and lambda
protocols are not supported at this time.
When using sqs
the Endpoint
for the subscription must be the full QueueUrl
returned from
the SQS service when creating the queue or listing with ListQueues
:
// async
const queue = await sqs.createQueue({ QueueName: 'my-queue' }).promise();
const subscription = await sns.subscribe({
TopicArn: myTopicArn,
Protocol: 'sqs',
Endpoint: queue.QueueUrl,
}).promise();
Contributors
Happy to accept contributions, feature requests and issues.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
| Matthew James💬 💻 🎨 📖 💡 | darbio🐛 💻 | TiVoMaker🐛 💻 🎨 📖 | Jade Hwang🐛 | Bennett Rogers🐛 💻 | Julius Breckel💻 💡 ⚠️ | RainaWLK🐛 💻 | | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | | Jamie Learmonth🐛 | Gevorg A. Galstyan🐛 💻 | Ivan Montiel🐛 💻 ⚠️ | Matt Ledom💻 🎨 | Keith Kirk💻 🎨 | Kobi Meirson💻 | Steve Green💻 | | Daniel🐛 💻 🎨 | Zdenek Farana💻 | Daniel Maricic💻 | Brandon Evans💻 | AJ Stuyvenberg💬 💻 ⚠️ | justin.kruse⚠️ 💻 | Clement134🐛 💻 | | PJ Cavanaugh🐛 💻 | Victor Ferreira🐛 💻 | Theo📖 | Matt Telesky🐛 💻 | Garrett Scott🐛 💻 | Patrice Gargiolo📖 | Michael W. Martin🐛 💻 | | mr-black-8🐛 💻 | Matthew Miller🐛 💻 | Jason Pell💻 | ziktar🐛 💻 | stevencsf🐛 |
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!