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A Koa-like middleware concept to quickly build Lambda functions

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Koala-mbda or Koa-Lambda Build Status JavaScript Style Guide Coverage Status

Koa-style middleware concept to quickly build AWS Lambda functions

Middlewares

Use Koa style middlewares and the kompose method. Examples can be found in handlers e.g. user/addToHistory.ts
A handler is therefore simply equal to the outcome of kompose e.g.

export const handler = kompose(
    callbackBased,
    ...,
    async (ctx, next) => {
        ... // <- this is called while going down the middleware chain
        await next()
        ... // <- this is called once the bottom of the chain has been reached and we are going back up the chain
    },
    ...
)

Rules

A middleware follows the following rules:

  • arguments are ctx:EventContext and next (optional, see Utility middlewares below)
  • ctx contains three properties: event:AWSEvent, context:AWSContext and state. The event type varies depending on the trigger of the lambda function.
  • All middlewares should be async functions; they should always call await next() (or next && await next() in the case of utility)
  • Code reached before the await next() call is processed down the middleware chain
  • Code reached after the await next() call is processed up the middleware chain
  • In case of errors, the middleware should throw an error, not return a rejected promise

Convention

  • All properties to be added or modified along the middleware chain should be added/modified on the ctx.state object
  • For HTTP based calls, the top chain will expect a ctx.state.response property to be populated
  • Errors thrown follow the pattern: {message: '...', code: 42}

Utility middlewares

In case of utility middlewares, that are expected to be used both as normal functions and as part of a middleware chain:

  • the next parameter should be made optional (next?)
  • the call to next should be made optional with the statement next && await next()

E.g. withUserId can be used as a part of a chain, when user isn't needed (only id) but it is also used within withUser as normal function

Base middlewares

↓ means acts down the chain; ↑ up the chain

callbackBased & contextBased ↑

Decide how the outcome of the Lambda function is triggered. Http calls use callback, whereas Cognito triggers use context for example. As of this writing, one of the two must be used as the top middleware for any handler function

httpResponse & standardHttpResponse ↑

Handles Http responses, both success and error. standardHttpResponse simply uses a default code 200 for success, as well as default CORS enabled and JSON content.

withUserId ↓

Reads the user Id from the request and adds it as ctx.state.userId

withUser ↓

Reads the user Id and loads the corresponding user object. Adds the user as ctx.state.user
Note: Does not require withUserId to be added to the chain as it is already part of the code of withUser.

jsonBody ↓

JSON-Parses the body of a POST. Sets the parsed object back onto ctx.state.body (overwrites original)

putInState ↓

Takes value with specified name and puts it in the state

filter ↓

filter the specified argument by specified function

Logical switches

when

Takes a "check" callback which receives the context, and a middleware. If check passes (either as a boolean or a Promise which resolves with a boolean), middleware is called.

Note: Check promise rejection is not currently considered a fail of the check

whenAttributeExists

Similar to when but checks whether a given attribute exists on the state. Uses lodash.get for shortcut (dot notation)

whenAttributeEquals

Similar to whenAttributeExists but checks whether the given attribute equals the given value.

Changelog

v0.0.2:

  • move all properties to state
  • move koa-compose initialisation higher to avoid checking functions twice (thank you @yujilim)

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A Koa-like middleware concept to quickly build Lambda functions

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