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Use AWS Lambda in Clojure way.

Current version:

Clojars Project

Usage

Define a Lambda handler using the deflambdafn macro provided by lambada.core:

(ns example.lambda
  (:require [lambada.core :refer [deflambdafn]]))

(deflambdafn example.lambda.MyLambdaFn
  [in out ctx]
  (println "AWS Lambda function called!"))

When this namespace is AOT compiled, it will generate a class called example.lambda.MyLambdaFn that implements the AWS Lambda RequestStreamHandler interface using the args and body provided.

Simplest way to deploy is to create an uberjar using leiningen or boot and then use that as the JAR you upload to AWS Lambda. Assuming you have an uberjar called my-lambda-project.jar in target, the following commands will do the job:

$ aws lambda create-function \
    --region eu-west-1 \
    --function-name my-lambda-project \
    --zip-file fileb://$(pwd)/target/my-lambda-project.jar \
    --role arn:aws:iam::YOUR-AWS-ACCOUNT-ID:role/lambda_basic_execution \
    --handler example.lambda.MyLambdaFn \
    --runtime java8 \
    --timeout 15 \
    --memory-size 512
...

$ aws lambda invoke \
    --invocation-type RequestResponse \
    --function-name my-lambda-project \
    --region eu-west-1 \
    --log-type Tail \
    --payload '{"some":"input"}' \
    outfile.txt
...

See example for an example project.

Startup time

While using aws lambda with Clojure i noticed, that cold start of application can take up to 5 seconds. That was a big problem in my case. You can't pass jvm args and somehow tune JVM. You can only play with memory size in aws console.

The only solution is to ping your function every 5 minutes to keep it warm. The question is, who should ping your function, which application, and where is it deployed. The answer - you can use Cloud Watch service and create scheduled warm up event for your lambda function.

Setup instraction:

  1. Open CloudWatch Management Console.
  2. Go to Events.
  3. Click Create rule
  4. Check Event Source as Schedule.
  5. In my case the default value of Fixed rate of was 5 minutes.
  6. Click on Add target.
  7. Select your lambda function.
  8. Click on Configure details.
  9. Give name to event.
  10. Click Create rule.

Congratulation. You created warm up event for your lambda function. Enjoy quick response time.

License

Copyright © 2017 Aleh Atsman.

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.

Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Ragnar Dahlén, Astma & Aleh Atsman
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