Rust Runtime for AWS Lambda
This package makes it easy to run AWS Lambda Functions written in Rust. This workspace includes multiple crates:
-
lambda-runtime
is a library that provides a Lambda runtime for applications written in Rust. -
lambda-http
is a library that makes it easy to write API Gateway proxy event focused Lambda functions in Rust. -
lambda-extension
is a library that makes it easy to write Lambda Runtime Extensions in Rust. -
lambda-runtime-api-client
is a shared library between the lambda runtime and lambda extension libraries that includes a common API client to talk with the AWS Lambda Runtime API.
Getting started
The easiest way to start writing Lambda functions with Rust is by using Cargo Lambda. This Cargo subcommand provides several commands to help you in your journey with Rust on AWS Lambda.
The preferred way to install Cargo Lambda is by using a package manager.
1- Use Homebrew on MacOS:
2- Use Scoop on Windows:
Or PiP on any system with Python 3 installed:
See other installation options in the Cargo Lambda documentation.
Your first function
To create your first function, run Cargo Lambda with the subcomand new
. This command will generate a Rust package with the initial source code for your function:
cargo lambda new YOUR_FUNCTION_NAME
Example function
If you'd like to manually create your first function, the code below shows you a simple function that receives an event with a firstName
field and returns a message to the caller.
use ;
use ;
async
async
Building and deploying your Lambda functions
If you already have Cargo Lambda installed in your machine, run the next command to build your function:
cargo lambda build --release
There are other ways of building your function: manually with the AWS CLI, with AWS SAM, and with the Serverless framework.
1. Cross-compiling your Lambda functions
By default, Cargo Lambda builds your functions to run on x86_64 architectures. If you'd like to use a different architecture, use the options described below.
1.2. Build your Lambda functions
Amazon Linux 2
We recommend you to use Amazon Linux 2 runtimes (such as provided.al2
) as much as possible for building Lambda functions in Rust. To build your Lambda functions for Amazon Linux 2 runtimes, run:
Amazon Linux 1
Amazon Linux 1 uses glibc version 2.17, while Rust binaries need glibc version 2.18 or later by default. However, with Cargo Lambda, you can specify a different version of glibc.
If you are building for Amazon Linux 1, or you want to support both Amazon Linux 2 and 1, run:
# Note: replace "aarch64" with "x86_64" if you are building for x86_64
cargo lambda build --release --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu.2.17
2. Deploying the binary to AWS Lambda
For a custom runtime, AWS Lambda looks for an executable called bootstrap
in the deployment package zip. Rename the generated executable to bootstrap
and add it to a zip archive.
You can find the bootstrap
binary for your function under the target/lambda
directory.
2.2. Deploying with Cargo Lambda
Once you've built your code with one of the options described earlier, use the deploy
subcommand to upload your function to AWS:
warning Make sure to replace the execution role with an existing role in your account!
This command will create a Lambda function with the same name of your rust package. You can change the name of the function by adding the argument at the end of the command:
info See other deployment options in the Cargo Lambda documentation.
You can test the function with the invoke subcommand:
2.2. Deploying with the AWS CLI
You can also use the AWS CLI to deploy your Rust functions. First, you will need to create a ZIP archive of your function. Cargo Lambda can do that for you automatically when it builds your binary if you add the output-format
flag:
You can find the resulting zip file in target/lambda/YOUR_PACKAGE/bootstrap.zip
. Use that file path to deploy your function with the AWS CLI:
warning Make sure to replace the execution role with an existing role in your account!
You can now test the function using the AWS CLI or the AWS Lambda console
Note: --cli-binary-format raw-in-base64-out
is a required
argument when using the AWS CLI version 2. More Information
2.3. AWS Serverless Application Model (SAM)
You can use Lambda functions built in Rust with the AWS Serverless Application Model (SAM). To do so, you will need to install the AWS SAM CLI, which will help you package and deploy your Lambda functions in your AWS account.
You will need to create a template.yaml
file containing your desired infrastructure in YAML. Here is an example with a single Lambda function:
AWSTemplateFormatVersion: '2010-09-09'
Transform: AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31
Resources:
HelloWorldFunction:
Type: AWS::Serverless::Function
Properties:
MemorySize: 128
Architectures:
Handler: bootstrap
Runtime: provided.al2
Timeout: 5
CodeUri: target/lambda/basic/
Outputs:
FunctionName:
Value: HelloWorldFunction
Description: Name of the Lambda function
You can then deploy your Lambda function using the AWS SAM CLI:
At the end, sam
will output the actual Lambda function name. You can use this name to invoke your function:
2.4. Serverless Framework
Alternatively, you can build a Rust-based Lambda function declaratively using the Serverless framework Rust plugin.
A number of getting started Serverless application templates exist to get you up and running quickly:
- a minimal echo function to demonstrate what the smallest Rust function setup looks like
- a minimal http function to demonstrate how to interface with API Gateway using Rust's native http crate (note this will be a git dependency until 0.2 is published)
- a combination multi function service to demonstrate how to set up a services with multiple independent functions
Assuming your host machine has a relatively recent version of node, you won't need to install any host-wide serverless dependencies. To get started, run the following commands to create a new lambda Rust application and install project level dependencies.
&& &&
Deploy it using the standard serverless workflow:
# build, package, and deploy service to aws lambda
Invoke it using serverless framework or a configured AWS integrated trigger source:
2.5. Docker
Alternatively, you can build a Rust-based Lambda function in a docker mirror of the AWS Lambda provided runtime with the Rust toolchain preinstalled.
Running the following command will start an ephemeral docker container, which will build your Rust application and produce a zip file containing its binary auto-renamed to bootstrap
to meet the AWS Lambda's expectations for binaries under target/lambda_runtime/release/{your-binary-name}.zip
. Typically, this is just the name of your crate if you are using the cargo default binary (i.e. main.rs
):
# build and package deploy-ready artifact
With your application build and packaged, it's ready to ship to production. You can also invoke it locally to verify is behavior using the lambci :provided docker container, which is also a mirror of the AWS Lambda provided runtime with build dependencies omitted:
# start a docker container replicating the "provided" lambda runtime
# awaiting an event to be provided via stdin
&& \
# provide an event payload via stdin (typically a json blob)
# Ctrl-D to yield control back to your function
Local development and testing
Testing your code with unit and integration tests
AWS Lambda events are plain structures deserialized from JSON objects.
If your function handler uses the standard runtime, you can use serde
to deserialize
your text fixtures into the structures, and call your handler directly:
If you're using lambda_http
to receive HTTP events, you can also create http_lambda::Request
structures from plain text fixtures:
Cargo Lambda
Cargo Lambda provides a local server that emulates the AWS Lambda control plane. This server works on Windows, Linux, and MacOS. In the root of your Lambda project, run the subcommand cargo lambda start
to start the server. Your function will be compiled when the server receives the first request to process. Use the subcommand cargo lambda invoke
to send requests to your function. The start
subcommand will watch your function's code for changes, and it will compile it every time you save the source after making changes.
You can read more about how cargo lambda watch and cargo lambda invoke work on the project's documentation page.
Lambda Debug Proxy
Lambdas can be run and debugged locally using a special Lambda debug proxy (a non-AWS repo maintained by @rimutaka), which is a Lambda function that forwards incoming requests to one AWS SQS queue and reads responses from another queue. A local proxy running on your development computer reads the queue, calls your Lambda locally and sends back the response. This approach allows debugging of Lambda functions locally while being part of your AWS workflow. The Lambda handler code does not need to be modified between the local and AWS versions.
AWS event objects
This project does not currently include Lambda event struct definitions. Instead, the community-maintained aws_lambda_events
crate can be leveraged to provide strongly-typed Lambda event structs. You can create your own custom event objects and their corresponding structs as well.
Custom event objects
To serialize and deserialize events and responses, we suggest using the serde
library. To receive custom events, annotate your structure with Serde's macros:
use ;
use json;
use Error;
Feature flags in lambda_http
lambda_http
is a wrapper for HTTP events coming from three different services, Amazon Load Balancer (ALB), Amazon Api Gateway (APIGW), and AWS Lambda Function URLs. Amazon Api Gateway can also send events from three different endpoints, REST APIs, HTTP APIs, and WebSockets. lambda_http
transforms events from all these sources into native http::Request
objects, so you can incorporate Rust HTTP semantics into your Lambda functions.
By default, lambda_http
compiles your function to support any of those services. This increases the compile time of your function because we have to generate code for all the sources. In reality, you'll usually put a Lambda function only behind one of those sources. You can choose which source to generate code for with feature flags.
The available features flags for lambda_http
are the following:
alb
: for events coming from Amazon Elastic Load Balancer.apigw_rest
: for events coming from Amazon API Gateway Rest APIs.apigw_http
: for events coming from Amazon API Gateway HTTP APIs and AWS Lambda Function URLs.apigw_websockets
: for events coming from Amazon API Gateway WebSockets.
If you only want to support one of these sources, you can disable the default features, and enable only the source that you care about in your package's Cargo.toml
file. Substitute the dependency line for lambda_http
for the snippet below, changing the feature that you want to enable:
[]
= "0.5.3"
= false
= ["apigw_rest"]
This will make your function compile much faster.
Supported Rust Versions (MSRV)
The AWS Lambda Rust Runtime requires a minimum of Rust 1.58, and is not guaranteed to build on compiler versions earlier than that.
Security
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
License
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.