4.3 KiB
Building provider integrations
Integrating different infrastructure providers happens through the standard plugin system. Take a look at the "building plugins" documentation to understand how the plugin system works.
Provider specific plugins
You can add the providers name inside the constructor of your plugin. This makes it possible to only execute your plugins logic when the Serverless service uses the provider you've specified in your plugin.
Deployment
Infrastructure provider plugins should bind to specific lifecycle events of the deploy command to compile the function
and their events to provider specific resources.
Deployment lifecycles
Let's take a look at the core deploy plugin and the different lifecycle hooks it provides.
The following lifecycle events are run in order once the user types serverless deploy and hits enter:
deploy:initializedeploy:setupProviderConfigurationdeploy:compileFunctionsdeploy:compileEventsdeploy:createDeploymentArtifactsdeploy:deploy
You, as a plugin developer can hook into those lifecycles to compile and deploy functions and events on your providers infrastructure.
Let's take a closer look at each lifecycle event to understand what its purpose is and what it should be used for.
deploy:initialize
This lifecycle should be used to load the basic resources the provider needs into memory (e.g. parse a basic resource template skeleton such as a CloudFormation template).
deploy:setupProviderConfiguration
The purpose of the deploy:setupProviderConfiguration lifecycle is to take the basic resource template which was created in
the previous lifecycle and deploy the rough skeleton on the cloud providers infrastructure (without any functions
or events) for the first time.
deploy:createDeploymentArtifacts
The whole service get's zipped up into one .zip file. Serverless will automatically exclude the following files / folders to reduce the size of the .zip file:
- .git
- .gitignore
- .serverless
- serverless.yaml
- serverless.yml
- serverless.env.yaml
- serverless.env.yml
- .DS_Store
You can always include previously excluded files and folders if you want to.
deploy:compileFunctions
Next up the functions inside the serverless.yml file should be
compiled to provider specific resources and stored into memory.
deploy:compileEvents
After that the events which are defined in the serverless.yml
file on a per function basis should be compiled to provider specific resources and also stored into memory.
deploy:deploy
The final lifecycle is the deploy:deploy lifecycle which should be used to deploy the previously compiled function and
event resources to the providers infrastructure.
Amazon Web Services provider integration
Curious how this works for the Amazon Web Services (AWS) provider integration? Here are the steps the AWS plugins take to compile and deploy the service on the AWS infrastructure in detail.
The steps in detail
- The
serverless.ymlandserverless.env.ymlfiles are loaded into memory - A default AWS CloudFormation template is loaded and deployed to AWS (A S3 bucket for the service gets created)
(
deploy:setupProviderConfiguration) - The functions of the
serverless.ymlfile are compiled to lambda resources and stored into memory (deploy:compileFunctions) - Each functions events are compiled into CloudFormation resources and stored into memory (
deploy:compileEvents) - Old functions (if available) are removed from the S3 bucket (
deploy:deploy) - The service gets zipped up and is uploaded to S3 (
deploy:createDeploymentArtifactsanddeploy:deploy) - The compiled functions, event resources and custom provider resources are attached to the core CloudFormation template
and the updated CloudFormation template gets redeployed (
deploy:deploy)
The code
You may also take a closer look at the corresponding plugin code to get a deeper knowledge about what's going on behind the scenes.
The full AWS integration can be found in lib/plugins/aws.