Production-ready Node.js GraphQL server for AWS Lambda
$ npm install apollo-server-lambda
This is the AWS Lambda integration for the Apollo community GraphQL Server. Read the docs. Read the CHANGELOG.
npm install apollo-server-lambda
To deploy the AWS Lambda function we must create a Cloudformation Template and a S3 bucket to store the artifact (zip of source code) and template. We will use the AWS Command Line Interface.
// graphql.js
var server = require('apollo-server-lambda'),
myGraphQLSchema = require('./schema');
exports.graphqlHandler = server.graphqlLambda({ schema: myGraphQLSchema });
exports.graphiqlHandler = server.graphiqlLambda({
endpointURL: '/Prod/graphql',
});
The bucket name name must be universally unique.
aws s3 mb s3://<bucket name>
This will look for a file called graphql.js with two exports: graphqlHandler
and graphiqlHandler
. It creates two API endpoints:
/graphql
(GET and POST)/graphiql
(GET)In a file called template.yaml
:
AWSTemplateFormatVersion: '2010-09-09'
Transform: AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31
Resources:
GraphQL:
Type: AWS::Serverless::Function
Properties:
Handler: graphql.graphqlHandler
Runtime: nodejs6.10
Events:
GetRequest:
Type: Api
Properties:
Path: /graphql
Method: get
PostRequest:
Type: Api
Properties:
Path: /graphql
Method: post
GraphQLInspector:
Type: AWS::Serverless::Function
Properties:
Handler: graphql.graphiqlHandler
Runtime: nodejs6.10
Events:
GetRequest:
Type: Api
Properties:
Path: /graphiql
Method: get
This will read and transform the template, created in previous step. Package and upload the artifact to the S3 bucket and generate another template for the deployment.
aws cloudformation package \
--template-file template.yaml \
--output-template-file serverless-output.yaml \
--s3-bucket <bucket-name>
The will create the Lambda Function and API Gateway for GraphQL. We use the stack-name prod
to mean production but any stack name can be used.
aws cloudformation deploy \
--template-file serverless-output.yaml \
--stack-name prod \
--capabilities CAPABILITY_IAM
To read information about the current request from the API Gateway event (HTTP headers, HTTP method, body, path, ...) or the current Lambda Context (Function Name, Function Version, awsRequestId, time remaning, ...) use the options function. This way they can be passed to your schema resolvers using the context option.
var server = require('apollo-server-lambda'),
myGraphQLSchema = require('./schema');
exports.graphqlHandler = server.graphqlLambda((event, context) => {
const headers = event.headers,
functionName = context.functionName;
return {
schema: myGraphQLSchema,
context: {
headers,
functionName,
event,
context,
},
};
});
To enable CORS the response HTTP headers need to be modified. To accomplish this pass in a callback filter to the generated handler of graphqlLambda.
var server = require('apollo-server-lambda'),
myGraphQLSchema = require('./schema');
exports.graphqlHandler = function(event, context, callback) {
const callbackFilter = function(error, output) {
output.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = '*';
callback(error, output);
};
const handler = server.graphqlLambda({ schema: myGraphQLSchema });
return handler(event, context, callbackFilter);
};
To enable CORS response for requests with credentials (cookies, http authentication) the allow origin header must equal the request origin and the allow credential header must be set to true.
const CORS_ORIGIN = 'https://example.com';
var server = require('apollo-server-lambda'),
myGraphQLSchema = require('./schema');
exports.graphqlHandler = function(event, context, callback) {
const requestOrigin = event.headers.origin,
callbackFilter = function(error, output) {
if (requestOrigin === CORS_ORIGIN) {
output.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = CORS_ORIGIN;
output.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Credentials'] = 'true';
}
callback(error, output);
};
const handler = server.graphqlLambda({ schema: myGraphQLSchema });
return handler(event, context, callbackFilter);
};
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