This is a plugin for the Serverless framework to allow you have a function that uses an already existing, or external (to that service), SNS topic as an event source.
By default, the Serverless SNS event source will create a new topic just for that function, but in many cases if you want a function to subscribe to a topic, the topic will have already been created, either in the same service or in a different service.
Rather than defining an sns
event for your function, define an externalSNS
event, where the value is a string, the name of the topic that you want to
subscribe this function to.
NOTE: at this time, it is assumed that the topic is in the same account and region as the Lambda function itself. That can be changed in the future if needed - feel free to open an issue, and preferably submit a pull request.
functions:
doSomething:
name: ${self:service}-${self:provider.stage}-doSomething
handler: src/DoSomething.handler
events:
- externalSNS: 'some-topic-name'
By doing that, the deploy
and remove
commands in SLS will now subscribe and
unsubscribe your function to or from the specified topic. If you would like to
subscribe or unsubscribe the functions manually (outside of a deploy or remove
command), you can use serverless subscribeExternalSNS
or
serverless unsubscribeExternalSNS
.
Easy! Pull requests are welcome! Just do the following:
npm install
git checkout -b my_new_feature
)grunt standards
npm test
Our goal is 100% unit test coverage, with good and effective tests (it's easy to hit 100% coverage with junk tests, so we differentiate). We will not accept pull requests for new features that do not include unit tests. If you are submitting a pull request to fix a bug, we may accept it without unit tests (we will certainly write our own for that bug), but we strongly encourage you to write a unit test exhibiting the bug, commit that, and then commit a fix in a separate commit. This greatly increases the likelihood that we will accept your pull request and the speed with which we can process it.
This software is released under the MIT license. See the license file for more details.