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The Serverless Framework – Build applications on AWS Lambda and other next-gen cloud services, that auto-scale and only charge you when they run. This lowers the total cost of running and operating your apps, enabling you to build more and manage less.
The Serverless Framework is a command-line tool that uses easy and approachable YAML syntax to deploy both your code and cloud infrastructure needed to make tons of serverless application use-cases. It's a multi-language framework that supports Node.js, Typescript, Python, Go, Java, and more. It's also completely extensible via over 1,000 plugins that can add more serverless use-cases and workflows to the Framework.
Actively maintained by Serverless Inc.
Install the serverless
CLI via NPM:
npm install -g serverless
Note: If you don’t already have Node on your machine, install it first. If you don't want to install Node or NPM, you can install serverless
as a standalone binary.
To create your first project, run the command below and follow the prompts:
# Create a new serverless project serverless # Move into the newly created directory cd your-service-name
The serverless
command will guide you to:
Note: users based in China get a setup centered around the chinese Tencent provider. To use AWS instead, set the following environment variable: SERVERLESS_PLATFORM_VENDOR=aws
.
Your new serverless project should contain a serverless.yml
file. This file defines what will be deployed to AWS: functions, events, resources and more. You can learn more about this in the Core Concepts documentation.
If the templates proposed by serverless
do not fit your needs, check out the project examples from Serverless Inc. and our community. You can install any example by passing a GitHub URL using the --template-url
option:
serverless --template-url=https://github.com/serverless/examples/tree/v3/...
If you haven't done so already within the serverless
command, you can deploy the project at any time by running:
The deployed functions, resources and URLs will be displayed in the command output.
If you deployed an API, querying its URL will trigger the associated Lambda function. You can find that URL in the serverless deploy
output, or retrieve it later via serverless info
.
If you deployed a function that isn't exposed via a URL, you can invoke it via:
serverless invoke -f hello # Invoke and display logs: serverless invoke -f hello --log
All logs generated by a function's invocation are automatically stored in AWS CloudWatch. Retrieve those logs in the CLI via:
serverless logs -f hello # Tail logs serverless logs -f hello --tail
You can monitor and debug Lambda functions and APIs via the Serverless Dashboard.
To set it up, run the following command in an existing project and follow the prompts:
If you want to delete your service, run serverless remove
. This will delete all the AWS resources created by your project and ensure that you don't incur any unexpected charges. It will also remove the service from Serverless Dashboard.
Now that Serverless Framework is installed, here is what you can do next:
Monitor, observe, and trace your serverless architectures.
Get started instantly with serverless --console
We love our contributors! Please read our Contributing Document to learn how you can start working on the Framework yourself.
Check out our help wanted or good first issue labels to find issues we want to move forward on with your help.
Serverless is licensed under the MIT License.
All files located in the node_modules and external directories are externally maintained libraries used by this software which have their own licenses; we recommend you read them, as their terms may differ from the terms in the MIT License.
Previous Serverless Version 0.5.xYou can read the v0.5.x documentation at readme.io.
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