smithy-rs/rust-runtime/aws-smithy-http-server-python
82marbag 5363c41c6a
Support @default (#1879)
* Default trait in server

Signed-off-by: Daniele Ahmed <ahmeddan@amazon.de>
Co-authored-by: david-perez <d@vidp.dev>
2022-12-23 09:20:41 +00:00
..
examples Break up `RustCodegenDecorator` (#2099) 2022-12-14 13:26:55 -08:00
src Support @default (#1879) 2022-12-23 09:20:41 +00:00
Cargo.toml Python: Allow injecting Lambda Context (#1985) 2022-12-12 17:42:40 +00:00
LICENSE Implement Python runtime crate and shared socket (#1399) 2022-05-20 17:08:57 +00:00
README.md Python: Use Maturin to build SDKs (#2025) 2022-12-14 12:12:58 +00:00

README.md

aws-smithy-http-server-python

Server libraries for smithy-rs generated servers, targeting pure Python business logic.

Running servers on AWS Lambda

aws-smithy-http-server-python supports running your services on AWS Lambda.

You need to use run_lambda method instead of run method to start the custom runtime instead of the Hyper HTTP server.

In your app.py:

from pokemon_service_server_sdk import App
from pokemon_service_server_sdk.error import ResourceNotFoundException

# ...

# Get the number of requests served by this server.
@app.get_server_statistics
def get_server_statistics(
    _: GetServerStatisticsInput, context: Context
) -> GetServerStatisticsOutput:
    calls_count = context.get_calls_count()
    logging.debug("The service handled %d requests", calls_count)
    return GetServerStatisticsOutput(calls_count=calls_count)

# ...

-app.run()
+app.run_lambda()

aws-smithy-http-server-python comes with a custom runtime so you should run your service without any provided runtimes. You can achieve that with a Dockerfile similar to this:

# You can use any image that has your desired Python version
FROM public.ecr.aws/lambda/python:3.8-x86_64

# Copy your application code to `LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT`
COPY app.py ${LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT}

# When you build your Server SDK for your service, you will get a Python wheel.
# You just need to copy that wheel and install it via `pip` inside your image.
# Note that you need to build your library for Linux, and Python version used to
# build your SDK should match with your image's Python version.
# For cross compiling, you can consult to:
# https://pyo3.rs/latest/building_and_distribution.html#cross-compiling
COPY wheels/ ${LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT}/wheels
RUN pip3 install ${LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT}/wheels/*.whl

# You can install your application's other dependencies listed in `requirements.txt`.
COPY requirements.txt .
RUN pip3 install -r requirements.txt --target "${LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT}"

# Create a symlink for your application's entrypoint,
# so we can use `/app.py` to refer it
RUN ln -s ${LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT}/app.py /app.py

# By default `public.ecr.aws/lambda/python` images comes with Python runtime,
# we need to override `ENTRYPOINT` and `CMD` to not call that runtime and
# instead run directly your service and it will start our custom runtime.
ENTRYPOINT [ "/var/lang/bin/python3.8" ]
CMD [ "/app.py" ]

See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/images-create.html#images-create-from-base for more details on building your custom image.

This crate is part of the AWS SDK for Rust and the smithy-rs code generator. In most cases, it should not be used directly.