Book Image

Hands-On Serverless Applications with Go

By : Mohamed Labouardy
Book Image

Hands-On Serverless Applications with Go

By: Mohamed Labouardy

Overview of this book

Serverless architecture is popular in the tech community due to AWS Lambda. Go is simple to learn, straightforward to work with, and easy to read for other developers; and now it's been heralded as a supported language for AWS Lambda. This book is your optimal guide to designing a Go serverless application and deploying it to Lambda. This book starts with a quick introduction to the world of serverless architecture and its benefits, and then delves into AWS Lambda using practical examples. You'll then learn how to design and build a production-ready application in Go using AWS serverless services with zero upfront infrastructure investment. The book will help you learn how to scale up serverless applications and handle distributed serverless systems in production. You will also learn how to log and test your application. Along the way, you'll also discover how to set up a CI/CD pipeline to automate the deployment process of your Lambda functions. Moreover, you'll learn how to troubleshoot and monitor your apps in near real-time with services such as AWS CloudWatch and X-ray. This book will also teach you how to secure the access with AWS Cognito. By the end of this book, you will have mastered designing, building, and deploying a Go serverless application.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Lambda CLI commands

In this section, we will go through the various AWS Lambda commands that you might use while building your Lambda functions. We will also learn how you use them to automate your deployment process.

The list-functions command

If you recall, this command was introduced in Chapter 2, Getting Started with AWS Lambda. As its name implies, it lists all Lambda functions in the AWS region you provided. The following command will return all Lambda functions in the North Virginia region:

aws lambda list-functions --region us-east-1

For each function, the response includes the function's configuration information (FunctionName, Resources usage, Environment variables, IAM Role, Runtime environment, and so on)...