2.3 KiB
Tutorial 1: NodeJS Function w/ Input (3 minutes)
This example will show you how to test and deploy Node code to Oracle Functions. It will also demonstrate passing data in through stdin.
First, run the following commands:
# Initialize your function creating a func.yaml file
fn init --name hello-node
# Test your function.
# This will run inside a container exactly how it will on the server. It will also install and vendor dependencies from Gemfile
fn run
# Now try with an input
cat sample.payload.json | fn run
# Deploy your functions to the Oracle Functions server (default localhost:8080)
# This will create a route to your function as well
fn deploy --app myapp
Now call your function:
curl http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello-node
Or call from a browser: http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello-node
And now with the JSON input:
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d @sample.payload.json http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello-node
That's it! Our fn deploy packaged our function and sent it to the Oracle Functions server. Try editing func.js
and then doing another fn deploy.
Note on Dependencies
Create a package.json file in your functions directory. The CLI should pick that up and build in all
your dependencies on fn run and fn deploy.
For example, using the package.json file in this directory which includes the request package, you can add this to func.js and it will work:
var request = require('request');
request('http://www.google.com', function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) {
console.log(body) // Show the HTML for the Google homepage.
}
})
In Review
-
We piped JSON data into the function at the command line
cat sample.payload.json | fn run -
We received our function input through stdin
obj = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('/dev/stdin').toString()) -
We wrote our output to stdout
console.log -
We sent stderr to the server logs
console.error