This layer contains PhantomJS headless browser which can be used for screen capture, page automation and headless web testing. Full feature list and use cases can be found here: For full feature list see this: https://github.com/ariya/phantomjs#use-cases
- Just pick up an ARN from the list below, include it in your lambda function.
- Add the layer binaries in PATH like this
export PATH="/opt/phantom-js/bin/:$PATH"; # Add the layer in the path
- Use it in your program like this (We are taking a screenshot here)
rasterize "$html_filename" "$screenshot"; # Read the html file and create screenshot
AWS Region | Layer ARN |
---|---|
us-east-1 | arn:aws:lambda:us-east-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:7 |
us-east-2 | arn:aws:lambda:us-east-2:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:2 |
us-west-1 | arn:aws:lambda:us-west-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:2 |
us-west-2 | arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
ap-south-1 | arn:aws:lambda:ap-south-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
ap-northeast-2 | arn:aws:lambda:ap-northeast-2:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
ap-southeast-1 | arn:aws:lambda:ap-southeast-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
ap-southeast-2 | arn:aws:lambda:ap-southeast-2:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:15 |
ap-northeast-1 | arn:aws:lambda:ap-northeast-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
ca-central-1 | arn:aws:lambda:ca-central-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
eu-central-1 | arn:aws:lambda:eu-central-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
eu-west-1 | arn:aws:lambda:eu-west-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
eu-west-2 | arn:aws:lambda:eu-west-2:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
eu-west-3 | arn:aws:lambda:eu-west-3:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
eu-north-1 | arn:aws:lambda:eu-north-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:1 |
sa-east-1 | arn:aws:lambda:sa-east-1:699054759624:layer:phantom-js:3 |
Note: As of now, it only supports takings screenshots using rasterize
command but can be expanded to
do other stuff too very easily. Pull requests are welcome.
Yeah, I tried resetting them by deleting all of them. Turns out AWS don't reset them even after deleting. More here on stackoverflow