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Plugins

A Plugin is custom Javascript code that creates new or extends existing commands within the Serverless Framework. The Serverless Framework is merely a group of Plugins that are provided in the core. If you or your organization have a specific workflow, install a pre-written Plugin or write a plugin to customize the Framework to your needs. External Plugins are written exactly the same way as the core Plugins.

Installing Plugins

External Plugins are added on a per service basis and are not applied globally. Make sure you are in your Service's root directory, then install the corresponding Plugin with the help of NPM:

npm install --save custom-serverless-plugin

We need to tell Serverless that we want to use the plugin inside our service. We do this by adding the name of the Plugin to the plugins section in the serverless.yml file.

# serverless.yml file

plugins:
  - custom-serverless-plugin

Plugins might want to add extra information which should be accessible to Serverless. The custom section in the serverless.yml file is the place where you can add necessary configurations for your plugins (the plugins author / documentation will tell you if you need to add anything there):

plugins:
  - custom-serverless-plugin

custom:
  customkey: customvalue

Service local plugin

If you are working on a plugin or have a plugin that is just designed for one project you can add them to the .serverless_plugins directory at the root of your service, and in the plugins array in serverless.yml.

The plugin will be loaded based on being named custom-serverless-plugin.js or custom-serverless-plugin\index.js in the root of .serverless_plugins folder.

Load Order

Keep in mind that the order you define your plugins matters. When Serverless loads all the core plugins and then the custom plugins in the order you've defined them.

# serverless.yml

plugins:
  - plugin1
  - plugin2

In this case plugin1 is loaded before plugin2.

Writing Plugins

Concepts

Plugin

Code which defines Commands, any Events within a Command, and any Hooks assigned to a Lifecycle Event.

  • Command // CLI configuration, commands, subcommands, options
    • LifecycleEvent(s) // Events that happen sequentially when the command is run
      • Hook(s) // Code that runs when a Lifecycle Event happens during a Command

Command

A CLI Command that can be called by a user, e.g. serverless deploy. A Command has no logic, but simply defines the CLI configuration (e.g. command, subcommands, parameters) and the Lifecycle Events for the command. Every command defines its own lifecycle events.

'use strict';

class MyPlugin {
  constructor() {
    this.commands = {
      deploy: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'resources',
          'functions'
        ]
      },
    };
  }
}

module.exports = MyPlugin;

Lifecycle Events

Events that fire sequentially during a Command. The above example lists two Events. However, for each Event, an additional before and after event is created. Therefore, six Events exist in the above example:

  • before:deploy:resources
  • deploy:resources
  • after:deploy:resources
  • before:deploy:functions
  • deploy:functions
  • after:deploy:functions

The name of the command in front of lifecycle events when they are used for Hooks.

Hooks

A Hook binds code to any lifecycle event from any command.

'use strict';

class Deploy {
  constructor() {
    this.commands = {
      deploy: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'resources',
          'functions'
        ]
      },
    };

    this.hooks = {
      'before:deploy:resources': this.beforeDeployResources,
      'deploy:resources': this.deployResources,
      'after:deploy:functions': this.afterDeployFunctions
    };
  }

  beforeDeployResources() {
    console.log('Before Deploy Resources');
  }

  deployResources() {
    console.log('Deploy Resources');
  }

  afterDeployFunctions() {
    console.log('After Deploy Functions');
  }
}

module.exports = Deploy;

Nesting Commands

You can also nest commands, e.g. if you want to provide a command serverless deploy function. Those nested commands have their own lifecycle events and do not inherit them from their parents.

'use strict';

class MyPlugin {
  constructor() {
    this.commands = {
      deploy: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'resources',
          'functions'
        ],
        commands: {
          function: {
            lifecycleEvents: [
              'package',
              'deploy'
            ],
          },
        },
      },
    }
  }
}

module.exports = MyPlugin;

Defining Options

Each (sub)command can have multiple Options.

Options are passed in with a double dash (--) like this: serverless function deploy --function functionName.

Option Shortcuts are passed in with a single dash (-) like this: serverless function deploy -f functionName.

The options object will be passed in as the second parameter to the constructor of your plugin.

In it, you can optionally add a shortcut property, as well as a required property. The Framework will return an error if a required Option is not included.

Note: At this time, the Serverless Framework does not use parameters.

'use strict';

class Deploy {
  constructor(serverless, options) {
    this.serverless = serverless;
    this.options = options;

    this.commands = {
      deploy: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'functions'
        ],
        options: {
          function: {
            usage: 'Specify the function you want to deploy (e.g. "--function myFunction")',
            shortcut: 'f',
            required: true
          }
        }
      },
    };

    this.hooks = {
      'deploy:functions': this.deployFunction.bind(this)
    }
  }

  deployFunction() {
    console.log('Deploying function: ', this.options.function);
  }
}

module.exports = Deploy;

Provider Specific Plugins

Plugins can be provider specific which means that they are bound to a provider.

Note: Binding a plugin to a provider is optional. Serverless will always consider your plugin if you don't specify a provider.

The provider definition should be added inside the plugins constructor:

'use strict';

class ProviderDeploy {
  constructor(serverless, options) {
    this.serverless = serverless;
    this.options = options;

    // set the providers name here
    this.provider = this.serverless.getProvider('providerName');

    this.commands = {
      deploy: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'functions'
        ],
        options: {
          function: {
            usage: 'Specify the function you want to deploy (e.g. "--function myFunction")',
            required: true
          }
        }
      },
    };

    this.hooks = {
      'deploy:functions': this.deployFunction.bind(this)
    }
  }

  deployFunction() {
    console.log('Deploying function: ', this.options.function);
  }
}

module.exports = ProviderDeploy;

The Plugin's functionality will now only be executed when the Serverless Service's provider matches the provider name which is defined inside the plugins constructor.

Serverless Instance

The serverless instance which enables access to global service config during runtime is passed in as the first parameter to the plugin constructor.

'use strict';

class MyPlugin {
  constructor(serverless, options) {
    this.serverless = serverless;
    this.options = options;

    this.commands = {
      log: {
        lifecycleEvents: [
          'serverless'
        ],
      },
    };

    this.hooks = {
      'log:serverless': this.logServerless.bind(this)
    }
  }

  logServerless() {
    console.log('Serverless instance: ', this.serverless);
  }
}

module.exports = MyPlugin;

Command Naming

Command names need to be unique. If we load two commands and both want to specify the same command (e.g. we have an integrated command deploy and an external command also wants to use deploy) the Serverless CLI will print an error and exit. If you want to have your own deploy command you need to name it something different like myCompanyDeploy so they don't clash with existing plugins.

Extending the info command

The info command which is used to display information about the deployment has detailed lifecycleEvents you can hook into to add and display custom information.

Here's an example overview of the info lifecycle events the AWS implementation exposes:

-> info:info
  -> aws:info:validate
  -> aws:info:gatherData
  -> aws:info:displayServiceInfo
  -> aws:info:displayApiKeys
  -> aws:info:displayEndpoints
  -> aws:info:displayFunctions
  -> aws:info:displayStackOutputs

Here you could e.g. hook into after:aws:info:gatherData and implement your own data collection and display it to the user.

Note: Every provider implements its own info plugin so you might want to take a look into the lifecycleEvents the provider info plugin exposes.