Sidecar for Laravel
Deploy and execute AWS Lambda functions from your Laravel application.
Read the full docs at hammerstone.dev/sidecar/docs.
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If you're a visual learner, watch the Laracasts series.
To install, simply require the package from composer: composer require hammerstone/sidecar
This package is still under development, please open issues for anything you run into.
What Sidecar Does
Sidecar packages, creates, deploys, and executes Lambda functions from your Laravel application.
You can write functions in any of the following runtimes and execute them straight from PHP:
- Node.js 16
- Node.js 14
- Node.js 12
- Node.js 10
- Python 3.9
- Python 3.8
- Python 3.7
- Python 3.6
- Python 2.7
- Ruby 2.7
- Ruby 2.5
- Java 11
- Java 8
- Go 1.x
- .NET 6
- .NET Core 3.1
- .NET Core 2.1
Any runtime that Lambda supports, you can use!
Hammerstone
Sidecar is maintained by Aaron Francis. If you find it useful consider checking out Refine which allows your users to easily create filters you can run on your app’s data. Works with Laravel and Vue 2 or Vue 3.
What It Looks Like
Every Sidecar Function requires two things:
- A PHP Class
- Files that you want deployed to Lambda
For example, if we were wanting to use Node on Lambda to generate an og:image for all of our blog posts, we would first set up a simple class in PHP called OgImage
.
App\Sidecar\OgImage.php
namespace App\Sidecar;
use Hammerstone\Sidecar\LambdaFunction;
class OgImage extends LambdaFunction
{
public function handler()
{
// Define your handler function.
return 'lambda/image.handler';
}
public function package()
{
// All files and folders needed for the function.
return [
'lambda',
];
}
}
That's it! There are a lot more options, but that's all that is required.
The second thing you'd need is your function's "handler", in this case a javascript file.
Here's a simple JS file that could serve as our handler:
resources/lambda/image.js
const {createCanvas} = require('canvas')
exports.handler = async function (event) {
const canvas = createCanvas(1200, 630)
const context = canvas.getContext('2d')
context.font = 'bold 70pt Helvetica'
context.textAlign = 'center'
context.fillStyle = '#3574d4'
// Read the text out of the event passed in from PHP.
context.fillText(event.text, 600, 170);
// Return an image.
return canvas.toDataURL('image/jpeg');
}
With those files created, you can deploy this function to Lambda:
php artisan sidecar:deploy --activate
And then execute it straight from your Laravel app!
web.php
Route::get('/ogimage', function () {
return OgImage::execute([
'text' => 'PHP to JS and Back Again!'
]);
});
Sidecar passes the payload from execute
over to your Javascript function. Your Javascript function generates an image and sends it back to PHP.
Sidecar reduces the complexity of deploying small bits of code to Lambda.
Why Sidecar Exists
AWS Lambda is a powerful service that allows you to run code without provisioning or thinking about servers.
Laravel Vapor brought that power to Laravel. Using Vapor, you can run your plain ol' Laravel apps on a serverless platform and get incredible speed, security, and reliability.
Using Lambda through Vapor is a wonderful developer experience, but there are times when building your applications that you need to run just one or two Node functions for some reason. Common use cases could be taking screenshots with headless Chrome, generating images, or doing server-side rendering of your Javascript frontend.
Or maybe you want to run a Python script without configuring a server? Or a single Ruby script. Or even Java!
When running on a serverless platform, it's not quite as easy as installing Node and running your functions. You don't have access to the server! So you end up deploying a single Vercel or Netlify function and calling it over HTTP or just forgetting the thing altogether.
Sidecar brings the ease of Vapor to those non-PHP functions.
What Sidecar Doesn't Do
Sidecar does not handle any API Gateway, Databases, Caches, etc. The only thing Sidecar concerns itself with is packaging, creating, deploying, and executing Lambda functions.
Sidecar does not provide a way to execute a function via HTTP. You must execute it from your Laravel app through the provided methods.
If you need those other services, you are encouraged to use the instances that Vapor has set up for you, or set them up yourself.