Reputation: 61396
I've got a piece of code that I need to make available over the 'Net. It's a perfect fit for an AWS Lambda with an HTTP API on top - a stateless, side effect free, rather CPU intensive function, blob in, blob out. It's written in C#/.NET, but it's not pure .NET, it makes use of the UWP API, therefore requires Windows Server 2016.
AWS Lambdas only run on Linux hosts, even C# ones. Is there any way to deploy this piece in the Amazon cloud in serverless manner - maybe something other than a Lambda? I know I can go with a EC2 VM, but this is the very kind of thing serverless architecture was invented for.
Upvotes: 6
Views: 557
Reputation: 30790
Lambda is the only option for serverless computing on AWS and Lambda functions run only on Linux machines.
If you need to run serverless functions in a Windows machine, try Azure Functions. That's the Lambda equivalent in the Microsoft cloud. I'm not sure if it runs in a Windows Server 2016 machine and couldn't find any reference to the platform, but I would expect that, as a brand new service, they are using their own edge tech.
To confirm if the platform is what you need, try this function:
using System.Management;
using System.Net;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
public static async Task<HttpResponseMessage> Run(HttpRequestMessage req, TraceWriter log)
{
// Get OS friendly name
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/577634/how-to-get-the-friendly-os-version-name
var caption = (from x in new ManagementObjectSearcher("SELECT Caption FROM Win32_OperatingSystem").Get().Cast<ManagementObject>()
select x.GetPropertyValue("Caption")).FirstOrDefault();
string name = caption != null ? caption.ToString() : "Unknown";
// the function response
return req.CreateResponse(HttpStatusCode.OK, name);
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 4942
I think yoy can achieve this via combination of CodeDeploy service and AWS CodePipeline.
Refer to this article:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/codedeploy/latest/userguide/getting-started-windows.html
to learn how to deploy code via CodeDeploy. Later see this article:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/codepipeline/latest/userguide/getting-started-4.html
to learn how you can configure aws Pipline to call Code Deploy and later execute your batch job on created windows machine (note: you will probably want to use S3 instead of Github - which is possible with CodePipeline).
I would consider to bootstrap whole such configuration via script - using aws cli - this way you can clean up easily your resources like this:
:aws codepipeline delete-pipeline --name "MyJob"
Of course you can configure the pipeline via aws web console and leave the pipeline configured to run your code on regular basis.
Upvotes: -1