A plugin for Serverless Framework, to simplify deploying Single Page Application using S3 and CloudFront.
Based on the official example, with some important tweaks:
- Auto-generated bucket name, to allow multiple independent deployments without name-clashes
- Packaged as its own repo, so that it can be re-used and independently versioned
Install the package via NPM:
npm install --save-dev https://github.com/jonathanconway/serverless-single-page-app-plugin/tarball
Then register it in your serverless.yml
file, as a plugin:
plugins:
- serverless-single-page-app-plugin
And set an s3LocalPath
custom variable:
custom:
s3LocalPath: dist/
Finally, add appropriately-named resources (Bucket, BucketPolicy and Distribution) and Outputs:
resources:
Resources:
## Specifying the S3 Bucket
WebAppS3Bucket:
Type: AWS::S3::Bucket
Properties:
AccessControl: PublicRead
WebsiteConfiguration:
IndexDocument: index.html
ErrorDocument: index.html
## Specifying the policies to make sure all files inside the Bucket are avaialble to CloudFront
WebAppS3BucketPolicy:
Type: AWS::S3::BucketPolicy
Properties:
Bucket:
Ref: WebAppS3Bucket
PolicyDocument:
Statement:
- Sid: PublicReadGetObject
Effect: Allow
Principal: "*"
Action:
- s3:GetObject
Resource:
Fn::Join: [
"", [
"arn:aws:s3:::",
{ "Ref": "WebAppS3Bucket" },
"/*"
]
]
## Specifying the CloudFront Distribution to server your Web Application
WebAppCloudFrontDistribution:
Type: AWS::CloudFront::Distribution
Properties:
DistributionConfig:
Origins:
- DomainName:
Fn::Join: [
"", [
{ "Ref": "WebAppS3Bucket" },
".s3.amazonaws.com"
]
]
## An identifier for the origin which must be unique within the distribution
Id: WebApp
CustomOriginConfig:
HTTPPort: 80
HTTPSPort: 443
OriginProtocolPolicy: https-only
## In case you want to restrict the bucket access use S3OriginConfig and remove CustomOriginConfig
# S3OriginConfig:
# OriginAccessIdentity: origin-access-identity/cloudfront/E127EXAMPLE51Z
Enabled: 'true'
## Uncomment the following section in case you are using a custom domain
# Aliases:
# - mysite.example.com
DefaultRootObject: index.html
## Since the Single Page App is taking care of the routing we need to make sure ever path is served with index.html
## The only exception are files that actually exist e.h. app.js, reset.css
CustomErrorResponses:
- ErrorCode: 404
ResponseCode: 200
ResponsePagePath: /index.html
DefaultCacheBehavior:
AllowedMethods:
- DELETE
- GET
- HEAD
- OPTIONS
- PATCH
- POST
- PUT
## The origin id defined above
TargetOriginId: WebApp
## Defining if and how the QueryString and Cookies are forwarded to the origin which in this case is S3
ForwardedValues:
QueryString: 'false'
Cookies:
Forward: none
## The protocol that users can use to access the files in the origin. To allow HTTP use `allow-all`
ViewerProtocolPolicy: redirect-to-https
## The certificate to use when viewers use HTTPS to request objects.
ViewerCertificate:
CloudFrontDefaultCertificate: 'true'
## Uncomment the following section in case you want to enable logging for CloudFront requests
# Logging:
# IncludeCookies: 'false'
# Bucket: mylogs.s3.amazonaws.com
# Prefix: myprefix
## In order to print out the hosted domain via `serverless info` we need to define the DomainName output for CloudFormation
Outputs:
WebAppS3BucketOutput:
Value:
'Ref': WebAppS3Bucket
WebAppCloudFrontDistributionOutput:
Value:
'Fn::GetAtt': [ WebAppCloudFrontDistribution, DomainName ]
Warning: Whenever you making changes to CloudFront resource in serverless.yml
the deployment might take a while e.g 20 minutes.
In order to deploy the Single Page Application you need to setup the infrastructure first by running
serverless deploy
The expected result should be similar to:
Serverless: Packaging service…
Serverless: Uploading CloudFormation file to S3…
Serverless: Uploading service .zip file to S3…
Serverless: Updating Stack…
Serverless: Checking Stack update progress…
...........................
Serverless: Stack update finished…
Service Information
service: serverless-simple-http-endpoint
stage: dev
region: us-east-1
api keys:
None
endpoints:
None
functions:
None
After this step your S3 bucket and CloudFront distribution is setup. Now you need to upload your static file e.g. index.html
and app.js
to S3. You can do this by running
serverless syncToS3
The expected result should be similar to
Serverless: upload: app/index.html to s3://yourBucketName123/index.html
Serverless: upload: app/app.js to s3://yourBucketName123/app.js
Serverless: Successfully synced to the S3 bucket
Hint: The plugin is simply running the AWS CLI command: aws S3 sync app/ s3://yourBucketName123/
Now you just need to figure out the deployed URL. You can use the AWS Console UI or run
sls domainInfo
The expected result should be similar to
Serverless: Web App Domain: dyj5gf0t6nqke.cloudfront.net
Visit the printed domain domain and navigate on the web site. It should automatically redirect you to HTTPS and visiting /about will not result in an error with the status code 404, but rather serves the index.html
and renders the about page.
This is how it should look like:
If you make changes to your Single Page Application you might need to invalidate CloudFront's cache to make sure new files are served. Meaning, run:
serverless syncToS3
To sync your files and then:
serverless invalidateCloudFrontCache