DEV Community

Nana Quayson for AWS Community Builders

Posted on • Originally published at nquayson.com on

Build a serverless hit counter on AWS using Terraform

In this easy-to-follow guide, you will learn how to create a hit counter for your website. You will need to be familiar with AWS serverless services and have a basic understanding of Terraform to be able to easily follow this guide. At the end of this guide, you will build a hit counter API that you can integrate into your web pages. See a working demo here. https://demos.nquayson.com/hitcounter/index.html

Why build a hit counter from scratch on AWS when other services exist for the purpose?

Consider this as a fun little hands-on project that hones your AWS, IaC and Python programming skills!

Overview

Here is a quick overview of all the services that will be deployed in this project:

An architecture diagram illustrating all the services used

  • S3 bucket for hosting the static assets of the web application

  • ACM certificate for enabling secure communication over HTTPS

  • Cloudfront for serving the static assets across edge locations for our global user base

  • DynamoDB will be our NoSQL database choice

  • Lambda function for running our backend logic and eventually getting and setting the values in the database.

  • Lambda function URL will be used rather than an API Gateway

Prerequisites

  • An AWS account and some AWS experience

  • Some Infrastructure as Code (IaC) knowledge

  • An AWS CLI profile configured for your development environment to access your AWS account

Fork the repository

Before we start, make your fork of the repository containing the full source code. This will be your own copy giving you the flexibility to experiment and explore.

Lambda function logic

The handler function will be the entry point when lambda is invoked. The handler calls the update_hit() function which updates the 'hit_count' attribute of a specific item (key = "1") in the DynamoDB table. The UpdateExpression parameter defines the update operation to perform. Here, it uses the 'ADD' action to increment the value of the 'hit_count' attribute by 1. The updated value of 'hit_count' is returned and we expect that as a string. The string zfill() method is used to pad a copy of this string with zeroes on the left. Resulting in the transformation "234" -> "00234"

Terraform provider

Time to write some Terraform for provisioning our resources. First, we declare the provider block in provider.tf file. The default_tags mean that all resources created with this provider will be tagged with the provided map.

provider "aws" {
  profile = "YOUR_CLI_PROFILE"
  region = "us-east-1"
  default_tags {
    tags = {Name = var.name}
  }
}

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Variables

We define some variables we need in variables.tf. We also declare the full_name local variable, which is a concatenation of name and env variables. This variable will be mainly used as the (aws-end) name of major resources. This way we can easily replicate the project for a different environment, such as another region within the same account, without worrying about name collisions.

variable "name" {
  description = "Name of application"
  default = "demo"
} 
variable "env" {
  description = "Environment name"
  default = "env"
}
locals {
  full_name = "${var.env}-${var.name}"
}

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Lambda Function

The rest of the code, except output, is defined in main.tf. Here we provision the lambda function that runs on Python3.8, using a deployment package in a zip archive. We also define an IAM role that the lambda function can assume. The role provides AWSLambdaBasicExecutionRole and an inline policy that allows the lambda function read and write access to the DynamoDB database.

resource "aws_lambda_function" "myfunc" {
  filename = data.archive_file.zip.output_path
  source_code_hash = data.archive_file.zip.output_base64sha256
  function_name = local.full_name
  description = "Hit counter demo"
  role = aws_iam_role.iam_for_lambda.arn
  handler = "func.handler" #filename.handlermethod
  runtime = "python3.8"
  environment {
    variables = {
      TABLE_NAME = aws_dynamodb_table.hitcount.name
    }
  }
}
resource "aws_iam_role" "iam_for_lambda" {
  name = local.full_name
  assume_role_policy = data.aws_iam_policy_document.allow-lambda-assume.json
  managed_policy_arns = [
    "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/service-role/AWSLambdaBasicExecutionRole"
  ]
  inline_policy {
    name = "ddbreadwrite"
    policy = data.aws_iam_policy_document.ddbreadwrite.json
  }
}
data "archive_file" "zip" {
  type = "zip"
  source_dir = "${path.module}/lambda/"
  output_path = "${path.module}/packedlambda.zip"
}
data "aws_iam_policy_document" "allow-lambda-assume" {
  statement {
    effect = "Allow"
    actions = ["sts:AssumeRole"]
    principals {
      identifiers = ["lambda.amazonaws.com"]
      type = "Service"
    }
  }
}

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Database

The database is DynamoDB with a single table; an id and hitcount columns. We can store as many website pages as ids and their corresponding hit counts in the hitcount column.

A dynamoDB Table which has various webpageIDs and their corresponding hitcounts

data "aws_iam_policy_document" "ddbreadwrite" {
  statement {
    sid = "ddbreadwrite"
    effect = "Allow"
    actions = ["dynamodb:Scan", "dynamodb:PutItem", "dynamodb:GetItem", "dynamodb:UpdateItem"]
    resources = ["*"]
  }
}
resource "aws_dynamodb_table" "hitcount" {
  name = local.full_name
  billing_mode = "PAY_PER_REQUEST"
  hash_key = "id"
  attribute {
    name = "id"
    type = "S"
  }
}

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The API

A lambda function URL will serve as the https endpoint to our lambda function. This is a quick way to create an API, but usually not suitable for production use.

resource "aws_lambda_function_url" "url1" {
  function_name = aws_lambda_function.myfunc.function_name
  authorization_type = "NONE"
  cors {
    allow_credentials = true
    allow_origins = ["*"]
    allow_methods = ["*"]
    allow_headers = ["date", "keep-alive"]
    expose_headers = ["keep-alive", "date"]
    max_age = 86400
  }
}

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Here is the full GitHub code for the project.

Let's run Terraform

To run Terraform we go through the workflow steps:

terraform init
terraform plan
terraform apply

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Outputs

Our resources should now be created in the AWS account. We see a terminal output for the new function URL endpoint. Making a get request to this endpoint should return the hit count value.

Changes to Outputs:
  + function_endpoint = "https://4pxyxy0e.execute-api.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/prod/api"

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

What's next: Embedding the counter API into a webpage

Now that our API is successfully deployed, we can integrate it into a webpage by writing some Javascript in our frontend.

url = "https://4pxyxy0e.execute-api.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/prod/api"
let mcount = ""
fetch(url)
  .then(response => response.text())
  .then((response) => {
      console.log(response)
      mcount = response
      for (let i = 0; i < mcount.length; i++) {
        var newSpan = document.createElement('span');
        newSpan.innerHTML = mcount[i];
        document.getElementById('mydiv').appendChild(newSpan);
      }
  })
  .catch(err => console.log(err))

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The code fetches data from our API endpoint via a GET request and then appends each character of the text response to an HTML span on the webpage.

See the full working demo here.

Let me know your thoughts in the comment section.

Top comments (0)