There's nothing as pleasing as sending a clean URL to a friend or a colleague. No complicated path, no extensions, just a plain and simple URL. As I explained in this post, I hosted my statically linked website on AWS S3. This is great for cost savings and low maintenance, but it comes with a trade-off.
When hosting websites on S3, you can configure your index page and your error page. When you configure index.html
as your index page, https://robkenis.com/
will lead to https://robkenis.com/index.html
. Wonderful, your single-page application works without further configuration. But what about https://robkenis.com/posts/hosting_your_blog_on_aws/
β¦there is no option to configure an index page for that path straight from S3.
The work-around I used in the initial setup, was enabling ugly URLs in Hugo. This would export the post as /posts/hosting_your_blog_on_aws.html
and create the links to the post accordingly. Although my site worked, I was unhappy with the need for extensions in my URLs.
AWS Lambda to the rescue
There is another way to manipulate the URLs, a way in which the user won't even notice. Why don't we intercept the request before it reaches S3 and append /index.html
to all URLs that need it? This would mean clean URLs for the user that point to actual files in S3.
Obviously I wasn't the first one to come up with this solution. Years ago, AWS introduced Lambda @ Edge, a solution that enables you to execute serverless functions directly from your CloudFront Distribution. So no servers to maintain, you only need to write a Lambda function and configure CloudFront to call it when a request is received.
Great solution, but can be improved on!
Introducing CloudFront Functions
And here we are, a couple of months after Lambda @ Edge was possible, the process to execute functions at the edge was made simpler. Back in May 2021, AWS introduced CloudFront Functions, a solution that provides the option to write small, fast functions that execute when a user arrives at your CDN.
Creating a function
For those who have written a Lambda before, the next part will seem familiar. Your function has a handler method, which takes an event as input. The same applies to CloudFront Functions. I'll explain further with the code I used to make pretty URLs possible for my own website.
function handler(event) {
var request = event.request;
var uri = request.uri;
if (uri.endsWith('/')) {
request.uri += 'index.html';
}
else if (!uri.includes('.')) {
request.uri += '/index.html';
}
return request;
}
When an event of type CloudFrontRequest is received, the URI is taken from the input. When the URI ends with a /
or has no extension, /index.html
is added to the URI, so it points to the correct file in S3.
Now we have our logic inside a Lambda function. All that is left, is attaching it to our CloudFront. In the same fashion as the previous post, I'll share the CloudFormation snippet below. The following CloudFormation resource will create a CloudFront Function. For now the only runtime available is cloudfront-js-1.0
. To me, this looks like very old JavaScript, so no const and let yet. To view your function, head over to the CloudFront console and find 'CloudFront Functions' in the menu on the left side.
Resources:
PrettyURLs:
Properties:
AutoPublish: true
FunctionCode: |
function handler(event) {
var request = event.request;
var uri = request.uri;
if (uri.endsWith('/')) {
request.uri += 'index.html';
}
else if (!uri.includes('.')) {
request.uri += '/index.html';
}
return request;
}
FunctionConfig:
Comment: Enable pretty URLs for Hugo
Runtime: cloudfront-js-1.0
Name: !Join
- '-'
- - !Ref 'AWS::StackName'
- rewrite-pretty-urls
Type: AWS::CloudFront::Function
This will only create the CloudFront Function, but without configuring it, it will never be called. To attach it to a Distribution, we must configure it like any Lambda @ Edge function. We must pick an EventType
, and this is where CloudFront Functions are limited. Out of the 4 options, we can only pick viewer-request
and viewer-response
, so no modifying the request between the Distribution and the Origin during the
origin-request
and origin-response
events. Next to the EventType, we must pass the reference to our CloudFront Function using the ARN.
Resources:
CloudFront:
Properties:
DistributionConfig:
...
DefaultCacheBehaviour:
...
FunctionAssociations:
- EventType: viewer-request
FunctionARN: !GetAtt 'PrettyURLs.FunctionARN'
After attaching the Function to the Distribution, you're all set. When a user requests a page at https://robkenis.com/posts/whatever-post-comes-next/
, index.html
will be added so the user is served the correct page straight from S3, without managing any servers or adding noticeable costs.
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