lambda_invoke_with_response_stream: Configure your Lambda functions to stream response payloads...

View source: R/lambda_operations.R

lambda_invoke_with_response_streamR Documentation

Configure your Lambda functions to stream response payloads back to clients

Description

Configure your Lambda functions to stream response payloads back to clients. For more information, see Configuring a Lambda function to stream responses.

See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/lambda_invoke_with_response_stream/ for full documentation.

Usage

lambda_invoke_with_response_stream(
  FunctionName,
  InvocationType = NULL,
  LogType = NULL,
  ClientContext = NULL,
  Qualifier = NULL,
  Payload = NULL
)

Arguments

FunctionName

[required] The name or ARN of the Lambda function.

Name formats

  • Function name⁠my-function⁠.

  • Function ARN⁠arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:123456789012:function:my-function⁠.

  • Partial ARN⁠123456789012:function:my-function⁠.

The length constraint applies only to the full ARN. If you specify only the function name, it is limited to 64 characters in length.

InvocationType

Use one of the following options:

  • RequestResponse (default) – Invoke the function synchronously. Keep the connection open until the function returns a response or times out. The API operation response includes the function response and additional data.

  • DryRun – Validate parameter values and verify that the IAM user or role has permission to invoke the function.

LogType

Set to Tail to include the execution log in the response. Applies to synchronously invoked functions only.

ClientContext

Up to 3,583 bytes of base64-encoded data about the invoking client to pass to the function in the context object.

Qualifier

The alias name.

Payload

The JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.

You can enter the JSON directly. For example, ⁠--payload '{ "key": "value" }'⁠. You can also specify a file path. For example, ⁠--payload file://payload.json⁠.


paws.compute documentation built on Sept. 12, 2024, 6:12 a.m.