Lambda / Client / create_function_url_config
create_function_url_config#
- Lambda.Client.create_function_url_config(**kwargs)#
Creates a Lambda function URL with the specified configuration parameters. A function URL is a dedicated HTTP(S) endpoint that you can use to invoke your function.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_function_url_config( FunctionName='string', Qualifier='string', AuthType='NONE'|'AWS_IAM', Cors={ 'AllowCredentials': True|False, 'AllowHeaders': [ 'string', ], 'AllowMethods': [ 'string', ], 'AllowOrigins': [ 'string', ], 'ExposeHeaders': [ 'string', ], 'MaxAge': 123 }, InvokeMode='BUFFERED'|'RESPONSE_STREAM' )
- Parameters:
FunctionName (string) –
[REQUIRED]
The name or ARN of the Lambda function.
Name formats
Function name –
my-function
.Function ARN –
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:123456789012:function:my-function
.Partial ARN –
123456789012: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.
Qualifier (string) – The alias name.
AuthType (string) –
[REQUIRED]
The type of authentication that your function URL uses. Set to
AWS_IAM
if you want to restrict access to authenticated users only. Set toNONE
if you want to bypass IAM authentication to create a public endpoint. For more information, see Security and auth model for Lambda function URLs.Cors (dict) –
The cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) settings for your function URL.
AllowCredentials (boolean) –
Whether to allow cookies or other credentials in requests to your function URL. The default is
false
.AllowHeaders (list) –
The HTTP headers that origins can include in requests to your function URL. For example:
Date
,Keep-Alive
,X-Custom-Header
.(string) –
AllowMethods (list) –
The HTTP methods that are allowed when calling your function URL. For example:
GET
,POST
,DELETE
, or the wildcard character (*
).(string) –
AllowOrigins (list) –
The origins that can access your function URL. You can list any number of specific origins, separated by a comma. For example:
https://www.example.com
,http://localhost:60905
.Alternatively, you can grant access to all origins using the wildcard character (
*
).(string) –
ExposeHeaders (list) –
The HTTP headers in your function response that you want to expose to origins that call your function URL. For example:
Date
,Keep-Alive
,X-Custom-Header
.(string) –
MaxAge (integer) –
The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that web browsers can cache results of a preflight request. By default, this is set to
0
, which means that the browser doesn’t cache results.
InvokeMode (string) –
Use one of the following options:
BUFFERED
– This is the default option. Lambda invokes your function using theInvoke
API operation. Invocation results are available when the payload is complete. The maximum payload size is 6 MB.RESPONSE_STREAM
– Your function streams payload results as they become available. Lambda invokes your function using theInvokeWithResponseStream
API operation. The maximum response payload size is 20 MB, however, you can request a quota increase.
- Return type:
dict
- Returns:
Response Syntax
{ 'FunctionUrl': 'string', 'FunctionArn': 'string', 'AuthType': 'NONE'|'AWS_IAM', 'Cors': { 'AllowCredentials': True|False, 'AllowHeaders': [ 'string', ], 'AllowMethods': [ 'string', ], 'AllowOrigins': [ 'string', ], 'ExposeHeaders': [ 'string', ], 'MaxAge': 123 }, 'CreationTime': 'string', 'InvokeMode': 'BUFFERED'|'RESPONSE_STREAM' }
Response Structure
(dict) –
FunctionUrl (string) –
The HTTP URL endpoint for your function.
FunctionArn (string) –
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of your function.
AuthType (string) –
The type of authentication that your function URL uses. Set to
AWS_IAM
if you want to restrict access to authenticated users only. Set toNONE
if you want to bypass IAM authentication to create a public endpoint. For more information, see Security and auth model for Lambda function URLs.Cors (dict) –
The cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) settings for your function URL.
AllowCredentials (boolean) –
Whether to allow cookies or other credentials in requests to your function URL. The default is
false
.AllowHeaders (list) –
The HTTP headers that origins can include in requests to your function URL. For example:
Date
,Keep-Alive
,X-Custom-Header
.(string) –
AllowMethods (list) –
The HTTP methods that are allowed when calling your function URL. For example:
GET
,POST
,DELETE
, or the wildcard character (*
).(string) –
AllowOrigins (list) –
The origins that can access your function URL. You can list any number of specific origins, separated by a comma. For example:
https://www.example.com
,http://localhost:60905
.Alternatively, you can grant access to all origins using the wildcard character (
*
).(string) –
ExposeHeaders (list) –
The HTTP headers in your function response that you want to expose to origins that call your function URL. For example:
Date
,Keep-Alive
,X-Custom-Header
.(string) –
MaxAge (integer) –
The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that web browsers can cache results of a preflight request. By default, this is set to
0
, which means that the browser doesn’t cache results.
CreationTime (string) –
When the function URL was created, in ISO-8601 format (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sTZD).
InvokeMode (string) –
Use one of the following options:
BUFFERED
– This is the default option. Lambda invokes your function using theInvoke
API operation. Invocation results are available when the payload is complete. The maximum payload size is 6 MB.RESPONSE_STREAM
– Your function streams payload results as they become available. Lambda invokes your function using theInvokeWithResponseStream
API operation. The maximum response payload size is 20 MB, however, you can request a quota increase.
Exceptions