Using the Serverless CLI tool, you can package your project without deploying it to Azure. This is best used with CI / CD workflows to ensure consistent deployable artifacts.
Running the following command will build and save all of the deployment artifacts in the service's .serverless directory:
serverless package
However, you can also use the --package option to add a destination path and Serverless will store your deployment artifacts there (../my-artifacts in the following case):
serverless package --package my-artifacts
Sometimes you might like to have more control over your function artifacts and how they are packaged.
You can use the package
and exclude
configuration for more control over the
packaging process.
Exclude and include allows you to define globs that will be excluded / included
from the resulting artifact. If you wish to include files you can use a glob
pattern prefixed with !
such as !re-include-me/**
in exclude
or the
dedicated include
config. Serverless will run the glob patterns in order.
At first it will apply the globs defined in exclude
. After that it'll add all
the globs from include
. This way you can always re-include previously excluded
files and directories.
Exclude all node_modules but then re-include a specific modules (in this case
node-fetch) using exclude
exclusively
package:
exclude:
- node_modules/**
- '!node_modules/node-fetch/**'
Exclude all files but handler.js
using exclude
and include
package:
exclude:
- src/**
include:
- src/function/handler.js
Note: Don't forget to use the correct glob syntax if you want to exclude directories
exclude:
- tmp/**
- .git/**
For complete control over the packaging process you can specify your own artifact
zip file. Serverless won't zip your service if this is configured and therefore
exclude
and include
will be ignored. Either you use artifact or
include/exclude.
The artifact option is especially useful in case your development environment allows you to generate a deployable artifact like Maven does for Java.
service: my-service
package:
exclude:
- tmp/**
- .git/**
include:
- some-file
artifact: path/to/my-artifact.zip
If you want even more controls over your functions for deployment you can
configure them to be packaged independently. This allows you more control for
optimizing your deployment. To enable individual packaging set individually
to
true in the service or function wide packaging settings.
Then for every function you can use the same exclude
, include
or artifact
config options as you can service wide. The exclude
and include
option will
be merged with the service wide options to create one exclude
and include
config per function during packaging.
service: my-service
package:
individually: true
exclude:
- excluded-by-default.json
functions:
hello:
handler: handler.hello
package:
# We're including this file so it will be in the final package of this function only
include:
- excluded-by-default.json
world:
handler: handler.hello
package:
exclude:
- some-file.js
You can also select which functions to be packaged separately, and have the rest
use the service package by setting the individually
flag at the function level:
service: my-service
functions:
hello:
handler: handler.hello
world:
handler: handler.hello
package:
individually: true
Serverless will auto-detect and exclude development dependencies based on the runtime your service is using.
This ensures that only the production relevant packages and modules are included in your zip file. Doing this drastically reduces the overall size of the deployment package which will be uploaded to the cloud provider.
You can opt-out of automatic dev dependency exclusion by setting the excludeDevDependencies
package config to false
:
package:
excludeDevDependencies: false
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