Drop large images in the static folder of an Architect app and request a transformed version.
You can install the plugin for any Architect app with npm install
@ryanbethel/arc-image-plugin
. You can then add it to your app manifest like this:
#app.arc
@app
image-app
@http
get /
get /transform/* #transform route for arc-image-plugin
@plugins
ryanbethel/arc-image-plugin
Currently, you need to add the get /transform/*
in line 6 to register a route for the handler. In the future, this will be rolled into the plugin. You also need to add the handler itself and the config file below for the same reason. Again will this will be added into the plugin in a future version.
// src/http/get-transform-catchall/index.js
let arc = require('@architect/functions')
let { imageHandler } = require('@ryanbethel/arc-image-plugin')
exports.handler = arc.http.async(imageHandler)
#src/http/get-transform-catchall/config.arc
@aws
memory 1152
timeout 30
The Architect framework serves static assets from a local folder that becomes an S3 bucket when deployed to AWS. You drop your giant.jpeg
image in the public
folder, and then once deployed, you can access it from anywhere in your app at http://example.com/_static/giant.jpeg
or with a root relative path at /_static/giant.jpeg
. Architect includes built in fingerprinting of assets as a best practice, but we will ignore that for the moment for clarity. With the image plugin, you can request the same image by swapping the “_static” for “transform” and include query parameters to get a different size (/transform/giant.jpeg?width=100&height=100
). This will scale the image to fit in those dimensions while maintaining the aspect ratio.
The first time you make a request, it is transformed in a lambda and that new version is saved to an S3 bucket. The next request for that size is served from the cache. Scale to fit, cover, and contain transforms are supported as well as grayscale.
Local Development
One of the most valuable features of using Architect is that it has local development support for almost everything. I built this plugin to have the same. It uses a local temp directory as a cache for transformed images and it works as it would when deployed.