Actions are stateless functions that run on the OpenWhisk platform. For example, an action can be used to detect the faces in an image, respond to a database change, respond to an API call, or post a Tweet. In general, an action is invoked in response to an event and produces some observable output.
An action may be created from a function programmed using a number of supported languages and runtimes, or from a binary-compatible executable, or even executables packaged as Docker containers.
wsk
makes it easy to create and invoke actions. Instructions for configuring the CLI are available here.While the actual function code will be specific to a language and runtime, the OpenWhisk operations to create, invoke and manage an action are the same regardless of the implementation choice. We recommend that you review the basics before moving on to advanced topics.
wsk
CLI operations and tipsLonger tutorials that are specific to a language of your choice are listed below. We recommend reading the basics in this document first, which are language agnostic, before getting deeper into a language-specific tutorial. If your preferred language isn't supported directly, you may find the Docker action or native binary paths more suitable. Multiple actions may be composed together to create a longer processing pipeline called a sequence. A more advanced form of composition is described here.
To use a function as an action, it must conform to the following:
wsk
CLI.main
or otherwise must be explicitly exported to identify it as the entry point. The mechanics may vary depending on your choice of language, but in general the entry point can be specified using the --main
flag when using the wsk
CLI.In this section, you'll invoke a built-in action using the wsk
CLI, which you should download and configure first if necessary.
Actions are identified by fully qualified names which generally have three parts separated by a forward slash:
As an example, we will work with a built-in sample action called /whisk.system/samples/greeting
. The namespace for this action is whisk.system
, the package name is samples
, and the action name is greeting
. There are other sample actions and utility actions, and later you'll learn how to explore the platform to discover more actions. You can learn more about packages after completing the basic tutorial.
Let's take a look at the action body by saving the function locally:
wsk action get /whisk.system/samples/greeting --save ok: saved action code to /path/to/openwhisk/greeting.js
This is a JavaScript function, which is indicated by the .js
extension. It will run using a Node.js runtime. See supported languages and runtimes for other languages and runtimes.
The contents of the file greeting.js
should match the function below. It is a short function which accepts optional parameters and returns a standard greeting.
/** * @params is a JSON object with optional fields "name" and "place". * @return a JSON object containing the message in a field called "msg". */ function main(params) { // log the paramaters to stdout console.log('params:', params); // if a value for name is provided, use it else use a default var name = params.name || 'stranger'; // if a value for place is provided, use it else use a default var place = params.place || 'somewhere'; // construct the message using the values for name and place return {msg: 'Hello, ' + name + ' from ' + place + '!'}; }
The command to invoke an action and get its result is wsk action invoke <name> --result
as in:
wsk action invoke /whisk.system/samples/greeting --result
This command will print the following result to the terminal:
{ "msg": "Hello, stranger from somewhere!" }
Actions may receive parameters as input, and the wsk
CLI makes it convenient to pass parameters to the actions from the command line. Briefly, this is done with the flag --param key value
where key
is the property name and value
is any valid JSON value. There is a longer tutorial on working with parameters that you should read after completing this basic walk-through.
The /whisk.system/samples/greeting
action accepts two optional input arguments, which are used to tailor the response. The default greeting as described earlier is “Hello, stranger from somewhere!”. The words “stranger” and “somewhere” may be replaced by specifying the following parameters respectively:
name
whose value will replace the word “stranger”,place
whose value will replace the word “somewhere”.wsk action invoke /whisk.system/samples/greeting --result --param name Dorothy --param place Kansas { "msg": "Hello, Dorothy from Kansas!" }
The style of invocation shown above is synchronous in that the request from the CLI blocks until the activation completes and the result is available from the OpenWhisk platform. This is generally useful for rapid iteration and development.
You can invoke an action asynchronously as well, by dropping the --result
command line option. In this case the action is invoked, and the OpenWhisk platform returns an activation ID which you can use later to retrieve the activation record.
wsk action invoke /whisk.system/samples/greeting ok: invoked /whisk.system/samples/greeting with id 5a64676ec8aa46b5a4676ec8aaf6b5d2
To retrieve the activation record, you use the wsk activations get <id>
command, as in:
wsk activation get 5a64676ec8aa46b5a4676ec8aaf6b5d2 ok: got activation 5a64676ec8aa46b5a4676ec8aaf6b5d2 { "activationId": "5a64676ec8aa46b5a4676ec8aaf6b5d2", "duration": 3, "response": { "result": { "msg": "Hello, stranger from somewhere!" }, "status": "success", "success": true }, ... }
Sometimes it is helpful to invoke an action in a blocking style and receiving the activation record entirely instead of just the result. This is achieved using the --blocking
command line parameter.
wsk action invoke /whisk.system/samples/greeting --blocking ok: invoked /whisk.system/samples/greeting with id 5975c24de0114ef2b5c24de0118ef27e { "activationId": "5975c24de0114ef2b5c24de0118ef27e", "duration": 3, "response": { "result": { "msg": "Hello, stranger from somewhere!" }, "status": "success", "success": true }, ... }
A blocking invocation request will wait for the activation result to be available. The wait period is the lesser of 60 seconds or the action's configured time limit. The result of the activation is returned if it is available within the wait period. Otherwise, the activation continues processing in the system and an activation ID is returned so that one may check for the result later, as with non-blocking requests (see here for tips on monitoring activations).
Each action invocation results in an activation record which contains the following fields:
activationId
: The activation ID.namespace
and name
: The namespace and name of the entity.start
and end
: Timestamps recording the start and end of the activation. The values are in UNIX time format.logs
: An array of strings with the logs that are produced by the action during its activation. Each array element corresponds to a line output to stdout
or stderr
by the action, and includes the time and stream of the log output. The structure is as follows: TIMESTAMP
STREAM:
LOG LINE
.annotations
: An array of key-value pairs that record metadata about the action activation.response
: A dictionary that defines the following keysstatus
: The activation result, which might be one of the following values:success
: Is true if and only if the status is “success”.result
: A dictionary as a JSON object which contains the activation result. If the activation was successful, this contains the value that is returned by the action. If the activation was unsuccessful, result
contains the error
key, generally with an explanation of the failure.Some common CLI commands for working with activations are:
wsk activation list
: lists all activationswsk activation get --last
: retrieves the most recent activation recordwsk activation result <activationId>
: retrieves only the result of the activation (or use --last
to get the most recent result).wsk activation logs <activationId>
: retrieves only the logs of the activation.wsk activation logs <activationId> --strip
: strips metadata from each log line so the logs are easier to read.Earlier we saved the code from the greeting
action locally. We can use it to create our own version of the action in our own namespace.
wsk action create greeting greeting.js ok: created action greeting
For convenience, you can omit the namespace when working with actions that belong to you. Also if there is no package, then you simply use the action name without a package name. If you modify the code and want to update the action, you can use wsk action update
instead of wsk action create
. The two commands are otherwise the same in terms of their command like parameters.
wsk action update greeting greeting.js ok: updated action greeting
Sometimes it is necessary or just convenient to provide values for function parameters. These can serve as defaults, or as a way of reusing an action but with different parameters. Parameters can be bound to an action and unless overriden later by an invocation, they will provide the specified value to the function.
Here is an example.
wsk action invoke greeting --result { "msg": "Hello, stranger from somewhere!" }
wsk action update greeting --param name Toto ok: updated action greeting
wsk action invoke greeting --result { "msg": "Hello, Toto from somewhere!" }
You may still provide additional parmaeters, as in the place
:
wsk action invoke greeting --result --param place Kansas { "msg": "Hello, Toto from Kansas!" }
and even override the name
:
wsk action invoke greeting --result --param place Kansas --param name Dorothy { "msg": "Hello, Dorothy from Kansas!" }
When an invocation request is received, the system records the request and dispatches an activation.
The system returns an activation ID (in the case of a nonblocking invocation) to confirm that the invocation was received. Notice that if there's a network failure or other failure which intervenes before you receive an HTTP response, it is possible that OpenWhisk received and processed the request.
The system attempts to invoke the action once and records the status
in the activation record. Every invocation that is successfully received, and that the user might be billed for, will eventually have an activation record.
Note that in the case of action developer error, the action may have partially run and generated externally visible side effects. It is the user's responsibility to check whether such side effects actually happened, and issue retry logic if desired. Also note that certain whisk internal errors will indicate that an action started running but the system failed before the action registered completion.
A powerful feature of the OpenWhisk programming model is the ability to compose actions together. A common composition is a sequence of actions, where the result of one action becomes the input to the next action in the sequence.
Here we will use several utility actions that are provided in the /whisk.system/utils
package to create your first sequence.
/whisk.system/utils
package.wsk package get --summary /whisk.system/utils
package /whisk.system/utils: Building blocks that format and assemble data (parameters: none defined) action /whisk.system/utils/split: Split a string into an array (parameters: payload, separator) action /whisk.system/utils/sort: Sorts an array (parameters: lines) ...
You will be using the split
and sort
actions in this example shown here, although the package contains more actions.
wsk action create mySequence --sequence /whisk.system/utils/split,/whisk.system/utils/sort
This action sequence converts some lines of text to an array, and sorts the lines.
wsk action invoke --result mySequence --param payload "Over-ripe sushi,\nThe Master\nIs full of regret."
{ "length": 3, "lines": [ "Is full of regret.", "Over-ripe sushi,", "The Master" ] }
In the result, you see that the lines are sorted.
Note: Parameters passed between actions in the sequence are explicit, except for default parameters. Therefore parameters that are passed to the sequence action (e.g., mySequence
) are only available to the first action in the sequence. The result of the first action in the sequence becomes the input JSON object to the second action in the sequence (and so on). This object does not include any of the parameters originally passed to the sequence unless the first action explicitly includes them in its result. Input parameters to an action are merged with the action's default parameters, with the former taking precedence and overriding any matching default parameters. For more information about invoking action sequences with multiple named parameters, learn about setting default parameters.
A more advanced form of composition using conductor actions is described here.
OpenWhisk actions might be invoked by other users, in response to various events, or as part of an action sequence. In such cases it can be useful to monitor the invocations.
You can use the OpenWhisk CLI to watch the output of actions as they are invoked.
wsk activation poll
This command starts a polling loop that continuously checks for logs from activations.
wsk action invoke /whisk.system/samples/helloWorld --param payload Bob ok: invoked /whisk.system/samples/helloWorld with id 7331f9b9e2044d85afd219b12c0f1491
Activation: helloWorld (7331f9b9e2044d85afd219b12c0f1491) 2016-02-11T16:46:56.842065025Z stdout: hello bob!
Similarly, whenever you run the poll utility, you see in real time the logs for any actions running on your behalf in OpenWhisk.
Metadata that describes existing actions can be retrieved via the wsk action get
command.
wsk action get hello ok: got action hello { "namespace": "guest", "name": "hello", "version": "0.0.1", "exec": { "kind": "nodejs:6", "binary": false }, "annotations": [ { "key": "exec", "value": "nodejs:6" } ], "limits": { "timeout": 60000, "memory": 256, "logs": 10 }, "publish": false }
An action can be invoked through the REST interface via an HTTPS request. To get an action URL, execute the following command:
wsk action get greeting --url
A URL with the following format will be returned for standard actions:
ok: got action actionName https://${APIHOST}/api/v1/namespaces/${NAMESPACE}/actions/greeting
Authentication is required when invoking an action via an HTTPS request using this resource path. For more information regarding action invocations using the REST interface, see Using REST APIs with OpenWhisk.
Another way of invoking an action which does not require authentication is via web actions.
Any action may be exposed as a web action, using the --web true
command line option at action creation time (or later when updating the action).
wsk action update greeting --web true ok: updated action greeting
The resource URL for a web action is different:
wsk action get greeting --url ok: got action greeting https://${APIHOST}/api/v1/web/${NAMESPACE}/${PACKAGE}/greeting
You can use curl
or wget to invoke the action.
curl `wsk action get greeting --url | tail -1`.json { "payload": "Hello, Toto from somewhere!" }
Code associated with an existing action may be retrieved and saved locally. Saving can be performed on all actions except sequences and docker actions.
.zip
will be used for action code that is a zip file.wsk action get /whisk.system/samples/greeting --save ok: saved action code to /path/to/openwhisk/greeting.js
--save-as
flag.wsk action get /whisk.system/samples/greeting --save-as hello.js ok: saved action code to /path/to/openwhisk/hello.js
You can list all the actions that you have created using wsk action list
:
wsk action list
actions /guest/mySequence private sequence /guest/greeting private nodejs:6
Here, we see actions listed in order from most to least recently updated. For easier browsing, you can use the flag --name-sort
or -n
to sort the list alphabetically:
wsk action list --name-sort
actions /guest/mySequence private sequence /guest/greeting private nodejs:6
Notice that the list is now sorted alphabetically by namespace, then package name if any, and finally action name, with the default package (no specified package) listed at the top.
Note: The printed list is sorted alphabetically after it is received from the platform. Other list flags such as --limit
and --skip
will be applied to the block of actions before they are received for sorting. To list actions in order by creation time, use the flag --time
.
As you write more actions, this list gets longer and it can be helpful to group related actions into packages. To filter your list of actions to just those within a specific package, you can use:
wsk action list action list /whisk.system/utils
actions /whisk.system/utils/hosturl private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/namespace private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/cat private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/smash private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/echo private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/split private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/date private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/head private nodejs:6 /whisk.system/utils/sort private nodejs:6
You can clean up by deleting actions that you do not want to use.
wsk action delete greeting ok: deleted greeting
wsk action list
actions /guest/mySequence private sequence
The action environment contains several properties that are specific to the running action. These allow the action to programmatically work with OpenWhisk assets via the REST API, or set an internal alarm when the action is about to use up its allotted time budget. The properties are accessible via the system environment for all supported runtimes: Node.js, Python, Swift, Java and Docker actions when using the OpenWhisk Docker skeleton.
__OW_API_HOST
the API host for the OpenWhisk deployment running this action__OW_API_KEY
the API key for the subject invoking the action, this key may be a restricted API key__OW_NAMESPACE
the namespace for the activation (this may not be the same as the namespace for the action)__OW_ACTION_NAME
the fully qualified name of the running action__OW_ACTIVATION_ID
the activation id for this running action instance__OW_DEADLINE
the approximate time when this action will have consumed its entire duration quota (measured in epoch milliseconds)