15

The documentation on the AWS cil lambda states that

...You provide only the parameters you want to change...

Which I assume means that the rest of the settings would still remain the same. However, say my lambda function has environment variables :

var1=old_val1
var2=old_val2
var3=old_val3

and then when I try doing something like this :

aws lambda update-function-configuration --function-name dummy_fun --environment '{"Variables":{"var1":"new_val1","var2":"new_val2"}}'

with the intention of updating the variables : var1 and var2 with the new values new_val1 and new_val2 respectively, although these 2 variables DO get updated, but the third one, var3, gets deleted !

Am I doing something wrong ? Or is there a way to make sure this doesn't happen?

I can definitely handle it using a workaround wherein I can fetch the current config and then update the env variables locally and then push the entire updated config, all of this through a python code etc. But, is that the only way to do it ? Or can there be a simpler way of doing it?

4 Answers 4

12

You are misinterpreting the intention of the documentation.

You provide only the parameters you want to change.

--environment is the (singular) "parameter" that you are specifying should be changed -- not the individual variables.

The environment variables are configured en bloc so there is no concept of specifying only certain environment variables that you want to be different.

4
  • Ok got it. But I think, I will at least try raising a PR on boto, something like say: selective-update-function-configuration, to try accommodating the same :) Thanks for the reply anyway though. Cheers!
    – qre0ct
    Sep 28, 2018 at 8:05
  • You can try that... but the SDKs tend to fairly closely model the underlying service APIs... and UpdateFunctionConfiguration doesn't support that, either. Sep 28, 2018 at 9:00
  • 2
    yea, that's true. The actual API also does the same. However, IMHO, this would be a nice to have thing :)
    – qre0ct
    Sep 28, 2018 at 9:55
  • 1
    Oh, agreed. aws cloudfront update-distribution is an other example, except that the underlying API is even more strict, requiring resubmission of a complete duplication of all parameters (not just what you want to change)... which I strongly suspect has roots in this design philosophy. Sep 28, 2018 at 11:48
11

It seems not easy to partially update the environment variables for a lambda with awscli.

But with the usage of the built-in JSON-based client-side filtering that uses the JMESPath syntax, I found a way to achieve what I needed to do.

NEW_ENVVARS=$(aws lambda get-function-configuration --function-name your-func-name --query "Environment.Variables | merge(@, \`{\"ENV_VAR_TO_UPDATE\":\"value_here\"}\`)")

aws lambda update-function-configuration --function-name your-func-name --environment "{ \"Variables\": $NEW_ENVVARS }"

Of course, you can update more than one environment variable with that trick.

10
aws lambda update-function-configuration --function-name my-function-name --environment Variables="{VAR1=variable_value, VAR2=variable_value}" 

Description:Above Command will update the environment variables for the lambda function in aws.

0
0

I had the same problem where I wanted to update only one env variable of a function and not touch the rest.

I ended up writing a script in node and publishing it:

https://www.npmjs.com/package/aws-lambda-update-env

It is pretty simple to use:

update-lambda-env KEY "My New Test Value" --stack-name myApplicationStack

This will only change the variable KEY in the functions located in the stack myApplicationStack

A better solution might be to use AWS Parameter Store if your variable is going to change often.

https://docs.aws.amazon.com/systems-manager/latest/userguide/systems-manager-paramstore.html

3
  • Cool tool - afraid it doesn't work with several nested stacks. I have A including B including C, where C is the lambda stack. I can apply it to B (and it will update C), but not to A.
    – Roelant
    Oct 31, 2020 at 11:51
  • 2
    @Roelant I am not sure I will be able to make make it work recursively. You will just have to call the script for each stack. Behind the scenes it does "aws cloudformation list-stack-resources --stack-name {mystack}"
    – sashok_bg
    Nov 2, 2020 at 10:28
  • 2
    Yes ended up writing a little boto loop around your tool to fetch me the right stacks :)
    – Roelant
    Nov 2, 2020 at 16:43

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