37

I wanted to import jsonschema library in my AWS Lambda in order to perform request validation. Instead of bundling the dependency with my app , I am looking to do this via Lambda Layers. I zipped all the dependencies under venv/lib/python3.6/site-packages/. I uploaded this as a lambda layer and added it to my aws lambda using publish-layer-version and aws lambda update-function-configuration commands respectively. The zip folder is name "lambda-dep.zip" and all the files are under it. However when I try to import jsonschema in my lambda_function , I see the error below -

from jsonschema import validate
{
  "errorMessage": "Unable to import module 'lambda_api': No module named 'jsonschema'",
  "errorType": "Runtime.ImportModuleError"
}

Am I missing any steps are is there a different mechanism to import anything within lambda layers?

5 Answers 5

83

You want to make sure your .zip follows this folder structure when unzipped

python/lib/python3.6/site-packages/{LibrariesGoHere}.

Upload that zip, make sure the layer is added to the Lambda function and you should be good to go.

This is the structure that has worked for me.

16
  • 3
    This works , I changed the folder name to python3.7 since I am using python 3.7 in lambda. Thank you! Apr 15, 2019 at 20:40
  • 2
    Sweet! Yea I would have mentioned to make sure you use the correct python version but in your original question it mentioned python 3.6 so figured that's what you were on. Congrats on getting it working. Also thank you, I can finally comment on things now lol. I've been trying to get an accepted answer forever because of the limitations put on my account until i had reputation points. Apr 16, 2019 at 12:35
  • 8
    I had looked at a few things but at 1:42 of this video is what finally made me understand it youtu.be/ebhcs-9FYJA?t=102 Apr 16, 2019 at 14:44
  • 1
    Here is docs about directory layout: docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/…
    – Pawel
    Oct 14, 2020 at 9:59
  • 2
    Per AWS documentation, requirements have been changed to simply be placed in a /python directory without the rest of the directory structure. aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/…
    – Ryan Lutz
    May 31, 2022 at 19:55
15

Here the script that I use to upload a layer:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

LAYER_NAME=$1 # input layer, retrived as arg
ZIP_ARTIFACT=${LAYER_NAME}.zip
LAYER_BUILD_DIR="python"

# note: put the libraries in a folder supported by the runtime, means that should by python

rm -rf ${LAYER_BUILD_DIR} && mkdir -p ${LAYER_BUILD_DIR}

docker run --rm -v `pwd`:/var/task:z lambci/lambda:build-python3.6 python3.6 -m pip --isolated install -t ${LAYER_BUILD_DIR} -r requirements.txt

zip -r ${ZIP_ARTIFACT} .

echo "Publishing layer to AWS..."
aws lambda publish-layer-version --layer-name ${LAYER_NAME} --zip-file fileb://${ZIP_ARTIFACT} --compatible-runtimes python3.6

# clean up
rm -rf ${LAYER_BUILD_DIR}
rm -r ${ZIP_ARTIFACT}

I added the content above to a file called build_layer.sh, then I call it as bash build_layer.sh my_layer. The script requires a requirements.txt in the same folder, and it uses Docker to have the same runtime used for Python3.6 Lambdas. The arg of the script is the layer name.

After uploading a layer to AWS, be sure that the right layer's version is referenced inside your Lambda.

2
  • Thank you very much @nicor88 Apr 15, 2019 at 20:41
  • Does anyone know if they'll support python3.9? Mar 21, 2023 at 10:21
15

Update from previous answers: Per AWS documentation, requirements have been changed to simply be placed in a /python directory without the rest of the directory structure.

https://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/lambda-import-module-error-python/

Be sure your unzipped directory structure has libraries within a /python directory.

4

There is an easier method. Just install the packages into a python folder. Then install the packages using the -t (Target) option. Note the "." in the zip file. this is a wild card.

mkdir lambda_function
cd lambda_function
mkdir python
cd python
pip install yourPackages -t ./
cd ..
zip /tmp/labmda_layer.zip .   

The zip file is now your lambda layer.

The step by step instructions includeing video instructions can be found here.

https://geektopia.tech/post.php?blogpost=Create_Lambda_Layer_Python

3
  • 3
    That is exactly the same as the script that I posted. But you also have to consider that pip install needs to run in the right OS. If you build a layer in OSx with pandas, it won't work.
    – nicor88
    Apr 24, 2019 at 15:23
  • I like this answer because it seems fairly independent of the python version being used. (Not sure if it would work to just take guitarhero23s answer above and replace 3.6 with 3.8, for example). I just used this with 3.8 and it works great though.
    – Maile Cupo
    Dec 17, 2020 at 19:13
  • Good answer. Adding "-t ." after pip install <packagename> is extremely important and the layer won't work if you install without adding it.
    – ire
    Jul 8, 2022 at 9:48
0

In my case the issue was related to the Python version. While zipping the package I used python\lib\ python3.8\site-packages whereas i was using Python 3.9 in lambda runtime setting. So make sure you are using the same version while packaging and configuring aws lambda runtime.

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