In a previous blog post I showed how to create your first cloud function (plus a video). It’s very likely that your cloud function will need to invoke an external REST API. The following tutorial will show you how to create such function (it’s very easy).
- Sign into an IBM Cloud account
- Click Catalog
- Remove the label:lite filter and type functions
- Click on Functions box
- Click Start Creating button
- Click Create Action
- For Action Name enter ajoke and click the Create button. A new cloud function will be created with Hello World message
- Replace the function code with the following code which invokes a 3rd party REST API which returns a random joke:
var request = require("request");
function main(params) {
var options = { url: "https://api.icndb.com/jokes/random", json: true };
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
request(options, function (err, resp) {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
return reject({err: err});
}
return resolve({joke:resp.body.value.joke});
});
});
}
- The code is simple. It uses the request Node.js package to connect to an external REST API
- The external REST API returns a random joke
- A JavaScript Promise is used for invoking the REST API
- At the end the cloud function returns a response in JSON format
- Now click the Save button to save the code. Once the code is saved the button will change to Invoke. Click the button to invoke the function. In the right-hand panel you should see output with a random joke:
{ "joke": "Project managers never ask Chuck Norris for estimations... ever." }
This is how it looks inside the IBM Cloud Functions editor:
Of course you can also build and test a cloud function using the CLI. I’ll cover that in another blog post.
For now, let’s expose this cloud function as a REST API so we can invoke it outside the console. In fact, you will be able to invoke it directly from the browser once we make it a Web Action.
- On the left-hand side, click Endpoints
- Check Enable as Web Action and click Save
- Copy the URL and enter into a browser’s address bar
Here is how it looks in Firefox:
That was easy, right?
In this blog post you learned how to create a cloud function which invokes an external (3rd party) API. It’s very likely that even the simplest application will need to get data from an external API so this a good example/template to have.
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