Deploy to production with OpenFaaS Standard and Enterprise
You can deploy OpenFaaS anywhere you have Kubernetes
Our templates follow best practices meaning you can write and deploy a new function to production within a few minutes, knowing it will scale to meet demand.
OpenFaaS Pro then builds on our Open Source codebase to bring flexible auto-scaling, event-connectors, monitoring, a new dashboard, GitOps and various levels of support.
Get code into production within minutes using our templates, or create your own.
Your functions can be fine-tuned to scale to match the type of traffic they receive, including to zero to save on costs.
Invoke functions through events from Apache Kafka, AWS SQS, Postgresql, Cron and MQTT.
With OpenFaaS Enterprise, you can take code snippets from your customers and use them to extend your platform.
You can use the Function Builder API to turn source code into functions, which can be deployed via the OpenFaaS REST API.
Network policies, resource limits, a runtime class, read-only filesystem and dedicated namespace means their code will be as isolated as possible.
Who's doing this already? Waylay (for custom functions for industrial IoT), Patchworks (customer extensions for e-commerce), LivePerson (for customer extensions) and Cognite (for custom ML/data-science functions).
OpenFaaS Pro autoscaling can be fine-tuned to match the execution pattern of your functions, and to retry failed invocations.
Through JetStream for OpenFaaS, you can fan out to many thousands of executions, executing in parallel and scaling automatically.
ML models can be deployed as functions, and scaled, even if they run for a long time.
See also: Exploring the Fan out and Fan in pattern with OpenFaaS
OpenFaaS enriches Kubernetes with scaling, queueing, monitoring and event triggers, so your team can focus on shipping features.
Customers have told us that even from early on, they were shipping new functionality to production within hours.
Functions can be run on-demand, or on a schedule, and can be triggered by events from your existing systems like Apache Kafka or AWS. If you invoke them asynchronously, you'll also get to benefit from retries without writing any additional code.
Deel migrated from AWS Lambda to Kubernetes, only to find that their code would no longer scale how they needed. They reached out to us, and we wrote up a reference architecture.
Learn more: Generate PDFs at scale on Kubernetes using OpenFaaS and Puppeteer
Does your product need to run on multiple different clouds? Perhaps you're considering writing an abstraction layer to cover your bases?
When faced with this question, Waylay.io built their low-code platform with OpenFaaS.
OpenFaaS functions are built as OCI images, which means they're portable, and integrate well with teams who use containers or Kubernetes already.
See also: Low-code automation with OpenFaaS
Functions can be written in any language, and are built into portable OCI images.
We have official templates available for: Go, Java, Python, C#, Ruby, Node.js, PHP, or you can write your own.
You can even bring along your existing microservices written with custom frameworks like Express.js, Vert.x, Flask, ASP.NET Core, FastAPI and Django.
Find templates in the store or build your own.
$ faas-cli new --lang java11 java-fn
package com.openfaas.function;
import com.openfaas.model.IHandler;
import com.openfaas.model.IResponse;
import com.openfaas.model.IRequest;
import com.openfaas.model.Response;
public class Handler implements com.openfaas.model.IHandler {
public IResponse Handle(IRequest req) {
Response res = new Response();
res.setBody("Hello, world!");
return res;
}
}
$ faas-cli template store pull golang-middleware
$ faas-cli new --lang golang-middleware go-fn
package function
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"net/http"
)
func Handle(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
var input []byte
if r.Body != nil {
defer r.Body.Close()
body, _ := io.ReadAll(r.Body)
input = body
}
w.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
w.Write([]byte(fmt.Sprintf("Body: %s", string(input))))
}
$ faas-cli template store pull python3-http
$ faas-cli new --lang python3-http python3-fn
def handle(event, context):
return {
"statusCode": 200,
"body": "Hello from OpenFaaS!"
}
$ faas-cli new --lang node17 javascript-fn
"use strict"
module.exports = async (event, context) => {
const result = {
status: "Received input: " + JSON.stringify(event.body)
};
return context
.status(200)
.succeed(result);
}
$ faas-cli template store pull bash-streaming
$ faas-cli new --lang bash-streaming bash-fn
#!/bin/sh
for i in $(seq 1 100)
do
sleep 0.001
echo "Hello" $i
done
$ faas-cli new --lang dockerfile ruby
FROM ruby:2.7-alpine
WORKDIR /home/app
COPY . .
RUN bundle install
EXPOSE 8080
CMD ["ruby", "main.rb"]
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