Autocomplete API with Serverless Redis

This tutorial implements an autocomplete API powered by serverless Redis. See the demo and API endpoint and the source code.

We will keep country names in a Redis Sorted set. In Redis sorted set, elements with the same score are sorted lexicographic…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Noah

This tutorial implements an autocomplete API powered by serverless Redis. See the demo and API endpoint and the source code.

We will keep country names in a Redis Sorted set. In Redis sorted set, elements with the same score are sorted lexicographically. So in our case, all country names will have the same score, 0. We keep all prefixes of country and use ZRANK to find the terms to suggest. See this blog post for the details of the algorithm.

Step 1: Project Setup

I will use Serverless framework for this tutorial. You can also use AWS SAM

If you do not have it already install serverless framework via: npm install -g serverless

In any folder run serverless as below:

>> serverless

Serverless: No project detected. Do you want to create a new one? Yes
Serverless: What do you want to make? AWS Node.js
Serverless: What do you want to call this project? test-upstash

Project successfully created in 'test-upstash' folder.

You can monitor, troubleshoot, and test your new service with a free Serverless account.

Serverless: Would you like to enable this? No
You can run the “serverless” command again if you change your mind later.

Inside the project folder create a node project with the command:

npm init

Then install the redis client with:

npm install ioredis

Step 2: API Implementation

Edit handler.js file as below.
See the blog post for the details of the algorithm.

var Redis = require("ioredis");
if (typeof client === 'undefined') {
    var client = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL);
}
const headers = {
    'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': '*',
    'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': true,
};

module.exports.query = async (event, context, callback) => {
    if (!event.queryStringParameters || !event.queryStringParameters.term) {
        return {
            statusCode: 400,
            headers: headers,
            body: JSON.stringify(
                {
                    message: 'Invalid parameters. Term needed as query param.',
                }
            ),
        };
    }
    let term = event.queryStringParameters.term.toUpperCase();
    let res = []
    let rank = await client.zrank("terms", term)
    if (rank != null) {
        let temp = await client.zrange("terms", rank, rank + 100)
        for (const el of temp) {
            if (!el.startsWith(term)) {
                break;
            }
            if (el.endsWith("*")) {
                res.push(el.substring(0, el.length - 1));
            }
        }
    }
    return {
        statusCode: 200,
        headers: headers,
        body: JSON.stringify(
            {
                message: 'Query:' + event.queryStringParameters.term,
                result: res,
            }
        ),
    };
};

Step 3: Create database on Upstash

If you do not have one, create a database following this guide. Copy the Redis URL by clicking Redis Connect button inside database page. Copy the URL for ioredis as we use ioredis in our application. Create .env file and paste your Redis URL:

REDIS_URL=YOUR_REDIS_URL

The URL format of ioredis is different than other clients. There is a colon before the password.

Step 4: Initialize Database

We will initialize the database with country names. Copy and run initdb.js script from here.

We simply put the country names and all their prefixes to the sorted set.

require('dotenv').config()
var Redis = require("ioredis");

var countries = [
    {"name": "Afghanistan", "code": "AF"},
    {"name": "Åland Islands", "code": "AX"},
    {"name": "Albania", "code": "AL"},
    {"name": "Algeria", "code": "DZ"},
    ...
]
var client = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL);

for (const country of countries) {
    let term = country.name.toUpperCase();
    let terms = [];

    for (let i = 1; i < term.length; i++) {
        terms.push(0);
        terms.push(term.substring(0, i));
    }
    terms.push(0);
    terms.push(term + "*");
    (async () => {
        await client.zadd("terms", ...terms)
    })();
}



Step 5: Deploy Your Function

Edit serverless.yml as below and replace your Redis URL:

service: auto-complete-api
# add this if you set REDIS_URL in .env
useDotenv: true
frameworkVersion: '2'

provider:
  name: aws
  runtime: nodejs14.x
  lambdaHashingVersion: 20201221
  environment:
    REDIS_URL: REPLACE_YOUR_REDIS_URL

functions:
  query:
    handler: handler.query
    events:
      - httpApi:
          path: /query
          method: get
          cors: true

In the project folder run:

serverless deploy

Now you can run your function with:

serverless invoke -f query -d '{ "queryStringParameters": {"term":"ca"}}'

It should give the following output:

 {
  "statusCode": 200,
  "headers": {
    "Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*",
    "Access-Control-Allow-Credentials": true
  },
  "body": "{\"message\":\"Query:ca\",\"result\":[\"CAMBODIA\",\"CAMEROON\",\"CANADA\",\"CAPE VERDE\",\"CAYMAN ISLANDS\"]}"
}

You can also test your function using AWS console. In your AWS Lambda section, click on your function. Scroll down to the code sections and click on the Test button on the top right. Use { "queryStringParameters": {"term":"ar"}} as your event data.

Step 6: Run Your Function Locally

In your project folder run:

 serverless invoke local -f query -d '{ "queryStringParameters": {"term":"ca"}}'

It should give the following output:

 {
  "statusCode": 200,
  "headers": {
    "Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*",
    "Access-Control-Allow-Credentials": true
  },
  "body": "{\"message\":\"Query:ca\",\"result\":[\"CAMBODIA\",\"CAMEROON\",\"CANADA\",\"CAPE VERDE\",\"CAYMAN ISLANDS\"]}"
}


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Noah


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