When Lambda runs your function, it passes a context object to the handler. This object provides methods and properties that provide information about the invocation, function, and execution environment.
Context methods
getRemainingTimeInMillis()
– Returns the number of milliseconds left before the execution times out.
Context properties
functionName
– The name of the Lambda function.functionVersion
– The version of the function.invokedFunctionArn
– The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that's used to invoke the function. Indicates if the invoker specified a version number or alias.memoryLimitInMB
– The amount of memory that's allocated for the function.awsRequestId
– The identifier of the invocation request.logGroupName
– The log group for the function.logStreamName
– The log stream for the function instance.identity
– (mobile apps) Information about the Amazon Cognito identity that authorized the request.cognitoIdentityId
– The authenticated Amazon Cognito identity.cognitoIdentityPoolId
– The Amazon Cognito identity pool that authorized the invocation.
clientContext
– (mobile apps) Client context that's provided to Lambda by the client application.client.installation_id
client.app_title
client.app_version_name
client.app_version_code
client.app_package_name
env.platform_version
env.platform
env.make
env.model
env.locale
Custom
– Custom values that are set by the client application.
callbackWaitsForEmptyEventLoop
– Set to false to send the response right away when the callback runs, instead of waiting for the Node.js event loop to be empty. If this is false, any outstanding events continue to run during the next invocation.
The following example function logs context information and returns the location of the logs.
Example index.js file
exports.handler = async function(event, context) {
console.log('Remaining time: ', context.getRemainingTimeInMillis())
console.log('Function name: ', context.functionName)
return context.logStreamName
}