open-consul/website/content/docs/lambda/invocation.mdx

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---
layout: docs
page_title: Invoke Lambda Functions
description: >-
This topic describes how to invoke AWS Lambda functions from the Consul service mesh.
---
# Invoke Lambda Functions
This topic describes how to invoke AWS Lambda functions from the Consul service mesh.
## Overview
You can invoke Lambda functions from the Consul service mesh through terminating gateways (recommended) or directly from connect proxies.
### Terminating Gateway
We recommend invoking Lambda functions through terminating gateways. This method supports cross-datacenter communication, transparent
proxies, intentions, and all other Consul service mesh features.
The terminating gateway must have [the appropriate IAM permissions](/docs/lambda/registration#configure-iam-permissions-for-envoy)
to invoke the function.
The following diagram shows the invocation procedure:
<ImageConfig width={700}>
![Terminating Gateway to Lambda](/img/terminating_gateway_to_lambda.svg)
</ImageConfig>
1. Make an HTTP request to the local Connect proxy.
1. The Connect proxy forwards the request to the terminating gateway.
1. The terminating gateway invokes the function.
### Connect Proxy
You can invoke Lambda functions directly from a service's Connect proxy.
This method has the following limitations:
- Intentions are unsupported. Consul enforces intentions by validating the client certificates presented when a connection is received. Lambda does not support client certificate validation, which prevents Consul from supporting intentions using this method.
- Transparent proxies are unsupported. This is because Lambda services are not
registered to a proxy.
This method is secure because AWS IAM permissions is required to invoke Lambda functions. Additionally, all communication is encrypted with Amazon TLS when invoking Lambda resources.
The Envoy sidecar proxy must have the correct AWS IAM credentials to invoke the function. You can define the credentials in environment variables, EC2 metadata, or ECS task metadata.
The following diagram shows the invocation procedure:
<ImageConfig width={400}>
![Connect Proxy to Lambda](/img/connect_proxy_to_lambda.svg)
</ImageConfig>
1. Make an HTTP request to the local Connect proxy.
2. The Connect proxy invokes the Lambda.
## Invoke a Lambda Function
Before you can invoke a Lambda function, register the service used to invoke
the Lambda function and the service running in Lambda with
Consul (refer to [registration](/docs/lambda/registration) for
instructions). The service used to invoke the function must be deployed to the
service mesh.
1. Update the invoking service to use the Lambda service as an upstream. In the following example, the `destination_name` for the invoking service (`api`) points to a Lambda service called `authentication`:
```hcl
upstreams {
local_bind_port = 2345
destination_name = "authentication"
}
```
1. Issue the `consul services register` command to store the configuration:
```shell-sesion
$ consul services register api-sidecar-proxy.hcl
```
1. Call the upstream service to invoke the Lambda function. In the following example, the `api` service invokes the `authentication` service at `localhost:2345`:
```shell-session
$ curl https://localhost:2345
```