Creating Azure Functions in F#
Aaron Powell
Posted on January 13, 2020
Last year I wrote a blog post on getting started with Azure Functions using F#. Sadly, it was a bit cumbersome as you needed to create a C# project and then convert it, and that was mainly so you got the right properties in the config file.
Thankfully though this has been improved as there are now F# templates for Azure Functions! Let's have a quick look at how to get started with them.
Getting The Templates
Before getting started you'll want to make sure you have the latest templates installed, so you have the latest NuGet packages referenced. To do that install the templates packages from NuGet, Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.ProjectTemplates and Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.ItemTemplates:
$> dotnet new --install Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.ItemTemplates
$> dotnet new --install Microsoft.Azure.WebJobs.ProjectTemplates
Installing these templates will add a bunch of new options to dotnet new
for both C# and F#:
Templates Short Name Language Tags
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DurableFunctionsOrchestration durable [C#] Azure Function/Durable Functions Orchestration
SendGrid sendgrid [C#] Azure Function/Ouput/SendGrid
BlobTrigger blob [C#], F# Azure Function/Trigger/Blob
CosmosDBTrigger cosmos [C#], F# Azure Function/Trigger/Cosmos DB
EventGridTrigger eventgrid [C#] Azure Function/Trigger/EventGrid
EventHubTrigger eventhub [C#], F# Azure Function/Trigger/EventHub
HttpTrigger http [C#], F# Azure Function/Trigger/Http
IotHubTrigger iothub [C#] Azure Function/Trigger/IotHub
ServiceBusQueueTrigger squeue [C#] Azure Function/Trigger/Service Bus/Queue
ServiceBusTopicTrigger stopic [C#] Azure Function/Trigger/Service Bus/Topic
QueueTrigger queue [C#] Azure Function/Trigger/Storage Queue
TimerTrigger timer [C#], F# Azure Function/Trigger/Timer
Azure Functions func [C#], F# Azure Functions/Solution
Not all the triggers have an F# template provided, but there's a number of good ones to get started with.
Creating Our Solution
With the templates installed we can create them from the CLI just like any other .NET project. Let's start by creating a Functions solution:
$> dotnet new func --language F# --name FunctionsInFSharp
You'll receive a success message and if we look on disk the files will be like so:
$> ls
FunctionsInFSharp.fsproj host.json local.settings.json
Woo, we have our fsproj
and ready to go with the right NuGet packages referenced.
Creating a Function
Finally, we want to create our Function itself, and again that's something we can do from the .NET CLI:
$> dotnet new http --language F# --name HttpTrigger
This will create us a new file called HttpTrigger.fs
alongside the project file using the http
template (for a HttpTrigger function). Since F# needs the files to include in compilation to be in the fsproj
file, make sure you pop open the fsproj
file and include it within an <ItemGroup>
:
<Compile Include="HttpTrigger.fs" />
Now if you open this in VS Code it'll be detected as a Azure Functions project and prompt you to setup the VS Code Extension and artefacts, then it's a matter of hitting F5 to launch!
Conclusion
There we have it folks, a much simpler way to create an F# Azure Function using the provided templates. No more remembering what NuGet packages to reference, renaming of csproj
files or working out what additional properties are needed in the project file to make one from scratch.
Happy F#‘ing!
Posted on January 13, 2020
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