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Cross-Stack References

One of the more powerful features of CDK is, automatic cross-stack references. When you pass a construct from one Stack to another stack and reference it there; CDK will create a stack export with an auto-generated export name in the stack with the construct. And then import that value in the stack that's referencing it.

Adding a reference

So imagine you have a DynamoDB Table in one stack, and you need to add the table name as an environment variable (for the Lambda functions) in another stack.

To do this, start by creating a table and then returning it.

import { StackContext, Table } from "sst/constructs";

export function StackA({ stack }: StackContext) {
const table = new Table(stack, "MyTable", {
fields: {
pk: "string",
},
primaryIndex: { partitionKey: "pk" },
});

return {
table,
};
}

Then in StackB you can utilize the use function to reference the table.

import { StackContext, use } from "sst/constructs";
import { StackA } from "./StackA";

export function StackB({ stack }: StackContext) {
const { table } = use(StackA);
new Api(stack, "Api", {
defaults: {
function: {
bind: [table],
},
},
routes: {
"GET /": "src/lambda.main",
},
});
}

Behind the scenes, the table name is exported as an output of StackA. If you head over to your AWS CloudFormation console and look at StackA's outputs, you should see an output with:

  • The key prefixed with ExportsOutput. Something like ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18.
  • The value of the table name, ie. dev-demo-StackA-MyTableCD79AAA0-1CUTVKQQ47K31.
  • And the export name will include the stack name and the key, ie. dev-demo-StackA:ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18.

And if you look at StackB's template, you should see the output being imported using the Fn::ImportValue intrinsic notation. For example, Fn::ImportValue: dev-demo-StackA:ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18.

Order of deployment

By doing this, it will add a dependency between the stacks. And the stack exporting the value will be deployed before the stack importing it. In the example above, StackA will be deployed first, and then StackB will be deployed later.

Removing a reference

Now suppose in the example above, StackB no longer needs the table name as a Lambda environment variable. So we remove the environment option and change the Api to:

new Api(stack, "Api", {
routes: {
"GET /": "src/lambda.main",
},
});

When you try to deploy your app, you'll likely get an Export XXXX cannot be deleted error. It'll look similar to this:

dev-demo-StackA Export dev-demo-StackA:ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18 cannot be deleted as it is in use by dev-demo-StackB

This will happen because:

  • With the cross-stack references removed, StackB no long depends on StackA, and both stacks will get deployed concurrently.
  • While they are both being deployed, AWS will find that StackA's output cannot be removed because StackB is still importing it.

To fix this, we need to first remove StackB's dependency on StackA, deploy it, then remove the export. It'll be a 2-step process:

  1. After we remove the reference in StackB, we'll tell CDK that we still want the output exported in StackA. We can do this by explicitly calling stack.exportValue.

    import { StackContext, Table } from "sst/constructs";

    export function StackA({ stack }: StackContext) {
    const table = new Table(stack, "MyTable", {
    fields: {
    pk: "string",
    },
    primaryIndex: { partitionKey: "pk" },
    });

    stack.exportValue(table.tableName);
    }

    Deploy.

    This changes the reference in StackB but leaves StackA as-is.

  2. After StackB finishes deploying, StackA's export is no longer being imported. So you can remove the stack.exportValue line.

    And deploy again.

Automatic export injection

You shouldn't have to perform the two-step process above, starting from v0.60.8 SST will handle this automatically.

Prior to deploying the CloudFormation stack, SST will look for exports that are about to be removed but are still being imported by other stacks. If such exports are found, SST will automatically inject the export into the CloudFormation template. In the example above, SST will create the export dev-demo-StackA:ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18 with the same value as that is currently being used. This has the same effect as the step 1 above.

And when you deploy again, since the export dev-demo-StackA:ExportsOutputRefMyTableCD79AAA0A1504A18 is no longer being used in other stacks, SST will not inject it to the template.