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Description

This cookbook provides libraries, resources and providers to configure and manage Amazon Web Services components and offerings with the EC2 API. Currently supported resources:

  • EBS Volumes (ebs_volume)
  • EBS Raid (ebs_raid)
  • Elastic IPs (elastic_ip)
  • Elastic Load Balancer (elastic_lb)
  • AWS Resource Tags (resource_tag)

Unsupported AWS resources that have other cookbooks include but are not limited to:

Requirements

Requires Chef 0.7.10 or higher for Lightweight Resource and Provider support. Chef 0.8+ is recommended. While this cookbook can be used in chef-solo mode, to gain the most flexibility, we recommend using chef-client with a Chef Server.

An Amazon Web Services account is required. The Access Key and Secret Access Key are used to authenticate with EC2.

AWS Credentials

In order to manage AWS components, authentication credentials need to be available to the node. There are 2 way to handle this:

  1. explicitly pass credentials parameter to the resource
  2. or let the resource pick up credentials from the IAM role assigned to the instance

Using resource parameters

To pass the credentials to the resource, credentials should be available to the node. There are a number of ways to handle this, such as node attributes or Chef roles.

We recommend storing these in a databag (Chef 0.8+), and loading them in the recipe where the resources are needed.

DataBag recommendation:

% knife data bag show aws main
{
  "id": "main",
  "aws_access_key_id": "YOUR_ACCESS_KEY",
  "aws_secret_access_key": "YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY",
  "aws_session_token": "YOUR_SESSION_TOKEN"
}

This can be loaded in a recipe with:

aws = data_bag_item("aws", "main")

And to access the values:

aws['aws_access_key_id']
aws['aws_secret_access_key']
aws['aws_session_token']

We'll look at specific usage below.

Using IAM instance role

If your instance has an IAM role, then the credentials can be automatically resolved by the cookbook using Amazon instance metadata API.

You can then omit the resource parameters aws_secret_access_key and aws_access_key.

Of course, the instance role must have the required policies. Here is a sample policy for EBS volume management:

{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Action": [
        "ec2:AttachVolume",
        "ec2:CreateVolume",
        "ec2:ModifyVolumeAttribute",
        "ec2:DescribeVolumeAttribute",
        "ec2:DescribeVolumeStatus",
        "ec2:DescribeVolumes",
        "ec2:DetachVolume",
        "ec2:EnableVolumeIO"
      ],
      "Sid": "Stmt1381536011000",
      "Resource": [
        "*"
      ],
      "Effect": "Allow"
    }
  ]
}

For resource tags:

{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Action": [
        "ec2:CreateTags",
        "ec2:DescribeTags"
      ],
      "Sid": "Stmt1381536708000",
      "Resource": [
        "*"
      ],
      "Effect": "Allow"
    }
  ]
}

Recipes

default.rb

The default recipe installs the aws-sdk RubyGem, which this cookbook requires in order to work with the EC2 API. Make sure that the aws recipe is in the node or role run_list before any resources from this cookbook are used.

"run_list": [
  "recipe[aws]"
]

The gem_package is created as a Ruby Object and thus installed during the Compile Phase of the Chef run.

ec2_hints.rb

This recipe is used to setup the ec2 hints for ohai in the case that an instance is not created using knife-ec2.

Libraries

The cookbook has a library module, Opscode::AWS::Ec2, which can be included where necessary:

include Opscode::Aws::Ec2

This is needed in any providers in the cookbook. Along with some helper methods used in the providers, it sets up a class variable, ec2 that is used along with the access and secret access keys

Resources and Providers

This cookbook provides two resources and corresponding providers.

ebs_volume.rb

Manage Elastic Block Store (EBS) volumes with this resource.

Actions:

  • create - create a new volume.
  • attach - attach the specified volume.
  • detach - detach the specified volume.
  • snapshot - create a snapshot of the volume.
  • prune - prune snapshots.

Attribute Parameters:

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate required, unless using IAM roles for authentication.
  • size - size of the volume in gigabytes.
  • snapshot_id - snapshot to build EBS volume from.
  • most_recent_snapshot - use the most recent snapshot when creating a volume from an existing volume (defaults to false)
  • availability_zone - EC2 region, and is normally automatically detected.
  • device - local block device to attach the volume to, e.g. /dev/sdi but no default value, required.
  • volume_id - specify an ID to attach, cannot be used with action :create because AWS assigns new volume IDs
  • timeout - connection timeout for EC2 API.
  • snapshots_to_keep - used with action :prune for number of snapshots to maintain.
  • description - used to set the description of an EBS snapshot
  • volume_type - "standard", "io1", or "gp2" ("standard" is magnetic, "io1" is piops SSD, "gp2" is general purpose SSD)
  • piops - number of Provisioned IOPS to provision, must be >= 100
  • existing_raid - whether or not to assume the raid was previously assembled on existing volumes (default no)
  • encrypted - specify if the EBS should be encrypted
  • kms_key_id - the full ARN of the AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) master key to use when creating the encrypted volume (defaults to master key if not specified)

ebs_raid.rb

Manage Elastic Block Store (EBS) raid devices with this resource.

Attribute Parameters:

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate, required.
  • mount_point - where to mount the RAID volume
  • mount_point_owner - the owner of the mount point (default root)
  • mount_point_group - the group of the mount point (default root)
  • mount_point_mode - the file mode of the mount point (default 0755)
  • disk_count - number of EBS volumes to raid
  • disk_size - size of EBS volumes to raid
  • level - RAID level (default 10)
  • filesystem - filesystem to format raid array (default ext4)
  • snapshots - array of EBS snapshots to restore. Snapshots must be taken using an ec2 consistent snapshot tool, and tagged with a number that indicates how many devices are in the array being backed up (e.g. "Logs Backup [0-4]" for a four-volume raid array snapshot)
  • disk_type - "standard" or "io1" (io1 is the type for IOPS volume)
  • disk_piops - number of Provisioned IOPS to provision per disk, must be > 100

elastic_ip.rb

Actions:

  • associate - associate the IP.
  • disassociate - disassociate the IP.

Attribute Parameters:

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate, required, unless using IAM roles for authentication.
  • ip - the IP address.
  • timeout - connection timeout for EC2 API.

elastic_lb.rb

Actions:

  • register - Add this instance to the LB
  • deregister - Remove this instance from the LB

Attribute Parameters:

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate, required, unless using IAM roles for authentication.
  • name - the name of the LB, required.

resource_tag.rb

Actions:

  • add - Add tags to a resource.
  • update - Add or modify existing tags on a resource -- this is the default action.
  • remove - Remove tags from a resource, but only if the specified values match the existing ones.
  • force_remove - Remove tags from a resource, regardless of their values.

Attribute Parameters

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate, required, unless using IAM roles for authentication.
  • tags - a hash of key value pairs to be used as resource tags, (e.g. { "Name" => "foo", "Environment" => node.chef_environment },) required.
  • resource_id - resources whose tags will be modified. The value may be a single ID as a string or multiple IDs in an array. If no resource_id is specified the name attribute will be used.

instance_monitoring.rb

Actions:

  • enable - Enable detailed CloudWatch monitoring for this instance (Default).
  • disable - Disable detailed CloudWatch monitoring for this instance.

Attribute Parameters:

  • aws_secret_access_key, aws_access_key and optionally aws_session_token - passed to Opscode::AWS:Ec2 to authenticate, required, unless using IAM roles for authentication.

Usage

The following examples assume that the recommended data bag item has been created and that the following has been included at the top of the recipe where they are used.

include_recipe "aws"
aws = data_bag_item("aws", "main")

aws_ebs_volume

The resource only handles manipulating the EBS volume, additional resources need to be created in the recipe to manage the attached volume as a filesystem or logical volume.

aws_ebs_volume "db_ebs_volume" do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  size 50
  device "/dev/sdi"
  action [ :create, :attach ]
end

This will create a 50G volume, attach it to the instance as /dev/sdi.

aws_ebs_volume "db_ebs_volume_from_snapshot" do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  size 50
  device "/dev/sdi"
  snapshot_id "snap-ABCDEFGH"
  action [ :create, :attach ]
end

This will create a new 50G volume from the snapshot ID provided and attach it as /dev/sdi.

aws_elastic_ip

The elastic_ip resource provider does not support allocating new IPs. This must be done before running a recipe that uses the resource. After allocating a new Elastic IP, we recommend storing it in a databag and loading the item in the recipe.

Databag structure:

% knife data bag show aws eip_load_balancer_production
{
  "id": "eip_load_balancer_production",
  "public_ip": "YOUR_ALLOCATED_IP"
}

Then to set up the Elastic IP on a system:

ip_info = data_bag_item("aws", "eip_load_balancer_production")

aws_elastic_ip "eip_load_balancer_production" do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  ip ip_info['public_ip']
  action :associate
end

This will use the loaded aws and ip_info databags to pass the required values into the resource to configure. Note that when associating an Elastic IP to an instance, connectivity to the instance will be lost because the public IP address is changed. You will need to reconnect to the instance with the new IP.

You can also store this in a role as an attribute or assign to the node directly, if preferred.

aws_elastic_lb

elastic_lb opererates similar to `elastic_ip'. Make sure that you've created the ELB and enabled your instances' availability zones prior to using this provider.

For example, to register the node in the 'QA' ELB:

aws_elastic_lb "elb_qa" do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  name "QA"
  action :register
end

aws_resource_tag

resource_tag can be used to manipulate the tags assigned to one or more AWS resources, i.e. ec2 instances, ebs volumes or ebs volume snapshots.

Assigning tags to a node to reflect it's role and environment:

aws_resource_tag node['ec2']['instance_id'] do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  tags({"Name" => "www.example.com app server",
        "Environment" => node.chef_environment})
  action :update
end

Assigning a set of tags to multiple resources, e.g. ebs volumes in a disk set:

aws_resource_tag 'my awesome raid set' do
  aws_access_key aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
  resource_id [ "vol-d0518cb2", "vol-fad31a9a", "vol-fb106a9f", "vol-74ed3b14" ]
  tags({"Name" => "My awesome RAID disk set",
        "Environment" => node.chef_environment})
end

Note If you would like to use the normal attribute node['aws']['ebs_volume']['db_ebs_volume']['volume_id'] generated by the aws_ebs_volume resource examples above as input for the resource_id attribute of the aws_resource_tag resource, you must employ the "lazy" attribute feature from Chef 10.28 or Chef 11.x and higher. "lazy" will delay the evaluation of the resource_id attribute's value until the normal/set node attribute is available.

aws_resource_tag "db_ebs_volume" do
  resource_id lazy { node['aws']['ebs_volume']['db_ebs_volume']['volume_id'] }
  tags ({"Service" => "Frontend"})
end

aws_s3_file

s3_file can be used to download a file from s3 that requires aws authorization. This is a wrapper around remote_file and supports the same resource attributes as remote_file.

aws_s3_file "/tmp/foo" do
  bucket "i_haz_an_s3_buckit"
  remote_path "path/in/s3/bukket/to/foo"
  aws_access_key_id aws['aws_access_key_id']
  aws_secret_access_key aws['aws_secret_access_key']
end

aws_instance_monitoring

Allows detailed CloudWatch monitoring to be enabled for the current instance.

aws_instance_monitoring "enable detailed monitoring"

License and Author

Copyright 2009-2015, Chef Software, Inc.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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