A script allowing to setup Amazon EC2 instances through configuration files.
Project description
Overview
mr.awsome is a commandline-tool (aws) to manage and control Amazon Webservice’s EC2 instances. Once configured with your AWS key, you can create, delete, monitor and ssh into instances, as well as perform scripted tasks on them (via fabfiles). Examples are adding additional, pre-configured webservers to a cluster (including updating the load balancer), performing automated software deployments and creating backups - each with just one call from the commandline. Aw(e)some, indeed, if we may say so…
Installation
mr.awsome currently requires buildout for installation, because there is no entry point defined in the egg and the entry point requires an argument to be set. You can do it with a part like the following:
[aws] recipe = zc.recipe.egg eggs = mr.awsome entry-points = aws=mr.awsome:aws assh=mr.awsome:aws_ssh arguments = configpath="${buildout:directory}/etc/deployment"
Configuration
To authorize itself against AWS, mr.awsome uses the following two environment variables:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
You can find their values at http://aws.amazon.com under ‘Your Account’-‘Security Credentials’.
All other information about server instances is located in aws.conf, which needs to reside in the configpath set in the buildout part.
Before you can create a server instance with the create command described below, you first have to declare a security group in your aws.conf like this:
[securitygroup:demo-server] description = Our Demo-Server connections = tcp 22 22 0.0.0.0/0 tcp 80 80 0.0.0.0/0
The security group is used for both the firewall settings, as documented in the AWS docs, and to find the server instance associated with it.
Then you can add the info about the server instance itself like this:
[instance:demo-server] keypair = default securitygroups = demo-server region = eu-west-1 placement = eu-west-1a # we use images from `http://alestic.com/`_ # Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic server 32-bit Europe image = ami-a62a01d2 startup_script = startup-demo-server fabfile = `fabfile.py`_
Startup scripts
The startup_script option above allows you to write a script which is run right after instance creation to setup your server. This feature is supported by many AMI images and was made popular by http://alestic.com/ (See http://alestic.com/2009/06/ec2-user-data-scripts).
Most of the time these are bash scripts like this (for Ubuntu in this case):
#!/bin/bash set -e -x export DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get update && apt-get upgrade -y
The set -e -x is for debugging. You can see the commands which ran and their output in /var/log/syslog once you are logged into the server.
The startup scripts have a maximum size of 16kb. You can check the size with the debug command of the aws script.
The startup script is basically a template for the Python string format method (See http://docs.python.org/library/string.html#formatstrings). So anything inside curly brackets is expanded. To get normal curly brackets, when you write bash functions etc, just double them like this:
function LOG() {{ echo "$*"; }}
If you want to include any files for something like ssh authorized_keys, you do something the following:
authorized_keys: file,escape_eol ssh-authorized_keys #!/bin/bash ... /bin/bash -c "echo -e \"{authorized_keys}\" >> /root/.ssh/authorized_keys"
So the startup script basically has rfc822 syntax (internally the e-mail parser is used). The file,escape_eol tells the script that the ssh- authorized_keys string should be used as a filename for a file which is then read and the \n characters are escaped so the resulting string can be used in the echo -e command.
- You have the following possibilities (brain dump, needs fleshing out):
file
base64
format
template
gzip
escape_eol
In addition to that, you have access to some more variables. For example full access to the server config in the aws.conf. With servers[demo- server].instance.dns_name for example, you can get the current DNS name of the server (this only works with other servers already started, not the one for which the startup script is for, since the DNS isn’t set at the time the script is created).
Controlling instances
start
stop
status
Snapshots
(Needs description of volumes in “Configuration”)
SSH integration
mr.awsome provides an additional tool assh to easily perform SSH based operations against named EC2 instances. Particularly, it encapsulates the entire SSH fingerprint mechanism, as EC2 instances are often short-lived and normally trigger warnings, especially, if you are using elastic IPs.
Note:: it does so not by simply turning off these checks, but by transparently updating its own fingerprint list (it relies on the console output of the instance to provide the fingerprint via the AWS API, some imags may not be configured to do so) when adding new instances.
The easiest scenario is simply to create an SSH session with an instance. You can either use the ssh subcommand of the aws tool like so:
aws ssh SERVERNAME
Alternatively you can use the assh command direct, like so:
assh SERVERNAME
The latter has been provided to support scp and rsync. Here are some examples, you get the idea:
scp -S `pwd`/bin/assh some.file demo-server:/some/path/ rsync -e "bin/assh" some/path fschulze@demo-server:/some/path
Fabric integration
Since Fabric <http://fabfile.org/`_>`_ basically works through ssh, all the bits necessary for ssh integration are also needed for Fabric. To make it easy to run fabfiles, you specifiy them with the "fabfile" option in your aws.conf and use the ``do command to run them.
Take the following fabfile.py as an example:
from fabric.api import env, run env.reject_unknown_hosts = True env.disable_known_hosts = True def get_syslog(): run("echo /var/log/syslog")
If you have that fabfile for the demo-server above, you can then run the command with “bin/aws demo-server do get_syslog”.
For more info about fabfiles, read the docs at http://fabfile.org/.
Changelog
0.4 - 2010-02-18
Check console output in status and tell user about it. [fschulze]
Friendly message instead of traceback when trying to ssh into an unavailable server. [fschulze]
Remove comment lines from startup script if it’s starting with #!/bin/sh or #!/bin/bash. [fschulze]
Removed -r option for start and debug commands and replaced it with more general -o option. [fschulze]
Made startup script optional (not all AMIs support it, especially Windows ones). [fschulze]
The stop command actually only stops an instance now (only works with instances booted from an EBS volume) and the new terminate command now does what stop did before. [fschulze]
Better error message when no console output is available for ssh finger print validation. [fschulze]
Fixed indentation in documentation. [natea, fschulze]
0.3 - 2010-02-08
Removed the [host_string] prefix of the do command output. [fschulze]
0.2 - 2010-02-02
Snapshots automatically get a description with date and volume id. [fschulze]
The ssh command can now be used with scp and rsync. [fschulze]
0.1 - 2010-01-21
Initial release [fschulze]
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