Chef Provisioning AWS

This README is a work in progress. Please add to it!

Prerequesites

Credentials

AWS credentials should be specified in your ~/.aws/credentials file as documented here. We support the use of profiles as well. If you do not specify a profile then we use the default profile.

You can specify a profile as the middle section of the semi-colon seperated driver url. For example, a driver url of aws:staging:us-east-1 would use the profile staging.

Resources

TODO: List out weird/unique things about resources here. We don't need to document every resource because users can look at the resource model.

TODO: document aws_object and get_aws_object and how you can get the aws object for a base chef-provisioning resource like machine or load_balancer

aws_vpc

If you specify internet_gateway true the VPC will create and manage its own internet gateway. Specifying internet_gateway false will delete that managed internet gateway.

Specifying main_routes without main_route_table will update the 'default' route table that is created when AWS creates the VPC.

Specifying main_route_table without specifying main_routes will update the main route association to point to the provided route table.

If you specify both main_routes and main_route_table we will update the main_route_table to have the specified main_routes. IE, running

aws_route_table 'ref-main-route-table' do
  vpc 'ref-vpc'
  routes '0.0.0.0/0' => :internet_gateway
end

aws_vpc 'ref-vpc' do
  main_route_table 'ref-main-route-table'
  main_routes '0.0.0.0/1' => :internet_gateway
end

aws_vpc 'ref-vpc' do
  main_routes '0.0.0.0/2' => :internet_gateway
end

will cause resource flapping. The ref-main-route-table resource will set the routes to /0 and then the vpc will set the routes to /1. Then because ref-main-route-table is set to the main route for ref-vpc the third resource will set the routes to /2.

The takeaway from this is that you should either specify main_routes on your VPC and only manage the routes through that, OR only specify main_route_table and manage the routes through the aws_route_table resource.

Purging

If you specify action :purge on the VPC it will attempt to delete ALL resources contained in this VPC before deleting the actual VPC.

A potential danger of this is that it does not delete the data bag entries for tracked AWS objects. If you :purge a VPC and it has aws_route_table[ref-route] in it, the data bag entry for ref-route is not automatically destroyed. Purge is most useful for testing to ensure no objects are left that AWS can charge for.

aws_key_pair

TODO - document how to specify an existing local key

Machine Options

You can pass machine options that will be used by machine, machine_batch and machine_image to configure the machine. These are all the available options:

with_machine_options({
  bootstrap_options: {
    key_name: 'ref-key-pair',
    ...
  },
  ...
})

This options hash can be supplied to either with_machine_options or directly into the machine_options attribute.

Looking up AWS objects

#aws_object

All chef-provisioning-aws resources have a aws_object method that will return the AWS object. The AWS object won't exist until the resource converges, however. An example of how to do this looks like:

my_vpc = aws_vpc 'my_vpc' do
  cidr_block '10.0.0.0/24'
  main_routes '0.0.0.0/0' => :internet_gateway
  internet_gateway true
end

my_sg = aws_security_group 'my_sg' do
  vpc lazy { my_vpc.aws_object.id }
  inbound_rules '0.0.0.0/0' => [ 22, 80 ]
end

my_subnet = aws_subnet 'my_subnet' do
  vpc lazy { my_vpc.aws_object.id }
  cidr_block '10.0.0.0/24'
  availability_zone 'eu-west-1a'
  map_public_ip_on_launch true
end

machine 'my_machine' do
  machine_options(
    lazy do
      {
        bootstrap_options: {
          subnet_id: my_subnet.aws_object.id,
          security_group_ids: [my_sg.aws_object.id]
        }
      }
    end
  )
end

Note the use of the lazy attribute modifier. This is necessary because when the resources are compiled the aws_objects do not exist yet, so we must wait to reference them until the converge phase.

#lookup_options

You have access to the aws object when necessary, but often it isn't needed. The above example is better written as:

aws_vpc 'my_vpc' do
  cidr_block '10.0.0.0/24'
  main_routes '0.0.0.0/0' => :internet_gateway
  internet_gateway true
end

aws_security_group 'my_sg' do
  vpc 'my_vpc'
  inbound_rules '0.0.0.0/0' => [ 22, 80 ]
end

aws_subnet 'my_subnet' do
  vpc 'my_vpc'
  cidr_block '10.0.0.0/24'
  availability_zone 'eu-west-1a'
  map_public_ip_on_launch true
end

machine 'my_machine' do
  machine_options bootstrap_options: {
    subnet_id: 'my_subnet',
    security_group_ids: ['my_sg']
  }
end

When specifying bootstrap_options and any attributes which reference another aws resource, we perform lookup_options. This tries to turn elements with names like vpc, security_group_ids, machines, launch_configurations, load_balancers, etc. to the correct AWS object.

Looking up chef-provisioning resources

The base chef-provisioning resources (machine, machine_batch, load_balancer, machine_image) don't have the aws_object method defined on them because they are not AWSResource classes. To look them up use the class method get_aws_object defined on the chef-provisioning-aws specific resource:

machine_image 'my_image' do
  ...
end

ruby_block "look up machine_image object" do
  block do
    aws_object = Chef::Resource::AwsImage.get_aws_object(
      'my_image',
      run_context: run_context,
      driver: run_context.chef_provisioning.current_driver,
      managed_entry_store: Chef::Provisioning.chef_managed_entry_store(run_context.cheffish.current_chef_server)
    )
  end
end

To look up a machine, use the AwsInstance class, to look up a load balancer use the AwsLoadBalancer class, etc. The first parameter you pass should be the same resource name as used in the base chef-provisioning resource.

Again, the AWS object will not exist until the converge phase, so the aws_object will only be available using a lazy attribute modifier or in a ruby_block.

Running Integration Tests

To run the integration tests execute bundle exec rspec. If you have not set it up, you should see an error message about a missing environment variable AWS_TEST_DRIVER. You can add this as a normal environment variable or set it for a single run with AWS_TEST_DRIVER=aws::eu-west-1 bundle exec rspec. The format should match what with_driver expects.

You will also need to have configured your ~/.aws/config or environment variables with your AWS credentials.

This creates real objects within AWS. The tests make their best effort to delete these objects after each test finishes but errors can happen which prevent this. Be aware that this may charge you!

If you find the tests leaving behind resources during normal conditions (IE, not when there is an unexpected exception) please file a bug. Most objects can be cleaned up by deleting the test_vpc from within the AWS browser console.

Tagging Resources

Aws Resources

All resources which extend Chef::Provisioning::AWSDriver::AWSResourceWithEntry support the ability to add tags, except AwsEipAddress. AWS does not support tagging on AwsEipAddress. To add a tag to any aws resource, us the aws_tags attribute and provide it a hash:

aws_ebs_volume 'ref-volume' do
  aws_tags company: 'my_company', 'key_as_string' => :value_as_symbol
end

aws_vpc 'ref-vpc' do
  aws_tags 'Name' => 'custom-vpc-name'
end

The hash of tags can use symbols or strings for both keys and values. The tags will be converged idempotently, meaning no write will occur if no tags are changing.

We will not touch the 'Name' tag UNLESS you specifically pass it. If you do not pass it, we leave it alone.

Base Resources

Because base resources from chef-provisioning do not have the aws_tag attribute, they must be tagged in their options:

machine 'ref-machine-1' do
  machine_options :aws_tags => {:marco => 'polo', :happyhappy => 'joyjoy'}
end

machine_batch "ref-batch" do
  machine 'ref-machine-2' do
    machine_options :aws_tags => {:marco => 'polo', :happyhappy => 'joyjoy'}
    converge false
  end
  machine 'ref-machine-3' do
    machine_options :aws_tags => {:othercustomtags => 'byebye'}
    converge false
  end
end

load_balancer 'ref-elb' do
  load_balancer_options :aws_tags => {:marco => 'polo', :happyhappy => 'joyjoy'}
end

See docs/examples/aws_tags.rb for further examples.