Awesome
cfn-modules User Guide
Rapid CloudFormation: Modular, production ready, open source.
Why cfn-modules?
We started with aws-cf-templates in 2015. Three years later, we believe that we have learned enough to come up with a new approach to use CloudFormation more efficient.
Modular
Reusing CloudFormation templates is hard. Most often, templates are initially copied and then modified.
Two problems arise. First, updates to the copy are not applied to the original. Second, updates to the original are not applied to the copy. In essence: we do not learn from each other!
By using an easy to use package manager (npm) you can install and update cfn-modules
to spin up complex infrastructure in minutes that just works.
Production ready
All modules are production-ready. If no other limitations are documented, they are:
- Highly available
- no single point of failure
- Scalable
- increase or decrease the capacity based on utilization
- Secure
- using the latest operating systems and software components
- follow the least privilege principle (e.g., IAM policies and Security Groups)
- backups of state (not configuration) enabled
- encryption at-rest enabled
- encryption in-transit enabled and preferred
- Operator-friendly
- logging enabled
- alerting enabled
- updatable
Open source
All modules are licensed under Apache-2.0. Commercial use is allowed.
Prerequisites
- AWS CLI installed (install)
- npm >=5.6 installed (install Node.js 10.x)
Getting started
cfn-modules
are installed and updated with the package manager npm. The module catalog contains all available modules. Let's start with a simple example: An EC2 instance launched into a VPC.
Install Node.js 10.x if
npm
is not installed on your system
Install the modules using npm:
npm i @cfn-modules/vpc@1.0.0
npm i @cfn-modules/ec2-instance-amazon-linux@1.0.0
Use the modules as nested stacks in your CloudFormation template. The vpc module comes with no required parameters. The ec2-instance-amazon-linux module comes with the required VpcModule
parameter to make the connection with the vpc
module. The UserData
parameter is optional. Use it to install additional software like the Apache HTTP Server. Create a file named example.yml
with the following content:
---
AWSTemplateFormatVersion: '2010-09-09'
Resources:
Vpc:
Type: 'AWS::CloudFormation::Stack'
Properties:
Parameters:
S3Endpoint: 'false' # speed up the example
DynamoDBEndpoint: 'false' # speed up the example
FlowLog: 'false' # speed up the example
NatGateways: 'false' # speed up the example
TemplateURL: './node_modules/@cfn-modules/vpc/module.yml'
Instance:
Type: 'AWS::CloudFormation::Stack'
Properties:
Parameters:
VpcModule: !GetAtt 'Vpc.Outputs.StackName' # reference the vpc module
UserData: |
yum install -y httpd24
service httpd start
echo "cfn-modules" > /var/www/html/index.html
IngressTcpPort1: '80' # open up port 80 to the world
TemplateURL: './node_modules/@cfn-modules/ec2-instance-amazon-linux/module.yml'
Outputs:
Url:
Value: !Sub 'http://${Instance.Outputs.PublicIpAddress}'
Upload the CloudFormation template and the dependencies to S3 with the aws cloudformation package
command.
Install AWS CLI if
aws
is not installed on your system
If you use cfn-modules
the first time, create an S3 bucket to store the artifacts first (otherwise, skip this step). Choose a unique bucket name, e.g. cfn-modules-$Name-$Region
.
In the following command, replace $Name
with a unique name (e.g. your initials or company name), and replace $Region
with your AWS default region (e.g. us-east-1
) to create an S3 bucket:
aws s3 mb s3://cfn-modules-$Name-$Region
Now you can upload all artifacts to S3:
aws cloudformation package --template-file example.yml --s3-bucket cfn-modules-$Name-$Region --output-template-file packaged.yml
Finally, you can create a CloudFormation stack with aws cloudformation deploy
:
aws cloudformation deploy --template-file packaged.yml --stack-name ec2-example --capabilities CAPABILITY_IAM
Creating the stack will take about 10 minutes. You can find the URL to the demo page in the stack outputs:
aws cloudformation describe-stacks --stack-name ec2-example --query "Stacks[0].Outputs"
Don't forget to delete the stack:
aws cloudformation delete-stack --stack-name ec2-example
aws cloudformation wait stack-delete-complete --stack-name ec2-example
Fin. Check out our examples next.
Examples
- Auto Scaling Group (singleton)
- EC2
- Fargate
- MSK cluster
- Serverless
Check out the examples folder to see all examples.
Modules
- acm-wildcard-certificate-public
- alerting
- Load Balancer
- Auto Scaling Group (singleton)
- client-sg
- cloudwatch-dashboard
- cognito-userpool
- dynamodb-table
- ebs-volume
- EC2 instance
- ECS
- efs-file-system
- elasticache-redis
- kinesis-data-stream
- kms-key
- Lambda
- msk-cluster
- RDS
- Route53
- s3-bucket
- secret
- sqs-queue
- ssh-bastion
- vpc
Check out the module catalog to browse all modules.
About
A cloudonaut.io project. Engineered by widdix.