AWS CodeDeploy Construct Library

This is a developer preview (public beta) module. Releases might lack important features and might have
future breaking changes.
This API is still under active development and subject to non-backward
compatible changes or removal in any future version. Use of the API is not recommended in production
environments. Experimental APIs are not subject to the Semantic Versioning model.
AWS CodeDeploy is a deployment service that automates application deployments to Amazon EC2 instances, on-premises instances, serverless Lambda functions, or Amazon ECS services.
The CDK currently supports Amazon EC2, on-premise and AWS Lambda applications.
EC2/on-premise Applications
To create a new CodeDeploy Application that deploys to EC2/on-premise instances:
import codedeploy = require('@aws-cdk/aws-codedeploy');
const application = new codedeploy.ServerApplication(this, 'CodeDeployApplication', {
applicationName: 'MyApplication',
});
To import an already existing Application:
const application = codedeploy.ServerApplication.import(this, 'ExistingCodeDeployApplication', {
applicationName: 'MyExistingApplication',
});
EC2/on-premise Deployment Groups
To create a new CodeDeploy Deployment Group that deploys to EC2/on-premise instances:
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.ServerDeploymentGroup(this, 'CodeDeployDeploymentGroup', {
application,
deploymentGroupName: 'MyDeploymentGroup',
autoScalingGroups: [asg1, asg2],
installAgent: true,
ec2InstanceTags: new codedeploy.InstanceTagSet(
{
'key1': ['v1', 'v2'],
'key2': [],
'': ['v3'],
},
),
onPremiseInstanceTags: new codedeploy.InstanceTagSet(
{
'key1': ['v1', 'v2'],
},
{
'key2': ['v3'],
},
),
alarms: [
new cloudwatch.Alarm(),
],
ignorePollAlarmsFailure: false,
autoRollback: {
failedDeployment: true,
stoppedDeployment: true,
deploymentInAlarm: true,
},
});
All properties are optional - if you don't provide an Application,
one will be automatically created.
To import an already existing Deployment Group:
const deploymentGroup = codedeploy.ServerDeploymentGroup.import(this, 'ExistingCodeDeployDeploymentGroup', {
application,
deploymentGroupName: 'MyExistingDeploymentGroup',
});
Load balancers
You can specify a load balancer
with the loadBalancer
property when creating a Deployment Group.
LoadBalancer
is an abstract class with static factory methods that allow you to create instances of it from various sources.
With Classic Elastic Load Balancer, you provide it directly:
import lb = require('@aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancing');
const elb = new lb.LoadBalancer(this, 'ELB', {
});
elb.addTarget();
elb.addListener({
});
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.ServerDeploymentGroup(this, 'DeploymentGroup', {
loadBalancer: codedeploy.LoadBalancer.classic(elb),
});
With Application Load Balancer or Network Load Balancer,
you provide a Target Group as the load balancer:
import lbv2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancingv2');
const alb = new lbv2.ApplicationLoadBalancer(this, 'ALB', {
});
const listener = alb.addListener('Listener', {
});
const targetGroup = listener.addTargets('Fleet', {
});
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.ServerDeploymentGroup(this, 'DeploymentGroup', {
loadBalancer: codedeploy.LoadBalancer.application(targetGroup),
});
Deployment Configurations
You can also pass a Deployment Configuration when creating the Deployment Group:
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.ServerDeploymentGroup(this, 'CodeDeployDeploymentGroup', {
deploymentConfig: codedeploy.ServerDeploymentConfig.AllAtOnce,
});
The default Deployment Configuration is ServerDeploymentConfig.OneAtATime
.
You can also create a custom Deployment Configuration:
const deploymentConfig = new codedeploy.ServerDeploymentConfig(this, 'DeploymentConfiguration', {
deploymentConfigName: 'MyDeploymentConfiguration',
minHealthyHostCount: 2,
minHealthyHostPercentage: 75,
});
Or import an existing one:
const deploymentConfig = codedeploy.ServerDeploymentConfig.import(this, 'ExistingDeploymentConfiguration', {
deploymentConfigName: 'MyExistingDeploymentConfiguration',
});
Lambda Applications
To create a new CodeDeploy Application that deploys to a Lambda function:
import codedeploy = require('@aws-cdk/aws-codedeploy');
const application = new codedeploy.LambdaApplication(this, 'CodeDeployApplication', {
applicationName: 'MyApplication',
});
To import an already existing Application:
const application = codedeploy.LambdaApplication.import(this, 'ExistingCodeDeployApplication', {
applicationName: 'MyExistingApplication',
});
Lambda Deployment Groups
To enable traffic shifting deployments for Lambda functions, CodeDeploy uses Lambda Aliases, which can balance incoming traffic between two different versions of your function.
Before deployment, the alias sends 100% of invokes to the version used in production.
When you publish a new version of the function to your stack, CodeDeploy will send a small percentage of traffic to the new version, monitor, and validate before shifting 100% of traffic to the new version.
To create a new CodeDeploy Deployment Group that deploys to a Lambda function:
import codedeploy = require('@aws-cdk/aws-codedeploy');
import lambda = require('@aws-cdk/aws-lambda');
const myApplication = new codedeploy.LambdaApplication(..);
const func = new lambda.Function(..);
const version = func.addVersion('1');
const version1Alias = new lambda.Alias(this, 'alias', {
aliasName: 'prod',
version
});
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentGroup(stack, 'BlueGreenDeployment', {
application: myApplication,
alias: version1Alias,
deploymentConfig: codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentConfig.Linear10PercentEvery1Minute,
});
In order to deploy a new version of this function:
- Increment the version, e.g.
const version = func.addVersion('2')
. - Re-deploy the stack (this will trigger a deployment).
- Monitor the CodeDeploy deployment as traffic shifts between the versions.
Rollbacks and Alarms
CodeDeploy will roll back if the deployment fails. You can optionally trigger a rollback when one or more alarms are in a failed state:
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentGroup(stack, 'BlueGreenDeployment', {
alias,
deploymentConfig: codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentConfig.Linear10PercentEvery1Minute,
alarms: [
new cloudwatch.Alarm(stack, 'Errors', {
comparisonOperator: cloudwatch.ComparisonOperator.GreaterThanThreshold,
threshold: 1,
evaluationPeriods: 1,
metric: alias.metricErrors()
})
]
});
deploymentGroup.addAlarm(new cloudwatch.Alarm(stack, 'BlueGreenErrors', {
comparisonOperator: cloudwatch.ComparisonOperator.GreaterThanThreshold,
threshold: 1,
evaluationPeriods: 1,
metric: blueGreenAlias.metricErrors()
}));
Pre and Post Hooks
CodeDeploy allows you to run an arbitrary Lambda function before traffic shifting actually starts (PreTraffic Hook) and after it completes (PostTraffic Hook).
With either hook, you have the opportunity to run logic that determines whether the deployment must succeed or fail.
For example, with PreTraffic hook you could run integration tests against the newly created Lambda version (but not serving traffic). With PostTraffic hook, you could run end-to-end validation checks.
const warmUpUserCache = new lambda.Function(..);
const endToEndValidation = new lambda.Function(..);
const deploymentGroup = new codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentGroup(stack, 'BlueGreenDeployment', {
alias: alias,
deploymentConfig: codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentConfig.Linear10PercentEvery1Minute,
preHook: warmUpUserCache,
});
deploymentGroup.onPostHook(endToEndValidation);
Import an existing Deployment Group
To import an already existing Deployment Group:
const deploymentGroup = codedeploy.LambdaDeploymentGroup.import(this, 'ExistingCodeDeployDeploymentGroup', {
application,
deploymentGroupName: 'MyExistingDeploymentGroup',
});