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@aws-cdk/aws-ec2
Advanced tools
AWS CDK v1 has reached End-of-Support on 2023-06-01. This package is no longer being updated, and users should migrate to AWS CDK v2.
For more information on how to migrate, see the Migrating to AWS CDK v2 guide.
The @aws-cdk/aws-ec2
package contains primitives for setting up networking and
instances.
import * as ec2 from '@aws-cdk/aws-ec2';
Most projects need a Virtual Private Cloud to provide security by means of
network partitioning. This is achieved by creating an instance of
Vpc
:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'VPC');
All default constructs require EC2 instances to be launched inside a VPC, so you should generally start by defining a VPC whenever you need to launch instances for your project.
A VPC consists of one or more subnets that instances can be placed into. CDK distinguishes three different subnet types:
SubnetType.PUBLIC
) - public subnets connect directly to the Internet using an
Internet Gateway. If you want your instances to have a public IP address
and be directly reachable from the Internet, you must place them in a
public subnet.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_NAT
) - instances in private subnets are not directly routable from the
Internet, and connect out to the Internet via a NAT gateway. By default, a
NAT gateway is created in every public subnet for maximum availability. Be
aware that you will be charged for NAT gateways.SubnetType.PRIVATE_ISOLATED
) - isolated subnets do not route from or to the Internet, and
as such do not require NAT gateways. They can only connect to or be
connected to from other instances in the same VPC. A default VPC configuration
will not include isolated subnets,A default VPC configuration will create public and private subnets. However, if
natGateways:0
and subnetConfiguration
is undefined, default VPC configuration
will create public and isolated subnets. See Advanced Subnet Configuration
below for information on how to change the default subnet configuration.
Constructs using the VPC will "launch instances" (or more accurately, create
Elastic Network Interfaces) into one or more of the subnets. They all accept
a property called subnetSelection
(sometimes called vpcSubnets
) to allow
you to select in what subnet to place the ENIs, usually defaulting to
private subnets if the property is omitted.
If you would like to save on the cost of NAT gateways, you can use
isolated subnets instead of private subnets (as described in Advanced
Subnet Configuration). If you need private instances to have
internet connectivity, another option is to reduce the number of NAT gateways
created by setting the natGateways
property to a lower value (the default
is one NAT gateway per availability zone). Be aware that this may have
availability implications for your application.
By default, a VPC will spread over at most 3 Availability Zones available to
it. To change the number of Availability Zones that the VPC will spread over,
specify the maxAzs
property when defining it.
The number of Availability Zones that are available depends on the region and account of the Stack containing the VPC. If the region and account are specified on the Stack, the CLI will look up the existing Availability Zones and get an accurate count. If region and account are not specified, the stack could be deployed anywhere and it will have to make a safe choice, limiting itself to 2 Availability Zones.
Therefore, to get the VPC to spread over 3 or more availability zones, you must specify the environment where the stack will be deployed.
You can gain full control over the availability zones selection strategy by overriding the Stack's get availabilityZones()
method:
// This example is only available in TypeScript
class MyStack extends Stack {
constructor(scope: Construct, id: string, props?: StackProps) {
super(scope, id, props);
// ...
}
get availabilityZones(): string[] {
return ['us-west-2a', 'us-west-2b'];
}
}
Note that overriding the get availabilityZones()
method will override the default behavior for all constructs defined within the Stack.
When creating resources that create Elastic Network Interfaces (such as
databases or instances), there is an option to choose which subnets to place
them in. For example, a VPC endpoint by default is placed into a subnet in
every availability zone, but you can override which subnets to use. The property
is typically called one of subnets
, vpcSubnets
or subnetSelection
.
The example below will place the endpoint into two AZs (us-east-1a
and us-east-1c
),
in Isolated subnets:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint(this, 'VPC Endpoint', {
vpc,
service: new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpointService('com.amazonaws.vpce.us-east-1.vpce-svc-uuddlrlrbastrtsvc', 443),
subnets: {
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_ISOLATED,
availabilityZones: ['us-east-1a', 'us-east-1c']
}
});
You can also specify specific subnet objects for granular control:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const subnet1: ec2.Subnet;
declare const subnet2: ec2.Subnet;
new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint(this, 'VPC Endpoint', {
vpc,
service: new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpointService('com.amazonaws.vpce.us-east-1.vpce-svc-uuddlrlrbastrtsvc', 443),
subnets: {
subnets: [subnet1, subnet2]
}
});
Which subnets are selected is evaluated as follows:
subnets
: if specific subnet objects are supplied, these are selected, and no other
logic is used.subnetType
/subnetGroupName
: otherwise, a set of subnets is selected by
supplying either type or name:
subnetType
will select all subnets of the given type.subnetGroupName
should be used to distinguish between multiple groups of subnets of
the same type (for example, you may want to separate your application instances and your
RDS instances into two distinct groups of Isolated subnets).availabilityZones
/onePerAz
: finally, some availability-zone based filtering may be done.
This filtering by availability zones will only be possible if the VPC has been created or
looked up in a non-environment agnostic stack (so account and region have been set and
availability zones have been looked up).
availabilityZones
: only the specific subnets from the selected subnet groups that are
in the given availability zones will be returned.onePerAz
: per availability zone, a maximum of one subnet will be returned (Useful for resource
types that do not allow creating two ENIs in the same availability zone).subnetFilters
: additional filtering on subnets using any number of user-provided filters which
extend SubnetFilter
. The following methods on the SubnetFilter
class can be used to create
a filter:
byIds
: chooses subnets from a list of idsavailabilityZones
: chooses subnets in the provided list of availability zonesonePerAz
: chooses at most one subnet per availability zonecontainsIpAddresses
: chooses a subnet which contains any of the listed ip addressesbyCidrMask
: chooses subnets that have the provided CIDR netmaskBy default, the Vpc
construct will create NAT gateways for you, which
are managed by AWS. If you would prefer to use your own managed NAT
instances instead, specify a different value for the natGatewayProvider
property, as follows:
The construct will automatically search for the most recent NAT gateway AMI.
If you prefer to use a custom AMI, use machineImage: MachineImage.genericLinux({ ... })
and configure the right AMI ID for the
regions you want to deploy to.
By default, the NAT instances will route all traffic. To control what traffic
gets routed, pass a custom value for defaultAllowedTraffic
and access the
NatInstanceProvider.connections
member after having passed the NAT provider to
the VPC:
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
const provider = ec2.NatProvider.instance({
instanceType,
defaultAllowedTraffic: ec2.NatTrafficDirection.OUTBOUND_ONLY,
});
new ec2.Vpc(this, 'TheVPC', {
natGatewayProvider: provider,
});
provider.connections.allowFrom(ec2.Peer.ipv4('1.2.3.4/8'), ec2.Port.tcp(80));
If the default VPC configuration (public and private subnets spanning the
size of the VPC) don't suffice for you, you can configure what subnets to
create by specifying the subnetConfiguration
property. It allows you
to configure the number and size of all subnets. Specifying an advanced
subnet configuration could look like this:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'TheVPC', {
// 'cidr' configures the IP range and size of the entire VPC.
// The IP space will be divided over the configured subnets.
cidr: '10.0.0.0/21',
// 'maxAzs' configures the maximum number of availability zones to use
maxAzs: 3,
// 'subnetConfiguration' specifies the "subnet groups" to create.
// Every subnet group will have a subnet for each AZ, so this
// configuration will create `3 groups × 3 AZs = 9` subnets.
subnetConfiguration: [
{
// 'subnetType' controls Internet access, as described above.
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
// 'name' is used to name this particular subnet group. You will have to
// use the name for subnet selection if you have more than one subnet
// group of the same type.
name: 'Ingress',
// 'cidrMask' specifies the IP addresses in the range of of individual
// subnets in the group. Each of the subnets in this group will contain
// `2^(32 address bits - 24 subnet bits) - 2 reserved addresses = 254`
// usable IP addresses.
//
// If 'cidrMask' is left out the available address space is evenly
// divided across the remaining subnet groups.
cidrMask: 24,
},
{
cidrMask: 24,
name: 'Application',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_NAT,
},
{
cidrMask: 28,
name: 'Database',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_ISOLATED,
// 'reserved' can be used to reserve IP address space. No resources will
// be created for this subnet, but the IP range will be kept available for
// future creation of this subnet, or even for future subdivision.
reserved: true
}
],
});
The example above is one possible configuration, but the user can use the constructs above to implement many other network configurations.
The Vpc
from the above configuration in a Region with three
availability zones will be the following:
Subnet Name | Type | IP Block | AZ | Features |
---|---|---|---|---|
IngressSubnet1 | PUBLIC | 10.0.0.0/24 | #1 | NAT Gateway |
IngressSubnet2 | PUBLIC | 10.0.1.0/24 | #2 | NAT Gateway |
IngressSubnet3 | PUBLIC | 10.0.2.0/24 | #3 | NAT Gateway |
ApplicationSubnet1 | PRIVATE | 10.0.3.0/24 | #1 | Route to NAT in IngressSubnet1 |
ApplicationSubnet2 | PRIVATE | 10.0.4.0/24 | #2 | Route to NAT in IngressSubnet2 |
ApplicationSubnet3 | PRIVATE | 10.0.5.0/24 | #3 | Route to NAT in IngressSubnet3 |
DatabaseSubnet1 | ISOLATED | 10.0.6.0/28 | #1 | Only routes within the VPC |
DatabaseSubnet2 | ISOLATED | 10.0.6.16/28 | #2 | Only routes within the VPC |
DatabaseSubnet3 | ISOLATED | 10.0.6.32/28 | #3 | Only routes within the VPC |
If you need access to the internet gateway, you can get its ID like so:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const igwId = vpc.internetGatewayId;
For a VPC with only ISOLATED
subnets, this value will be undefined.
This is only supported for VPCs created in the stack - currently you're unable to get the ID for imported VPCs. To do that you'd have to specifically look up the Internet Gateway by name, which would require knowing the name beforehand.
This can be useful for configuring routing using a combination of gateways: for more information see Routing below.
It's possible to add routes to any subnets using the addRoute()
method. If for
example you want an isolated subnet to have a static route via the default
Internet Gateway created for the public subnet - perhaps for routing a VPN
connection - you can do so like this:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, "VPC", {
subnetConfiguration: [{
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
name: 'Public',
},{
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_ISOLATED,
name: 'Isolated',
}]
});
(vpc.isolatedSubnets[0] as ec2.Subnet).addRoute("StaticRoute", {
routerId: vpc.internetGatewayId!,
routerType: ec2.RouterType.GATEWAY,
destinationCidrBlock: "8.8.8.8/32",
})
Note that we cast to Subnet
here because the list of subnets only returns an
ISubnet
.
There are situations where the IP space for a subnet or number of subnets
will need to be reserved. This is useful in situations where subnets would
need to be added after the vpc is originally deployed, without causing IP
renumbering for existing subnets. The IP space for a subnet may be reserved
by setting the reserved
subnetConfiguration property to true, as shown
below:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'TheVPC', {
natGateways: 1,
subnetConfiguration: [
{
cidrMask: 26,
name: 'Public',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
},
{
cidrMask: 26,
name: 'Application1',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_NAT,
},
{
cidrMask: 26,
name: 'Application2',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_NAT,
reserved: true, // <---- This subnet group is reserved
},
{
cidrMask: 27,
name: 'Database',
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_ISOLATED,
}
],
});
In the example above, the subnet for Application2 is not actually provisioned
but its IP space is still reserved. If in the future this subnet needs to be
provisioned, then the reserved: true
property should be removed. Reserving
parts of the IP space prevents the other subnets from getting renumbered.
If you are creating multiple Stack
s inside the same CDK application, you
can reuse a VPC defined in one Stack in another by simply passing the VPC
instance around:
If your VPC is created outside your CDK app, you can use Vpc.fromLookup()
.
The CDK CLI will search for the specified VPC in the the stack's region and
account, and import the subnet configuration. Looking up can be done by VPC
ID, but more flexibly by searching for a specific tag on the VPC.
Subnet types will be determined from the aws-cdk:subnet-type
tag on the
subnet if it exists, or the presence of a route to an Internet Gateway
otherwise. Subnet names will be determined from the aws-cdk:subnet-name
tag
on the subnet if it exists, or will mirror the subnet type otherwise (i.e.
a public subnet will have the name "Public"
).
The result of the Vpc.fromLookup()
operation will be written to a file
called cdk.context.json
. You must commit this file to source control so
that the lookup values are available in non-privileged environments such
as CI build steps, and to ensure your template builds are repeatable.
Here's how Vpc.fromLookup()
can be used:
Vpc.fromLookup
is the recommended way to import VPCs. If for whatever
reason you do not want to use the context mechanism to look up a VPC at
synthesis time, you can also use Vpc.fromVpcAttributes
. This has the
following limitations:
Using Vpc.fromVpcAttributes()
looks like this:
const vpc = ec2.Vpc.fromVpcAttributes(this, 'VPC', {
vpcId: 'vpc-1234',
availabilityZones: ['us-east-1a', 'us-east-1b'],
// Either pass literals for all IDs
publicSubnetIds: ['s-12345', 's-67890'],
// OR: import a list of known length
privateSubnetIds: Fn.importListValue('PrivateSubnetIds', 2),
// OR: split an imported string to a list of known length
isolatedSubnetIds: Fn.split(',', ssm.StringParameter.valueForStringParameter(this, `MyParameter`), 2),
});
In AWS, all network traffic in and out of Elastic Network Interfaces (ENIs)
is controlled by Security Groups. You can think of Security Groups as a
firewall with a set of rules. By default, Security Groups allow no incoming
(ingress) traffic and all outgoing (egress) traffic. You can add ingress rules
to them to allow incoming traffic streams. To exert fine-grained control over
egress traffic, set allowAllOutbound: false
on the SecurityGroup
, after
which you can add egress traffic rules.
You can manipulate Security Groups directly:
const mySecurityGroup = new ec2.SecurityGroup(this, 'SecurityGroup', {
vpc,
description: 'Allow ssh access to ec2 instances',
allowAllOutbound: true // Can be set to false
});
mySecurityGroup.addIngressRule(ec2.Peer.anyIpv4(), ec2.Port.tcp(22), 'allow ssh access from the world');
All constructs that create ENIs on your behalf (typically constructs that create EC2 instances or other VPC-connected resources) will all have security groups automatically assigned. Those constructs have an attribute called connections, which is an object that makes it convenient to update the security groups. If you want to allow connections between two constructs that have security groups, you have to add an Egress rule to one Security Group, and an Ingress rule to the other. The connections object will automatically take care of this for you:
declare const loadBalancer: elbv2.ApplicationLoadBalancer;
declare const appFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
declare const dbFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
// Allow connections from anywhere
loadBalancer.connections.allowFromAnyIpv4(ec2.Port.tcp(443), 'Allow inbound HTTPS');
// The same, but an explicit IP address
loadBalancer.connections.allowFrom(ec2.Peer.ipv4('1.2.3.4/32'), ec2.Port.tcp(443), 'Allow inbound HTTPS');
// Allow connection between AutoScalingGroups
appFleet.connections.allowTo(dbFleet, ec2.Port.tcp(443), 'App can call database');
There are various classes that implement the connection peer part:
declare const appFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
declare const dbFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
// Simple connection peers
let peer = ec2.Peer.ipv4('10.0.0.0/16');
peer = ec2.Peer.anyIpv4();
peer = ec2.Peer.ipv6('::0/0');
peer = ec2.Peer.anyIpv6();
peer = ec2.Peer.prefixList('pl-12345');
appFleet.connections.allowTo(peer, ec2.Port.tcp(443), 'Allow outbound HTTPS');
Any object that has a security group can itself be used as a connection peer:
declare const fleet1: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
declare const fleet2: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
declare const appFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
// These automatically create appropriate ingress and egress rules in both security groups
fleet1.connections.allowTo(fleet2, ec2.Port.tcp(80), 'Allow between fleets');
appFleet.connections.allowFromAnyIpv4(ec2.Port.tcp(80), 'Allow from load balancer');
The connections that are allowed are specified by port ranges. A number of classes provide the connection specifier:
ec2.Port.tcp(80)
ec2.Port.tcpRange(60000, 65535)
ec2.Port.allTcp()
ec2.Port.allTraffic()
NOTE: This set is not complete yet; for example, there is no library support for ICMP at the moment. However, you can write your own classes to implement those.
Some Constructs have default ports associated with them. For example, the listener of a load balancer does (it's the public port), or instances of an RDS database (it's the port the database is accepting connections on).
If the object you're calling the peering method on has a default port associated with it, you can call
allowDefaultPortFrom()
and omit the port specifier. If the argument has an associated default port, call
allowDefaultPortTo()
.
For example:
declare const listener: elbv2.ApplicationListener;
declare const appFleet: autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup;
declare const rdsDatabase: rds.DatabaseCluster;
// Port implicit in listener
listener.connections.allowDefaultPortFromAnyIpv4('Allow public');
// Port implicit in peer
appFleet.connections.allowDefaultPortTo(rdsDatabase, 'Fleet can access database');
By default, security group wills be added inline to the security group in the output cloud formation template, if applicable. This includes any static rules by ip address and port range. This optimization helps to minimize the size of the template.
In some environments this is not desirable, for example if your security group access is controlled
via tags. You can disable inline rules per security group or globally via the context key
@aws-cdk/aws-ec2.securityGroupDisableInlineRules
.
const mySecurityGroupWithoutInlineRules = new ec2.SecurityGroup(this, 'SecurityGroup', {
vpc,
description: 'Allow ssh access to ec2 instances',
allowAllOutbound: true,
disableInlineRules: true
});
//This will add the rule as an external cloud formation construct
mySecurityGroupWithoutInlineRules.addIngressRule(ec2.Peer.anyIpv4(), ec2.Port.tcp(22), 'allow ssh access from the world');
If you know the ID and the configuration of the security group to import, you can use SecurityGroup.fromSecurityGroupId
:
const sg = ec2.SecurityGroup.fromSecurityGroupId(this, 'SecurityGroupImport', 'sg-1234', {
allowAllOutbound: true,
});
Alternatively, use lookup methods to import security groups if you do not know the ID or the configuration details. Method SecurityGroup.fromLookupByName
looks up a security group if the secruity group ID is unknown.
const sg = ec2.SecurityGroup.fromLookupByName(this, 'SecurityGroupLookup', 'security-group-name', vpc);
If the security group ID is known and configuration details are unknown, use method SecurityGroup.fromLookupById
instead. This method will lookup property allowAllOutbound
from the current configuration of the security group.
const sg = ec2.SecurityGroup.fromLookupById(this, 'SecurityGroupLookup', 'sg-1234');
The result of SecurityGroup.fromLookupByName
and SecurityGroup.fromLookupById
operations will be written to a file called cdk.context.json
. You must commit this file to source control so that the lookup values are available in non-privileged environments such as CI build steps, and to ensure your template builds are repeatable.
If you are attempting to add a connection from a peer in one stack to a peer in a different stack, sometimes it is necessary to ensure that you are making the connection in a specific stack in order to avoid a cyclic reference. If there are no other dependencies between stacks then it will not matter in which stack you make the connection, but if there are existing dependencies (i.e. stack1 already depends on stack2), then it is important to make the connection in the dependent stack (i.e. stack1).
Whenever you make a connections
function call, the ingress and egress security group rules will be added to the stack that the calling object exists in.
So if you are doing something like peer1.connections.allowFrom(peer2)
, then the security group rules (both ingress and egress) will be created in peer1
's Stack.
As an example, if we wanted to allow a connection from a security group in one stack (egress) to a security group in a different stack (ingress), we would make the connection like:
If Stack1 depends on Stack2
// Stack 1
declare const stack1: Stack;
declare const stack2: Stack;
const sg1 = new ec2.SecurityGroup(stack1, 'SG1', {
allowAllOutbound: false, // if this is `true` then no egress rule will be created
vpc,
});
// Stack 2
const sg2 = new ec2.SecurityGroup(stack2, 'SG2', {
allowAllOutbound: false, // if this is `true` then no egress rule will be created
vpc,
});
// `connections.allowTo` on `sg1` since we want the
// rules to be created in Stack1
sg1.connections.allowTo(sg2, ec2.Port.tcp(3333));
In this case both the Ingress Rule for sg2
and the Egress Rule for sg1
will both be created
in Stack 1
which avoids the cyclic reference.
If Stack2 depends on Stack1
// Stack 1
declare const stack1: Stack;
declare const stack2: Stack;
const sg1 = new ec2.SecurityGroup(stack1, 'SG1', {
allowAllOutbound: false, // if this is `true` then no egress rule will be created
vpc,
});
// Stack 2
const sg2 = new ec2.SecurityGroup(stack2, 'SG2', {
allowAllOutbound: false, // if this is `true` then no egress rule will be created
vpc,
});
// `connections.allowFrom` on `sg2` since we want the
// rules to be created in Stack2
sg2.connections.allowFrom(sg1, ec2.Port.tcp(3333));
In this case both the Ingress Rule for sg2
and the Egress Rule for sg1
will both be created
in Stack 2
which avoids the cyclic reference.
AMIs control the OS that gets launched when you start your EC2 instance. The EC2 library contains constructs to select the AMI you want to use.
Depending on the type of AMI, you select it a different way. Here are some examples of things you might want to use:
NOTE: The AMIs selected by
MachineImage.lookup()
will be cached incdk.context.json
, so that your AutoScalingGroup instances aren't replaced while you are making unrelated changes to your CDK app.To query for the latest AMI again, remove the relevant cache entry from
cdk.context.json
, or use thecdk context
command. For more information, see Runtime Context in the CDK developer guide.
MachineImage.genericLinux()
,MachineImage.genericWindows()
will useCfnMapping
in an agnostic stack.
Create your VPC with VPN connections by specifying the vpnConnections
props (keys are construct id
s):
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'MyVpc', {
vpnConnections: {
dynamic: { // Dynamic routing (BGP)
ip: '1.2.3.4'
},
static: { // Static routing
ip: '4.5.6.7',
staticRoutes: [
'192.168.10.0/24',
'192.168.20.0/24'
]
}
}
});
To create a VPC that can accept VPN connections, set vpnGateway
to true
:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'MyVpc', {
vpnGateway: true
});
VPN connections can then be added:
vpc.addVpnConnection('Dynamic', {
ip: '1.2.3.4'
});
By default, routes will be propagated on the route tables associated with the private subnets. If no
private subnets exist, isolated subnets are used. If no isolated subnets exist, public subnets are
used. Use the Vpc
property vpnRoutePropagation
to customize this behavior.
VPN connections expose metrics (cloudwatch.Metric) across all tunnels in the account/region and per connection:
// Across all tunnels in the account/region
const allDataOut = ec2.VpnConnection.metricAllTunnelDataOut();
// For a specific vpn connection
const vpnConnection = vpc.addVpnConnection('Dynamic', {
ip: '1.2.3.4'
});
const state = vpnConnection.metricTunnelState();
A VPC endpoint enables you to privately connect your VPC to supported AWS services and VPC endpoint services powered by PrivateLink without requiring an internet gateway, NAT device, VPN connection, or AWS Direct Connect connection. Instances in your VPC do not require public IP addresses to communicate with resources in the service. Traffic between your VPC and the other service does not leave the Amazon network.
Endpoints are virtual devices. They are horizontally scaled, redundant, and highly available VPC components that allow communication between instances in your VPC and services without imposing availability risks or bandwidth constraints on your network traffic.
example of setting up VPC endpoints
By default, CDK will place a VPC endpoint in one subnet per AZ. If you wish to override the AZs CDK places the VPC endpoint in,
use the subnets
parameter as follows:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint(this, 'VPC Endpoint', {
vpc,
service: new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpointService('com.amazonaws.vpce.us-east-1.vpce-svc-uuddlrlrbastrtsvc', 443),
// Choose which availability zones to place the VPC endpoint in, based on
// available AZs
subnets: {
availabilityZones: ['us-east-1a', 'us-east-1c']
}
});
Per the AWS documentation, not all
VPC endpoint services are available in all AZs. If you specify the parameter lookupSupportedAzs
, CDK attempts to discover which
AZs an endpoint service is available in, and will ensure the VPC endpoint is not placed in a subnet that doesn't match those AZs.
These AZs will be stored in cdk.context.json.
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint(this, 'VPC Endpoint', {
vpc,
service: new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpointService('com.amazonaws.vpce.us-east-1.vpce-svc-uuddlrlrbastrtsvc', 443),
// Choose which availability zones to place the VPC endpoint in, based on
// available AZs
lookupSupportedAzs: true
});
Pre-defined AWS services are defined in the InterfaceVpcEndpointAwsService class, and can be used to create VPC endpoints without having to configure name, ports, etc. For example, a Keyspaces endpoint can be created for use in your VPC:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
new ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint(this, 'VPC Endpoint', {
vpc,
service: ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpointAwsService.KEYSPACES,
});
By default, interface VPC endpoints create a new security group and traffic is not automatically allowed from the VPC CIDR.
Use the connections
object to allow traffic to flow to the endpoint:
declare const myEndpoint: ec2.InterfaceVpcEndpoint;
myEndpoint.connections.allowDefaultPortFromAnyIpv4();
Alternatively, existing security groups can be used by specifying the securityGroups
prop.
A VPC endpoint service enables you to expose a Network Load Balancer(s) as a provider service to consumers, who connect to your service over a VPC endpoint. You can restrict access to your service via allowed principals (anything that extends ArnPrincipal), and require that new connections be manually accepted.
declare const networkLoadBalancer1: elbv2.NetworkLoadBalancer;
declare const networkLoadBalancer2: elbv2.NetworkLoadBalancer;
new ec2.VpcEndpointService(this, 'EndpointService', {
vpcEndpointServiceLoadBalancers: [networkLoadBalancer1, networkLoadBalancer2],
acceptanceRequired: true,
allowedPrincipals: [new iam.ArnPrincipal('arn:aws:iam::123456789012:root')]
});
Endpoint services support private DNS, which makes it easier for clients to connect to your service by automatically setting up DNS in their VPC. You can enable private DNS on an endpoint service like so:
import { HostedZone, VpcEndpointServiceDomainName } from '@aws-cdk/aws-route53';
declare const zone: HostedZone;
declare const vpces: ec2.VpcEndpointService;
new VpcEndpointServiceDomainName(this, 'EndpointDomain', {
endpointService: vpces,
domainName: 'my-stuff.aws-cdk.dev',
publicHostedZone: zone,
});
Note: The domain name must be owned (registered through Route53) by the account the endpoint service is in, or delegated to the account. The VpcEndpointServiceDomainName will handle the AWS side of domain verification, the process for which can be found here
AWS Client VPN is a managed client-based VPN service that enables you to securely access your AWS resources and resources in your on-premises network. With Client VPN, you can access your resources from any location using an OpenVPN-based VPN client.
Use the addClientVpnEndpoint()
method to add a client VPN endpoint to a VPC:
vpc.addClientVpnEndpoint('Endpoint', {
cidr: '10.100.0.0/16',
serverCertificateArn: 'arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/server-certificate-id',
// Mutual authentication
clientCertificateArn: 'arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/client-certificate-id',
// User-based authentication
userBasedAuthentication: ec2.ClientVpnUserBasedAuthentication.federated(samlProvider),
});
The endpoint must use at least one authentication method:
If user-based authentication is used, the self-service portal URL is made available via a CloudFormation output.
By default, a new security group is created, and logging is enabled. Moreover, a rule to authorize all users to the VPC CIDR is created.
To customize authorization rules, set the authorizeAllUsersToVpcCidr
prop to false
and use addAuthorizationRule()
:
const endpoint = vpc.addClientVpnEndpoint('Endpoint', {
cidr: '10.100.0.0/16',
serverCertificateArn: 'arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/server-certificate-id',
userBasedAuthentication: ec2.ClientVpnUserBasedAuthentication.federated(samlProvider),
authorizeAllUsersToVpcCidr: false,
});
endpoint.addAuthorizationRule('Rule', {
cidr: '10.0.10.0/32',
groupId: 'group-id',
});
Use addRoute()
to configure network routes:
const endpoint = vpc.addClientVpnEndpoint('Endpoint', {
cidr: '10.100.0.0/16',
serverCertificateArn: 'arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/server-certificate-id',
userBasedAuthentication: ec2.ClientVpnUserBasedAuthentication.federated(samlProvider),
});
// Client-to-client access
endpoint.addRoute('Route', {
cidr: '10.100.0.0/16',
target: ec2.ClientVpnRouteTarget.local(),
});
Use the connections
object of the endpoint to allow traffic to other security groups.
You can use the Instance
class to start up a single EC2 instance. For production setups, we recommend
you use an AutoScalingGroup
from the aws-autoscaling
module instead, as AutoScalingGroups will take
care of restarting your instance if it ever fails.
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
// AWS Linux
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance1', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage(),
});
// AWS Linux 2
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance2', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage({
generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AMAZON_LINUX_2,
}),
});
// AWS Linux 2 with kernel 5.x
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance3', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage({
generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AMAZON_LINUX_2,
kernel: ec2.AmazonLinuxKernel.KERNEL5_X,
}),
});
// AWS Linux 2022
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance4', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage({
generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AMAZON_LINUX_2022,
}),
});
CloudFormation Init allows you to configure your instances by writing files to them, installing software
packages, starting services and running arbitrary commands. By default, if any of the instance setup
commands throw an error; the deployment will fail and roll back to the previously known good state.
The following documentation also applies to AutoScalingGroup
s.
For the full set of capabilities of this system, see the documentation for
AWS::CloudFormation::Init
.
Here is an example of applying some configuration to an instance:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
declare const machineImage: ec2.IMachineImage;
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage,
// Showing the most complex setup, if you have simpler requirements
// you can use `CloudFormationInit.fromElements()`.
init: ec2.CloudFormationInit.fromConfigSets({
configSets: {
// Applies the configs below in this order
default: ['yumPreinstall', 'config'],
},
configs: {
yumPreinstall: new ec2.InitConfig([
// Install an Amazon Linux package using yum
ec2.InitPackage.yum('git'),
]),
config: new ec2.InitConfig([
// Create a JSON file from tokens (can also create other files)
ec2.InitFile.fromObject('/etc/stack.json', {
stackId: Stack.of(this).stackId,
stackName: Stack.of(this).stackName,
region: Stack.of(this).region,
}),
// Create a group and user
ec2.InitGroup.fromName('my-group'),
ec2.InitUser.fromName('my-user'),
// Install an RPM from the internet
ec2.InitPackage.rpm('http://mirrors.ukfast.co.uk/sites/dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/8/Everything/x86_64/Packages/r/rubygem-git-1.5.0-2.el8.noarch.rpm'),
]),
},
}),
initOptions: {
// Optional, which configsets to activate (['default'] by default)
configSets: ['default'],
// Optional, how long the installation is expected to take (5 minutes by default)
timeout: Duration.minutes(30),
// Optional, whether to include the --url argument when running cfn-init and cfn-signal commands (false by default)
includeUrl: true,
// Optional, whether to include the --role argument when running cfn-init and cfn-signal commands (false by default)
includeRole: true,
},
});
You can have services restarted after the init process has made changes to the system.
To do that, instantiate an InitServiceRestartHandle
and pass it to the config elements
that need to trigger the restart and the service itself. For example, the following
config writes a config file for nginx, extracts an archive to the root directory, and then
restarts nginx so that it picks up the new config and files:
declare const myBucket: s3.Bucket;
const handle = new ec2.InitServiceRestartHandle();
ec2.CloudFormationInit.fromElements(
ec2.InitFile.fromString('/etc/nginx/nginx.conf', '...', { serviceRestartHandles: [handle] }),
ec2.InitSource.fromS3Object('/var/www/html', myBucket, 'html.zip', { serviceRestartHandles: [handle] }),
ec2.InitService.enable('nginx', {
serviceRestartHandle: handle,
})
);
A bastion host functions as an instance used to access servers and resources in a VPC without open up the complete VPC on a network level. You can use bastion hosts using a standard SSH connection targeting port 22 on the host. As an alternative, you can connect the SSH connection feature of AWS Systems Manager Session Manager, which does not need an opened security group. (https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/07/session-manager-launches-tunneling-support-for-ssh-and-scp/)
A default bastion host for use via SSM can be configured like:
const host = new ec2.BastionHostLinux(this, 'BastionHost', { vpc });
If you want to connect from the internet using SSH, you need to place the host into a public subnet. You can then configure allowed source hosts.
const host = new ec2.BastionHostLinux(this, 'BastionHost', {
vpc,
subnetSelection: { subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC },
});
host.allowSshAccessFrom(ec2.Peer.ipv4('1.2.3.4/32'));
As there are no SSH public keys deployed on this machine, you need to use EC2 Instance Connect
with the command aws ec2-instance-connect send-ssh-public-key
to provide your SSH public key.
EBS volume for the bastion host can be encrypted like:
const host = new ec2.BastionHostLinux(this, 'BastionHost', {
vpc,
blockDevices: [{
deviceName: 'EBSBastionHost',
volume: ec2.BlockDeviceVolume.ebs(10, {
encrypted: true,
}),
}],
});
To add EBS block device mappings, specify the blockDevices
property. The following example sets the EBS-backed
root device (/dev/sda1
) size to 50 GiB, and adds another EBS-backed device mapped to /dev/sdm
that is 100 GiB in
size:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
declare const machineImage: ec2.IMachineImage;
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage,
// ...
blockDevices: [
{
deviceName: '/dev/sda1',
volume: ec2.BlockDeviceVolume.ebs(50),
},
{
deviceName: '/dev/sdm',
volume: ec2.BlockDeviceVolume.ebs(100),
},
],
});
It is also possible to encrypt the block devices. In this example we will create an customer managed key encrypted EBS-backed root device:
import { Key } from '@aws-cdk/aws-kms';
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
declare const machineImage: ec2.IMachineImage;
const kmsKey = new Key(this, 'KmsKey')
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage,
// ...
blockDevices: [
{
deviceName: '/dev/sda1',
volume: ec2.BlockDeviceVolume.ebs(50, {
encrypted: true,
kmsKey: kmsKey,
}),
},
],
});
Whereas a BlockDeviceVolume
is an EBS volume that is created and destroyed as part of the creation and destruction of a specific instance. A Volume
is for when you want an EBS volume separate from any particular instance. A Volume
is an EBS block device that can be attached to, or detached from, any instance at any time. Some types of Volume
s can also be attached to multiple instances at the same time to allow you to have shared storage between those instances.
A notable restriction is that a Volume can only be attached to instances in the same availability zone as the Volume itself.
The following demonstrates how to create a 500 GiB encrypted Volume in the us-west-2a
availability zone, and give a role the ability to attach that Volume to a specific instance:
declare const instance: ec2.Instance;
declare const role: iam.Role;
const volume = new ec2.Volume(this, 'Volume', {
availabilityZone: 'us-west-2a',
size: Size.gibibytes(500),
encrypted: true,
});
volume.grantAttachVolume(role, [instance]);
If you need to grant an instance the ability to attach/detach an EBS volume to/from itself, then using grantAttachVolume
and grantDetachVolume
as outlined above
will lead to an unresolvable circular reference between the instance role and the instance. In this case, use grantAttachVolumeByResourceTag
and grantDetachVolumeByResourceTag
as follows:
declare const instance: ec2.Instance;
declare const volume: ec2.Volume;
const attachGrant = volume.grantAttachVolumeByResourceTag(instance.grantPrincipal, [instance]);
const detachGrant = volume.grantDetachVolumeByResourceTag(instance.grantPrincipal, [instance]);
The Amazon EC2 documentation for Linux Instances and Windows Instances contains information on how to attach and detach your Volumes to/from instances, and how to format them for use.
The following is a sample skeleton of EC2 UserData that can be used to attach a Volume to the Linux instance that it is running on:
declare const instance: ec2.Instance;
declare const volume: ec2.Volume;
volume.grantAttachVolumeByResourceTag(instance.grantPrincipal, [instance]);
const targetDevice = '/dev/xvdz';
instance.userData.addCommands(
// Retrieve token for accessing EC2 instance metadata (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instancedata-data-retrieval.html)
`TOKEN=$(curl -SsfX PUT "http://169.254.169.254/latest/api/token" -H "X-aws-ec2-metadata-token-ttl-seconds: 21600")`,
// Retrieve the instance Id of the current EC2 instance
`INSTANCE_ID=$(curl -SsfH "X-aws-ec2-metadata-token: $TOKEN" http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/instance-id)`,
// Attach the volume to /dev/xvdz
`aws --region ${Stack.of(this).region} ec2 attach-volume --volume-id ${volume.volumeId} --instance-id $INSTANCE_ID --device ${targetDevice}`,
// Wait until the volume has attached
`while ! test -e ${targetDevice}; do sleep 1; done`
// The volume will now be mounted. You may have to add additional code to format the volume if it has not been prepared.
);
You can configure tag propagation on volume creation.
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
declare const machineImage: ec2.IMachineImage;
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance', {
vpc,
machineImage,
instanceType,
propagateTagsToVolumeOnCreation: true,
});
You can configure EC2 Instance Metadata Service options to either allow both IMDSv1 and IMDSv2 or enforce IMDSv2 when interacting with the IMDS.
To do this for a single Instance
, you can use the requireImdsv2
property.
The example below demonstrates IMDSv2 being required on a single Instance
:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
declare const machineImage: ec2.IMachineImage;
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage,
// ...
requireImdsv2: true,
});
You can also use the either the InstanceRequireImdsv2Aspect
for EC2 instances or the LaunchTemplateRequireImdsv2Aspect
for EC2 launch templates
to apply the operation to multiple instances or launch templates, respectively.
The following example demonstrates how to use the InstanceRequireImdsv2Aspect
to require IMDSv2 for all EC2 instances in a stack:
const aspect = new ec2.InstanceRequireImdsv2Aspect();
Aspects.of(this).add(aspect);
VPC Flow Logs is a feature that enables you to capture information about the IP traffic going to and from network interfaces in your VPC. Flow log data can be published to Amazon CloudWatch Logs and Amazon S3. After you've created a flow log, you can retrieve and view its data in the chosen destination. (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/flow-logs.html).
By default, a flow log will be created with CloudWatch Logs as the destination.
You can create a flow log like this:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
new ec2.FlowLog(this, 'FlowLog', {
resourceType: ec2.FlowLogResourceType.fromVpc(vpc)
})
Or you can add a Flow Log to a VPC by using the addFlowLog method like this:
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'Vpc');
vpc.addFlowLog('FlowLog');
You can also add multiple flow logs with different destinations.
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(this, 'Vpc');
vpc.addFlowLog('FlowLogS3', {
destination: ec2.FlowLogDestination.toS3()
});
vpc.addFlowLog('FlowLogCloudWatch', {
trafficType: ec2.FlowLogTrafficType.REJECT
});
By default, the CDK will create the necessary resources for the destination. For the CloudWatch Logs destination it will create a CloudWatch Logs Log Group as well as the IAM role with the necessary permissions to publish to the log group. In the case of an S3 destination, it will create the S3 bucket.
If you want to customize any of the destination resources you can provide your own as part of the destination
.
CloudWatch Logs
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const logGroup = new logs.LogGroup(this, 'MyCustomLogGroup');
const role = new iam.Role(this, 'MyCustomRole', {
assumedBy: new iam.ServicePrincipal('vpc-flow-logs.amazonaws.com')
});
new ec2.FlowLog(this, 'FlowLog', {
resourceType: ec2.FlowLogResourceType.fromVpc(vpc),
destination: ec2.FlowLogDestination.toCloudWatchLogs(logGroup, role)
});
S3
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const bucket = new s3.Bucket(this, 'MyCustomBucket');
new ec2.FlowLog(this, 'FlowLog', {
resourceType: ec2.FlowLogResourceType.fromVpc(vpc),
destination: ec2.FlowLogDestination.toS3(bucket)
});
new ec2.FlowLog(this, 'FlowLogWithKeyPrefix', {
resourceType: ec2.FlowLogResourceType.fromVpc(vpc),
destination: ec2.FlowLogDestination.toS3(bucket, 'prefix/')
});
User data enables you to run a script when your instances start up. In order to configure these scripts you can add commands directly to the script or you can use the UserData's convenience functions to aid in the creation of your script.
A user data could be configured to run a script found in an asset through the following:
import { Asset } from '@aws-cdk/aws-s3-assets';
declare const instance: ec2.Instance;
const asset = new Asset(this, 'Asset', {
path: './configure.sh'
});
const localPath = instance.userData.addS3DownloadCommand({
bucket:asset.bucket,
bucketKey:asset.s3ObjectKey,
region: 'us-east-1', // Optional
});
instance.userData.addExecuteFileCommand({
filePath:localPath,
arguments: '--verbose -y'
});
asset.grantRead(instance.role);
In addition, to above the MultipartUserData
can be used to change instance startup behavior. Multipart user data are composed
from separate parts forming archive. The most common parts are scripts executed during instance set-up. However, there are other
kinds, too.
The advantage of multipart archive is in flexibility when it's needed to add additional parts or to use specialized parts to
fine tune instance startup. Some services (like AWS Batch) support only MultipartUserData
.
The parts can be executed at different moment of instance start-up and can serve a different purpose. This is controlled by contentType
property.
For common scripts, text/x-shellscript; charset="utf-8"
can be used as content type.
In order to create archive the MultipartUserData
has to be instantiated. Than, user can add parts to multipart archive using addPart
. The MultipartBody
contains methods supporting creation of body parts.
If the very custom part is required, it can be created using MultipartUserData.fromRawBody
, in this case full control over content type,
transfer encoding, and body properties is given to the user.
Below is an example for creating multipart user data with single body part responsible for installing awscli
and configuring maximum size
of storage used by Docker containers:
const bootHookConf = ec2.UserData.forLinux();
bootHookConf.addCommands('cloud-init-per once docker_options echo \'OPTIONS="${OPTIONS} --storage-opt dm.basesize=40G"\' >> /etc/sysconfig/docker');
const setupCommands = ec2.UserData.forLinux();
setupCommands.addCommands('sudo yum install awscli && echo Packages installed らと > /var/tmp/setup');
const multipartUserData = new ec2.MultipartUserData();
// The docker has to be configured at early stage, so content type is overridden to boothook
multipartUserData.addPart(ec2.MultipartBody.fromUserData(bootHookConf, 'text/cloud-boothook; charset="us-ascii"'));
// Execute the rest of setup
multipartUserData.addPart(ec2.MultipartBody.fromUserData(setupCommands));
new ec2.LaunchTemplate(this, '', {
userData: multipartUserData,
blockDevices: [
// Block device configuration rest
]
});
For more information see Specifying Multiple User Data Blocks Using a MIME Multi Part Archive
To use the add*Command
methods, that are inherited from the UserData
interface, on MultipartUserData
you must add a part
to the MultipartUserData
and designate it as the reciever for these methods. This is accomplished by using the addUserDataPart()
method on MultipartUserData
with the makeDefault
argument set to true
:
const multipartUserData = new ec2.MultipartUserData();
const commandsUserData = ec2.UserData.forLinux();
multipartUserData.addUserDataPart(commandsUserData, ec2.MultipartBody.SHELL_SCRIPT, true);
// Adding commands to the multipartUserData adds them to commandsUserData, and vice-versa.
multipartUserData.addCommands('touch /root/multi.txt');
commandsUserData.addCommands('touch /root/userdata.txt');
When used on an EC2 instance, the above multipartUserData
will create both multi.txt
and userdata.txt
in /root
.
To import an existing Subnet, call Subnet.fromSubnetAttributes()
or
Subnet.fromSubnetId()
. Only if you supply the subnet's Availability Zone
and Route Table Ids when calling Subnet.fromSubnetAttributes()
will you be
able to use the CDK features that use these values (such as selecting one
subnet per AZ).
Importing an existing subnet looks like this:
// Supply all properties
const subnet1 = ec2.Subnet.fromSubnetAttributes(this, 'SubnetFromAttributes', {
subnetId: 's-1234',
availabilityZone: 'pub-az-4465',
routeTableId: 'rt-145'
});
// Supply only subnet id
const subnet2 = ec2.Subnet.fromSubnetId(this, 'SubnetFromId', 's-1234');
A Launch Template is a standardized template that contains the configuration information to launch an instance. They can be used when launching instances on their own, through Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling, EC2 Fleet, and Spot Fleet. Launch templates enable you to store launch parameters so that you do not have to specify them every time you launch an instance. For information on Launch Templates please see the official documentation.
The following demonstrates how to create a launch template with an Amazon Machine Image, and security group.
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const template = new ec2.LaunchTemplate(this, 'LaunchTemplate', {
machineImage: ec2.MachineImage.latestAmazonLinux(),
securityGroup: new ec2.SecurityGroup(this, 'LaunchTemplateSG', {
vpc: vpc,
}),
});
The following demonstrates how to enable Detailed Monitoring for an EC2 instance. Keep in mind that Detailed Monitoring results in additional charges.
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
declare const instanceType: ec2.InstanceType;
new ec2.Instance(this, 'Instance1', {
vpc,
instanceType,
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage(),
detailedMonitoring: true,
});
FAQs
The CDK Construct Library for AWS::EC2
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