Amazon Elastic Load Balancing V2 Construct Library
The @aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancingv2
package provides constructs for
configuring application and network load balancers.
For more information, see the AWS documentation for
Application Load Balancers
and Network Load Balancers.
Defining an Application Load Balancer
You define an application load balancer by creating an instance of
ApplicationLoadBalancer
, adding a Listener to the load balancer
and adding Targets to the Listener:
import ec2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-ec2');
import elbv2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancingv2');
import autoscaling = require('@aws-cdk/aws-autoscaling');
const vpc = new ec2.Vpc(...);
const lb = new elbv2.ApplicationLoadBalancer(this, 'LB', {
vpc,
internetFacing: true
});
const listener = lb.addListener('Listener', {
port: 80,
open: true,
});
const asg = new autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup(...);
listener.addTargets('ApplicationFleet', {
port: 8080,
targets: [asg]
});
The security groups of the load balancer and the target are automatically
updated to allow the network traffic.
Use the addFixedResponse()
method to add fixed response rules on the listener:
listener.addFixedResponse('Fixed', {
pathPattern: '/ok',
contentType: elbv2.ContentType.TEXT_PLAIN,
messageBody: 'OK',
statusCode: '200'
});
Conditions
It's possible to route traffic to targets based on conditions in the incoming
HTTP request. Path- and host-based conditions are supported. For example,
the following will route requests to the indicated AutoScalingGroup
only if the requested host in the request is example.com
:
listener.addTargets('Example.Com Fleet', {
priority: 10,
hostHeader: 'example.com',
port: 8080,
targets: [asg]
});
priority
is a required field when you add targets with conditions. The lowest
number wins.
Every listener must have at least one target without conditions.
Defining a Network Load Balancer
Network Load Balancers are defined in a similar way to Application Load
Balancers:
import ec2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-ec2');
import elbv2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancingv2');
import autoscaling = require('@aws-cdk/aws-autoscaling');
const lb = new elbv2.NetworkLoadBalancer(this, 'LB', {
vpc,
internetFacing: true
});
const listener = lb.addListener('Listener', {
port: 443,
});
listener.addTargets('AppFleet', {
port: 443,
targets: [asg]
});
One thing to keep in mind is that network load balancers do not have security
groups, and no automatic security group configuration is done for you. You will
have to configure the security groups of the target yourself to allow traffic by
clients and/or load balancer instances, depending on your target types. See
Target Groups for your Network Load
Balancers
and Register targets with your Target
Group
for more information.
Targets and Target Groups
Application and Network Load Balancers organize load balancing targets in Target
Groups. If you add your balancing targets (such as AutoScalingGroups, ECS
services or individual instances) to your listener directly, the appropriate
TargetGroup
will be automatically created for you.
If you need more control over the Target Groups created, create an instance of
ApplicationTargetGroup
or NetworkTargetGroup
, add the members you desire,
and add it to the listener by calling addTargetGroups
instead of addTargets
.
addTargets()
will always return the Target Group it just created for you:
const group = listener.addTargets('AppFleet', {
port: 443,
targets: [asg1],
});
group.addTarget(asg2);
Configuring Health Checks
Health checks are configured upon creation of a target group:
listener.addTargets('AppFleet', {
port: 8080,
targets: [asg],
healthCheck: {
path: '/ping',
interval: cdk.Duration.minutes(1),
}
});
The health check can also be configured after creation by calling
configureHealthCheck()
on the created object.
No attempts are made to configure security groups for the port you're
configuring a health check for, but if the health check is on the same port
you're routing traffic to, the security group already allows the traffic.
If not, you will have to configure the security groups appropriately:
listener.addTargets('AppFleet', {
port: 8080,
targets: [asg],
healthCheck: {
port: 8088,
}
});
listener.connections.allowFrom(lb, ec2.Port.tcp(8088));
Protocol for Load Balancer Targets
Constructs that want to be a load balancer target should implement
IApplicationLoadBalancerTarget
and/or INetworkLoadBalancerTarget
, and
provide an implementation for the function attachToXxxTargetGroup()
, which can
call functions on the load balancer and should return metadata about the
load balancing target:
public attachToApplicationTargetGroup(targetGroup: ApplicationTargetGroup): LoadBalancerTargetProps {
targetGroup.registerConnectable(...);
return {
targetType: TargetType.Instance | TargetType.Ip
targetJson: { id: ..., port: ... },
};
}
targetType
should be one of Instance
or Ip
. If the target can be
directly added to the target group, targetJson
should contain the id
of
the target (either instance ID or IP address depending on the type) and
optionally a port
or availabilityZone
override.
Application load balancer targets can call registerConnectable()
on the
target group to register themselves for addition to the load balancer's security
group rules.
If your load balancer target requires that the TargetGroup has been
associated with a LoadBalancer before registration can happen (such as is the
case for ECS Services for example), take a resource dependency on
targetGroup.loadBalancerDependency()
as follows:
resourced.addDependency(targetGroup.loadBalancerDependency());