Amazon FSx Construct Library

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This package is no longer being updated, and users should migrate to AWS CDK v2.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.
Amazon FSx provides fully managed third-party file systems with the
native compatibility and feature sets for workloads such as Microsoft Windows–based storage, high-performance computing,
machine learning, and electronic design automation.
Amazon FSx supports two file system types: Lustre and
Windows File Server.
FSx for Lustre
Amazon FSx for Lustre makes it easy and cost-effective to launch and run the popular, high-performance Lustre file
system. You use Lustre for workloads where speed matters, such as machine learning, high performance computing (HPC),
video processing, and financial modeling.
The open-source Lustre file system is designed for applications that require fast storage—where you want your storage
to keep up with your compute. Lustre was built to solve the problem of quickly and cheaply processing the world's
ever-growing datasets. It's a widely used file system designed for the fastest computers in the world. It provides
submillisecond latencies, up to hundreds of GBps of throughput, and up to millions of IOPS. For more information on
Lustre, see the Lustre website.
As a fully managed service, Amazon FSx makes it easier for you to use Lustre for workloads where storage speed matters.
Amazon FSx for Lustre eliminates the traditional complexity of setting up and managing Lustre file systems, enabling
you to spin up and run a battle-tested high-performance file system in minutes. It also provides multiple deployment
options so you can optimize cost for your needs.
Amazon FSx for Lustre is POSIX-compliant, so you can use your current Linux-based applications without having to make
any changes. Amazon FSx for Lustre provides a native file system interface and works as any file system does with your
Linux operating system. It also provides read-after-write consistency and supports file locking.
Installation
Import to your project:
import * as fsx from '@aws-cdk/aws-fsx';
Basic Usage
Setup required properties and create:
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const fileSystem = new fsx.LustreFileSystem(this, 'FsxLustreFileSystem', {
lustreConfiguration: { deploymentType: fsx.LustreDeploymentType.SCRATCH_2 },
storageCapacityGiB: 1200,
vpc,
vpcSubnet: vpc.privateSubnets[0],
});
Connecting
To control who can access the file system, use the .connections
attribute. FSx has a fixed default port, so you don't
need to specify the port. This example allows an EC2 instance to connect to a file system:
declare const fileSystem: fsx.LustreFileSystem;
declare const instance: ec2.Instance;
fileSystem.connections.allowDefaultPortFrom(instance);
Mounting
The LustreFileSystem Construct exposes both the DNS name of the file system as well as its mount name, which can be
used to mount the file system on an EC2 instance. The following example shows how to bring up a file system and EC2
instance, and then use User Data to mount the file system on the instance at start-up:
import * as iam from '@aws-cdk/aws-iam';
declare const vpc: ec2.Vpc;
const lustreConfiguration = {
deploymentType: fsx.LustreDeploymentType.SCRATCH_2,
};
const fs = new fsx.LustreFileSystem(this, 'FsxLustreFileSystem', {
lustreConfiguration,
storageCapacityGiB: 1200,
vpc,
vpcSubnet: vpc.privateSubnets[0],
});
const inst = new ec2.Instance(this, 'inst', {
instanceType: ec2.InstanceType.of(ec2.InstanceClass.T2, ec2.InstanceSize.LARGE),
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage({
generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AMAZON_LINUX_2,
}),
vpc,
vpcSubnets: {
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
},
});
fs.connections.allowDefaultPortFrom(inst);
inst.role.addManagedPolicy(iam.ManagedPolicy.fromAwsManagedPolicyName('AmazonFSxReadOnlyAccess'));
const mountPath = '/mnt/fsx';
const dnsName = fs.dnsName;
const mountName = fs.mountName;
inst.userData.addCommands(
'set -eux',
'yum update -y',
'amazon-linux-extras install -y lustre2.10',
`mkdir -p ${mountPath}`,
`chmod 777 ${mountPath}`,
`chown ec2-user:ec2-user ${mountPath}`,
`echo "${dnsName}@tcp:/${mountName} ${mountPath} lustre defaults,noatime,flock,_netdev 0 0" >> /etc/fstab`,
'mount -a',
);
Importing
An FSx for Lustre file system can be imported with fromLustreFileSystemAttributes(stack, id, attributes)
. The
following example lays out how you could import the SecurityGroup a file system belongs to, use that to import the file
system, and then also import the VPC the file system is in and add an EC2 instance to it, giving it access to the file
system.
const sg = ec2.SecurityGroup.fromSecurityGroupId(this, 'FsxSecurityGroup', '{SECURITY-GROUP-ID}');
const fs = fsx.LustreFileSystem.fromLustreFileSystemAttributes(this, 'FsxLustreFileSystem', {
dnsName: '{FILE-SYSTEM-DNS-NAME}',
fileSystemId: '{FILE-SYSTEM-ID}',
securityGroup: sg,
});
const vpc = ec2.Vpc.fromVpcAttributes(this, 'Vpc', {
availabilityZones: ['us-west-2a', 'us-west-2b'],
publicSubnetIds: ['{US-WEST-2A-SUBNET-ID}', '{US-WEST-2B-SUBNET-ID}'],
vpcId: '{VPC-ID}',
});
const inst = new ec2.Instance(this, 'inst', {
instanceType: ec2.InstanceType.of(ec2.InstanceClass.T2, ec2.InstanceSize.LARGE),
machineImage: new ec2.AmazonLinuxImage({
generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AMAZON_LINUX_2,
}),
vpc,
vpcSubnets: {
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
},
});
fs.connections.allowDefaultPortFrom(inst);
FSx for Windows File Server
The L2 construct for the FSx for Windows File Server has not yet been implemented. To instantiate an FSx for Windows
file system, the L1 constructs can be used as defined by CloudFormation.