Cdk synthesizer for with app-scoped staging stack
Project description
App Staging Synthesizer
---The APIs of higher level constructs in this module are experimental and under active development. They are subject to non-backward compatible changes or removal in any future version. These are not subject to the Semantic Versioning model and breaking changes will be announced in the release notes. This means that while you may use them, you may need to update your source code when upgrading to a newer version of this package.
This library includes constructs aimed at replacing the current model of bootstrapping and providing greater control of the bootstrap experience to the CDK user. The important constructs in this library are as follows:
- the
IStagingResources
interface: a framework for an app-level bootstrap stack that handles file assets and docker assets. - the
DefaultStagingStack
, which is a works-out-of-the-box implementation of theIStagingResources
interface. - the
AppStagingSynthesizer
, a new CDK synthesizer that will synthesize CDK applications with the staging resources provided.
As this library is
experimental
, there are features that are not yet implemented. Please look at the list of Known Limitations before getting started.
To get started, update your CDK App with a new defaultStackSynthesizer
:
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id", # put a unique id here
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED
)
)
This will introduce a DefaultStagingStack
in your CDK App and staging assets of your App
will live in the resources from that stack rather than the CDK Bootstrap stack.
If you are migrating from a different version of synthesis your updated CDK App will target
the resources in the DefaultStagingStack
and no longer be tied to the bootstrapped resources
in your account.
Bootstrap Model
In our default bootstrapping process, when you run cdk bootstrap aws://<account>/<region>
, the following
resources are created:
- It creates Roles to assume for cross-account deployments and for Pipeline deployments;
- It creates staging resources: a global S3 bucket and global ECR repository to hold CDK assets;
- It creates Roles to write to the S3 bucket and ECR repository;
Because the bootstrapping resources include regional resources, you need to bootstrap every region you plan to deploy to individually. All assets of all CDK apps deploying to that account and region will be written to the single S3 Bucket and ECR repository.
By using the synthesizer in this library, instead of the
DefaultStackSynthesizer
, a different set of staging resources will be created
for every CDK application, and they will be created automatically as part of a
regular deployment, in a separate Stack that is deployed before your application
Stacks. The staging resources will be one S3 bucket, and one ECR repository per
image, and Roles necessary to access those buckets and ECR repositories. The
Roles from the default bootstrap stack are still used (though their use can be
turned off).
This has the following advantages:
- Because staging resources are now application-specific, they can be fully cleaned up when you clean up the application.
- Because there is now one ECR repository per image instead of one ECR repository for all images, it is possible to effectively use ECR life cycle rules (for example, retain only the most recent 5 images) to cut down on storage costs.
- Resources between separate CDK Apps are separated so they can be cleaned up and lifecycle controlled individually.
- Because the only shared bootstrapping resources required are Roles, which are global resources, you now only need to bootstrap every account in one Region (instead of every Region). This makes it easier to do with CloudFormation StackSets.
For the deployment roles, this synthesizer still uses the Roles from the default bootstrap stack, and nothing else. The staging resources from that bootstrap stack will be unused. You can customize the template to remove those resources if you prefer. In the future, we will provide a bootstrap stack template with only those Roles, specifically for use with this synthesizer.
Using the Default Staging Stack per Environment
The most common use case will be to use the built-in default resources. In this scenario, the
synthesizer will create a new Staging Stack in each environment the CDK App is deployed to store
its staging resources. To use this kind of synthesizer, use AppStagingSynthesizer.defaultResources()
.
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
# The following line is optional. By default it is assumed you have bootstrapped in the same
# region(s) as the stack(s) you are deploying.
deployment_identities=DeploymentIdentities.default_bootstrap_roles(bootstrap_region="us-east-1")
)
)
Every CDK App that uses the DefaultStagingStack
must include an appId
. This should
be an identifier unique to the app and is used to differentiate staging resources associated
with the app.
Default Staging Stack
The Default Staging Stack includes all the staging resources necessary for CDK Assets. The below example
is of a CDK App using the AppStagingSynthesizer
and creating a file asset for the Lambda Function
source code. As part of the DefaultStagingStack
, an S3 bucket and IAM role will be created that will be
used to upload the asset to S3.
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED
)
)
stack = Stack(app, "my-stack")
lambda_.Function(stack, "lambda",
code=lambda_.AssetCode.from_asset(path.join(__dirname, "assets")),
handler="index.handler",
runtime=lambda_.Runtime.PYTHON_3_9
)
app.synth()
Custom Roles
You can customize some or all of the roles you'd like to use in the synthesizer as well,
if all you need is to supply custom roles (and not change anything else in the DefaultStagingStack
):
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
deployment_identities=DeploymentIdentities.specify_roles(
cloud_formation_execution_role=BootstrapRole.from_role_arn("arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/Execute"),
deployment_role=BootstrapRole.from_role_arn("arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/Deploy"),
lookup_role=BootstrapRole.from_role_arn("arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/Lookup")
)
)
)
Or, you can ask to use the CLI credentials that exist at deploy-time.
These credentials must have the ability to perform CloudFormation calls,
lookup resources in your account, and perform CloudFormation deployment.
For a full list of what is necessary, see LookupRole
, DeploymentActionRole
,
and CloudFormationExecutionRole
in the
bootstrap template.
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
deployment_identities=DeploymentIdentities.cli_credentials()
)
)
The default staging stack will create roles to publish to the S3 bucket and ECR repositories,
assumable by the deployment role. You can also specify an existing IAM role for the
fileAssetPublishingRole
or imageAssetPublishingRole
:
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
file_asset_publishing_role=BootstrapRole.from_role_arn("arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/S3Access"),
image_asset_publishing_role=BootstrapRole.from_role_arn("arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/ECRAccess")
)
)
Deploy Time S3 Assets
There are two types of assets:
- Assets used only during deployment. These are used to hand off a large piece of data to another service, that will make a private copy of that data. After deployment, the asset is only necessary for a potential future rollback.
- Assets accessed throughout the running life time of the application.
Examples of assets that are only used at deploy time are CloudFormation Templates and Lambda Code
bundles. Examples of assets accessed throughout the life time of the application are script files
downloaded to run in a CodeBuild Project, or on EC2 instance startup. ECR images are always application
life-time assets. S3 deploy time assets are stored with a deploy-time/
prefix, and a lifecycle rule will collect them after a configurable number of days.
Lambda assets are by default marked as deploy time assets:
# stack: Stack
lambda_.Function(stack, "lambda",
code=lambda_.AssetCode.from_asset(path.join(__dirname, "assets")), # lambda marks deployTime = true
handler="index.handler",
runtime=lambda_.Runtime.PYTHON_3_9
)
Or, if you want to create your own deploy time asset:
from aws_cdk.aws_s3_assets import Asset
# stack: Stack
asset = Asset(stack, "deploy-time-asset",
deploy_time=True,
path=path.join(__dirname, "deploy-time-asset")
)
By default, we store deploy time assets for 30 days, but you can change this number by specifying
deployTimeFileAssetLifetime
. The number you specify here is how long you will be able to roll back
to a previous version of an application just by doing a CloudFormation deployment with the old
template, without rebuilding and republishing assets.
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
deploy_time_file_asset_lifetime=Duration.days(100)
)
)
Lifecycle Rules on ECR Repositories
By default, we store a maximum of 3 revisions of a particular docker image asset. This allows for smooth faciliation of rollback scenarios where we may reference previous versions of an image. When more than 3 revisions of an asset exist in the ECR repository, the oldest one is purged.
To change the number of revisions stored, use imageAssetVersionCount
:
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
image_asset_version_count=10
)
)
Auto Delete Staging Assets on Deletion
By default, the staging resources will be cleaned up on stack deletion. That means that the
S3 Bucket and ECR Repositories are set to RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
and have autoDeleteObjects
or emptyOnDelete
turned on. This creates custom resources under the hood to facilitate
cleanup. To turn this off, specify autoDeleteStagingAssets: false
.
from aws_cdk.aws_s3 import BucketEncryption
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.default_resources(
app_id="my-app-id",
staging_bucket_encryption=BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED,
auto_delete_staging_assets=False
)
)
Staging Bucket Encryption
You must explicitly specify the encryption type for the staging bucket via the stagingBucketEncryption
property. In
future versions of this package, the default will be BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED
.
In previous versions of this package, the default was to use KMS encryption for the staging bucket. KMS keys cost $1/month, which could result in unexpected costs for users who are not aware of this. As we stabilize this module we intend to make the default S3-managed encryption, which is free. However, the migration path from KMS to S3 managed encryption for existing buckets is not straightforward. Therefore, for now, this property is required.
If you have an existing staging bucket encrypted with a KMS key, you will likely want to set this property to
BucketEncryption.KMS
. If you are creating a new staging bucket, you can set this property to
BucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED
to avoid the cost of a KMS key.
You can learn more about choosing a bucket encryption type in the S3 documentation.
Using a Custom Staging Stack per Environment
If you want to customize some behavior that is not configurable via properties,
you can implement your own class that implements IStagingResources
. To get a head start,
you can subclass DefaultStagingStack
.
class CustomStagingStack(DefaultStagingStack):
pass
Or you can roll your own staging resources from scratch, as long as it implements IStagingResources
.
@jsii.implements(IStagingResources)
class CustomStagingStack(Stack):
def __init__(self, scope, id, *, description=None, env=None, stackName=None, tags=None, synthesizer=None, terminationProtection=None, analyticsReporting=None, crossRegionReferences=None, permissionsBoundary=None, suppressTemplateIndentation=None):
super().__init__(scope, id, description=description, env=env, stackName=stackName, tags=tags, synthesizer=synthesizer, terminationProtection=terminationProtection, analyticsReporting=analyticsReporting, crossRegionReferences=crossRegionReferences, permissionsBoundary=permissionsBoundary, suppressTemplateIndentation=suppressTemplateIndentation)
def add_file(self, *, sourceHash, executable=None, fileName=None, packaging=None, deployTime=None):
return FileStagingLocation(
bucket_name="myBucket",
assume_role_arn="myArn",
dependency_stack=self
)
def add_docker_image(self, *, sourceHash, executable=None, directoryName=None, dockerBuildArgs=None, dockerBuildSecrets=None, dockerBuildSsh=None, dockerBuildTarget=None, dockerFile=None, repositoryName=None, networkMode=None, platform=None, dockerOutputs=None, assetName=None, dockerCacheFrom=None, dockerCacheTo=None, dockerCacheDisabled=None):
return ImageStagingLocation(
repo_name="myRepo",
assume_role_arn="myArn",
dependency_stack=self
)
Using your custom staging resources means implementing a CustomFactory
class and calling the
AppStagingSynthesizer.customFactory()
static method. This has the benefit of providing a
custom Staging Stack that can be created in every environment the CDK App is deployed to.
@jsii.implements(IStagingResourcesFactory)
class CustomFactory:
def obtain_staging_resources(self, stack, *, environmentString, deployRoleArn=None, qualifier):
my_app = App.of(stack)
return CustomStagingStack(my_app, f"CustomStagingStack-{context.environmentString}")
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.custom_factory(
factory=CustomFactory(),
once_per_env=True
)
)
Using an Existing Staging Stack
Use AppStagingSynthesizer.customResources()
to supply an existing stack as the Staging Stack.
Make sure that the custom stack you provide implements IStagingResources
.
resource_app = App()
resources = CustomStagingStack(resource_app, "CustomStagingStack")
app = App(
default_stack_synthesizer=AppStagingSynthesizer.custom_resources(
resources=resources
)
)
Known Limitations
Since this module is experimental, there are some known limitations:
- Currently this module does not support CDK Pipelines. You must deploy CDK Apps using this
synthesizer via
cdk deploy
. Please upvote this issue to indicate you want this. - This synthesizer only needs a bootstrap stack with Roles, without staging resources. We haven't written such a bootstrap stack yet; at the moment you can use the existing modern bootstrap stack, the staging resources in them will just go unused. You can customize the template to remove them if desired.
- Due to limitations on the CloudFormation template size, CDK Applications can have at most 20 independent ECR images. Please upvote this issue if you need more than this.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Hashes for aws-cdk.app-staging-synthesizer-alpha-2.150.0a0.tar.gz
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 2ed5735533c5e506a5c3fabd78e06aebe03478dd392ae3add2d2d458394e6d1d |
|
MD5 | 749d12b524820fd5d1e4a8a04adfa641 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 5b9b7e21f2932456a7ee69c696304f142b88aef7d38b5a3c30e72c71eb7a2db2 |
Hashes for aws_cdk.app_staging_synthesizer_alpha-2.150.0a0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | bcb7d47d5bd5a5661d22405a27fecec48cd3897fd1fded317b8dd41c5b97c54a |
|
MD5 | d78956a362f653361993b1fb93cd1881 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 1240e217a6eba5aad7ed3ea8aa422dc0b5f5385b9cf7fc4ee9c8912f6cdb9fd2 |