The CDK Construct Library for AWS::ECS
Project description
Amazon ECS Construct Library
This package contains constructs for working with Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS).
Amazon ECS is a highly scalable, fast, container management service that makes it easy to run, stop, and manage Docker containers on a cluster of Amazon EC2 instances.
For further information on Amazon ECS, see the Amazon ECS documentation
The following example creates an Amazon ECS cluster, adds capacity to it, and instantiates the Amazon ECS Service with an automatic load balancer.
import ecs = require('@aws-cdk/aws-ecs');
// Create an ECS cluster
const cluster = new ecs.Cluster(this, 'Cluster', {
vpc,
});
// Add capacity to it
cluster.addCapacity('DefaultAutoScalingGroupCapacity', {
instanceType: new ec2.InstanceType("t2.xlarge"),
desiredCapacity: 3,
});
// Instantiate an Amazon ECS Service
const ecsService = new ecs.Ec2Service(this, 'Service', {
cluster,
memoryLimitMiB: 512,
image: ecs.ContainerImage.fromRegistry("amazon/amazon-ecs-sample"),
});
For a set of constructs defining common ECS architectural patterns, see the @aws-cdk/aws-ecs-patterns
package.
AWS Fargate vs Amazon ECS
There are two sets of constructs in this library; one to run tasks on Amazon ECS and one to run tasks on AWS Fargate.
- Use the
Ec2TaskDefinition
andEc2Service
constructs to run tasks on Amazon EC2 instances running in your account. - Use the
FargateTaskDefinition
andFargateService
constructs to run tasks on instances that are managed for you by AWS.
Here are the main differences:
- Amazon EC2: instances are under your control. Complete control of task to host allocation. Required to specify at least a memory reseration or limit for every container. Can use Host, Bridge and AwsVpc networking modes. Can attach Classic Load Balancer. Can share volumes between container and host.
- AWS Fargate: tasks run on AWS-managed instances, AWS manages task to host allocation for you. Requires specification of memory and cpu sizes at the taskdefinition level. Only supports AwsVpc networking modes and Application/Network Load Balancers. Only the AWS log driver is supported. Many host features are not supported such as adding kernel capabilities and mounting host devices/volumes inside the container.
For more information on Amazon EC2 vs AWS Fargate and networking see the AWS Documentation: AWS Fargate and Task Networking.
Clusters
A Cluster
defines the infrastructure to run your
tasks on. You can run many tasks on a single cluster.
The following code creates a cluster that can run AWS Fargate tasks:
const cluster = new ecs.Cluster(this, 'Cluster', {
vpc: vpc
});
To use tasks with Amazon EC2 launch-type, you have to add capacity to the cluster in order for tasks to be scheduled on your instances. Typically, you add an AutoScalingGroup with instances running the latest Amazon ECS-optimized AMI to the cluster. There is a method to build and add such an AutoScalingGroup automatically, or you can supply a customized AutoScalingGroup that you construct yourself. It's possible to add multiple AutoScalingGroups with various instance types.
The following example creates an Amazon ECS cluster and adds capacity to it:
const cluster = new ecs.Cluster(this, 'Cluster', {
vpc: vpc
});
// Either add default capacity
cluster.addCapacity('DefaultAutoScalingGroupCapacity', {
instanceType: new ec2.InstanceType("t2.xlarge"),
desiredCapacity: 3,
});
// Or add customized capacity. Be sure to start the Amazon ECS-optimized AMI.
const autoScalingGroup = new autoscaling.AutoScalingGroup(this, 'ASG', {
vpc,
instanceType: new ec2.InstanceType('t2.xlarge'),
machineImage: new EcsOptimizedAmi(),
// Or use Amazon ECS-Optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI
// machineImage: new EcsOptimizedAmi({ generation: ec2.AmazonLinuxGeneration.AmazonLinux2 }),
desiredCapacity: 3,
// ... other options here ...
});
cluster.addAutoScalingGroup(autoScalingGroup);
Task definitions
A task Definition describes what a single copy of a task should look like. A task definition has one or more containers; typically, it has one main container (the default container is the first one that's added to the task definition, and it is marked essential) and optionally some supporting containers which are used to support the main container, doings things like upload logs or metrics to monitoring services.
To run a task or service with Amazon EC2 launch type, use the Ec2TaskDefinition
. For AWS Fargate tasks/services, use the
FargateTaskDefinition
. These classes provide a simplified API that only contain
properties relevant for that specific launch type.
For a FargateTaskDefinition
, specify the task size (memoryLimitMiB
and cpu
):
const fargateTaskDefinition = new ecs.FargateTaskDefinition(this, 'TaskDef', {
memoryLimitMiB: 512,
cpu: 256
});
To add containers to a task definition, call addContainer()
:
const container = fargateTaskDefinition.addContainer("WebContainer", {
// Use an image from DockerHub
image: ecs.ContainerImage.fromRegistry("amazon/amazon-ecs-sample"),
// ... other options here ...
});
For a Ec2TaskDefinition
:
const ec2TaskDefinition = new ecs.Ec2TaskDefinition(this, 'TaskDef', {
networkMode: NetworkMode.BRIDGE
});
const container = ec2TaskDefinition.addContainer("WebContainer", {
// Use an image from DockerHub
image: ecs.ContainerImage.fromRegistry("amazon/amazon-ecs-sample"),
memoryLimitMiB: 1024
// ... other options here ...
});
You can specify container properties when you add them to the task definition, or with various methods, e.g.:
container.addPortMappings({
containerPort: 3000
})
To use a TaskDefinition that can be used with either Amazon EC2 or
AWS Fargate launch types, use the TaskDefinition
construct.
When creating a task definition you have to specify what kind of tasks you intend to run: Amazon EC2, AWS Fargate, or both. The following example uses both:
const taskDefinition = new ecs.TaskDefinition(this, 'TaskDef', {
memoryMiB: '512',
cpu: '256',
networkMode: NetworkMode.AWS_VPC,
compatibility: ecs.Compatibility.EC2_AND_FARGATE,
});
Images
Images supply the software that runs inside the container. Images can be obtained from either DockerHub or from ECR repositories, or built directly from a local Dockerfile.
ecs.ContainerImage.fromRegistry(imageName)
: use a public image.ecs.ContainerImage.fromRegistry(imageName, { credentials: mySecret })
: use a private image that requires credentials.ecs.ContainerImage.fromEcrRepository(repo, tag)
: use the given ECR repository as the image to start. If no tag is provided, "latest" is assumed.ecs.ContainerImage.fromAsset('./image')
: build and upload an image directly from aDockerfile
in your source directory.
Service
A Service
instantiates a TaskDefinition
on a Cluster
a given number of
times, optionally associating them with a load balancer.
If a task fails,
Amazon ECS automatically restarts the task.
const taskDefinition;
const service = new ecs.FargateService(this, 'Service', {
cluster,
taskDefinition,
desiredCount: 5
});
Include a load balancer
Services
are load balancing targets and can be directly attached to load
balancers:
import elbv2 = require('@aws-cdk/aws-elasticloadbalancingv2');
const service = new ecs.FargateService(this, 'Service', { /* ... */ });
const lb = new elbv2.ApplicationLoadBalancer(this, 'LB', { vpc, internetFacing: true });
const listener = lb.addListener('Listener', { port: 80 });
const target = listener.addTargets('ECS', {
port: 80,
targets: [service]
});
There are two higher-level constructs available which include a load balancer for you that can be found in the aws-ecs-patterns module:
LoadBalancedFargateService
LoadBalancedEc2Service
Task Auto-Scaling
You can configure the task count of a service to match demand. Task auto-scaling is
configured by calling autoScaleTaskCount()
:
const scaling = service.autoScaleTaskCount({ maxCapacity: 10 });
scaling.scaleOnCpuUtilization('CpuScaling', {
targetUtilizationPercent: 50
});
scaling.scaleOnRequestCount('RequestScaling', {
requestsPerTarget: 10000,
targetGroup: target
})
Task auto-scaling is powered by Application Auto-Scaling. See that section for details.
Instance Auto-Scaling
If you're running on AWS Fargate, AWS manages the physical machines that your containers are running on for you. If you're running an Amazon ECS cluster however, your Amazon EC2 instances might fill up as your number of Tasks goes up.
To avoid placement errors, configure auto-scaling for your Amazon EC2 instance group so that your instance count scales with demand. To keep your Amazon EC2 instances halfway loaded, scaling up to a maximum of 30 instances if required:
const autoScalingGroup = cluster.addCapacity('DefaultAutoScalingGroup', {
instanceType: new ec2.InstanceType("t2.xlarge"),
minCapacity: 3,
maxCapacity: 30,
desiredCapacity: 3,
// Give instances 5 minutes to drain running tasks when an instance is
// terminated. This is the default, turn this off by specifying 0 or
// change the timeout up to 900 seconds.
taskDrainTime: Duration.seconds(300)
});
autoScalingGroup.scaleOnCpuUtilization('KeepCpuHalfwayLoaded', {
targetUtilizationPercent: 50
});
See the @aws-cdk/aws-autoscaling
library for more autoscaling options
you can configure on your instances.
Integration with CloudWatch Events
To start an Amazon ECS task on an Amazon EC2-backed Cluster, instantiate an
@aws-cdk/aws-events-targets.EcsTask
instead of an Ec2Service
:
import targets = require('@aws-cdk/aws-events-targets');
// Create a Task Definition for the container to start
const taskDefinition = new ecs.Ec2TaskDefinition(this, 'TaskDef');
taskDefinition.addContainer('TheContainer', {
image: ecs.ContainerImage.fromAsset(path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'eventhandler-image')),
memoryLimitMiB: 256,
logging: new ecs.AwsLogDriver({ streamPrefix: 'EventDemo' })
});
// An Rule that describes the event trigger (in this case a scheduled run)
const rule = new events.Rule(this, 'Rule', {
schedule: events.Schedule.expression('rate(1 min)')
});
// Pass an environment variable to the container 'TheContainer' in the task
rule.addTarget(new targets.EcsTask({
cluster,
taskDefinition,
taskCount: 1,
containerOverrides: [{
containerName: 'TheContainer',
environment: [{
name: 'I_WAS_TRIGGERED',
value: 'From CloudWatch Events'
}]
}]
}));
Note: it is currently not possible to start AWS Fargate tasks in this way.
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