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A CLI tool for finding unused CIDR blocks in AWS VPCs.

Project description

aws-cidr-finder master PyPI codecov

  1. Overview
    1. An Example
  2. Installation
  3. Configuration
  4. Usage
    1. CLI
    2. Python
  5. Contributing

Overview

aws-cidr-finder is a Python CLI tool which finds unused CIDR blocks (supports both IPv4 and IPv6) in your AWS VPCs and outputs them to STDOUT. It is very simple, but can be quite useful for users who manage many subnets across one or more VPCs.

Use aws-cidr-finder -h to see command options.

An Example

It is easiest to see the value of this tool through an example. Imagine that we have the following setup in AWS:

  • A VPC whose CIDR is 172.31.0.0/16, with a Name tag of Hello World
  • Six subnets inside that VPC whose CIDRs are:
    • 172.31.0.0/20
    • 172.31.16.0/20
    • 172.31.32.0/20
    • 172.31.48.0/20
    • 172.31.64.0/20
    • 172.31.80.0/20
  • An AWS CLI profile named myprofile

aws-cidr-finder allows you to quickly compute the CIDRs that you still have available in the VPC without having to do a lot of annoying/tedious octet math. If we issue this command:

aws-cidr-finder --profile myprofile

We should see this output:

Here are the available CIDR blocks in the 'Hello World' VPC (VPC CIDR block '172.31.0.0/16'):
CIDR               IP Count
---------------  ----------
172.31.96.0/19         8192
172.31.128.0/17       32768
Total                 40960

You should notice that by default, aws-cidr-finder will automatically "simplify" the CIDRs by merging adjacent free CIDR blocks so that the resulting table shows the maximum contiguous space per CIDR (in other words, the resulting table has the fewest number of rows possible). This is why the result of the command displayed only two CIDRs: a /19 and a /17.

Note that the first CIDR is /19 instead of, for example, /18, because the /18 CIDR would mathematically have to begin at IP address 172.31.64.0, and that IP address is already taken by a subnet!

However, we can change this "simplification" behavior by specifying the --prefix CLI flag:

aws-cidr-finder --profile myprofile --prefix 20

Now, the expected output should look something like this:

Here are the available CIDR blocks in the 'Hello World' VPC (VPC CIDR block '172.31.0.0/16'):
CIDR               IP Count
---------------  ----------
172.31.96.0/20         4096
172.31.112.0/20        4096
172.31.128.0/20        4096
172.31.144.0/20        4096
172.31.160.0/20        4096
172.31.176.0/20        4096
172.31.192.0/20        4096
172.31.208.0/20        4096
172.31.224.0/20        4096
172.31.240.0/20        4096
Total                 40960

With the --prefix argument, we can now query our available network space to our desired level of detail. Note that if we specify a --prefix with a value lower than any of the prefixes in the originally-returned list, those CIDRs will be skipped. For example, if we run the following:

aws-cidr-finder --profile myprofile --prefix 18

We should see this output:

Note: skipping CIDR '172.31.96.0/19' because its prefix (19) is numerically greater than the requested prefix (18)

Here are the available CIDR blocks in the 'Hello World' VPC (VPC CIDR block '172.31.0.0/16'):
CIDR               IP Count
---------------  ----------
172.31.128.0/18       16384
172.31.192.0/18       16384
Total                 32768

The CIDR that was skipped was the 172.31.96.0/19 CIDR because it is impossible to convert a /19 CIDR into one or more /18 CIDRs.

Installation

If you have Python >=3.10 and <4.0 installed, aws-cidr-finder can be installed from PyPI using something like

pip install aws-cidr-finder

Configuration

All that needs to be configured in order to use this CLI is an AWS CLI profile or a keypair. The former may be specified using the --profile argument on the CLI, while the keypair must be specified in environment variables. If both are available simultaneously, aws-cidr-finder will prefer the profile.

The environment variables for the keypair approach are AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY, and optionally AWS_SESSION_TOKEN (if authenticating with a session). These are the same values Boto uses.

You should also ensure that the profile/keypair you are using has the AWS IAM access needed to make the underlying API calls via Boto. Here is a minimal IAM policy document that fills this requirement:

{
  "Effect": "Allow",
  "Action": [
    "ec2:DescribeVpcs",
    "ec2:DescribeSubnets"
  ],
  "Resource": "*"
}

Read more about the actions shown above here.

Usage

CLI

See An Example above for a detailed demonstration of the CLI interface of this tool. You can also use aws-cidr-finder --help to see command line options.

Python

Setup:

from aws_cidr_finder import JSONOutput, find_cidrs

# All arguments
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs(profile_name="", region="", ipv6=False, desired_prefix=20)

# Minimal arguments (profile-based authentication)
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs(profile_name="")

# Minimal arguments (environment variable-based authentication)
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs()

# Other miscellaneous combinations
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs(profile_name="", ipv6=True)
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs(profile_name="", desired_prefix=16)
output: JSONOutput = find_cidrs(region="")
# ...and so on

Accessing the CIDR data:

output: JSONOutput = ...  # See above

for message in output["messages"]:
    # Print the messages that would have been written to STDOUT when using the CLI
    print(message)

for vpc in output["data"]:
    # The following shows how to access all available fields in the data object
    print(vpc["id"])
    print(vpc["name"])
    print(vpc["cidr"])
    for cidr in vpc["available_cidr_blocks"]:
        print(cidr)

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for developer-oriented information.

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