Skip to main content

AWS System Manager Parameter Store caching client for Python

Project description

AWS System Manager Parameter Store Caching Client (Python)

Build Status Coverage Status PyPI version GitHub license Maintenance GitHub issues Open Source Love svg2 GitHub stars

This module wraps the AWS Parameter Store and adds a caching and grouping layer with max-age invalidation.

You can use this module with AWS Lambda to read and refresh sensitive parameters. Your IAM role will require ssm:GetParameters permissions (optionally, also kms:Decrypt if you use SecureString params).

How to install

Install the module with pip:

pip install ssm-cache

How to use it

Simplest use case

A single parameter, configured by name.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
param = SSMParameter('my_param_name')
value = param.value

With cache invalidation

You can configure the max_age in seconds, after which the values will be automatically refreshed.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
param_1 = SSMParameter('param_1', max_age=300)  # 5 min
value_1 = param.value

param_2 = SSMParameter('param_2', max_age=3600)  # 1 hour
value_2 = param_2.value

With multiple parameters

You can configure more than one parameter to be fetched/cached (and decrypted or not) together.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameterGroup
group = SSMParameterGroup(max_age=300)
param_1 = group.parameter('param_1')
param_2 = group.parameter('param_2')

value_1 = param_1.value
value_2 = param_2.value

With hierarchical parameters

You can fetch (and cache) a group of parameters under a given prefix. Optionally, the group itself could have a global prefix.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameterGroup
group = SSMParameterGroup(base_path="/Foo")
foo_bar = group.parameter('/Bar')  # will fetch /Foo/Bar
baz_params = group.parameters('/Baz')  # will fetch /Foo/Baz/1 and /Foo/Baz/2

assert len(group) == 3

Note: you can call group.parameters(...) multiple times. If caching is enabled, the group's cache will expire when the firstly fetched parameters expire.

Hierarchical parameters and filters

You can optionally filter by parameter Type and KMS KeyId, either building the filter object manually or using a class-based approach (which provides some additional checks before invoking the API).

from ssm_cache import SSMParameterGroup
from ssm_cache.filters import SSMFilterType

group = SSMParameterGroup()

# manual filter definition
params = group.parameters(
    path="/Foo/Bar",
    filters=[{
        'Key': 'Type',
        'Option': 'Equals',
        'Values': ['StringList']
    }],
)

# class-based filter
params = group.parameters(
    path="/Foo/Bar",
    filters=[SSMFilterType().value('StringList')],  # will validate allowed value(s)
)

Hierarchical parameters and non-recursiveness

You can optionally disable recursion when fetching parameters via prefix.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameterGroup
group = SSMParameterGroup()

# will fetch /Foo/1, but not /Foo/Bar/1
params = group.parameters(
    path="/Foo",
    recursive=False,
)

With StringList parameters

StringList parameters (documentation here) are automatically converted to Python lists with no additional configuration.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
# "my_twitter_api_keys" is a StringList parameter (four comma-separated values)
twitter_params = SSMParameter('my_twitter_api_keys')
key, secret, access_token, access_token_secret = twitter_params.value

Explicit refresh

You can manually force a refresh on a parameter or parameter group. Note that if a parameter is part of a group, refreshing it will refresh the entire group.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
param = SSMParameter('my_param_name')
value = param.value
param.refresh()
new_value = param.value
from ssm_cache import SSMParameterGroup
group = SSMParameterGroup()
param_1 = group.parameter('param_1')
param_2 = group.parameter('param_2')

value_1 = param_1.value
value_2 = param_2.value

group.refresh()
new_value_1 = param_1.value
new_value_2 = param_2.value

param_1.refresh()
new_new_value_1 = param_1.value
new_new_value_2 = param_2.value # one parameter refreshes the whole group

Without decryption

Decryption is enabled by default, but you can explicitly disable it on either an SSMParameter or SSMGroup.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
param = SSMParameter('my_param_name', with_decryption=False)
value = param.value

AWS Secrets Manager Integration

You can read Secrets Manager secrets transparently by using the SecretsManagerParameter class, which comes with the same interface of SSMParameter and performs some additional prefixing and validation.

from ssm_cache import SecretsManagerParameter
secret = SecretsManagerParameter('my_secret_name')
value = secret.value

Secrets can be added to a SSMGroup as well, although no group prefix will be applied.

from ssm_cache import SecretsManagerParameter, SSMGroup
group = SSMParameterGroup()
param = group.parameter('my_param')
secret = group.secret('my_secret')

param_value = param.value
secret_value = secret.value

Usage with AWS Lambda

Your AWS Lambda code will look similar to the following snippet.

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
param = SSMParameter('my_param_name')

def lambda_handler(event, context):
    secret_value = param.value
    return 'Hello from Lambda with secret %s' % secret_value

Complex invalidation based on "signals"

You may want to explicitly refresh the parameter cache when you believe the cached value expired.

In the example below, we refresh the parameter value when an InvalidCredentials exception is detected (see the decorator utility for a simpler version!).

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
from my_db_lib import Client, InvalidCredentials  # pseudo-code

param = SSMParameter('my_db_password')
my_db_client = Client(password=param.value)

def read_record(is_retry=False):
    try:
        return my_db_client.read_record()
    except InvalidCredentials:
        if not is_retry:  # avoid infinite recursion
            param.refresh()  # force parameter refresh
            my_db_client = Client(password=param.value)  # re-configure db client
            return read_record(is_retry=True)  # let's try again :)

def lambda_handler(event, context):
    return {
        'record': read_record(),
    }

Decorator utility

The retry logic shown above can be simplified with the decorator method provided by each SSMParameter and SSMParameterGroup object.

The @refresh_on_error decorator will intercept errors (or a specific error_class, if given), refresh the parameters values, and attempt to re-call the decorated function. Optionally, you can provide a callback argument to implement your own logic (in the example below, to create a new db client with the new password).

from ssm_cache import SSMParameter
from my_db_lib import Client, InvalidCredentials  # pseudo-code

param = SSMParameter('my_db_password')
my_db_client = Client(password=param.value)

def on_error_callback():
    my_db_client = Client(password=param.value)

@param.refresh_on_error(InvalidCredentials, on_error_callback)
def read_record(is_retry=False):
    return my_db_client.read_record()

def lambda_handler(event, context):
    return {
        'record': read_record(),
    }

Optionally, you can also customize the is_retry argument name. refresh_on_error supports the following arguments:

  • error_class (default: Exception)
  • error_callback (default: None)
  • retry_argument (default: "is_retry")

Replacing the SSM client

If you want to replace the default boto3 SSM client, SSMParameter and SSMParameterGroup both support calling set_ssm_client with an object that implements the SSM get_parameters method.

For example, here's how you could inject a Placebo client for local tests:

import placebo, boto3
from ssm_cache import SSMParameter

# create regular boto3 session
session = boto3.Session()
# attach placebo to the session
pill = placebo.attach(session, data_path=PLACEBO_PATH)
pill.playback()
# create special boto3 client
client = session.client('ssm')
# inject special client into SSMParameter or SSMParameterGroup
SSMParameter.set_ssm_client(client)

How to contribute

Clone this repository, create a virtualenv and install all the dev dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/alexcasalboni/ssm-cache-python.git
cd ssm-cache-python
virtualenv env
source env/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt

You can run tests with nose:

nosetests

Generate a coverage report:

nosetests --with-coverage --cover-erase --cover-html --cover-package=ssm_cache
open cover/index.html

Run pylint:

pylint ssm_cache

Note: when you open a new PR, GitHub will run tests on multiple Python environments and verify the new coverage for you, but we highly recommend you run these tasks locally as well before submitting new code.

What's new?

  • version 2.6: support for AWS Secrets Manager integration
  • version 2.5: hierarchical parameters, filters, and non-recursiveness support
  • version 2.3: StringList parameters support (auto-conversion)
  • version 2.2: client replacement and boto3/botocore minimum requirements
  • version 2.1: group refresh bugfix
  • version 2.0: new interface, SSMParameterGroup support
  • version 1.3: Python3 support
  • version 1.0: initial release

References and articles

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

ssm-cache-2.6.1.tar.gz (16.9 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

ssm_cache-2.6.1-py2-none-any.whl (20.0 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 2

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page