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Merge pull request #12548 from amenonsen/pr-9130-rebase
#9130 rebase: EC2 Inventory Boto Profile Support
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commit
4225c0677d
3 changed files with 63 additions and 3 deletions
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@ -139,3 +139,7 @@ group_by_elasticache_replication_group = True
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# tag Name value matches webservers1*
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# (ex. webservers15, webservers1a, webservers123 etc)
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# instance_filters = tag:Name=webservers1*
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# A boto configuration profile may be used to separate out credentials
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# see http://boto.readthedocs.org/en/latest/boto_config_tut.html
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# boto_profile = some-boto-profile-name
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@ -22,6 +22,12 @@ you need to define:
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export EC2_URL=http://hostname_of_your_cc:port/services/Eucalyptus
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If you're using boto profiles (requires boto>=2.24.0) you can choose a profile
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using the --boto-profile command line argument (e.g. ec2.py --boto-profile prod) or using
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the AWS_PROFILE variable:
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AWS_PROFILE=prod ansible-playbook -i ec2.py myplaybook.yml
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For more details, see: http://docs.pythonboto.org/en/latest/boto_config_tut.html
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When run against a specific host, this script returns the following variables:
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@ -148,9 +154,18 @@ class Ec2Inventory(object):
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# Index of hostname (address) to instance ID
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self.index = {}
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# Boto profile to use (if any)
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self.boto_profile = None
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# Read settings and parse CLI arguments
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self.read_settings()
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self.parse_cli_args()
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self.read_settings()
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# Make sure that profile_name is not passed at all if not set
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# as pre 2.24 boto will fall over otherwise
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if self.boto_profile:
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if not hasattr(boto.ec2.EC2Connection, 'profile_name'):
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self.fail_with_error("boto version must be >= 2.24 to use profile")
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# Cache
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if self.args.refresh_cache:
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@ -290,8 +305,15 @@ class Ec2Inventory(object):
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else:
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self.all_elasticache_nodes = False
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# boto configuration profile (prefer CLI argument)
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self.boto_profile = self.args.boto_profile
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if config.has_option('ec2', 'boto_profile') and not self.boto_profile:
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self.boto_profile = config.get('ec2', 'boto_profile')
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# Cache related
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cache_dir = os.path.expanduser(config.get('ec2', 'cache_path'))
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if self.boto_profile:
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cache_dir = os.path.join(cache_dir, 'profile_' + self.boto_profile)
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if not os.path.exists(cache_dir):
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os.makedirs(cache_dir)
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@ -373,6 +395,8 @@ class Ec2Inventory(object):
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help='Get all the variables about a specific instance')
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parser.add_argument('--refresh-cache', action='store_true', default=False,
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help='Force refresh of cache by making API requests to EC2 (default: False - use cache files)')
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parser.add_argument('--boto-profile', action='store',
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help='Use boto profile for connections to EC2')
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self.args = parser.parse_args()
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@ -399,7 +423,25 @@ class Ec2Inventory(object):
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conn = boto.connect_euca(host=self.eucalyptus_host)
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conn.APIVersion = '2010-08-31'
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else:
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conn = ec2.connect_to_region(region)
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conn = self.connect_to_aws(ec2, region)
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return conn
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def boto_fix_security_token_in_profile(self, connect_args):
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''' monkey patch for boto issue boto/boto#2100 '''
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profile = 'profile ' + self.boto_profile
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if boto.config.has_option(profile, 'aws_security_token'):
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connect_args['security_token'] = boto.config.get(profile, 'aws_security_token')
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return connect_args
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def connect_to_aws(self, module, region):
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connect_args = {}
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# only pass the profile name if it's set (as it is not supported by older boto versions)
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if self.boto_profile:
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connect_args['profile_name'] = self.boto_profile
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self.boto_fix_security_token_in_profile(connect_args)
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conn = module.connect_to_region(region, **connect_args)
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# connect_to_region will fail "silently" by returning None if the region name is wrong or not supported
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if conn is None:
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self.fail_with_error("region name: %s likely not supported, or AWS is down. connection to region failed." % region)
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@ -435,7 +477,7 @@ class Ec2Inventory(object):
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region '''
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try:
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conn = rds.connect_to_region(region)
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conn = self.connect_to_aws(rds, region)
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if conn:
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instances = conn.get_all_dbinstances()
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for instance in instances:
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@ -101,6 +101,20 @@ You can test the script by itself to make sure your config is correct::
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After a few moments, you should see your entire EC2 inventory across all regions in JSON.
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If you use boto profiles to manage multiple AWS accounts, you can pass ``--profile PROFILE`` name to the ``ec2.py`` script. An example profile might be::
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[profile dev]
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aws_access_key_id = <dev access key>
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aws_secret_access_key = <dev secret key>
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[profile prod]
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aws_access_key_id = <prod access key>
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aws_secret_access_key = <prod secret key>
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You can then run ``ec2.py --profile prod`` to get the inventory for the prod account, or run playbooks with: ``ansible-playbook -i 'ec2.py --profile prod' myplaybook.yml``.
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Alternatively, use the ``AWS_PROFILE`` variable - e.g. ``AWS_PROFILE=prod ansible-playbook -i ec2.py myplaybook.yml``
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Since each region requires its own API call, if you are only using a small set of regions, feel free to edit ``ec2.ini`` and list only the regions you are interested in. There are other config options in ``ec2.ini`` including cache control, and destination variables.
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At their heart, inventory files are simply a mapping from some name to a destination address. The default ``ec2.ini`` settings are configured for running Ansible from outside EC2 (from your laptop for example) -- and this is not the most efficient way to manage EC2.
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