This reference architecture provides a set of YAML templates for deploying microservices to Amazon EC2 Container Service (Amazon ECS) with AWS CloudFormation.
You can launch this CloudFormation stack in the US East (N. Virginia) Region in your account:
The repository consists of a set of nested templates that deploy the following:
- A tiered VPC with public and private subnets, spanning an AWS region.
- A highly available ECS cluster deployed across two Availability Zones in an Auto Scaling group.
- A pair of NAT gateways (one in each zone) to handle outbound traffic.
- Two interconnecting microservices deployed as ECS services (website-service and product-service).
- An Application Load Balancer (ALB) to the public subnets to handle inbound traffic.
- ALB path-based routes for each ECS service to route the inbound traffic to the correct service.
- Centralized container logging with Amazon CloudWatch Logs.
Using CloudFormation to deploy and manage services with ECS has a number of nice benefits over more traditional methods (AWS CLI, scripting, etc.).
A template can be used repeatedly to create identical copies of the same stack (or to use as a foundation to start a new stack). Templates are simple YAML- or JSON-formatted text files that can be placed under your normal source control mechanisms, stored in private or public locations such as Amazon S3, and exchanged via email. With CloudFormation, you can see exactly which AWS resources make up a stack. You retain full control and have the ability to modify any of the AWS resources created as part of a stack.
Fed up with outdated documentation on your infrastructure or environments? Still keep manual documentation of IP ranges, security group rules, etc.?
With CloudFormation, your template becomes your documentation. Want to see exactly what you have deployed? Just look at your template. If you keep it in source control, then you can also look back at exactly which changes were made and by whom.
CloudFormation not only handles the initial deployment of your infrastructure and environments, but it can also manage the whole lifecycle, including future updates. During updates, you have fine-grained control and visibility over how changes are applied, using functionality such as change sets, rolling update policies and stack policies.
The templates below are included in this repository and reference architecture:
Template | Description |
---|---|
master.yaml | This is the master template - deploy it to CloudFormation and it includes all of the others automatically. |
infrastructure/vpc.yaml | This template deploys a VPC with a pair of public and private subnets spread across two Availability Zones. It deploys an Internet gateway, with a default route on the public subnets. It deploys a pair of NAT gateways (one in each zone), and default routes for them in the private subnets. |
infrastructure/security-groups.yaml | This template contains the security groups required by the entire stack. They are created in a separate nested template, so that they can be referenced by all of the other nested templates. |
infrastructure/load-balancers.yaml | This template deploys an ALB to the public subnets, which exposes the various ECS services. It is created in in a separate nested template, so that it can be referenced by all of the other nested templates and so that the various ECS services can register with it. |
infrastructure/ecs-cluster.yaml | This template deploys an ECS cluster to the private subnets using an Auto Scaling group. |
services/product-service/service.yaml | This is an example of a long-running ECS service that serves a JSON API of products. For the full source for the service, see services/product-service/src. |
services/website-service/service.yaml | This is an example of a long-running ECS service that needs to connect to another service (product-service) via the load-balanced URL. We use an environment variable to pass the product-service URL to the containers. For the full source for this service, see services/website-service/src. |
After the CloudFormation templates have been deployed, the stack outputs contain a link to the load-balanced URLs for each of the deployed microservices.
You can launch this CloudFormation stack in the US East (N. Virginia) Region in your account:
- Fork this GitHub repository.
- Clone the forked GitHub repository to your local machine.
- Modify the templates.
- Upload them to an Amazon S3 bucket of your choice.
- Either create a new CloudFormation stack by deploying the master.yaml template, or update your existing stack with your version of the templates.
- Push your container to a registry somewhere (e.g., Amazon ECR).
- Copy one of the existing service templates in services/*.
- Update the
ContainerName
andImage
parameters to point to your container image instead of the example container. - Increment the
ListenerRule
priority number (no two services can have the same priority number - this is used to order the ALB path based routing rules). - Copy one of the existing service definitions in master.yaml and point it at your new service template. Specify the HTTP
Path
at which you want the service exposed. - Deploy the templates as a new stack, or as an update to an existing stack.
By default, the containers in your ECS tasks/services are already configured to send log information to CloudWatch Logs and retain them for 365 days. Within each service's template (in services/*), a LogGroup is created that is named after the CloudFormation stack. All container logs are sent to that CloudWatch Logs log group.
You can view the logs by looking in your CloudWatch Logs console (make sure you are in the correct AWS region).
ECS also supports other logging drivers, including syslog
, journald
, splunk
, gelf
, json-file
, and fluentd
. To configure those instead, adjust the service template to use the alternative LogDriver
. You can also adjust the log retention period from the default 365 days by tweaking the RetentionInDays
parameter.
For more information, see the LogConfiguration API operation.
This is specified in the master.yaml template.
By default, t2.large instances are used, but you can change this by modifying the following section:
ECS:
Type: AWS::CloudFormation::Stack
Properties:
TemplateURL: ...
Parameters:
...
InstanceType: t2.large
InstanceCount: 4
...
The Auto Scaling group scaling policy provided by default launches and maintains a cluster of 4 ECS hosts distributed across two Availability Zones (min: 4, max: 4, desired: 4).
It is not set up to scale automatically based on any policies (CPU, network, time of day, etc.).
If you would like to configure policy or time-based automatic scaling, you can add the ScalingPolicy property to the AutoScalingGroup deployed in infrastructure/ecs-cluster.yaml.
As well as configuring Auto Scaling for the ECS hosts (your pool of compute), you can also configure scaling each individual ECS service. This can be useful if you want to run more instances of each container/task depending on the load or time of day (or a custom CloudWatch metric). To do this, you need to create AWS::ApplicationAutoScaling::ScalingPolicy within your service template.
Deploy another CloudFormation stack from the same set of templates to create a new environment. The stack name provided when deploying the stack is prefixed to all taggable resources (e.g., EC2 instances, VPCs, etc.) so you can distinguish the different environment resources in the AWS Management Console.
This set of templates deploys the following network design:
Item | CIDR Range | Usable IPs | Description |
---|---|---|---|
VPC | 10.180.0.0/16 | 65,536 | The whole range used for the VPC and all subnets |
Public Subnet | 10.180.8.0/21 | 2,041 | The public subnet in the first Availability Zone |
Public Subnet | 10.180.16.0/21 | 2,041 | The public subnet in the second Availability Zone |
Private Subnet | 10.180.24.0/21 | 2,041 | The private subnet in the first Availability Zone |
Private Subnet | 10.180.32.0/21 | 2,041 | The private subnet in the second Availability Zone |
You can adjust the CIDR ranges used in this section of the master.yaml template:
VPC:
Type: AWS::CloudFormation::Stack
Properties:
TemplateURL: !Sub ${TemplateLocation}/infrastructure/vpc.yaml
Parameters:
EnvironmentName: !Ref AWS::StackName
VpcCIDR: 10.180.0.0/16
PublicSubnet1CIDR: 10.180.8.0/21
PublicSubnet2CIDR: 10.180.16.0/21
PrivateSubnet1CIDR: 10.180.24.0/21
PrivateSubnet2CIDR: 10.180.32.0/21
ECS has the ability to perform rolling upgrades to your ECS services to minimize downtime during deployments. For more information, see Updating a Service.
To update one of your services to a new version, adjust the Image
parameter in the service template (in services/* to point to the new version of your container image. For example, if 1.0.0
was currently deployed and you wanted to update to 1.1.0
, you could update it as follows:
TaskDefinition:
Type: AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition
Properties:
ContainerDefinitions:
- Name: your-container
Image: registry.example.com/your-container:1.1.0
After you've updated the template, update the deployed CloudFormation stack; CloudFormation and ECS handle the rest.
To adjust the rollout parameters (min/max number of tasks/containers to keep in service at any time), you need to configure DeploymentConfiguration
for the ECS service.
For example:
Service:
Type: AWS::ECS::Service
Properties:
...
DesiredCount: 4
DeploymentConfiguration:
MaximumPercent: 200
MinimumHealthyPercent: 50
If you found yourself wishing this set of frequently asked questions had an answer for a particular problem, please submit a pull request. The chances are that others will also benefit from having the answer listed here.
Please create a new GitHub issue for any feature requests, bugs, or documentation improvements.
Where possible, please also submit a pull request for the change.
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