A node command line utility and library to assist in deploying AWS CloudFormation stacks.
Deploying any non-trivial CloudFormation stack requires managing parameter values,
stack names, tags, etc. When any of this is dynamic, like when deploying to multiple
environments/stages, sticking these commands in package.json
isn't very practical.
Sirocco manages one or more stacks across multiple environments, generating commands, parameter values, stack names, etc., based on a simple (and optional) configuration file.
The "Quick Start" below is meant as a quick reminder for when you already know how to use this package; to actually get started, take a look at Getting Started.
This requires the AWS CLI be installed and executable from your path.
Currently, only YAML is supported from CloudFormation stack templates.
> npm install --save-dev sirocco
> sirocco (deploy|teardown) [DEPLOY_TYPE] [options]
./
└── stacks/
├── queue/
│ └── stack.yml
├── lambda/
│ └── stack.yml
└── test/
└── stack.yml
Specify optional config at .sirocco.js
:
module.exports = {
options: {
/* command-line-ish options */
},
// The default set of stacks to deploy if none are specified with the --stacks option.
defaultStacks: ["queue", "lambda"],
// Base configuration shared by all deploy types and envs.
global: {
params: {
suite: "Sirocco",
app: "SiroccoDemo",
isTest: false
}
},
// A dictionary of known deploy types.
deployTypes: {
dev: {
validEnvs: /dev-[a-z0-9-]+/,
role: "NONPROD_ROLE",
params: {
nodeEnv: "development"
}
},
prod: {
role: "PROD_ROLE",
validEnvs: /prod-[0-9]+/,
params: {
nodeEnv: "production"
}
}
},
envs: {
"dev-test": {
params: {
isTest: true
}
}
}
};
If your config file exports a function, instead of an object, it will be invoked without any arguments
and treated as an async
function. This allows your config module to do asynchronous things like read
from file before returning the actual sirocco config object.
Parameters and most of configuration options are resolved dynamically for each stack and environment, so a single configuration object can provide dynamic values based on the stack or environment name. The following shows some example of dynamic parameters:
module.exports = {
global: {
params: {
constant: "value",
foo: (stackName, envName, parameters) => {
/* derive the value of the "foo" parameter for this stack/env */
},
bar:
"The bar parameter value for stack {stack} in the {env} environment",
baz: "Derived-From-Other-Params-{constant}",
trot: () => "A parameter value with literal brackets in it: {foo}"
}
}
};
As shown, dynamic parameter values can either be functions (as in "foo" and "trot", above) or string templates (as in "bar" and "baz").
Functions are invoked with three parameters:
- The name of the stack being targeted (see below)
- The name of the environment
- A dictionary of unresolved parameters.
Note that the first argument, the name of the stack, is the local name of the stack (i.e., the name of the stack's
directory under stacks/
), not the generated name of the cloudformation stack.
The third argument is a dictionary (a plain object) of the parameters for the stack, without resolving any of
the parameter values. Thus, e.g., the "foo" property of this dictionary, in the above examples, would be the foo
function
itself, not the resulting value.
The dictionary is first populateed with two items: stack and env, which are the same as the values passed in for the first two arguments. However, you happen to have parameters named "stack" or "env", then these entries will be overwritten in the dictionary with the (unresolved) parameter values.
String values are assumed to be string-templates which use curly braces to denote place holders to be replaced. These templates are resolved with the same dictionary that is passed as the third argument to function values (described above), which is the unresolved parameter values with the added default properties of stack and env.
If your parameter value has literal pairs of curly braces that you want to include in the value, you can escape them by doubling the braces. You can also make it unambiguous by defining the value as a function which returns the string value you want: returned value are never treated as string-templates.