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AWS Lambda function to automatically name EC2 instances on Route53

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Pilot53

Automatic DNS for EC2 instances on Route53.

Status

This project is in alpha stage with no stable release. It is currently a really good example from which you can take inspiration or base further developments, do not try to use in production as it is.

Why and How

If you have ever worked in a project/team with more than one server, you have felt the pain of:

  • Keeping track of all your servers
  • Distribute and maintain a servers list, maybe with ssh aliases
  • Easily access each server as it's up and running

Pilot53 is a AWS lambda function listening to EC2 events and automatically registering new servers to Route53 based on their Name tag.

Use case

You create a new EC2 instance with tag Name: web-1. Pilot53 will receive an event from EC2 as your instance will become running and will create a new DNS record. Your team will be able to access web-1 from web-1.yourdomain.com after adding yourdomain.com to their local DNS search lists.

Expected Behaviour

Create

When creating a new instance, Pilot53 will look for the tag Name and will use it to create the DNS entry. For example, creating an instance with Name tag called web-1 will generate a DNS record web-1.yourdomain.xpz

Delete

As your instance gets stopped or terminated, Pilot53 will remove the related DNS entry

Update

If you wish to swap an instance, simply create a new instance with the same Name tag. As the new instance is created, Pilot53 will first DELETE the current DNS entry and create a new one with the updated instance IP. Pay attention: if you do that and the new machine hasn't yet been provisioned, the DNS will be anyway swapped. This will cause downtime of your services until the new machine is ready.

Setup

  1. Create a new Hostedzone in Route53. This is where your DNS domain will live. Note down the Hosted Zone ID.

  2. Create a new IAM role that will run your lambda function. It will need ReadAccess on EC2 and FullAccess on Lambda.

  3. Create your lambda function. From the AWS Console select AWS Lambda, click on create a Lambda function and skip the blueprint selection. Here you can name your function, just make sure to select Node.js >= 4.3.

  4. Copy the content of index.js in the Lambda function code text area. Make sure to add your BASE_DOMAIN_NAME (ex. opengrid.xyz) and the HOSTED_ZONE_ID from your Route53. Select as Role the newly created IAM role

  5. You need now to bind your lambda function to specific EC2 events. You can do that in the CloudWatch section of your AWS Console. Click on Events and create a new rule. Select EC2 instance state change notification, from specific state select Running, Shutting Down and Stopping. Then add a new Target where you will need to select your newly created lambda function. Choose a name for your Rule definition and simply create it.

If everything went well, you should be good to go.

Note: You can add your base_domain to your Search Domains to be able to simply (for example) do ssh <newly-created-instance-name>

Credits

This project was developed after a hint/idea from pracucci
Thanks to gabrielelana for co-authoring/contributing.
The project was developed during the Open Source Saturday. If you live in Milan, you should check it out.

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