I would like to know if there is a way to setup a cronjob/task to execute every minute. Currently any of my instances should be able to run this task.
This is what I have tried to do in the config files without success:
container_commands:
01cronjobs:
command: echo "*/1 * * * * root php /etc/httpd/myscript.php"
I'm not really sure if this is the correct way to do it
Any ideas?
This is how I added a cron job to Elastic Beanstalk:
Create a folder at the root of your application called .ebextensions if it doesn't exist already. Then create a config file inside the .ebextensions folder. I'll use example.config for illustration purposes. Then add this to example.config
container_commands:
01_some_cron_job:
command: "cat .ebextensions/some_cron_job.txt > /etc/cron.d/some_cron_job && chmod 644 /etc/cron.d/some_cron_job"
leader_only: true
This is a YAML configuration file for Elastic Beanstalk. Make sure when you copy this into your text editor that your text editor uses spaces instead of tabs. Otherwise you'll get a YAML error when you push this to EB.
So what this does is create a command called 01_some_cron_job. Commands are run in alphabetical order so the 01 makes sure it's run as the first command.
The command then takes the contents of a file called some_cron_job.txt and adds it to a file called some_cron_job in /etc/cron.d.
The command then changes the permissions on the /etc/cron.d/some_cron_job file.
The leader_only key ensures the command is only run on the ec2 instance that is considered the leader. Rather than running on every ec2 instance you may have running.
Then create a file called some_cron_job.txt inside the .ebextensions folder. You will place your cron jobs in this file.
So for example:
# The newline at the end of this file is extremely important. Cron won't run without it.
* * * * * root /usr/bin/php some-php-script-here > /dev/null
So this cron job will run every minute of every hour of every day as the root user and discard the output to /dev/null. /usr/bin/php is the path to php. Then replace some-php-script-here with the path to your php file. This is obviously assuming your cron job needs to run a PHP file.
Also, make sure the some_cron_job.txt file has a newline at the end of the file just like the comment says. Otherwise cron won't run.
Update:
There is an issue with this solution when Elastic Beanstalk scales up your instances. For example, lets say you have one instance with the cron job running. You get an increase in traffic so Elastic Beanstalk scales you up to two instances. The leader_only will ensure you only have one cron job running between the two instances. Your traffic decreases and Elastic Beanstalk scales you down to one instance. But instead of terminating the second instance, Elastic Beanstalk terminates the first instance that was the leader. You now don't have any cron jobs running since they were only running on the first instance that was terminated. See the comments below.
Update 2:
Just making this clear from the comments below:
AWS has now protection against automatic instance termination. Just enable it on your leader instance and you're good to go. – Nicolás Arévalo Oct 28 '16 at 9:23
This is the official way to do it now (2015+). Please try this first, it's by far easiest method currently available and most reliable as well.
According to current docs, one is able to run periodic tasks on their so-called worker tier.
Citing the documentation:
AWS Elastic Beanstalk supports periodic tasks for worker environment tiers in environments running a predefined configuration with a solution stack that contains "v1.2.0" in the container name. You must create a new environment.
Also interesting is the part about cron.yaml:
To invoke periodic tasks, your application source bundle must include a cron.yaml file at the root level. The file must contain information about the periodic tasks you want to schedule. Specify this information using standard crontab syntax.
Update: We were able to get this work. Here are some important gotchas from our experience (Node.js platform):
When using cron.yaml file, make sure you have latest awsebcli, because older versions will not work properly.
It is also vital to create new environment (at least in our case it was), not just clone old one.
If you want to make sure CRON is supported on your EC2 Worker Tier instance, ssh into it (eb ssh), and run cat /var/log/aws-sqsd/default.log. It should report as aws-sqsd 2.0 (2015-02-18). If you don't have 2.0 version, something gone wrong when creating your environment and you need to create new one as stated above.
Regarding jamieb's response, and as alrdinleal mentions, you can use the 'leader_only' property to ensure that only one EC2 instance runs the cron job.
Quote taken from http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/elasticbeanstalk/latest/dg/customize-containers-ec2.html:
you can use leader_only. One instance is chosen to be the leader in an Auto Scaling group. If the leader_only value is set to true, the command runs only on the instance that is marked as the leader.
Im trying to achieve a similar thing on my eb, so will update my post if I solve it.
UPDATE:
Ok, I now have working cronjobs using the following eb config:
files:
"/tmp/cronjob" :
mode: "000777"
owner: ec2-user
group: ec2-user
content: |
# clear expired baskets
*/10 * * * * /usr/bin/wget -o /dev/null http://blah.elasticbeanstalk.com/basket/purge > $HOME/basket_purge.log 2>&1
# clean up files created by above cronjob
30 23 * * * rm $HOME/purge*
encoding: plain
container_commands:
purge_basket:
command: crontab /tmp/cronjob
leader_only: true
commands:
delete_cronjob_file:
command: rm /tmp/cronjob
Essentially, I create a temp file with the cronjobs and then set the crontab to read from the temp file, then delete the temp file afterwards. Hope this helps.
I spoke to an AWS support agent and this is how we got this to work for me. 2015 solution:
Create a file in your .ebextensions directory with your_file_name.config.
In the config file input:
files:
"/etc/cron.d/cron_example":
mode: "000644"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
* * * * * root /usr/local/bin/cron_example.sh
"/usr/local/bin/cron_example.sh":
mode: "000755"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
#!/bin/bash
/usr/local/bin/test_cron.sh || exit
echo "Cron running at " `date` >> /tmp/cron_example.log
# Now do tasks that should only run on 1 instance ...
"/usr/local/bin/test_cron.sh":
mode: "000755"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
#!/bin/bash
METADATA=/opt/aws/bin/ec2-metadata
INSTANCE_ID=`$METADATA -i | awk '{print $2}'`
REGION=`$METADATA -z | awk '{print substr($2, 0, length($2)-1)}'`
# Find our Auto Scaling Group name.
ASG=`aws ec2 describe-tags --filters "Name=resource-id,Values=$INSTANCE_ID" \
--region $REGION --output text | awk '/aws:autoscaling:groupName/ {print $5}'`
# Find the first instance in the Group
FIRST=`aws autoscaling describe-auto-scaling-groups --auto-scaling-group-names $ASG \
--region $REGION --output text | awk '/InService$/ {print $4}' | sort | head -1`
# Test if they're the same.
[ "$FIRST" = "$INSTANCE_ID" ]
commands:
rm_old_cron:
command: "rm *.bak"
cwd: "/etc/cron.d"
ignoreErrors: true
This solution has 2 drawbacks:
On subsequent deployments, Beanstalk renames the existing cron script as .bak, but cron will still run it. Your Cron now executes twice on the same machine.
If your environment scales up, you get several instances, all running your cron script. This means your mail shots are repeated, or your database archives duplicated
Workaround:
Ensure any .ebextensions script which creates a cron also removes the .bak files on subsequent deployments.
Have a helper script which does the following: -- Gets the current Instance ID from the Metadata -- Gets the current Auto
Scaling Group name from the EC2 Tags -- Gets the list of EC2
Instances in that Group, sorted alphabetically. -- Takes the first
instance from that list. -- Compares the Instance ID from step 1
with the first Instance ID from step 4.
Your cron scripts can then use this helper script to determine if they should execute.
Caveat:
The IAM Role used for the Beanstalk instances needs ec2:DescribeTags and autoscaling:DescribeAutoScalingGroups permissions
The instances chosen from are those shown as InService by Auto Scaling. This does not necessarily mean they are fully booted up and ready to run your cron.
You would not have to set the IAM Roles if you are using the default beanstalk role.
As mentioned above, the fundamental flaw with establishing any crontab configuration is that it only happens at deployment. As the cluster gets auto-scaled up, and then back down, it is favored to also be the first server turned off. In addition there would be no fail-over, which for me was critical.
I did some research, then talked with our AWS account specialist to bounce ideas and valid the solution I came up with. You can accomplish this with OpsWorks, although it's bit like using a house to kill a fly. It is also possible to use Data Pipeline with Task Runner, but this has limited ability in the scripts that it can execute, and I needed to be able to run PHP scripts, with access to the whole code base. You could also dedicate an EC2 instance outside of the ElasticBeanstalk cluster, but then you have no fail-over again.
So here is what I came up with, which apparently is unconventional (as the AWS rep commented) and may be considered a hack, but it works and is solid with fail-over. I chose a coding solution using the SDK, which I'll show in PHP, although you could do the same method in any language you prefer.
// contains the values for variables used (key, secret, env)
require_once('cron_config.inc');
// Load the AWS PHP SDK to connection to ElasticBeanstalk
use Aws\ElasticBeanstalk\ElasticBeanstalkClient;
$client = ElasticBeanstalkClient::factory(array(
'key' => AWS_KEY,
'secret' => AWS_SECRET,
'profile' => 'your_profile',
'region' => 'us-east-1'
));
$result = $client->describeEnvironmentResources(array(
'EnvironmentName' => AWS_ENV
));
if (php_uname('n') != $result['EnvironmentResources']['Instances'][0]['Id']) {
die("Not the primary EC2 instance\n");
}
So walking through this and how it operates... You call scripts from crontab as you normally would on every EC2 instance. Each script includes this at the beginning (or includes a single file for each, as I use it), which establishes an ElasticBeanstalk object and retrieves a list of all instances. It uses only the first server in the list, and checks if it matches itself, which if it does it continues, otherwise it dies and closes out. I've checked and the list returned seems to be consistent, which technically it only needs to be consistent for a minute or so, as each instance executes the scheduled cron. If it does change, it wouldn't matter, since again it only is relevant for that small window.
This isn't elegant by any means, but suited our specific needs - which was not to increase cost with an additional service or have to have a dedicated EC2 instance, and would have fail-over in case of any failure. Our cron scripts run maintenance scripts which get placed into SQS and each server in the cluster helps execute. At least this may give you an alternate option if it fits your needs.
-Davey
If you're using Rails, you can use the whenever-elasticbeanstalk gem. It allows you to run cron jobs on either all instances or just one. It checks every minute to ensure that there is only one "leader" instance, and will automatically promote one server to "leader" if there are none. This is needed since Elastic Beanstalk only has the concept of leader during deployment and may shut down any instance at any time while scaling.
UPDATE
I switched to using AWS OpsWorks and am no longer maintaining this gem. If you need more functionality than is available in the basics of Elastic Beanstalk, I highly recommend switching to OpsWorks.
You really don't want to be running cron jobs on Elastic Beanstalk. Since you'll have multiple application instances, this can cause race conditions and other odd problems. I actually recently blogged about this (4th or 5th tip down the page). The short version: Depending on the application, use a job queue like SQS or a third-party solution like iron.io.
2017: If you are using Laravel5+
You just need 2 minutes to configure it:
create a Worker Tier
install laravel-aws-worker
composer require dusterio/laravel-aws-worker
add a cron.yaml to the root folder:
Add cron.yaml to the root folder of your application (this can be a
part of your repo or you could add this file right before deploying to
EB - the important thing is that this file is present at the time of
deployment):
version: 1
cron:
- name: "schedule"
url: "/worker/schedule"
schedule: "* * * * *"
That's it!
All your task in App\Console\Kernel will now be executed
Detailed instructions and explainations: https://github.com/dusterio/laravel-aws-worker
How to write tasks inside of Laravel: https://laravel.com/docs/5.4/scheduling
A more readable solution using files instead of container_commands:
files:
"/etc/cron.d/my_cron":
mode: "000644"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
# override default email address
MAILTO="example#gmail.com"
# run a Symfony command every five minutes (as ec2-user)
*/10 * * * * ec2-user /usr/bin/php /var/app/current/app/console do:something
encoding: plain
commands:
# delete backup file created by Elastic Beanstalk
clear_cron_backup:
command: rm -f /etc/cron.d/watson.bak
Note the format differs from the usual crontab format in that it specifies the user to run the command as.
My 1 cent of contribution for 2018
Here is the right way to do it (using django/python and django_crontab app):
inside .ebextensions folder create a file like this 98_cron.config:
files:
"/tmp/98_create_cron.sh":
mode: "000755"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
#!/bin/sh
cd /
sudo /opt/python/run/venv/bin/python /opt/python/current/app/manage.py crontab remove > /home/ec2-user/remove11.txt
sudo /opt/python/run/venv/bin/python /opt/python/current/app/manage.py crontab add > /home/ec2-user/add11.txt
container_commands:
98crontab:
command: "mv /tmp/98_create_cron.sh /opt/elasticbeanstalk/hooks/appdeploy/post && chmod 774 /opt/elasticbeanstalk/hooks/appdeploy/post/98_create_cron.sh"
leader_only: true
It needs to be container_commands instead of commands
The latest example from Amazon is the easiest and most efficient (periodic tasks):
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticbeanstalk/latest/dg/using-features-managing-env-tiers.html
where you create a separate worker tier to execute any of your cron jobs. Create the cron.yaml file and place it in your root folder. One issue I had (after cron did not seem to be executing) was finding that my CodePipeline did not have authority to perform a dynamodb modification. Based on that after adding FullDynamoDB access under IAM -> roles -> yourpipeline and redeploying (elastic beanstalk) it worked perfectly.
Someone was wondering about the leader_only auto scaling problems when new leaders arise. I can't seem to figure out how to reply to their comments, but see this link: http://blog.paulopoiati.com/2013/08/25/running-cron-in-elastic-beanstalk-auto-scaling-environment/
So we've been struggling with this for a while and after some discussion with an AWS rep I've finally come up with what I think is the best solution.
Using a worker tier with cron.yaml is definitely the easiest fix. However, what the documentation doesn't make clear is that this will put the job at the end of the SQS queue you're using to actually run your jobs. If your cron jobs are time sensitive (as many are), this isn't acceptable, since it would depend on the size of the queue. One option is to use a completely separate environment just to run cron jobs, but I think that's overkill.
Some of the other options, like checking to see if you're the first instance in the list, aren't ideal either. What if the current first instance is in the process of shutting down?
Instance protection can also come with issues - what if that instance gets locked up / frozen?
What's important to understand is how AWS itself manages the cron.yaml functionality. There is an SQS daemon which uses a Dynamo table to handle "leader election". It writes to this table frequently, and if the current leader hasn't written in a short while, the next instance will take over as leader. This is how the daemon decides which instance to fire the job into the SQS queue.
We can repurpose the existing functionality rather than trying to rewrite our own. You can see the full solution here: https://gist.github.com/dorner/4517fe2b8c79ccb3971084ec28267f27
That's in Ruby, but you can easily adapt it to any other language that has the AWS SDK. Essentially, it checks the current leader, then checks the state to make sure it's in a good state. It'll loop until there is a current leader in a good state, and if the current instance is the leader, execute the job.
The best way to do this is to use an Elastic Beanstalk Worker Environment (see "Option 1" below). However, this will add to your server costs. If you don't want to do this, see "Option 2" below for how to configure cron itself.
Option 1: Use Elastic Beanstalk Worker environments
Amazon has support for Elastic Beanstalk Worker Environments. They are Elastic Beanstalk managed environments that come with an SQS queue which you can enqueue tasks onto. You can also give them a cron config that will automatically enqueue the task on a recurring schedule. Then, rather than receiving requests from a load balancer, the servers in a worker environment each have a daemon (managed by Elastic Beanstalk) that polls the queue for tasks and calls the appropriate web endpoint when they get a message on the queue. Worker environments have several benefits over running cron yourself:
Performance. Your tasks are now running on dedicated servers instead of competing for CPU and memory with web requests. You can also have different specs for the worker servers (ex. you can have more memory on just the worker servers).
Scalability. You can also scale up your number of worker servers to more than 1 in order to handle large task loads.
Ad-hoc Tasks. Your code can enqueue ad-hoc tasks as well as scheduled ones.
Standardization. You write tasks as web endpoints rather than needing to configure your own task framework, which lets your standardize your code and tooling.
If you just want a cron replacement, all you need to do is make a file called cron.yaml at the top level of your project, with config like the following:
cron.yaml
version: 1
cron:
- name: "hourly"
url: "/tasks/hourly"
schedule: "0 */1 * * *"
This will call the url /tasks/hourly once an hour.
If you are deploying the same codebase to web and worker environments, you should have the task URLs require an environment variable that you set on worker environments and not web environments. This way, your task endpoints are not exposed to the world (task servers by default do not accept incoming HTTP requests, as the only thing making calls to them is the on-server daemon).
The full docs are here: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticbeanstalk/latest/dg/using-features-managing-env-tiers.html
Option 2: Configure Cron
If you want to run cron, you need to make sure it's running on only one server. The leader_only flag in .ebextensions config isn't sufficient because servers don't reliably stay the leader. This can be fixed by deleting the cron config if present on any server as the first step of a deploy and then installing it on just one server using leader_only. Here is an example .ebextensions config file that accomplishes this:
.ebextensions/cron.config
container_commands:
01_remove_cron_jobs:
command: "rm /etc/cron.d/cronjobs || exit 0"
02_set_up_cron:
command: "cat .ebextensions/cronjobs.txt > /etc/cron.d/cronjobs && chmod 644 /etc/cron.d/cronjobs"
leader_only: true
This config file assumes the existence of a file .ebextensions/cronjobs.txt. This file contains your actual cron config. Note that in order to have environment variables loaded and your code in scope, you need to have code that does this baked into each command. The following is an example cron config that works on an Amazon Linux 2 based Python environment:
.ebextensions/cronjobs.txt
SHELL=/bin/bash
PROJECT_PATH=/var/app/current
ENV_PATH=/opt/elasticbeanstalk/deployment/env
# m h dom mon dow user command
0 * * * * ec2-user set -a; source <(sudo cat $ENV_PATH) && cd $PROJECT_PATH && python HOURLY_COMMAND > /dev/null
# Cron requires a newline at the end of the file
Here is a full explanation of the solution:
http://blog.paulopoiati.com/2013/08/25/running-cron-in-elastic-beanstalk-auto-scaling-environment/
To control whether Auto Scaling can terminate a particular instance when scaling in, use instance protection. You can enable the instance protection setting on an Auto Scaling group or an individual Auto Scaling instance. When Auto Scaling launches an instance, the instance inherits the instance protection setting of the Auto Scaling group. You can change the instance protection setting for an Auto Scaling group or an Auto Scaling instance at any time.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/autoscaling/latest/userguide/as-instance-termination.html#instance-protection
I had another solution to this if a php file needs to be run through cron and if you had set any NAT instances then you can put cronjob on NAT instance and run php file through wget.
here is a fix incase you want to do this in PHP. You just need cronjob.config in your .ebextensions folder to get it to work like this.
files:
"/etc/cron.d/my_cron":
mode: "000644"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
empty stuff
encoding: plain
commands:
01_clear_cron_backup:
command: "rm -f /etc/cron.d/*.bak"
02_remove_content:
command: "sudo sed -i 's/empty stuff//g' /etc/cron.d/my_cron"
container_commands:
adding_cron:
command: "echo '* * * * * ec2-user . /opt/elasticbeanstalk/support/envvars && /usr/bin/php /var/app/current/index.php cron sendemail > /tmp/sendemail.log 2>&1' > /etc/cron.d/my_cron"
leader_only: true
the envvars gets the environment variables for the files. You can debug the output on the tmp/sendemail.log as above.
Hope this helps someone as it surely helped us!
Based on the principles of the answer from user1599237, where you let the cron jobs run on all instances but then instead in the beginning of the jobs determine if they should be allowed to run, I have made another solution.
Instead of looking at the running instances (and having to store your AWS key and secret) I'm using the MySQL database that I'm already connecting to from all instances.
It has no downsides, only positives:
no extra instance or expenses
rock solid solution - no chance of double execution
scalable - automatically works as your instances are scaled up and down
failover - automatically works in case an instance has a failure
Alternatively, you could also use a commonly shared filesystem (like AWS EFS via the NFS protocol) instead of a database.
The following solution is created within the PHP framework Yii but you can easily adapt it for another framework and language. Also the exception handler Yii::$app->system is a module of my own. Replace it with whatever you are using.
/**
* Obtain an exclusive lock to ensure only one instance or worker executes a job
*
* Examples:
*
* `php /var/app/current/yii process/lock 60 empty-trash php /var/app/current/yii maintenance/empty-trash`
* `php /var/app/current/yii process/lock 60 empty-trash php /var/app/current/yii maintenance/empty-trash StdOUT./test.log`
* `php /var/app/current/yii process/lock 60 "empty trash" php /var/app/current/yii maintenance/empty-trash StdOUT./test.log StdERR.ditto`
* `php /var/app/current/yii process/lock 60 "empty trash" php /var/app/current/yii maintenance/empty-trash StdOUT./output.log StdERR./error.log`
*
* Arguments are understood as follows:
* - First: Duration of the lock in minutes
* - Second: Job name (surround with quotes if it contains spaces)
* - The rest: Command to execute. Instead of writing `>` and `2>` for redirecting output you need to write `StdOUT` and `StdERR` respectively. To redirect stderr to stdout write `StdERR.ditto`.
*
* Command will be executed in the background. If determined that it should not be executed the script will terminate silently.
*/
public function actionLock() {
$argsAll = $args = func_get_args();
if (!is_numeric($args[0])) {
\Yii::$app->system->error('Duration for obtaining process lock is not numeric.', ['Args' => $argsAll]);
}
if (!$args[1]) {
\Yii::$app->system->error('Job name for obtaining process lock is missing.', ['Args' => $argsAll]);
}
$durationMins = $args[0];
$jobName = $args[1];
$instanceID = null;
unset($args[0], $args[1]);
$command = trim(implode(' ', $args));
if (!$command) {
\Yii::$app->system->error('Command to execute after obtaining process lock is missing.', ['Args' => $argsAll]);
}
// If using AWS Elastic Beanstalk retrieve the instance ID
if (file_exists('/etc/elasticbeanstalk/.aws-eb-system-initialized')) {
if ($awsEb = file_get_contents('/etc/elasticbeanstalk/.aws-eb-system-initialized')) {
$awsEb = json_decode($awsEb);
if (is_object($awsEb) && $awsEb->instance_id) {
$instanceID = $awsEb->instance_id;
}
}
}
// Obtain lock
$updateColumns = false; //do nothing if record already exists
$affectedRows = \Yii::$app->db->createCommand()->upsert('system_job_locks', [
'job_name' => $jobName,
'locked' => gmdate('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
'duration' => $durationMins,
'source' => $instanceID,
], $updateColumns)->execute();
// The SQL generated: INSERT INTO system_job_locks (job_name, locked, duration, source) VALUES ('some-name', '2019-04-22 17:24:39', 60, 'i-HmkDAZ9S5G5G') ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE job_name = job_name
if ($affectedRows == 0) {
// record already exists, check if lock has expired
$affectedRows = \Yii::$app->db->createCommand()->update('system_job_locks', [
'locked' => gmdate('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
'duration' => $durationMins,
'source' => $instanceID,
],
'job_name = :jobName AND DATE_ADD(locked, INTERVAL duration MINUTE) < NOW()', ['jobName' => $jobName]
)->execute();
// The SQL generated: UPDATE system_job_locks SET locked = '2019-04-22 17:24:39', duration = 60, source = 'i-HmkDAZ9S5G5G' WHERE job_name = 'clean-trash' AND DATE_ADD(locked, INTERVAL duration MINUTE) < NOW()
if ($affectedRows == 0) {
// We could not obtain a lock (since another process already has it) so do not execute the command
exit;
}
}
// Handle redirection of stdout and stderr
$command = str_replace('StdOUT', '>', $command);
$command = str_replace('StdERR.ditto', '2>&1', $command);
$command = str_replace('StdERR', '2>', $command);
// Execute the command as a background process so we can exit the current process
$command .= ' &';
$output = []; $exitcode = null;
exec($command, $output, $exitcode);
exit($exitcode);
}
This is the database schema I'm using:
CREATE TABLE `system_job_locks` (
`job_name` VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
`locked` DATETIME NOT NULL COMMENT 'UTC',
`duration` SMALLINT(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL COMMENT 'Minutes',
`source` VARCHAR(255) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`job_name`)
)
Related
I'm currently moving an application off of static EC2 servers to ECS, as until now the release process has been ssh'ing into the server to git pull/migrate the database.
I've created everything I need using terraform to deploy my code from my organisations' Elastic Container Registry. I have a cluster, some services and task definitions.
I can deploy the app successfully for any given version now, however my main problem is finding a way to run migrations.
My approach so far has been to split the application into 3 services, I have my 'web' service which handles all HTTP traffic (serving the frontend, responding to API requests), my 'cron' service which handles things like sending emails/push notifications on specific times/events and my 'migrate' service which is just the 'cron' service but with the entryPoint to the container overwritten to just run the migrations (as I don't need any of the apache2 stuff for this container, and I didn't see reason to make another one for just migrations).
The problem I had with this was the 'migrate' service would constantly try and schedule more tasks for migrating the database, even though it only needed to be done once. So I've scrapped it as a service and kept it as a task definition however, so that I can still place it into my cluster.
As part of the deploy process I'm writing, I run that task inside the cluster via a bash script so I can wait until the migrations finish before deciding whether to take the application out of maintenance mode (if the migrations fail) or to deploy the new 'web'/'cron' containers once the migration has been completed.
Currently this is inside a shell script (ran by Github actions) that looks like this:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
CLUSTER_NAME=$1
echo $CLUSTER_NAME
OUTPUT=`aws ecs run-task --cluster ${CLUSTER_NAME} --task-definition saas-app-migrate`
if [$? -n 0]; then
>&2 echo $OUTPUT
exit 1
fi
TASKS=`echo $OUTPUT | jq '.tasks[].taskArn' | jq #sh | sed -e "s/'//g" | sed -e 's/"//g'`
for task in $TASKS
do
# check for task to be done
done
Because $TASKS contains the taskArn of any tasks that have been spawned by this, I am freely able to query the task however I don't know what information I'm looking for.
The AWS documentation says I should use the 'describe-task' command to then find out why a task has reached the 'STOPPED' status, as it provides a 'stopCode' and 'stoppedReason' property in the response. However, it doesn't say what these values would be if it was succesfully stopped? I don't want to have to introduce a manual step in my deployment where I wait until the migrations are done - with the application not being usable - to then tell my release process to continue.
Is there a link to documentation I might have missed with the values I'm searching for, or an alternate way to handle this case?
I have a few Docker containers running on EC2 instances in AWS. In the past I have had situations where the Docker containers simply exit due to errors on the docker daemon, and they never start up even though the restart policies are in place (daemon is not running so I don't expect them to get up of course).
Since I am going on holiday I want to implement a quick and easy solution that would allow me to be notified if any containers have exited unexpectedly. The only quick solution I could find was using an Amazon Event Bridge rule for running a scheduled task every X minutes and executing a Systems Manager RunDockerAction command (docker ps) on the instances, but this does not give me any output except for the fact that the command has successfully executed on the instance.
Is there any way that I can get the output of such an Event Bridge task to send the results over an SNS topic if things go wrong?
IF you are running Linux on your AWS EC2 instance, then one solution is to use e-mail as a notification system. In that case, I would suggest the following:
On the AWS EC2 instance, create a Bash script that runs docker ps -a and combine that with a grep statement to filter on the docker container IDs that you want to monitor.
In the same Bash script, using echo and mail, you can e-mail yourself with statistics seen in the previous step. For example"
echo "${container} is not running" | mail -s "Alert! Docker container ${container} is not running!" "first.last#domain.com"
(The above relies on $container to be set appropriately. Use grep to filter out data of interest.)
Create a system crontab job (etc/crontab) and schedule the Bash script to run at your wanted interval.
This is only one possible solution, one that I use myself for quick checks at times.
I have a Django project running on AWS using Elastic Beanstalk. It can have between 1 and 6 instances running.
I load a crontab file to run some management/commands overnight. I have this config file:
container_commands:
01_cron_job:
command: "cp .ebextensions/crontab.txt /etc/cron.d/my_cron_jobs && chmod 644 /etc/cron.d/my_cron_jobs"
#leader_only: true
The file copied across looks like:
# Set the cron to run with utf8 encoding
PYTHONIOENCODING=utf8
# Specify where to send email
MAILTO="me#gmail.com"
1 0 * * * root source /opt/python/current/env && nice /opt/python/current/app/src/manage.py clearsessions
15 0 * * * root source /opt/python/current/env && nice /opt/python/current/app/src/manage.py update_summary_stats >> /opt/python/log/update_summary_stats.log 2>&1
# this file needs a blank space as the last line otherwise it will fail
Within the config file, if I set leader_only to false then the command doesn't run if the leader instance gets deleted at some point (for example because another instance was added during peak times and the leader deleted when it quietened). If I set leader_only to true then the crontab commands run on every instance.
What is the best way to set up crontab on AWS Elastic Beanstalk to only run once irrespective of the number of instances? Thank you
You could create a lock file (perhaps locally on a shared EFS mount, or externally using a service such as DynamoDB with Transactional Consistency or S3).
When your application creates this lock file it could then continue as normal, however should the file exist you would skip the script.
By doing this it reduces the chance of a collision, however I would also recommend adding some jitter to the start of the script (add a sleep for a random amount of seconds) to reduce the chance further that the scripts will attempt to create this lockfile at the same time.
I have an Elastic BeanStalk environment where I run my application on 1 EC2 instance. I've added load balancer, when I configured the environment initially, but since then I set it only use 1 instance.
Application run within container apparently produces quite a lot of logs - after several days they use up whole disk space and then application crash. Health check drops to severe.
I see that terminating instance manually helps - environment removes old instance and creates a new one that works (until it fills up the whole disk again).
What are my options? A script that regularly cleans up logs? Some log rotation? Trigger that reboots instance when disk is nearly full?
I do not write anything to file myself - my application only log to std out and std err, so writing to file is done by EC2/EBS wrapper. (I deploy the application as a ZIP containing a JAR, a bash script and Procfile if that is relevant).
By default EB will rotate some of the logs produced by the Docker containers, but not all of them. After contacting support on this issue I received the following helpful config file, to be placed in the source path .ebextensions/liblogrotate.config:
files:
"/etc/logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.hourly/logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.containers.conf":
mode: "00644"
owner: "root"
group: "root"
content: |
/var/lib/docker/containers/*/*.log {
size 10M
rotate 5
missingok
compress
notifempty
copytruncate
dateext
dateformat %s
olddir /var/lib/docker/containers/rotated
}
"/etc/cron.hourly/cron.logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.containers.conf":
mode: "00755"
owner: "root"
group: "root"
content: |
#!/bin/sh
test -x /usr/sbin/logrotate || exit 0
/usr/sbin/logrotate /etc/logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.hourly/logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.containers.conf
container_commands:
create_rotated_dir:
command: mkdir -p /var/lib/docker/containers/rotated
test: test ! -d /var/lib/docker/containers/rotated
99_cleanup:
command: rm /etc/cron.hourly/*.bak /etc/logrotate.elasticbeanstalk.hourly/*.bak
ignoreErrors: true
What this does is install an additional log rotation configuration and cron task for the /var/lib/docker/containers/*/*.log files which are the ones not automatically rotated on EB.
Eventually, however, the rotated logs themselves will fill up the disk if the host lives long enough. For this, you can add shred in the list of logrotation options (along side compress notifempty etc).
(However, I'm not sure if the container logs that are already configured for rotation are set to be shredded, probably not - so those may accumulate too and require modification of the default EB log rotation config. Not sure how to do that yet. But the above solution in most cases would be sufficient since hosts typically do not live that long. The volume of logging and lifetime of your containers may force you to go even further.)
Logrotation is the way forward. You can create a configuration file in `/etc/logrotate.d/' where you state your options in order to avoid having large log files.
You can read more about the configurations here https://linuxconfig.org/setting-up-logrotate-on-redhat-linux
A sample configuration file would look something like this:
/var/log/your-large-log.log {
missingok
notifempty
compress
size 20k
daily
create 0600 root root
}
You can also test the new configuration file from the cli by running the follow:
logrotate -d [your_config_file]
This will test if the log rotation will be successful or not but only in debugging mode, therefore the log file will not be actually rotated.
I want to monitor memory used by particular process under cloudwatch in AWS. Do I have to use script to do so? If yes, let me know the steps or some guideline or Can I use cloudwatch logs to report memory utilized by particular process in real time? Tell me the other alternatives as well.
Yes, you will need a script that runs on the instance you want to monitor. Cloudwatch by default can only report on things it can 'see' at the hypervisor level, not things that re going on 'inside', so you'll need to create and report 'custom metrics'.
Here are some Linux script pointers:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/DeveloperGuide/mon-scripts.html
and some for windows:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/DeveloperGuide/mon-scripts-powershell.html
Put this in a file called 001initial.config in your .ebextensions folder of your s3 bucket you're using for your app ver. This will install the monitoring and set it up as a cron job.
Note the perl modules that get installed.
You'll want to ssh into your box and test the script is running.
Go into security and update your iam role for you ec2 instance with CloudWatch rights. Make sure to select the checkbox for the role and then click it to get to the rights page.
Once you know monitoring is running, go to the cloud watch page, and from the very first page type in System/Linux and search for that and it will show you disk and memory stats.
---
files:
"/etc/cron.d/my_cron":
mode: "000644"
owner: root
group: root
content: |
# run a cloudwatch command every five minutes (as ec2-user)
*/5 * * * * ec2-user ~/aws-scripts-mon/mon-put-instance-data.pl --mem-util --mem-used --mem-avail --disk-space-util --disk-path=/ --from-cron
encoding: plain
commands:
# delete backup file created by Elastic Beanstalk
clear_cron_backup:
command: rm -f /etc/cron.d/watson.bak
container_commands:
02download:
command: "curl http://aws-cloudwatch.s3.amazonaws.com/downloads/CloudWatchMonitoringScripts-1.2.1.zip -O"
ignoreErrors: true
03extract:
command: "unzip CloudWatchMonitoringScripts-1.2.1.zip"
ignoreErrors: true
04rmzip:
command: "rm rm CloudWatchMonitoringScripts-1.2.1.zip"
ignoreErrors: true
05cdinto:
command: "mv aws-scripts-mon/ /home/ec2-user"
ignoreErrors: true
packages:
yum:
perl-Switch : []
perl-URI: []
perl-Bundle-LWP: []
perl-DateTime: []
perl-Sys-Syslog: []
perl-LWP-Protocol-https: []
While the reason provided by #EJBrennan in his answer is correct, a more recent update to this question is to simply install the scripts as provided in this excellent documentation from AWS
AWS Documentation for Memory & Disk Metrics
So you need to
Install the scripts in your EC2 server
PUT the logs to Cloudwatch using ./mon-put-instance-data.pl --mem-util --mem-used-incl-cache-buff --mem-used --mem-avail
Setup a dashboard in your cloudwatch to see the metrics.
Alternatively, you can also setup a cron job to get the metrics on a periodic basis.
Hope that helps
You can try AWS CloudWatch procstat plugin. Apart from memory using memory_data param of procstat, you can monitor many other data of process. I have answered here.
A sample JSON configuration file using procstat -
{
"agent":{
"metrics_collection_interval":60,
"region":"us-south-1",
"logfile":"/opt/aws/amazon-cloudwatch-agent/logs/process-monitoring.log"
},
"metrics":{
"namespace":"CWAgent",
"append_dimensions":{
"AutoScalingGroupName":"${aws:AutoScalingGroupName}"
},
"aggregation_dimensions":[
[
"AutoScalingGroupName"
]
],
"force_flush_interval":60,
"metrics_collected":{
"procstat":[
{
"pid_file":"/var/opt/data/myapp/tmp/sampleApp.pid",
"measurement":[
"memory_data",
"memory_locked",
"memory_rss"
],
"metrics_collection_interval":30
}
]
}
}
}