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A wrapper for haproxy that handles auto-scaling EC2 instances.

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markcaudill/haproxy-autoscale

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haproxy-autoscale

Description

I had a project I was working on where I needed a private load balancer to use on Amazon Web Services. Unfortunately, AWS Elastic Load Balancers do not support private listeners so I needed to make my own load balancer using Linux.

Making a load balancer is pretty straight forward. The challenge was that the instances under it were auto-scaling and there was no built-in mechanism for the load balancer to know to send traffic to new instances and to stop sending traffic to deleted instances.

Enter haproxy-autoscale. This is a wrapper of sorts that will automatically add all instances in a security group that are currently in a running state to the haproxy configuration. It then reloads haproxy in a manner which gracefully terminates connections so there is no downtime. Also, haproxy will only be reloaded if there are changes. If there are no changes in the isntances that should be sent traffic then it just exits.

I've actually bundled the haproxy binary with this repo to make things easier when getting started.

The update-haproxy.py script does a good job with basic setups using the default options but as things get more complex you may want to get more specific with the paramters. For instance, if you decide to run multiple instances at the same time then you should probably specifify different templates, outputs and pid files for each.

Installation

Run sudo python setup.py install and if everything goes well you're ready to configure (if you have complex needs) and run the update-haproxy.py command.

OR

sudo pip install git+https://github.com/markcaudill/haproxy-autoscale

Configuration

Most of the configuration is done via command line options. The only configuration that may need to be done is the haproxy.cfg template. You can customize it to suit your needs or you can specify a different on on the command line. Make sure to read the existing template to see what variables will be available to use.

IAM

Below is an example policy that should provide the minimal access necessary for this to work.

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Sid": "Stmt1458960803000",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "ec2:AssociateAddress",
                "ec2:DescribeAddresses",
                "ec2:DescribeAvailabilityZones",
                "ec2:DescribeInstanceAttribute",
                "ec2:DescribeInstanceStatus",
                "ec2:DescribeInstances",
                "ec2:DescribeRegions",
                "ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups"
            ],
            "Resource": [
                "arn:aws:ec2:*"
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Usage

haproxy-autoscale was designed to be run from the load balancer itself as a cron job. Ideally it would be run every minute.

update-haproxy.py [-h] --security-group SECURITY_GROUP
                  [SECURITY_GROUP ...] --access-key ACCESS_KEY
                  --secret-key SECRET_KEY [--output OUTPUT]
                  [--template TEMPLATE] [--haproxy HAPROXY] [--pid PID]
                  [--eip EIP] [--health-check-url HEALTH_CHECK_URL]
                  [--safe-mode]

Update haproxy to use all instances running in a security group.

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --security-group SECURITY_GROUP [SECURITY_GROUP ...]
  [--access-key ACCESS_KEY
  --secret-key SECRET_KEY]
                        Optional parameters in case the policy is assigned to the instance's role
  --output OUTPUT       Defaults to haproxy.cfg if not specified.
  --template TEMPLATE
  --haproxy HAPROXY     The haproxy binary to call. Defaults to haproxy if not
                        specified.
  --pid PID             The pid file for haproxy. Defaults to
                        /var/run/haproxy.pid.
  --eip EIP             The Elastic IP to bind to when VIP seems unhealthy.
  --health-check-url HEALTH_CHECK_URL
                        The URL to check. Assigns EIP to self if health check
                        fails.
  --safe-mode           If enabled, the script exits if there is any AWS exception.
                        E.g., wrong key/secret.'
                        Also if there is no instance in any of the security groups, haproxy conf
                        will be generated but NOT reloaded.

Example:

/usr/bin/python update-haproxy.py --access-key='SOMETHING' --secret-key='SoMeThInGeLsE' --security-group='webheads' 'tomcat-servers'

/usr/bin/python update-haproxy.py --access-key='SOMETHING' --secret-key='SoMeThInGeLsE' --security-group='webheads' 'tomcat-servers' --safe-mode

Changelog

  • v0.1 - Initial release.
  • v0.2 - Added ability to specify multiple security groups. This version is not compatible with previous versions' templates.
  • v0.3 - Added support for all regions.
  • v0.4 - Added accessor class for autobackend generation (see tests/data/autobackends_example.tpl for example usage)
  • v0.5 - Made access and security keys optional, replaced haproxy restart to reload, added path to the service command

(Above change logs are for version 0.4.1 and before.)

  • version 0.5.0 - Add --safe-mode: exit on aws exception, and no reload when security group is empty Redirect log to stdout so you can pipe it to other programs; Add timestamp for logging.
  • version 0.5.1 - Add --delay option. If specified, instances that were just created within DELAY seconds are not added into haproxy conf. Use when you want to give it some time to make sure the service on the instance is up and running before adding it into haproxy.

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A wrapper for haproxy that handles auto-scaling EC2 instances.

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