Difference between revisions of "Amazon EC2"
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+ | == Intro == | ||
+ | We use [http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/ Amazon EC2] for the [[Collegedale Community Church Webcast]].<br> | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | We created batch file wrappers for the java based instance tools to start, monitor and stop a [[Wowza Media Server]] instance on an elastic (static) IP address. We pass our custom configuration parameters in a .zip file specified at instance launch time.<br> | ||
+ | |||
== Amazon EC2 instance start, status and stop batch files == | == Amazon EC2 instance start, status and stop batch files == | ||
− | I | + | Problem: Need a user friendly way to start and stop an Amazon EC2 instance which uses a static IP. The IP assignment has to be done after the instance start command is issued using the instance id.<br> |
+ | <br> | ||
+ | Solution: I created batch files on Windows Vista 32 bit edition to start, stop and check the status of a Wowza server EC2 instance. I have created shortcuts to the batch files using the following syntax so that the command prompts stay open after a user double clicks the shortcut. | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe /k c:\ec2\start.bat | C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe /k c:\ec2\start.bat | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
− | The tricky part | + | The tricky part was reading in the instance ID in order to automatically assign the static IP after the instance launch. These batch files assume that you will only launch one instance at a time but could be modified to launch multiple instances.<br> |
+ | <br> | ||
+ | Alternative Solution: If you prefer to do something with automated cronjobs on Linux check out this post: | ||
+ | http://blog.ianbeyer.com/archives/201 | ||
=== Start === | === Start === | ||
− | The following batch file will start an Amazon instance and automatically assign your elastic (static) IP address to it after the instance ID is assigned by Amazon. Just replace any environment or instance preferences and change to your own elastic IP. The most tricky part of this is the for command which first launches the instance and then extracts the instance id from line 2 (line 1 is skipped), field (token) 2 and | + | The following batch file will start an Amazon instance and automatically assign your elastic (static) IP address to it after the instance ID is assigned by Amazon. Just replace any environment or instance preferences and change to your own elastic IP. The most tricky part of this is the for command which first launches the instance and then extracts the instance id from line 2 (line 1 is skipped), field (token) 2. The instance id is then stored in a variable and used to assign the elastic IP address to it after a delay. |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
@echo off | @echo off | ||
Line 19: | Line 29: | ||
echo to check status run status.bat (startup usually take a couple of minutes) | echo to check status run status.bat (startup usually take a couple of minutes) | ||
− | for /f "skip=1 tokens=2" %%i in ('c:\ec2\bin\ec2-run-instances ami- | + | for /f "skip=1 tokens=2" %%i in ('c:\ec2\bin\ec2-run-instances ami-af51b0c6 -k wowza-keypair -t m1.small -f c:\ec2\includes\live.zip') do set INSTANCE=%%i |
+ | echo. | ||
+ | echo waiting 30 seconds before assigning static IP | ||
+ | timeout /t 30 /nobreak | ||
+ | c:\ec2\bin\ec2-associate-address -i %INSTANCE% 123.123.123.123 | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
+ | The timeout command works on Vista but you may need to replace it with something else on other OS flavors (ping perhaps?). At first I did not have a delay at all, but ran into sporadic trouble where the instance ID might not be recognized by ec2 if you try to assign an IP to it immediately. IP assignment does seem to work before the instance has finished starting though. | ||
=== Status === | === Status === |
Latest revision as of 21:03, 15 November 2010
Contents
Intro
We use Amazon EC2 for the Collegedale Community Church Webcast.
We created batch file wrappers for the java based instance tools to start, monitor and stop a Wowza Media Server instance on an elastic (static) IP address. We pass our custom configuration parameters in a .zip file specified at instance launch time.
Amazon EC2 instance start, status and stop batch files
Problem: Need a user friendly way to start and stop an Amazon EC2 instance which uses a static IP. The IP assignment has to be done after the instance start command is issued using the instance id.
Solution: I created batch files on Windows Vista 32 bit edition to start, stop and check the status of a Wowza server EC2 instance. I have created shortcuts to the batch files using the following syntax so that the command prompts stay open after a user double clicks the shortcut.
C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe /k c:\ec2\start.bat
The tricky part was reading in the instance ID in order to automatically assign the static IP after the instance launch. These batch files assume that you will only launch one instance at a time but could be modified to launch multiple instances.
Alternative Solution: If you prefer to do something with automated cronjobs on Linux check out this post:
http://blog.ianbeyer.com/archives/201
Start
The following batch file will start an Amazon instance and automatically assign your elastic (static) IP address to it after the instance ID is assigned by Amazon. Just replace any environment or instance preferences and change to your own elastic IP. The most tricky part of this is the for command which first launches the instance and then extracts the instance id from line 2 (line 1 is skipped), field (token) 2. The instance id is then stored in a variable and used to assign the elastic IP address to it after a delay.
@echo off set JAVA_HOME="c:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre6" set EC2_HOME=c:\ec2 set PATH=%PATH%;%EC2_HOME%\bin set EC2_PRIVATE_KEY=c:\ec2\keys\private.pem set EC2_CERT=c:\ec2\keys\509.pem echo to check status run status.bat (startup usually take a couple of minutes) for /f "skip=1 tokens=2" %%i in ('c:\ec2\bin\ec2-run-instances ami-af51b0c6 -k wowza-keypair -t m1.small -f c:\ec2\includes\live.zip') do set INSTANCE=%%i echo. echo waiting 30 seconds before assigning static IP timeout /t 30 /nobreak c:\ec2\bin\ec2-associate-address -i %INSTANCE% 123.123.123.123
The timeout command works on Vista but you may need to replace it with something else on other OS flavors (ping perhaps?). At first I did not have a delay at all, but ran into sporadic trouble where the instance ID might not be recognized by ec2 if you try to assign an IP to it immediately. IP assignment does seem to work before the instance has finished starting though.
Status
This batch file simply checks the current instance status.
@echo off set JAVA_HOME="c:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre6" set EC2_HOME=c:\ec2 set PATH=%PATH%;%EC2_HOME%\bin set EC2_PRIVATE_KEY=c:\ec2\keys\private.pem set EC2_CERT=c:\ec2\keys\509.pem echo The instance id is i-something c:\ec2\bin\ec2-describe-instances
Stop
This one finds the instance ID and then stops that instance. If you have multiple instances running it will stop each of them one by one (it will also generate some errors, but worked when I tested it).
@echo off set JAVA_HOME="c:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre6" set EC2_HOME=c:\ec2 set PATH=%PATH%;%EC2_HOME%\bin set EC2_PRIVATE_KEY=c:\ec2\keys\private.pem set EC2_CERT=c:\ec2\keys\509.pem echo After you stop the server verify that the status shows terminated with the status.bat command for /f "skip=1 tokens=2" %%i in ('c:\ec2\bin\ec2-describe-instances') do c:\ec2\bin\ec2-terminate-instances %%i