CDK patterns for modern application with serverless containers on AWS
Inspired by Vijay Menon from the AWS blog post introduced in 2019, AlbFargateServices
allows you to create one or many fargate services with both internet-facing ALB and internal ALB associated with all services. With this pattern, fargate services will be allowed to intercommunicat via internal ALB while external inbound traffic will be spread across the same service tasks through internet-facing ALB.
The sample below will create 3 fargate services associated with both external and internal ALBs. The internal ALB will have an alias(internal.svc.local
) auto-configured from Route 53 so services can communite through the private ALB endpoint.
import { AlbFargateServices } from 'serverless-container-constructs';
new AlbFargateServices(stack, 'Service', {
spot: true, // FARGATE_SPOT only cluster
tasks: [
{
listenerPort: 80,
task: orderTask,
desiredCount: 2,
// customize the service autoscaling policy
scalingPolicy: {
maxCapacity: 20,
requestPerTarget: 1000,
targetCpuUtilization: 50,
},
},
{ listenerPort: 8080, task: customerTask, desiredCount: 2 },
{ listenerPort: 9090, task: productTask, desiredCount: 2 },
],
route53Ops: {
zoneName, // svc.local
externalAlbRecordName, // external.svc.local
internalAlbRecordName, // internal.svc.local
},
});
By enabling the spot
property, 100% fargate spot tasks will be provisioned to help you save up to 70%. Check more details about Fargate Spot. This is a handy catch-all flag to force all tasks to be FARGATE_SPOT
only.
To specify mixed strategy with partial FARGATE
and partial FARGATE_SPOT
, specify the capacityProviderStrategy
for individual tasks like
new AlbFargateServices(stack, 'Service', {
tasks: [
{
listenerPort: 8080,
task: customerTask,
desiredCount: 2,
capacityProviderStrategy: [
{
capacityProvider: 'FARGATE',
base: 1,
weight: 1,
},
{
capacityProvider: 'FARGATE_SPOT',
base: 0,
weight: 3,
},
],
},
],
});
The custom capacity provider strategy will be applied if capacityProviderStretegy
is specified, otherwise, 100% spot will be used when spot: true
. The default policy is 100% Fargate on-demand.
Simply turn on the enableExecuteCommand
property to enable the ECS Exec support for all services.
By default, all task(s) defined in the AlbFargateServices
will be registered to both external and internal ALBs.
Set accessibility
to make it internal only, external only, or both.
new AlbFargateServices(stack, 'Service', {
tasks: [
// this task is internal only
{ listenerPort: 8080, task: task1, accessibility: LoadBalancerAccessibility.INTERNAL_ONLY},
// this task is external only
{ listenerPort: 8081, task: task2, accessibility: LoadBalancerAccessibility.EXTERNAL_ONLY},
// this task is both external and internal facing(default behavior)
{ listenerPort: 8082, task: task3 },
],
});
Please note if all tasks are defined as INTERNAL_ONLY
, no external ALB will be created. Similarly, no internal ALB
will be created if all defined as EXTERNAL_ONLY
.
By default, all tasks will be deployed in the private subnets. You will need the NAT gateway for the default route associated with the private subnets to ensure the task can successfully pull the container images.
However, you are allowed to specify vpcSubnets
to customize the subnet selection.
To deploy all tasks in public subnets, one per AZ:
new AlbFargateServices(stack, 'Service', {
vpcSubnets: {
subnetType: ec2.SubnetType.PUBLIC,
onePerAz: true,
},
...
});
This will implicitly enable the auto assign public IP
for each fargate task so the task can successfully pull the container images from external registry. However, the ingress traffic will still be balanced via the external ALB.
To deploy all tasks in specific subnets:
new AlbFargateServices(stack, 'Service', {
vpcSubnets: {
subnets: [
ec2.Subnet.fromSubnetId(stack, 'sub-1a', 'subnet-0e9460dbcfc4cf6ee'),
ec2.Subnet.fromSubnetId(stack, 'sub-1b', 'subnet-0562f666bdf5c29af'),
ec2.Subnet.fromSubnetId(stack, 'sub-1c', 'subnet-00ab15c0022872f06'),
],
},
...
});
This repository comes with a sample applicaiton with 3 services in Golang. On deployment, the Order
service will be exposed externally on external ALB port 80
and all requests to the Order
service will trigger sub-requests internally to another other two services(product
and customer
) through the internal ALB and eventually aggregate the response back to the client.
To deploy the sample application in you default VPC:
// install first
yarn install
npx cdk diff -c use_default_vpc=1
npx cdk deploy -c use_default_vpc=1
On deployment complete, you will see the external ALB endpoint in the CDK output. cURL
the external HTTP endpoint and you should be able to see the aggregated response.
$ curl http://demo-Servi-EH1OINYDWDU9-1397122594.ap-northeast-1.elb.amazonaws.com
{"service":"order", "version":"1.0"}
{"service":"product","version":"1.0"}
{"service":"customer","version":"1.0"}
This construct follows the best practices from the AWS Solutoins with cdk-nag. Enable the AWS_SOLUTIONS_CHECK
context variable to check aginst the cdk-nag rules.
npx cdk diff -c AWS_SOLUTIONS_CHECK=1
or
npx cdk synth -c AWS_SOLUTIONS_CHECK=1
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This library is licensed under the MIT-0 License. See the LICENSE file.