Paramsync is a simple, straightforward CLI tool for synchronizing data from the filesystem to the AWS parameter store KV store and vice-versa.
Run paramsync check
to see what differences exist, and paramsync push
to
synchronize the changes from the filesystem to parameter store.
$ paramsync check
=====================================================================================
myapp-private
local:path/private => ssm:us-east-1:private/myapp
Keys scanned: 37
No changes to make for this sync target.
=====================================================================================
myapp-config
local:path/config => ssm:us-east-1:config/myapp
Keys scanned: 80
UPDATE config/myapp/prod/ip-allowlist.json
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-["10.8.0.0/16"]
+["10.8.0.0/16","10.9.10.0/24"]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Keys to update: 1
~ config/myapp/prod/ip-allowlist.json
You can also limit your command to specific synchronization targets by using
the --target
flag:
$ paramsync push --target myapp-config
=====================================================================================
myapp-config
local:path/config => ssm:us-east-1:config/myapp
Keys scanned: 80
UPDATE config/myapp/prod/ip-allowlist.json
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-["10.8.0.0/16"]
+["10.8.0.0/16","10.9.10.0/24"]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Keys to update: 1
~ config/myapp/prod/ip-allowlist.json
Do you want to push these changes?
Enter 'yes' to continue: yes
UPDATE config/myapp/prod/ip-allowlist.json OK
Run paramsync --help
for additional options and commands.
Paramsync can also sync from parameter store to the local filesystem. This can be particularly useful for seeding a git repo with the current contents of a parameter store config.
Run paramsync check --pull
to get a summary of changes, and paramsync pull
to actually sync the changes to the local filesystem. Additional arguments such
as --target <name>
work in pull mode as well.
Paramsync will automatically configure itself using the first paramsync.yml
file it comes across when searching backwards through the directory tree from
the current working directory. So, typically you may wish to place the config
file in the root of your git repository or the base directory of your config
file tree.
You can also specify a config file using the --config <filename>
command line
argument.
The configuration file is a Hash represented in YAML format with three possible
top-level keys: paramsync
, ssm
, and sync
. The paramsync
section sets
global defaults and app options. The ssm
section specifies the roles to
assume for aws. And the sync
section lists the directories and
ssm prefixes you wish to synchronize. Only the sync
section is strictly
required. An example paramsync.yml
is below including explanatory comments:
# paramsync.yml
paramsync:
# verbose - defaults to `false`
# Set this to `true` for more verbose output.
verbose: false
# chomp - defaults to `true`
# Automatically runs `chomp` on the strings read in from files to
# eliminate a single trailing newline character (commonly inserted
# by text editors). Set to `false` to disable this by default for
# all sync targets (it can be overridden on a per-target basis).
chomp: true
# delete - defaults to `false`
# Set this to `true` to make the default for all sync targets to
# delete any keys found in parameter store that do not have a corresponding
# file on disk. By default, extraneous remote keys will be ignored.
# If `verbose` is set to `true` the extraneous keys will be named
# in the output.
delete: false
# color - defaults to `true`
# Set this to `false` to disable colorized output (eg when running
# with an automated tool).
color: true
ssm:
accounts:
account1:
role: arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/admin
sync:
# sync is an array of hashes of sync target configurations
# Fields:
# name - The arbitrary friendly name of the sync target. Only
# required if you wish to target specific sync targets using
# the `--target` CLI flag.
# prefix - (required) The parameter store prefix to synchronize to.
# type - (default: "dir") The type of local file storage. Either
# 'dir' to indicate a directory tree of files corresponding to
# parameter store keys; or 'file' to indicate a single YAML file with a
# map of relative key paths to values.
# region - (required) The aws region to synchronize to
# path - (required) The relative filesystem path to either the
# directory containing the files with content to synchronize
# to parameter store if this sync target has type=dir, or the local file
# containing a hash of remote keys if this sync target has
# type=file. This path is calculated relative to the directory
# containing the configuration file.
# account - (account) The account from the ssm block to use
# delete - Whether or not to delete remote keys that do not exist
# in the local filesystem. This inherits the setting from the
# `paramsync` section, or if not specified, defaults to `false`.
# chomp - Whether or not to chomp a single newline character off
# the contents of local files before synchronizing to parameter store.
# This inherits the setting from the `paramsync` section, or if
# not specified, defaults to `true`.
# exclude - An array of parameter store paths to exclude from the
# sync process. These exclusions will be noted in output if the
# verbose mode is in effect, otherwise they will be silently
# ignored. At this time there is no provision for specifying
# prefixes or patterns. Each key must be fully and explicitly
# specified.
# erb_enabled - Whether or not to run the local content through
# ERB parsing before attempting to sync to the remote. Defaults
# to `false`.
- name: myapp-config
prefix: config/myapp
region: us-east-1
path: path/config
exclude:
- config/myapp/beta.cowboy-yolo
- config/myapp/prod.cowboy-yolo
account: account1
- name: myapp-private
prefix: private/myapp
type: dir
region: us-east-1
path: path/private
account: account1
delete: true
- name: yourapp-config
prefix: config/yourapp
type: file
region: us-east-1
path: path/yourapp.yml
delete: true
erb_enabled: true
You can run paramsync config
to get a summary of the defined configuration
and to double-check config syntax.
When using type: file
for a sync target (see example above), the local path
should be a YAML (or JSON) file containing a hash of relative key paths to the
contents of those keys. So for example, given this configuration:
sync:
- name: config
prefix: config/yourapp
type: file
region: us-east-1
path: yourapp.yml
If the file yourapp.yml
has the following content:
---
prod/dbname: yourapp
prod/message: |
Hello, world. This is a multiline message.
Thanks.
prod/app/config.json: |
{
"port": 8080,
"enabled": true
}
Then paramsync push
will attempt to create and/or update the following keys
with the corresponding content from yourapp.yml
:
Key | Value |
---|---|
config/yourapp/prod/dbname |
yourapp |
config/yourapp/prod/message |
Hello, world. This is a multiline message.\nThanks. |
config/yourapp/prod/app/config.json |
{\n "port": 8080,\n "enabled": true\n} |
In addition to specifying the entire relative path in each key, you may also reference paths via your file's YAML structure directly. For example:
---
prod:
redis:
port: 6380
host: redis.example.com
When pushed, this document will create and/or update the following keys:
Key | Value |
---|---|
config/yourapp/prod/redis/port |
6380 |
config/yourapp/prod/redis/host |
redis.example.com |
You may mix and match relative paths and document hierarchy to build paths as
you would like. And you may also use the special key _
to embed a value for
a particular prefix while also nesting values underneath it. For example, given
this local file target content:
---
prod/postgres:
host: db.myproject.example.com
port: 10001
prod:
redis:
_: Embedded Value
port: 6380
prod/redis/host: cache.myproject.example.com
This file target content would correspond to the following values, when pushed:
Key | Value |
---|---|
config/yourapp/prod/postgres/host |
db.myproject.example.com |
config/yourapp/prod/postgres/port |
10001 |
config/yourapp/prod/redis |
Embedded Value |
config/yourapp/prod/redis/port |
6380 |
config/yourapp/prod/redis/host |
cache.myproject.example.com |
A paramsync pull
operation against a file type target will work in reverse,
and pull values from any keys under config/yourapp/
into the file
yourapp.yml
, overwriting whatever values are there.
NOTE: Values in local file targets are converted to strings before comparing
with or uploading to the parameter store. However, because YAML parsing
converts some values (such as yes
or no
) to boolean types, the effective
value of a key with a value of a bare yes
will be true
when converted to a
string. If you need the actual values yes
or no
, use quotes around the value
to force the YAML parser to interpret it as a string.
Against a file target, the structure of the local file can vary in a number of ways while still producing the same remote structure. Thus, in pull mode, Paramsync must necessarily choose one particular rendering format, and will not be able to retain the exact structure of the local file if you alternate push and pull operations.
Specifically, the following caveats are important to note, when pulling a target to a local file:
-
The local file will be written out as YAML, even if it was originally provided locally as a JSON file, and even if the extension is
.json
. -
Any existing comments in the local file will be lost.
-
The document structure will be that of a flat hash will fully-specified relative paths as the keys.
Future versions of Paramsync may provide options to modify the behavior for pull operations on a per-target basis. Pull requests are always welcome.
The configuration file will be rendered through ERB before being parsed as YAML. This can be useful for avoiding repetitive configuration across multiple prefixes or regions, eg:
sync:
<% %w( us-east-1 us-west-2 ).each do |region| %>
- name: <%= dc %>:myapp-private
prefix: private/myapp
region: <%= region %>
path: path/<%= region %>/private
delete: true
<% end %>
It's a good idea to sanity-check your ERB by running paramsync config
after
making any changes.
You can also choose to enable ERB parsing for local content as well, by setting
erb_enabled: true
on any sync targets you wish to populate in this way.
Paramsync may be partially configured using environment variables:
PARAMSYNC_VERBOSE
- set this variable to any value to enable verbose mode
I'm happy to accept suggestions, bug reports, and pull requests through Github.
This software is public domain. No rights are reserved. See LICENSE for more information.