Skip to content

tape-tv/cumuliform

Repository files navigation

Cumuliform

Gem Version Build Status Code Climate Test Coverage [Documentation]

Amazon’s CloudFormation AWS service provides a way to describe infrastructure stacks using a JSON template. We love CloudFormation, and use it a lot, but the JSON templates are hard to write and read, it's very hard to reuse things shared between stacks, and it's very easy to make simple typos which are not discovered until minutes into stack creation when things fail for seemingly crazy reasons.

Cumuliform is a tool to help eliminate as many sources of reference errors as possible, and to allow easier reuse of template parts between stacks. It provides a simple DSL that generates reliably valid JSON and enforces referential integrity through convenience wrappers around the common points where CloudFormation expects references between resources. provides.

Cumuliform was originally extracted from ops and deployment code at tape.tv

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'cumuliform'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install cumuliform

Getting started

You’ll probably want to familiarise yourself with the CloudFormation getting started guide if you haven’t already.

To quickly recap the key points for template authors:

  1. A template is a JSON file containing a single Object ({})
  2. The template object is split into specific sections through top-level properties (resources, parameters, mappings, and outputs).
  3. The things we’re actually interested in are object children of those top-level objects, and the keys (‘logical IDs’ in CloudFormation terms) must be unique across each of the four sections.
  4. Resources, parameters, and the like are just JSON Objects.
  5. CloudFormation provides what it calls ‘Intrinsic Functions’, e.g. Fn::Ref to define links and dependencies between your resources.
  6. Because a template is just a JSON object, it’s very easy to accidentally define a resource or parameter with the same logical id more than once, which results in a last-one-wins situation where the object defined latest in the file will obliterate the previously defined one.

Cumuliform provides DSL methods to define objects in each of the four sections, helps catch any duplicate logical IDs and provides wrappers for CloudFormation’s Intrinsic Functions that enforce referential integrity before you upload your template and start creating a stack with it.

The simplest possible template

Let’s define a very simple template consisting of one resource and one parameter

Cumuliform.template do
  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Description: 'The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)',
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-accff2b1'
    }
  end

  resource 'MyInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ref('AMI'),
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium'
      }
    }
  end
end

Processing the ruby source with cumuliform's command line runner gives us this JSON template:

$ cumuliform simplest.rb simplest.cform
{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  }
}

More detailed examples are below the section on Rake...

Rake tasks and the Command Line runner

Cumuliform provides a very simple command-line runner to turn a .rb template into JSON:

$ cumuliform /path/to/input_template.rb /path/to/output_template.json

It also provides a Rake task generator to create a Rake rule task to turn x.rb into x.cform:

require 'cumuliform/rake_task'

Cumuliform::RakeTask.rule '.cform' => '.rb'

To transform filename.rb into filename.cform:

$ rake filename.cform

If you haven't used Rake's rule tasks before, this Rake rules article from Avdi Grimm is a good place to start.

You'll almost certainly want something more sophisticated than that. Here's an example that declares the standard rule and adds a FileList to list the targets (CloudFormation templates you want to generate) based on your sources (Ruby Cumuliform template files). rake cform will transform all .rb files in the same dir as your Rakefile into the corresponding .cform files:

require 'cumuliform/rake_task'

Cumuliform::RakeTask.rule '.cform' => '.rb'

TARGETS = Rake::FileList['*.rb'].ext('.cform')

task :cform => TARGETS

Examples

Simple top-level object declarations

This example declares one of each of the top level objects Cumuliform supports. More details can be found in CloudFormation's Template Anatomy documentation.

Cumuliform.template do
  # See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/parameters-section-structure.html
  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Description: 'The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)',
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-accff2b1'
    }
  end

  # See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/mappings-section-structure.html
  mapping 'RegionAMI' do
    {
      'eu-central-1' => {
        'hvm' => 'ami-accff2b1',
        'pv' => 'ami-b6cff2ab'
      },
      'eu-west-1' => {
        'hvm' => 'ami-47a23a30',
        'pv' => 'ami-5da23a2a'
      }
    }
  end

  # See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/conditions-section-structure.html
  condition 'Ireland' do
    fn.equals(ref('AWS::Region'), 'eu-west-1')
  end

  # See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/resources-section-structure.html
  resource 'PrimaryInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ref('AMI'),
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium'
      }
    }
  end

  # See http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/outputs-section-structure.html
  output 'PrimaryInstanceID' do
    {
      Value: ref('PrimaryInstance')
    }
  end
end

The generated template is:

{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    }
  },
  "Mappings": {
    "RegionAMI": {
      "eu-central-1": {
        "hvm": "ami-accff2b1",
        "pv": "ami-b6cff2ab"
      },
      "eu-west-1": {
        "hvm": "ami-47a23a30",
        "pv": "ami-5da23a2a"
      }
    }
  },
  "Conditions": {
    "Ireland": {
      "Fn::Equals": [
        {
          "Ref": "AWS::Region"
        },
        "eu-west-1"
      ]
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "PrimaryInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  },
  "Outputs": {
    "PrimaryInstanceID": {
      "Value": {
        "Ref": "PrimaryInstance"
      }
    }
  }
}

Note that the optional AWSTemplateFormatVersion, and Metadata sections are not currently supported.

Here's a trivial template that specifies a Transform top-level value (e.g. for AWS SAM)

Cumuliform.template do
  transform 'AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31'
  resource 'MyFunction' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::Serverless::Function'
    }
  end
end

And the result:

{
  "Transform": "AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31",
  "Resources": {
    "MyFunction": {
      "Type": "AWS::Serverless::Function"
    }
  }
}

Intrinsic functions

Cumuliform provides convenience wrappers for all the intrinsic functions. See CloudFormation's Intrinsic Function documentation.

Cumuliform.template do
  mapping 'RegionAMI' do
    {
      'eu-central-1' => {
        'hvm' => 'ami-accff2b1',
        'pv' => 'ami-b6cff2ab'
      },
      'eu-west-1' => {
        'hvm' => 'ami-47a23a30',
        'pv' => 'ami-5da23a2a'
      }
    }
  end

  parameter 'VirtualizationMethod' do
    {
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'hvm'
    }
  end

  resource 'PrimaryInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: fn.find_in_map('RegionAMI', ref('AWS::Region'),
                                ref('VirtualizationMethod')),
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium',
        AvailabilityZone: fn.select(0, fn.get_azs),
        UserData: fn.base64(
          fn.join('', [
            "#!/bin/bash -xe\n",
            "apt-get update\n",
            "apt-get -y install python-pip python-docutils\n",
            "pip install https://s3.amazonaws.com/cloudformation-examples/aws-cfn-bootstrap-latest.tar.gz\n",
            "/usr/local/bin/cfn-init",
            " --region ", ref("AWS::Region"),
            " --stack ", ref("AWS::StackId"),
            " --resource #{xref('PrimaryInstance')}",
            " --configsets db"
          ])
        ),
        Metadata: {
          'AWS::CloudFormation::Init' => {
            configSets: { db: ['install'] },
            install: {
              commands: {
                '01-apt' => {
                  command: 'apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib'
                },
                '02-db' => {
                  command: 'sudo -u postgres createdb the-db'
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  end

  resource 'SiteDNS' do
    {
      Type: "AWS::Route53::RecordSet",
      Properties: {
        HostedZoneName: 'my-zone.example.org',
        Name: 'service.my-zone.example.org',
        ResourceRecords: [fn.get_att(xref('LoadBalancer'), 'DNSName')],
        TTL: '900',
        Type: 'CNAME'
      }
    }
  end

  resource 'LoadBalancer' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::ElasticLoadBalancing::LoadBalancer',
      Properties: {
        AvailabilityZones: [fn.select(0, fn.get_azs)],
        Listeners: [
          {
            InstancePort: 5432,
            Protocol: 'TCP'
          }
        ],
        Instances: [ref('PrimaryInstance')]
      }
    }
  end
end

The generated template is:

{
  "Parameters": {
    "VirtualizationMethod": {
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "hvm"
    }
  },
  "Mappings": {
    "RegionAMI": {
      "eu-central-1": {
        "hvm": "ami-accff2b1",
        "pv": "ami-b6cff2ab"
      },
      "eu-west-1": {
        "hvm": "ami-47a23a30",
        "pv": "ami-5da23a2a"
      }
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "PrimaryInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Fn::FindInMap": [
            "RegionAMI",
            {
              "Ref": "AWS::Region"
            },
            {
              "Ref": "VirtualizationMethod"
            }
          ]
        },
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium",
        "AvailabilityZone": {
          "Fn::Select": [
            "0",
            {
              "Fn::GetAZs": ""
            }
          ]
        },
        "UserData": {
          "Fn::Base64": {
            "Fn::Join": [
              "",
              [
                "#!/bin/bash -xe\n",
                "apt-get update\n",
                "apt-get -y install python-pip python-docutils\n",
                "pip install https://s3.amazonaws.com/cloudformation-examples/aws-cfn-bootstrap-latest.tar.gz\n",
                "/usr/local/bin/cfn-init",
                " --region ",
                {
                  "Ref": "AWS::Region"
                },
                " --stack ",
                {
                  "Ref": "AWS::StackId"
                },
                " --resource PrimaryInstance",
                " --configsets db"
              ]
            ]
          }
        },
        "Metadata": {
          "AWS::CloudFormation::Init": {
            "configSets": {
              "db": [
                "install"
              ]
            },
            "install": {
              "commands": {
                "01-apt": {
                  "command": "apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib"
                },
                "02-db": {
                  "command": "sudo -u postgres createdb the-db"
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    },
    "SiteDNS": {
      "Type": "AWS::Route53::RecordSet",
      "Properties": {
        "HostedZoneName": "my-zone.example.org",
        "Name": "service.my-zone.example.org",
        "ResourceRecords": [
          {
            "Fn::GetAtt": [
              "LoadBalancer",
              "DNSName"
            ]
          }
        ],
        "TTL": "900",
        "Type": "CNAME"
      }
    },
    "LoadBalancer": {
      "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancing::LoadBalancer",
      "Properties": {
        "AvailabilityZones": [
          {
            "Fn::Select": [
              "0",
              {
                "Fn::GetAZs": ""
              }
            ]
          }
        ],
        "Listeners": [
          {
            "InstancePort": 5432,
            "Protocol": "TCP"
          }
        ],
        "Instances": [
          {
            "Ref": "PrimaryInstance"
          }
        ]
      }
    }
  }
}

Condition functions

Cumuliform provides convenience wrappers for all the Condition-related intrinsic functions. See CloudFormation's Condition Function documentation.

Cumuliform.template do
  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-12345678'
    }
  end

  parameter 'UtilAMI' do
    {
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-abcdef12'
    }
  end

  parameter 'InstanceType' do
    {
      Description: "The instance type",
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'c4.large'
    }
  end

  condition 'InEU' do
    fn.or(
      fn.equals('eu-central-1', ref('AWS::Region')),
      fn.equals('eu-west-1', ref('AWS::Region'))
    )
  end

  condition 'UtilBox' do
    fn.and(
      fn.equals('m4.large', ref('InstanceType')),
      {"Condition": xref('InEU')}
    )
  end

  condition 'WebBox' do
    fn.not(ref('UtilBox'))
  end

  resource 'WebInstance' do
    {
      Type: "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      Condition: xref('WebBox'),
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ref('AMI'),
        InstanceType: ref('InstanceType')
      }
    }
  end

  resource 'UtilInstance' do
    {
      Type: "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      Condition: xref('UtilBox'),
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ref('UtilAMI'),
        InstanceType: ref('InstanceType')
      }
    }
  end
end

The generated template is:

{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-12345678"
    },
    "UtilAMI": {
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-abcdef12"
    },
    "InstanceType": {
      "Description": "The instance type",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "c4.large"
    }
  },
  "Conditions": {
    "InEU": {
      "Fn::Or": [
        {
          "Fn::Equals": [
            "eu-central-1",
            {
              "Ref": "AWS::Region"
            }
          ]
        },
        {
          "Fn::Equals": [
            "eu-west-1",
            {
              "Ref": "AWS::Region"
            }
          ]
        }
      ]
    },
    "UtilBox": {
      "Fn::And": [
        {
          "Fn::Equals": [
            "m4.large",
            {
              "Ref": "InstanceType"
            }
          ]
        },
        {
          "Condition": "InEU"
        }
      ]
    },
    "WebBox": {
      "Fn::Not": [
        {
          "Ref": "UtilBox"
        }
      ]
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "WebInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Condition": "WebBox",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": {
          "Ref": "InstanceType"
        }
      }
    },
    "UtilInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Condition": "UtilBox",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "UtilAMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": {
          "Ref": "InstanceType"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

xref

Quite often you'll need to use a Resource, Condition, or Parameter Logical ID outside of a { "Ref" => "LogicalID" }. Because Logical IDs are one of the things we can check at evaluation time, we provide a function that simply takes a Logical ID, checks it, then returns it. If the Logical ID isn't there then it explodes with a Cumuliform::Error::NoSuchLogicalId.

resource "Resource" do
  {
    Type: "AWS::EC2::Instance",
    Condition: xref("TheCondition")
  }
end

Fragments

You'll often want to use a collection of resources several times in a template, and it can be pretty verbose and tedious. Cumuliform offers reusable fragments to allow you to reuse similar template chunks.

You define them with def_fragment() and use them with fragment(). You pass a name and a block to def_fragment. You call fragment() with the name of a fragment and an optional hash of options to pass to the fragment block. The fragment block is called and its return value output into the template.

Here's an example:

Cumuliform.template do
  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Description: 'The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)',
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-accff2b1'
    }
  end

  def_fragment(:instance) do |opts|
    resource opts[:logical_id] do
      {
        Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
        Properties: {
          ImageId: ref('AMI'),
          InstanceType: opts[:instance_type]
        }
      }
    end
  end

  fragment(:instance, logical_id: 'LittleInstance', instance_type: 't2.micro')
  fragment(:instance, logical_id: 'BigInstance', instance_type: 'c4.xlarge')
end

And the output:

{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "LittleInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "t2.micro"
      }
    },
    "BigInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "c4.xlarge"
      }
    }
  }
}

Importing other templates

If you want to share complete resources, or fragments, between different templates then you can import one template into another. All the imported template's resources will be available to you, and you can override template parts (i.e. a parameter) or even fragments simply be defining them again in the importing template.

To import a template, you simply require it as you would any other ruby file, and then use Cumuliform's import method to import it.

This is easier to explain with an example. Take this very simple example, defining a single AWS::EC2::Instance in a resource, and a parameter that controls the AMI it uses:

BaseTemplate = Cumuliform.template do
  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Description: 'The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)',
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-accff2b1'
    }
  end

  resource 'MyInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ref('AMI'),
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium'
      }
    }
  end
end

It generates the following JSON (as expected):

{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "The AMI id for our template (defaults to the stock Ubuntu 14.04 image in eu-central-1)",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  }
}

Say we to change the default AMI parameter but reuse everything else. We can import that template and redefine the parameter:

require_relative './import-base.rb'

Cumuliform.template do
  import BaseTemplate

  parameter 'AMI' do
    {
      Description: 'A different AMI',
      Type: 'String',
      Default: 'ami-DIFFERENT'
    }
  end
end

That produces the following JSON:

{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "A different AMI",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-DIFFERENT"
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  }
}

There are a couple of very important points to note: First, we have to require the base template (exactly as you require any ruby file). Second, we have to assign the result of calling Cumuliform.template to a constant so that it is available once we've required the file.

In the importing template, once we have required the base template, we pass the constant containing the base template to the import DSL method.

Importing fragments

Fragments defined in a template are also available when imported. You can override fragments in the importing template as you would override a resource.

Here's a base template that defines several fragments (shown with the JSON it generates).

FragmentBaseTemplate = Cumuliform.template do
  def_fragment(:ami_param) do |opts|
    parameter 'AMI' do
      {
        Description: 'AMI id',
        Type: 'String',
        Default: opts[:ami_id]
      }
    end
  end

  def_fragment(:instance_type) do |opts|
    parameter 'InstanceType' do
      {
        Description: 'InstanceType',
        Type: 'String',
        Default: opts[:type],
        AllowedValues: ['t2.small', 't2.medium', 't2.large']
      }
    end
  end

  def_fragment(:instance) do |opts|
    resource 'MyInstance' do
      {
        Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
        Properties: {
          ImageId: ref('AMI'),
          InstanceType: ref('InstanceType')
        }
      }
    end
  end

  fragment(:ami_param, ami_id: 'ami-accff2b1')
  fragment(:instance_type, type: 't2.medium')
  fragment(:instance)
end
{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "AMI id",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    },
    "InstanceType": {
      "Description": "InstanceType",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "m4.medium",
      "AllowedValues": [
        "t2.small",
        "t2.medium",
        "t2.large"
      ]
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": {
          "Ref": "InstanceType"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

An importing template can use, or override, the fragments exactly as with any other resource:

require_relative './import-fragments-base.rb'

Cumuliform.template do
  import FragmentBaseTemplate

  def_fragment(:instance_type) do |opts|
    parameter 'InstanceType' do
      {
        Description: 'InstanceType',
        Type: 'String',
        Default: opts[:type],
        AllowedValues: ['m3.medium', 'm4.large', 'm4.xlarge']
      }
    end
  end

  fragment(:instance_type, type: 'm3.medium')
end
{
  "Parameters": {
    "AMI": {
      "Description": "AMI id",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "ami-accff2b1"
    },
    "InstanceType": {
      "Description": "InstanceType",
      "Type": "String",
      "Default": "m3.medium",
      "AllowedValues": [
        "m3.medium",
        "m4.large",
        "m4.xlarge"
      ]
    }
  },
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": {
          "Ref": "AMI"
        },
        "InstanceType": {
          "Ref": "InstanceType"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

We redefined the fragment so the allowed values for instance type allowed the instance type we wanted to use. (Using the fragments in the base template is a bit weird, and not really recommended - it's included here to warn you...)

Assigning templates to constants, namespaces, and processing

The Cumuliform.template method returns a template object directly. So, to make a template that can be imported into another template you need to assign it to a variable or constant.

If you want to be able to directly process your base templates (instead of only using them by importing them into another template), then you also need to make sure your file returns the template when it's run. The runner works by class_evaling your template file as a string and expecting that the result of that call will be an instance of Cumuliform::Template. If you use namespaces for your template objects (as you might if you have several base templates) then you need to be careful of that: the last line in your template must be something that returns the template. If you're nesting within modules, then the call to module will return nil, not the template. Instead, return the template as the last line:

module Stacks
  Base = Cumuliform.template do
    ...
  end
end

Stacks::Base

Helpers

Because templates are actually instances, not classes or modules, you can't simply include a mixin module. Cumuliform provides a helpers DSL method that allows you pass in modules, or block containing helper methods, that will be made available to the template:

Cumuliform.template do
  helpers do
    def ami
      'ami-accff2b1'
    end
  end

  resource 'MyInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ami,
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium'
      }
    }
  end
end

Which evaluates to:

{
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": "ami-accff2b1",
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  }
}

Or using a module:

module AmiHelper
  def ami
    'ami-accff2b1'
  end
end

Cumuliform.template do
  helpers AmiHelper

  resource 'MyInstance' do
    {
      Type: 'AWS::EC2::Instance',
      Properties: {
        ImageId: ami,
        InstanceType: 'm3.medium'
      }
    }
  end
end

Which also evaluates to:

{
  "Resources": {
    "MyInstance": {
      "Type": "AWS::EC2::Instance",
      "Properties": {
        "ImageId": "ami-accff2b1",
        "InstanceType": "m3.medium"
      }
    }
  }
}

Helper methods are not able to access any methods on the template (like resource), they're really for wrapping complex external calls (for example, a class that fetches an API token you need to use in your template).

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release to create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/tape-tv/cumuliform/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published