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ansible/cloud/amazon/GUIDELINES.md

2.3 KiB

Guidelines for AWS modules

Naming your module

Base the name of the module on the part of AWS that you actually use. (A good rule of thumb is to take whatever module you use with boto as a starting point).

Don't further abbreviate names - if something is a well known abbreviation due to it being a major component of AWS, that's fine, but don't create new ones independently (e.g. VPC, ELB, etc. are fine)

Using boto

Wrap the import statements in a try block and fail the module later on if the import fails

try:
    import boto
    import boto.module.that.you.use
    HAS_BOTO = True
except ImportError:
    HAS_BOTO = False

<lots of code here>

def main():
    argument_spec = ec2_argument_spec()
    argument_spec.update(
        dict(
            module_specific_parameter=dict(),
        )
    )

    module = AnsibleModule(
        argument_spec=argument_spec,
    )
    if not HAS_BOTO:
        module.fail_json(msg='boto required for this module')

Try and keep backward compatibility with relatively recent versions of boto. That means that if want to implement some functionality that uses a new feature of boto, it should only fail if that feature actually needs to be run, with a message saying which version of boto is needed.

Use feature testing (e.g. hasattr('boto.module', 'shiny_new_method')) to check whether boto supports a feature rather than version checking

e.g. from the ec2 module:

if boto_supports_profile_name_arg(ec2):
    params['instance_profile_name'] = instance_profile_name
else:
    if instance_profile_name is not None:
        module.fail_json(
            msg="instance_profile_name parameter requires Boto version 2.5.0 or higher")

Connecting to AWS

For EC2 you can just use

ec2 = ec2_connect(module)

For other modules, you should use get_aws_connection_info and then connect_to_aws. To connect to an example xyz service:

region, ec2_url, aws_connect_params = get_aws_connection_info(module)
xyz = connect_to_aws(boto.xyz, region, **aws_connect_params)

The reason for using get_aws_connection_info and connect_to_aws (and even ec2_connect uses those under the hood) rather than doing it yourself is that they handle some of the more esoteric connection options such as security tokens and boto profiles.