This repo contains the sample code for the talk Infrastructure-as-code: running microservices on AWS with Docker, Terraform, and ECS. It includes a couple sample Dockerized microservices and the Terraform code to deploy them on AWS:
Note: This repo is for demonstration purposes only and should NOT be used to run anything important. For production-ready version of this code and many other types of infrastructure, check out Gruntwork.
To run the rails-frontend and sinatra-backend on your local dev box:
- Install Docker.
docker-compose up
- Test sinatra-backend by going to http://localhost:4567.
- Test the rails-frontend (and its connectivity to the sinatra-backend) by going to http://localhost:3000.
The docker-compose.yml
file mounts rails-frontend
and sinatra-backend
folders as volumes in each Docker image, so
any changes you make to the apps on your host OS will automatically be reflected in the running Docker container. This
lets you do iterative "make-a-change-and-refresh" style development.
To deploy the microservices to your AWS account, see the terraform-configurations README.
By default, docker-compose.yml and the terraform-configurations
are using the gruntwork/rails-frontend
and gruntwork/sinatra-backend
Docker images. These are images I pushed to
the Gruntwork Docker Hub account to make it easy for you to
try this repo quickly. Obviously, in the real world, you'll want to use your own images instead.
Follow Docker's documentation to create your own Docker images and fill in the new image id and tag in:
docker-compose.yml
: theimage
attribute forrails_frontend
orsinatra_backend
.terraform-configurations/terraform.tfvars
: therails_frontend_image
andrails_frontend_version
orsinatra_backend_image
andsinatra_backend_version
variables.
Here's an overview of what's in this repo:
-
An example sinatra-backend microservice that just returns the text "Hello, World". This app includes a Dockerfile to package it as a Docker container.
-
An example rails-frontend microservice that makes an HTTP call to the sinatra-backend and renders the result as HTML. This app includes a Dockerfile to package it as a Docker container.
-
A docker-compose.yml file to deploy both Docker containers so you can see how the two microservices work together in the development environment. To allow the services to talk to each other, we are using Docker Links as a simple "service discovery" mechanism.
-
Terraform configurations to deploy both Docker containers on Amazon's EC2 Container Service (ECS) so you can see how the two microservices work together in the production environment. To allow the services to talk to each other, we deploy an Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) in front of each service and use Terraform to pass the ELB URLs between services. We are using the same environment variables as Docker Links, so this acts as a simple "service discovery" mechanism that works in both dev and prod.
For more info, check out the talk Infrastructure-as-code: running microservices on AWS with Docker, Terraform, and ECS, including the video and slides. For a deeper look at Terraform, check out the book Terraform: Up & Running.