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tf-aws-module_primitive-codepipeline

License License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Overview

This terraform module creates a CodePipeline pipeline.

Usage

A sample variable file example.tfvars is available in the root directory which can be used to test this module. User needs to follow the below steps to execute this module

  1. Update the example.tfvars to manually enter values for all fields marked within <> to make the variable file usable
  2. Create a file provider.tf with the below contents
     provider "aws" {
       profile = "<profile_name>"
       region  = "<region_name>"
     }
    
    If using SSO, make sure you are logged in aws sso login --profile <profile_name>
  3. Make sure terraform binary is installed on your local. Use command type terraform to find the installation location. If you are using asdf, you can run asfd install and it will install the correct terraform version for you. .tool-version contains all the dependencies.
  4. Run the terraform to provision infrastructure on AWS
    # Initialize
    terraform init
    # Plan
    terraform plan -var-file example.tfvars
    # Apply (this is create the actual infrastructure)
    terraform apply -var-file example.tfvars -auto-approve
    

Known Issues

  1. NA

Pre-Commit hooks

.pre-commit-config.yaml file defines certain pre-commit hooks that are relevant to terraform, golang and common linting tasks. There are no custom hooks added.

commitlint hook enforces commit message in certain format. The commit contains the following structural elements, to communicate intent to the consumers of your commit messages:

  • fix: a commit of the type fix patches a bug in your codebase (this correlates with PATCH in Semantic Versioning).
  • feat: a commit of the type feat introduces a new feature to the codebase (this correlates with MINOR in Semantic Versioning).
  • BREAKING CHANGE: a commit that has a footer BREAKING CHANGE:, or appends a ! after the type/scope, introduces a breaking API change (correlating with MAJOR in Semantic Versioning). A BREAKING CHANGE can be part of commits of any type. footers other than BREAKING CHANGE: may be provided and follow a convention similar to git trailer format.
  • build: a commit of the type build adds changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
  • chore: a commit of the type chore adds changes that don't modify src or test files
  • ci: a commit of the type ci adds changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
  • docs: a commit of the type docs adds documentation only changes
  • perf: a commit of the type perf adds code change that improves performance
  • refactor: a commit of the type refactor adds code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
  • revert: a commit of the type revert reverts a previous commit
  • style: a commit of the type style adds code changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
  • test: a commit of the type test adds missing tests or correcting existing tests

Base configuration used for this project is commitlint-config-conventional (based on the Angular convention)

If you are a developer using vscode, this plugin may be helpful.

detect-secrets-hook prevents new secrets from being introduced into the baseline. TODO: INSERT DOC LINK ABOUT HOOKS

In order for pre-commit hooks to work properly

  • You need to have the pre-commit package manager installed. Here are the installation instructions.
  • pre-commit would install all the hooks when commit message is added by default except for commitlint hook. commitlint hook would need to be installed manually using the command below
pre-commit install --hook-type commit-msg

To test the resource group module locally

  1. For development/enhancements to this module locally, you'll need to install all of its components. This is controlled by the configure target in the project's Makefile. Before you can run configure, familiarize yourself with the variables in the Makefile and ensure they're pointing to the right places.
make configure

This adds in several files and directories that are ignored by git. They expose many new Make targets.

  1. The first target you care about is env. This is the common interface for setting up environment variables. The values of the environment variables will be used to authenticate with cloud provider from local development workstation.

make configure command will bring down aws_env.sh file on local workstation. Developer would need to modify this file, replace the environment variable values with relevant values.

These environment variables are used by terratest integration suit.

Then run this make target to set the environment variables on developer workstation.

make env
  1. The first target you care about is check.

Pre-requisites Before running this target it is important to ensure that, developer has created files mentioned below on local workstation under root directory of git repository that contains code for primitives/segments. Note that these files are aws specific. If primitive/segment under development uses any other cloud provider than AWS, this section may not be relevant.

  • A file named provider.tf with contents below
provider "aws" {
  profile = "<profile_name>"
  region  = "<region_name>"
}
  • A file named terraform.tfvars which contains key value pair of variables used.

Note that since these files are added in gitignore they would not be checked in into primitive/segment's git repo.

After creating these files, for running tests associated with the primitive/segment, run

make check

If make check target is successful, developer is good to commit the code to primitive/segment's git repo.

make check target

  • runs terraform commands to lint,validate and plan terraform code.
  • runs conftests. conftests make sure policy checks are successful.
  • runs terratest. This is integration test suit.
  • runs opa tests

Know Issues

Currently, the encrypt at transit is not supported in terraform. There is an open issue for this logged with Hashicorp - hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws#26987

Requirements

Name Version
terraform ~> 1.0
aws >= 5.32.0
random >= 3.6.0

Providers

Name Version
aws 5.72.1
random 3.6.3

Modules

No modules.

Resources

Name Type
aws_codepipeline.this resource
aws_iam_role.codepipeline_role resource
aws_iam_role_policy.codepipeline_policy resource
random_string.random resource
aws_iam_policy_document.assume_role data source
aws_iam_policy_document.codepipeline_policy data source
aws_s3_bucket.artifact_bucket data source

Inputs

Name Description Type Default Required
name The name of the pipeline string n/a yes
artifact_stores One or more artifact_store blocks. list(map(string))
[
{
"use_kms": false
}
]
no
stages One or more stage blocks. any n/a yes
pipeline_type The CodePipeline pipeline_type. Valid options are V1, V2 string "V1" no
execution_mode The CodePipeline execution_mode. Valid options are PARALLEL, QUEUED, SUPERSEDED (default) string "SUPERSEDED" no
artifact_bucket_name the name of the S3 bucket used for storing the artifacts in the Codepipeline string n/a yes
tags An arbitrary map of tags that can be added to all resources. map(string) {} no

Outputs

Name Description
id The codepipeline ID
arn The codepipeline ARN

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 5