A flexible easy to use set of AWS APIs.
ExAws.Cloudwatch
ExAws.Dynamo
ExAws.DynamoStreams
ExAws.ElasticTranscoder
ExAws.Firehose
ExAws.Kinesis
ExAws.KMS
ExAws.Lambda
ExAws.RDS
ExAws.Route53
ExAws.S3
ExAws.SES
ExAws.SNS
ExAws.SQS
ExAws.STS
ExAws.Cloudformation (BETA)
ExAws.EC2 (BETA)
ExAws.ECS (COMING SOON)
The v0.5
branch holds the legacy approach.
ExAws 1.0.0 takes a more data driven approach to querying APIs. The various
functions that exist inside a service like S3.list_objects
or
Dynamo.create_table
all return a struct which holds the information necessary
to make that particular operation.
You then have 4 ways you can choose to execute that operation:
# Simple
S3.list_buckets |> ExAws.request #=> {:ok, response}
# With per request configuration overrides
S3.list_buckets |> ExAws.request(config) #=> {:ok, response}
# Raise on error, return successful responses directly
S3.list_buckets |> ExAws.request! #=> response
S3.list_buckets |> ExAws.request!(config) #=> response
Certain operations also support Elixir streams:
S3.list_objects("my-bucket") |> ExAws.stream! #=> #Function<13.52451638/2 in Stream.resource/3>
S3.list_objects("my-bucket") |> ExAws.stream!(config) #=> #Function<13.52451638/2 in Stream.resource/3>
The ability to return a stream is noticed in the function's documentation.
TL;DR: Do this now:
ExAws.S3.get_object("my-bucket", "path/to/object") |> ExAws.request
not
ExAws.S3.get_object("my-bucket", "path/to/object")
This change greatly simplifies the ExAws code paths, and removes entirely the complex meta-programming pervasive to the original approach. However, it does constitute a breaking change for anyone who had a client with custom logic.
Lists are always encoded as dynamodb lists now. Previously if you had [1,2,3]
it would be encoded as an integer set. This had issues because if the list was
[1,2,1]
you could get an error because the items are not unique.
- Easy configuration.
- Minimal dependencies. Choose your favorite JSON codec and HTTP client.
- Elixir streams to automatically retrieve paginated resources.
- Elixir protocols allow easy customization of Dynamo encoding / decoding.
mix kinesis.tail your-stream-name
task for easily watching the contents of a kinesis stream.- Simple. ExAws aims to provide a clear and consistent elixir wrapping around AWS APIs, not abstract them away entirely. For every action in a given AWS API there is a corresponding function within the appropriate module. Higher level abstractions like the aforementioned streams are in addition to and not instead of basic API calls.
Add ex_aws to your mix.exs, along with your json parser and http client of choice. ExAws works out of the box with Poison and :hackney and sweet_xml. All APIs require an http client, but only some require a json or xml codec. You only need the codec for the API you intend to use. At this time only SweetXml is supported for xml parsing.
- Dynamo: json
- Kinesis: json
- Kms: json
- Lambda: json
- SQS: xml
- S3: xml
If you wish to use instance roles to obtain AWS access keys you will need to add a JSON codec whether the particular API requires one or not.
def deps do
[
{:ex_aws, "~> 1.0"},
{:poison, "~> 2.0"},
{:hackney, "~> 1.6"}
]
end
Don't forget to add :hackney to your applications list if that's in fact the
http client you choose. :ex_aws
must always be added to your applications
list.
def application do
[applications: [:ex_aws, :hackney, :poison]]
end
That's it!
ExAws has by default the equivalent including the following in your mix.exs
config :ex_aws,
access_key_id: [{:system, "AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"}, :instance_role],
secret_access_key: [{:system, "AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"}, :instance_role],
This means it will try to resolve credentials in order
- Look for the AWS standard
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
environment variables - Resolve credentials with IAM
- If running inside ECS and a task role has been assigned it will use it
- Otherwise it will fall back to the instance role
AWS CLI config files are supported, but require an additional dependency:
{:configparser_ex, "~> 0.2.1"}
You can then add {:awscli, "profile_name", timeout}
to the above config and it
will pull information from ~/.aws/config
and ~/.aws/credentials
config :ex_aws,
access_key_id: [{:system, "AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"}, {:awscli, "default", 30}, :instance_role],
secret_access_key: [{:system, "AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"}, {:awscli, "default", 30}, :instance_role],
ExAws will retry failed AWS API requests using exponential backoff per the "Full Jitter" formula described in https://www.awsarchitectureblog.com/2015/03/backoff.html
The algorithm uses three values, which are configurable:
# default values shown below
config :ex_aws, :retries,
max_attempts: 10,
base_backoff_in_ms: 10,
max_backoff_in_ms: 10_000
max_attempts
is the maximum number of possible attempts with backoffs in between each onebase_backoff_in_ms
corresponds to thebase
value described in the blog postmax_backoff_in_ms
corresponds to thecap
value described in the blog post
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2014 CargoSense, Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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