Automates AWS to create a reverse proxy for HTTPS requests from a public DNS record to your service running on localhost:port
.
for example:
https://api.dev.yourdomain.com -> localhost:4000
- node > v20.0.0
- terraform > v1.5.7
Git clone
git clone [email protected]:nelsonenzo/tolocal.git
Make tolocal a command
npm link
Configure tolocal using the interactive cli
tolocal config
since it's running terraform under the hood, apply like you do terraform
tolocal apply
This will open the SSH tunnel
tolocal up
tolocal is an npm cli that wraps terraform.
The terraform creates:
- an ec2 with nginx
- a security group
- dns records
Use tolocal config
and it will prompt you for all the necessary aws config variables.
It queries your aws account as it goes, so it's super simple to select your vpc, public subnet, and dns hostzone.
tolocal config [--dev]
tolocal apply
tolocal up
tolocal destroy
tolocal help
tolocal config
the config command will
- prompt for aws info:
- profile
- region
- vpc
- PUBLIC subnet
- route53 dns host zone
- prompt for subdomains=localport mappings
- prompt for your ssh public and private key file locations
- your public key goes on the ec2, your private key is used to start ssh tunnels.
tolocal apply
This opens an ssh reverse tunel. If you run ps aux
, you will see it running in the background:
ssh -i ~/.ssh/private-ssh.key -N -R :8001:localhost:4000 [email protected]
This ssh tunnel is how tolocal can securely usher traffic to your http service on localhost.
tolocal up
To stop paying for the t2.micro (~$8/mo when run 24/7*30) by destroying the infra.
tolocal destroy
You don't need to run config if nothing has changed.
tolocal apply
tolocal up
- t2.micro ec2 running nginx
- ec2 security group
- route53 dns records
No, an existing route53 dns host zone is required.
- http is redirected to https
- https is resolved with Lets Encrypt certbot on ec2 creation.
get started
git clone [email protected]:nelsonenzo/tolocal.git
cd tolocal
npm link
For the initial config, run
tolocal config
Copy terraform.tfvars.json to the github repo terraform/terraform.tfvars.json
cp $HOME/.tolocal/terraform.tfvars.json ./terraform/terraform.tfvars.json
You can now edit that local terraform/terraform.tfvars.json file and run:
tolocal config --dev
This coppies the usual required template files + your json config, and skips prompts. It just makes development easier.
You can explore your $HOME/.tolocal directory to see what is created at any time.
Terraforms state is stored in that directory after tolocal apply
cd ~/.tolocal
~/.tolocal$ tree
.
├── main.tf
├── terraform.tfstate
├── terraform.tfstate.backup
├── terraform.tfvars.json
└── user_data.sh.tpl
if you are an npm collaborator on tolocal
npm publish --access public