Note: This public repo contains the documentation for the private GitHub repo https://github.com/gruntwork-io/module-data-storage. We publish the documentation publicly so it turns up in online searches, but to see the source code, you must be a Gruntwork customer. If you're already a Gruntwork customer, the original source for this file is at: https://github.com/gruntwork-io/module-data-storage/blob/master/README.md. If you're not a customer, contact us at [email protected] or http://www.gruntwork.io for info on how to get access!
This repo contains modules for running relational databases such as MySQL, PostgreSQL, and Aurora on Amazon's Relational Database Service (RDS):
At Gruntwork, we've taken the thousands of hours we spent building infrastructure on AWS and condensed all that experience and code into pre-built packages or modules. Each module is a battle-tested, best-practices definition of a piece of infrastructure, such as a VPC, ECS cluster, or an Auto Scaling Group. Modules are versioned using Semantic Versioning to allow Gruntwork clients to keep up to date with the latest infrastructure best practices in a systematic way.
Most of our modules contain either:
- Terraform code
- Scripts & binaries
To use a module in your Terraform templates, create a module
resource and set its source
field to the Git URL of
this repo. You should also set the ref
parameter so you're fixed to a specific version of this repo, as the master
branch may have backwards incompatible changes (see module
sources).
For example, to use v1.0.8
of one of the data-storage modules, you would add the following:
module "postgres_prod" {
source = "git::[email protected]:gruntwork-io/module-data-storage.git//modules/rds?ref=v1.0.8"
// set the parameters for the rds module
}
Note: the double slash (//
) is intentional and required. It's part of Terraform's Git syntax (see module
sources).
See the module's documentation and vars.tf
file for all the parameters you can set. Run terraform get -update
to
pull the latest version of this module from this repo before running the standard terraform plan
and
terraform apply
commands.
NOTE: To automatically enforce terraform best practices, we recommend using terragrunt.
You can install the scripts and binaries in the modules
folder of any repo using the Gruntwork
Installer. For example, if the scripts you want to install are
in the modules/ecs-scripts
folder of the https://github.com/gruntwork-io/module-ecs repo, you could install them
as follows:
gruntwork-install --module-name "ecs-scripts" --repo "https://github.com/gruntwork-io/module-ecs" --tag "0.0.1"
See the docs for each script & binary for detailed instructions on how to use them.
Relational Database Service (RDS) is Amazon's implementation of a best-practices setup for the most popular databases including PostgreSQL, MySQL, Oracle, and SQL Server. RDS automatically includes real-time failover, makes it easy to add read replicas, automatically takes nightly snapshots, allows for easy database upgrades, and for easy machine upgrades.
You pay a small premium over running the services yourself and everything is pre-configured for you.
We are following the principles of Semantic Versioning. During initial development, the major
version is to 0 (e.g., 0.x.y
), which indicates the code does not yet have a stable API. Once we hit 1.0.0
, we will
follow these rules:
- Increment the patch version for backwards-compatible bug fixes (e.g.,
v1.0.8 -> v1.0.9
). - Increment the minor version for new features that are backwards-compatible (e.g.,
v1.0.8 -> 1.1.0
). - Increment the major version for any backwards-incompatible changes (e.g.
1.0.8 -> 2.0.0
).
The version is defined using Git tags. Use GitHub to create a release, which will have the effect of adding a git tag.
See the test folder for details.
Please see LICENSE.txt for details on how the code in this repo is licensed.