This package provides a schema and related functions that allow you to parse and serialize CloudFormation templates in golang. The package places an emphasis on type-safety so that the templates it produces are (slightly) more likely to be correct, and maybe you can avoid endless cycles of UPDATE_ROLLBACK_IN_PROGRESS
.
Parsing example:
t := Template{}
json.NewDecoder(os.Stdin).Decode(&t)
fmt.Printf("DNS name: %s\n", t.Parameters["DnsName"].Default)
Producing Example:
t := NewTemplate()
t.Parameters["DnsName"] = &Parameter{
Type: "string",
Default: "example.com",
Description: "the top level DNS name for the service"
}
t.AddResource("DataBucket", &S3Bucket{
BucketName: Join("-", String("data"), Ref("DnsName"))
})
json.NewEncoder(os.Stdout).Encoder(t)
See the examples directory for a more complete example of producing a cloudformation template from code.
As far as I can tell, AWS do not produce a structured document that describes the CloudFormation schema. The names and types for the various resources and objects are derived from scraping their HTML documentation (see scraper/). It is mostly, but not entirely, complete. I've noticed several inconsistencies in the documentation which suggests that it is constructed by hand. If you run into problems, please submit a bug (or better yet, a pull request).
Top level objects in CloudFormation are called resources. They have names like AWS::S3::Bucket and appear as values in the "Resources" mapping. We remove the punctuation and redundant words from the name to derive a golang structure name like S3Bucket.
There are other non-resource structs that are refered to by resources or other non-resource structs. These objects have names with spaces in them, like "Amazon S3 Versioning Configuration". To derive a golang type name the non-letter characters and redundant words are removed to get S3VersioningConfiguration.
CloudFormation uses three scalar types: string, int and bool. When
they appear as properties we represent them as *StringExpr
, *IntegerExpr
,
and *BoolExpr
respectively.
type StringExpr struct {
Func StringFunc
Literal string
}
// StringFunc is an interface provided by objects that represent
// CloudFormation functions that can return a string value.
type StringFunc interface {
Func
String() *StringExpr
}
These types reflect that fact that a scalar type could be a literal value ("us-east-1"
) or a JSON dictionary representing a "function call" ({"Ref": "AWS::Region"}
).
Another vagary of the CloudFormation language is that in cases where
a list of objects is expected, a single object can provided. For example,
AutoScalingLaunchConfiguration
has a property BlockDeviceMappings
which is a list of AutoScalingBlockDeviceMapping
. Valid CloudFormation documents can specify a single AutoScalingBlockDeviceMapping
rather than a list. To model this, we use a custom type AutoScalingBlockDeviceMappingList
which is just a []AutoScalingBlockDeviceMapping
with extra functions attached so that a single items an be unserialized. JSON produced by this package will always be in the list-of-objects form, rather than the single object form.
The cloudformation.String("foo")
is cumbersome for scalar literals. On balance, I think it is the best way to handle the vagaries of the CloudFormation syntax, but that doesn't make it less kludgy. A similar approach is taken by aws-sdk-go (and is similarly cumbersome).
There are some types that are not parsed fully and appear as interface{}
.
I worked through public template files I could find, making sure the library could accurately serialize and unserialize them. In this process I discovered some of the idiosyncracies described. This package works for our purposes, but I wouldn't be surprised if there are more idiosyncracies hidden in parts of CloudFormation we are not using.
Feedback, bug reports and pull requests are gratefully accepted.