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How to deploy on AWS

Amazon Web Services is a popular subsidiary of Amazon that provides on-demand cloud computing platforms on a metered pay-as-you-go basis. Access the AWS web console at console.aws.amazon.com.

Summary


Install AWS and Juju tooling

Install Juju via snap:

sudo snap install juju --channel 3.5/stable

Follow the AWS documentation for guidance on how to install the Amazon Web Services CLI.

To check whether both Juju and AWS CLI are correctly installed, run commands to display their versions:

juju version

aws --version
Output example
3.5.4-genericlinux-amd64

aws-cli/2.13.25 Python/3.11.5 Linux/6.2.0-33-generic exe/x86_64.ubuntu.23 prompt/off

Authenticate

Create an IAM account or use legacy user access keys and secret key to operate AWS EC2:

mkdir -p ~/.aws && cat <<- EOF >  ~/.aws/credentials.yaml
credentials:
  aws:
    NAME_OF_YOUR_CREDENTIAL:
      auth-type: access-key
      access-key: SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_ID
      secret-key: SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_VALUE
EOF

Bootstrap Juju controller on AWS EC2

Add AWS credentials to Juju:

juju add-credential aws -f ~/.aws/credentials.yaml

Bootstrap Juju controller (check all supported configuration options):

juju bootstrap aws <CONTROLLER_NAME>
Output example
Creating Juju controller "aws-us-east-1" on aws/us-east-1
Looking for packaged Juju agent version 3.5.4 for amd64
Located Juju agent version 3.5.4-ubuntu-amd64 at https://juju-dist-aws.s3.amazonaws.com/agents/agent/3.5.4/juju-3.5.4-linux-amd64.tgz
Launching controller instance(s) on aws/us-east-1...
 - i-0f4615983d113166d (arch=amd64 mem=8G cores=2)           
Installing Juju agent on bootstrap instance
Waiting for address
Attempting to connect to 54.226.221.6:22
Attempting to connect to 172.31.20.34:22
Connected to 54.226.221.6
Running machine configuration script...
Bootstrap agent now started
Contacting Juju controller at 54.226.221.6 to verify accessibility...

Bootstrap complete, controller "aws-us-east-1" is now available
Controller machines are in the "controller" model

Now you can run
	juju add-model <model-name>
to create a new model to deploy workloads.

Deploy charms

Create a new Juju model, if needed:

juju add-model <MODEL_NAME>

(Optional) Increase the debug level if you are troubleshooting charms:

juju model-config logging-config='<root>=INFO;unit=DEBUG'

Deploy and integrate Kafka and ZooKeeper:

juju deploy zookeeper -n3 --channel 3/stable [--constraints "instance-type=<INSTANCE_TYPE>"] 
juju deploy kafka -n3 --channel 3/stable [--constraints "instance-type=<INSTANCE_TYPE>"]
juju integrate kafka zookeeper

The smallest AWS instance types may not provide sufficient resources to host a Kafka broker. We recommend choosing an instance type with a minimum of 8 GB of RAM and 4 CPU cores, such as m7i.xlarge.

For more guidance on sizing production environments, see the Requirements page. Additional information about AWS instance types is available in the AWS documentation.

We also recommend to deploy a Data Integrator for creating an admin user to manage the content of the Kafka cluster:

juju deploy data-integrator admin \
  --config extra-user-roles=admin \
  --config topic-name=admin-topic

And integrate it with the Kafka application:

juju integrate kafka admin

For more information on Data Integrator and how to use it, please refer to the how-to manage applications guide.

Clean up

Always clean AWS resources that are no longer necessary! Abandoned resources are tricky to detect and they can become expensive over time.

To list all controllers that have been registered to your local client, use the juju controllers command.

To destroy the Juju controller and remove AWS instance (Warning: all your data will be permanently deleted):

juju destroy-controller <CONTROLLER_NAME> --destroy-all-models --destroy-storage --force

Should the destroying process take a long time or be seemingly stuck, proceed to delete EC2 resources also manually via the AWS portal. See Amazon AWS documentation for more information on how to remove active resources no longer needed.

After destroying the controller, check and manually delete all unnecessary AWS EC2 instances, to show the list of all your EC2 instances run the following command (make sure to use the correct region):

aws ec2 describe-instances --region us-east-1 --query "Reservations[].Instances[*].{InstanceType: InstanceType, InstanceId: InstanceId, State: State.Name}" --output table
Output example
-------------------------------------------------------
|                  DescribeInstances                  |
+---------------------+----------------+--------------+
|     InstanceId      | InstanceType   |    State     |
+---------------------+----------------+--------------+
|  i-0f374435695ffc54c|  m7i.xlarge    |  terminated  |
|  i-0e1e8279f6b2a08e0|  m7i.xlarge    |  terminated  |
|  i-061e0d10d36c8cffe|  m7i.xlarge    |  terminated  |
|  i-0f4615983d113166d|  m7i.xlarge    |  terminated  |
+---------------------+----------------+--------------+

List your Juju credentials with the juju credentials command:

...
Client Credentials:
Cloud        Credentials
aws          NAME_OF_YOUR_CREDENTIAL
...

Remove AWS EC2 CLI credentials from Juju:

juju remove-credential aws NAME_OF_YOUR_CREDENTIAL

Finally, remove AWS CLI user credentials (to avoid forgetting and leaking):

rm -f ~/.aws/credentials.yaml

Last updated 3 days ago. Help improve this document in the forum.