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Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at brightinventions.pl

How to call a load balanced ECS service?

A service running ECS can call plethora of AWS APIs. It can read messages from queues, publish messages to SNS topics, query a database. These are all valid ways to communicate with the service. However, often the most appropriate way is to call the service by an HTTP API. In this post I'll describe how to configure an ECS service running inside VPC so that other services can call its API.

containers

Deploy an ECS service to multiple hosts

Whenever we care about availability of a service running inside AWS, we need to have it running in at least 2 availability zones. For that reason when defining the ECS Cluster Auto Scaling Group we need to specify at least 2 VPC Subnets running in different availability zones.

"ECSMainCluster": {
    "Type": "AWS::ECS::Cluster",
    "Properties": { "ClusterName": "Main Cluster" }
},
"ECSAutoScalingGroup": {
    "Type": "AWS::AutoScaling::AutoScalingGroup",
    "Properties": {
        "VPCZoneIdentifier": [
            { "Ref": "PrivateASubnet" },
            { "Ref": "PrivateBSubnet" }
        ],
        "LaunchConfigurationName": { "Ref": "ContainerHostInstances" },
        "MinSize": "2",
        "MaxSize": "6",
        "DesiredCapacity": "2"                
    }
},
"ServiceA": {
    "Type": "AWS::ECS::Service",
    "Properties": {
        "Cluster": { "Ref": "ECSMainCluster" },
        "DesiredCount": 2,
        "LoadBalancers": [{
            "ContainerName": "serviceA",
            "ContainerPort": 8080,
            "TargetGroupArn": { "Ref": "ServiceAAlbTargetGroup" }
        }],
        "DeploymentConfiguration": { "MinimumHealthyPercent": 50 },
        "Role": { "Ref": "ECSServiceRole" },
        "TaskDefinition": { "Ref": "ServiceATask" }
    }
}
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Notice how we are using 2 private subnets as VPCZoneIdentifier. The MinSize is also set to 2 which will cause both availability zones to have at least 1 instance running. For brevity subnets and VPC definitions are not included. You can find more details about how to configure the EC2 instances inside ECS cluster in my previous post.

The ServiceA deployed in ECSMainCluster is also specifying that at it has DesiredCount of 2 which instructs ECS to have at least 2 instances of the service running. The LoadBalancers and Role attributes are required for the load balanced setup. The ECSServiceRole must allow the ECS agent to make calls to the load balancer API. The LoadBalancers reference an ALB target group to which the running ECS task should be added.

A private load balancer

In order for us to be able to call an API exposed by ECS service running on multiple instances we will use an internal Application Load Balancer. By internal, I mean that the load balancer will not be accessible outside of the VPC.

"PrivateApiLoadBalancer": {
    "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::LoadBalancer",
    "Properties": {
        "Subnets": [
            { "Ref": "PrivateASubnet" },
            { "Ref": "PrivateBSubnet" }
        ],
        "Name": "PrivateApiLoadBalancer",
        "Scheme": "internal",
        "SecurityGroups": [{
            "Ref": "HttpHttpsProxySecurityGroup"
        }]
    }
},
"HttpHttpsProxySecurityGroup": {
    "Type": "AWS::EC2::SecurityGroup",
    "Properties": {
        "GroupDescription": "Enable http and https access",
        "VpcId": { "Ref": "VPC" },
        "SecurityGroupIngress": [{
            "IpProtocol": "tcp", "FromPort": "80", "ToPort": "80",
            "CidrIp": { "Ref": "VPCCidr" }
        }, {
            "IpProtocol": "tcp", "FromPort": "443", "ToPort": "443",
            "CidrIp": { "Ref": "VPCCidr" }
        }],
        "SecurityGroupEgress": [{
            "IpProtocol": "-1",
            "CidrIp": { "Ref": "VPCCidr" }
        }]
    }
}
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There are only 2 important aspects to the PrivateApiLoadBalancer. First, it is attached to the same subnets as our ECS task definition. Secondly, it has a security group configured which allows for incoming HTTP/HTTPS traffic and outgoing traffic to any IP in the VPC CIDR address. The egress rule is required for the load balancer to be able to check the health of its targets.

For the load balancer to perform some actions we need to configure listeners that define its behavior in response to incoming traffic.

"PrivateApiLoadBalancerHttpListener": {
    "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::Listener",
    "Properties": {
        "Port": 80,
        "Protocol": "HTTP",
        "LoadBalancerArn": { "Ref": "PrivateApiLoadBalancer" },
        "DefaultActions": [{
            "Type": "forward",
            "TargetGroupArn": {
                "Ref": "PrivateApiLoadBalancerInvalidHostGroup"
            }
        }]
    }
},
"PrivateApiLoadBalancerInvalidHostGroup": {
    "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::TargetGroup",
    "Properties": {
        "Protocol": "HTTP",
        "Port": 80,
        "VpcId": { "Ref": "VPC" },
        "Name": "invalid-target-group"
    }
}
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The PrivateApiLoadBalancerHttpListener specifies that the HTTP request to PrivateApiLoadBalancer on port 80 should be routed to PrivateApiLoadBalancerInvalidHostGroup. The AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::Listener requires us to set the DefaultActions. The above setup allows us to fail in a consistent manner. Unless there are AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::ListenerRule which match an incoming the HTTP request it will be routed to an empty AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::TargetGroup which in turn will result in 502 Bad Gateway. This allows us to effectively decouple the DefaultActions of the load balancer listener from a specific ECS service instance.

Attach ECS service to an Application Load Balancer

It is time to route a request from the Application Load Balancer to the ECS service instances. The AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::ListenerRule allows us to configure such behavior:

"ServiceAAlbHttpListenerRule": {
    "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::ListenerRule",
    "Properties": {
        "Actions": [{
            "Type": "forward",
            "TargetGroupArn": { "Ref": "ServiceAAlbTargetGroup" }
        }],
        "Priority": 1,
        "Conditions": [{
            "Field": "host-header",
            "Values": [ "service-a.in.example.com"]
        }],
        "ListenerArn": {
            "Ref": "PrivateApiLoadBalancerHttpListener"
        }
    }
},
"ServiceAAlbTargetGroup": {
    "Type": "AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::TargetGroup",
    "Properties": {
        "Protocol": "HTTP",
        "Port": 8080,
        "HealthCheckPath": "/application-status/health",
        "HealthyThresholdCount": 2,
        "UnhealthyThresholdCount": 10,
        "HealthCheckIntervalSeconds": 5,
        "HealthCheckTimeoutSeconds": 4,
        "VpcId": { "Ref": "VPC" },
        "Name": "service-a-target-group"
    }
}
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The ServiceAAlbHttpListenerRule states that any request with a Host equal to service-a.in.example.com should be routed to an instance from the ServiceAAlbTargetGroup. The ServiceAAlbTargetGroup group is referenced from the ServiceA definition and contains all running and healthy instances of our task. This means that in order to call the HTTP API exposed by ServiceA we will simply use the service-a.in.example.com domain name.

A private DNS record

The last part is to define a Private Hosted Zone and a DNS Record Set so that a DNS look up, happening inside the VPC, for service-a.in.example.com results in an IP address of the PrivateApiLoadBalancer.

"PrivateHostedZone": {
    "Type": "AWS::Route53::HostedZone",
    "Properties": {
        "VPCs": [{
            "VPCId": { "Ref": "VPC" },
            "VPCRegion": { "Ref": "AWS::Region" }
        }],
        "Name": "in.example.com"
    }
},
 "ServiceALoadBalancerDNSRecord": {
    "Type": "AWS::Route53::RecordSet",
    "Properties": {
        "Name": "service-a.in.example.com",
        "HostedZoneId": { "Ref": "PrivateHostedZone" },
        "ResourceRecords": [{
            "Fn::GetAtt": ["PrivateApiLoadBalancer", "DNSName"]
        }],
        "TTL": 60,
        "Type": "CNAME"
    }
}
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The PrivateHostedZone merely defines the name of the domain which we will use for addressing ECS services running inside our VPC. It is recommended to use a domain name that you control so that a mistake in the DNS configuration will not cause your services to call an address that you do not own. The ServiceALoadBalancerDNSRecord defines a CNAME that uses PrivateApiLoadBalancer AWS assigned DNS name. This way the lookup for service-a.in.example.com will effectively resolve to multiple IPs in different availability zones.

With the above configuration in place we can call an HTTP API exposed privately by a load balanced service running inside VPC on ECS cluster using the most natural way i.e. a DNS name.

Originally published at brightinventions.pl

By Piotr Mionskowski, Software Engineer @ Bright Inventions
Email Stackoverflow Personal blog

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