Command line interface for Amazon OpsWorks.
Run opsworks
with one of the following commands:
-
ssh
Generate and update SSH configuration files.Instances are added in stack order to the SSH configuration. If you have instances with the same name in multiple stacks, the one from the first stack will be used by SSH.
-
dsh
Generate and update dsh configuration files.Instances are added in stack order to the dsh machines.list in $HOME/.dsh, as per
ssh
above. A file is created in $HOME/.dsh/group for each layer in each stack.
This gem uses the same configuration file as the AWS CLI. This requires you to have a working AWS CLI setup before continuing.
Add the following section to ~/.aws/config
or to the file pointed out by the
AWS_CONFIG_FILE
environment variable:
[opsworks]
stack-id=<MY STACK IDs>
ssh-user-name=<MY SSH USER NAME>
The stack ID can be found in the stack settings, under OpsWorks ID (or in the
address bar of your browser as
console.aws.amazon.com/opsworks/home?#/stack/<STACK_ID>/stack
). You can add
several stack IDs belonging to the same IAM account separated by commas
(stack-id=STACK1,...,STACKN
). If no stack-id is specified all accessible stacks
are used.
The ssh-user-name
value should be set to the username you want to use when
logging in remotely, most probably the user name from your My Settings page
on OpsWorks.
Install for use on the command line (requires Ruby and Rubygems):
$ gem install opsworks
Then run opsworks
:
$ opsworks --help
To use the gem in a project, add this to your Gemfile
:
gem 'opsworks'
And then execute:
$ bundle
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request