An ember-cli-deploy plugin to deploy ember-cli's bootstrap index file to S3.
This plugin uploads a file, presumably index.html, to a specified S3-bucket.
More often than not this plugin will be used in conjunction with the lightning method of deployment where the ember application assets will be served from S3 and the index.html file will also be served from S3.
A plugin is an addon that can be executed as a part of the ember-cli-deploy pipeline. A plugin will implement one or more of the ember-cli-deploy's pipeline hooks.
For more information on what plugins are and how they work, please refer to the Plugin Documentation.
To get up and running quickly, do the following:
-
Ensure ember-cli-deploy-build is installed and configured.
-
Ensure ember-cli-deploy-revision-data is installed and configured.
-
Ensure ember-cli-deploy-display-revisions is installed and configured.
-
Install this plugin
$ ember install ember-cli-deploy-s3-index
- Place the following configuration into
config/deploy.js
ENV['s3-index'] = {
accessKeyId: '<your-access-key>',
secretAccessKey: '<your-secret>',
bucket: '<your-bucket-name>',
region: '<your-bucket-region>'
}
- Run the pipeline
$ ember deploy
For detailed information on what plugin hooks are and how they work, please refer to the Plugin Documentation.
configure
upload
activate
fetchRevisions
For detailed information on how configuration of plugins works, please refer to the Plugin Documentation.
**WARNING: Don't share a configuration object between [ember-cli-deploy-s3](https://github.com/ember-cli-deploy/ember-cli-deploy-s3) and this plugin. The way these two plugins read their configuration has sideeffects which will unfortunately break your deploy if you share one configuration object between the two** (we are already working on a fix)
The AWS access key for the user that has the ability to upload to the bucket
. If this is left undefined, the normal AWS SDK credential resolution will take place.
Default: undefined
The AWS secret for the user that has the ability to upload to the bucket
. This must be defined when accessKeyId
is defined.
Default: undefined
The AWS profile as definied in ~/.aws/credentials. If this is left undefined, the normal AWS SDK credential resolution will take place.
Default: undefined
The AWS bucket that the files will be uploaded to.
Default: undefined
The region your bucket is located in. (e.g. set this to eu-west-1
if your bucket is located in the 'Ireland' region)
Default: undefined
A directory within the bucket
that the files should be uploaded in to.
Default: ''
A file matching this pattern will be uploaded to S3. The active key in S3 will be a combination of the bucket
, prefix
, filePattern
. The versioned keys will have revisionKey
appended.
Default: 'index.html'
The ACL to apply to the objects.
Default: 'public-read'
Sets the Cache-Control
header on uploaded files.
Default: 'max-age=0, no-cache'
The root directory where the file matching filePattern
will be searched for. By default, this option will use the distDir
property of the deployment context.
Default: context.distDir
The unique revision number for the version of the file being uploaded to S3. The key will be a combination of the keyPrefix
and the revisionKey
. By default this option will use either the revision
passed in from the command line or the revisionData.revisionKey
property from the deployment context.
Default: context.commandOptions.revision || context.revisionData.revisionKey
A flag to specify whether the revision should be overwritten if it already exists in S3.
Default: false
The underlying S3 library used to upload the files to S3. This allows the user to use the default upload client provided by this plugin but switch out the underlying library that is used to actually send the files.
The client specified MUST implement functions called getObject
and putObject
.
Default: the default S3 library is aws-sdk
The Server-side encryption algorithm used when storing this object in S3 (e.g., AES256, aws:kms). Possible values include:
- "AES256"
- "aws:kms"
A user can activate a revision by either:
- Passing a command line argument to the
deploy
command:
$ ember deploy --activate=true
- Running the
deploy:activate
command:
$ ember deploy:activate --revision <revision-key>
- Setting the
activateOnDeploy
flag indeploy.js
ENV.pipeline = {
activateOnDeploy: true
}
When ember-cli-deploy-s3-index uploads a file to S3, it uploads it under the key defined by a combination of the four config properties bucket
, prefix
, filePattern
and revisionKey
.
So, if the filePattern
was configured to be index.html
and there had been a few revisons deployed, then your bucket might look something like this:
$ aws s3 ls s3://<bucket>/
PRE assets/
2015-09-27 07:25:26 585 crossdomain.xml
2015-09-27 07:47:42 1207 index.html
2015-09-27 07:25:51 1207 index.html:a644ba43cdb987288d646c5a97b1c8a9
2015-09-27 07:20:27 1207 index.html:61cfff627b79058277e604686197bbbd
2015-09-27 07:19:11 1207 index.html:9dd26dbc8f3f9a8a342d067335315a63
Activating a revision would copy the content of the passed revision to index.html
which is used to host your ember application via the static web hosting feature built into S3.
$ ember deploy:activate --revision a644ba43cdb987288d646c5a97b1c8a9
Activation occurs during the activate
hook of the pipeline. By default, activation is turned off and must be explicitly enabled by one of the 3 methods above.
The following properties are expected to be present on the deployment context
object:
distDir
(provided by ember-cli-deploy-build)project.name()
(provided by ember-cli-deploy)revisionKey
(provided by ember-cli-deploy-revision-data)commandLineArgs.revisionKey
(provided by ember-cli-deploy)deployEnvironment
(provided by ember-cli-deploy)
This plugin requires the following permissions on your Amazon S3 access policy:
- For the bucket:
- s3:ListBucket
- For the files on the bucket:
- s3:GetObject
- s3:PutObject
- s3:PutObjectACL
The following is an example policy that meets these requirements:
{
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "Stmt1EmberCLIS3IndexDeployPolicy",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:GetObject",
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:PutObjectACL",
"s3:ListBucket"
],
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:s3:::<your-bucket-name>",
"arn:aws:s3:::<your-bucket-name>/*"
]
}
]
}
You can deploy your Ember application to S3 and still use the history-api for pretty URLs. This needs some configuration and the exact process depends on whether or not you are using Cloudfront to serve cached content from your S3 bucket or if you are serving from an S3 bucket directly using S3's Static Website Hosting option. Both options work, however, the Cloudfront method allows the process to occur without flashing a non-pretty URL in the browser before the application loads.
A Cloudfront Custom Error Response can handle catching the 404 error that occurs when a request is made to a pretty URL and can allow that request to be handled by index.html and in turn Ember.
A Custom Error Response can be created for your CloudFront distrubution in the AWS console by navigating to:
Cloudfront > Distribution ID
> Error Pages > Create Custom Error Response.
You will want to use the following values.
- HTTP Error Code:
404: Not Found
- Customized Error Response:
Yes
- Response Page Path:
/index.html
- HTTP Response Code:
200: OK
From within the Static Website Hosting options for your S3 bucket, you can use S3's Redirection Rules
-feature to redirect user's to the correct route based on the URL they are requesting from your app:
<RoutingRules>
<RoutingRule>
<Condition>
<HttpErrorCodeReturnedEquals>403</HttpErrorCodeReturnedEquals>
</Condition>
<Redirect>
<HostName><your-bucket-endpoint-from-static-website-hosting-options></HostName>
<ReplaceKeyPrefixWith>#/</ReplaceKeyPrefixWith>
</Redirect>
</RoutingRule>
</RoutingRules>
If you'd like to be able to preview a deployed revision before activation, you'll need some additional setup. See this article for more information.
npm test