Create a trigger for a CodeDeploy event (original) (raw)
You can create a trigger that publishes an Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic for a AWS CodeDeploy deployment or instance event. Then, when that event occurs, all subscribers to the associated topic receive notifications through the endpoint specified in the topic, such as an SMS message or email message. Amazon SNS offers multiple methods for subscribing to topics.
Before you create a trigger, you must set up the Amazon SNS topic for the trigger to point to. For information, see Create a topic. When you create a topic, we recommend you give it a name that identifies its purpose, in formats such asTopic-group-us-west-3-deploy-fail
orTopic-group-project-2-instance-stop
.
You must also grant Amazon SNS permissions to a CodeDeploy service role before notifications can be sent for your trigger. For information, see Grant Amazon SNS permissions to a CodeDeploy service role.
After you have created the topic, you can add subscribers. For information about creating, managing, and subscribing to topics, see What is Amazon Simple Notification Service.
Create a trigger to send notifications for CodeDeploy events (console)
You can use the CodeDeploy console to create triggers for a CodeDeploy event. At the end of the setup process, a test notification message is sent to ensure that both permissions and trigger details are set up correctly.
To create a trigger for a CodeDeploy event
- In the AWS Management Console, open the AWS CodeDeploy console.
- Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the CodeDeploy console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/codedeploy.
- In the navigation pane, expand Deploy, then choose Applications.
- On the Applications page, choose the name of the application associated with the deployment group where you want to add a trigger.
- On the Application details page, choose the deployment group where you want to add a trigger.
- Choose Edit.
- Expand Advanced - optional.
- In the Triggers area, choose Create trigger.
- In Create deployment trigger pane, do the following:
- In Trigger name, enter a name for the trigger that makes it easy to identify its purpose. We recommend formats such as
Trigger-group-us-west-3-deploy-fail
orTrigger-group-eu-central-instance-stop
. - In Events, choose the event type or types to trigger the Amazon SNS topic to send notifications.
- In Amazon SNS topics, choose the name of topic you created for sending notifications for this trigger.
- Choose Create trigger. CodeDeploy sends a test notification to confirm you have correctly configured access between CodeDeploy and the Amazon SNS topic. Depending on the endpoint type you selected for the topic, and if you are subscribed to the topic, you receive confirmation in an SMS message or email message.
- In Trigger name, enter a name for the trigger that makes it easy to identify its purpose. We recommend formats such as
- Choose Save changes.
Create a trigger to send notifications for CodeDeploy events (CLI)
You can use the CLI to include triggers when you create a deployment group, or you can add triggers to an existing deployment group.
To create a trigger to send notifications for a new deployment group
Create a JSON file to configure the deployment group, and then run thecreate-deployment-group command using the--cli-input-json
option.
The simplest way to create the JSON file is to use the--generate-cli-skeleton
option to get a copy of the JSON format, and then provide the required values in a plain-text editor.
- Run the following command, and then copy the results into a plain-text editor.
aws deploy create-deployment-group --generate-cli-skeleton
- Add the name of an existing CodeDeploy application to the output:
{
"applicationName": "TestApp-us-east-2",
"deploymentGroupName": "",
"deploymentConfigName": "",
"ec2TagFilters": [
{
"Key": "",
"Value": "",
"Type": ""
}
],
"onPremisesInstanceTagFilters": [
{
"Key": "",
"Value": "",
"Type": ""
}
],
"autoScalingGroups": [
""
],
"serviceRoleArn": "",
"triggerConfigurations": [
{
"triggerName": "",
"triggerTargetArn": "",
"triggerEvents": [
""
]
}
]
}
- Provide values for the parameters you want to configure.
When you use the create-deployment-group command, you must provide, at a minimum, values for the following parameters:applicationName
: The name of an application already created in your account.deploymentGroupName
: A name for the deployment group you are creating.serviceRoleArn
: The ARN of an existing service role set up for CodeDeploy in your account. For information, seeStep 2: Create a service role for CodeDeploy.
In thetriggerConfigurations
section, provide values for the following parameters:triggerName
: The name you want to give the trigger so you can easily identify it. We recommend formats such asTrigger-group-us-west-3-deploy-fail
orTrigger-group-eu-central-instance-stop
.triggerTargetArn
: The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic you created to associate with your trigger, in this format:arn:aws:sns:us-east-2:444455556666:NewTestTopic
.triggerEvents
: The type of event or events for which you want to trigger notifications. You can specify one or more event types, separating multiple event type names with commas (for example,"triggerEvents":["DeploymentSuccess","DeploymentFailure","InstanceFailure"]
). When you add more than one event type, notifications for all those types are sent to the topic you specified, rather than to a different topic for each one. You can choose from the following event types:
* DeploymentStart
* DeploymentSuccess
* DeploymentFailure
* DeploymentStop
* DeploymentRollback
* DeploymentReady (Applies only to replacement instances in a blue/green deployment)
* InstanceStart
* InstanceSuccess
* InstanceFailure
* InstanceReady (Applies only to replacement instances in a blue/green deployment)
The following configuration example creates a deployment group nameddep-group-ghi-789-2
for an application namedTestApp-us-east-2
and a trigger that prompts the sending of notifications whenever a deployment starts, succeeds, or fails:
{
"applicationName": "TestApp-us-east-2",
"deploymentConfigName": "CodeDeployDefault.OneAtATime",
"deploymentGroupName": "dep-group-ghi-789-2",
"ec2TagFilters": [
{
"Key": "Name",
"Value": "Project-ABC",
"Type": "KEY_AND_VALUE"
}
],
"serviceRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::444455556666:role/AnyCompany-service-role",
"triggerConfigurations": [
{
"triggerName": "Trigger-group-us-east-2",
"triggerTargetArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-2:444455556666:us-east-deployments",
"triggerEvents": [
"DeploymentStart",
"DeploymentSuccess",
"DeploymentFailure"
]
}
]
}
- Save your updates as a JSON file, and then call that file using the
--cli-input-json
option when you run thecreate-deployment-group command:
Important
Be sure to include file://
before the file name. It is required in this command.
aws deploy create-deployment-group --cli-input-json file://filename.json
At the end of the creation process, you receive a test notification message that indicates both permissions and trigger details are set up correctly.
To create a trigger to send notifications for an existing deployment group
To use the AWS CLI to add triggers for CodeDeploy events to an existing deployment group, create a JSON file to update the deployment group, and then run the update-deployment-group command using the--cli-input-json
option.
The simplest way to create the JSON file is to run theget-deployment-group command to get a copy of the deployment group's configuration, in JSON format, and then update the parameter values in a plain-text editor.
- Run the following command, and then copy the results into a plain-text editor.
aws deploy get-deployment-group --application-name application --deployment-group-name deployment-group
- Delete the following from the output:
- At the beginning of the output, delete
{ "deploymentGroupInfo":
. - At the end of the output, delete
}
. - Delete the row containing
deploymentGroupId
. - Delete the row containing
deploymentGroupName
.
The contents of your text file should now look similar to the following:
- At the beginning of the output, delete
{
"applicationName": "TestApp-us-east-2",
"deploymentConfigName": "CodeDeployDefault.OneAtATime",
"autoScalingGroups": [],
"ec2TagFilters": [
{
"Type": "KEY_AND_VALUE",
"Value": "Project-ABC",
"Key": "Name"
}
],
"triggerConfigurations": [],
"serviceRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::444455556666:role/AnyCompany-service-role",
"onPremisesInstanceTagFilters": []
}
- In the
triggerConfigurations
section, add data for thetriggerEvents
,triggerTargetArn
, andtriggerName
parameters. For information about trigger configuration parameters, see TriggerConfig.
The contents of your text file should now look similar to the following. This code prompts notifications to be sent whenever a deployment starts, succeeds, or fails.
{
"applicationName": "TestApp-us-east-2",
"deploymentConfigName": "CodeDeployDefault.OneAtATime",
"autoScalingGroups": [],
"ec2TagFilters": [
{
"Type": "KEY_AND_VALUE",
"Value": "Project-ABC",
"Key": "Name"
}
],
"triggerConfigurations": [
{
"triggerEvents": [
"DeploymentStart",
"DeploymentSuccess",
"DeploymentFailure"
],
"triggerTargetArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-2:444455556666:us-east-deployments",
"triggerName": "Trigger-group-us-east-2"
}
],
"serviceRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::444455556666:role/AnyCompany-service-role",
"onPremisesInstanceTagFilters": []
}
- Save your updates as a JSON file, and then run the update-deployment-group command using the
--cli-input-json
option. Be sure to include the--current-deployment-group-name
option and substitute the name of your JSON file forfilename
:
Important
Be sure to include file://
before the file name. It is required in this command.
aws deploy update-deployment-group --current-deployment-group-name deployment-group-name --cli-input-json file://filename.json
At the end of the creation process, you receive a test notification message that indicates both permissions and trigger details are set up correctly.