github.com/nbering/terraform@v0.8.5-0.20170113232247-453f670684b5/website/source/docs/providers/aws/r/autoscaling_group.html.markdown (about)

     1  ---
     2  layout: "aws"
     3  page_title: "AWS: aws_autoscaling_group"
     4  sidebar_current: "docs-aws-resource-autoscaling-group"
     5  description: |-
     6    Provides an AutoScaling Group resource.
     7  ---
     8  
     9  # aws\_autoscaling\_group
    10  
    11  Provides an AutoScaling Group resource.
    12  
    13  ## Example Usage
    14  
    15  ```
    16  resource "aws_placement_group" "test" {
    17    name     = "test"
    18    strategy = "cluster"
    19  }
    20  
    21  resource "aws_autoscaling_group" "bar" {
    22    availability_zones        = ["us-east-1a"]
    23    name                      = "foobar3-terraform-test"
    24    max_size                  = 5
    25    min_size                  = 2
    26    health_check_grace_period = 300
    27    health_check_type         = "ELB"
    28    desired_capacity          = 4
    29    force_delete              = true
    30    placement_group           = "${aws_placement_group.test.id}"
    31    launch_configuration      = "${aws_launch_configuration.foobar.name}"
    32  
    33    initial_lifecycle_hook {
    34      name                   = "foobar"
    35      default_result         = "CONTINUE"
    36      heartbeat_timeout      = 2000
    37      lifecycle_transition   = "autoscaling:EC2_INSTANCE_LAUNCHING"
    38  
    39      notification_metadata = <<EOF
    40  {
    41    "foo": "bar"
    42  }
    43  EOF
    44  
    45      notification_target_arn = "arn:aws:sqs:us-east-1:444455556666:queue1*"
    46      role_arn                = "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/S3Access"
    47    }
    48  
    49    tag {
    50      key                 = "foo"
    51      value               = "bar"
    52      propagate_at_launch = true
    53    }
    54  
    55    tag {
    56      key                 = "lorem"
    57      value               = "ipsum"
    58      propagate_at_launch = false
    59    }
    60  }
    61  ```
    62  
    63  ## Argument Reference
    64  
    65  The following arguments are supported:
    66  
    67  * `name` - (Optional) The name of the auto scale group. By default generated by terraform.
    68  * `max_size` - (Required) The maximum size of the auto scale group.
    69  * `min_size` - (Required) The minimum size of the auto scale group.
    70      (See also [Waiting for Capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) below.)
    71  * `availability_zones` - (Optional) A list of AZs to launch resources in.
    72     Required only if you do not specify any `vpc_zone_identifier`
    73  * `launch_configuration` - (Required) The name of the launch configuration to use.
    74  * `initial_lifecycle_hook` - (Optional) One or more
    75    [Lifecycle Hooks](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/autoscaling/latest/userguide/lifecycle-hooks.html)
    76    to attach to the autoscaling group **before** instances are launched. The
    77    syntax is exactly the same as the separate
    78    [`aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook`](/docs/providers/aws/r/autoscaling_lifecycle_hooks.html)
    79    resource, without the `autoscaling_group_name` attribute.
    80  * `health_check_grace_period` - (Optional, Default: 300) Time (in seconds) after instance comes into service before checking health.
    81  * `health_check_type` - (Optional) "EC2" or "ELB". Controls how health checking is done.
    82  * `desired_capacity` - (Optional) The number of Amazon EC2 instances that
    83      should be running in the group. (See also [Waiting for
    84      Capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) below.)
    85  * `force_delete` - (Optional) Allows deleting the autoscaling group without waiting
    86     for all instances in the pool to terminate.  You can force an autoscaling group to delete
    87     even if it's in the process of scaling a resource. Normally, Terraform
    88     drains all the instances before deleting the group.  This bypasses that
    89     behavior and potentially leaves resources dangling.
    90  * `load_balancers` (Optional) A list of load balancer names to add to the autoscaling
    91     group names.
    92  * `vpc_zone_identifier` (Optional) A list of subnet IDs to launch resources in.
    93  * `target_group_arns` (Optional) A list of `aws_alb_target_group` ARNs, for use with
    94  Application Load Balancing
    95  * `termination_policies` (Optional) A list of policies to decide how the instances in the auto scale group should be terminated. The allowed values are `OldestInstance`, `NewestInstance`, `OldestLaunchConfiguration`, `ClosestToNextInstanceHour`, `Default`.
    96  * `suspended_processes` - (Optional) A list of processes to suspend for the AutoScaling Group. The allowed values are `Launch`, `Terminate`, `HealthCheck`, `ReplaceUnhealthy`, `AZRebalance`, `AlarmNotification`, `ScheduledActions`, `AddToLoadBalancer`.
    97  Note that if you suspend either the `Launch` or `Terminate` process types, it can prevent your autoscaling group from functioning properly.
    98  * `tag` (Optional) A list of tag blocks. Tags documented below.
    99  * `placement_group` (Optional) The name of the placement group into which you'll launch your instances, if any.
   100  * `metrics_granularity` - (Optional) The granularity to associate with the metrics to collect. The only valid value is `1Minute`. Default is `1Minute`.
   101  * `enabled_metrics` - (Optional) A list of metrics to collect. The allowed values are `GroupMinSize`, `GroupMaxSize`, `GroupDesiredCapacity`, `GroupInServiceInstances`, `GroupPendingInstances`, `GroupStandbyInstances`, `GroupTerminatingInstances`, `GroupTotalInstances`.
   102  * `wait_for_capacity_timeout` (Default: "10m") A maximum
   103    [duration](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) that Terraform should
   104    wait for ASG instances to be healthy before timing out.  (See also [Waiting
   105    for Capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) below.) Setting this to "0" causes
   106    Terraform to skip all Capacity Waiting behavior.
   107  * `min_elb_capacity` - (Optional) Setting this causes Terraform to wait for
   108    this number of instances to show up healthy in the ELB only on creation.
   109    Updates will not wait on ELB instance number changes.
   110    (See also [Waiting for Capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) below.)
   111  * `wait_for_elb_capacity` - (Optional) Setting this will cause Terraform to wait
   112    for exactly this number of healthy instances in all attached load balancers
   113    on both create and update operations. (Takes precedence over
   114    `min_elb_capacity` behavior.)
   115    (See also [Waiting for Capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) below.)
   116  * `protect_from_scale_in` (Optional) Allows setting instance protection. The
   117     autoscaling group will not select instances with this setting for terminination
   118     during scale in events.
   119  
   120  Tags support the following:
   121  
   122  * `key` - (Required) Key
   123  * `value` - (Required) Value
   124  * `propagate_at_launch` - (Required) Enables propagation of the tag to
   125     Amazon EC2 instances launched via this ASG
   126  
   127  ## Attributes Reference
   128  
   129  The following attributes are exported:
   130  
   131  * `id` - The autoscaling group id.
   132  * `arn` - The ARN for this AutoScaling Group
   133  * `availability_zones` - The availability zones of the autoscale group.
   134  * `min_size` - The minimum size of the autoscale group
   135  * `max_size` - The maximum size of the autoscale group
   136  * `default_cooldown` - Time between a scaling activity and the succeeding scaling activity.
   137  * `name` - The name of the autoscale group
   138  * `health_check_grace_period` - Time after instance comes into service before checking health.
   139  * `health_check_type` - "EC2" or "ELB". Controls how health checking is done.
   140  * `desired_capacity` -The number of Amazon EC2 instances that should be running in the group.
   141  * `launch_configuration` - The launch configuration of the autoscale group
   142  * `vpc_zone_identifier` (Optional) - The VPC zone identifier
   143  * `load_balancers` (Optional) The load balancer names associated with the
   144     autoscaling group.
   145  * `target_group_arns` (Optional) list of Target Group ARNs that apply to this
   146  AutoScaling Group
   147  
   148  ~> **NOTE:** When using `ELB` as the `health_check_type`, `health_check_grace_period` is required.
   149  
   150  ~> **NOTE:** Terraform has two types of ways you can add lifecycle hooks - via
   151  the `initial_lifecycle_hook` attribute from this resource, or via the separate
   152  [`aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook`](/docs/providers/aws/r/autoscaling_lifecycle_hooks.html)
   153  resource. `initial_lifecycle_hook` exists here because any lifecycle hooks
   154  added with `aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook` will not be added until the
   155  autoscaling group has been created, and depending on your
   156  [capacity](#waiting-for-capacity) settings, after the initial instances have
   157  been launched, creating unintended behavior. If you need hooks to run on all
   158  instances, add them with `initial_lifecycle_hook` here, but take
   159  care to not duplicate these hooks in `aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook`.
   160  
   161  ## Waiting for Capacity
   162  
   163  A newly-created ASG is initially empty and begins to scale to `min_size` (or
   164  `desired_capacity`, if specified) by launching instances using the provided
   165  Launch Configuration. These instances take time to launch and boot.
   166  
   167  On ASG Update, changes to these values also take time to result in the target
   168  number of instances providing service.
   169  
   170  Terraform provides two mechanisms to help consistently manage ASG scale up
   171  time across dependent resources.
   172  
   173  #### Waiting for ASG Capacity
   174  
   175  The first is default behavior. Terraform waits after ASG creation for
   176  `min_size` (or `desired_capacity`, if specified) healthy instances to show up
   177  in the ASG before continuing.
   178  
   179  If `min_size` or `desired_capacity` are changed in a subsequent update,
   180  Terraform will also wait for the correct number of healthy instances before
   181  continuing.
   182  
   183  Terraform considers an instance "healthy" when the ASG reports `HealthStatus:
   184  "Healthy"` and `LifecycleState: "InService"`. See the [AWS AutoScaling
   185  Docs](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AutoScaling/latest/DeveloperGuide/AutoScalingGroupLifecycle.html)
   186  for more information on an ASG's lifecycle.
   187  
   188  Terraform will wait for healthy instances for up to
   189  `wait_for_capacity_timeout`. If ASG creation is taking more than a few minutes,
   190  it's worth investigating for scaling activity errors, which can be caused by
   191  problems with the selected Launch Configuration.
   192  
   193  Setting `wait_for_capacity_timeout` to `"0"` disables ASG Capacity waiting.
   194  
   195  #### Waiting for ELB Capacity
   196  
   197  The second mechanism is optional, and affects ASGs with attached ELBs specified
   198  via the `load_balancers` attribute.
   199  
   200  The `min_elb_capacity` parameter causes Terraform to wait for at least the
   201  requested number of instances to show up `"InService"` in all attached ELBs
   202  during ASG creation.  It has no effect on ASG updates.
   203  
   204  If `wait_for_elb_capacity` is set, Terraform will wait for exactly that number
   205  of Instances to be `"InService"` in all attached ELBs on both creation and
   206  updates.
   207  
   208  These parameters can be used to ensure that service is being provided before
   209  Terraform moves on. If new instances don't pass the ELB's health checks for any
   210  reason, the Terraform apply will time out, and the ASG will be marked as
   211  tainted (i.e. marked to be destroyed in a follow up run).
   212  
   213  As with ASG Capacity, Terraform will wait for up to `wait_for_capacity_timeout`
   214  for the proper number of instances to be healthy.
   215  
   216  #### Troubleshooting Capacity Waiting Timeouts
   217  
   218  If ASG creation takes more than a few minutes, this could indicate one of a
   219  number of configuration problems. See the [AWS Docs on Load Balancer
   220  Troubleshooting](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ElasticLoadBalancing/latest/DeveloperGuide/elb-troubleshooting.html)
   221  for more information.
   222  
   223  
   224  ## Import
   225  
   226  AutoScaling Groups can be imported using the `name`, e.g. 
   227  
   228  ```
   229  $ terraform import aws_autoscaling_group.web web-asg
   230  ```