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AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi

Host a Static Website on Amazon S3

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AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi

    View JavaScript Code View Python Code

    In this tutorial, we’ll show you how to provision raw resources in AWS using the @pulumi/aws package. First, we’ll create a Pulumi program that uploads files from the www directory to S3. Then, we’ll configure the bucket to serve a website. We’ll be using JavaScript in this tutorial, but you can also run through this example in Python.

    Prerequisites

    1. Install Pulumi
    2. Configure AWS credentials

    Deploy the App

    Step 1: Create a new project from a template

    Create a project directory, s3website, and change into it. Run pulumi new javascript --name myproject to create a new project using the JavaScript template. Replace myproject with your desired project name.

    $ mkdir s3website && cd s3website
    $ pulumi new javascript --name myproject
    

    Step 2: Create a bucket and upload files

    Open up index.js using your preferred text editor and add the following code. This creates a new S3 bucket, then iterates over the files in the www folder to create an S3 Object for each file.

    const aws = require("@pulumi/aws");
    const pulumi = require("@pulumi/pulumi");
    const mime = require("mime");
    const fs = require("fs");
    const path = require("path");
    
    // Create an S3 bucket
    let siteBucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("s3-website-bucket");
    
    const addFolderContents = (siteDir, prefix) => {
      for (let item of fs.readdirSync(siteDir)) {
        let filePath = path.join(siteDir, item);
        let isDir = fs.lstatSync(filePath).isDirectory();
    
        // This handles adding subfolders and their content
        if (isDir) {
          const newPrefix = prefix ? path.join(prefix, item) : item;
          addFolderContents(filePath, newPrefix);
          continue;
        }
    
        let itemPath = prefix ? path.join(prefix, item) : item;
        itemPath = itemPath.replace(/\\/g,'/');             // convert Windows paths to something S3 will recognize
    
        let object = new aws.s3.BucketObject(itemPath, {
          bucket: bucket,
          source: new pulumi.asset.FileAsset(filePath),     // use FileAsset to point to a file
          contentType: mime.getType(filePath) || undefined, // set the MIME type of the file
        });
      }
    }
    
    addFolderContents("www"); // base directory for content files
    
    exports.bucketName = siteBucket.bucket; // create a stack export for bucket name
    

    Notice how we are using the @pulumi/aws npm package to create an Amazon S3 bucket with aws.s3.Bucket. This uses the s3 module and the Bucket resource for the package. For each file in www, an aws.s3.BucketObject gets created, using the helper pulumi.asset.FileAsset to reference a local file.

    In order to serve the files to a browser, the content type for each S3 object must be set. For this, the NPM mime package is used. Just like a regular Node program, Pulumi programs can use any Node.js package.

    Step 3: Create your website files

    Create a subfolder of s3website called www. Download favicon.png and save it to www.

    Also save the following as index.html:

    <html>
      <head>
        <title>Hello S3</title><meta charset="UTF-8">
        <link rel="shortcut icon" href="/favicon.png" type="image/png">
      </head>
      <body>
        <p>Hello, world!</p><p>Made with ❤️ with <a href="https://pulumi.com">Pulumi</a></p>
      </body>
    </html>
    

    Step 4: Install npm dependencies

    Add and install the NPM dependencies:

    $ npm install --save @pulumi/aws mime
    

    Step 5: Set your AWS region

    Configure the AWS region to deploy to, such as us-west-2.

    $ pulumi config set aws:region us-west-2
    

    Notice how a new file, Pulumi.website-testing.yaml, got created in the root directory for your project next to your Pulumi.yaml project file. See Defining and setting stack settings for more information about this file.

    Step 6: Preview and deploy your resources

    To preview your Pulumi program, run pulumi up. The command shows a preview of the resources that will be created and prompts you to proceed with the deployment. Select yes to create a stack component, a Bucket and two S3 Objects (one for each file in the www folder).

    Step 7: View your stack resources

    Pulumi Cloud

    To see the full details of the deployment and the resources that are now part of the stack, open the update link in a browser. You can see the bucket that was creAted in the Resources tab.

    Pulumi CLI

    To see the name of the bucket that was created, run pulumi stack output. Note that an extra 7-digit identifier is appended to the name. All Pulumi resources add this identifier automatically, so that you don’t have to manually create unique names.

    $ pulumi stack output
    Current stack outputs (1):
        OUTPUT                                           VALUE
        bucketName                                     s3-website-bucket-8533d8b
    

    To see that the S3 bucket objects exist, you can either use the AWS Console (which is accessible from the Pulumi Cloud) or the AWS CLI:

    $ aws s3 ls $(pulumi stack output bucketName)
    2019-09-26 17:12:22      13731 favicon.png
    2019-09-26 17:12:22        264 index.html
    

    Step 8: Add S3 website support

    Next, configure the S3 bucket to serve the files on a browser. To do this, you use the aws.s3.Bucket.website property and attach an aws.s3.BucketPolicy object.

    Change the declaration of siteBucket to specify an indexDocument:

    ...
    // Update your siteBucket declaration to this
    let siteBucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("s3-website-bucket", {
      website: {
        indexDocument: "index.html",
      },
    });
    ...
    

    Add the following code, which defines the S3 public read policy, applies it to the bucket, and defines a new stack output:

    // Create an S3 Bucket Policy to allow public read of all objects in bucket
    // This reusable function can be pulled out into its own module
    function publicReadPolicyForBucket(bucketName) {
      return JSON.stringify({
        Version: "2012-10-17",
        Statement: [{
          Effect: "Allow",
          Principal: "*",
          Action: [
            "s3:GetObject"
          ],
          Resource: [
            `arn:aws:s3:::${bucketName}/*` // policy refers to bucket name explicitly
          ]
        }]
      })
    }
    
    // Set the access policy for the bucket so all objects are readable
    let bucketPolicy = new aws.s3.BucketPolicy("bucketPolicy", {
      bucket: siteBucket.bucket, // depends on siteBucket -- see explanation below
      policy: siteBucket.bucket.apply(publicReadPolicyForBucket)
              // transform the siteBucket.bucket output property -- see explanation below
    });
    
    exports.websiteUrl = siteBucket.websiteEndpoint; // output the endpoint as a stack output
    

    To make all objects in the bucket publicly readable, you’ll need to create a BucketPolicy object. The definition of bucketPolicy illustrates how Pulumi tracks dependencies between resources. The property aws.s3.Bucket.bucket is an output property of type pulumi.Output—a marker class that encodes the relationship between resources in a Pulumi program. An object of type Output can be passed directly to the inputs of a resource constructor, such as the bucket property.

    For the policy property, the IAM policy must include the target bucket name. Since the value of output properties are not known until the underlying resource is created (such as the generated name for the S3 bucket), you need to use the apply method of pulumi.Output rather than directly calling publicReadPolicyForBucket.

    Whenever you need to create a dependency between resources, use the output property of one resource as the input to another one. Pulumi uses this information to create physical resources in the correct order.

    Step 9: Run your update

    Run pulumi up, which shows the change to update the Bucket resource and create a new BucketPolicy resource. Select yes to confirm the changes. You should see an output similar to the following:

    $ pulumi up
    ...
    
        Type                    Name               Status      Info
        pulumi:pulumi:Stack     s3-website-dev
    ~   ├─ aws:s3:Bucket        s3-website-bucket      updated     [diff: +website]
    +   └─ aws:s3:BucketPolicy  bucketPolicy           created
    
    Outputs:
        bucketName: "s3-website-bucket-8533d8b"
      + websiteUrl: "s3-website-bucket-8533d8b.s3-website-us-west-2.amazonaws.com"
    
    Resources:
        + 1 created
        ~ 1 updated
        2 changes. 3 unchanged
    

    Step 10: View your static website

    Open the site URL in a browser to see both the rendered HTML and the favicon:

    $ pulumi stack output websiteUrl
    s3-website-bucket-8533d8b.s3-website-us-west-2.amazonaws.com
    
    Hello S3 example

    Clean Up

    Before moving on, tear down the resources that are part of your stack to avoid incurring any charges.

    1. Run pulumi destroy to tear down all resources. You'll be prompted to make sure you really want to delete these resources. A destroy operation may take some time, since Pulumi waits for the resources to finish shutting down before it considers the destroy operation to be complete.
    2. To delete the stack itself, run pulumi stack rm. Note that this command deletes all deployment history from the Pulumi Service.

    Summary

    In this tutorial, we showed you how to use the @pulumi/aws package for fine-grain control over AWS resources.

    You also learned how to work with the Pulumi CLI. To recap:

    • Run pulumi new javascript --name myproject to create a new project using a JavaScript template.
    • Run pulumi up to preview and update your infrastructure.
    • Run pulumi destroy to clean up your resources.
    • Run pulumi stack rm to delete your stack.

    Next steps

    aws logo
    AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi