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Voting app Using Django and MySQL
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A simple voting app that uses MySQL for data storage and a Python Django app for the frontend.
The example shows how easy it is to deploy containers into production and to connect them to one another. Since the example defines a custom container, Pulumi does the following:
- Builds the Docker image
- Provisions AWS Container Registry (ECR) instance
- Pushes the image to the ECR instance
- Creates a new ECS task definition, pointing to the ECR image definition
Prerequisites
Deploying and running the program
Create a new stack:
$ pulumi stack init aws-py-django-voting-app
Set the AWS region, the usernames and passwords for a set of accounts the project uses, and a random 50-character string to serve as Django’s secret key:
$ pulumi config set aws:region us-west-2 $ pulumi config set sql-admin-name <NAME> $ pulumi config set sql-admin-password <PASSWORD> --secret $ pulumi config set sql-user-name <NAME> $ pulumi config set sql-user-password <PASSWORD> --secret $ pulumi config set django-admin-name <NAME> $ pulumi config set django-admin-password <PASSWORD> --secret $ pulumi config set django-secret-key <VALUE> --secret
Run
pulumi up -y
to deploy changes:Updating (aws-py-django-voting-app): Type Name Status Info + pulumi:pulumi:Stack voting-app-aws-py-django-voting-app created + ├─ docker:image:Image django-dockerimage created 1 warning + ├─ aws:ec2:Vpc app-vpc created + ├─ aws:ecs:Cluster app-cluster created + ├─ aws:iam:Role app-exec-role created + ├─ aws:iam:Role app-task-role created + ├─ aws:ecr:Repository app-ecr-repo created + ├─ aws:cloudwatch:LogGroup django-log-group created + ├─ aws:ecr:LifecyclePolicy app-lifecycle-policy created + ├─ aws:iam:RolePolicyAttachment app-exec-policy created + ├─ aws:iam:RolePolicyAttachment app-access-policy created + ├─ aws:iam:RolePolicyAttachment app-lambda-policy created + ├─ aws:ec2:InternetGateway app-gateway created + ├─ aws:ec2:SecurityGroup security-group created + ├─ aws:ec2:Subnet app-vpc-subnet created + ├─ aws:ec2:Subnet extra-rds-subnet created + ├─ aws:lb:TargetGroup django-targetgroup created + ├─ aws:lb:LoadBalancer django-balancer created + ├─ aws:ec2:RouteTable app-routetable created + ├─ aws:rds:SubnetGroup app-database-subnetgroup created + ├─ aws:ec2:MainRouteTableAssociation app_routetable_association created + ├─ aws:rds:Instance mysql-server created + ├─ aws:lb:Listener django-listener created + ├─ pulumi:providers:mysql mysql-provider created + ├─ mysql:index:Database mysql-database created + ├─ mysql:index:User mysql-standard-user created + ├─ mysql:index:Grant mysql-access-grant created + ├─ aws:ecs:TaskDefinition django-site-task-definition created + ├─ aws:ecs:TaskDefinition django-database-task-definition created + ├─ aws:ecs:Service django-site-service created + └─ aws:ecs:Service django-database-service created Outputs: app-url: "django-balancer-2f4f9fe-c6e6893a1972a811.elb.us-west-2.amazonaws.com" Resources: + 31 created Duration: 4m16s
View the DNS address of the instance via
pulumi stack output
:$ pulumi stack output Current stack outputs (1): OUTPUT VALUE app-url django-balancer-2f4f9fe-c6e6893a1972a811.elb.us-west-2.amazonaws.com
Verify that the ECS instance exists by connecting to it in a browser window.
Clean up
To clean up resources, run pulumi destroy
and answer the confirmation question at the prompt.
Try AWS Native preview for resources not in the classic version.