DEPRECATED: hazelcast-aws
plugin has been merged with hazelcast
!
Since version 5.0
hazelcast
includes hazelcast-aws
and does not require additional dependency. For details about running Hazelcast on AWS consider the documentation.
This repository contains a plugin which provides the automatic Hazelcast member discovery in the Amazon Web Services Platform.
- Hazelcast 3.6+
- Linux Kernel 3.19+ (TCP connections may get stuck when used with older Kernel versions, resulting in undefined timeouts)
- Versions compatibility:
- hazelcast-aws 3+ is compatible with hazelcast 4+
- hazelcast-aws 2.4 is compatible with hazelcast 3.12.x
- hazelcast-aws 2.3 is compatible with hazelcast 3.11.x
- hazelcast-aws 2.2 is compatible with older hazelcast versions
To use Hazelcast embedded in your application, you need to add the plugin dependency into your Maven/Gradle file (or use hazelcast-all which already includes the plugin). Then, when you provide hazelcast.xml
/hazelcast.yaml
as presented below or an equivalent Java-based configuration, your Hazelcast instances discover themselves automatically.
<dependency>
<groupId>com.hazelcast</groupId>
<artifactId>hazelcast-aws</artifactId>
<version>${hazelcast-aws.version}</version>
</dependency>
compile group: "com.hazelcast", name: "hazelcast-aws", version: "${hazelcast-aws.version}"
Hazelcast member starts by fetching a list of all running instances filtered by the plugin parameters (region
, etc.). Then, each instance is checked one-by-one with its IP and each of the ports defined in the hz-port
property. When a member is discovered under IP:PORT
, then it joins the cluster.
Note that this plugin supports Hazelcast Zone Aware feature.
The plugin is prepared to work for both AWS EC2 and AWS ECS/Fargate environments. However, note that requirements and plugin properties vary depending on the environment you use.
The plugin works both for Hazelcast Member Discovery and Hazelcast Client Discovery.
Make sure that:
- you have the
hazelcast-aws.jar
(orhazelcast-all.jar
) dependency in your classpath - your IAM Role has
ec2:DescribeInstances
permission
Then, you can configure Hazelcast in one of the following manners.
<hazelcast>
<network>
<join>
<multicast enabled="false"/>
<aws enabled="true">
<tag-key>my-ec2-instance-tag-key</tag-key>
<tag-value>my-ec2-instance-tag-value</tag-value>
</aws>
</join>
</network>
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
network:
join:
multicast:
enabled: false
aws:
enabled: true
tag-key: my-ec2-instance-tag-key
tag-value: my-ec2-instance-tag-value
config.getNetworkConfig().getJoin().getMulticastConfig().setEnabled(false);
config.getNetworkConfig().getJoin().getAwsConfig().setEnabled(true)
.setProperty("tag-key", "my-ec2-instance-tag-key")
.setProperty("tag-value", "my-ec2-instance-tag-value");
The following properties can be configured (all are optional).
access-key
,secret-key
: access and secret keys of your AWS account; if not set,iam-role
is usediam-role
: IAM Role attached to EC2 instance used to fetch credentials (ifaccess-key
/secret-key
not specified); if not set, default IAM Role attached to EC2 instance is usedregion
: region where Hazelcast members are running; default is the current regionhost-header
:ec2
,ecs
, or the URL of a EC2/ECS API endpoint; automatically detected by defaultsecurity-group-name
: filter to look only for EC2 instances with the given security grouptag-key
,tag-value
: filter to look only for EC2 Instances with the giventag-key
/tag-value
; multi values supported if comma-separated (e.g.KeyA,KeyB
); comma-separated values behaves as AND conditionsconnection-timeout-seconds
,read-timeout-seconds
: connection and read timeouts when making a call to AWS API; default to10
connection-retries
: number of retries while connecting to AWS API; default to3
hz-port
: a range of ports where the plugin looks for Hazelcast members; default is5701-5708
Note that if you don't specify any of the properties, then the plugin uses the IAM Role assigned to EC2 Instance and forms a cluster from all Hazelcast members running in same region.
Hazelcast Client discovery parameters are the same as mentioned above.
If Hazelcast Client is run outside AWS, then you need to always specify the following parameters:
access-key
,secret-key
- IAM role cannot be used from outside AWSregion
- it cannot be detected automaticallyuse-public-ip
- must be set totrue
Note also that your EC2 instances must have public IP assigned.
Following are example declarative and programmatic configuration snippets.
<hazelcast-client>
<network>
<aws enabled="true">
<access-key>my-access-key</access-key>
<secret-key>my-secret-key</secret-key>
<region>us-west-1</region>
<tag-key>my-ec2-instance-tag-key</tag-key>
<tag-value>my-ec2-instance-tag-value</tag-value>
<use-public-ip>true</use-public-ip>
</aws>
</network>
</hazelcast-client>
hazelcast-client:
network:
aws:
enabled: true
access-key: my-access-key
secret-key: my-secret-key
region: us-west-1
tag-key: my-ec2-instance-tag-key
tag-value: my-ec2-instance-tag-value
use-public-ip: true
clientConfig.getNetworkConfig().getAwsConfig()
.setEnabled(true)
.setProperty("access-key", "my-access-key")
.setProperty("secret-key", "my-secret-key")
.setProperty("region", "us-west-1")
.setProperty("tag-key", "my-ec2-instance-tag-key")
.setProperty("tag-value", "my-ec2-instance-tag-value")
.setProperty("use-public-ip", "true");
The plugin works both for Hazelcast Member Discovery (forming Hazelcast cluster) and Hazelcast Client Discovery.
Note: for the detailed description, check out Hazelcast Guides: Getting Started with Embedded Hazelcast on ECS.
Make sure that your IAM Task Role has the following permissions:
ecs:ListTasks
ecs:DescribeTasks
ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces
(needed only if task have public IPs)
Then, you can configure Hazelcast in one of the following manners. Please note that 10.0.*.*
value depends on your VPC CIDR block definition.
<hazelcast>
<network>
<join>
<multicast enabled="false"/>
<aws enabled="true" />
</join>
<interfaces enabled="true">
<interface>10.0.*.*</interface>
</interfaces>
</network>
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
network:
join:
multicast:
enabled: false
aws:
enabled: true
interfaces:
enabled: true
interfaces:
- 10.0.*.*
config.getNetworkConfig().getJoin().getMulticastConfig().setEnabled(false);
config.getNetworkConfig().getJoin().getAwsConfig().setEnabled(true);
config.getNetworkConfig().getInterfaces().setEnabled(true).addInterface("10.0.*.*");
The following properties can be configured (all are optional).
access-key
,secret-key
: access and secret keys of AWS your account; if not set, IAM Task Role is usedregion
: region where Hazelcast members are running; default is the current regioncluster
: ECS cluster short name or ARN; default is the current clusterfamily
: filter to look only for ECS tasks with the given family name; mutually exclusive withservice-name
service-name
: filter to look only for ECS tasks from the given service; mutually exclusive withfamily
host-header
:ecs
or the URL of a ECS API endpoint; automatically detected by defaultconnection-timeout-seconds
,read-timeout-seconds
: connection and read timeouts when making a call to AWS API; default to10
connection-retries
: number of retries while connecting to AWS API; default to3
hz-port
: a range of ports where the plugin looks for Hazelcast members; default is5701-5708
Note that if you don't specify any of the properties, then the plugin discovers all Hazelcast members running in the current ECS cluster.
Hazelcast Client discovery parameters are the same as mentioned above.
If Hazelcast Client is run outside ECS cluster, then you need to always specify the following parameters:
access-key
,secret-key
- IAM role cannot be used from outside AWSregion
- it cannot be detected automaticallycluster
- it cannot be detected automaticallyuse-public-ip
- must be set totrue
Note also that your ECS Tasks must have public IPs assigned and your IAM Task Role must have ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces
permission.
Following are example declarative and programmatic configuration snippets.
<hazelcast-client>
<network>
<aws enabled="true">
<access-key>my-access-key</access-key>
<secret-key>my-secret-key</secret-key>
<region>eu-central-1</region>
<cluster>my-cluster</cluster>
<use-public-ip>true</use-public-ip>
</aws>
</network>
</hazelcast-client>
hazelcast-client:
network:
aws:
enabled: true
access-key: my-access-key
secret-key: my-secret-key
region: eu-central-1
cluster: my-cluster
use-public-ip: true
clientConfig.getNetworkConfig().getAwsConfig()
.setEnabled(true)
.setProperty("access-key", "my-access-key")
.setProperty("secret-key", "my-secret-key")
.setProperty("region", "eu-central-1")
.setProperty("cluster", "my-cluster")
.setProperty("use-public-ip", "true");
If you use ECS on EC2 instances (not Fargate), you may also set up your ECS Tasks to use host
network mode and then use EC2 discovery mode instead of ECS. In that case, your Hazelcast configuration would look as follows.
hazelcast:
network:
join:
multicast:
enabled: false
aws:
enabled: true
host-header: ec2
interfaces:
enabled: true
interfaces:
- 10.0.*.*
All other parameters can be used exactly the same as described in the EC2-related section.
The plugin works correctly on the AWS Elastic Beanstalk environment. While deploying your application into the Java Platform, please make sure your Elastic Beanstalk Environment Configuration satisfies the following requirements:
- EC2 security groups contain a group which allows the port
5701
- IAM instance profile contains IAM role which has
ec2:DescribeInstances
permission (or your Hazelcast configuration containsaccess-key
andsecret-key
) - Deployment policy is
Rolling
(instead of the defaultAll at once
which may cause the whole Hazelcast members to restart at the same time and therefore lose data)
By default, Hazelcast distributes partition replicas (backups) randomly and equally among cluster members. However, this is not safe in terms of high availability when a partition and its replicas are stored on the same rack, using the same network, or power source. To deal with that, Hazelcast offers logical partition grouping, so that a partition itself and its backup(s) would not be stored within the same group. This way Hazelcast guarantees that a possible failure affecting more than one member at a time will not cause data loss. The details of partition groups can be found in the documentation: Partition Group Configuration
In addition to two built-in grouping options ZONE_AWARE
and PLACEMENT_AWARE
, you can customize the formation of
these groups based on the network interfaces of members. See more details on custom groups in the documentation:
Custom Partition Groups.
If ZONE_AWARE
partition group is enabled, the backup(s) of a partition is always stored in a different availability
zone. Hazelcast AWS Discovery plugin supports ZONE_AWARE feature for both EC2 and ECS.
NOTE: When using the ZONE_AWARE
partition grouping, a cluster spanning multiple Availability Zones (AZ)
should have an equal number of members in each AZ. Otherwise, it will result in uneven partition distribution among
the members.
<partition-group enabled="true" group-type="ZONE_AWARE" />
hazelcast:
partition-group:
enabled: true
group-type: ZONE_AWARE
config.getPartitionGroupConfig()
.setEnabled(true)
.setGroupType(MemberGroupType.ZONE_AWARE);
AWS Partition Placement Group (PPG) ensures low latency between the instances in the same partition of a placement group and also provides availability since no two partitions share the same underlying hardware. As long as the partitions of a PPG contain an equal number of instances, it will be good practice for Hazelcast clusters formed within a single zone.
If EC2 instances belong to a PPG and PLACEMENT_AWARE
partition group is enabled, then Hazelcast members will be grouped
by the partitions of the PPG. For instance, the Hazelcast members in the first partition of a PPG named ppg
will belong
to the partition group of ppg-1
, and those in the second partition will belong to ppg-2
and so on. Furthermore, these
groups will be specific to each availability zone. That is, they are formed with zone names as well: us-east-1-ppg-1
,
us-east-2-ppg-1
, and the like. However, if a Hazelcast cluster spans multiple availability zones then you should
consider using ZONE_AWARE
.
AWS Cluster Placement Group (CPG) ensures low latency by packing instances close together inside an availability zone. If you favor latency over availability, then CPG will serve your purpose.
NOTE: In the case of CPG, using PLACEMENT_AWARE
has no effect, so can use the default Hazelcast partition group
strategy.
AWS Spread Placement Groups (SPG) ensures high availability in a single zone by placing each instance in a group on a distinct rack. It provides better latency than multi-zone deployment, but worse than Cluster Placement Group. SPG is limited to 7 instances, so if you need a larger Hazelcast cluster within a single zone, you should use PPG instead.
NOTE: In the case of SPG, using PLACEMENT_AWARE
has no effect, so can use the default Hazelcast partition group
strategy.
<partition-group enabled="true" group-type="PLACEMENT_AWARE" />
hazelcast:
partition-group:
enabled: true
group-type: PLACEMENT_AWARE
config.getPartitionGroupConfig()
.setEnabled(true)
.setGroupType(MemberGroupType.PLACEMENT_AWARE);
Hazelcast is prepared to work correctly within the autoscaling environments. Note that there are two specific requirements to prevent Hazelcast from losing data:
- the number of members must change by 1 at the time
- when a member is launched or terminated, the cluster must be in the safe state
Read about details in the blog post: AWS Auto Scaling with Hazelcast.
You can download the white paper "Amazon EC2 Deployment Guide for Hazelcast IMDG" here.
In case of any question or issue, please raise a GH issue, send an email to Hazelcast Google Groups or contact as directly via Hazelcast Gitter.