amazonka-ssm
Version 1.3.6 revision 1 uploaded by jack.
Package meta
- Synopsis
- Amazon Simple Systems Management Service SDK.
- Description
Simple Systems Manager (SSM) is a set of capabilities that can help you manage your Amazon EC2 instances running on Windows. SSM enables you to run scripts or other common administrative tasks on your instances using either SSM Run Command or SSM Config. Run Command extends the server administration capabilities of SSM by offering an on-demand experience for executing commands. You can use pre-defined Amazon SSM documents (formerly called configuration documents) to perform the actions listed later in this section, or you can create your own documents. With these document, you can then remotely configure your instances by sending commands using the AWS command line interface (CLI), AWS Tools for Windows PowerShell, or the Commands page in the Amazon EC2 console. Additionally, because Run Command enables you to execute PowerShell commands or scripts, you can administer your instances remotely using PowerShell as though you were logged on locally to the instance. Run Command reports the status of the command execution for each instance targeted by a command. You can also audit the command execution to understand who executed commands, when, and what changes were made. By switching between different SSM documents, you can quickly configure your instances with different types of commands. SSM Config is a lightweight instance configuration solution. With SSM Config, you can specify a setup configuration for your instances. SSM Config is similar to EC2 User Data, which is another way of running one-time scripts or applying settings during instance launch. SSM Config is an extension of this capability. Using SSM documents, you can specify which actions the system should perform on your instances, including which applications to install, which AWS Directory Service directory to join, which Microsoft PowerShell modules to install, etc. If an instance is missing one or more of these configurations, the system makes those changes. By default, the system checks every five minutes to see if there is a new configuration to apply as defined in a new SSM document. If so, the system updates the instances accordingly. In this way, you can remotely maintain a consistent configuration baseline on your instances. SSM Config is available using the AWS CLI or the AWS Tools for Windows PowerShell. SSM is currently not supported on Linux instances. You can use Run Command and SSM Config to do the following: - Join an AWS Directory Service directory (SSM Config and Run Command) - Install, repair, or uninstall software using an MSI package (SSM Config and Run Command) - Install PowerShell modules (SSM Config and Run Command) - Configure CloudWatch Logs to monitor applications and systems (SSM Config and Run Command) - Run PowerShell commands or scripts (Run Command only) - Update the EC2Config service (Run Command only) - Configure Windows Update settings (Run Command only) SSM documents run with administrative privilege on Windows instances because the EC2Config service runs in the Local System account. If a user has permission to execute any of the pre-defined SSM documents (any document that begins with AWS-*) then that user also has administrator access to the instance. Delegate access to SSM Config and Run Command judiciously. This becomes extremely important if you create your own SSM documents. Amazon Web Services does not provide guidance about how to create secure SSM documents. You create SSM documents and delegate access to Run Command actions at your own risk. As a security best practice, we recommend that you assign access to "AWS-*" documents, especially the AWS-RunPowerShellScript document, to trusted administrators only. You can create low-level SSM documents for low security tasks and delegate access to non-administrators.
The types from this library are intended to be used with amazonka, which provides mechanisms for specifying AuthN/AuthZ information and sending requests.
Use of lenses is required for constructing and manipulating types. This is due to the amount of nesting of AWS types and transparency regarding de/serialisation into more palatable Haskell values. The provided lenses should be compatible with any of the major lens libraries such as lens or lens-family-core.
See Network.AWS.SSM and the AWS API Reference to get started.
- Author
- Brendan Hay
- Bug reports
- https://github.com/brendanhay/amazonka/issues
- Category
- Network, AWS, Cloud, Distributed Computing
- Copyright
- Copyright (c) 2013-2015 Brendan Hay
- Homepage
- https://github.com/brendanhay/amazonka
- Maintainer
- Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay@gmail.com>
- Package URL
- n/a
- Stability
- n/a