Skip to content

TechDirectArchive

Hands-on IT, Cloud, Security & DevOps Insights

  • Home
  • About
  • Advertise With US
  • Reviews
  • Contact
  • Toggle search form
Home » Linux » How to Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform

How to Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform

Posted on 31/05/202202/01/2024 Dickson Victor By Dickson Victor No Comments on How to Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform
Install-Packages-to-Amazon-Virtual-Machine-Using-Terraform

In this blog post, I’ll show you how to create an Amazon EC2 instance and install packages into it using a cloud-agnostic infrastructure as a code tool known as Terraform. For better understanding, it is advised that you follow along in this hands-on demo. To get started, sign up for a free tier account from AWS. Please follow along to learn how to Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform. Please see how to deploy an Angular App to AWS S3, and how to deploy a Dynamic Website to AWS EC2.

Once you have the account, create a new user and grant it administrative privileges. Also, you will need to generate AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY for the new user and configure AWS CLI on your local machine.

You will also need to install Terraform on your local machine. Kindly refer to our related AWS guides: Creating IAM Users, Adding MFA and Policies on AWS, and How to manage cost with AWS Budgets.

Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform

Below are the steps to Deploy using Terraform. After completing the recommended installations above, continue with the following steps.

1: Create a directory named terraform-ec-2 and change it into the directory

mkdir ~/terraform-ec-2
cd ~/terraform-ec-2

2. Create two files main.tf and provider.tf

vim main.tf 
vim provider.tf

3. In the the main.tf file, paste the following code block (Beware of the syntax);

resource "aws_vpc" "lifebit_vpc" {
  cidr_block 		= 	"172.16.0.0/16"
  enable_dns_hostnames	= 	true
  enable_dns_support	=	true
  tags = {
    Name = "lifebit-vpc"
  }
}
resource "aws_subnet" "lifebit_subnet" {
  vpc_id            	= aws_vpc.lifebit_vpc.id
  cidr_block        	= "${cidrsubnet(aws_vpc.lifebit_vpc.cidr_block, 3, 1)}"
  availability_zone 	= "eu-west-2a"
  tags = {
    Name 		= "lifebit-subnets"
  }
}
locals {
  ports_in		= [22,80,3000]
  ports_out		= [0]
}
resource "aws_security_group" "lifebit_SG" {
  name        		= "lifebit_SG"
  description 		= "Allow TLS inbound traffic"
  vpc_id      		= "${aws_vpc.lifebit_vpc.id}"
  dynamic "ingress" {
    for_each		= toset(local.ports_in)
    content {
      description      	= "TLS from VPC"
      from_port        	= ingress.value
      to_port          	= ingress.value
      protocol         	= "tcp"
      cidr_blocks      	= ["0.0.0.0/0"]
}
}
  dynamic "egress" {
    for_each		= toset(local.ports_out)
    content {
      description      	= "TLS from VPC"
      from_port        	= egress.value
      to_port          	= egress.value
      protocol         	= "-1"
      cidr_blocks      	= ["0.0.0.0/0"]
}
}
   tags = {
    Name 			= "allow_tls"
  }
}
resource "aws_instance" "lifebit" {
  ami           	= "ami-0de842d2477e3b337"
  instance_type 	= "t2.micro"
  key_name 		= aws_key_pair.lifebit.key_name
  security_groups	= ["${aws_security_group.lifebit_SG.id}"]
  

user_data	= <<EOF
	#!/bin/bash

	#Installing git and cloning the repository
	yum install git -y
	mkdir lifebit_test
	cd lifebit_test
	git clone https://github.com/nodejs/examples.git
	cd examples/servers/express/api-with-express-and-handlebars

	Installing Nodejs
	yum -y install curl
	curl -sL https://rpm.nodesource.com/setup_14.x | sudo bash -
	yum install -y nodejs
	npm install
	npm start &
EOF
  tags = {
    Name		= "LifeBitVM"
 
}
  subnet_id		= "${aws_subnet.lifebit_subnet.id}"
  }
resource "aws_key_pair" "lifebit" {
  key_name			= "lifebit"
  public_key		= "${file("${path.module}/lifebit.pub")}"
}
resource "aws_eip" "lifebit_eip" {
  instance		= "${aws_instance.lifebit.id}"
  vpc 			= true
}
resource "aws_internet_gateway" "lifebit_gw" {
  vpc_id 		= "${aws_vpc.lifebit_vpc.id}"

  tags = {
    Name 		= "LifeBit_gw"
  }
}
resource "aws_route_table" "lifebit_RTB" {
  vpc_id 		= "${aws_vpc.lifebit_vpc.id}"
  route {
    	cidr_block 	= "0.0.0.0/0"
    	gateway_id 	= "${aws_internet_gateway.lifebit_gw.id}"
  }
  tags = {
    Name = "lifebit_RTB"
  }
}
resource "aws_route_table_association" "lifebit_RTB_AS" {
  subnet_id 		= "${aws_subnet.lifebit_subnet.id}"
  route_table_id	= "${aws_route_table.lifebit_RTB.id}"

   }

4. In the the provider.tf file, paste the following code block;

provider "aws" {
region = "eu-west-2"
access_key = "xxxxxxAKIA63J"
secret_key = "xxxxxvt8a5yzNJyY"
}

Examine the main.tf and provider.tf files

The main.tf file contains scripts to deploy the following resources: VPC, Subnet, Route Table, Internet-Gateway, Security Group, Key-Pair, EC2 instance, User_Data, and Elastic IP. You can update the “ami” and the availability zone of your choice. The user_data contains a bash script that configures and deploys a nodejs application.

To understand the providers.tf file, refer to this link. Update it with the access key and secret key as obtained in the instructions referred to above.

For security reasons, it is more appropriate to input these values as environment variables, which external references can then use, rather than hardcoding them.

5. Generate an SSH key. In this example, it’s named ‘lifebit‘

ssh-keygen -f "lifebit"

Accept all the defaults and use the command ll to confirm you now have a lifebit.pub file.

Screenshot_sshKeyGen-1
NB: The name used in the above screenshot may be different from yours.

3. Run the following terraform commands in the appropriate directory

terraform init

The terraform init command initializes a working directory containing Terraform configuration files. Users should run this command first after writing a new Terraform configuration or cloning an existing one from version control. It is safe to run this command multiple times.

terraform plan

The terraform plan the command creates an execution plan, which lets you preview the changes that Terraform plans to make to your infrastructure.

terraform apply 

The terraform apply the command executes the actions proposed in a Terraform plan. After successfully running the above commands, terraform deploys the required resources as specified in the main.tf file.

Verify if the Packages are deployed successfully

To verify the successful deployment of the installed packages, paste the public IP of the EC2 instance into a browser and add port 3000, as shown in the screenshot below.

TerraDeployedApp-1
Congratulation! You have successfully deployed your application using terraform.

4. To avoid accumulating huge bills from AWS, it’s advised to shut down created resources immediately. Use the command below.

terraform destroy

I hope you found this blog post helpful on how to Install Packages to Amazon VM using Terraform. If you have any questions, please let me know in the comment session.

Rate this post

Thank you for reading this post. Kindly share it with others.

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor
AWS/Azure/OpenShift, Linux Tags:AWS, AWS CLI, EC2 Instances, Packages

Post navigation

Previous Post: Configure logon hours for users in Active Directory
Next Post: Deploy a function app from Visual Studio to Azure Platform

Related Posts

  • image 129
    Using Awx to deploy, schedule and run playbooks Linux
  • Run Linux on Windows Server
    How to install Windows Subsystem for Linux on Windows Server Linux
  • image 10
    Change Visual Studio Code UI language JIRA|Confluence|Apps
  • Linux Shell Scripting 1
    Write a Shell Script that Count Lines and Words in a File Linux
  • Azure Backup 1
    How to Install Azure Backup Agent AWS/Azure/OpenShift
  • linux tux minimalism 4k 42 2560x1700 1 1
    Warning useradd: the home directory already exists. Not copying any file from skel director into it Linux

More Related Articles

image 129 Using Awx to deploy, schedule and run playbooks Linux
Run Linux on Windows Server How to install Windows Subsystem for Linux on Windows Server Linux
image 10 Change Visual Studio Code UI language JIRA|Confluence|Apps
Linux Shell Scripting 1 Write a Shell Script that Count Lines and Words in a File Linux
Azure Backup 1 How to Install Azure Backup Agent AWS/Azure/OpenShift
linux tux minimalism 4k 42 2560x1700 1 1 Warning useradd: the home directory already exists. Not copying any file from skel director into it Linux

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Microsoft MVP

VEEAMLEGEND

vexpert-badge-stars-5

Virtual Background

GoogleNews

Categories

veeaam100

Veeam Vanguard

  • M0365VBO
    Why should you use Veeam to protect your Microsoft 365 Data? Backup
  • 1723152 3cc3 2 750x405 1
    Cluster creation in Proxmox VE Virtualization
  • taskbar1
    Hide or Remove Search Button from Windows 11 Taskbar Windows
  • article 1280x720.192a2586 1 2
    Fix error 0x800f0805, run DISM executable (Failure 5627) Windows Server
  • Exchange password
    How to block the Change Password Feature for All Users via the Exchange Administrative Center Network | Monitoring
  • how to install software packages from source files
    How to install a software package from source file in Linux Linux
  • Windows 11 taskbar features remove 1
    How to modify Windows 11 Taskbar via Intune and GPO Windows
  • Vro And Agent Deployment
    Deploy Veeam Recovery Orchestrator and Agents to VBR and VEM Backup

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,819 other subscribers
  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments
  • About
  • Authors
  • Write for us
  • Advertise with us
  • General Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Feedly
  • Telegram
  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Tumblr
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • mastodon

Tags

Active Directory Azure Bitlocker Microsoft Windows PowerShell WDS Windows 10 Windows 11 Windows Deployment Services Windows Server 2016

Copyright © 2025 TechDirectArchive

 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.