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This component is responsible for provisioning the primary DNS zones into an AWS account. By convention, we typically provision the primary DNS zones in the dns account. The primary account for branded zones (e.g. example.com), however, would be in the prod account, while staging zone (e.g. example.qa) might be in the staging account.

The zones from the primary DNS zone are then expected to be delegated to other accounts via the dns-delegated component. Additionally, external records can be created on the primary DNS zones via the record_config variable.

Architecture

Summary

The dns account gets a single dns-primary component deployed. Every other account that needs DNS entries gets a single dns-delegated component, chaining off the domains in the dns account. Optionally, accounts can have a single dns-primary component of their own, to have apex domains (which Cloud Posse calls "vanity domains"). Typically, these domains are configured with CNAME (or apex alias) records to point to service domain entries.

Details

The purpose of the dns account is to host root domains shared by several accounts (with each account being delegated its own subdomain) and to be the owner of domain registrations purchased from Amazon.

The purpose of the dns-primary component is to provision AWS Route53 zones for the root domains. These zones, once provisioned, must be manually configured into the Domain Name Registrar's records as name servers. A single component can provision multiple domains and, optionally, associated ACM (SSL) certificates in a single account.

Cloud Posse's architecture expects root domains shared by several accounts to be provisioned in the dns account with dns-primary and delegated to other accounts using the dns-delegated component, with each account getting its own subdomain corresponding to a Route 53 zone in the delegated account. Cloud Posse's architecture requires at least one such domain, called "the service domain", be provisioned. The service domain is not customer facing, and is provisioned to allow fully automated construction of host names without any concerns about how they look. Although they are not secret, the public will never see them.

Root domains used by a single account are provisioned with the dns-primary component directly in that account. Cloud Posse calls these "vanity domains". These can be whatever the marketing or PR or other stakeholders want to be.

After a domain is provisioned in the dns account, the dns-delegated component can provision one or more subdomains for each account, and, optionally, associated ACM certificates. For the service domain, Cloud Posse recommends using the account name as the delegated subdomain (either directly, e.g. "plat-dev", or as multiple subdomains, e.g. "dev.plat") because that allows dns-delegated to automatically provision any required host name in that zone.

There is no automated support for dns-primary to provision root domains outside of the dns account that are to be shared by multiple accounts, and such usage is not recommended. If you must, dns-primary can provision a subdomain of a root domain that is provisioned in another account (not dns). In this case, the delegation of the subdomain must be done manually by entering the name servers into the parent domain's records (instead of in the Registrar's records).

The architecture does not support other configurations, or non-standard component names.

Usage

Stack Level: Global

Here's an example snippet for how to use this component. This component should only be applied once as the DNS zones it creates are global. This is typically done via the DNS stack (e.g. gbl-dns.yaml).

components:
  terraform:
    dns-primary:
      vars:
        domain_names:
          - example.net
        record_config:
          - root_zone: example.net
            name: ""
            type: A
            ttl: 60
            records:
              - 53.229.170.215
          # using a period at the end of a name
          - root_zone: example.net
            name: www.
            type: CNAME
            ttl: 60
            records:
              - example.net
          # using numbers as name requires quotes
          - root_zone: example.net
            name: "123456."
            type: CNAME
            ttl: 60
            records:
              - example.net
          # strings that are very long, this could be a DKIM key
          - root_zone: example.net
            name: service._domainkey.
            type: CNAME
            ttl: 60
            records:
              - !!str |-
                YourVeryLongStringGoesHere

Tip

Use the acm component for more advanced certificate requirements.

Requirements

Name Version
terraform >= 1.0.0
aws >= 4.9.0

Providers

Name Version
aws >= 4.9.0

Modules

Name Source Version
acm cloudposse/acm-request-certificate/aws 0.16.3
iam_roles ../account-map/modules/iam-roles n/a
this cloudposse/label/null 0.25.0

Resources

Name Type
aws_route53_record.aliasrec resource
aws_route53_record.dnsrec resource
aws_route53_record.soa resource
aws_route53_zone.root resource

Inputs

Name Description Type Default Required
additional_tag_map Additional key-value pairs to add to each map in tags_as_list_of_maps. Not added to tags or id.
This is for some rare cases where resources want additional configuration of tags
and therefore take a list of maps with tag key, value, and additional configuration.
map(string) {} no
alias_record_config DNS Alias Record config
list(object({
root_zone = string
name = string
type = string
zone_id = string
record = string
evaluate_target_health = bool
}))
[] no
attributes ID element. Additional attributes (e.g. workers or cluster) to add to id,
in the order they appear in the list. New attributes are appended to the
end of the list. The elements of the list are joined by the delimiter
and treated as a single ID element.
list(string) [] no
context Single object for setting entire context at once.
See description of individual variables for details.
Leave string and numeric variables as null to use default value.
Individual variable settings (non-null) override settings in context object,
except for attributes, tags, and additional_tag_map, which are merged.
any
{
"additional_tag_map": {},
"attributes": [],
"delimiter": null,
"descriptor_formats": {},
"enabled": true,
"environment": null,
"id_length_limit": null,
"label_key_case": null,
"label_order": [],
"label_value_case": null,
"labels_as_tags": [
"unset"
],
"name": null,
"namespace": null,
"regex_replace_chars": null,
"stage": null,
"tags": {},
"tenant": null
}
no
delimiter Delimiter to be used between ID elements.
Defaults to - (hyphen). Set to "" to use no delimiter at all.
string null no
descriptor_formats Describe additional descriptors to be output in the descriptors output map.
Map of maps. Keys are names of descriptors. Values are maps of the form
{<br/> format = string<br/> labels = list(string)<br/>}
(Type is any so the map values can later be enhanced to provide additional options.)
format is a Terraform format string to be passed to the format() function.
labels is a list of labels, in order, to pass to format() function.
Label values will be normalized before being passed to format() so they will be
identical to how they appear in id.
Default is {} (descriptors output will be empty).
any {} no
dns_soa_config Root domain name DNS SOA record:
- awsdns-hostmaster.amazon.com. ; AWS default value for administrator email address
- 1 ; serial number, not used by AWS
- 7200 ; refresh time in seconds for secondary DNS servers to refresh SOA record
- 900 ; retry time in seconds for secondary DNS servers to retry failed SOA record update
- 1209600 ; expire time in seconds (1209600 is 2 weeks) for secondary DNS servers to remove SOA record if they cannot refresh it
- 60 ; nxdomain TTL, or time in seconds for secondary DNS servers to cache negative responses
See SOA Record Documentation for more information.
string "awsdns-hostmaster.amazon.com. 1 7200 900 1209600 60" no
domain_names Root domain name list, e.g. ["example.net"] list(string) null no
enabled Set to false to prevent the module from creating any resources bool null no
environment ID element. Usually used for region e.g. 'uw2', 'us-west-2', OR role 'prod', 'staging', 'dev', 'UAT' string null no
id_length_limit Limit id to this many characters (minimum 6).
Set to 0 for unlimited length.
Set to null for keep the existing setting, which defaults to 0.
Does not affect id_full.
number null no
label_key_case Controls the letter case of the tags keys (label names) for tags generated by this module.
Does not affect keys of tags passed in via the tags input.
Possible values: lower, title, upper.
Default value: title.
string null no
label_order The order in which the labels (ID elements) appear in the id.
Defaults to ["namespace", "environment", "stage", "name", "attributes"].
You can omit any of the 6 labels ("tenant" is the 6th), but at least one must be present.
list(string) null no
label_value_case Controls the letter case of ID elements (labels) as included in id,
set as tag values, and output by this module individually.
Does not affect values of tags passed in via the tags input.
Possible values: lower, title, upper and none (no transformation).
Set this to title and set delimiter to "" to yield Pascal Case IDs.
Default value: lower.
string null no
labels_as_tags Set of labels (ID elements) to include as tags in the tags output.
Default is to include all labels.
Tags with empty values will not be included in the tags output.
Set to [] to suppress all generated tags.
Notes:
The value of the name tag, if included, will be the id, not the name.
Unlike other null-label inputs, the initial setting of labels_as_tags cannot be
changed in later chained modules. Attempts to change it will be silently ignored.
set(string)
[
"default"
]
no
name ID element. Usually the component or solution name, e.g. 'app' or 'jenkins'.
This is the only ID element not also included as a tag.
The "name" tag is set to the full id string. There is no tag with the value of the name input.
string null no
namespace ID element. Usually an abbreviation of your organization name, e.g. 'eg' or 'cp', to help ensure generated IDs are globally unique string null no
record_config DNS Record config
list(object({
root_zone = string
name = string
type = string
ttl = string
records = list(string)
}))
[] no
regex_replace_chars Terraform regular expression (regex) string.
Characters matching the regex will be removed from the ID elements.
If not set, "/[^a-zA-Z0-9-]/" is used to remove all characters other than hyphens, letters and digits.
string null no
region AWS Region string n/a yes
request_acm_certificate Whether or not to request an ACM certificate for each domain bool false no
stage ID element. Usually used to indicate role, e.g. 'prod', 'staging', 'source', 'build', 'test', 'deploy', 'release' string null no
tags Additional tags (e.g. {'BusinessUnit': 'XYZ'}).
Neither the tag keys nor the tag values will be modified by this module.
map(string) {} no
tenant ID element _(Rarely used, not included by default)_. A customer identifier, indicating who this instance of a resource is for string null no

Outputs

Name Description
acms ACM certificates for domains
zones DNS zones

References

Tip

👽 Use Atmos with Terraform

Cloud Posse uses atmos to easily orchestrate multiple environments using Terraform.
Works with Github Actions, Atlantis, or Spacelift.

Watch demo of using Atmos with Terraform
Example of running atmos to manage infrastructure from our Quick Start tutorial.

Related Projects

Check out these related projects.

  • Cloud Posse Terraform Modules - Our collection of reusable Terraform modules used by our reference architectures.
  • Atmos - Atmos is like docker-compose but for your infrastructure

Tip

Use Terraform Reference Architectures for AWS

Use Cloud Posse's ready-to-go terraform architecture blueprints for AWS to get up and running quickly.

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✨ Contributing

This project is under active development, and we encourage contributions from our community.

Many thanks to our outstanding contributors:

For 🐛 bug reports & feature requests, please use the issue tracker.

In general, PRs are welcome. We follow the typical "fork-and-pull" Git workflow.

  1. Review our Code of Conduct and Contributor Guidelines.
  2. Fork the repo on GitHub
  3. Clone the project to your own machine
  4. Commit changes to your own branch
  5. Push your work back up to your fork
  6. Submit a Pull Request so that we can review your changes

NOTE: Be sure to merge the latest changes from "upstream" before making a pull request!

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License

License

Preamble to the Apache License, Version 2.0

Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership.  The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at

  https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied.  See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.

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