Code examples for Amazon EC2 using AWS SDKs - Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud

Code examples for Amazon EC2 using AWS SDKs

The following code examples show how to use Amazon EC2 with an AWS software development kit (SDK).

Basics are code examples that show you how to perform the essential operations within a service.

Actions are code excerpts from larger programs and must be run in context. While actions show you how to call individual service functions, you can see actions in context in their related scenarios.

Scenarios are code examples that show you how to accomplish specific tasks by calling multiple functions within a service or combined with other AWS services.

For a complete list of AWS SDK developer guides and code examples, see Create Amazon EC2 resources using an AWS SDK. This topic also includes information about getting started and details about previous SDK versions.

Get started

The following code examples show how to get started using Amazon EC2.

.NET
AWS SDK for .NET
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

namespace EC2Actions; public class HelloEc2 { /// <summary> /// HelloEc2 lists the existing security groups for the default users. /// </summary> /// <param name="args">Command line arguments</param> /// <returns>Async task.</returns> static async Task Main(string[] args) { // Set up dependency injection for Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). using var host = Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args) .ConfigureServices((_, services) => services.AddAWSService<IAmazonEC2>() .AddTransient<EC2Wrapper>() ) .Build(); // Now the client is available for injection. var ec2Client = host.Services.GetRequiredService<IAmazonEC2>(); try { // Retrieve information for up to 10 Amazon EC2 security groups. var request = new DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest { MaxResults = 10, }; var securityGroups = new List<SecurityGroup>(); var paginatorForSecurityGroups = ec2Client.Paginators.DescribeSecurityGroups(request); await foreach (var securityGroup in paginatorForSecurityGroups.SecurityGroups) { securityGroups.Add(securityGroup); } // Now print the security groups returned by the call to // DescribeSecurityGroupsAsync. Console.WriteLine("Welcome to the EC2 Hello Service example. " + "\nLet's list your Security Groups:"); securityGroups.ForEach(group => { Console.WriteLine( $"Security group: {group.GroupName} ID: {group.GroupId}"); }); } catch (AmazonEC2Exception ex) { Console.WriteLine($"An Amazon EC2 service error occurred while listing security groups. {ex.Message}"); } catch (Exception ex) { Console.WriteLine($"An error occurred while listing security groups. {ex.Message}"); } } }
C++
SDK for C++
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

Code for the CMakeLists.txt CMake file.

# Set the minimum required version of CMake for this project. cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.13) # Set the AWS service components used by this project. set(SERVICE_COMPONENTS ec2) # Set this project's name. project("hello_ec2") # Set the C++ standard to use to build this target. # At least C++ 11 is required for the AWS SDK for C++. set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11) # Use the MSVC variable to determine if this is a Windows build. set(WINDOWS_BUILD ${MSVC}) if (WINDOWS_BUILD) # Set the location where CMake can find the installed libraries for the AWS SDK. string(REPLACE ";" "/aws-cpp-sdk-all;" SYSTEM_MODULE_PATH "${CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH}/aws-cpp-sdk-all") list(APPEND CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH ${SYSTEM_MODULE_PATH}) endif () # Find the AWS SDK for C++ package. find_package(AWSSDK REQUIRED COMPONENTS ${SERVICE_COMPONENTS}) if (WINDOWS_BUILD AND AWSSDK_INSTALL_AS_SHARED_LIBS) # Copy relevant AWS SDK for C++ libraries into the current binary directory for running and debugging. # set(BIN_SUB_DIR "/Debug") # If you are building from the command line, you may need to uncomment this # and set the proper subdirectory to the executables' location. AWSSDK_CPY_DYN_LIBS(SERVICE_COMPONENTS "" ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}${BIN_SUB_DIR}) endif () add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} hello_ec2.cpp) target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME} ${AWSSDK_LINK_LIBRARIES})

Code for the hello_ec2.cpp source file.

#include <aws/core/Aws.h> #include <aws/ec2/EC2Client.h> #include <aws/ec2/model/DescribeInstancesRequest.h> #include <iomanip> #include <iostream> /* * A "Hello EC2" starter application which initializes an Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) client and describes * the Amazon EC2 instances. * * main function * * Usage: 'hello_ec2' * */ int main(int argc, char **argv) { (void)argc; (void)argv; Aws::SDKOptions options; // Optionally change the log level for debugging. // options.loggingOptions.logLevel = Utils::Logging::LogLevel::Debug; Aws::InitAPI(options); // Should only be called once. int result = 0; { Aws::Client::ClientConfiguration clientConfig; // Optional: Set to the AWS Region (overrides config file). // clientConfig.region = "us-east-1"; Aws::EC2::EC2Client ec2Client(clientConfig); Aws::EC2::Model::DescribeInstancesRequest request; bool header = false; bool done = false; while (!done) { Aws::EC2::Model::DescribeInstancesOutcome outcome = ec2Client.DescribeInstances(request); if (outcome.IsSuccess()) { if (!header) { std::cout << std::left << std::setw(48) << "Name" << std::setw(20) << "ID" << std::setw(25) << "Ami" << std::setw(15) << "Type" << std::setw(15) << "State" << std::setw(15) << "Monitoring" << std::endl; header = true; } const std::vector<Aws::EC2::Model::Reservation> &reservations = outcome.GetResult().GetReservations(); for (const auto &reservation: reservations) { const std::vector<Aws::EC2::Model::Instance> &instances = reservation.GetInstances(); for (const auto &instance: instances) { Aws::String instanceStateString = Aws::EC2::Model::InstanceStateNameMapper::GetNameForInstanceStateName( instance.GetState().GetName()); Aws::String typeString = Aws::EC2::Model::InstanceTypeMapper::GetNameForInstanceType( instance.GetInstanceType()); Aws::String monitorString = Aws::EC2::Model::MonitoringStateMapper::GetNameForMonitoringState( instance.GetMonitoring().GetState()); Aws::String name = "Unknown"; const std::vector<Aws::EC2::Model::Tag> &tags = instance.GetTags(); auto nameIter = std::find_if(tags.cbegin(), tags.cend(), [](const Aws::EC2::Model::Tag &tag) { return tag.GetKey() == "Name"; }); if (nameIter != tags.cend()) { name = nameIter->GetValue(); } std::cout << std::setw(48) << name << std::setw(20) << instance.GetInstanceId() << std::setw(25) << instance.GetImageId() << std::setw(15) << typeString << std::setw(15) << instanceStateString << std::setw(15) << monitorString << std::endl; } } if (!outcome.GetResult().GetNextToken().empty()) { request.SetNextToken(outcome.GetResult().GetNextToken()); } else { done = true; } } else { std::cerr << "Failed to describe EC2 instances:" << outcome.GetError().GetMessage() << std::endl; result = 1; break; } } } Aws::ShutdownAPI(options); // Should only be called once. return result; }
Java
SDK for Java 2.x
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

/** * Asynchronously describes the security groups for the specified group ID. * * @param groupName the name of the security group to describe * @return a {@link CompletableFuture} that represents the asynchronous operation * of describing the security groups. The future will complete with a * {@link DescribeSecurityGroupsResponse} object that contains the * security group information. */ public CompletableFuture<String> describeSecurityGroupArnByNameAsync(String groupName) { DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest request = DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest.builder() .groupNames(groupName) .build(); DescribeSecurityGroupsPublisher paginator = getAsyncClient().describeSecurityGroupsPaginator(request); AtomicReference<String> groupIdRef = new AtomicReference<>(); return paginator.subscribe(response -> { response.securityGroups().stream() .filter(securityGroup -> securityGroup.groupName().equals(groupName)) .findFirst() .ifPresent(securityGroup -> groupIdRef.set(securityGroup.groupId())); }).thenApply(v -> { String groupId = groupIdRef.get(); if (groupId == null) { throw new RuntimeException("No security group found with the name: " + groupName); } return groupId; }).exceptionally(ex -> { logger.info("Failed to describe security group: " + ex.getMessage()); throw new RuntimeException("Failed to describe security group", ex); }); }
JavaScript
SDK for JavaScript (v3)
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

import { DescribeSecurityGroupsCommand, EC2Client } from "@aws-sdk/client-ec2"; // Call DescribeSecurityGroups and display the result. export const main = async () => { const client = new EC2Client(); try { const { SecurityGroups } = await client.send( new DescribeSecurityGroupsCommand({}), ); const securityGroupList = SecurityGroups.slice(0, 9) .map((sg) => ` • ${sg.GroupId}: ${sg.GroupName}`) .join("\n"); console.log( "Hello, Amazon EC2! Let's list up to 10 of your security groups:", ); console.log(securityGroupList); } catch (err) { console.error(err); } }; // Call function if run directly. import { fileURLToPath } from "node:url"; if (process.argv[1] === fileURLToPath(import.meta.url)) { main(); }
Kotlin
SDK for Kotlin
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

suspend fun describeEC2SecurityGroups(groupId: String) { val request = DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest { groupIds = listOf(groupId) } Ec2Client { region = "us-west-2" }.use { ec2 -> val response = ec2.describeSecurityGroups(request) response.securityGroups?.forEach { group -> println("Found Security Group with id ${group.groupId}, vpc id ${group.vpcId} and description ${group.description}") } } }
Python
SDK for Python (Boto3)
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

def hello_ec2(ec2_client): """ Use the AWS SDK for Python (Boto3) to list the security groups in your account. This example uses the default settings specified in your shared credentials and config files. :param ec2_client: A Boto3 EC2 client. This client provides low-level access to AWS EC2 services. """ print("Hello, Amazon EC2! Let's list up to 10 of your security groups:") try: paginator = ec2_client.get_paginator("describe_security_groups") response_iterator = paginator.paginate(MaxResults=10) for page in response_iterator: for sg in page["SecurityGroups"]: logger.info(f"\t{sg['GroupId']}: {sg['GroupName']}") except ClientError as err: logger.error("Failed to list security groups.") if err.response["Error"]["Code"] == "AccessDeniedException": logger.error("You do not have permission to list security groups.") raise if __name__ == "__main__": hello_ec2(boto3.client("ec2"))
Ruby
SDK for Ruby
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

require 'aws-sdk-ec2' require 'logger' # EC2Manager is a class responsible for managing EC2 operations # such as listing all EC2 instances in the current AWS account. class EC2Manager def initialize(client) @client = client @logger = Logger.new($stdout) end # Lists and prints all EC2 instances in the current AWS account. def list_instances @logger.info('Listing instances') instances = fetch_instances if instances.empty? @logger.info('You have no instances') else print_instances(instances) end end private # Fetches all EC2 instances using pagination. # # @return [Array<Aws::EC2::Types::Instance>] List of EC2 instances. def fetch_instances paginator = @client.describe_instances instances = [] paginator.each_page do |page| page.reservations.each do |reservation| reservation.instances.each do |instance| instances << instance end end end instances end # Prints details of the given EC2 instances. # # @param instances [Array<Aws::EC2::Types::Instance>] List of EC2 instances to print. def print_instances(instances) instances.each do |instance| @logger.info("Instance ID: #{instance.instance_id}") @logger.info("Instance Type: #{instance.instance_type}") @logger.info("Public IP: #{instance.public_ip_address}") @logger.info("Public DNS Name: #{instance.public_dns_name}") @logger.info("\n") end end end if $PROGRAM_NAME == __FILE__ ec2_client = Aws::EC2::Client.new(region: 'us-west-2') manager = EC2Manager.new(ec2_client) manager.list_instances end
Rust
SDK for Rust
Note

There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository.

async fn show_security_groups(client: &aws_sdk_ec2::Client, group_ids: Vec<String>) { let response = client .describe_security_groups() .set_group_ids(Some(group_ids)) .send() .await; match response { Ok(output) => { for group in output.security_groups() { println!( "Found Security Group {} ({}), vpc id {} and description {}", group.group_name().unwrap_or("unknown"), group.group_id().unwrap_or("id-unknown"), group.vpc_id().unwrap_or("vpcid-unknown"), group.description().unwrap_or("(none)") ); } } Err(err) => { let err = err.into_service_error(); let meta = err.meta(); let message = meta.message().unwrap_or("unknown"); let code = meta.code().unwrap_or("unknown"); eprintln!("Error listing EC2 Security Groups: ({code}) {message}"); } } }
Code examples