问题
I am creating an AWS ECS service using Cloudformation.
Everything seems to complete successfully, I can see the instance being attached to the load-balancer, the load-balancer is declaring the instance as being healthy, and if I hit the load-balancer I am successfully taken to my running container.
Looking at the ECS control panel, I can see that the service has stabilised, and that everything is looking OK. I can also see that the container is stable, and is not being terminated/re-created.
However, the Cloudformation template never completes, it is stuck in CREATE_IN_PROGRESS
until about 30-60 minutes later, when it rolls back claiming that the service did not stabilise. Looking at CloudTrail, I can see a number of RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer
instantiated by ecs-service-scheduler
, all with the same parameters i.e. same instance id and load-balancer. I am using standard IAM roles and permissions for ECS, so it should not be a permissions issue.
Anyone had a similar issue?
回答1:
Your AWS::ECS::Service
needs to register the full ARN for the TaskDefinition
(Source: See the answer from ChrisB@AWS on the AWS forums). The key thing is to set your TaskDefinition
with the full ARN, including revision. If you skip the revision (:123
in the example below), the latest revision is used, but CloudFormation still goes out to lunch with "CREATE_IN_PROGRESS" for about an hour before failing. Here's one way to do that:
"MyService": {
"Type": "AWS::ECS::Service",
"Properties": {
"Cluster": { "Ref": "ECSClusterArn" },
"DesiredCount": 1,
"LoadBalancers": [
{
"ContainerName": "myContainer",
"ContainerPort": "80",
"LoadBalancerName": "MyELBName"
}
],
"Role": { "Ref": "EcsElbServiceRoleArn" },
"TaskDefinition": {
"Fn::Join": ["", ["arn:aws:ecs:", { "Ref": "AWS::Region" },
":", { "Ref": "AWS::AccountId" },
":task-definition/my-task-definition-name:123"]]}
}
}
}
Here's a nifty way to grab the latest revision of MyTaskDefinition
via the aws cli and jq:
aws ecs list-task-definitions --family-prefix MyTaskDefinition | jq --raw-output .taskDefinitionArns[0][-1:]
回答2:
I found another related scenario that will cause this and thought I'd put it here in case anyone else runs into it. If you define a TaskDefinition
with an Image that doesn't actually exist in its ContainerDefinition
and then you try to run that TaskDefinition
as a Service, you'll run into the same hang issue (or at least something that looks like the same issue).
NOTE: The example YAML chunks below were all in the same CloudFormation template
So as an example, I created this Repository
:
MyRepository:
Type: AWS::ECR::Repository
And then I created this Cluster
:
MyCluster:
Type: AWS::ECS::Cluster
And this TaskDefinition
(abridged):
MyECSTaskDefinition:
Type: AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition
Properties:
# ...
ContainerDefinitions:
# ...
Image: !Join ["", [!Ref "AWS::AccountId", ".dkr.ecr.", !Ref "AWS::Region", ".amazonaws.com/", !Ref MyRepository, ":1"]]
# ...
With those defined, I went to create a Service
like this:
MyECSServiceDefinition:
Type: AWS::ECS::Service
Properties:
Cluster: !Ref MyCluster
DesiredCount: 2
PlacementStrategies:
- Type: spread
Field: attribute:ecs.availability-zone
TaskDefinition: !Ref MyECSTaskDefinition
Which all seemed sensible to me, but it turns out there two issues with this as written/deployed that caused it to hang.
- The
DesiredCount
is set to 2 which means it will actually try to spin up the service and run it, not just define it. If I setDesiredCount
to 0, this works just fine. - The
Image
defined inMyECSTaskDefinition
doesn't exist yet. I made the repository as part of this template, but I didn't actually push anything to it. So when theMyECSServiceDefinition
tried to spin up theDesiredCount
of 2 instances, it hung because the image wasn't actually available in the repository (because the repository literally just got created in the same template).
So, for now, the solution is to create the CloudFormation stack with a DesiredCount
of 0 for the Service
, upload the appropriate Image
to the repository and then update the CloudFormation stack to scale up the service. Or alternately, have a separate template that sets up core infrastructure like the repository, upload builds to that and then have a separate template to run that sets up the Services
themselves.
Hope that helps anyone having this issue!
回答3:
No need to register the full ARN for the TaskDefinition, because when the logical ID of this resource is provided to the Ref intrinsic function, Ref returns the Amazon Resource Name (ARN).
In the following sample, the Ref function returns the ARN of the MyTaskDefinition task, such as arn:aws:ecs:us-west-2:123456789012:task/1abf0f6d-a411-4033-b8eb-a4eed3ad252a.
{ "Ref": "MyTaskDefinition" }
Source http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-resource-ecs-taskdefinition.html
回答4:
I think I had similar issue. Try looking at the "DesiredCount" property in the Service template. I think CloudFormation will indicate that the creation/update is still in progress until the Service reach that number of "DesiredCount" in your cluster.
回答5:
Anything that prevents the ECS Service definition from reaching the Desired Count. One example is missing permissions in the policies attached to the role used by the instances. Check the instances ECS agent logs (/var/log/ecs/ecs-agent.log.timestamp).
Another example: Instances don't have enough memory available to match the requested Desired Count.... events will show something like this:
"...service myService was unable to place a task because no container instance met all of its requirements. The closest matching container-instance 123456789 has insufficient memory available..."
回答6:
To add another data point, I've seen AWS::ECS::Service
get permanently stuck in CREATE_IN_PROGRESS
if the ECR docker image is not both a) available from the ECR repo and b) pass the health check.
I've tried multiple times to boot an AWS::ECS::Service
with a valid-image-hash-but-failing-health-check container, then fix the image and do the various "set desired count to zero", "set it back", etc., and nothing AFAICT gets it unstuck.
I eventually have to delete the stack, and start over with an image that immediately passes the health check. Then it works fine.
Super flakey.
回答7:
I had the same problem. I solved by increasing my allocated memory size for the task definition.
The container(s) you're running must not exceed the available memory on your ECS instance.
回答8:
To add another possibility, I ran into this issue one time where everything was fine with the template, desired task count = # of running tasks, etc. It turned out that one of the underlying EC2 instances was stuck near 100% CPU state (but EC2 saw it as "healthy"). It was preventing CloudFormation from validating that particular instance. I killed the bad EC2 instance, and ECS spun up a truly healthy one.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32727520/cloudformation-template-for-creating-ecs-service-stuck-in-create-in-progress