An easy interface to query the EC2 metadata API, with caching.
A quick example:
>>> from ec2_metadata import ec2_metadata
>>> print(ec2_metadata.region)
us-east-1
>>> print(ec2_metadata.instance_id)
i-123456
Use pip:
pip install ec2-metadata
Tested on Python 2.7 and Python 3.6.
boto
came with a utility function to retrieve the instance metadata as a
lazy loading dictionary, boto.utils.get_instance_metadata
, but this has not
been ported to boto3
, as per this issue. I thought that rather than
building a new version inside boto3
it would work well as a standalone
library.
A container that represents the data available on the EC2 metadata service. Attributes don't entirely correspond to the paths in the metadata service - they have been 'cleaned up'. You may also want to refer to the metadata service docs to understand the exact contents.
There's a singleton instance of it at the name ec2_metadata
which should
cover 90% of use cases. Use it like:
from ec2_metadata import ec2_metadata
ec2_metadata.region
The session
argument, if provided, should be an instance of
requests.Session
, allowing you to customize the way requests are made.
Most of the attributes are cached, except where noted below. This is because they are mostly immutable, or at least require an instance stop to change. However some cached attributes do represent things that can change without an instance stop, but rarely do, such as network devices.
The caching is done with @cached_property
, so they cache on first access.
If you want to clear the cache of one attribute you can just del it:
del ec2_metadata.network_interfaces
To clear all, use the clear_all()
method as per below.
The current AWS account ID, e.g. '123456789012'
.
The ID of the AMI used to launch the instance, e.g. 'ami-123456'
.
The name of the current AZ e.g. 'eu-west-1a'
.
The index of the instance in the launch request, zero-based, e.g. 0
.
The path to the AMI manifest file in Amazon S3, or '(unknown)'
on
EBS-backed AMI's.
Clear all the cached attributes on the class, meaning their next access will re-fetch the data from the metadata API.
A dictionary of data for the IAM role attached to the instance, or None
if
no role is attached.
Uncached. A state that notifies if the instance will reboot in preparation for bundling. See the AWS docs for the valid values.
The current instance's ID, e.g. 'i-123456'
A dictionary of dynamic data - see AWS docs.
The ARN of the IAM role/instance profile attached to the instance, taken from
iam_info
, or None
if no role is attached.
The ID of the IAM role/instance profile attached to the instance, taken from
iam_info
, or None
if no role is attached.
The current instance's type, e.g. 't2.nano'
The current instance's kernel ID, or None
if it doesn't have one, e.g.
'aki-dc9ed9af'
.
The instance's MAC address, e.g. '0a:d2:ae:4d:f3:12'
A dictionary of mac address to NetworkInterface
, which represents the data
available on a network interface - see below. E.g.
{'01:23:45:67:89:ab': NetworkInterface('01:23:45:67:89:ab')}
The private IPv4 DNS hostname of the instance, e.g.
'ip-172-30-0-0.eu-west-1.compute.internal'
.
The private IPv4 of the instance, e.g. '172.30.0.0'
.
The public DNS hostname of the instance, or None
if the instance is not
public, e.g. 'ec2-1-2-3-4.compute-1.amazonaws.com'
.
The public IPv4 address of the instance, or None
if the instance is not
public, e.g. '1.2.3.4'
.
The region the instance is running in, e.g. 'eu-west-1'
.
The ID of the reservation used to launch the instance, e.g.
'r-12345678901234567'
.
List of security groups by name, e.g. ['ssh-access', 'custom-sg-1']
.
The raw user data assigned to the instance (not base64 encoded), or None
if
there is none.
Represents a single network interface, as retrieved from
EC2Metadata.network_interfaces
. Again like EC2Metadata
all its
attributes cache on first access, and can be cleared with del
or
its clear_all()
method.
The unique device number associated with that interface, e.g. 0
.
A dictionary mapping public IP addresses on the interface to the list of
private IP addresses associated with that public IP, for each public IP that is
associated with the interface, e.g. {'54.0.0.1': ['172.30.0.0']}
.
The MAC address of the interface, e.g. '01:23:45:67:89:ab'
.
The AWS Account ID of the owner of the network interface, e.g.
'123456789012'
.
The interface's local/private hostname, e.g.
'ip-172-30-0-0.eu-west-1.compute.internal'
.
The private IPv4 addresses associated with the interface, e.g.
['172.30.0.0']
.
The interface's public DNS (IPv4), e.g.
'ec2-54-0-0-0.compute-1.amazonaws.com'
.
The Elastic IP addresses associated with the interface, e.g. ['54.0.0.0']
.
The names of the security groups to which the network interface belongs, e.g.
['ssh-access', 'custom-sg-1']
.
The names of the security groups to which the network interface belongs, e.g.
['sg-12345678', 'sg-12345679']
.
The ID of the subnet in which the interface resides, e.g.
'subnet-12345678'
.
The IPv4 CIDR block of the subnet in which the interface resides, e.g.
'172.30.0.0/24'
.
The ID of the VPC in which the interface resides, e.g. 'vpc-12345678'
.
The IPv4 CIDR block of the VPC, or None
if the instance isn't in a VPC,
e.g. '172.30.0.0/16'
.
The list of IPv4 CIDR blocks, or None
if the instance isn't in a VPC, e.g.
['172.30.0.0/16']
.