Feature #6457
openAllow ability to configure AWS EC2 AMI via userdata
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Description
Most AWS EC2 AMIs allow you to configure many aspects of the instances that you are launching via the 'userdata'. Currently the pfSense AMI supplied by NetGate only allows us to configure the management network and the default admin user password. Having the ability to configure the instance with values supplied via the instance 'userdata' allows end-users to be able to launch instances configured in a manner that they are ready for use. Some examples that would be nice to have, but certainly can be expanded upon:
Management UI Port(1) - Allow the end-user to supply a port that sets $config[system][webui][port], and also automatically adds an appropriate rule to allow traffic
Management SSH Port(1) - Allow the end-user to supply a port that sets $config[system][ssh][port], and also automatically adds an appropriate rule to allow traffic
Enable SSH Management(1) - Allow the end-user to supply a boolean that sets $config[system][enablesshd]
Enable default VPN Configuration(2) - Allow the end-user to supply a boolean that tells the system to configure all of the openVPN/IPSec VPN configuration that currently comes with the AMI
Packages to Install - Allow the end-user to supply a list of package names to install (examples: haproxy,snort)
Package Configuration Array - Allow the end-user to supply an array to configure all packages given in above list that will set $config[installedpackages][$packagename]
NAT Configuration Array - Allow the end-user to supply an array to set $config[nat]
Rules Configuration Array - Allow the end-user to supply an array to set $config[filter][rule]
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Notes:
1) Allowing the user to configure the default management ports (for SSH as well as WebUI) enables the user to set the correct security groups when launching the instance. If you have the WebUI and SSH listening on their current defaults (80/443/22), and production traffic for the end-user application listens on these ports, extra measures have to be taken while the instance is reconfigured to keep the newly created instance secure and also to not cause application service interruptions. Allowing SSH enabled during launch allows for automation tools like ansible to run against this instance once the instance is in the running state.
2) The current AMI ships with a lot of default configuration to make the pfSense appliance a VPN-based appliance. This is a great feature, but it would be great if it was able to be enabled by request. For end-users that wish to use the pfSense only for its firewall filtering and forwarding capabilities, this causes manual configuration (or de-configuration) before it can be put into production.