Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: sshaws
Version: 0.2.0
Summary: Simply connect to your "EC2 Instance Connect"-capable AWS EC2 servers using one command
Home-page: https://github.com/FrederikP/sshaws
Author: Frederik Petersen
Author-email: sshaws@the-imperfection.de
License: UNKNOWN
Project-URL: Bug Reports, https://github.com/FrederikP/sshaws/issues
Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/FrederikP/sshaws
Description: # sshaws
        
        Simply connect to your 'EC2 Instance Connect'-capable AWS EC2 servers using one command.
        If you use 'EC2 Instance Connect' as described [in this article](https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/compute/new-using-amazon-ec2-instance-connect-for-ssh-access-to-your-ec2-instances/) you already noticed that it can become a hassle to connect to instances, especially if you frequently connect to different instances. The `sshaws` command allows takes care of gathering the necessary information, calling ec2-instance-connect (to register your public key) and, finally, ssh to the instance.
        
        With sshaws, in the best case, connecting to your instances will look like this:
        
        TODO GIF
        
        ## Requirements
        
        - python3 and pip
        - configured aws credentials and rights to connect to the instance
        - instance needs to support ec2-instance-connect (AWS AMIs support that + you can install it on your servers)
        - public (or private) IP needs to be reachable
        
        ## Installation
        
        ```bash
        pip install sshaws
        ```
        
        You might need to use pip3 if you are not in a virtualenv. You might want to install the package in user space (if you don't have sudo rights). E.g.:
        
        ```bash
        pip3 install --user sshaws
        ```
        
        ## Usage
        
        ```bash
        sshaws <instance-id>
        ```
        
        `<instance-id>` should be replaced by something like: `i-074126021e7b3e7f5`. The Instance ID can be found in the AWS Console (EC2 view, ECS task description, etc.)
        
        By default it will use the default region, your ssh key at ~/.ssh/id_rsa (private) and ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub (public) and ec2-user as the username used to connect.
        See the help output to see how to change these options:
        
        ```bash
        sshaws --help
        ```
        
        ## More Examples
        
        To look for the instance in two different regions use:
        
        ```bash
        sshaws <instance-id> --regions eu-central-1 us-east-1
        ```
        
        ## Config
        
        To avoid having to set command line arguments again and again you can write a config file to `~/.sshaws.conf`.
        
        This is an example:
        
        ```json
        {
            "os_user": "kevin",
            "use_private_id": true,
            "regions": ["eu-central-1", "us-east-1"],
            "key_file_path_private": "/home/example/.ssh/somekey",
            "key_file_path_public": "/home/example/.ssh/somekey.pub",
        }
        ```
        
        Private and public key might be combined in the same file in some cases. Just specify both options.
        
Keywords: aws connect ssh cli instance
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development
Classifier: Topic :: System :: Networking
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Requires-Python: >=3.0, <4
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
