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Amazon only gives you a certain number of static ip address and the local (private) ips of each EC2 instance can change when the machine is restarted. This makes creating a stable platform where EC2 instances depend on each other ridiculously hard to use as far as I can tell.

I've search online a lot about various solutions and so far have found nothing reasonable outside of assigning an elastic ip address on ever EC2 even if its not public facing. Does anyone have any other good ideas that is actually easy to execute on?

Thanks!

See the AWS team's response to question Static local IP:

The internal IP address of EC2 instances is allocated via DHCP. On instance shutdown, or when the DHCP lease expires, the IP address is returned to the general EC2 DHCP pool of addresses available for other instances.

There is no way to guarantee that you will obtain the same DHCP address across reboots.

Edit: The answer is to use Amazon VPC. There is no downside except a trivial amount of extra setup because now you control the router. It's a world apart from plain old EC2 instance on AWS. It's so necessary in fact that VPC will be enabled for all future AWS setups by default. See this post for more information: http://www.reddit.com/r/aws/comments/1a3n0r/ec2_update_virtual_private_clouds_for_everyone/

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5 Answers 5

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The stock answers are:

  1. Use AWS VPC so you have complete control over instance addressing
  2. Use Elastic IPs, which will resolve to the instance's local address (not the public, as you'd expect) when used to communicate between EC2 instances
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  • Thanks gabrtv. Just a note here that AWS VPC doesn't work with micro instances. I'm using Kue to create a pub/sub worker queue and buying all small instances (at 4x the cost) isn't manageable. Looking at the other solutions. May 24, 2012 at 23:10
  • Additionally, you are limited in how many Elastic IP's you can have. Our limit seems to be 10. Sep 18, 2012 at 17:55
  • 1
    @MauvisLedford I believe the limit starts at 5. However you can request more Elastic IPs here: aws.amazon.com/contact-us/eip_limit_request
    – gabrtv
    Sep 18, 2012 at 18:49
  • An update here that VPC now works with micro instances and I have a working VPC prototype with two instances. One publicly addressable via elastic ip and the other using local ip only and only communicable within my private network. This is truly the way to go. And best of all no additional charge to use. Nov 23, 2012 at 14:58
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    "Use Elastic IPs, which will resolve to the instance's local address (not the public, as you'd expect) when used to communicate between EC2 instances" Major caveat: It only resolves like that if you use the Public DNS Name, not the Public IP address.
    – wisbucky
    Dec 12, 2013 at 20:35
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I stumbled upon third option. There's ec2-ssh by the Instragram folks. It's a python shell script that you install globally and lets you both query the public dns of your ec2 instances by tag name and also ssh in via tag name as well.

The documentation for it is virtually nonexistent. I've written down the steps to install below:

To install ec2-ssh:

  1. sudo yum install python-boto (python wrapper for ec2 api)
  2. git clone https://github.com/Instagram/ec2-ssh
  3. In your ~/.bash_profile set your AWS access key and secret like so:

    export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=XYZ123

    export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=XYZ123

  4. cd into the bin folder of the repo, there will be two files:

    ec2-host and ec2-ssh

copy them to your /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin.

Now you can do awesome stuff like:

$ ec2-host ZenWorker
ec2-999-xy-999-99.compute-1.amazonaws.com

and

$ ec2-ssh ZenWorker
Connecting to ec2-999-xy-999-99.compute-1.amazonaws.com.

Note that in your regular shell scripts you can use backticks to call these global tools. I've timed these calls and they take between 0.25 and 0.5 second using an EC2 instance, so that's really the only downside. Perhaps you can live with the delay, or use the fact that public DNS only changes for an instance on reboot to work up a solution.

Note that these two programs are commandline scripts and you don't need any Python knowledge to use them. For PHP fans, or those that also want an easy way to scp files without knowing the changing public DNS, you can checkout ec2dns.

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I was in the same situation once. I still dont have the expertise to solve it properly. My ugly solution was to use elb not really for load balancing but just for the endpoint.

But I think a good solution can be obtained by using aws vpc.

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  • That can add up at $18.60 month minimally + $0.008 per GB Data processed. Thanks for discussing the option though. Will investigate Amazon Virtual Private Cloud. Nov 22, 2012 at 8:42
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Here's another Ruby solution for Updating Route 53 DNS from instance on AWS. You shouldn't reference raw 3rd party system IP addresses in your applications or server configurations.

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you can change Ip Address using Elastic Ip: You Can Do Using C# Code:

 var associateRequest = new AssociateAddressRequest
            {
                 PublicIp = your Elastic Ip,
                 InstanceId = Your Instance Id Which You Assign
            };    
        amazonEc2Client.AssociateAddress(associateRequest);

after That DeAssociate It.

        var disAssociateRequest = new isassociateAddressRequest(publicIp.ElasticIpAddress1);
  AmazonEc2Client.DisassociateAddress(your Elastic Ip);

your Public Ip Will Change

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