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Can I automatically start and terminate my Amazon instance using Amazon API? Can you please describe how this can be done? I ideally need to start the instance and stop the instance at specified time intervals every day.

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What happens to the data of your EC2 instance when it's shut down? Does it persist or do you have to rebuild it again? – Matthew Lock Feb 9 at 9:38

8 Answers

up vote 26 down vote accepted

Just in case somebody stumbles on this ye old question, nowadays you can achieve the same thing by adding a schedule to an auto scaling group: increase the amount of instances in an auto scaling group to 1 at certain times and decrease it back to 0 afterwards.

And since this answer is getting a lot of views, I thought to link to a very helpful guide about this: Running EC2 Instances on a Recurring Schedule with Auto Scaling

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1  
Best awnser here. – N. McA. Dec 20 '12 at 16:51

I recommend you take a look at the EC2 Getting Started Guide, which shows you how to do what you need using the EC2 command line tools. You can easily script this into a cron job (on Linux / UNIX) or scheduled job on Windows to call the start and stop commands at a given time.

If you want to do this from your own code, you can use the SOAP or REST APIs; see the Developer Guide for details.

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You can try using the Amazon EC2 API tools directly. There are really only two commands you need: ec2-start-instances and ec2-stop-instances. Make sure that environment variables such as EC2_HOME, AWS_CREDENTIAL_FILE, EC2_CERT, EC2_PRIVATE_KEY, etc. are properly configured and all AWS credentials, certificate and private key files are in proper location - you can find more info in the AWS EC2 API tools documentation.

You can test the command by hand first and then, when everything works fine, configure Unix crontab or Scheduled Tasks on Windows. You can find the example below for the Linux /etc/crontab file (do not forget that all those environment variables mentioned above need to be present for 'your-account' user.

/etc/crontab
0 8     * * *   your-account ec2-start-instances <your_instance_id>
0 16    * * *   your-account ec2-stop-instances <your_instance_id>
# Your instance will be started at 8am and shutdown at 4pm.

I am a developer for the BitNami Cloud project, where we package the AWS tools (including the ones I mentioned) in a free, easy to use installer that you may want to try: BitNami CloudTools pack stack

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I wrote code in Python, using the Boto library, to do this. You can adjust this for your own use. Make sure to run this as part of a cron job, and then you will be able to start-up or shut-down as many instances as you need during the cron jobs run.

#!/usr/bin/python
#
# Auto-start and stop EC2 instances
#
import boto, datetime, sys
from time import gmtime, strftime, sleep

# AWS credentials
aws_key = "AKIAxxx"
aws_secret = "abcd"

# The instances that we want to auto-start/stop
instances = [
    # You can have tuples in this format:
    # [instance-id, name/description, startHour, stopHour, ipAddress]
    ["i-12345678", "Description", "00", "12", "1.2.3.4"]
]

# --------------------------------------------

# If its the weekend, then quit
# If you don't care about the weekend, remove these three 
# lines of code below.
weekday = datetime.datetime.today().weekday()
if (weekday == 5) or (weekday == 6):
    sys.exit()

# Connect to EC2
conn = boto.connect_ec2(aws_key, aws_secret)

# Get current hour
hh = strftime("%H", gmtime())

# For each instance
for (instance, description, start, stop, ip) in instances:
    # If this is the hour of starting it...
    if (hh == start):
        # Start the instance
        conn.start_instances(instance_ids=[instance])
        # Sleep for a few seconds to ensure starting
        sleep(10)
        # Associate the Elastic IP with instance
        if ip:
            conn.associate_address(instance, ip)
    # If this is the hour of stopping it...
    if (hh == stop):
        # Stop the instance
        conn.stop_instances(instance_ids=[instance])
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If it's not mission critical - A simplistic thing to do is to schedule batch file to run 'SHUTDOWN' (windows) at 3am every day. Then at least you don't run the risk of accidentally leaving an unwanted instance running indefinitely.

Obviously this is only half the story!

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The company I work for had customers regularly asking about this so we've written a freeware EC2 scheduling app available here:

http://blog.simple-help.com/2012/03/free-ec2-scheduler/

It works on Windows and Mac, lets you create multiple daily/weekly/monthly schedules and lets you use matching filters to include large numbers of instances easily or includes ones that you add in the future.

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You could look at Ylastic to do this. The alternative seems to be having one machine running that shuts down/starts other instances using a cron job or scheduled task.

Obviously if you only want one instance this is an expensive solution, as one machine has to always be running, and paying ~$80 a month for one machine to run cron jobs isn't cost effective.

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You cannot do this automatically, or at least not without some programming and API manipulation in script files. If you want to a reliable solution to stop, restart and manage your images (presumably to control costs in your environment) then you may want to look at LabSlice. Disclaimer: I work for this company.

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