
An Introduction to boto's RDS interface
***************************************

This tutorial focuses on the boto interface to the Relational Database
Service from Amazon Web Services.  This tutorial assumes that you have
boto already downloaded and installed, and that you wish to setup a
MySQL instance in RDS.

Warning: This tutorial covers the **ORIGINAL** module for RDS. It
  has since been supplanted by a second major version & an updated API
  complete with all service operations. The documentation for the new
  version of boto's support for RDS is at *RDS v2*.


Creating a Connection
=====================

The first step in accessing RDS is to create a connection to the
service. The recommended method of doing this is as follows:

   >>> import boto.rds
   >>> conn = boto.rds.connect_to_region(
   ...     "us-west-2",
   ...     aws_access_key_id='<aws access key'>,
   ...     aws_secret_access_key='<aws secret key>')

At this point the variable conn will point to an RDSConnection object
in the US-WEST-2 region. Bear in mind that just as any other AWS
service, RDS is region-specific. In this example, the AWS access key
and AWS secret key are passed in to the method explicitely.
Alternatively, you can set the environment variables:

* "AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID" - Your AWS Access Key ID

* "AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY" - Your AWS Secret Access Key

and then simply call:

   >>> import boto.rds
   >>> conn = boto.rds.connect_to_region("us-west-2")

In either case, conn will point to an RDSConnection object which we
will use throughout the remainder of this tutorial.


Starting an RDS Instance
========================

Creating a DB instance is easy. You can do so as follows:

   >>> db = conn.create_dbinstance("db-master-1", 10, 'db.m1.small', 'root', 'hunter2')

This example would create a DB identified as "db-master-1" with 10GB
of storage. This instance would be running on "db.m1.small" type, with
the login name being "root", and the password "hunter2".

To check on the status of your RDS instance, you will have to query
the RDS connection again:

   >>> instances = conn.get_all_dbinstances("db-master-1")
   >>> instances
   [DBInstance:db-master-1]
   >>> db = instances[0]
   >>> db.status
   u'available'
   >>> db.endpoint
   (u'db-master-1.aaaaaaaaaa.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com', 3306)


Creating a Security Group
=========================

Before you can actually connect to this RDS service, you must first
create a security group. You can add a CIDR range or an "EC2 security
group"  to your "DB security group"

   >>> sg = conn.create_dbsecurity_group('web_servers', 'Web front-ends')
   >>> sg.authorize(cidr_ip='10.3.2.45/32')
   True

You can then associate this security group with your RDS instance:

   >>> db.modify(security_groups=[sg])


Connecting to your New Database
===============================

Once you have reached this step, you can connect to your RDS instance
as you would with any other MySQL instance:

   >>> db.endpoint
   (u'db-master-1.aaaaaaaaaa.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com', 3306)

   % mysql -h db-master-1.aaaaaaaaaa.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com -u root -phunter2
   mysql>


Making a backup
===============

You can also create snapshots of your database very easily:

   >>> db.snapshot('db-master-1-2013-02-05')
   DBSnapshot:db-master-1-2013-02-05

Once this snapshot is complete, you can create a new database instance
from it:

   >>> db2 = conn.restore_dbinstance_from_dbsnapshot(
   ...    'db-master-1-2013-02-05',
   ...    'db-restored-1',
   ...    'db.m1.small',
   ...    'us-west-2')
