🛑 | If you already deployed one website using the v1 version of the tool, follow the Migration from v1 to v2 section before updating the tool version. |
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An out-of-the box tool written in Python to deploy your Webflow static website on AWS with a serverless architecture.
This tool uses the power of Cloud Formation to let you have your website up in minutes, with CDN and SSL Certificate enabled.
You can manage up to an infinite number of websites in the same AWS account, paying only for the real traffic. That's the beautiful part of serverless 😉
☝️ | In this version, everything needs to be hosted in AWS, also your domain. |
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In order to use this tool, you need to have:
- Access to an Active AWS account with all required permissions
- NodeJS 10.3.0 or later installed (instructions).
- Python 3.6 or later with pip3 installed (instructions)
- AWS CLI installed and configured (instructions).
Finally, install the AWS CDK command line tool with the following command
npm install -g aws-cdk
You can download and install the latest version of this tool from the Python package index (Pypi) as follows:
pip3 install webflow-aws
This section explains how build and install the Python package using the source code.
To use our tool, you have to clone this repository and install:
- Clone using HTTPs:
git clone https://github.com/odfdata/webflow-aws.git
- Clone using SSH:
git clone [email protected]:odfdata/webflow-aws.git
After you cloned the repository, go inside the webflow-aws folder and generate the .whl package to be installed.
cd webflow-aws
python3 setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
The build file (generate above) will be visible in the dist/
folder. You will have a wheel
and tar.gz
file.
If you previously installed another version of webflow-aws
, it's recommended to uninstall it running the following
command:
pip3 uninstall dist/webflow_aws-{version}-py3-none-any.whl
Now you're ready to install the package inside the dist/
folder. Without renaming them, you can install our tool on
any computer with the following command
pip3 install dist/webflow_aws-{version}-py3-none-any.whl
You can find the {version}
inside the setup.py
file.
At this point, on your target machine, you will be able to use the tool by typing webflow-aws
from any folder. To see
the available commands, and check if it's correctly installed, run the following command
webflow-aws --help
If you used the v1 version of the tool and you plan to migrate to the v2, remember this:
Running the commands below will put your current website offline for couple of minutes. Plan to run the migration when you don't have traffic on your website. |
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To migrate from v1 to v2, you have to delete the current deployed website from the AWS Console. Unfortunately is not possible to do it using our tool since there are resources that are running at edge and it takes time to complete the deletion on AWS side.
These are the steps to delete your current website:
- Open the configuration file you have locally (named webflow-aws-config.yaml), and search for the keywords
- stack_name and bucket_name and copy the values.
- Go to AWS Console and login in the account you have deployed your website.
- Search for the AWS service named S3 and open it.
- Search for the Bucket with the same name copied before and click on the circle on the left of the name.
- Click on the Empty button, and now you are ready to click on Delete button
- Search for the AWS service named CloudFormation and open it.
- Search for the stack deployed, click on it and click on Delete
- After a couple of minutes, you will see the status stack equal to DELETE_FAILED
- You can now click on Delete again, and check the square on the left of the resource name
- Now you can click on Delete stack, and you are ready to upgrade your local tool.
Run the following command to update the tool:
pip3 install --upgrade webflow-aws
Now you are ready to deploy your website using the new version running:
webflow-aws publish
You are now ready to deploy your website. Start by going to Webflow and download your created website as a .zip
file
(click here to see a detailed guide on how to do it).
Once you downloaded it, create a folder and put the .zip
file inside. The folder's name does not matter, but make it meaningful for you. In our guide we will use the example-website
folder
Once your website is deployed, you will need a DNS Record to point to the file location. With webflow-aws
you can do that in two ways:
- create a hosted zone inside Route53 (guide) on the AWS account you're using to deploy the website. In this scenario
webflow-aws
automatically manages the creation of all needed configuration, both for DNS Records and for SSL Certificate verification. - [beta] use a custom DNS manager, such as GoDaddy or your domain registrant. In this scenario, do not configure Route 53 properties and, once website is published, instructions with CNAMEs to set will be shown to you, so that you can manually configure them. Moreover, during first website deployment, you will need to publish a TXT record to verify your SSL Certificate.
With webflow-aws
you can have one or more subdomain point at your website, such as example.com
and www.example.com
.
In the webflow-aws-config.yaml
file you will need to set the list of domains you would like to have your website pointing at. For example, you can have example.com
and www.example.com
enabled.
The webflow-aws-config.yaml
file allows you to customize the website you want to publish online. To create it, you
have to run this command:
webflow-aws create-config
It will guide you through the creation of the configuration. At the end of this procedure, you will see the
webflow-aws-config.yaml
in your current directory.
If you want to create the configuration file on your own, this is an example file you can customize:
# REQUIRED parameters
bucket_name: "www.example.com"
domain_name: "example.com"
CNAMEs:
- "www.example.com"
route_53_hosted_zone_id: "Z05234556KK8DIAQM"
route_53_hosted_zone_name: "example.com"
stack_name: "WwwExampleComStack"
# OPTIONAL parameters
aws_profile_name: "default"
- bucket_name: the AWS S3 bucket name you want to create. In most of the cases, it's equal to the domain name.
- domain_name: the domain name you want to use to expose your website.
- CNAMEs: the list of alternative domain names you want to redirect to the domain name.
- route_53_hosted_zone_id: the AWS Route53 hosted zone created. This
guide shows how to create a new hosted zone and get hisid
. - route_53_hosted_zone_name: the AWS Route53 hosted zone domain name.
- stack_name: the name of the stack which all the resources will be grouped in. In most of the cases, it's the
domain name without dots
.
- aws_profile_name: (optional) the AWS profile name configured in AWS CLI. If you didn't specify it,
the profile name is
default
Place this file inside the example-website/
folder previously created. The content of that folder should be
|—— example-website
| |—— weblfow-files.zip
| |—— webflow-aws-config.yaml
Now you are ready to publish your website online.
Go inside the folder created before that contains:
webflow-aws-config.yaml
file.zip
file
To deploy your website, you have to execute this command:
webflow-aws publish
In 2 minutes, the content will be public available under the specified domain names.