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Amazon Account
HiveMQ License (optional)
Install Amazon CLI
The AWS Command Line Interface is an open-source tool that enables you to interact with AWS services using commands in your command-line shell.
To install the AWS CLI on macOS with Homebrew, open a terminal and enter the following. For other operating systems, see AWS CLI installation.Code Block brew install awscli
Verify AWS CLI Installation Open a new terminal or command prompt and run:
This should display the installed AWS CLI version.(For us , its aws-cli/2.15.17 Python/3.11.7 Darwin/23.3.0 source/arm64 prompt/off)
Code Block aws --version
Configure AWS CLI: After installing the AWS CLI, do the following steps to configure it. (For more information, see Configure the AWS CLI in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide.)
AWS IAM User: You can also create IAM user from AWS Management console. For this procedure, we are creating an IAM user using AWS CLI.
You can skip the following steps if you already have a IAM user with the right access.Create a New IAM User
Run the following command to create a new IAM user:
Code Block aws iam create-user --user-name hivemq-user
Attach AdministratorAccess Policy
Run the following command to attach the AdministratorAccess policy to the newly created user:
Code Block aws iam attach-user-policy --user-name hivemq-user --policy-arn arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AdministratorAccess
Create Access Key
Run the following command to create an access key for the user:
Code Block aws iam create-access-key --user-name hivemq-user
Following is the output is displayed after the successful creation of the access key, Please copy
AccessKeyId
andSecretAccessKey
values for the next steps.Code Block { "AccessKey": { "UserName": "test-user", "AccessKeyId": "AKIAZDMBWNVEP3Y5F2PH", "Status": "Active", "SecretAccessKey": "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", "CreateDate": "2024-02-01T11:10:59+00:00" } }
Run the following command:
Code Block aws configure
Optionally, you can configure a named profile, such as
--profile cluster-admin
. If you configure a named profile in the AWS CLI, you must always pass this flag in subsequent commands.If you do not have existing access keys, please use the steps here to create new access key and note it or download the csv file.
Run the following command
Code Block aws configure
This command will prompt you to enter the following information:
AWS Access Key ID: Enter your AWS access key.
AWS Secret Access Key: Enter your AWS secret key.
Default region name: Enter the AWS region you want to use (e.g.,
us-east-1
).Default output format: You can leave this as
json
.
For example:
AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLECode Block AWS Access Key ID [None]:
wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEYAKIAI#####LE AWS Secret Access Key [None]:
wJal####KEY Default region name [None]: us-east-1 Default output format [None]: json
Optionally, you can configure a named profile, such as
--profile cluster-admin
. If you configure a named profile in the AWS CLI, you must always pass this flag in subsequent commands.
EKS CLI (eksctl
)eksctl
is a command line tool for working with EKS clusters that automates many individual tasks. To install the AWS CLI on macOS with Homebrew, open a terminal and enter the following. For other operating systems, see the installation in eksctl
documentation.
Code Block |
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brew tap weaveworks/tap brew install weaveworks/tap/eksctl |
IAM permissions – The IAM security principal that you're using must have permissions to work with Amazon EKS IAM roles, service linked roles, AWS CloudFormation, a VPC, and related resources. For more information, see Actions, resources, and condition keys for Amazon Elastic Container Service for Kubernetes and Using service-linked roles in the IAM User Guide.
Kubectl, Helm and MQTT CLI https://hivemq.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/HMS/pages/2700902571
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