Provided by: libvm-ec2-perl_1.23-1_all bug

NAME

       VM::EC2::Staging::Manager - Automate VMs and volumes for moving data in and out of cloud.

SYNOPSIS

        use VM::EC2::Staging::Manager;

        my $ec2     = VM::EC2->new(-region=>'us-east-1');
        my $staging = $ec2->staging_manager(-on_exit     => 'stop', # default, stop servers when process exists
                                            -verbose     => 1,      # default, verbose progress messages
                                            -scan        => 1,      # default, scan region for existing staging servers and volumes
                                            -image_name  => 'ubuntu-precise-12.04',  # default server image
                                            -user_name   => 'ubuntu',                # default server login name
                                            );

        # Assuming an EBS image named ami-12345 is located in the US, copy it into
        # the South American region, returning the AMI ID in South America
        my $new_image = $staging->copy_image('ami-12345','sa-east-1');

        # provision a new server, using defaults. Name will be assigned automatically
        my $server = $staging->provision_server(-availability_zone => 'us-east-1a');

        # retrieve a new server named "my_server", if one exists. If not, it creates one
        # using the specified options
        my $server = $staging->get_server(-name              => 'my_server',
                                          -availability_zone => 'us-east-1a',
                                          -instance_type     => 't1.micro');

        # open up an ssh session in an xterm
        $server->shell;

        # run a command over ssh on the server. See VM::EC2::Staging::Server
        $server->ssh('whoami');

        # run a command over ssh on the server, returning the result as an array of lines or a
        # scalar string, similar to backticks (``)
        my @password_lines = $server->scmd('cat /etc/passwd');

        # run a command on the server and read from it using a filehandle
        my $fh  = $server->scmd_read('ls -R /usr/lib');
        while (<$fh>) { # do something }

        # run a command on the server and write to it using a filehandle
        my $fh  = $server->scmd_write('sudo -s "cat >>/etc/fstab"');
        print $fh "/dev/sdf3 /mnt/demo ext3 0 2\n";
        close $fh;

        # Provision a new volume named "Pictures". Will automatically be mounted to a staging server in
        # the specified zone. Server will be created if needed.
        my $volume = $staging->provision_volume(-name              => 'Pictures',
                                                -fstype            => 'ext4',
                                                -availability_zone => 'us-east-1a',
                                                -size              => 2) or die $staging->error_str;

        # gets an existing volume named "Pictures" if it exists. Otherwise provisions a new volume;
        my $volume = $staging->get_volume(-name              => 'Pictures',
                                          -fstype            => 'ext4',
                                          -availability_zone => 'us-east-1a',
                                          -size              => 2) or die $staging->error_str;

        # copy contents of local directory /opt/test to remote volume $volume using rsync
        # See VM::EC2::Staging::Volume
        $volume->put('/opt/test/');

        # same thing, but first creating a subdirectory on the remote volume
        $volume->put('/opt/test/' => './mirrors/');

        # copy contents of remote volume $volume to local directory /tmp/test using rsync
        $volume->get('/tmp/test');

        # same thing, but from a subdirectory of the remote volume
        $volume->get('./mirrors/' => '/tmp/test');

        # server to server transfer (works both within and between availability regions)
        my $south_america = VM::EC2->new(-region=>'sa-east-1')->staging_manager;    # create a staging manager in Sao Paolo
        my $volume2 = $south_america->provision_volume(-name              => 'Videos',
                                                       -availability_zone => 'sa-east-1a',
                                                       -size              => 2);
        $staging->rsync("$volume/mirrors" => "$volume2/us-east");

        $staging->stop_all_servers();
        $staging->start_all_servers();
        $staging->terminate_all_servers();
        $staging->force_terminate_all_servers();

DESCRIPTION

       VM::EC2::Staging::Manager manages a set of EC2 volumes and servers in a single AWS region.
       It was primarily designed to simplify the process of provisioning and populating volumes,
       but it also provides a handy set of ssh commands that allow you to run remote commands
       programmatically.

       The manager also allows you to copy EBS-backed AMIs and their attached volumes from one
       region to another, something that is otherwise difficult to do.

       The main classes are:

        VM::EC2::Staging::Manager -- A set of volume and server resources in
                                     a single AWS region.

        VM::EC2::Staging::Server -- A staging server running somewhere in the
                                    region. It is a VM::EC2::Instance
                                    extended to provide remote command and
                                    copy facilities.

        VM::EC2::Staging::Volume -- A staging disk volume running somewhere in the
                                    region. It is a VM::EC2::Volume
                                    extended to provide remote copy
                                    facilities.

       Staging servers can provision volumes, format them, mount them, copy data between local
       and remote (virtual) machines, and execute secure shell commands. Staging volumes can
       mount themselves on servers, run a variety of filesystem-oriented commands, and invoke
       commands on the servers to copy data around locally and remotely.

       See VM::EC2::Staging::Server and VM::EC2::Staging::Volume for the full details.

Constructors

       The following methods allow you to create new VM::EC2::Staging::Manager instances. Be
       aware that only one manager is allowed per EC2 region; attempting to create additional
       managers in the same region will return the same one each time.

   $manager = $ec2->staging_manager(@args)
       This is a simplified way to create a staging manager. First create the EC2 object in the
       desired region, and then call its staging_manager() method:

        $manager = VM::EC2->new(-region=>'us-west-2')->staging_manager()

       The staging_manager() method is only known to VM::EC2 objects if you first "use"
       VM::EC2::Staging::Manager.

       Required Arguments
           None.

       Optional Arguments
           The optional arguments change the way that the manager creates new servers and
           volumes.

            -on_exit       What to do with running servers when the manager goes
                           out of scope or the script exits. One of 'run',
                           'stop' (default), or 'terminate'. "run" keeps all
                           created instances running, so beware!

            -architecture  Architecture for newly-created server
                           instances (default "i386"). Can be overridden in calls to get_server()
                           and provision_server().

            -instance_type Type of newly-created servers (default "m1.small"). Can be overridden
                           in calls to get_server() and provision_server().

            -root_type     Root type for newly-created servers (default depends
                           on the -on_exit behavior; "ebs" for exit behavior of
                           "stop" and "instance-store" for exit behavior of "run"
                           or "terminate".

            -image_name    Name or ami ID of the AMI to use for creating the
                           instances of new servers. Defaults to 'ubuntu-precise-12.04'.
                           If the image name begins with "ami-", then it is
                           treated as an AMI ID. Otherwise it is treated as
                           a name pattern and will be used to search the AMI
                           name field using the wildcard search "*$name*".
                           Names work better than AMI ids here, because the
                           latter change from one region to another. If multiple
                           matching image candidates are found, then an alpha
                           sort on the name is used to find the image with the
                           highest alpha sort value, which happens to work with
                           Ubuntu images to find the latest release.

            -availability_zone Availability zone for newly-created
                           servers. Default is undef, in which case a random
                           zone is selected.

            -username      Username to use for ssh connections. Defaults to
                           "ubuntu". Note that this user must be able to use
                           sudo on the instance without providing a password,
                           or functionality of this module will be limited.

            -verbose       Integer level of verbosity. Level 1 prints warning
                           messages. Level 2 (the default) adds informational
                           messages as well. Level 3 adds verbose debugging
                           messages. Level 0 suppresses all messages.

            -quiet         (deprecated) If true, turns off all verbose messages.

            -scan          Boolean, default true. If true, scans region for
                           volumes and servers created by earlier manager
                           instances.

            -reuse_key     Boolean, default true. If true, creates a single
                           ssh keypair for each region and reuses it. Note that
                           the private key is kept on the local computer in the
                           directory ~/.vm-ec2-staging, and so additional
                           keypairs may be created if you use this module on
                           multiple local machines. If this option is false,
                           then a new keypair will be created for every server
                           you partition.

            -reuse_volumes Boolean, default true. If this flag is true, then
                           calls to provision_volume() will return existing
                           volumes if they share the same name as the requested
                           volume. If no suitable existing volume exists, then
                           the most recent snapshot of this volume is used to
                           create it in the specified availability zone. Only
                           if no volume or snapshot exist will a new volume be
                           created from scratch.

            -dotdir        Path to the directory that contains keyfiles and other
                           stable configuration information for this module.
                           Defaults to ~/.vm_ec2_staging. You may wish to change
                           this to, say, a private dropbox directory or an NFS-mount
                           in order to share keyfiles among machines. Be aware of
                           the security implications of sharing private key files.

            -server_class  By default, staging server objects created by the manager
                           are of class type VM::EC2::Staging::Server. If you create
                           a custom server subclass, you need to let the manager know
                           about it by passing the class name to this argument.

            -volume_class  By default, staging volume objects created by the manager
                           are of class type VM::EC2::Staging::Volume. If you create
                           a custom volume subclass, you need to let the manager know
                           about it by passing the class name to this argument.

   $manager = VM::EC2::Staging::Manager(-ec2 => $ec2,@args)
       This is a more traditional constructur for the staging manager.

       Required Arguments
             -ec2     A VM::EC2 object.

       Optional Arguments
           All of the arguments listed in the description of VM::EC2->staging_manager().

Interzone Copying of AMIs and Snapshots

       This library provides convenience methods for copying whole AMIs as well as individual
       snapshots from one zone to another. It does this by gathering information about the
       AMI/snapshot in the source zone, creating staging servers in the source and target zones,
       and then copying the volume data from the source to the target. If an AMI/snapshot does
       not use a recognized filesystem (e.g. it is part of an LVM or RAID disk set), then block
       level copying of the entire device is used. Otherwise, rsync() is used to minimize data
       transfer fees.

       Note that interzone copying of instance-backed AMIs is not supported. Only EBS-backed
       images can be copied in this way.

       See also the command-line script migrate-ebs-image.pl that comes with this package.

   $new_image_id = $manager->copy_image($source_image,$destination_zone,@register_options)
       This method copies the AMI indicated by $source_image from the zone that $manager belongs
       to, into the indicated $destination_zone, and returns the AMI ID of the new image in the
       destination zone.

       $source_image may be an AMI ID, or a VM::EC2::Image object.

       $destination_zone may be a simple region name, such as "us-west-2", or a VM::EC2::Region
       object (as returned by VM::EC2->describe_regions), or a VM::EC2::Staging::Manager object
       that is associated with the desired region. The latter form gives you control over the
       nature of the staging instances created in the destination zone. For example, if you wish
       to use 'm1.large' high-I/O instances in both the source and destination reasons, you would
       proceed like this:

        my $source      = VM::EC2->new(-region=>'us-east-1'
                                      )->staging_manager(-instance_type=>'m1.large',
                                                         -on_exit      =>'terminate');
        my $destination = VM::EC2->new(-region=>'us-west-2'
                                      )->staging_manager(-instance_type=>'m1.large',
                                                         -on_exit      =>'terminate');
        my $new_image   = $source->copy_image('ami-123456' => $destination);

       If present, the named argument list @register_options will be passed to register_image()
       and used to override options in the destination image. This can be used to set ephemeral
       device mappings, which cannot currently be detected and transferred automatically by
       copy_image():

        $new_image =$source->copy_image('ami-123456'   => 'us-west-2',
                                        -description   => 'My AMI western style',
                                        -block_devices => '/dev/sde=ephemeral0');

   $dest_kernel = $manager->match_kernel($src_kernel,$dest_zone)
       Find a kernel in $dest_zone that matches the $src_kernel in the current zone. $dest_zone
       can be a VM::EC2::Staging manager object, a region name, or a VM::EC2::Region object.

   $new_snapshot_id = $manager->copy_snapshot($source_snapshot,$destination_zone)
       This method copies the EBS snapshot indicated by $source_snapshot from the zone that
       $manager belongs to, into the indicated $destination_zone, and returns the ID of the new
       snapshot in the destination zone.

       $source_snapshot may be an string ID, or a VM::EC2::Snapshot object.

       $destination_zone may be a simple region name, such as "us-west-2", or a VM::EC2::Region
       object (as returned by VM::EC2->describe_regions), or a VM::EC2::Staging::Manager object
       that is associated with the desired region.

       Note that this call uses the Amazon CopySnapshot API call that was introduced in
       2012-12-01 and no longer involves the creation of staging servers in the source and
       destination regions.

Instance Methods for Managing Staging Servers

       These methods allow you to create and interrogate staging servers. They each return one or
       more VM::EC2::Staging::Server objects. See VM::EC2::Staging::Server for more information
       about what you can do with these servers once they are running.

   $server = $manager->provision_server(%options)
       Create a new VM::EC2::Staging::Server object according to the passed options, which
       override the default options provided by the Manager object.

        -name          Name for this server, which can be used to retrieve
                       it later with a call to get_server().

        -architecture  Architecture for the newly-created server
                       instances (e.g. "i386"). If not specified, then defaults
                       to the default_architecture() value. If explicitly
                       specified as undef, then the architecture of the matching
                       image will be used.

        -instance_type Type of the newly-created server (e.g. "m1.small").

        -root_type     Root type for the server ("ebs" or "instance-store").

        -image_name    Name or ami ID of the AMI to use for creating the
                       instance for the server. If the image name begins with
                       "ami-", then it is treated as an AMI ID. Otherwise it
                       is treated as a name pattern and will be used to
                       search the AMI name field using the wildcard search
                       "*$name*". Names work better than AMI ids here,
                       because the latter change from one region to
                       another. If multiple matching image candidates are
                       found, then an alpha sort on the name is used to find
                       the image with the highest alpha sort value, which
                       happens to work with Ubuntu images to find the latest
                       release.

        -availability_zone Availability zone for the server, or undef to
                       choose an availability zone randomly.

        -username      Username to use for ssh connections. Defaults to
                       "ubuntu". Note that this user must be able to use
                       sudo on the instance without providing a password,
                       or functionality of this server will be limited.

       In addition, you may use any of the options recognized by VM::EC2->run_instances() (e.g.
       -block_devices).

   $server = $manager->get_server(-name=>$name,%other_options)
   $server = $manager->get_server($name)
       Return an existing VM::EC2::Staging::Server object having the indicated symbolic name, or
       create a new server if one with this name does not already exist. The server's instance
       characteristics will be configured according to the options passed to the manager at
       create time (e.g. -availability_zone, -instance_type). These options can be overridden by
       %other_args. See provision_volume() for details.

   $server = $manager->get_server_in_zone(-zone=>$availability_zone,%other_options)
   $server = $manager->get_server_in_zone($availability_zone)
       Return an existing VM::EC2::Staging::Server running in the indicated symbolic name, or
       create a new server if one with this name does not already exist. The server's instance
       characteristics will be configured according to the options passed to the manager at
       create time (e.g. -availability_zone, -instance_type). These options can be overridden by
       %other_args. See provision_server() for details.

   $server = $manager->find_server_by_instance($instance_id)
       Given an EC2 instanceId, return the corresponding VM::EC2::Staging::Server, if any.

   @servers $manager->servers
       Return all registered VM::EC2::Staging::Servers in the zone managed by the manager.

   $manager->start_all_servers
       Start all VM::EC2::Staging::Servers that are currently in the "stop" state.

   $manager->stop_all_servers
       Stop all VM::EC2::Staging::Servers that are currently in the "running" state.

   $manager->terminate_all_servers
       Terminate all VM::EC2::Staging::Servers and unregister them.

   $manager->force_terminate_all_servers
       Force termination of all VM::EC2::Staging::Servers, even if the internal registration
       system indicates that some may be in use by other Manager instances.

   $manager->wait_for_servers(@servers)
       Wait until all the servers on the list @servers are up and able to accept ssh commands.
       You may wish to wrap this in an eval{} and timeout in order to avoid waiting indefinitely.

Instance Methods for Managing Staging Volumes

       These methods allow you to create and interrogate staging volumes. They each return one or
       more VM::EC2::Staging::Volume objects. See VM::EC2::Staging::Volume for more information
       about what you can do with these staging volume objects.

   $volume = $manager->provision_volume(%options)
       Create and register a new VM::EC2::Staging::Volume and mount it on a staging server in the
       appropriate availability zone. A new staging server will be created for this purpose if
       one does not already exist.

       If you provide a symbolic name for the volume and the manager has previously snapshotted a
       volume by the same name, then the snapshot will be used to create the volume (this
       behavior can be suppressed by passing -reuse=>0). This allows for the following pattern
       for efficiently updating a snapshotted volume:

        my $vol = $manager->provision_volume(-name=>'MyPictures',
                                             -size=>10);
        $vol->put('/usr/local/my_pictures/');   # will do an rsync from local directory
        $vol->create_snapshot;  # write out to a snapshot
        $vol->delete;

       You may also explicitly specify a volumeId or snapshotId. The former allows you to place
       an existing volume under management of VM::EC2::Staging::Manager and returns a
       corresponding staging volume object. The latter creates the staging volume from the
       indicated snapshot, irregardless of whether the snapshot was created by the staging
       manager at an earlier time.

       Newly-created staging volumes are automatically formatted as ext4 filesystems and mounted
       on the staging server under /mnt/Staging/$name, where $name is the staging volume's
       symbolic name. The filesystem type and the mountpoint can be modified with the -fstype and
       -mount arguments, respectively. In addition, you may specify an -fstype of "raw", in which
       case the volume will be attached to a staging server (creating the server first if
       necessary) but not formatted or mounted. This is useful when creating multi-volume RAID or
       LVM setups.

       Options:

        -name       Name of the staging volume. A fatal error issues if a staging
                    volume by this name already exists (use get_volume() to
                    avoid this).  If no name is provided, then a random
                    unique one is chosen for you.

        -availability_zone
                    Availability zone in which to create this
                    volume. If none is specified, then a zone is chosen that
                    reuses an existing staging server, if any.

        -size       Size of the desired volume, in GB.

        -fstype     Filesystem type for the volume, ext4 by default. Supported
                    types are ext2, ext3, ext4, xfs, reiserfs, jfs, hfs,
                    ntfs, vfat, msdos, and raw.

        -mount      Mount point for this volume on the staging server (e.g. /opt/bin).
                    Use with care, as there are no checks to prevent you from mounting
                    two staging volumes on top of each other or mounting over essential
                    operating system paths.

        -label      Volume label. Only applies to filesystems that support labels
                    (all except hfs, vfat, msdos and raw).

        -volume_id  Create the staging volume from an existing EBS volume with
                    the specified ID. Most other options are ignored in this
                    case.

        -snapshot_id
                    Create the staging volume from an existing EBS
                    snapshot. If a size is specified that is larger than the
                    snapshot, then the volume and its filesystem will be
                    automatically extended (this only works for ext volumes
                    at the moment). Shrinking of volumes is not currently
                    supported.

        -reuse      If true, then the most recent snapshot created from a staging
                    volume of the same name is used to create the
                    volume. This is the default. Pass 0 to disable this
                    behavior.

       The -reuse argument is intended to support the following use case in which you wish to
       rsync a directory on a host system somewhere to an EBS snapshot, without maintaining a
       live server and volume on EC2:

        my $volume = $manager->provision_volume(-name=>'backup_1',
                                                -reuse  => 1,
                                                -fstype => 'ext3',
                                                -size   => 10);
        $volume->put('fred@gw.harvard.edu:my_music');
        $volume->create_snapshot('Music Backup '.localtime);
        $volume->delete;

       The next time this script is run, the "backup_1" volume will be recreated from the most
       recent snapshot, minimizing copying. A new snapshot is created, and the staging volume is
       deleted.

   $volume = $manager->get_volume(-name=>$name,%other_options)
   $volume = $manager->get_volume($name)
       Return an existing VM::EC2::Staging::Volume object with the indicated symbolic name, or
       else create a new volume if one with this name does not already exist. The volume's
       characteristics will be configured according to the options in %other_args. See
       provision_volume() for details. If called with no arguments, this method returns Volume
       object with default characteristics and a randomly-assigned name.

   $result = $manager->rsync($src1,$src2,$src3...,$dest)
       This method provides remote synchronization (rsync) file-level copying between one or more
       source locations and a destination location via an ssh tunnel. Copying among arbitrary
       combinations of local and remote filesystems is supported, with the caveat that the remote
       filesystems must be contained on volumes and servers managed by this module (see below for
       a workaround).

       You may provide two or more directory paths. The last path will be treated as the copy
       destination, and the source paths will be treated as copy sources. All copying is
       performed using the -avz options, which activates recursive directory copying in which
       ownership, modification times and permissions are preserved, and compresses the data to
       reduce network usage. Verbosity is set so that the names of copied files are printed to
       STDERR. If you do not wish this, then use call the manager's quiet() method with a true
       value.

       Source paths can be formatted in one of several ways:

        /absolute/path
             Copy the contents of the directory /absolute/path located on the
             local machine to the destination. This will create a
             subdirectory named "path" on the destination disk. Add a slash
             to the end of the path (i.e. "/absolute/path/") in order to
             avoid creating this subdirectory on the destination disk.

        ./relative/path
             Relative paths work the way you expect, and depend on the current
             working directory. The terminating slash rule applies.

        $staging_volume
             Pass a VM::EC2::Staging::Volume to copy the contents of the
             volume to the destination disk starting at the root of the
             volume. Note that you do *not* need to have any knowledge of the
             mount point for this volume in order to copy its contents.

        $staging_volume:/absolute/path
        $staging_volume:absolute/path
        $staging_volume/absolute/path
             All these syntaxes accomplish the same thing, which is to
             copy a subdirectory of a staging volume to the destination disk.
             The root of the volume is its top level, regardless of where it
             is mounted on the staging server.  Because of string
             interpolation magic, you can enclose staging volume object names
             in quotes in order to construct the path, as in
             "$picture_volume:/family/vacations/". As in local paths, a
             terminating slash indicates that the contents of the last
             directory in the path are to be copied without creating the
             enclosing directory on the desetination. Note that you do *not*
             need to have any knowledge of the mount point for this volume in
             order to copy its contents.

        $staging_server:/absolute/path
            Pass a staging server object and absolute path to copy the contents
            of this path to the destination disk. Because of string interpolation
            you can include server objects in quotes: "$my_server:/opt"

        $staging_server:relative/path
            This form will copy data from paths relative to the remote user's home
            directory on the staging server. Typically not very useful, but supported.

       The same syntax is supported for destination paths, except that it makes no difference
       whether a path has a trailing slash or not.

       As with the rsync command, if you proceed a path with a single colon (:/my/path), it is a
       short hand to use the previous server/volume/host in the source list.

       When specifying multiple source directories, all source directories must reside on the
       same local or remote machine. This is legal:

        $manager->rsync("$picture_volume:/family/vacations",
                        "$picture_volume:/family/picnics"
                        => "$backup_volume:/recent_backups");

       This is not:

        $manager->rsync("$picture_volume:/family/vacations",
                        "$audio_volume:/beethoven"
                        => "$backup_volume:/recent_backups");

       When specifying multiple sources, you may give the volume or server once for the first
       source and then start additional source paths with a ":" to indicate the same volume or
       server is to be used:

        $manager->rsync("$picture_volume:/family/vacations",
                        ":/family/picnics"
                        => "$backup_volume:/recent_backups");

       When copying to/from the local machine, the rsync process will run as the user that the
       script was launched by. However, on remote servers managed by the staging manager, the
       rsync process will run as superuser.

       The rsync() method will also accept regular remote DNS names and IP addresses, optionally
       preceded by a username:

        $manager->rsync("$picture_volume:/family/vacations" => 'fred@gw.harvard.edu:/tmp')

       When called in this way, the method does what it can to avoid prompting for a password or
       passphrase on the non-managed host (gw.harvard.edu in the above example). This includes
       turning off strict host checking and forwarding the user agent information from the local
       machine.

   $result = $manager->rsync(\@options,$src1,$src2,$src3...,$dest)
       This is a variant of the rsync command in which extra options can be passed to rsync by
       providing an array reference as the first argument.  For example:

           $manager->rsync(['--exclude' => '*~'],
                           '/usr/local/backups',
                           "$my_server:/usr/local");

   $manager->dd($source_vol=>$dest_vol)
       This method performs block-level copying of the contents of $source_vol to $dest_vol by
       using dd over an SSH tunnel, where both source and destination volumes are
       VM::EC2::Staging::Volume objects. The volumes must be attached to a server but not
       mounted. Everything in the volume, including its partition table, is copied, allowing you
       to make an exact image of a disk.

       The volumes do not actually need to reside on this server, but can be attached to any
       staging server in the zone.

   $volume = $manager->find_volume_by_volid($volume_id)
       Given an EC2 volumeId, return the corresponding VM::EC2::Staging::Volume, if any.

   $volume = $manager->find_volume_by_name($name)
       Given a staging name (assigned at volume creation time), return the corresponding
       VM::EC2::Staging::Volume, if any.

   @volumes = $manager->volumes
       Return all VM::EC2::Staging::Volumes managed in this zone.

Instance Methods for Accessing Configuration Options

       This section documents accessor methods that allow you to examine or change configuration
       options that were set at create time. Called with an argument, the accessor changes the
       option and returns the option's previous value. Called without an argument, the accessor
       returns the option's current value.

   $on_exit = $manager->on_exit([$new_behavior])
       Get or set the "on_exit" option, which specifies what to do with existing staging servers
       when the staging manager is destroyed. Valid values are "terminate", "stop" and "run".

   $reuse_key = $manager->reuse_key([$boolean])
       Get or set the "reuse_key" option, which if true uses the same internally-generated ssh
       keypair for all running instances. If false, then a new keypair will be created for each
       staging server. The keypair will be destroyed automatically when the staging server
       terminates (but only if the staging manager initiates the termination itself).

   $username = $manager->username([$new_username])
       Get or set the username used to log into staging servers.

   $architecture = $manager->architecture([$new_architecture])
       Get or set the architecture (i386, x86_64) to use for launching new staging servers.

   $root_type = $manager->root_type([$new_type])
       Get or set the instance root type for new staging servers ("instance-store", "ebs").

   $instance_type = $manager->instance_type([$new_type])
       Get or set the instance type to use for new staging servers (e.g. "t1.micro"). I recommend
       that you use "m1.small" (the default) or larger instance types because of the extremely
       slow I/O of the micro instance. In addition, micro instances running Ubuntu have a known
       bug that prevents them from unmounting and remounting EBS volumes repeatedly on the same
       block device. This can lead to hangs when the staging manager tries to create volumes.

   $reuse_volumes = $manager->reuse_volumes([$new_boolean])
       This gets or sets the "reuse_volumes" option, which if true causes the provision_volumes()
       call to create staging volumes from existing EBS volumes and snapshots that share the same
       staging manager symbolic name. See the discussion under VM::EC2->staging_manager(), and
       VM::EC2::Staging::Manager->provision_volume().

   $name = $manager->image_name([$new_name])
       This gets or sets the "image_name" option, which is the AMI ID or AMI name to use when
       creating new staging servers. Names beginning with "ami-" are treated as AMI IDs, and
       everything else is treated as a pattern match on the AMI name.

   $zone = $manager->availability_zone([$new_zone])
       Get or set the default availability zone to use when creating new servers and volumes. An
       undef value allows the staging manager to choose the zone in a way that minimizes
       resources.

   $class_name = $manager->volume_class([$new_class])
       Get or set the name of the perl package that implements staging volumes,
       VM::EC2::Staging::Volume by default. Staging volumes created by the manager will have this
       class type.

   $class_name = $manager->server_class([$new_class])
       Get or set the name of the perl package that implements staging servers,
       VM::EC2::Staging::Server by default. Staging servers created by the manager will have this
       class type.

   $boolean = $manager->scan([$boolean])
       Get or set the "scan" flag, which if true will cause the zone to be scanned quickly for
       existing managed servers and volumes when the manager is first created.

   $path = $manager->dot_directory([$new_directory])
       Get or set the dot directory which holds private key files.

Internal Methods

       This section documents internal methods that are not normally called by end-user scripts
       but may be useful in subclasses. In addition, there are a number of undocumented internal
       methods that begin with the "_" character. Explore the source code to learn about these.

   $ok   = $manager->environment_ok
       This performs a check on the environment in which the module is running. For this module
       to work properly, the ssh, rsync and dd programs must be found in the PATH. If all three
       programs are found, then this method returns true.

       This method can be called as an instance method or class method.

   $name = $manager->default_verbosity
       Returns the default verbosity level (2: warning+informational messages). This is
       overridden using -verbose at create time.

   $name = $manager->default_exit_behavior
       Return the default exit behavior ("stop") when the manager terminates.  Intended to be
       overridden in subclasses.

   $name = $manager->default_image_name
       Return the default image name ('ubuntu-precise-12.04') for use in creating new instances.
       Intended to be overridden in subclasses.

   $name = $manager->default_user_name
       Return the default user name ('ubuntu') for use in creating new instances. Intended to be
       overridden in subclasses.

   $name = $manager->default_architecture
       Return the default instance architecture ('i386') for use in creating new instances.
       Intended to be overridden in subclasses.

   $name = $manager->default_root_type
       Return the default instance root type ('instance-store') for use in creating new
       instances. Intended to be overridden in subclasses. Note that this value is ignored if the
       exit behavior is "stop", in which case an ebs-backed instance will be used. Also, the
       m1.micro instance type does not come in an instance-store form, so ebs will be used in
       this case as well.

   $name = $manager->default_instance_type
       Return the default instance type ('m1.small') for use in creating new instances. Intended
       to be overridden in subclasses. We default to m1.small rather than a micro instance
       because the I/O in m1.small is far faster than in t1.micro.

   $name = $manager->default_reuse_keys
       Return the default value of the -reuse_keys argument ('true'). This value allows the
       manager to create an ssh keypair once, and use the same one for all servers it creates
       over time. If false, then a new keypair is created for each server and then discarded when
       the server terminates.

   $name = $manager->default_reuse_volumes
       Return the default value of the -reuse_volumes argument ('true'). This value instructs the
       manager to use the symbolic name of the volume to return an existing volume whenever a
       request is made to provision a new one of the same name.

   $path = $manager->default_dot_directory_path
       Return the default value of the -dotdir argument ("$ENV{HOME}/.vm-ec2-staging"). This
       value instructs the manager to use the symbolic name of the volume to return an existing
       volume whenever a request is made to provision a new one of the same name.

   $class_name = $manager->default_volume_class
       Return the class name for staging volumes created by the manager, VM::EC2::Staging::Volume
       by default. If you wish a subclass of VM::EC2::Staging::Manager to create a different type
       of volume, override this method.

   $class_name = $manager->default_server_class
       Return the class name for staging servers created by the manager, VM::EC2::Staging::Server
       by default. If you wish a subclass of VM::EC2::Staging::Manager to create a different type
       of volume, override this method.

   $server = $manager->register_server($server)
       Register a VM::EC2::Staging::Server object. Usually called internally.

   $manager->unregister_server($server)
       Forget about the existence of VM::EC2::Staging::Server. Usually called internally.

   $manager->register_volume($volume)
       Register a VM::EC2::Staging::Volume object. Usually called internally.

   $manager->unregister_volume($volume)
       Forget about a VM::EC2::Staging::Volume object. Usually called internally.

   $pid = $manager->pid([$new_pid])
       Get or set the process ID of the script that is running the manager. This is used
       internally to detect the case in which the script has forked, in which case we do not want
       to invoke the manager class's destructor in the child process (because it may stop or
       terminate servers still in use by the parent process).

   $path = $manager->dotdir([$new_dotdir])
       Low-level version of dot_directory(), differing only in the fact that dot_directory will
       automatically create the path, including subdirectories.

   $manager->scan_region
       Synchronize internal list of managed servers and volumes with the EC2 region. Called
       automatically during new() and needed only if servers & volumes are changed from outside
       the module while it is running.

   $group = $manager->security_group
       Returns or creates a security group with the permissions needed used to manage staging
       servers. Usually called internally.

   $keypair = $manager->keypair
       Returns or creates the ssh keypair used internally by the manager to to access staging
       servers. Usually called internally.

   $name = $manager->new_volume_name
       Returns a new random name for volumes provisioned without a -name argument. Currently
       names are in of the format "volume-12345678", where the numeric part are 8 random hex
       digits. Although no attempt is made to prevent naming collisions, the large number of
       possible names makes this unlikely.

   $name = $manager->new_server_name
       Returns a new random name for server provisioned without a -name argument. Currently names
       are in of the format "server-12345678", where the numeric part are 8 random hex digits.
       Although no attempt is made to prevent naming collisions, the large number of possible
       names makes this unlikely.

   $description = $manager->volume_description($volume)
       This method is called to assign a description to newly-created volumes. The current format
       is "Staging volume for Foo created by VM::EC2::Staging::Manager", where Foo is the
       volume's symbolic name.

   $manager->debug("Debugging message\n")
   $manager->info("Informational message\n")
   $manager->warn("Warning message\n")
       Prints an informational message to standard error if current verbosity() level allows.

   $verbosity = $manager->verbosity([$new_value])
       The verbosity() method get/sets a flag that sets the level of informational messages.

SEE ALSO

       VM::EC2 VM::EC2::Staging::Server VM::EC2::Staging::Volume migrate-ebs-image.pl

AUTHOR

       Lincoln Stein <lincoln.stein@gmail.com>.

       Copyright (c) 2012 Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

       This package and its accompanying libraries is free software; you can redistribute it
       and/or modify it under the terms of the GPL (either version 1, or at your option, any
       later version) or the Artistic License 2.0.  Refer to LICENSE for the full license text.
       In addition, please see DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.