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Centrally track Microsoft SQL Server licenses in AWS Organizations using AWS License Manager and AWS Systems Manager
Most enterprises find it hard to maintain control of the commercial licensing of Microsoft, SAP, Oracle, and IBM products due to limited visibility. They wind up over-provisioning licenses to avoid the headache with third-party license providers or under-provisioning licenses, only to be faced with steep penalties.
To assist enterprises with the challenge of tracking licenses, AWS has built specific features and services to make this easier for customers. There are two main use-cases:
- Using license-included instances allows you access to fully compliant licenses, where AWS handles the tracking and management for you. With this option, you either pay as you go, with no upfront costs or long-term investment, or purchase reserved instances or savings plans for cost savings in exchange for a commitment to a consistent amount of usage.
- AWS License Manager makes it easy for you to set rules to manage, discover, and report software license usage. When you use AWS License Manager to associate an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) with a licensing configuration, you can track the use of licenses in AWS or your on-premises environment. You can also set rules in AWS License Manager to prevent licensing violations to help you stay compliant.
There are some scenarios or software products (for example, Microsoft SQL Server editions) that cannot be governed by these two options, which means you could receive an unwanted surprise in the next audit. In this first of a two-part post, I show you how to build a solution that centrally discovers and tracks your SQL Server instances across AWS accounts and Regions that are part of an organization in AWS Organizations. You can enhance this approach to target other commercial software such as Oracle, SAP, or IBM. For single account setups, see the Use AWS License Manager and AWS Systems Manager to discover SQL Server BYOL instances blog post.
In part 2 of this post, I’ll show you how to query and centralize your data so you have a unified view of your license utilization across AWS.
Prerequisites
To deploy this solution in a multi-account or multi-region architecture in an organization , complete these steps in each AWS Region where your workloads are running.
- Link License Manager or share license configurations between accounts. Depending on your current setup and requirements, you can either link License Manager to AWS Organizations or use AWS Resource Access Manager to share license configurations between accounts. For more information, see the Tracking software usage across multiple AWS accounts using AWS License Manager blog post. I recommend the first option, as it allows for a shared inventory and a seamless transition when accounts are added or removed from the organization. However, the AWS RAM method provides maximum flexibility and allows you to share license configurations outside your organization.
If you prefer the first option, in the AWS License Manager console, choose Settings, and then select Link AWS Organizations accounts, as shown in Figure 1.
Note: For this solution, you can leave cross-account inventory search disabled unless you want to discover other software license usage.
Figure 1: Linking AWS Organizations accounts in the License Manager console
- Create license configurations. In AWS License Manager, create license configurations for the SQL Server editions in each AWS Region where you will be deploying this solution. A license configuration represents the licensing terms in the agreement with your software vendor. For instructions, see Create a license configuration in the AWS License Manager User Guide.
Use the following names for the license configurations:
-
- SQLServerENTLicenseConfiguration for Enterprise Edition
- SQLServerSTDLicenseConfiguration for Standard Edition
- SQLServerDEVLicenseConfiguration for Developer Edition
- SQLServerWEBLicenseConfiguration for Web Edition
- SQLServerEXPLicenseConfiguration for Express Edition
If you already have license configurations, edit the names to match.
- Share license configurations. After you have defined your configurations, use AWS Organizations or AWS Resource Access Manager to share license configurations. For instructions, see the Tracking software usage across multiple AWS accounts using AWS License Manager blog post.
After you share your principals (accounts) and resources (license configurations), you should see them in the AWS Resource Access Manager console:
Figure 2: Shared principals and resources in the AWS Resource Access Manager console
Solution overview
AWS License Manager allows you to track your commercial license usage to stay compliant across your enterprise teams. It associates license definitions with AMIs from which instances are launched. AWS License Manager can also auto-discover licensed software (in this solution, SQL Server) that’s installed on instances after initial instance deployment. The solution described in this blog post enhances the auto-discovery capability and provides license edition details for instances deployed across AWS Regions and accounts in AWS Organizations.
Figure 3 shows the solution architecture. In addition to AWS License Manager, the solution uses the following Systems Manager features and capabilities:
- Automation to orchestrate the workflow.
- State Manager to invoke the Automation document on a user-defined frequency.
- Inventory to maintain the information collected about the instances and the SQL Server editions running on them.
Figure 3: Solution architecture
Walkthrough
To deploy the solution, launch this CloudFormation template in the management account of your organization.
This template deploys the following resources:
- Systems Manager documents
- The primary Automation document (Primary-SQLServerLicenseTrackingSolution-Document) includes the logic to execute steps 1 and 2 of the walkthrough.
- The secondary Automation document (Secondary-SQLServerLicenseTrackingSolution-Document) includes the logic to execute steps 3-8 of the walkthrough.
- All the IAM roles required to deploy the solution
- Automation administration role (for the administration of the Automation documents)
- Automation execution role (for the execution of the Automation documents)
- CloudFormation StackSets administration role (to deploy the solution across multiple accounts and Regions)
- CloudFormation StackSets execution role (to deploy the solution across multiple accounts and Regions)
- Lambda execution role (for the execution of the Modify-SQLServerSecondaryDocument-Permission Lambda function)
- S3 bucket
This central bucket in the management account stores all the data from resource data syncs across the accounts, as shown in step 8 of Figure 3.
- Lambda
- The Modify-SQLServerSecondaryDocument-Permission function is used to maintain permissions of the secondary Automation document with the accounts in the organization.
- A trigger to schedule the execution of the Lambda function to run once every 30 days using Amazon EventBridge to ensure that the secondary document is shared with the latest set of accounts.
- A custom resource is created for the initial invocation of the Lambda function.
Centralizing Systems Manager Inventory data using resource data sync
The resource data sync capability in AWS Systems Manager lets you sync inventory data from your managed instances into an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) bucket. The resource data sync then updates the S3 bucket whenever new Inventory data is collected. You can also sync Inventory data from multiple AWS accounts into a single S3 bucket, making the bucket an inventory data lake for multiple AWS accounts. You can then use the data lake for advanced queries and analysis of inventory data across multiple accounts. For more information, see Use resource data sync to aggregate inventory data in the AWS Systems Manager User Guide.
To use resource data sync, execute the following AWS CLI command in each account across the AWS Regions where your workloads are running.
Note: DestinationDataSharing
is currently available with the AWS CLI and SDK only.
Invoking the solution using a State Manager association
Because CloudFormation doesn’t currently support target-locations, use the AWS CLI to create the association. Update the highlighted parameters and then execute this command in the management or root account of your organization.
- Management account ID: Specify your management account ID for the SQLServerLTS-SystemsManager-AutomationAdministrationRole ARN.
- Organizational unit IDs: Enter an organizational unit ID (for example, ou-abcd-1qwert43).
- Regions: Specify all AWS Regions (for example, us-east-1) where your SQL Server instances are running.
- TargetLocationMaxConcurrency andTargetLocationMaxErrors: Specify these values based on the number of accounts and error thresholds described in TargetLocation in the AWS Systems Manager API Reference.
This command will invoke the system to run it once immediately after it is created. To update it to run on a scheduled basis using --schedule-expression
, see create-association in the AWS CLI Command Reference.
Validating the execution ran successfully
After the association has triggered the automation, open the Systems Manager console and from the left navigation pane, choose Automation. In Automation executions, choose the most recent execution of the Primary-SQLSeverLicenseTrackingSolution-Document, as shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4: Automation executions (management account)
Depending on the number of Regions, accounts, and instances you execute this solution against, a successful run of the execution looks like the following:
Figure 5: Automation execution detail (management account)
On the details page for the execution, choose any of the step IDs, and then under Outputs, choose the execution ID. In the Outputs section, you can find the Automation execution ID of the secondary document in the member account, as shown in Figure 6.
Figure 6: Automation outputs (management account)
In the Systems Manager console, search for this ID in the member account and Region. Choose the execution ID link to get more information about the execution.
Figure 7: Automation executions (member account)
To confirm that the license utilization data has been updated in AWS License Manager, using the management account and selected Region, open the License Manager console. Depending on the licenses consumed, the Customer managed licenses list will look something like Figure 8:
Figure 8: Customer managed licenses
Adding new accounts and Regions
The solution will automatically cover any new AWS accounts that you provision under the OUs you specified when you created the association. If you create new OUs or add Regions, you will need to update the following solution components:
CloudFormation:
- In the CloudFormation console, choose the original template you deployed and then choose Update.
- Leave the Use the current template option selected.
- Under Automation Documents, update the TargetRegions and TargetOUs parameters with the new values.
Association:
Use update-association to update the current association. Specify the accounts and Regions in --target-locations
.
Resource data sync:
Add a new resource data sync in the account and Region as described earlier in the post in “Centralizing Systems Manager Inventory data using resource data sync.”
Cleaning up resources
If you would like to remove the resources and solution after testing you can clean up the resources deployed by the CloudFormation template using the following instructions:
- In all Regions where the solution is deployed, modify the permissions for the secondary Automation document. For instructions, see Modify permissions for a shared SSM document in the AWS Systems Manager User Guide.
- Use the AWS CloudFormation console or AWS CLI to delete the main CloudFormation stack. When you delete the CloudFormation stack, all the solution components will be deleted.
- Use the Systems Manager console or AWS CLI to delete the association.
- Use the Systems Manager console or AWS CLI to delete the resource data syncs in all member accounts. Complete this step in each AWS Region where the solution is deployed.
Conclusion
In this post, I showed you how to use AWS License Manager, AWS Systems Manager, and AWS Organizations to automate the tracking of your SQL Server licenses across multiple accounts and Regions. This solution can be extended to govern other software licenses consumed in your organization to avoid any surprises during your next audit.