Configuring and using the Snowball Edge Client

The Snowball Edge Client is a command-line interface (CLI) tool from AWS that you can use to work with a Snow Family device or a cluster of Snow Family devices. You can use the client to unlock a Snow Family device or cluster of devices, set up Snow Family devices, start and stop services on devices, and transfer data to or from devices. The Snowball Edge client is compatible with computers running on Linux, macOS, and Windows operating systems.

Downloading and installing the Snowball Edge Client

You can download and install the Snowball Edge Client from AWS Snowball Edge Resources. On that page, you can find the installation package for your operating system.

Running the Snowball Edge Client on your device might require you to configure the environment variables of your device's operating system:

  • Microsoft Windows – The client is packaged as Microsoft Software Installer (MSI) file. Open the file and follow the prompts in the installation wizard. When the client has been installed, you can run it from any directory without any additional preparation.

  • Linux – The Snowball Edge client is only supported on 64-bit Linux distributions. When you extract the snowball-client-linux.tar.gz file, it will create the /snowball-client-linux-build_number/bin folder structure and extract the files there. The Snowball Edge Client must be run from the ~/snowball-client-linux-build_number/bin/ directory. Add this path to your operating system's $PATH environment variable to run Snowball Edge Client commands from any directory. For more information, see the documentation for your device's operating system or your shell.

  • macOS – When you extract the snowball-client-mac.tar.gz file, it will create the /snowball-client-linux-build_number/bin folder structure and extract the files there. The Snowball Edge Client must be run from the ~/snowball-client-linux-build_number/bin/ directory. Add this path to your operating system's $PATH environment variable to run Snowball Edge Client commands from any directory. For more information, see the documentation for your device's operating system or your shell.

Configuring a profile for the Snowball Edge Client

Every time you run a command for the Snowball Edge Client, you provide your manifest file, unlock code, and the IP address of the Snow Family device. Instead of providing these each time you run a command, you can use the configure command to store the path to the manifest file, the 29-character unlock code, and the endpoint (the IP address of the Snow Family device) as a profile. After configuration, you can use Snowball Edge Client commands without having to manually enter these values for each command by including the profile name with the command. After you configure the Snowball Edge Client, the information is saved in a plaintext JSON format to home directory/.aws/snowball/config/snowball-edge.config. Make sure your environment is configured to allow you to create this file.

Important

Anyone who can access the configuration file can access the data on your Snowball Edge devices or clusters. Managing local access control for this file is one of your administrative responsibilities.

You can also use AWS OpsHub to create a profile. Profiles created in AWS OpsHub are available to use with the Snowball Edge Client and profiles created in AWS OpsHub are available to use with the Snowball Edge Client. For more information, see Managing profiles.

To create a profile
  1. Enter the command in the command line interface for your operating system. The value of the profile-name parameter is the name of the profile. You will provide it in the future when running Snowball Edge Client commands.

    snowballEdge configure --profile profile-name
  2. The Snowball Edge Client will prompt you for each parameter. When prompted, enter the information for your environment and the Snow Family device.

    Note

    The value of the endpoint parameter is the IP address of the Snow Family device, prefaced by https://. You can locate the IP address for the Snowball Edge device on the LCD screen on the front of the device.

    Example output of configure command
    Configuration will stored at home directory\.aws\snowball\config\snowball-edge.config Snowball Edge Manifest Path: /Path/to/manifest/file Unlock Code: 29 character unlock code Default Endpoint: https://192.0.2.0

    The Snowball Edge Client will check that the unlock code is correct for the manifest file. If they do not match, the command stops and does not create the profile. Check the unlock code and manifest file and run the command again.

To use the profile, include --profile profile-name before the command syntax.

If you are using multiple, standalone Snow Family devices, you can create a profile for each. To create another profile, run the configure command again, provide a different value for the --profile prameter, and provide the information for another device.

Example snowball-edge.config file

This example shows a profile file containing three profiles—SnowDevice1profile, SnowDevice2profile, and SnowDevice3profile.

{"version":1,"profiles": { "SnowDevice1profile": { "name":"SnowDevice1profile", "jobId":"JID12345678-136f-45b4-b5c2-847db8adc749", "unlockCode":"db223-12345-dbe46-44557-c7cc2", "manifestPath":"C:\\Users\\Administrator\\.aws\\ops-hub\\manifest\\JID12345678-136f-45b4-b5c2-847db8adc749_manifest-1670622989203.bin", "defaultEndpoint":"https://10.16.0.1", "isCluster":false, "deviceIps":[] }, }, "SnowDevice2profile": { "name":"SnowDevice2profile", "jobId":"JID12345678-fdb2-436a-a4ff-7c510dec1bae", "unlockCode":"b893b-54321-0f65c-6c5e1-7f748", "manifestPath":"C:\\Users\\Administrator\\.aws\\ops-hub\\manifest\\JID12345678-fdb2-436a-a4ff-7c510dec1bae_manifest-1670623746908.bin", "defaultEndpoint":"https://10.16.0.2", "isCluster":false, "deviceIps":[] }, "SnowDevice3profile": { "name":"SnowDevice3profile", "jobId":"JID12345678-c384-4a5e-becd-ab5f38888463", "unlockCode":"64c89-13524-4d054-13d93-c1b80", "manifestPath":"C:\\Users\\Administrator\\.aws\\ops-hub\\manifest\\JID12345678-c384-4a5e-becd-ab5f38888463_manifest-1670623999136.bin", "defaultEndpoint":"https://10.16.0.3", "isCluster":false, "deviceIps":[] } }

To edit or delete profiles, edit the profile file in a text editor.

To edit a profile
  1. In a text editor, open snowball-edge.config from home directory\.aws\snowball\config.

    Note

    Make sure your environment is configured to allow you to access to read and write this file.

  2. Edit the file as necessary. For example, to change the IP address of the Snow Family device associated with the profile, change the defaultEndpoint entry.

  3. Save and close the file.

To delete a profile
  1. Using a text editor, open snowball-edge.config from home directory\.aws\snowball\config.

    Note

    Make sure your environment is configured to allow you to access to read and write this file.

  2. Delete the line that contains the profile name, the curly brackets { }that follow the profile name, and the contents within the those brackets.

  3. Save and close the file.

Finding Snowball Edge client version

Use the version command to see the version of the Snowball Edge command line interface (CLI) client.

Usage

snowballEdge version

Example output

Snowball Edge client version: 1.2.0 Build 661

Getting credentials for a Snow Family device

Using the snowballEdge list-access-keys and snowballEdge get-secret-access-key commands, you can get the credentials of the admin user of your AWS account on Snowball Edge. You can use these credentials to create AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM users) and roles, and to authenticate your requests when using the AWS CLI or with an AWS SDK. These credentials are only associated with an individual job for Snowball Edge, and you can use them only on the device or cluster of devices. The device or devices don't have any IAM permissions in the AWS Cloud.

Note

If you're using the AWS CLI with the Snowball Edge, you must use these credentials when you configure the CLI. For information about configuring credentials for the AWS CLI, see Configuring the AWS CLI in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide.

Usage (configured Snowball Edge client)

snowballEdge list-access-keys
Example Output
{ "AccessKeyIds" : [ "AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" ] }

Usage (configured Snowball Edge client)

snowballEdge get-secret-access-key --access-key-id Access Key
Example Output
[snowballEdge] aws_access_key_id = AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE aws_secret_access_key = wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY

Starting a service on a Snow Family device

Snowball Edge devices support multiple services. These include compute instances, the Network File System (NFS) interface, Snow Device Management, and AWS IoT Greengrass. The Amazon S3 adapter service, Amazon EC2, AWS STS, and IAM are started by default and can't be stopped or restarted. However, the NFS interface, Snow Device Management, and AWS IoT Greengrass can be started by using its service ID with the start-service command. To get the service ID for each service, you can use the list-services command.

Before you run this command, create a single virtual network interface to bind to the service that you're starting. For more information, see Creating a Virtual Network Interface on a Snow Family device.

snowballEdge start-service --profile profile-name --service-id service_id --virtual-network-interface-arns virtual-network-interface-arn
Example output of start-service command
Starting the AWS service on your Snowball Edge. You can determine the status of the AWS service using the describe-service command.

Stopping a service on a Snow Family device

To stop a service running on a Snow Family device, you can use the stop-service command.

The Amazon S3 adapter, Amazon EC2, AWS STS, and IAM services cannot be stopped.

Warning

Data loss can occur if the Network File System (NFS) service is stopped before remaining buffered data is written to the device. For more information on using the NFS service, see Managing the NFS interface on Snow Family devices.

Note

Stopping the Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices service disables access to the data stored in your S3 buckets on the device or cluster. Access is restored when the Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices is started again. For devices enabled with Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices, it is recommended to start the service after the Snowball Edge device is powered up. See Setting up Snowball Edge in this guide.

snowballEdge stop-service --profile profile-name --service-id service_id
Example output of stop-service command
Stopping the AWS service on your Snowball Edge. You can determine the status of the AWS service using the describe-service command.

Viewing and downloading logs from Snow Family devices

When you transfer data between your on-premises data center and a Snow Family device, logs are automatically generated. If you encounter unexpected errors during data transfer to the device, you can use the following commands to save a copy of the logs to your local server.

There are three commands related to logs:

  • list-logs – Returns a list of logs in JSON format. This list reports the size of the logs in bytes, the ARN for the logs, the service ID for the logs, and the type of logs.

    Usage

    snowballEdge list-logs --profile profile-name
    Example output of the list-logs command
    { "Logs" : [ { "LogArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::log/s3-storage-JIEXAMPLE2f-1234-4953-a7c4-dfEXAMPLE709", "LogType" : "SUPPORT", "ServiceId" : "s3", "EstimatedSizeBytes" : 53132614 }, { "LogArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::log/fileinterface-JIDEXAMPLEf-1234-4953-a7c4-dfEXAMPLE709", "LogType" : "CUSTOMER", "ServiceId" : "fileinterface", "EstimatedSizeBytes" : 4446 }] }
  • get-log – Downloads a copy of a specific log from the Snowball Edge to your device at a specified path. CUSTOMER logs are saved in the .zip format, and you can extract this type of log to view its contents. SUPPORT logs are encrypted and can only be read by AWS Support. You have the option of specifying a name and a path for the log.

    Usage

    snowballEdge get-log --profile profile-name --log-arn arn:aws:snowball-device:::log/fileinterface-JIDEXAMPLEf-1234-4953-a7c4-dfEXAMPLE709
    Example output of get-log command
    Logs are being saved to download/path/snowball-edge-logs-1515EXAMPLE88.bin
  • get-support-logs – Downloads a copy of all the SUPPORT type of logs from the Snowball Edge to your service at a specified path.

    Usage

    snowballEdge get-support-logs --profile profile-name
    Example output of get-support-logs command
    Logs are being saved to download/path/snowball-edge-logs-1515716135711.bin
Important

CUSTOMER type might contain sensitive information about your own data. To protect this potentially sensitive information, we strongly suggest that you delete these logs once you're done with them.

Viewing status of a Snow Family device

You can determine the status and general health of Snow Family devices with the describe-device command.

snowballEdge describe-device --profile profile-name
Example output of describe-device command
{ "DeviceId": "JID-EXAMPLE12345-123-456-7-890", "UnlockStatus": { "State": "UNLOCKED" }, "ActiveNetworkInterface": { "IpAddress": "192.0.2.0" }, "PhysicalNetworkInterfaces": [ { "PhysicalNetworkInterfaceId": "s.ni-EXAMPLEd9ecbf03e3", "PhysicalConnectorType": "RJ45", "IpAddressAssignment": "STATIC", "IpAddress": "0.0.0.0", "Netmask": "0.0.0.0", "DefaultGateway": "192.0.2.1", "MacAddress": "EX:AM:PL:E0:12:34" }, { "PhysicalNetworkInterfaceId": "s.ni-EXAMPLE4c3840068f", "PhysicalConnectorType": "QSFP", "IpAddressAssignment": "STATIC", "IpAddress": "0.0.0.0", "Netmask": "0.0.0.0", "DefaultGateway": "192.0.2.2", "MacAddress": "EX:AM:PL:E0:56:78" }, { "PhysicalNetworkInterfaceId": "s.ni-EXAMPLE0a3a6499fd", "PhysicalConnectorType": "SFP_PLUS", "IpAddressAssignment": "DHCP", "IpAddress": "192.168.1.231", "Netmask": "255.255.255.0", "DefaultGateway": "192.0.2.3", "MacAddress": "EX:AM:PL:E0:90:12" } ] }

Vieiwing status of services running on Snow Family devices

You can determine the status and general health of the services running on Snowball Edge devices with the describe-service command. You can first run the list-services command to see what services are running.

  • list-services

    Usage

    snowballEdge list-services --profile profile-name
    Example output of list-services command
    { "ServiceIds" : [ "greengrass", "fileinterface", "s3", "ec2", "s3-snow" ] }
  • describe-service

    This command returns a status value for a service. It also includes state information that might be helpful in resolving issues you encounter with the service. Those states are as follows.

    • ACTIVE – The service is running and available for use.

    • ACTIVATING – The service is starting up, but it is not yet available for use.

    • DEACTIVATING – The service is in the process of shutting down.

    • DEGRADED – For Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices, this status indicates one or more disks or devices in cluster is down. The Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices service is running uninterrupted, but you should recover or replace the affected device before the cluster quorum is lost to minimize the risk of lost data. See Clustering overview in this guide.

    • INACTIVE – The service is not running and is not available for use.

    Usage

    snowballEdge describe-service --profile profile-name --service-id service-id
    Example output of describe-service command
    { "ServiceId": "s3", "Status": { "State": "ACTIVE" }, "Storage": { "TotalSpaceBytes": 99608745492480, "FreeSpaceBytes": 99608744468480 }, "Endpoints": [ { "Protocol": "http", "Port": 8080, "Host": "192.0.2.0" }, { "Protocol": "https", "Port": 8443, "Host": "192.0.2.0", "CertificateAssociation": { "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/6d955EXAMPLEdb71798146EXAMPLE3f0" } } ] }
    Example Amazon S3 compatible storage on Snow Family devices service output

    The describe-service command provides the following output for the s3-snow value of the service-id parameter.

    { "ServiceId" : "s3-snow", "Autostart" : false, "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" }, "ServiceCapacities" : [ { "Name" : "S3 Storage", "Unit" : "Byte", "Used" : 640303104, "Available" : 219571981512 } ], "Endpoints" : [ { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.2.123", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow bucket API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID6ebd4c50-c3a1-4b16-b32c-b254f9b7f2dc", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.3.202", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow object API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID6ebd4c50-c3a1-4b16-b32c-b254f9b7f2dc", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.3.63", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow bucket API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID2a1e0deb-38b1-41f8-b904-a396c62da70d", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.2.243", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow object API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID2a1e0deb-38b1-41f8-b904-a396c62da70d", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.2.220", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow bucket API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JIDcc45fa8f-b994-4ada-a821-581bc35d8645", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.2.55", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow object API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JIDcc45fa8f-b994-4ada-a821-581bc35d8645", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.3.213", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow bucket API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID4ec68543-d974-465f-b81d-89832dd502db", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.3.144", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow object API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID4ec68543-d974-465f-b81d-89832dd502db", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.2.143", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow bucket API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID6331b8b5-6c63-4e01-b3ca-eab48b5628d2", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } }, { "Protocol" : "https", "Port" : 443, "Host" : "10.0.3.224", "CertificateAssociation" : { "CertificateArn" : "arn:aws:snowball-device:::certificate/a65ba817f2c5ac9683fc3bc1ae123456" }, "Description" : "s3-snow object API endpoint", "DeviceId" : "JID6331b8b5-6c63-4e01-b3ca-eab48b5628d2", "Status" : { "State" : "ACTIVE" } } ] }

Viewing status of features of Snow Family devices

To list the status of features available on a Snow Family device use the describe-features command.

RemoteManagementState indicates the status of Snow Device Management and returns one of the following states:

  • INSTALLED_ONLY – The feature is installed but not enabled.

  • INSTALLED_AUTOSTART – The feature is enabled and the device will attempt to connect to its AWS Region when it is powered on.

  • NOT_INSTALLED – The device does not support the feature or was already in the field before its launch.

Usage

snowballEdge describe-features --profile profile-name
Example output of describe-features command
{ "RemoteManagementState" : String }

Setting time servers for Snow Family devices

You can use Snowball Edge Client commands to view the current Network Time Protocol (NTP) configuration and choose a server or peer to provide time. You can use the Snowball Edge Client commands when the device is in both locked and unlocked states.

It is your responsibility to provide a secure NTP time server. To set which NTP time servers the device connects to, use the update-time-servers command.

Checking time sources of Snow Family devices

To see which NTP time sources the device are currently connected to, use the describe-time-sources command.

snowballEdge describe-time-sources --profile profile-name
Example output of describe-time-sources command
{ "Sources" : [ { "Address" : "172.31.2.71", "State" : "LOST", "Type" : "PEER", "Stratum" : 10 }, { "Address" : "172.31.3.203", "State" : "LOST", "Type" : "PEER", "Stratum" : 10 }, { "Address" : "172.31.0.178", "State" : "LOST", "Type" : "PEER", "Stratum" : 10 }, { "Address" : "172.31.3.178", "State" : "LOST", "Type" : "PEER", "Stratum" : 10 }, { "Address" : "216.239.35.12", "State" : "CURRENT", "Type" : "SERVER", "Stratum" : 1 } ] }

The describe-time-sources command returns a list of time source states. Each time source state contains the Address, State, Type, and Stratum fields. Following are the meanings of these fields.

  • Address – The DNS name / IP address of the time source.

  • State – The current connection status between the device and that time source. There are five possible states:.

    • CURRENT – The time source is currently being used to synchronize time.

    • COMBINED – The time source is combined with the current source.

    • EXCLUDED – The time source is excluded by the combining algorithm.

    • LOST – The connection with the time source has been lost.

    • UNACCEPTABLE – An invalid time source where the combining algorithm has deemed to be either a falseticker or has too much variability.

  • Type – An NTP time source can be either a server or a peer. Servers can be set by the update-time-servers command. Peers can only be other Snowball Edge devices in the cluster and are automatically set up when the cluster is associated.

  • Stratum – This field shows the stratum of the source. Stratum 1 indicates a source with a locally attached reference clock. A source that is synchronized to a stratum 1 source is at stratum 2. A source that is synchronized to a stratum 2 source is at stratum 3, and so on..

An NTP time source can either be a server or a peer. A server can be set by the user with the update-time-servers command, whereas a peer could only be other Snowball Edge devices in the cluster. In the example output, describe-time-sources is called on a Snowball Edge that is in a cluster of 5. The output contains 4 peers and 1 server. The peers have a stratum of 10 while the server has a stratum of 1; therefore, the server is selected to be the current time source.

Updating time servers

Use the update-time-servers command and the time server address to configure the Snow Family device to use an NTP server or peer for NTP.

snowballEdge update-time-servers --profile profile-name time-server-address
Note

The update-time-servers command will override the previous NTP time servers settings.

Example output of update-time-servers command
Updating time servers now.

Getting a QR code to validate Snowball Edge NFC tags

You can use this command to generate a device-specific QR code for use with the AWS Snowball Edge Verification App. For more information about NFC validation, see Validating NFC Tags.

Usage

snowballEdge get-app-qr-code --output-file ~/downloads/snowball-qr-code.png
Example Output
QR code is saved to ~/downloads/snowball-qr-code.png

Updating MTU size

Use the update-mtu-size command to modify the size in bytes of the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of a physical interface of a Snow Family device. All virtual network interfaces and direct network interface associated with this physical network interface will be configured with the same MTU size.

Note

The minimum MTU size is 1500 bytes and the maximum size is 9216 bytes.

You can use the describe-device command to retrieve the physical network interface IDs and current MTU sizes of those interfaces. For more information, see Viewing status of a Snow Family device.

You can use the descibe-direct-network-interface and describe-virtual-network-interface commands to retrieve the current MTU sizes of those interfaces.

Usage

snowballEdge update-mtu-size --physical-network-interface-id physical-network-interface-id --mtu-size size-in-bytes
Example of update-mtu-size output
{ "PhysicalNetworkInterface": { "PhysicalNetworkInterfaceId": "s.ni-8c1f891d7f5b87cfe", "PhysicalConnectorType": "SFP_PLUS", "IpAddressAssignment": "DHCP", "IpAddress": "192.0.2.0", "Netmask": "255.255.255.0", "DefaultGateway": "192.0.2.255", "MacAddress": "8A:2r:5G:9p:6Q:4s", "MtuSize": "5743" } }