Skip to content

kindlyops/deleterious

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

deleterious

codecov

Helps you clean up AWS resources. This is handy when retention policies on CloudFormation stacks leave lots of orphaned AWS resources around costing money.

installation for homebrew (MacOS/Linux)

brew install kindlyops/tap/deleterious

once installed, you can upgrade to a newer version using this command:

brew upgrade kindlyops/tap/deleterious

installation for scoop (Windows Powershell)

To enable the bucket for your scoop installation

scoop bucket add kindlyops https://github.com/kindlyops/kindlyops-scoop

To install deleterious

scoop install deleterious

once installed, you can upgrade to a newer version using this command:

scoop status
scoop update deleterious

installation from source

go get github.com/kindlyops/deleterious
deleterious help

Example of deleting DynamoDB tables

Once deleterious gives you a list of things to delete, and you have manually confirmed they are ok to delete, you can make a little loop to delete the objects. Here is an example with dynamoDB tables

#!/bin/bash

# tables that need to be deleted
declare -a tables=("foo-MonkeyTable-1FDTVGZJOT25Y"
"foo-BananaTable-1HFLQZL7CVQ7L"
)

for i in "${tables[@]}"; do
	echo "deleting table: $i"
	aws dynamodb delete-table --table-name "$i"
done

Example of deleting S3 buckets

To list orphaned buckets, you can run

deleterious orphaned --resource "AWS::S3::Bucket"

To distill the output into only the bucket names, you can use jq

deleterious orphaned --resource "AWS::S3::Bucket" | jq -r '.[].Name'

Once deleterious gives you a list of things to delete, and you have manually confirmed they are ok to delete, you can make a little loop to delete the objects. Here is an example with S3 buckets

#!/bin/bash

# buckets that need to be deleted
declare -a buckets=("foo-bananabucket-148lv5q85e3dc"
	"foo-bananabucket-14bh2oapj6a3e"
)

for i in "${buckets[@]}"; do
	echo "deleting bucket: $i"
	aws s3api delete-bucket --bucket "$i"
done

Testing release process

To run goreleaser locally to test changes to the release process configuration:

goreleaser release --snapshot --skip-publish --rm-dist