View Source AWS.CloudWatch (aws-elixir v0.13.3)
Amazon CloudWatch monitors your Amazon Web Services (Amazon Web Services) resources and the applications you run on Amazon Web Services in real time.
You can use CloudWatch to collect and track metrics, which are the variables you want to measure for your resources and applications.
CloudWatch alarms send notifications or automatically change the resources you are monitoring based on rules that you define. For example, you can monitor the CPU usage and disk reads and writes of your Amazon EC2 instances. Then, use this data to determine whether you should launch additional instances to handle increased load. You can also use this data to stop under-used instances to save money.
In addition to monitoring the built-in metrics that come with Amazon Web Services, you can monitor your own custom metrics. With CloudWatch, you gain system-wide visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and operational health.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Deletes the specified alarms.
Deletes the specified anomaly detection model from your account.
Deletes all dashboards that you specify.
Permanently deletes the specified Contributor Insights rules.
Permanently deletes the metric stream that you specify.
Retrieves the history for the specified alarm.
Retrieves the specified alarms.
Retrieves the alarms for the specified metric.
Lists the anomaly detection models that you have created in your account.
Returns a list of all the Contributor Insights rules in your account.
Disables the actions for the specified alarms.
Disables the specified Contributor Insights rules.
Enables the actions for the specified alarms.
Enables the specified Contributor Insights rules.
Displays the details of the dashboard that you specify.
This operation returns the time series data collected by a Contributor Insights rule.
You can use the GetMetricData
API to retrieve CloudWatch metric values.
Gets statistics for the specified metric.
Returns information about the metric stream that you specify.
You can use the GetMetricWidgetImage
API to retrieve a snapshot graph of one
or more Amazon CloudWatch metrics as a bitmap image.
Returns a list of the dashboards for your account.
Returns a list that contains the number of managed Contributor Insights rules in your account.
Returns a list of metric streams in this account.
List the specified metrics.
Displays the tags associated with a CloudWatch resource.
Creates an anomaly detection model for a CloudWatch metric.
Creates or updates a composite alarm.
Creates a dashboard if it does not already exist, or updates an existing dashboard.
Creates a Contributor Insights rule.
Creates a managed Contributor Insights rule for a specified Amazon Web Services resource.
Creates or updates an alarm and associates it with the specified metric, metric math expression, anomaly detection model, or Metrics Insights query.
Publishes metric data points to Amazon CloudWatch.
Creates or updates a metric stream.
Temporarily sets the state of an alarm for testing purposes.
Starts the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
Stops the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
Assigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified CloudWatch resource.
Removes one or more tags from the specified resource.
Link to this section Functions
Deletes the specified alarms.
You can delete up to 100 alarms in one operation. However, this total can include no more than one composite alarm. For example, you could delete 99 metric alarms and one composite alarms with one operation, but you can't delete two composite alarms with one operation.
If you specify an incorrect alarm name or make any other error in the operation,
no alarms are deleted. To confirm that alarms were deleted successfully, you can
use the
DescribeAlarms
operation after using DeleteAlarms
.
It is possible to create a loop or cycle of composite alarms, where composite alarm A depends on composite alarm B, and composite alarm B also depends on composite alarm A. In this scenario, you can't delete any composite alarm that is part of the cycle because there is always still a composite alarm that depends on that alarm that you want to delete.
To get out of such a situation, you must break the cycle by changing the rule of
one of the composite alarms in the cycle to remove a dependency that creates the
cycle. The simplest change to make to break a cycle is to change the AlarmRule
of one of the alarms to false
.
Additionally, the evaluation of composite alarms stops if CloudWatch detects a cycle in the evaluation path.
Deletes the specified anomaly detection model from your account.
For more information about how to delete an anomaly detection model, see Deleting an anomaly detection model in the CloudWatch User Guide.
Deletes all dashboards that you specify.
You can specify up to 100 dashboards to delete. If there is an error during this call, no dashboards are deleted.
Permanently deletes the specified Contributor Insights rules.
If you create a rule, delete it, and then re-create it with the same name, historical data from the first time the rule was created might not be available.
Permanently deletes the metric stream that you specify.
Retrieves the history for the specified alarm.
You can filter the results by date range or item type. If an alarm name is not specified, the histories for either all metric alarms or all composite alarms are returned.
CloudWatch retains the history of an alarm even if you delete the alarm.
To use this operation and return information about a composite alarm, you must
be signed on with the cloudwatch:DescribeAlarmHistory
permission that is
scoped to *
. You can't return information about composite alarms if your
cloudwatch:DescribeAlarmHistory
permission has a narrower scope.
Retrieves the specified alarms.
You can filter the results by specifying a prefix for the alarm name, the alarm state, or a prefix for any action.
To use this operation and return information about composite alarms, you must be
signed on with the cloudwatch:DescribeAlarms
permission that is scoped to *
.
You can't return information about composite alarms if your
cloudwatch:DescribeAlarms
permission has a narrower scope.
Retrieves the alarms for the specified metric.
To filter the results, specify a statistic, period, or unit.
This operation retrieves only standard alarms that are based on the specified metric. It does not return alarms based on math expressions that use the specified metric, or composite alarms that use the specified metric.
Lists the anomaly detection models that you have created in your account.
For single metric anomaly detectors, you can list all of the models in your
account or filter the results to only the models that are related to a certain
namespace, metric name, or metric dimension. For metric math anomaly detectors,
you can list them by adding METRIC_MATH
to the AnomalyDetectorTypes
array.
This will return all metric math anomaly detectors in your account.
Returns a list of all the Contributor Insights rules in your account.
For more information about Contributor Insights, see Using Contributor Insights to Analyze High-Cardinality Data.
Disables the actions for the specified alarms.
When an alarm's actions are disabled, the alarm actions do not execute when the alarm state changes.
Disables the specified Contributor Insights rules.
When rules are disabled, they do not analyze log groups and do not incur costs.
Enables the actions for the specified alarms.
Enables the specified Contributor Insights rules.
When rules are enabled, they immediately begin analyzing log data.
Displays the details of the dashboard that you specify.
To copy an existing dashboard, use GetDashboard
, and then use the data
returned within DashboardBody
as the template for the new dashboard when you
call PutDashboard
to create the copy.
This operation returns the time series data collected by a Contributor Insights rule.
The data includes the identity and number of contributors to the log group.
You can also optionally return one or more statistics about each data point in the time series. These statistics can include the following:
UniqueContributors
-- the number of unique contributors for each data point.MaxContributorValue
-- the value of the top contributor for each data point. The identity of the contributor might change for each data point in the graph.
If this rule aggregates by COUNT, the top contributor for each data point is the
contributor with the most occurrences in that period. If the rule aggregates by
SUM, the top contributor is the contributor with the highest sum in the log
field specified by the rule's Value
, during that period.
SampleCount
-- the number of data points matched by the rule.Sum
-- the sum of the values from all contributors during the time period represented by that data point.Minimum
-- the minimum value from a single observation during the time period represented by that data point.Maximum
-- the maximum value from a single observation during the time period represented by that data point.Average
-- the average value from all contributors during the time period represented by that data point.
You can use the GetMetricData
API to retrieve CloudWatch metric values.
The operation can also include a CloudWatch Metrics Insights query, and one or more metric math functions.
A GetMetricData
operation that does not include a query can retrieve as many
as 500 different metrics in a single request, with a total of as many as 100,800
data points. You can also optionally perform metric math expressions on the
values of the returned statistics, to create new time series that represent new
insights into your data. For example, using Lambda metrics, you could divide the
Errors metric by the Invocations metric to get an error rate time series. For
more information about metric math expressions, see Metric Math Syntax and Functions
in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
If you include a Metrics Insights query, each GetMetricData
operation can
include only one query. But the same GetMetricData
operation can also retrieve
other metrics. Metrics Insights queries can query only the most recent three
hours of metric data. For more information about Metrics Insights, see Query your metrics with CloudWatch Metrics
Insights.
Calls to the GetMetricData
API have a different pricing structure than calls
to GetMetricStatistics
. For more information about pricing, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
Amazon CloudWatch retains metric data as follows:
Data points with a period of less than 60 seconds are available for 3 hours. These data points are high-resolution metrics and are available only for custom metrics that have been defined with a
StorageResolution
of 1.Data points with a period of 60 seconds (1-minute) are available for 15 days.
Data points with a period of 300 seconds (5-minute) are available for 63 days.
Data points with a period of 3600 seconds (1 hour) are available for 455 days (15 months).
Data points that are initially published with a shorter period are aggregated together for long-term storage. For example, if you collect data using a period of 1 minute, the data remains available for 15 days with 1-minute resolution. After 15 days, this data is still available, but is aggregated and retrievable only with a resolution of 5 minutes. After 63 days, the data is further aggregated and is available with a resolution of 1 hour.
If you omit Unit
in your request, all data that was collected with any unit is
returned, along with the corresponding units that were specified when the data
was reported to CloudWatch. If you specify a unit, the operation returns only
data that was collected with that unit specified. If you specify a unit that
does not match the data collected, the results of the operation are null.
CloudWatch does not perform unit conversions.
using-metrics-insights-queries-with-metric-math
Using Metrics Insights queries with metric math
You can't mix a Metric Insights query and metric math syntax in the same expression, but you can reference results from a Metrics Insights query within other Metric math expressions. A Metrics Insights query without a ## GROUP BY clause returns a single time-series (TS), and can be used as input for a metric math expression that expects a single time series. A Metrics Insights query with a GROUP BY clause returns an array of time-series (TS[]), and can be used as input for a metric math expression that expects an array of time series.
Gets statistics for the specified metric.
The maximum number of data points returned from a single call is 1,440. If you request more than 1,440 data points, CloudWatch returns an error. To reduce the number of data points, you can narrow the specified time range and make multiple requests across adjacent time ranges, or you can increase the specified period. Data points are not returned in chronological order.
CloudWatch aggregates data points based on the length of the period that you specify. For example, if you request statistics with a one-hour period, CloudWatch aggregates all data points with time stamps that fall within each one-hour period. Therefore, the number of values aggregated by CloudWatch is larger than the number of data points returned.
CloudWatch needs raw data points to calculate percentile statistics. If you publish data using a statistic set instead, you can only retrieve percentile statistics for this data if one of the following conditions is true:
The SampleCount value of the statistic set is 1.
The Min and the Max values of the statistic set are equal.
Percentile statistics are not available for metrics when any of the metric values are negative numbers.
Amazon CloudWatch retains metric data as follows:
Data points with a period of less than 60 seconds are available for 3 hours. These data points are high-resolution metrics and are available only for custom metrics that have been defined with a
StorageResolution
of 1.Data points with a period of 60 seconds (1-minute) are available for 15 days.
Data points with a period of 300 seconds (5-minute) are available for 63 days.
Data points with a period of 3600 seconds (1 hour) are available for 455 days (15 months).
Data points that are initially published with a shorter period are aggregated together for long-term storage. For example, if you collect data using a period of 1 minute, the data remains available for 15 days with 1-minute resolution. After 15 days, this data is still available, but is aggregated and retrievable only with a resolution of 5 minutes. After 63 days, the data is further aggregated and is available with a resolution of 1 hour.
CloudWatch started retaining 5-minute and 1-hour metric data as of July 9, 2016.
For information about metrics and dimensions supported by Amazon Web Services services, see the Amazon CloudWatch Metrics and Dimensions Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
Returns information about the metric stream that you specify.
You can use the GetMetricWidgetImage
API to retrieve a snapshot graph of one
or more Amazon CloudWatch metrics as a bitmap image.
You can then embed this image into your services and products, such as wiki pages, reports, and documents. You could also retrieve images regularly, such as every minute, and create your own custom live dashboard.
The graph you retrieve can include all CloudWatch metric graph features, including metric math and horizontal and vertical annotations.
There is a limit of 20 transactions per second for this API. Each
GetMetricWidgetImage
action has the following limits:
As many as 100 metrics in the graph.
Up to 100 KB uncompressed payload.
Returns a list of the dashboards for your account.
If you include DashboardNamePrefix
, only those dashboards with names starting
with the prefix are listed. Otherwise, all dashboards in your account are
listed.
ListDashboards
returns up to 1000 results on one page. If there are more than
1000 dashboards, you can call ListDashboards
again and include the value you
received for NextToken
in the first call, to receive the next 1000 results.
Returns a list that contains the number of managed Contributor Insights rules in your account.
Returns a list of metric streams in this account.
List the specified metrics.
You can use the returned metrics with GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics to get statistical data.
Up to 500 results are returned for any one call. To retrieve additional results, use the returned token with subsequent calls.
After you create a metric, allow up to 15 minutes for the metric to appear. To see metric statistics sooner, use GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics.
If you are using CloudWatch cross-account observability, you can use this operation in a monitoring account and view metrics from the linked source accounts. For more information, see CloudWatch cross-account observability.
ListMetrics
doesn't return information about metrics if those metrics haven't
reported data in the past two weeks. To retrieve those metrics, use
GetMetricData or
GetMetricStatistics.
Displays the tags associated with a CloudWatch resource.
Currently, alarms and Contributor Insights rules support tagging.
Creates an anomaly detection model for a CloudWatch metric.
You can use the model to display a band of expected normal values when the metric is graphed.
For more information, see CloudWatch Anomaly Detection.
Creates or updates a composite alarm.
When you create a composite alarm, you specify a rule expression for the alarm that takes into account the alarm states of other alarms that you have created. The composite alarm goes into ALARM state only if all conditions of the rule are met.
The alarms specified in a composite alarm's rule expression can include metric alarms and other composite alarms. The rule expression of a composite alarm can include as many as 100 underlying alarms. Any single alarm can be included in the rule expressions of as many as 150 composite alarms.
Using composite alarms can reduce alarm noise. You can create multiple metric alarms, and also create a composite alarm and set up alerts only for the composite alarm. For example, you could create a composite alarm that goes into ALARM state only when more than one of the underlying metric alarms are in ALARM state.
Currently, the only alarm actions that can be taken by composite alarms are notifying SNS topics.
It is possible to create a loop or cycle of composite alarms, where composite alarm A depends on composite alarm B, and composite alarm B also depends on composite alarm A. In this scenario, you can't delete any composite alarm that is part of the cycle because there is always still a composite alarm that depends on that alarm that you want to delete.
To get out of such a situation, you must break the cycle by changing the rule of
one of the composite alarms in the cycle to remove a dependency that creates the
cycle. The simplest change to make to break a cycle is to change the AlarmRule
of one of the alarms to false
.
Additionally, the evaluation of composite alarms stops if CloudWatch detects a cycle in the evaluation path.
When this operation creates an alarm, the alarm state is immediately set to
INSUFFICIENT_DATA
. The alarm is then evaluated and its state is set
appropriately. Any actions associated with the new state are then executed. For
a composite alarm, this initial time after creation is the only time that the
alarm can be in INSUFFICIENT_DATA
state.
When you update an existing alarm, its state is left unchanged, but the update completely overwrites the previous configuration of the alarm.
To use this operation, you must be signed on with the
cloudwatch:PutCompositeAlarm
permission that is scoped to *
. You can't
create a composite alarms if your cloudwatch:PutCompositeAlarm
permission has
a narrower scope.
If you are an IAM user, you must have iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole
to create a
composite alarm that has Systems Manager OpsItem actions.
Creates a dashboard if it does not already exist, or updates an existing dashboard.
If you update a dashboard, the entire contents are replaced with what you specify here.
All dashboards in your account are global, not region-specific.
A simple way to create a dashboard using PutDashboard
is to copy an existing
dashboard. To copy an existing dashboard using the console, you can load the
dashboard and then use the View/edit source command in the Actions menu to
display the JSON block for that dashboard. Another way to copy a dashboard is to
use GetDashboard
, and then use the data returned within DashboardBody
as the
template for the new dashboard when you call PutDashboard
.
When you create a dashboard with PutDashboard
, a good practice is to add a
text widget at the top of the dashboard with a message that the dashboard was
created by script and should not be changed in the console. This message could
also point console users to the location of the DashboardBody
script or the
CloudFormation template used to create the dashboard.
Creates a Contributor Insights rule.
Rules evaluate log events in a CloudWatch Logs log group, enabling you to find contributor data for the log events in that log group. For more information, see Using Contributor Insights to Analyze High-Cardinality Data.
If you create a rule, delete it, and then re-create it with the same name, historical data from the first time the rule was created might not be available.
Creates a managed Contributor Insights rule for a specified Amazon Web Services resource.
When you enable a managed rule, you create a Contributor Insights rule that
collects data from Amazon Web Services services. You cannot edit these rules
with PutInsightRule
. The rules can be enabled, disabled, and deleted using
EnableInsightRules
, DisableInsightRules
, and DeleteInsightRules
. If a
previously created managed rule is currently disabled, a subsequent call to this
API will re-enable it. Use ListManagedInsightRules
to describe all available
rules.
Creates or updates an alarm and associates it with the specified metric, metric math expression, anomaly detection model, or Metrics Insights query.
For more information about using a Metrics Insights query for an alarm, see Create alarms on Metrics Insights queries.
Alarms based on anomaly detection models cannot have Auto Scaling actions.
When this operation creates an alarm, the alarm state is immediately set to
INSUFFICIENT_DATA
. The alarm is then evaluated and its state is set
appropriately. Any actions associated with the new state are then executed.
When you update an existing alarm, its state is left unchanged, but the update completely overwrites the previous configuration of the alarm.
If you are an IAM user, you must have Amazon EC2 permissions for some alarm operations:
The
iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole
permission for all alarms with EC2 actionsThe
iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole
permissions to create an alarm with Systems Manager OpsItem or response plan actions.
The first time you create an alarm in the Amazon Web Services Management
Console, the CLI, or by using the PutMetricAlarm API, CloudWatch creates the
necessary service-linked role for you. The service-linked roles are called
AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchEvents
and
AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchAlarms_ActionSSM
. For more information, see Amazon Web Services service-linked
role.
cross-account-alarms
Cross-account alarms
You can set an alarm on metrics in the current account, or in another account. To create a cross-account alarm that watches a metric in a different account, you must have completed the following pre-requisites:
The account where the metrics are located (the sharing account) must already have a sharing role named CloudWatch-CrossAccountSharingRole. If it does not already have this role, you must create it using the instructions in Set up a sharing account in Cross-account cross-Region CloudWatch console. The policy for that role must grant access to the ID of the account where you are creating the alarm.
The account where you are creating the alarm (the monitoring account) must already have a service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchCrossAccount to allow CloudWatch to assume the sharing role in the sharing account. If it does not, you must create it following the directions in Set up a monitoring account in Cross-account cross-Region CloudWatch console.
Publishes metric data points to Amazon CloudWatch.
CloudWatch associates the data points with the specified metric. If the
specified metric does not exist, CloudWatch creates the metric. When CloudWatch
creates a metric, it can take up to fifteen minutes for the metric to appear in
calls to
ListMetrics. You can publish either individual data points in the Value
field, or arrays of
values and the number of times each value occurred during the period by using
the Values
and Counts
fields in the MetricDatum
structure. Using the
Values
and Counts
method enables you to publish up to 150 values per metric
with one PutMetricData
request, and supports retrieving percentile statistics
on this data.
Each PutMetricData
request is limited to 1 MB in size for HTTP POST requests.
You can send a payload compressed by gzip. Each request is also limited to no
more than 1000 different metrics.
Although the Value
parameter accepts numbers of type Double
, CloudWatch
rejects values that are either too small or too large. Values must be in the
range of -2^360 to 2^360. In addition, special values (for example, NaN,
+Infinity, -Infinity) are not supported.
You can use up to 30 dimensions per metric to further clarify what data the metric collects. Each dimension consists of a Name and Value pair. For more information about specifying dimensions, see Publishing Metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
You specify the time stamp to be associated with each data point. You can specify time stamps that are as much as two weeks before the current date, and as much as 2 hours after the current day and time.
Data points with time stamps from 24 hours ago or longer can take at least 48 hours to become available for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics from the time they are submitted. Data points with time stamps between 3 and 24 hours ago can take as much as 2 hours to become available for for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics.
CloudWatch needs raw data points to calculate percentile statistics. If you publish data using a statistic set instead, you can only retrieve percentile statistics for this data if one of the following conditions is true:
The
SampleCount
value of the statistic set is 1 andMin
,Max
, andSum
are all equal.The
Min
andMax
are equal, andSum
is equal toMin
multiplied bySampleCount
.
Creates or updates a metric stream.
Metric streams can automatically stream CloudWatch metrics to Amazon Web Services destinations, including Amazon S3, and to many third-party solutions.
For more information, see Using Metric Streams.
To create a metric stream, you must be signed in to an account that has the
iam:PassRole
permission and either the CloudWatchFullAccess
policy or the
cloudwatch:PutMetricStream
permission.
When you create or update a metric stream, you choose one of the following:
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account.
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account, except for the namespaces that you list in
ExcludeFilters
.Stream metrics from only the metric namespaces that you list in
IncludeFilters
.
By default, a metric stream always sends the MAX
, MIN
, SUM
, and
SAMPLECOUNT
statistics for each metric that is streamed. You can use the
StatisticsConfigurations
parameter to have the metric stream send additional
statistics in the stream. Streaming additional statistics incurs additional
costs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
When you use PutMetricStream
to create a new metric stream, the stream is
created in the running
state. If you use it to update an existing stream, the
state of the stream is not changed.
If you are using CloudWatch cross-account observability and you create a metric stream in a monitoring account, you can choose whether to include metrics from source accounts in the stream. For more information, see CloudWatch cross-account observability.
Temporarily sets the state of an alarm for testing purposes.
When the updated state differs from the previous value, the action configured
for the appropriate state is invoked. For example, if your alarm is configured
to send an Amazon SNS message when an alarm is triggered, temporarily changing
the alarm state to ALARM
sends an SNS message.
Metric alarms returns to their actual state quickly, often within seconds. Because the metric alarm state change happens quickly, it is typically only visible in the alarm's History tab in the Amazon CloudWatch console or through DescribeAlarmHistory.
If you use SetAlarmState
on a composite alarm, the composite alarm is not
guaranteed to return to its actual state. It returns to its actual state only
once any of its children alarms change state. It is also reevaluated if you
update its configuration.
If an alarm triggers EC2 Auto Scaling policies or application Auto Scaling
policies, you must include information in the StateReasonData
parameter to
enable the policy to take the correct action.
Starts the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
Stops the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
Assigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified CloudWatch resource.
Currently, the only CloudWatch resources that can be tagged are alarms and Contributor Insights rules.
Tags can help you organize and categorize your resources. You can also use them to scope user permissions by granting a user permission to access or change only resources with certain tag values.
Tags don't have any semantic meaning to Amazon Web Services and are interpreted strictly as strings of characters.
You can use the TagResource
action with an alarm that already has tags. If you
specify a new tag key for the alarm, this tag is appended to the list of tags
associated with the alarm. If you specify a tag key that is already associated
with the alarm, the new tag value that you specify replaces the previous value
for that tag.
You can associate as many as 50 tags with a CloudWatch resource.
Removes one or more tags from the specified resource.