[ aws . iotsitewise ]

update-asset-model

Description

Updates an asset model and all of the assets that were created from the model. Each asset created from the model inherits the updated asset model’s property and hierarchy definitions. For more information, see Updating assets and models in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

Warning

This operation overwrites the existing model with the provided model. To avoid deleting your asset model’s properties or hierarchies, you must include their IDs and definitions in the updated asset model payload. For more information, see DescribeAssetModel .

If you remove a property from an asset model, IoT SiteWise deletes all previous data for that property. If you remove a hierarchy definition from an asset model, IoT SiteWise disassociates every asset associated with that hierarchy. You can’t change the type or data type of an existing property.

See also: AWS API Documentation

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Synopsis

  update-asset-model
--asset-model-id <value>
--asset-model-name <value>
[--asset-model-description <value>]
[--asset-model-properties <value>]
[--asset-model-hierarchies <value>]
[--asset-model-composite-models <value>]
[--client-token <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]

Options

--asset-model-id (string)

The ID of the asset model to update.

--asset-model-name (string)

A unique, friendly name for the asset model.

--asset-model-description (string)

A description for the asset model.

--asset-model-properties (list)

The updated property definitions of the asset model. For more information, see Asset properties in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

You can specify up to 200 properties per asset model. For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

(structure)

Contains information about an asset model property.

id -> (string)

The ID of the asset model property.

name -> (string)

The name of the asset model property.

dataType -> (string)

The data type of the asset model property.

dataTypeSpec -> (string)

The data type of the structure for this property. This parameter exists on properties that have the STRUCT data type.

unit -> (string)

The unit of the asset model property, such as Newtons or RPM .

type -> (structure)

The property type (see PropertyType ).

attribute -> (structure)

Specifies an asset attribute property. An attribute generally contains static information, such as the serial number of an IIoT wind turbine.

defaultValue -> (string)

The default value of the asset model property attribute. All assets that you create from the asset model contain this attribute value. You can update an attribute’s value after you create an asset. For more information, see Updating attribute values in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

measurement -> (structure)

Specifies an asset measurement property. A measurement represents a device’s raw sensor data stream, such as timestamped temperature values or timestamped power values.

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given measurement property. You can configure measurements to be kept at the edge or forwarded to the Amazon Web Services Cloud. By default, measurements are forwarded to the cloud.

forwardingConfig -> (structure)

The forwarding configuration for the given measurement property.

state -> (string)

The forwarding state for the given property.

transform -> (structure)

Specifies an asset transform property. A transform contains a mathematical expression that maps a property’s data points from one form to another, such as a unit conversion from Celsius to Fahrenheit.

expression -> (string)

The mathematical expression that defines the transformation function. You can specify up to 10 variables per expression. You can specify up to 10 functions per expression.

For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

variables -> (list)

The list of variables used in the expression.

(structure)

Contains expression variable information.

name -> (string)

The friendly name of the variable to be used in the expression.

value -> (structure)

The variable that identifies an asset property from which to use values.

propertyId -> (string)

The ID of the property to use as the variable. You can use the property name if it’s from the same asset model.

hierarchyId -> (string)

The ID of the hierarchy to query for the property ID. You can use the hierarchy’s name instead of the hierarchy’s ID.

You use a hierarchy ID instead of a model ID because you can have several hierarchies using the same model and therefore the same propertyId . For example, you might have separately grouped assets that come from the same asset model. For more information, see Asset hierarchies in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given transform property. You can configure transforms to be kept at the edge or forwarded to the Amazon Web Services Cloud. You can also configure transforms to be computed at the edge or in the cloud.

computeLocation -> (string)

The compute location for the given transform property.

forwardingConfig -> (structure)

The forwarding configuration for a given property.

state -> (string)

The forwarding state for the given property.

metric -> (structure)

Specifies an asset metric property. A metric contains a mathematical expression that uses aggregate functions to process all input data points over a time interval and output a single data point, such as to calculate the average hourly temperature.

expression -> (string)

The mathematical expression that defines the metric aggregation function. You can specify up to 10 variables per expression. You can specify up to 10 functions per expression.

For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

variables -> (list)

The list of variables used in the expression.

(structure)

Contains expression variable information.

name -> (string)

The friendly name of the variable to be used in the expression.

value -> (structure)

The variable that identifies an asset property from which to use values.

propertyId -> (string)

The ID of the property to use as the variable. You can use the property name if it’s from the same asset model.

hierarchyId -> (string)

The ID of the hierarchy to query for the property ID. You can use the hierarchy’s name instead of the hierarchy’s ID.

You use a hierarchy ID instead of a model ID because you can have several hierarchies using the same model and therefore the same propertyId . For example, you might have separately grouped assets that come from the same asset model. For more information, see Asset hierarchies in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

window -> (structure)

The window (time interval) over which IoT SiteWise computes the metric’s aggregation expression. IoT SiteWise computes one data point per window .

tumbling -> (structure)

The tumbling time interval window.

interval -> (string)

The time interval for the tumbling window. The interval time must be between 1 minute and 1 week.

IoT SiteWise computes the 1w interval the end of Sunday at midnight each week (UTC), the 1d interval at the end of each day at midnight (UTC), the 1h interval at the end of each hour, and so on.

When IoT SiteWise aggregates data points for metric computations, the start of each interval is exclusive and the end of each interval is inclusive. IoT SiteWise places the computed data point at the end of the interval.

offset -> (string)

The offset for the tumbling window. The offset parameter accepts the following:

  • The offset time. For example, if you specify 18h for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) the next day.

  • The ISO 8601 format. For example, if you specify PT18H for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) the next day.

  • The 24-hour clock. For example, if you specify 00:03:00 for offset , 5m for interval , and you create the metric at 2 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 2:03 PM (UTC). You get the second aggregation result at 2:08 PM (UTC).

  • The offset time zone. For example, if you specify 2021-07-23T18:00-08 for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (PST), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (PST) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (PST), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (PST) the next day.

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given metric property. You can configure metrics to be computed at the edge or in the Amazon Web Services Cloud. By default, metrics are forwarded to the cloud.

computeLocation -> (string)

The compute location for the given metric property.

JSON Syntax:

[
  {
    "id": "string",
    "name": "string",
    "dataType": "STRING"|"INTEGER"|"DOUBLE"|"BOOLEAN"|"STRUCT",
    "dataTypeSpec": "string",
    "unit": "string",
    "type": {
      "attribute": {
        "defaultValue": "string"
      },
      "measurement": {
        "processingConfig": {
          "forwardingConfig": {
            "state": "DISABLED"|"ENABLED"
          }
        }
      },
      "transform": {
        "expression": "string",
        "variables": [
          {
            "name": "string",
            "value": {
              "propertyId": "string",
              "hierarchyId": "string"
            }
          }
          ...
        ],
        "processingConfig": {
          "computeLocation": "EDGE"|"CLOUD",
          "forwardingConfig": {
            "state": "DISABLED"|"ENABLED"
          }
        }
      },
      "metric": {
        "expression": "string",
        "variables": [
          {
            "name": "string",
            "value": {
              "propertyId": "string",
              "hierarchyId": "string"
            }
          }
          ...
        ],
        "window": {
          "tumbling": {
            "interval": "string",
            "offset": "string"
          }
        },
        "processingConfig": {
          "computeLocation": "EDGE"|"CLOUD"
        }
      }
    }
  }
  ...
]

--asset-model-hierarchies (list)

The updated hierarchy definitions of the asset model. Each hierarchy specifies an asset model whose assets can be children of any other assets created from this asset model. For more information, see Asset hierarchies in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

You can specify up to 10 hierarchies per asset model. For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

(structure)

Describes an asset hierarchy that contains a hierarchy’s name, ID, and child asset model ID that specifies the type of asset that can be in this hierarchy.

id -> (string)

The ID of the asset model hierarchy. This ID is a hierarchyId .

name -> (string)

The name of the asset model hierarchy that you specify by using the CreateAssetModel or UpdateAssetModel API operation.

childAssetModelId -> (string)

The ID of the asset model. All assets in this hierarchy must be instances of the childAssetModelId asset model.

Shorthand Syntax:

id=string,name=string,childAssetModelId=string ...

JSON Syntax:

[
  {
    "id": "string",
    "name": "string",
    "childAssetModelId": "string"
  }
  ...
]

--asset-model-composite-models (list)

The composite asset models that are part of this asset model. Composite asset models are asset models that contain specific properties. Each composite model has a type that defines the properties that the composite model supports. Use composite asset models to define alarms on this asset model.

(structure)

Contains information about a composite model in an asset model. This object contains the asset property definitions that you define in the composite model.

name -> (string)

The name of the composite model.

description -> (string)

The description of the composite model.

type -> (string)

The type of the composite model. For alarm composite models, this type is AWS/ALARM .

properties -> (list)

The asset property definitions for this composite model.

(structure)

Contains information about an asset model property.

id -> (string)

The ID of the asset model property.

name -> (string)

The name of the asset model property.

dataType -> (string)

The data type of the asset model property.

dataTypeSpec -> (string)

The data type of the structure for this property. This parameter exists on properties that have the STRUCT data type.

unit -> (string)

The unit of the asset model property, such as Newtons or RPM .

type -> (structure)

The property type (see PropertyType ).

attribute -> (structure)

Specifies an asset attribute property. An attribute generally contains static information, such as the serial number of an IIoT wind turbine.

defaultValue -> (string)

The default value of the asset model property attribute. All assets that you create from the asset model contain this attribute value. You can update an attribute’s value after you create an asset. For more information, see Updating attribute values in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

measurement -> (structure)

Specifies an asset measurement property. A measurement represents a device’s raw sensor data stream, such as timestamped temperature values or timestamped power values.

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given measurement property. You can configure measurements to be kept at the edge or forwarded to the Amazon Web Services Cloud. By default, measurements are forwarded to the cloud.

forwardingConfig -> (structure)

The forwarding configuration for the given measurement property.

state -> (string)

The forwarding state for the given property.

transform -> (structure)

Specifies an asset transform property. A transform contains a mathematical expression that maps a property’s data points from one form to another, such as a unit conversion from Celsius to Fahrenheit.

expression -> (string)

The mathematical expression that defines the transformation function. You can specify up to 10 variables per expression. You can specify up to 10 functions per expression.

For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

variables -> (list)

The list of variables used in the expression.

(structure)

Contains expression variable information.

name -> (string)

The friendly name of the variable to be used in the expression.

value -> (structure)

The variable that identifies an asset property from which to use values.

propertyId -> (string)

The ID of the property to use as the variable. You can use the property name if it’s from the same asset model.

hierarchyId -> (string)

The ID of the hierarchy to query for the property ID. You can use the hierarchy’s name instead of the hierarchy’s ID.

You use a hierarchy ID instead of a model ID because you can have several hierarchies using the same model and therefore the same propertyId . For example, you might have separately grouped assets that come from the same asset model. For more information, see Asset hierarchies in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given transform property. You can configure transforms to be kept at the edge or forwarded to the Amazon Web Services Cloud. You can also configure transforms to be computed at the edge or in the cloud.

computeLocation -> (string)

The compute location for the given transform property.

forwardingConfig -> (structure)

The forwarding configuration for a given property.

state -> (string)

The forwarding state for the given property.

metric -> (structure)

Specifies an asset metric property. A metric contains a mathematical expression that uses aggregate functions to process all input data points over a time interval and output a single data point, such as to calculate the average hourly temperature.

expression -> (string)

The mathematical expression that defines the metric aggregation function. You can specify up to 10 variables per expression. You can specify up to 10 functions per expression.

For more information, see Quotas in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

variables -> (list)

The list of variables used in the expression.

(structure)

Contains expression variable information.

name -> (string)

The friendly name of the variable to be used in the expression.

value -> (structure)

The variable that identifies an asset property from which to use values.

propertyId -> (string)

The ID of the property to use as the variable. You can use the property name if it’s from the same asset model.

hierarchyId -> (string)

The ID of the hierarchy to query for the property ID. You can use the hierarchy’s name instead of the hierarchy’s ID.

You use a hierarchy ID instead of a model ID because you can have several hierarchies using the same model and therefore the same propertyId . For example, you might have separately grouped assets that come from the same asset model. For more information, see Asset hierarchies in the IoT SiteWise User Guide .

window -> (structure)

The window (time interval) over which IoT SiteWise computes the metric’s aggregation expression. IoT SiteWise computes one data point per window .

tumbling -> (structure)

The tumbling time interval window.

interval -> (string)

The time interval for the tumbling window. The interval time must be between 1 minute and 1 week.

IoT SiteWise computes the 1w interval the end of Sunday at midnight each week (UTC), the 1d interval at the end of each day at midnight (UTC), the 1h interval at the end of each hour, and so on.

When IoT SiteWise aggregates data points for metric computations, the start of each interval is exclusive and the end of each interval is inclusive. IoT SiteWise places the computed data point at the end of the interval.

offset -> (string)

The offset for the tumbling window. The offset parameter accepts the following:

  • The offset time. For example, if you specify 18h for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) the next day.

  • The ISO 8601 format. For example, if you specify PT18H for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (UTC) the next day.

  • The 24-hour clock. For example, if you specify 00:03:00 for offset , 5m for interval , and you create the metric at 2 PM (UTC), you get the first aggregation result at 2:03 PM (UTC). You get the second aggregation result at 2:08 PM (UTC).

  • The offset time zone. For example, if you specify 2021-07-23T18:00-08 for offset and 1d for interval , IoT SiteWise aggregates data in one of the following ways:

    • If you create the metric before or at 6 PM (PST), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (PST) on the day when you create the metric.

    • If you create the metric after 6 PM (PST), you get the first aggregation result at 6 PM (PST) the next day.

processingConfig -> (structure)

The processing configuration for the given metric property. You can configure metrics to be computed at the edge or in the Amazon Web Services Cloud. By default, metrics are forwarded to the cloud.

computeLocation -> (string)

The compute location for the given metric property.

JSON Syntax:

[
  {
    "name": "string",
    "description": "string",
    "type": "string",
    "properties": [
      {
        "id": "string",
        "name": "string",
        "dataType": "STRING"|"INTEGER"|"DOUBLE"|"BOOLEAN"|"STRUCT",
        "dataTypeSpec": "string",
        "unit": "string",
        "type": {
          "attribute": {
            "defaultValue": "string"
          },
          "measurement": {
            "processingConfig": {
              "forwardingConfig": {
                "state": "DISABLED"|"ENABLED"
              }
            }
          },
          "transform": {
            "expression": "string",
            "variables": [
              {
                "name": "string",
                "value": {
                  "propertyId": "string",
                  "hierarchyId": "string"
                }
              }
              ...
            ],
            "processingConfig": {
              "computeLocation": "EDGE"|"CLOUD",
              "forwardingConfig": {
                "state": "DISABLED"|"ENABLED"
              }
            }
          },
          "metric": {
            "expression": "string",
            "variables": [
              {
                "name": "string",
                "value": {
                  "propertyId": "string",
                  "hierarchyId": "string"
                }
              }
              ...
            ],
            "window": {
              "tumbling": {
                "interval": "string",
                "offset": "string"
              }
            },
            "processingConfig": {
              "computeLocation": "EDGE"|"CLOUD"
            }
          }
        }
      }
      ...
    ]
  }
  ...
]

--client-token (string)

A unique case-sensitive identifier that you can provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. Don’t reuse this client token if a new idempotent request is required.

--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml (string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml.

--generate-cli-skeleton (string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json. Similarly, if provided yaml-input it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml. If provided with the value output, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Examples

Note

To use the following examples, you must have the AWS CLI installed and configured. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.

Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide .

To update an asset model

The following update-asset-model example updates a wind farm asset model’s description. This example includes the model’s existing IDs and definitions, because update-asset-model overwrites the existing model with the new model.

aws iotsitewise update-asset-model \
    --cli-input-json file://update-wind-farm-model.json

Contents of update-wind-farm-model.json:

{
    "assetModelName": "Wind Farm Model",
    "assetModelDescription": "Represents a wind farm that comprises many wind turbines",
    "assetModelProperties": [
        {
            "id": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-88888EXAMPLE",
            "name": "Region",
            "dataType": "STRING",
            "type": {
                "attribute": {}
            }
        },
        {
            "id": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-99999EXAMPLE",
            "name": "Total Generated Power",
            "dataType": "DOUBLE",
            "unit": "kW",
            "type": {
                "metric": {
                    "expression": "sum(power)",
                    "variables": [
                        {
                            "name": "power",
                            "value": {
                                "hierarchyId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-77777EXAMPLE",
                                "propertyId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-66666EXAMPLE"
                            }
                        }
                    ],
                    "window": {
                        "tumbling": {
                            "interval": "1h"
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    ],
    "assetModelHierarchies": [
        {
            "id": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-77777EXAMPLE",
            "name": "Wind Turbines",
            "childAssetModelId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-11111EXAMPLE"
        }
    ]
}

Output:

{
    "assetModelId": "a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-22222EXAMPLE",
    "assetModelArn": "arn:aws:iotsitewise:us-west-2:123456789012:asset-model/a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-22222EXAMPLE",
    "assetModelStatus": {
        "state": "CREATING"
    }
}

For more information, see Updating asset models in the AWS IoT SiteWise User Guide.

Output

assetModelStatus -> (structure)

The status of the asset model, which contains a state (UPDATING after successfully calling this operation) and any error message.

state -> (string)

The current state of the asset model.

error -> (structure)

Contains associated error information, if any.

code -> (string)

The error code.

message -> (string)

The error message.

details -> (list)

A list of detailed errors.

(structure)

Contains detailed error information.

code -> (string)

The error code.

message -> (string)

The error message.