Creates or updates an alarm, and associates it with the specified metric.
An alarm is used to monitor a single metric for one of your resources. When a metric condition is met, the alarm can notify you by email, SMS text message, and a banner displayed on the Amazon Lightsail console. For more information, see Alarms in Amazon Lightsail .
When this action 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. The alarm is then evaluated with the updated configuration.
See also: AWS API Documentation
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
put-alarm
--alarm-name <value>
--metric-name <value>
--monitored-resource-name <value>
--comparison-operator <value>
--threshold <value>
--evaluation-periods <value>
[--datapoints-to-alarm <value>]
[--treat-missing-data <value>]
[--contact-protocols <value>]
[--notification-triggers <value>]
[--notification-enabled | --no-notification-enabled]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
--alarm-name
(string)
The name for the alarm. Specify the name of an existing alarm to update, and overwrite the previous configuration of the alarm.
--metric-name
(string)
The name of the metric to associate with the alarm.
You can configure up to two alarms per metric.
The following metrics are available for each resource type:
Instances :
BurstCapacityPercentage
,BurstCapacityTime
,CPUUtilization
,NetworkIn
,NetworkOut
,StatusCheckFailed
,StatusCheckFailed_Instance
, andStatusCheckFailed_System
.Load balancers :
ClientTLSNegotiationErrorCount
,HealthyHostCount
,UnhealthyHostCount
,HTTPCode_LB_4XX_Count
,HTTPCode_LB_5XX_Count
,HTTPCode_Instance_2XX_Count
,HTTPCode_Instance_3XX_Count
,HTTPCode_Instance_4XX_Count
,HTTPCode_Instance_5XX_Count
,InstanceResponseTime
,RejectedConnectionCount
, andRequestCount
.Relational databases :
CPUUtilization
,DatabaseConnections
,DiskQueueDepth
,FreeStorageSpace
,NetworkReceiveThroughput
, andNetworkTransmitThroughput
.For more information about these metrics, see Metrics available in Lightsail .
Possible values:
CPUUtilization
NetworkIn
NetworkOut
StatusCheckFailed
StatusCheckFailed_Instance
StatusCheckFailed_System
ClientTLSNegotiationErrorCount
HealthyHostCount
UnhealthyHostCount
HTTPCode_LB_4XX_Count
HTTPCode_LB_5XX_Count
HTTPCode_Instance_2XX_Count
HTTPCode_Instance_3XX_Count
HTTPCode_Instance_4XX_Count
HTTPCode_Instance_5XX_Count
InstanceResponseTime
RejectedConnectionCount
RequestCount
DatabaseConnections
DiskQueueDepth
FreeStorageSpace
NetworkReceiveThroughput
NetworkTransmitThroughput
BurstCapacityTime
BurstCapacityPercentage
--monitored-resource-name
(string)
The name of the Lightsail resource that will be monitored.
Instances, load balancers, and relational databases are the only Lightsail resources that can currently be monitored by alarms.
--comparison-operator
(string)
The arithmetic operation to use when comparing the specified statistic to the threshold. The specified statistic value is used as the first operand.
Possible values:
GreaterThanOrEqualToThreshold
GreaterThanThreshold
LessThanThreshold
LessThanOrEqualToThreshold
--threshold
(double)
The value against which the specified statistic is compared.
--evaluation-periods
(integer)
The number of most recent periods over which data is compared to the specified threshold. If you are setting an “M out of N” alarm, this value (
evaluationPeriods
) is the N.If you are setting an alarm that requires that a number of consecutive data points be breaching to trigger the alarm, this value specifies the rolling period of time in which data points are evaluated.
Each evaluation period is five minutes long. For example, specify an evaluation period of 24 to evaluate a metric over a rolling period of two hours.
You can specify a minimum valuation period of 1 (5 minutes), and a maximum evaluation period of 288 (24 hours).
--datapoints-to-alarm
(integer)
The number of data points that must be not within the specified threshold to trigger the alarm. If you are setting an “M out of N” alarm, this value (
datapointsToAlarm
) is the M.
--treat-missing-data
(string)
Sets how this alarm will handle missing data points.
An alarm can treat missing data in the following ways:
breaching
- Assume the missing data is not within the threshold. Missing data counts towards the number of times the metric is not within the threshold.
notBreaching
- Assume the missing data is within the threshold. Missing data does not count towards the number of times the metric is not within the threshold.
ignore
- Ignore the missing data. Maintains the current alarm state.
missing
- Missing data is treated as missing.If
treatMissingData
is not specified, the default behavior ofmissing
is used.Possible values:
breaching
notBreaching
ignore
missing
--contact-protocols
(list)
The contact protocols to use for the alarm, such as
SMS
(text messaging), or both.A notification is sent via the specified contact protocol if notifications are enabled for the alarm, and when the alarm is triggered.
A notification is not sent if a contact protocol is not specified, if the specified contact protocol is not configured in the Amazon Web Services Region, or if notifications are not enabled for the alarm using the
notificationEnabled
paramater.Use the
CreateContactMethod
action to configure a contact protocol in an Amazon Web Services Region.(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
Where valid values are:
Email
SMS
--notification-triggers
(list)
The alarm states that trigger a notification.
An alarm has the following possible states:
ALARM
- The metric is outside of the defined threshold.
INSUFFICIENT_DATA
- The alarm has just started, the metric is not available, or not enough data is available for the metric to determine the alarm state.
OK
- The metric is within the defined threshold.When you specify a notification trigger, the
ALARM
state must be specified. TheINSUFFICIENT_DATA
andOK
states can be specified in addition to theALARM
state.
If you specify
OK
as an alarm trigger, a notification is sent when the alarm switches from anALARM
orINSUFFICIENT_DATA
alarm state to anOK
state. This can be thought of as an all clear alarm notification.If you specify
INSUFFICIENT_DATA
as the alarm trigger, a notification is sent when the alarm switches from anOK
orALARM
alarm state to anINSUFFICIENT_DATA
state.The notification trigger defaults to
ALARM
if you don’t specify this parameter.(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
Where valid values are:
OK
ALARM
INSUFFICIENT_DATA
--notification-enabled
| --no-notification-enabled
(boolean)
Indicates whether the alarm is enabled.
Notifications are enabled by default if you don’t specify this parameter.
--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.
operations -> (list)
An array of objects that describe the result of the action, such as the status of the request, the timestamp of the request, and the resources affected by the request.
(structure)
Describes the API operation.
id -> (string)
The ID of the operation.
resourceName -> (string)
The resource name.
resourceType -> (string)
The resource type.
createdAt -> (timestamp)
The timestamp when the operation was initialized (e.g.,
1479816991.349
).location -> (structure)
The Amazon Web Services Region and Availability Zone.
availabilityZone -> (string)
The Availability Zone. Follows the format
us-east-2a
(case-sensitive).regionName -> (string)
The AWS Region name.
isTerminal -> (boolean)
A Boolean value indicating whether the operation is terminal.
operationDetails -> (string)
Details about the operation (e.g.,
Debian-1GB-Ohio-1
).operationType -> (string)
The type of operation.
status -> (string)
The status of the operation.
statusChangedAt -> (timestamp)
The timestamp when the status was changed (e.g.,
1479816991.349
).errorCode -> (string)
The error code.
errorDetails -> (string)
The error details.