Updates a specified layer.
Required Permissions : To use this action, an IAM user must have a Manage permissions level for the stack, or an attached policy that explicitly grants permissions. For more information on user permissions, see Managing User Permissions .
See also: AWS API Documentation
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
update-layer
--layer-id <value>
[--name <value>]
[--shortname <value>]
[--attributes <value>]
[--cloud-watch-logs-configuration <value>]
[--custom-instance-profile-arn <value>]
[--custom-json <value>]
[--custom-security-group-ids <value>]
[--packages <value>]
[--volume-configurations <value>]
[--enable-auto-healing | --no-enable-auto-healing]
[--auto-assign-elastic-ips | --no-auto-assign-elastic-ips]
[--auto-assign-public-ips | --no-auto-assign-public-ips]
[--custom-recipes <value>]
[--install-updates-on-boot | --no-install-updates-on-boot]
[--use-ebs-optimized-instances | --no-use-ebs-optimized-instances]
[--lifecycle-event-configuration <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
--layer-id
(string)
The layer ID.
--name
(string)
The layer name, which is used by the console.
--shortname
(string)
For custom layers only, use this parameter to specify the layer’s short name, which is used internally by AWS OpsWorks Stacks and by Chef. The short name is also used as the name for the directory where your app files are installed. It can have a maximum of 200 characters and must be in the following format: /A[a-z0-9-_.]+Z/.
The built-in layers’ short names are defined by AWS OpsWorks Stacks. For more information, see the Layer Reference
--attributes
(map)
One or more user-defined key/value pairs to be added to the stack attributes.
key -> (string)
value -> (string)
Shorthand Syntax:
KeyName1=string,KeyName2=string
Where valid key names are:
EcsClusterArn
EnableHaproxyStats
HaproxyStatsUrl
HaproxyStatsUser
HaproxyStatsPassword
HaproxyHealthCheckUrl
HaproxyHealthCheckMethod
MysqlRootPassword
MysqlRootPasswordUbiquitous
GangliaUrl
GangliaUser
GangliaPassword
MemcachedMemory
NodejsVersion
RubyVersion
RubygemsVersion
ManageBundler
BundlerVersion
RailsStack
PassengerVersion
Jvm
JvmVersion
JvmOptions
JavaAppServer
JavaAppServerVersion
JSON Syntax:
{"EcsClusterArn"|"EnableHaproxyStats"|"HaproxyStatsUrl"|"HaproxyStatsUser"|"HaproxyStatsPassword"|"HaproxyHealthCheckUrl"|"HaproxyHealthCheckMethod"|"MysqlRootPassword"|"MysqlRootPasswordUbiquitous"|"GangliaUrl"|"GangliaUser"|"GangliaPassword"|"MemcachedMemory"|"NodejsVersion"|"RubyVersion"|"RubygemsVersion"|"ManageBundler"|"BundlerVersion"|"RailsStack"|"PassengerVersion"|"Jvm"|"JvmVersion"|"JvmOptions"|"JavaAppServer"|"JavaAppServerVersion": "string"
...}
--cloud-watch-logs-configuration
(structure)
Specifies CloudWatch Logs configuration options for the layer. For more information, see CloudWatchLogsLogStream .
Enabled -> (boolean)
Whether CloudWatch Logs is enabled for a layer.
LogStreams -> (list)
A list of configuration options for CloudWatch Logs.
(structure)
Describes the Amazon CloudWatch logs configuration for a layer. For detailed information about members of this data type, see the CloudWatch Logs Agent Reference .
LogGroupName -> (string)
Specifies the destination log group. A log group is created automatically if it doesn’t already exist. Log group names can be between 1 and 512 characters long. Allowed characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, ‘_’ (underscore), ‘-‘ (hyphen), ‘/’ (forward slash), and ‘.’ (period).
DatetimeFormat -> (string)
Specifies how the time stamp is extracted from logs. For more information, see the CloudWatch Logs Agent Reference .
TimeZone -> (string)
Specifies the time zone of log event time stamps.
File -> (string)
Specifies log files that you want to push to CloudWatch Logs.
File
can point to a specific file or multiple files (by using wild card characters such as/var/log/system.log*
). Only the latest file is pushed to CloudWatch Logs, based on file modification time. We recommend that you use wild card characters to specify a series of files of the same type, such asaccess_log.2014-06-01-01
,access_log.2014-06-01-02
, and so on by using a pattern likeaccess_log.*
. Don’t use a wildcard to match multiple file types, such asaccess_log_80
andaccess_log_443
. To specify multiple, different file types, add another log stream entry to the configuration file, so that each log file type is stored in a different log group.Zipped files are not supported.
FileFingerprintLines -> (string)
Specifies the range of lines for identifying a file. The valid values are one number, or two dash-delimited numbers, such as ‘1’, ‘2-5’. The default value is ‘1’, meaning the first line is used to calculate the fingerprint. Fingerprint lines are not sent to CloudWatch Logs unless all specified lines are available.
MultiLineStartPattern -> (string)
Specifies the pattern for identifying the start of a log message.
InitialPosition -> (string)
Specifies where to start to read data (start_of_file or end_of_file). The default is start_of_file. This setting is only used if there is no state persisted for that log stream.
Encoding -> (string)
Specifies the encoding of the log file so that the file can be read correctly. The default is
utf_8
. Encodings supported by Pythoncodecs.decode()
can be used here.BufferDuration -> (integer)
Specifies the time duration for the batching of log events. The minimum value is 5000ms and default value is 5000ms.
BatchCount -> (integer)
Specifies the max number of log events in a batch, up to 10000. The default value is 1000.
BatchSize -> (integer)
Specifies the maximum size of log events in a batch, in bytes, up to 1048576 bytes. The default value is 32768 bytes. This size is calculated as the sum of all event messages in UTF-8, plus 26 bytes for each log event.
Shorthand Syntax:
Enabled=boolean,LogStreams=[{LogGroupName=string,DatetimeFormat=string,TimeZone=string,File=string,FileFingerprintLines=string,MultiLineStartPattern=string,InitialPosition=string,Encoding=string,BufferDuration=integer,BatchCount=integer,BatchSize=integer},{LogGroupName=string,DatetimeFormat=string,TimeZone=string,File=string,FileFingerprintLines=string,MultiLineStartPattern=string,InitialPosition=string,Encoding=string,BufferDuration=integer,BatchCount=integer,BatchSize=integer}]
JSON Syntax:
{
"Enabled": true|false,
"LogStreams": [
{
"LogGroupName": "string",
"DatetimeFormat": "string",
"TimeZone": "LOCAL"|"UTC",
"File": "string",
"FileFingerprintLines": "string",
"MultiLineStartPattern": "string",
"InitialPosition": "start_of_file"|"end_of_file",
"Encoding": "ascii"|"big5"|"big5hkscs"|"cp037"|"cp424"|"cp437"|"cp500"|"cp720"|"cp737"|"cp775"|"cp850"|"cp852"|"cp855"|"cp856"|"cp857"|"cp858"|"cp860"|"cp861"|"cp862"|"cp863"|"cp864"|"cp865"|"cp866"|"cp869"|"cp874"|"cp875"|"cp932"|"cp949"|"cp950"|"cp1006"|"cp1026"|"cp1140"|"cp1250"|"cp1251"|"cp1252"|"cp1253"|"cp1254"|"cp1255"|"cp1256"|"cp1257"|"cp1258"|"euc_jp"|"euc_jis_2004"|"euc_jisx0213"|"euc_kr"|"gb2312"|"gbk"|"gb18030"|"hz"|"iso2022_jp"|"iso2022_jp_1"|"iso2022_jp_2"|"iso2022_jp_2004"|"iso2022_jp_3"|"iso2022_jp_ext"|"iso2022_kr"|"latin_1"|"iso8859_2"|"iso8859_3"|"iso8859_4"|"iso8859_5"|"iso8859_6"|"iso8859_7"|"iso8859_8"|"iso8859_9"|"iso8859_10"|"iso8859_13"|"iso8859_14"|"iso8859_15"|"iso8859_16"|"johab"|"koi8_r"|"koi8_u"|"mac_cyrillic"|"mac_greek"|"mac_iceland"|"mac_latin2"|"mac_roman"|"mac_turkish"|"ptcp154"|"shift_jis"|"shift_jis_2004"|"shift_jisx0213"|"utf_32"|"utf_32_be"|"utf_32_le"|"utf_16"|"utf_16_be"|"utf_16_le"|"utf_7"|"utf_8"|"utf_8_sig",
"BufferDuration": integer,
"BatchCount": integer,
"BatchSize": integer
}
...
]
}
--custom-instance-profile-arn
(string)
The ARN of an IAM profile to be used for all of the layer’s EC2 instances. For more information about IAM ARNs, see Using Identifiers .
--custom-json
(string)
A JSON-formatted string containing custom stack configuration and deployment attributes to be installed on the layer’s instances. For more information, see Using Custom JSON .
--custom-security-group-ids
(list)
An array containing the layer’s custom security group IDs.
(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--packages
(list)
An array of
Package
objects that describe the layer’s packages.(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--volume-configurations
(list)
A
VolumeConfigurations
object that describes the layer’s Amazon EBS volumes.(structure)
Describes an Amazon EBS volume configuration.
MountPoint -> (string)
The volume mount point. For example “/dev/sdh”.
RaidLevel -> (integer)
The volume RAID level .
NumberOfDisks -> (integer)
The number of disks in the volume.
Size -> (integer)
The volume size.
VolumeType -> (string)
The volume type. For more information, see Amazon EBS Volume Types .
standard
- Magnetic. Magnetic volumes must have a minimum size of 1 GiB and a maximum size of 1024 GiB.
io1
- Provisioned IOPS (SSD). PIOPS volumes must have a minimum size of 4 GiB and a maximum size of 16384 GiB.
gp2
- General Purpose (SSD). General purpose volumes must have a minimum size of 1 GiB and a maximum size of 16384 GiB.
st1
- Throughput Optimized hard disk drive (HDD). Throughput optimized HDD volumes must have a minimum size of 500 GiB and a maximum size of 16384 GiB.
sc1
- Cold HDD. Cold HDD volumes must have a minimum size of 500 GiB and a maximum size of 16384 GiB.Iops -> (integer)
For PIOPS volumes, the IOPS per disk.
Encrypted -> (boolean)
Specifies whether an Amazon EBS volume is encrypted. For more information, see Amazon EBS Encryption .
Shorthand Syntax:
MountPoint=string,RaidLevel=integer,NumberOfDisks=integer,Size=integer,VolumeType=string,Iops=integer,Encrypted=boolean ...
JSON Syntax:
[
{
"MountPoint": "string",
"RaidLevel": integer,
"NumberOfDisks": integer,
"Size": integer,
"VolumeType": "string",
"Iops": integer,
"Encrypted": true|false
}
...
]
--enable-auto-healing
| --no-enable-auto-healing
(boolean)
Whether to disable auto healing for the layer.
--auto-assign-elastic-ips
| --no-auto-assign-elastic-ips
(boolean)
Whether to automatically assign an Elastic IP address to the layer’s instances. For more information, see How to Edit a Layer .
--auto-assign-public-ips
| --no-auto-assign-public-ips
(boolean)
For stacks that are running in a VPC, whether to automatically assign a public IP address to the layer’s instances. For more information, see How to Edit a Layer .
--custom-recipes
(structure)
A
LayerCustomRecipes
object that specifies the layer’s custom recipes.Setup -> (list)
An array of custom recipe names to be run following a
setup
event.(string)
Configure -> (list)
An array of custom recipe names to be run following a
configure
event.(string)
Deploy -> (list)
An array of custom recipe names to be run following a
deploy
event.(string)
Undeploy -> (list)
An array of custom recipe names to be run following a
undeploy
event.(string)
Shutdown -> (list)
An array of custom recipe names to be run following a
shutdown
event.(string)
Shorthand Syntax:
Setup=string,string,Configure=string,string,Deploy=string,string,Undeploy=string,string,Shutdown=string,string
JSON Syntax:
{
"Setup": ["string", ...],
"Configure": ["string", ...],
"Deploy": ["string", ...],
"Undeploy": ["string", ...],
"Shutdown": ["string", ...]
}
--install-updates-on-boot
| --no-install-updates-on-boot
(boolean)
Whether to install operating system and package updates when the instance boots. The default value is
true
. To control when updates are installed, set this value tofalse
. You must then update your instances manually by using CreateDeployment to run theupdate_dependencies
stack command or manually runningyum
(Amazon Linux) orapt-get
(Ubuntu) on the instances.Note
We strongly recommend using the default value of
true
, to ensure that your instances have the latest security updates.
--use-ebs-optimized-instances
| --no-use-ebs-optimized-instances
(boolean)
Whether to use Amazon EBS-optimized instances.
--lifecycle-event-configuration
(structure)
Shutdown -> (structure)
A
ShutdownEventConfiguration
object that specifies the Shutdown event configuration.ExecutionTimeout -> (integer)
The time, in seconds, that AWS OpsWorks Stacks will wait after triggering a Shutdown event before shutting down an instance.
DelayUntilElbConnectionsDrained -> (boolean)
Whether to enable Elastic Load Balancing connection draining. For more information, see Connection Draining
Shorthand Syntax:
Shutdown={ExecutionTimeout=integer,DelayUntilElbConnectionsDrained=boolean}
JSON Syntax:
{
"Shutdown": {
"ExecutionTimeout": integer,
"DelayUntilElbConnectionsDrained": true|false
}
}
--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.
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 a layer
The following example updates a specified layer to use Amazon EBS-optimized instances.
aws opsworks --region us-east-1 update-layer --layer-id 888c5645-09a5-4d0e-95a8-812ef1db76a4 --use-ebs-optimized-instances
Output: None.
More Information
For more information, see Editing an OpsWorks Layer’s Configuration in the AWS OpsWorks User Guide.
None