[ aws . autoscaling ]
We strongly recommend that all Auto Scaling groups use launch templates to ensure full functionality for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling and Amazon EC2.
Updates the configuration for the specified Auto Scaling group.
To update an Auto Scaling group, specify the name of the group and the property that you want to change. Any properties that you don’t specify are not changed by this update request. The new settings take effect on any scaling activities after this call returns.
If you associate a new launch configuration or template with an Auto Scaling group, all new instances will get the updated configuration. Existing instances continue to run with the configuration that they were originally launched with. When you update a group to specify a mixed instances policy instead of a launch configuration or template, existing instances may be replaced to match the new purchasing options that you specified in the policy. For example, if the group currently has 100% On-Demand capacity and the policy specifies 50% Spot capacity, this means that half of your instances will be gradually terminated and relaunched as Spot Instances. When replacing instances, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling launches new instances before terminating the old ones, so that updating your group does not compromise the performance or availability of your application.
Note the following about changing DesiredCapacity
, MaxSize
, or MinSize
:
If a scale-in activity occurs as a result of a new DesiredCapacity
value that is lower than the current size of the group, the Auto Scaling group uses its termination policy to determine which instances to terminate.
If you specify a new value for MinSize
without specifying a value for DesiredCapacity
, and the new MinSize
is larger than the current size of the group, this sets the group’s DesiredCapacity
to the new MinSize
value.
If you specify a new value for MaxSize
without specifying a value for DesiredCapacity
, and the new MaxSize
is smaller than the current size of the group, this sets the group’s DesiredCapacity
to the new MaxSize
value.
To see which properties have been set, call the DescribeAutoScalingGroups API. To view the scaling policies for an Auto Scaling group, call the DescribePolicies API. If the group has scaling policies, you can update them by calling the PutScalingPolicy API.
See also: AWS API Documentation
update-auto-scaling-group
--auto-scaling-group-name <value>
[--launch-configuration-name <value>]
[--launch-template <value>]
[--mixed-instances-policy <value>]
[--min-size <value>]
[--max-size <value>]
[--desired-capacity <value>]
[--default-cooldown <value>]
[--availability-zones <value>]
[--health-check-type <value>]
[--health-check-grace-period <value>]
[--placement-group <value>]
[--vpc-zone-identifier <value>]
[--termination-policies <value>]
[--new-instances-protected-from-scale-in | --no-new-instances-protected-from-scale-in]
[--service-linked-role-arn <value>]
[--max-instance-lifetime <value>]
[--capacity-rebalance | --no-capacity-rebalance]
[--context <value>]
[--desired-capacity-type <value>]
[--default-instance-warmup <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
[--debug]
[--endpoint-url <value>]
[--no-verify-ssl]
[--no-paginate]
[--output <value>]
[--query <value>]
[--profile <value>]
[--region <value>]
[--version <value>]
[--color <value>]
[--no-sign-request]
[--ca-bundle <value>]
[--cli-read-timeout <value>]
[--cli-connect-timeout <value>]
[--cli-binary-format <value>]
[--no-cli-pager]
[--cli-auto-prompt]
[--no-cli-auto-prompt]
--auto-scaling-group-name
(string)
The name of the Auto Scaling group.
--launch-configuration-name
(string)
The name of the launch configuration. If you specify
LaunchConfigurationName
in your update request, you can’t specifyLaunchTemplate
orMixedInstancesPolicy
.
--launch-template
(structure)
The launch template and version to use to specify the updates. If you specify
LaunchTemplate
in your update request, you can’t specifyLaunchConfigurationName
orMixedInstancesPolicy
.LaunchTemplateId -> (string)
The ID of the launch template. To get the template ID, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.LaunchTemplateName -> (string)
The name of the launch template. To get the template name, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.Version -> (string)
The version number,
$Latest
, or$Default
. To get the version number, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions API operation. New launch template versions can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplateVersion API. If the value is$Latest
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the latest version of the launch template when launching instances. If the value is$Default
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the default version of the launch template when launching instances. The default value is$Default
.
Shorthand Syntax:
LaunchTemplateId=string,LaunchTemplateName=string,Version=string
JSON Syntax:
{
"LaunchTemplateId": "string",
"LaunchTemplateName": "string",
"Version": "string"
}
--mixed-instances-policy
(structure)
An embedded object that specifies a mixed instances policy. For more information, see Auto Scaling groups with multiple instance types and purchase options in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
LaunchTemplate -> (structure)
One or more launch templates and the instance types (overrides) that are used to launch EC2 instances to fulfill On-Demand and Spot capacities.
LaunchTemplateSpecification -> (structure)
The launch template to use.
LaunchTemplateId -> (string)
The ID of the launch template. To get the template ID, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.LaunchTemplateName -> (string)
The name of the launch template. To get the template name, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.Version -> (string)
The version number,
$Latest
, or$Default
. To get the version number, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions API operation. New launch template versions can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplateVersion API. If the value is$Latest
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the latest version of the launch template when launching instances. If the value is$Default
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the default version of the launch template when launching instances. The default value is$Default
.Overrides -> (list)
Any properties that you specify override the same properties in the launch template. If not provided, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the instance type or instance type requirements specified in the launch template when it launches an instance.
The overrides can include either one or more instance types or a set of instance requirements, but not both.
(structure)
Describes an override for a launch template. For more information, see Configuring overrides in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
InstanceType -> (string)
The instance type, such as
m3.xlarge
. You must use an instance type that is supported in your requested Region and Availability Zones. For more information, see Instance types in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide .WeightedCapacity -> (string)
The number of capacity units provided by the instance type specified in
InstanceType
in terms of virtual CPUs, memory, storage, throughput, or other relative performance characteristic. When a Spot or On-Demand Instance is launched, the capacity units count toward the desired capacity. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling launches instances until the desired capacity is totally fulfilled, even if this results in an overage. For example, if there are two units remaining to fulfill capacity, and Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling can only launch an instance with aWeightedCapacity
of five units, the instance is launched, and the desired capacity is exceeded by three units. For more information, see Configuring instance weighting for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide . Value must be in the range of 1–999.LaunchTemplateSpecification -> (structure)
Provides a launch template for the specified instance type or instance requirements. For example, some instance types might require a launch template with a different AMI. If not provided, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the launch template that’s defined for your mixed instances policy. For more information, see Specifying a different launch template for an instance type in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
LaunchTemplateId -> (string)
The ID of the launch template. To get the template ID, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.LaunchTemplateName -> (string)
The name of the launch template. To get the template name, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplates API operation. New launch templates can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplate API.
Conditional: You must specify either a
LaunchTemplateId
or aLaunchTemplateName
.Version -> (string)
The version number,
$Latest
, or$Default
. To get the version number, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions API operation. New launch template versions can be created using the Amazon EC2 CreateLaunchTemplateVersion API. If the value is$Latest
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the latest version of the launch template when launching instances. If the value is$Default
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects the default version of the launch template when launching instances. The default value is$Default
.InstanceRequirements -> (structure)
The instance requirements. When you specify instance requirements, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling finds instance types that satisfy your requirements, and then uses your On-Demand and Spot allocation strategies to launch instances from these instance types, in the same way as when you specify a list of specific instance types.
VCpuCount -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum number of vCPUs for an instance type.
Min -> (integer)
The minimum number of vCPUs.
Max -> (integer)
The maximum number of vCPUs.
MemoryMiB -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum instance memory size for an instance type, in MiB.
Min -> (integer)
The memory minimum in MiB.
Max -> (integer)
The memory maximum in MiB.
CpuManufacturers -> (list)
Lists which specific CPU manufacturers to include.
For instance types with Intel CPUs, specify
intel
.For instance types with AMD CPUs, specify
amd
.For instance types with Amazon Web Services CPUs, specify
amazon-web-services
.Note
Don’t confuse the CPU hardware manufacturer with the CPU hardware architecture. Instances will be launched with a compatible CPU architecture based on the Amazon Machine Image (AMI) that you specify in your launch template.
Default: Any manufacturer
(string)
MemoryGiBPerVCpu -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum amount of memory per vCPU for an instance type, in GiB.
Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (double)
The memory minimum in GiB.
Max -> (double)
The memory maximum in GiB.
ExcludedInstanceTypes -> (list)
Lists which instance types to exclude. You can use strings with one or more wild cards, represented by an asterisk (
*
). The following are examples:c5*
,m5a.*
,r*
,*3*
.For example, if you specify
c5*
, you are excluding the entire C5 instance family, which includes all C5a and C5n instance types. If you specifym5a.*
, you are excluding all the M5a instance types, but not the M5n instance types.Default: No excluded instance types
(string)
InstanceGenerations -> (list)
Indicates whether current or previous generation instance types are included.
For current generation instance types, specify
current
. The current generation includes EC2 instance types currently recommended for use. This typically includes the latest two to three generations in each instance family. For more information, see Instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances .For previous generation instance types, specify
previous
.Default: Any current or previous generation
(string)
SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice -> (integer)
The price protection threshold for Spot Instances. This is the maximum you’ll pay for a Spot Instance, expressed as a percentage higher than the least expensive current generation M, C, or R instance type with your specified attributes. When Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects instance types with your attributes, we will exclude instance types whose price is higher than your threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling interprets as a percentage. To turn off price protection, specify a high value, such as
999999
.If you set
DesiredCapacityType
tovcpu
ormemory-mib
, the price protection threshold is applied based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price.Default:
100
OnDemandMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice -> (integer)
The price protection threshold for On-Demand Instances. This is the maximum you’ll pay for an On-Demand Instance, expressed as a percentage higher than the least expensive current generation M, C, or R instance type with your specified attributes. When Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling selects instance types with your attributes, we will exclude instance types whose price is higher than your threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling interprets as a percentage. To turn off price protection, specify a high value, such as
999999
.If you set
DesiredCapacityType
tovcpu
ormemory-mib
, the price protection threshold is applied based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price.Default:
20
BareMetal -> (string)
Indicates whether bare metal instance types are included, excluded, or required.
Default:
excluded
BurstablePerformance -> (string)
Indicates whether burstable performance instance types are included, excluded, or required. For more information, see Burstable performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances .
Default:
excluded
RequireHibernateSupport -> (boolean)
Indicates whether instance types must provide On-Demand Instance hibernation support.
Default:
false
NetworkInterfaceCount -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum number of network interfaces for an instance type.
Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (integer)
The minimum number of network interfaces.
Max -> (integer)
The maximum number of network interfaces.
LocalStorage -> (string)
Indicates whether instance types with instance store volumes are included, excluded, or required. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance store in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances .
Default:
included
LocalStorageTypes -> (list)
Indicates the type of local storage that is required.
For instance types with hard disk drive (HDD) storage, specify
hdd
.For instance types with solid state drive (SSD) storage, specify
ssd
.Default: Any local storage type
(string)
TotalLocalStorageGB -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum total local storage size for an instance type, in GB.
Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (double)
The storage minimum in GB.
Max -> (double)
The storage maximum in GB.
BaselineEbsBandwidthMbps -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum baseline bandwidth performance for an instance type, in Mbps. For more information, see Amazon EBS–optimized instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances .
Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (integer)
The minimum value in Mbps.
Max -> (integer)
The maximum value in Mbps.
AcceleratorTypes -> (list)
Lists the accelerator types that must be on an instance type.
For instance types with GPU accelerators, specify
gpu
.For instance types with FPGA accelerators, specify
fpga
.For instance types with inference accelerators, specify
inference
.Default: Any accelerator type
(string)
AcceleratorCount -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum number of accelerators (GPUs, FPGAs, or Amazon Web Services Inferentia chips) for an instance type.
To exclude accelerator-enabled instance types, set
Max
to0
.Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (integer)
The minimum value.
Max -> (integer)
The maximum value.
AcceleratorManufacturers -> (list)
Indicates whether instance types must have accelerators by specific manufacturers.
For instance types with NVIDIA devices, specify
nvidia
.For instance types with AMD devices, specify
amd
.For instance types with Amazon Web Services devices, specify
amazon-web-services
.For instance types with Xilinx devices, specify
xilinx
.Default: Any manufacturer
(string)
AcceleratorNames -> (list)
Lists the accelerators that must be on an instance type.
For instance types with NVIDIA A100 GPUs, specify
a100
.For instance types with NVIDIA V100 GPUs, specify
v100
.For instance types with NVIDIA K80 GPUs, specify
k80
.For instance types with NVIDIA T4 GPUs, specify
t4
.For instance types with NVIDIA M60 GPUs, specify
m60
.For instance types with AMD Radeon Pro V520 GPUs, specify
radeon-pro-v520
.For instance types with Xilinx VU9P FPGAs, specify
vu9p
.Default: Any accelerator
(string)
AcceleratorTotalMemoryMiB -> (structure)
The minimum and maximum total memory size for the accelerators on an instance type, in MiB.
Default: No minimum or maximum
Min -> (integer)
The memory minimum in MiB.
Max -> (integer)
The memory maximum in MiB.
InstancesDistribution -> (structure)
The instances distribution.
OnDemandAllocationStrategy -> (string)
The order of the launch template overrides to use in fulfilling On-Demand capacity.
If you specify
lowest-price
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses price to determine the order, launching the lowest price first.If you specify
prioritized
, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the priority that you assigned to each launch template override, launching the highest priority first. If all your On-Demand capacity cannot be fulfilled using your highest priority instance, then Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling launches the remaining capacity using the second priority instance type, and so on.Default:
lowest-price
for Auto Scaling groups that specify InstanceRequirements in the overrides andprioritized
for Auto Scaling groups that don’t.Valid values:
lowest-price
|prioritized
OnDemandBaseCapacity -> (integer)
The minimum amount of the Auto Scaling group’s capacity that must be fulfilled by On-Demand Instances. This base portion is launched first as your group scales.
If you specify weights for the instance types in the overrides, the base capacity is measured in the same unit of measurement as the instance types. If you specify InstanceRequirements in the overrides, the base capacity is measured in the same unit of measurement as your group’s desired capacity.
Default:
0
OnDemandPercentageAboveBaseCapacity -> (integer)
Controls the percentages of On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances for your additional capacity beyond
OnDemandBaseCapacity
. Expressed as a number (for example, 20 specifies 20% On-Demand Instances, 80% Spot Instances). If set to 100, only On-Demand Instances are used.Default:
100
SpotAllocationStrategy -> (string)
Indicates how to allocate instances across Spot Instance pools.
If the allocation strategy is
lowest-price
, the Auto Scaling group launches instances using the Spot pools with the lowest price, and evenly allocates your instances across the number of Spot pools that you specify.If the allocation strategy is
capacity-optimized
(recommended), the Auto Scaling group launches instances using Spot pools that are optimally chosen based on the available Spot capacity. Alternatively, you can usecapacity-optimized-prioritized
and set the order of instance types in the list of launch template overrides from highest to lowest priority (from first to last in the list). Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling honors the instance type priorities on a best-effort basis but optimizes for capacity first.Default:
lowest-price
Valid values:
lowest-price
|capacity-optimized
|capacity-optimized-prioritized
SpotInstancePools -> (integer)
The number of Spot Instance pools across which to allocate your Spot Instances. The Spot pools are determined from the different instance types in the overrides. Valid only when the Spot allocation strategy is
lowest-price
. Value must be in the range of 1–20.Default:
2
SpotMaxPrice -> (string)
The maximum price per unit hour that you are willing to pay for a Spot Instance. If you keep the value at its default (unspecified), Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the On-Demand price as the maximum Spot price. To remove a value that you previously set, include the property but specify an empty string (“”) for the value.
Warning
If your maximum price is lower than the Spot price for the instance types that you selected, your Spot Instances are not launched.
Valid Range: Minimum value of 0.001
JSON Syntax:
{
"LaunchTemplate": {
"LaunchTemplateSpecification": {
"LaunchTemplateId": "string",
"LaunchTemplateName": "string",
"Version": "string"
},
"Overrides": [
{
"InstanceType": "string",
"WeightedCapacity": "string",
"LaunchTemplateSpecification": {
"LaunchTemplateId": "string",
"LaunchTemplateName": "string",
"Version": "string"
},
"InstanceRequirements": {
"VCpuCount": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
},
"MemoryMiB": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
},
"CpuManufacturers": ["intel"|"amd"|"amazon-web-services", ...],
"MemoryGiBPerVCpu": {
"Min": double,
"Max": double
},
"ExcludedInstanceTypes": ["string", ...],
"InstanceGenerations": ["current"|"previous", ...],
"SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice": integer,
"OnDemandMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice": integer,
"BareMetal": "included"|"excluded"|"required",
"BurstablePerformance": "included"|"excluded"|"required",
"RequireHibernateSupport": true|false,
"NetworkInterfaceCount": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
},
"LocalStorage": "included"|"excluded"|"required",
"LocalStorageTypes": ["hdd"|"ssd", ...],
"TotalLocalStorageGB": {
"Min": double,
"Max": double
},
"BaselineEbsBandwidthMbps": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
},
"AcceleratorTypes": ["gpu"|"fpga"|"inference", ...],
"AcceleratorCount": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
},
"AcceleratorManufacturers": ["nvidia"|"amd"|"amazon-web-services"|"xilinx", ...],
"AcceleratorNames": ["a100"|"v100"|"k80"|"t4"|"m60"|"radeon-pro-v520"|"vu9p", ...],
"AcceleratorTotalMemoryMiB": {
"Min": integer,
"Max": integer
}
}
}
...
]
},
"InstancesDistribution": {
"OnDemandAllocationStrategy": "string",
"OnDemandBaseCapacity": integer,
"OnDemandPercentageAboveBaseCapacity": integer,
"SpotAllocationStrategy": "string",
"SpotInstancePools": integer,
"SpotMaxPrice": "string"
}
}
--min-size
(integer)
The minimum size of the Auto Scaling group.
--max-size
(integer)
The maximum size of the Auto Scaling group.
Note
With a mixed instances policy that uses instance weighting, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling may need to go above
MaxSize
to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling will never go aboveMaxSize
by more than your largest instance weight (weights that define how many units each instance contributes to the desired capacity of the group).
--desired-capacity
(integer)
The desired capacity is the initial capacity of the Auto Scaling group after this operation completes and the capacity it attempts to maintain. This number must be greater than or equal to the minimum size of the group and less than or equal to the maximum size of the group.
--default-cooldown
(integer)
Only needed if you use simple scaling policies.
The amount of time, in seconds, between one scaling activity ending and another one starting due to simple scaling policies. For more information, see Scaling cooldowns for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--availability-zones
(list)
One or more Availability Zones for the group.
(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--health-check-type
(string)
The service to use for the health checks. The valid values are
EC2
andELB
. If you configure an Auto Scaling group to useELB
health checks, it considers the instance unhealthy if it fails either the EC2 status checks or the load balancer health checks.
--health-check-grace-period
(integer)
The amount of time, in seconds, that Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling waits before checking the health status of an EC2 instance that has come into service and marking it unhealthy due to a failed Elastic Load Balancing or custom health check. This is useful if your instances do not immediately pass these health checks after they enter the
InService
state. For more information, see Health check grace period in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--placement-group
(string)
The name of an existing placement group into which to launch your instances. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances .
Note
A cluster placement group is a logical grouping of instances within a single Availability Zone. You cannot specify multiple Availability Zones and a cluster placement group.
--vpc-zone-identifier
(string)
A comma-separated list of subnet IDs for a virtual private cloud (VPC). If you specify
VPCZoneIdentifier
withAvailabilityZones
, the subnets that you specify must reside in those Availability Zones.
--termination-policies
(list)
A policy or a list of policies that are used to select the instances to terminate. The policies are executed in the order that you list them. For more information, see Work with Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling termination policies in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
Valid values:
Default
|AllocationStrategy
|ClosestToNextInstanceHour
|NewestInstance
|OldestInstance
|OldestLaunchConfiguration
|OldestLaunchTemplate
|arn:aws:lambda:region:account-id:function:my-function:my-alias
(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--new-instances-protected-from-scale-in
| --no-new-instances-protected-from-scale-in
(boolean)
Indicates whether newly launched instances are protected from termination by Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling when scaling in. For more information about preventing instances from terminating on scale in, see Using instance scale-in protection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--service-linked-role-arn
(string)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the service-linked role that the Auto Scaling group uses to call other Amazon Web Services on your behalf. For more information, see Service-linked roles in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--max-instance-lifetime
(integer)
The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that an instance can be in service. The default is null. If specified, the value must be either 0 or a number equal to or greater than 86,400 seconds (1 day). To clear a previously set value, specify a new value of 0. For more information, see Replacing Auto Scaling instances based on maximum instance lifetime in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--capacity-rebalance
| --no-capacity-rebalance
(boolean)
Enables or disables Capacity Rebalancing. For more information, see Use Capacity Rebalancing to handle Amazon EC2 Spot Interruptions in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .
--context
(string)
Reserved.
--desired-capacity-type
(string)
The unit of measurement for the value specified for desired capacity. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling supports
DesiredCapacityType
for attribute-based instance type selection only. For more information, see Creating an Auto Scaling group using attribute-based instance type selection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .By default, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling specifies
units
, which translates into number of instances.Valid values:
units
|vcpu
|memory-mib
--default-instance-warmup
(integer)
The amount of time, in seconds, until a newly launched instance can contribute to the Amazon CloudWatch metrics. This delay lets an instance finish initializing before Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling aggregates instance metrics, resulting in more reliable usage data. Set this value equal to the amount of time that it takes for resource consumption to become stable after an instance reaches the
InService
state. For more information, see Set the default instance warmup for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide .Warning
To manage your warm-up settings at the group level, we recommend that you set the default instance warmup, even if its value is set to 0 seconds . This also optimizes the performance of scaling policies that scale continuously, such as target tracking and step scaling policies.
If you need to remove a value that you previously set, include the property but specify
-1
for the value. However, we strongly recommend keeping the default instance warmup enabled by specifying a minimum value of0
.
--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.
--debug
(boolean)
Turn on debug logging.
--endpoint-url
(string)
Override command’s default URL with the given URL.
--no-verify-ssl
(boolean)
By default, the AWS CLI uses SSL when communicating with AWS services. For each SSL connection, the AWS CLI will verify SSL certificates. This option overrides the default behavior of verifying SSL certificates.
--no-paginate
(boolean)
Disable automatic pagination.
--output
(string)
The formatting style for command output.
json
text
table
yaml
yaml-stream
--query
(string)
A JMESPath query to use in filtering the response data.
--profile
(string)
Use a specific profile from your credential file.
--region
(string)
The region to use. Overrides config/env settings.
--version
(string)
Display the version of this tool.
--color
(string)
Turn on/off color output.
on
off
auto
--no-sign-request
(boolean)
Do not sign requests. Credentials will not be loaded if this argument is provided.
--ca-bundle
(string)
The CA certificate bundle to use when verifying SSL certificates. Overrides config/env settings.
--cli-read-timeout
(int)
The maximum socket read time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket read will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-connect-timeout
(int)
The maximum socket connect time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket connect will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-binary-format
(string)
The formatting style to be used for binary blobs. The default format is base64. The base64 format expects binary blobs to be provided as a base64 encoded string. The raw-in-base64-out format preserves compatibility with AWS CLI V1 behavior and binary values must be passed literally. When providing contents from a file that map to a binary blob fileb://
will always be treated as binary and use the file contents directly regardless of the cli-binary-format
setting. When using file://
the file contents will need to properly formatted for the configured cli-binary-format
.
base64
raw-in-base64-out
--no-cli-pager
(boolean)
Disable cli pager for output.
--cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)
Automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
--no-cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)
Disable automatically prompt for CLI input 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 .
Example 1: To update the size limits of an Auto Scaling group
This example updates the specified Auto Scaling group with a minimum size of 2 and a maximum size of 10.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--auto-scaling-group-name my-asg \
--min-size 2 \
--max-size 10
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Setting capacity limits for your Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
Example 2: To add Elastic Load Balancing health checks and specify which Availability Zones and subnets to use
This example updates the specified Auto Scaling group to add Elastic Load Balancing health checks. This command also updates the value of --vpc-zone-identifier
with a list of subnet IDs in multiple Availability Zones.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--auto-scaling-group-name my-asg \
--health-check-type ELB \
--health-check-grace-period 600 \
--vpc-zone-identifier "subnet-5ea0c127,subnet-6194ea3b,subnet-c934b782"
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Elastic Load Balancing and Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
Example 3: To update the placement group and termination policy
This example updates the placement group and termination policy to use.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--auto-scaling-group-name my-asg \
--placement-group my-placement-group \
--termination-policies "OldestInstance"
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Auto Scaling groups in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
Example 4: To use the latest version of the launch template
This example updates the specified Auto Scaling group to use the latest version of the specified launch template.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--auto-scaling-group-name my-asg \
--launch-template LaunchTemplateId=lt-1234567890abcde12,Version='$Latest'
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Launch templates in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
Example 5: To use a specific version of the launch template
This example updates the specified Auto Scaling group to use a specific version of a launch template instead of the latest or default version.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--auto-scaling-group-name my-asg \
--launch-template LaunchTemplateName=my-template-for-auto-scaling,Version='2'
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Launch templates in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
Example 6: To define a mixed instances policy and enable capacity rebalancing
This example updates the specified Auto Scaling group to use a mixed instances policy and enables capacity rebalancing. This structure lets you specify groups with Spot and On-Demand capacities and use different launch templates for different architectures.
aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group \
--cli-input-json file://~/config.json
Contents of config.json
:
{
"AutoScalingGroupName": "my-asg",
"CapacityRebalance": true,
"MixedInstancesPolicy": {
"LaunchTemplate": {
"LaunchTemplateSpecification": {
"LaunchTemplateName": "my-launch-template-for-x86",
"Version": "$Latest"
},
"Overrides": [
{
"InstanceType": "c6g.large",
"LaunchTemplateSpecification": {
"LaunchTemplateName": "my-launch-template-for-arm",
"Version": "$Latest"
}
},
{
"InstanceType": "c5.large"
},
{
"InstanceType": "c5a.large"
}
]
},
"InstancesDistribution": {
"OnDemandPercentageAboveBaseCapacity": 50,
"SpotAllocationStrategy": "capacity-optimized"
}
}
}
This command produces no output.
For more information, see Auto Scaling groups with multiple instance types and purchase options in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
None