@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class AbstractAmazonApplicationSignals extends Object implements AmazonApplicationSignals
AmazonApplicationSignals. Convenient method forms pass through to the
corresponding overload that takes a request object, which throws an UnsupportedOperationException.ENDPOINT_PREFIX| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
BatchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReportResult |
batchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReport(BatchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReportRequest request)
Use this operation to retrieve one or more service level objective (SLO) budget reports.
|
CreateServiceLevelObjectiveResult |
createServiceLevelObjective(CreateServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
Creates a service level objective (SLO), which can help you ensure that your critical business operations are
meeting customer expectations.
|
DeleteServiceLevelObjectiveResult |
deleteServiceLevelObjective(DeleteServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
Deletes the specified service level objective.
|
ResponseMetadata |
getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
Returns additional metadata for a previously executed successful request, typically used for debugging issues
where a service isn't acting as expected.
|
GetServiceResult |
getService(GetServiceRequest request)
Returns information about a service discovered by Application Signals.
|
GetServiceLevelObjectiveResult |
getServiceLevelObjective(GetServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
Returns information about one SLO created in the account.
|
ListServiceDependenciesResult |
listServiceDependencies(ListServiceDependenciesRequest request)
Returns a list of service dependencies of the service that you specify.
|
ListServiceDependentsResult |
listServiceDependents(ListServiceDependentsRequest request)
Returns the list of dependents that invoked the specified service during the provided time range.
|
ListServiceLevelObjectivesResult |
listServiceLevelObjectives(ListServiceLevelObjectivesRequest request)
Returns a list of SLOs created in this account.
|
ListServiceOperationsResult |
listServiceOperations(ListServiceOperationsRequest request)
Returns a list of the operations of this service that have been discovered by Application Signals.
|
ListServicesResult |
listServices(ListServicesRequest request)
Returns a list of services that have been discovered by Application Signals.
|
ListTagsForResourceResult |
listTagsForResource(ListTagsForResourceRequest request)
Displays the tags associated with a CloudWatch resource.
|
void |
shutdown()
Shuts down this client object, releasing any resources that might be held open.
|
StartDiscoveryResult |
startDiscovery(StartDiscoveryRequest request)
Enables this Amazon Web Services account to be able to use CloudWatch Application Signals by creating the
AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchApplicationSignals service-linked role.
|
TagResourceResult |
tagResource(TagResourceRequest request)
Assigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified CloudWatch resource, such as a service level
objective.
|
UntagResourceResult |
untagResource(UntagResourceRequest request)
Removes one or more tags from the specified resource.
|
UpdateServiceLevelObjectiveResult |
updateServiceLevelObjective(UpdateServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
Updates an existing service level objective (SLO).
|
public BatchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReportResult batchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReport(BatchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReportRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsUse this operation to retrieve one or more service level objective (SLO) budget reports.
An error budget is the amount of time in unhealthy periods that your service can accumulate during an interval before your overall SLO budget health is breached and the SLO is considered to be unmet. For example, an SLO with a threshold of 99.95% and a monthly interval translates to an error budget of 21.9 minutes of downtime in a 30-day month.
Budget reports include a health indicator, the attainment value, and remaining budget.
For more information about SLO error budgets, see SLO concepts.
batchGetServiceLevelObjectiveBudgetReport in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic CreateServiceLevelObjectiveResult createServiceLevelObjective(CreateServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsCreates a service level objective (SLO), which can help you ensure that your critical business operations are meeting customer expectations. Use SLOs to set and track specific target levels for the reliability and availability of your applications and services. SLOs use service level indicators (SLIs) to calculate whether the application is performing at the level that you want.
Create an SLO to set a target for a service or operation’s availability or latency. CloudWatch measures this target frequently you can find whether it has been breached.
When you create an SLO, you set an attainment goal for it. An attainment goal is the ratio of good periods that meet the threshold requirements to the total periods within the interval. For example, an attainment goal of 99.9% means that within your interval, you are targeting 99.9% of the periods to be in healthy state.
After you have created an SLO, you can retrieve error budget reports for it. An error budget is the number of periods or amount of time that your service can accumulate during an interval before your overall SLO budget health is breached and the SLO is considered to be unmet. for example, an SLO with a threshold that 99.95% of requests must be completed under 2000ms every month translates to an error budget of 21.9 minutes of downtime per month.
When you call this operation, Application Signals creates the AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchApplicationSignals service-linked role, if it doesn't already exist in your account. This service- linked role has the following permissions:
xray:GetServiceGraph
logs:StartQuery
logs:GetQueryResults
cloudwatch:GetMetricData
cloudwatch:ListMetrics
tag:GetResources
autoscaling:DescribeAutoScalingGroups
You can easily set SLO targets for your applications that are discovered by Application Signals, using critical metrics such as latency and availability. You can also set SLOs against any CloudWatch metric or math expression that produces a time series.
For more information about SLOs, see Service level objectives (SLOs).
createServiceLevelObjective in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic DeleteServiceLevelObjectiveResult deleteServiceLevelObjective(DeleteServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsDeletes the specified service level objective.
deleteServiceLevelObjective in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic GetServiceResult getService(GetServiceRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns information about a service discovered by Application Signals.
getService in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic GetServiceLevelObjectiveResult getServiceLevelObjective(GetServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns information about one SLO created in the account.
getServiceLevelObjective in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListServiceDependenciesResult listServiceDependencies(ListServiceDependenciesRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns a list of service dependencies of the service that you specify. A dependency is an infrastructure component that an operation of this service connects with. Dependencies can include Amazon Web Services services, Amazon Web Services resources, and third-party services.
listServiceDependencies in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListServiceDependentsResult listServiceDependents(ListServiceDependentsRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns the list of dependents that invoked the specified service during the provided time range. Dependents include other services, CloudWatch Synthetics canaries, and clients that are instrumented with CloudWatch RUM app monitors.
listServiceDependents in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListServiceLevelObjectivesResult listServiceLevelObjectives(ListServiceLevelObjectivesRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns a list of SLOs created in this account.
listServiceLevelObjectives in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListServiceOperationsResult listServiceOperations(ListServiceOperationsRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns a list of the operations of this service that have been discovered by Application Signals. Only the operations that were invoked during the specified time range are returned.
listServiceOperations in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListServicesResult listServices(ListServicesRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsReturns a list of services that have been discovered by Application Signals. A service represents a minimum logical and transactional unit that completes a business function. Services are discovered through Application Signals instrumentation.
listServices in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ListTagsForResourceResult listTagsForResource(ListTagsForResourceRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsDisplays the tags associated with a CloudWatch resource. Tags can be assigned to service level objectives.
listTagsForResource in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic StartDiscoveryResult startDiscovery(StartDiscoveryRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsEnables this Amazon Web Services account to be able to use CloudWatch Application Signals by creating the AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchApplicationSignals service-linked role. This service- linked role has the following permissions:
xray:GetServiceGraph
logs:StartQuery
logs:GetQueryResults
cloudwatch:GetMetricData
cloudwatch:ListMetrics
tag:GetResources
autoscaling:DescribeAutoScalingGroups
After completing this step, you still need to instrument your Java and Python applications to send data to Application Signals. For more information, see Enabling Application Signals.
startDiscovery in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic TagResourceResult tagResource(TagResourceRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsAssigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified CloudWatch resource, such as a service level objective.
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.
tagResource in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic UntagResourceResult untagResource(UntagResourceRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsRemoves one or more tags from the specified resource.
untagResource in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic UpdateServiceLevelObjectiveResult updateServiceLevelObjective(UpdateServiceLevelObjectiveRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsUpdates an existing service level objective (SLO). If you omit parameters, the previous values of those parameters are retained.
updateServiceLevelObjective in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic void shutdown()
AmazonApplicationSignalsshutdown in interface AmazonApplicationSignalspublic ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
AmazonApplicationSignalsResponse metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you need to access this extra diagnostic information for an executed request, you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after executing a request.
getCachedResponseMetadata in interface AmazonApplicationSignalsrequest - The originally executed request.