Module Awso_internetmonitor_syncSource

include module type of struct include Awso_internetmonitor.Values end
Sourceval service : Awso.Service.t
Sourceval apiVersion : string
Sourceval endpointPrefix : string
Sourceval serviceFullName : string
Sourceval signatureVersion : string
Sourceval protocol : string
Sourceval globalEndpoint : string
Sourceval simple_to_json : ('a -> Awso__Botodata.value) -> 'a -> Yojson.Safe.t
Sourceval composed_to_json : ('a -> Awso__Botodata.value) -> 'a -> Yojson.Safe.t
Sourceval to_query : ('a -> Awso.Client.Query.value) -> 'a -> Awso.Client.Query.t
Sourceval structure_to_value_aux : ('a * 'b option) list -> f:(('a * 'b) list -> 'c) -> [> `Structure of 'c ]
Sourceval structure_to_value : ('a * 'b option) list -> [> `Structure of ('a * 'b) list ]
Sourceval structure_to_wrapped_value : wrapper:'a -> response:'a -> ('b * 'c option) list -> [> `Structure of ('a * [> `Structure of ('b * 'c) list ]) list ]

Round-trip time (RTT) is how long it takes for a request from the user to return a response to the user. Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor calculates RTT at different percentiles: p50, p90, and p95.

An internet service provider (ISP) or network (ASN) in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor calculates measurements about the availability for your application's internet traffic between client locations and Amazon Web Services. Amazon Web Services has substantial historical data about internet performance and availability between Amazon Web Services services and different network providers and geographies. By applying statistical analysis to the data, Internet Monitor can detect when the performance and availability for your application has dropped, compared to an estimated baseline that's already calculated. To make it easier to see those drops, we report that information to you in the form of health scores: a performance score and an availability score. Availability in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing an availability drop. For example, an availability score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing an availability drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor calculates measurements about the performance for your application's internet traffic between client locations and Amazon Web Services. Amazon Web Services has substantial historical data about internet performance and availability between Amazon Web Services services and different network providers and geographies. By applying statistical analysis to the data, Internet Monitor can detect when the performance and availability for your application has dropped, compared to an estimated baseline that's already calculated. To make it easier to see those drops, we report that information to you in the form of health scores: a performance score and an availability score. Performance in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing a performance drop. For example, a performance score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing a performance drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.

Internet health includes measurements calculated by Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor about the performance and availability for your application on the internet. Amazon Web Services has substantial historical data about internet performance and availability between Amazon Web Services services and different network providers and geographies. By applying statistical analysis to the data, Internet Monitor can detect when the performance and availability for your application has dropped, compared to an estimated baseline that's already calculated. To make it easier to see those drops, Internet Monitor reports the information to you in the form of health scores: a performance score and an availability score.

Information about the network impairment for a specific network measured by Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Information about a location impacted by a health event in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. Geographic regions are hierarchically categorized into country, subdivision, metro and city geographic granularities. The geographic region is identified based on the IP address used at the client locations.

The impacted location, such as a city, that Amazon Web Services clients access application resources from.

A complex type with the configuration information that determines the threshold and other conditions for when Internet Monitor creates a health event for a local performance or availability issue, when scores cross a threshold for one or more city-networks. Defines the percentages, for performance scores or availability scores, that are the local thresholds for when Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor creates a health event. Also defines whether a local threshold is enabled or disabled, and the minimum percentage of overall traffic that must be impacted by an issue before Internet Monitor creates an event when a threshold is crossed for a local health score. If you don't set a local health event threshold, the default value is 60%. For more information, see Change health event thresholds in the Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.

The configuration for publishing Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor internet measurements to Amazon S3. The configuration includes the bucket name and (optionally) prefix for the S3 bucket to store the measurements, and the delivery status. The delivery status is ENABLED or DISABLED, depending on whether you choose to deliver internet measurements to S3 logs.

A filter that you use with the results of a Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query that you created and ran. The query sets up a repository of data that is a subset of your application's Internet Monitor data. FilterParameter is a string that defines how you want to filter the repository of data to return a set of results, based on your criteria. The filter parameters that you can specify depend on the query type that you used to create the repository, since each query type returns a different set of Internet Monitor data. For each filter, you specify a field (such as city), an operator (such as not_equals, and a value or array of values (such as ["Seattle", "Redmond"]). Separate values in the array with commas. For more information about specifying filter parameters, see Using the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor User Guide.

The description of and information about a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

A summary of information about an internet event in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. Internet events are issues that cause performance degradation or availability problems for impacted Amazon Web Services client locations. Internet Monitor displays information about recent global health events, called internet events, on a global outages map that is available to all Amazon Web Services customers.

Information about a health event created in a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Defines a field to query for your application's Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor data. You create a data repository by running a query of a specific type. Each QueryType includes a specific set of fields and datatypes to retrieve data for.

You don't have sufficient permission to perform this action.

An internal error occurred.

The request exceeded a service quota.

The request specifies a resource that doesn't exist.

The request was denied due to request throttling.

Invalid request.

A complex type with the configuration information that determines the threshold and other conditions for when Internet Monitor creates a health event for an overall performance or availability issue, across an application's geographies. Defines the percentages, for overall performance scores and availability scores for an application, that are the thresholds for when Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor creates a health event. You can override the defaults to set a custom threshold for overall performance or availability scores, or both. You can also set thresholds for local health scores,, where Internet Monitor creates a health event when scores cross a threshold for one or more city-networks, in addition to creating an event when an overall score crosses a threshold. If you don't set a health event threshold, the default value is 95%. For local thresholds, you also set a minimum percentage of overall traffic that is impacted by an issue before Internet Monitor creates an event. In addition, you can disable local thresholds, for performance scores, availability scores, or both. For more information, see Change health event thresholds in the Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.

Publish internet measurements to an Amazon S3 bucket in addition to CloudWatch Logs.

A bad request was received.

There was an internal server error.

The request specifies something that doesn't exist.

There were too many requests.

The requested resource is in use.

Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to change the percentage of traffic to monitor or the maximum number of city-networks (locations and ASNs), to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. Note that you can't change the name of a monitor. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to change the percentage of traffic to monitor or the maximum number of city-networks (locations and ASNs), to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. Note that you can't change the name of a monitor. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

Removes a tag from a resource.

Removes a tag from a resource.

Adds a tag to a resource. Tags are supported only for monitors in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. You can add a maximum of 50 tags in Internet Monitor. A minimum of one tag is required for this call. It returns an error if you use the TagResource request with 0 tags.

Adds a tag to a resource. Tags are supported only for monitors in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. You can add a maximum of 50 tags in Internet Monitor. A minimum of one tag is required for this call. It returns an error if you use the TagResource request with 0 tags.

Stop a query that is progress for a specific monitor.

Stop a query that is progress for a specific monitor.

Start a query to return data for a specific query type for the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface. Specify a time period for the data that you want returned by using StartTime and EndTime. You filter the query results to return by providing parameters that you specify with FilterParameters. For more information about using the query interface, including examples, see Using the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor User Guide.

Start a query to return data for a specific query type for the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface. Specify a time period for the data that you want returned by using StartTime and EndTime. You filter the query results to return by providing parameters that you specify with FilterParameters. For more information about using the query interface, including examples, see Using the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor User Guide.

Lists the tags for a resource. Tags are supported only for monitors in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Lists the tags for a resource. Tags are supported only for monitors in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Lists all of your monitors for Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor and their statuses, along with the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) and name of each monitor.

Lists all of your monitors for Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor and their statuses, along with the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) and name of each monitor.

Lists internet events that cause performance or availability issues for client locations. Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor displays information about recent global health events, called internet events, on a global outages map that is available to all Amazon Web Services customers. You can constrain the list of internet events returned by providing a start time and end time to define a total time frame for events you want to list. Both start time and end time specify the time when an event started. End time is optional. If you don't include it, the default end time is the current time. You can also limit the events returned to a specific status (ACTIVE or RESOLVED) or type (PERFORMANCE or AVAILABILITY).

Lists internet events that cause performance or availability issues for client locations. Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor displays information about recent global health events, called internet events, on a global outages map that is available to all Amazon Web Services customers. You can constrain the list of internet events returned by providing a start time and end time to define a total time frame for events you want to list. Both start time and end time specify the time when an event started. End time is optional. If you don't include it, the default end time is the current time. You can also limit the events returned to a specific status (ACTIVE or RESOLVED) or type (PERFORMANCE or AVAILABILITY).

Lists all health events for a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. Returns information for health events including the event start and end times, and the status. Health events that have start times during the time frame that is requested are not included in the list of health events.

Lists all health events for a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. Returns information for health events including the event start and end times, and the status. Health events that have start times during the time frame that is requested are not included in the list of health events.

Returns the current status of a query for the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface, for a specified query ID and monitor. When you run a query, check the status to make sure that the query has SUCCEEDED before you review the results. QUEUED: The query is scheduled to run. RUNNING: The query is in progress but not complete. SUCCEEDED: The query completed sucessfully. FAILED: The query failed due to an error. CANCELED: The query was canceled.

Returns the current status of a query for the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface, for a specified query ID and monitor. When you run a query, check the status to make sure that the query has SUCCEEDED before you review the results. QUEUED: The query is scheduled to run. RUNNING: The query is in progress but not complete. SUCCEEDED: The query completed sucessfully. FAILED: The query failed due to an error. CANCELED: The query was canceled.

Return the data for a query with the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface. Specify the query that you want to return results for by providing a QueryId and a monitor name. For more information about using the query interface, including examples, see Using the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor User Guide.

Return the data for a query with the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface. Specify the query that you want to return results for by providing a QueryId and a monitor name. For more information about using the query interface, including examples, see Using the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor query interface in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor User Guide.

Gets information about a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor based on a monitor name. The information returned includes the Amazon Resource Name (ARN), create time, modified time, resources included in the monitor, and status information.

Gets information about a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor based on a monitor name. The information returned includes the Amazon Resource Name (ARN), create time, modified time, resources included in the monitor, and status information.

Gets information that Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor has generated about an internet event. Internet Monitor displays information about recent global health events, called internet events, on a global outages map that is available to all Amazon Web Services customers. The information returned here includes the impacted location, when the event started and (if the event is over) ended, the type of event (PERFORMANCE or AVAILABILITY), and the status (ACTIVE or RESOLVED).

Gets information that Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor has generated about an internet event. Internet Monitor displays information about recent global health events, called internet events, on a global outages map that is available to all Amazon Web Services customers. The information returned here includes the impacted location, when the event started and (if the event is over) ended, the type of event (PERFORMANCE or AVAILABILITY), and the status (ACTIVE or RESOLVED).

Gets information that Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor has created and stored about a health event for a specified monitor. This information includes the impacted locations, and all the information related to the event, by location. The information returned includes the impact on performance, availability, and round-trip time, information about the network providers (ASNs), the event type, and so on. Information rolled up at the global traffic level is also returned, including the impact type and total traffic impact.

Gets information that Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor has created and stored about a health event for a specified monitor. This information includes the impacted locations, and all the information related to the event, by location. The information returned includes the impact on performance, availability, and round-trip time, information about the network providers (ASNs), the event type, and so on. Information rolled up at the global traffic level is also returned, including the impact type and total traffic impact.

Deletes a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Deletes a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor.

Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: VPCs, Network Load Balancers (NLBs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and Amazon WorkSpaces directories. Internet Monitor then publishes internet measurements from Amazon Web Services that are specific to the city-networks. That is, the locations and ASNs (typically internet service providers or ISPs), where clients access your application. For more information, see Using Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide. When you create a monitor, you choose the percentage of traffic that you want to monitor. You can also set a maximum limit for the number of city-networks where client traffic is monitored, that caps the total traffic that Internet Monitor monitors. A city-network maximum is the limit of city-networks, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. You can update your monitor at any time to change the percentage of traffic to monitor or the city-networks maximum. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: VPCs, Network Load Balancers (NLBs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and Amazon WorkSpaces directories. Internet Monitor then publishes internet measurements from Amazon Web Services that are specific to the city-networks. That is, the locations and ASNs (typically internet service providers or ISPs), where clients access your application. For more information, see Using Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide. When you create a monitor, you choose the percentage of traffic that you want to monitor. You can also set a maximum limit for the number of city-networks where client traffic is monitored, that caps the total traffic that Internet Monitor monitors. A city-network maximum is the limit of city-networks, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. You can update your monitor at any time to change the percentage of traffic to monitor or the city-networks maximum. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.