Awso_config.ValuesSourceval structure_to_value_aux :
('a * 'b option) list ->
f:(('a * 'b) list -> 'c) ->
[> `Structure of 'c ]val structure_to_wrapped_value :
wrapper:'a ->
response:'a ->
('b * 'c option) list ->
[> `Structure of ('a * [> `Structure of ('b * 'c) list ]) list ]The dynamic value of the resource.
The static value of the resource.
Amazon Web Services Systems Manager (SSM) specific remediation controls.
The value is either a dynamic (resource) value or a static value. You must select either a dynamic value or a static value.
The controls that Config uses for executing remediations.
An object for you to specify your overrides for the recording mode.
Provides the source and the message types that trigger Config to evaluate your Amazon Web Services resources against a rule. It also provides the frequency with which you want Config to run evaluations for the rule if the trigger type is periodic. You can specify the parameter values for SourceDetail only for custom rules.
An object that represents the details about the remediation exception. The details include the rule name, an explanation of an exception, the time when the exception will be deleted, the resource ID, and resource type.
An object that represents the details about the remediation configuration that includes the remediation action, parameters, and data to execute the action.
The relationship of the related resource to the main resource.
Identifies an Config rule that evaluated an Amazon Web Services resource, and provides the type and ID of the resource that the rule evaluated.
The number of Amazon Web Services resources or Config rules responsible for the current compliance of the item, up to a maximum number.
Name of the step from the SSM document.
Input parameters in the form of key-value pairs for the conformance pack, both of which you define. Keys can have a maximum character length of 255 characters, and values can have a maximum length of 4096 characters.
Specifies whether the configuration recorder excludes certain resource types from being recorded. Use the resourceTypes field to enter a comma-separated list of resource types you want to exclude from recording. By default, when Config adds support for a new resource type in the Region where you set up the configuration recorder, including global resource types, Config starts recording resources of that type automatically. How to use the exclusion recording strategy To use this option, you must set the useOnly field of RecordingStrategy to EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES. Config will then record configuration changes for all supported resource types, except the resource types that you specify to exclude from being recorded. Global resource types and the exclusion recording strategy Unless specifically listed as exclusions, AWS::RDS::GlobalCluster will be recorded automatically in all supported Config Regions were the configuration recorder is enabled. IAM users, groups, roles, and customer managed policies will be recorded in the Region where you set up the configuration recorder if that is a Region where Config was available before February 2022. You cannot be record the global IAM resouce types in Regions supported by Config after February 2022. For a list of those Regions, see Recording Amazon Web Services Resources | Global Resources.
Specifies the recording strategy of the configuration recorder.
A collection of accounts and regions.
An object to filter the configuration recorders based on the resource types in scope for recording.
An object to filter service-linked configuration recorders in an aggregator based on the linked Amazon Web Services service.
The configuration object for Config rule evaluation mode. The supported valid values are Detective or Proactive.
Provides the runtime system, policy definition, and whether debug logging enabled. You can specify the following CustomPolicyDetails parameter values only for Config Custom Policy rules.
The details that identify a resource within Config, including the resource type and resource ID.
Uniquely identifies an evaluation result.
The number of Config rules or Amazon Web Services resources that are compliant and noncompliant.
The number of conformance packs that are compliant and noncompliant.
The details that identify a resource within Config, including the resource type and resource ID.
metadata for your organization Config Custom Policy rule including the runtime system in use, which accounts have debug logging enabled, and other custom rule metadata such as resource type, resource ID of Amazon Web Services resource, and organization trigger types that trigger Config to evaluate Amazon Web Services resources against a rule.
An object that specifies organization custom rule metadata such as resource type, resource ID of Amazon Web Services resource, Lambda function ARN, and organization trigger types that trigger Config to evaluate your Amazon Web Services resources against a rule. It also provides the frequency with which you want Config to run evaluations for the rule if the trigger type is periodic.
An object that specifies organization managed rule metadata such as resource type and ID of Amazon Web Services resource along with the rule identifier. It also provides the frequency with which you want Config to run evaluations for the rule if the trigger type is periodic.
Provides options for how often Config delivers configuration snapshots to the Amazon S3 bucket in your delivery channel. The frequency for a rule that triggers evaluations for your resources when Config delivers the configuration snapshot is set by one of two values, depending on which is less frequent: The value for the deliveryFrequency parameter within the delivery channel configuration, which sets how often Config delivers configuration snapshots. This value also sets how often Config invokes evaluations for Config rules. The value for the MaximumExecutionFrequency parameter, which sets the maximum frequency with which Config invokes evaluations for the rule. For more information, see ConfigRule. If the deliveryFrequency value is less frequent than the MaximumExecutionFrequency value for a rule, Config invokes the rule only as often as the deliveryFrequency value. For example, you want your rule to run evaluations when Config delivers the configuration snapshot. You specify the MaximumExecutionFrequency value for Six_Hours. You then specify the delivery channel deliveryFrequency value for TwentyFour_Hours. Because the value for deliveryFrequency is less frequent than MaximumExecutionFrequency, Config invokes evaluations for the rule every 24 hours. You should set the MaximumExecutionFrequency value to be at least as frequent as the deliveryFrequency value. You can view the deliveryFrequency value by using the DescribeDeliveryChannnels action. To update the deliveryFrequency with which Config delivers your configuration snapshots, use the PutDeliveryChannel action.
Provides status of the delivery of the snapshot or the configuration history to the specified Amazon S3 bucket. Also provides the status of notifications about the Amazon S3 delivery to the specified Amazon SNS topic.
A list that contains the status of the delivery of the configuration stream notification to the Amazon SNS topic.
This API allows you to create a conformance pack template with an Amazon Web Services Systems Manager document (SSM document). To deploy a conformance pack using an SSM document, first create an SSM document with conformance pack content, and then provide the DocumentName in the PutConformancePack API. You can also provide the DocumentVersion. The TemplateSSMDocumentDetails object contains the name of the SSM document and the version of the SSM document.
Specifies which resource types Config records for configuration changes. By default, Config records configuration changes for all current and future supported resource types in the Amazon Web Services Region where you have enabled Config, excluding the global IAM resource types: IAM users, groups, roles, and customer managed policies. In the recording group, you specify whether you want to record all supported current and future supported resource types or to include or exclude specific resources types. For a list of supported resource types, see Supported Resource Types in the Config developer guide. If you don't want Config to record all current and future supported resource types (excluding the global IAM resource types), use one of the following recording strategies: Record all current and future resource types with exclusions (EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES), or Record specific resource types (INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES). If you use the recording strategy to Record all current and future resource types (ALL_SUPPORTED_RESOURCE_TYPES), you can use the flag includeGlobalResourceTypes to include the global IAM resource types in your recording. Aurora global clusters are recorded in all enabled Regions The AWS::RDS::GlobalCluster resource type will be recorded in all supported Config Regions where the configuration recorder is enabled. If you do not want to record AWS::RDS::GlobalCluster in all enabled Regions, use the EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES or INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES recording strategy.
Specifies the default recording frequency that Config uses to record configuration changes. Config supports Continuous recording and Daily recording. Continuous recording allows you to record configuration changes continuously whenever a change occurs. Daily recording allows you to receive a configuration item (CI) representing the most recent state of your resources over the last 24-hour period, only if it’s different from the previous CI recorded. Firewall Manager depends on continuous recording to monitor your resources. If you are using Firewall Manager, it is recommended that you set the recording frequency to Continuous. You can also override the recording frequency for specific resource types.
An object to filter the data you specify for an aggregator.
This object contains regions to set up the aggregator and an IAM role to retrieve organization details.
Defines which resources trigger an evaluation for an Config rule. The scope can include one or more resource types, a combination of a tag key and value, or a combination of one resource type and one resource ID. Specify a scope to constrain which resources trigger an evaluation for a rule. Otherwise, evaluations for the rule are triggered when any resource in your recording group changes in configuration.
Provides the CustomPolicyDetails, the rule owner (Amazon Web Services for managed rules, CUSTOM_POLICY for Custom Policy rules, and CUSTOM_LAMBDA for Custom Lambda rules), the rule identifier, and the events that cause the evaluation of your Amazon Web Services resources.
Indicates whether an Amazon Web Services resource or Config rule is compliant and provides the number of contributors that affect the compliance.
Provides the number of compliant and noncompliant rules within a conformance pack. Also provides the compliance status of the conformance pack and the total rule count which includes compliant rules, noncompliant rules, and rules that cannot be evaluated due to insufficient data. A conformance pack is compliant if all of the rules in a conformance packs are compliant. It is noncompliant if any of the rules are not compliant. The compliance status of a conformance pack is INSUFFICIENT_DATA only if all rules within a conformance pack cannot be evaluated due to insufficient data. If some of the rules in a conformance pack are compliant but the compliance status of other rules in that same conformance pack is INSUFFICIENT_DATA, the conformance pack shows compliant.
The tags for the resource. The metadata that you apply to a resource to help you categorize and organize them. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value, both of which you define. Tag keys can have a maximum character length of 128 characters, and tag values can have a maximum length of 256 characters.
List of each of the failed remediation exceptions with specific reasons.
List of each of the failed remediations with specific reasons.
Identifies an Amazon Web Services resource and indicates whether it complies with the Config rule that it was evaluated against.
Returns details of a specific query.
Returns details of a resource evaluation.
Filters evaluation results based on start and end times.
The details that identify a resource that is discovered by Config, including the resource type, ID, and (if available) the custom resource name.
A compliance score is the percentage of the number of compliant rule-resource combinations in a conformance pack compared to the number of total possible rule-resource combinations in the conformance pack. This metric provides you with a high-level view of the compliance state of your conformance packs. You can use it to identify, investigate, and understand the level of compliance in your conformance packs.
A summary of a configuration recorder, including the arn, name, servicePrincipal, and recordingScope.
Filters configuration recorders by recording scope.
The details that identify a resource that is collected by Config aggregator, including the resource type, ID, (if available) the custom resource name, the source account, and source region.
A list that contains detailed configurations of a specified resource.
Organization conformance pack creation or deletion status in each member account. This includes the name of the conformance pack, the status, error code and error message when the conformance pack creation or deletion failed.
Organization Config rule creation or deletion status in each member account. This includes the name of the rule, the status, error code and error message when the rule creation or deletion failed.
An object that contains the resource type and the number of resources.
Summary includes the name and status of the conformance pack.
The details of a conformance pack evaluation. Provides Config rule and Amazon Web Services resource type that was evaluated, the compliance of the conformance pack, related time stamps, and supplementary information.
The number of Amazon Web Services resources of a specific type that are compliant or noncompliant, up to a maximum of 100 for each.
The details of an Config evaluation. Provides the Amazon Web Services resource that was evaluated, the compliance of the resource, related time stamps, and supplementary information.
The count of resources that are grouped by the group name.
Provides a summary of compliance based on either account ID or region.
Returns the number of compliant and noncompliant rules for one or more accounts and regions in an aggregator.
The details of an Config evaluation for an account ID and region in an aggregator. Provides the Amazon Web Services resource that was evaluated, the compliance of the resource, related time stamps, and supplementary information.
An object with the name of the retention configuration and the retention period in days. The object stores the configuration for data retention in Config.
Provides details of the current status of the invoked remediation action for that resource.
An object that represents the account ID and region of an aggregator account that is requesting authorization but is not yet authorized.
An organization conformance pack that has information about conformance packs that Config creates in member accounts.
Returns the status for an organization conformance pack in an organization.
An organization Config rule that has information about Config rules that Config creates in member accounts.
Returns the status for an organization Config rule in an organization.
The channel through which Config delivers notifications and updated configuration states.
The status of a specified delivery channel. Valid values: Success | Failure
Returns details of a conformance pack. A conformance pack is a collection of Config rules and remediation actions that can be easily deployed in an account and a region.
Status details of a conformance pack.
Compliance information of one or more Config rules within a conformance pack. You can filter using Config rule names and compliance types.
Records configuration changes to the resource types in scope. For more information about the configuration recorder, see Working with the Configuration Recorder in the Config Developer Guide.
The current status of the configuration recorder. For a detailed status of recording events over time, add your Config events to CloudWatch metrics and use CloudWatch metrics.
The details about the configuration aggregator, including information about source accounts, regions, and metadata of the aggregator.
The current sync status between the source and the aggregator account.
Config rules evaluate the configuration settings of your Amazon Web Services resources. A rule can run when Config detects a configuration change to an Amazon Web Services resource or at a periodic frequency that you choose (for example, every 24 hours). There are two types of rules: Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of Config Managed Rules. Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create Config custom rules: with Lambda functions ( Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. Config custom rules created with Lambda are called Config Custom Lambda Rules and Config custom rules created with Guard are called Config Custom Policy Rules. For more information about developing and using Config rules, see Evaluating Resource with Config Rules in the Config Developer Guide. You can use the Amazon Web Services CLI and Amazon Web Services SDKs if you want to create a rule that triggers evaluations for your resources when Config delivers the configuration snapshot. For more information, see ConfigSnapshotDeliveryProperties.
Status information for your Config Managed rules and Config Custom Policy rules. The status includes information such as the last time the rule ran, the last time it failed, and the related error for the last failure. This operation does not return status information about Config Custom Lambda rules.
Indicates whether an Amazon Web Services resource that is evaluated according to one or more Config rules is compliant. A resource is compliant if it complies with all of the rules that evaluate it. A resource is noncompliant if it does not comply with one or more of these rules.
Indicates whether an Config rule is compliant. A rule is compliant if all of the resources that the rule evaluated comply with it. A rule is noncompliant if any of these resources do not comply.
An object that represents the authorizations granted to aggregator accounts and regions.
Provides aggregate compliance of the conformance pack. Indicates whether a conformance pack is compliant based on the name of the conformance pack, account ID, and region. A conformance pack is compliant if all of the rules in a conformance packs are compliant. It is noncompliant if any of the rules are not compliant. The compliance status of a conformance pack is INSUFFICIENT_DATA only if all rules within a conformance pack cannot be evaluated due to insufficient data. If some of the rules in a conformance pack are compliant but the compliance status of other rules in that same conformance pack is INSUFFICIENT_DATA, the conformance pack shows compliant.
Indicates whether an Config rule is compliant based on account ID, region, compliance, and rule name. A rule is compliant if all of the resources that the rule evaluated comply with it. It is noncompliant if any of these resources do not comply.
List of each of the failed delete remediation exceptions with specific reasons.
The detailed configurations of a specified resource.
Using the same client token with one or more different parameters. Specify a new client token with the parameter changes and try again.
One or more of the specified parameters are not valid. Verify that your parameters are valid and try again.
Use EvaluationContext to group independently initiated proactive resource evaluations. For example, CFN Stack. If you want to check just a resource definition, you do not need to provide evaluation context.
Returns information about the resource being evaluated.
Indicates one of the following errors: For PutConfigRule, the rule cannot be created because the IAM role assigned to Config lacks permissions to perform the config:Put* action. For PutConfigRule, the Lambda function cannot be invoked. Check the function ARN, and check the function's permissions. For PutOrganizationConfigRule, organization Config rule cannot be created because you do not have permissions to call IAM GetRole action or create a service-linked role. For PutConformancePack and PutOrganizationConformancePack, a conformance pack cannot be created because you do not have the following permissions: You do not have permission to call IAM GetRole action or create a service-linked role. You do not have permission to read Amazon S3 bucket or call SSM:GetDocument. For PutServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder, a service-linked configuration recorder cannot be created because you do not have the following permissions: IAM CreateServiceLinkedRole.
You specified an Config rule without a remediation configuration.
For PutServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder API, this exception is thrown if the number of service-linked roles in the account exceeds the limit. For StartConfigRulesEvaluation API, this exception is thrown if an evaluation is in progress or if you call the StartConfigRulesEvaluation API more than once per minute. For PutConfigurationAggregator API, this exception is thrown if the number of accounts and aggregators exceeds the limit.
The Config rule in the request is not valid. Verify that the rule is an Config Process Check rule, that the rule name is correct, and that valid Amazon Resouce Names (ARNs) are used before trying again.
You see this exception in the following cases: For DeleteConfigRule, Config is deleting this rule. Try your request again later. For DeleteConfigRule, the rule is deleting your evaluation results. Try your request again later. For DeleteConfigRule, a remediation action is associated with the rule and Config cannot delete this rule. Delete the remediation action associated with the rule before deleting the rule and try your request again later. For PutConfigOrganizationRule, organization Config rule deletion is in progress. Try your request again later. For DeleteOrganizationConfigRule, organization Config rule creation is in progress. Try your request again later. For PutConformancePack and PutOrganizationConformancePack, a conformance pack creation, update, and deletion is in progress. Try your request again later. For DeleteConformancePack, a conformance pack creation, update, and deletion is in progress. Try your request again later.
The syntax of the query is incorrect.
The specified limit is outside the allowable range.
The specified next token is not valid. Specify the nextToken string that was returned in the previous response to get the next page of results.
You have specified a configuration aggregator that does not exist.
Two users are trying to modify the same query at the same time. Wait for a moment and try again.
You have reached the limit of the number of tags you can use. For more information, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide.
The requested operation is not valid. You will see this exception if there are missing required fields or if the input value fails the validation. For PutStoredQuery, one of the following errors: There are missing required fields. The input value fails the validation. You are trying to create more than 300 queries. For DescribeConfigurationRecorders and DescribeConfigurationRecorderStatus, one of the following errors: You have specified more than one configuration recorder. You have provided a service principal for service-linked configuration recorder that is not valid. For AssociateResourceTypes and DisassociateResourceTypes, one of the following errors: Your configuraiton recorder has a recording strategy that does not allow the association or disassociation of resource types. One or more of the specified resource types are already associated or disassociated with the configuration recorder. For service-linked configuration recorders, the configuration recorder does not record one or more of the specified resource types.
Provides the details of a stored query.
For PutServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder, you cannot create a service-linked recorder because a service-linked recorder already exists for the specified service. For DeleteServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder, you cannot delete the service-linked recorder because it is currently in use by the linked Amazon Web Services service. For DeleteDeliveryChannel, you cannot delete the specified delivery channel because the customer managed configuration recorder is running. Use the StopConfigurationRecorder operation to stop the customer managed configuration recorder. For AssociateResourceTypes and DisassociateResourceTypes, one of the following errors: For service-linked configuration recorders, the configuration recorder is not in use by the service. No association or dissociation of resource types is permitted. For service-linked configuration recorders, your requested change to the configuration recorder has been denied by its linked Amazon Web Services service.
Failed to add the retention configuration because a retention configuration with that name already exists.
You have reached the limit of the number of organization conformance packs you can create in an account. For more information, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide.
Organization is no longer available.
For PutConfigurationAggregator API, you can see this exception for the following reasons: No permission to call EnableAWSServiceAccess API The configuration aggregator cannot be updated because your Amazon Web Services Organization management account or the delegated administrator role changed. Delete this aggregator and create a new one with the current Amazon Web Services Organization. The configuration aggregator is associated with a previous Amazon Web Services Organization and Config cannot aggregate data with current Amazon Web Services Organization. Delete this aggregator and create a new one with the current Amazon Web Services Organization. You are not a registered delegated administrator for Config with permissions to call ListDelegatedAdministrators API. Ensure that the management account registers delagated administrator for Config service principal name before the delegated administrator creates an aggregator. For all OrganizationConfigRule and OrganizationConformancePack APIs, Config throws an exception if APIs are called from member accounts. All APIs must be called from organization management account.
Config resource cannot be created because your organization does not have all features enabled.
You have specified a template that is not valid or supported.
You have reached the limit of the number of organization Config rules you can create. For more information, see see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide.
An object that specifies metadata for your organization's Config Custom Policy rule. The metadata includes the runtime system in use, which accounts have debug logging enabled, and other custom rule metadata, such as resource type, resource ID of Amazon Web Services resource, and organization trigger types that initiate Config to evaluate Amazon Web Services resources against a rule.
Identifies an Amazon Web Services resource and indicates whether it complies with the Config rule that it was evaluated against.
The specified ResultToken is not valid.
You have specified a template that is not valid or supported.
You have reached the limit of the number of conformance packs you can create in an account. For more information, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide.
You have provided a null or empty Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the IAM role assumed by Config and used by the customer managed configuration recorder.
You have specified a resource that does not exist.
The specified time range is not valid. The earlier time is not chronologically before the later time.
Returns details of a resource evaluation based on the selected filter.
There are no customer managed configuration recorders available to record your resources. Use the PutConfigurationRecorder operation to create the customer managed configuration recorder.
A list of filters to apply to the conformance pack compliance score result set.
Filters the results by resource account ID, region, resource ID, and resource name.
Returns status details of an evaluation.
You have specified a resource that is either unknown or has not been discovered.
The Config rule in the request is not valid. Verify that the rule is an organization Config Process Check rule, that the rule name is correct, and that valid Amazon Resouce Names (ARNs) are used before trying again.
Config organization conformance pack that you passed in the filter does not exist. For DeleteOrganizationConformancePack, you tried to delete an organization conformance pack that does not exist.
Status filter object to filter results based on specific member account ID or status type for an organization conformance pack.
Status filter object to filter results based on specific member account ID or status type for an organization Config rule.
You specified one or more conformance packs that do not exist.
Config rule that you passed in the filter does not exist.
Filters a conformance pack by Config rule names, compliance types, Amazon Web Services resource types, and resource IDs.
The configuration item size is outside the allowable range.
Filters the resource count based on account ID, region, and resource type.
Filters the results based on account ID and region.
Filters the results based on the account IDs and regions.
You have specified a configuration recorder that does not exist.
You have specified a retention configuration that does not exist.
You have specified a delivery channel that does not exist.
Filters the conformance pack by compliance types and Config rule names.
Returns a filtered list of Detective or Proactive Config rules. By default, if the filter is not defined, this API returns an unfiltered list. For more information on Detective or Proactive Config rules, see Evaluation Mode in the Config Developer Guide.
Filters the conformance packs based on an account ID, region, compliance type, and the name of the conformance pack.
Filters the compliance results based on account ID, region, compliance type, and rule name.
There is no configuration recorder running.
You tried to delete a remediation exception that does not exist.
Remediation action is in progress. You can either cancel execution in Amazon Web Services Systems Manager or wait and try again later.
Deletes specified tags from a resource.
The requested operation is not valid. For PutConfigurationRecorder, you will see this exception because you cannot use this operation to create a service-linked configuration recorder. Use the PutServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder operation to create a service-linked configuration recorder. For DeleteConfigurationRecorder, you will see this exception because you cannot use this operation to delete a service-linked configuration recorder. Use the DeleteServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder operation to delete a service-linked configuration recorder. For StartConfigurationRecorder and StopConfigurationRecorder, you will see this exception because these operations do not affect service-linked configuration recorders. Service-linked configuration recorders are always recording. To stop recording, you must delete the service-linked configuration recorder. Use the DeleteServiceLinkedConfigurationRecorder operation to delete a service-linked configuration recorder.
Associates the specified tags to a resource with the specified ResourceArn. If existing tags on a resource are not specified in the request parameters, they are not changed. If existing tags are specified, however, then their values will be updated. When a resource is deleted, the tags associated with that resource are deleted as well.
The input for the StopConfigurationRecorder operation.
Runs an on-demand evaluation for the specified resource to determine whether the resource details will comply with configured Config rules. You can also use it for evaluation purposes. Config recommends using an evaluation context. It runs an execution against the resource details with all of the Config rules in your account that match with the specified proactive mode and resource type. Ensure you have the cloudformation:DescribeType role setup to validate the resource type schema. You can find the Resource type schema in "Amazon Web Services public extensions" within the CloudFormation registry or with the following CLI commmand: aws cloudformation describe-type --type-name "AWS::S3::Bucket" --type RESOURCE. For more information, see Managing extensions through the CloudFormation registry and Amazon Web Services resource and property types reference in the CloudFormation User Guide.
Runs an on-demand evaluation for the specified resource to determine whether the resource details will comply with configured Config rules. You can also use it for evaluation purposes. Config recommends using an evaluation context. It runs an execution against the resource details with all of the Config rules in your account that match with the specified proactive mode and resource type. Ensure you have the cloudformation:DescribeType role setup to validate the resource type schema. You can find the Resource type schema in "Amazon Web Services public extensions" within the CloudFormation registry or with the following CLI commmand: aws cloudformation describe-type --type-name "AWS::S3::Bucket" --type RESOURCE. For more information, see Managing extensions through the CloudFormation registry and Amazon Web Services resource and property types reference in the CloudFormation User Guide.
Runs an on-demand remediation for the specified Config rules against the last known remediation configuration. It runs an execution against the current state of your resources. Remediation execution is asynchronous. You can specify up to 100 resource keys per request. An existing StartRemediationExecution call for the specified resource keys must complete before you can call the API again.
Runs an on-demand remediation for the specified Config rules against the last known remediation configuration. It runs an execution against the current state of your resources. Remediation execution is asynchronous. You can specify up to 100 resource keys per request. An existing StartRemediationExecution call for the specified resource keys must complete before you can call the API again.
The input for the StartConfigurationRecorder operation.
The output when you start the evaluation for the specified Config rule.
Accepts a structured query language (SQL) SELECT command, performs the corresponding search, and returns resource configurations matching the properties. For more information about query components, see the Query Components section in the Config Developer Guide.
Accepts a structured query language (SQL) SELECT command, performs the corresponding search, and returns resource configurations matching the properties. For more information about query components, see the Query Components section in the Config Developer Guide.
Accepts a structured query language (SQL) SELECT command and an aggregator to query configuration state of Amazon Web Services resources across multiple accounts and regions, performs the corresponding search, and returns resource configurations matching the properties. For more information about query components, see the Query Components section in the Config Developer Guide. If you run an aggregation query (i.e., using GROUP BY or using aggregate functions such as COUNT; e.g., SELECT resourceId, COUNT(*) WHERE resourceType = 'AWS::IAM::Role' GROUP BY resourceId) and do not specify the MaxResults or the Limit query parameters, the default page size is set to 500. If you run a non-aggregation query (i.e., not using GROUP BY or aggregate function; e.g., SELECT * WHERE resourceType = 'AWS::IAM::Role') and do not specify the MaxResults or the Limit query parameters, the default page size is set to 25.
Accepts a structured query language (SQL) SELECT command and an aggregator to query configuration state of Amazon Web Services resources across multiple accounts and regions, performs the corresponding search, and returns resource configurations matching the properties. For more information about query components, see the Query Components section in the Config Developer Guide. If you run an aggregation query (i.e., using GROUP BY or using aggregate functions such as COUNT; e.g., SELECT resourceId, COUNT(*) WHERE resourceType = 'AWS::IAM::Role' GROUP BY resourceId) and do not specify the MaxResults or the Limit query parameters, the default page size is set to 500. If you run a non-aggregation query (i.e., not using GROUP BY or aggregate function; e.g., SELECT * WHERE resourceType = 'AWS::IAM::Role') and do not specify the MaxResults or the Limit query parameters, the default page size is set to 25.
Saves a new query or updates an existing saved query. The QueryName must be unique for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. You can create upto 300 queries in a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated PutStoredQuery is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different.
Saves a new query or updates an existing saved query. The QueryName must be unique for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. You can create upto 300 queries in a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated PutStoredQuery is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different.
Creates a service-linked configuration recorder that is linked to a specific Amazon Web Services service based on the ServicePrincipal you specify. The configuration recorder's name, recordingGroup, recordingMode, and recordingScope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder. For more information and a list of supported services/service principals, see Working with the Configuration Recorder in the Config Developer Guide. This API creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfig in your account. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in your account. The recording scope determines if you receive configuration items The recording scope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder and determines whether you receive configuration items (CIs) in the delivery channel. If the recording scope is internal, you will not receive CIs in the delivery channel. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Creates a service-linked configuration recorder that is linked to a specific Amazon Web Services service based on the ServicePrincipal you specify. The configuration recorder's name, recordingGroup, recordingMode, and recordingScope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder. For more information and a list of supported services/service principals, see Working with the Configuration Recorder in the Config Developer Guide. This API creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfig in your account. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in your account. The recording scope determines if you receive configuration items The recording scope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder and determines whether you receive configuration items (CIs) in the delivery channel. If the recording scope is internal, you will not receive CIs in the delivery channel. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Creates and updates the retention configuration with details about retention period (number of days) that Config stores your historical information. The API creates the RetentionConfiguration object and names the object as default. When you have a RetentionConfiguration object named default, calling the API modifies the default object. Currently, Config supports only one retention configuration per region in your account.
Creates and updates the retention configuration with details about retention period (number of days) that Config stores your historical information. The API creates the RetentionConfiguration object and names the object as default. When you have a RetentionConfiguration object named default, calling the API modifies the default object. Currently, Config supports only one retention configuration per region in your account.
Records the configuration state for the resource provided in the request. The configuration state of a resource is represented in Config as Configuration Items. Once this API records the configuration item, you can retrieve the list of configuration items for the custom resource type using existing Config APIs. The custom resource type must be registered with CloudFormation. This API accepts the configuration item registered with CloudFormation. When you call this API, Config only stores configuration state of the resource provided in the request. This API does not change or remediate the configuration of the resource. Write-only schema properites are not recorded as part of the published configuration item.
A remediation exception is when a specified resource is no longer considered for auto-remediation. This API adds a new exception or updates an existing exception for a specified resource with a specified Config rule. Exceptions block auto remediation Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs running a remediation action for a specified resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared. Manual remediation is recommended when placing an exception When placing an exception on an Amazon Web Services resource, it is recommended that remediation is set as manual remediation until the given Config rule for the specified resource evaluates the resource as NON_COMPLIANT. Once the resource has been evaluated as NON_COMPLIANT, you can add remediation exceptions and change the remediation type back from Manual to Auto if you want to use auto-remediation. Otherwise, using auto-remediation before a NON_COMPLIANT evaluation result can delete resources before the exception is applied. Exceptions can only be performed on non-compliant resources Placing an exception can only be performed on resources that are NON_COMPLIANT. If you use this API for COMPLIANT resources or resources that are NOT_APPLICABLE, a remediation exception will not be generated. For more information on the conditions that initiate the possible Config evaluation results, see Concepts | Config Rules in the Config Developer Guide. Exceptions cannot be placed on service-linked remediation actions You cannot place an exception on service-linked remediation actions, such as remediation actions put by an organizational conformance pack. Auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources If you enable auto remediation for a specific Config rule using the PutRemediationConfigurations API or the Config console, it initiates the remediation process for all non-compliant resources for that specific rule. The auto remediation process relies on the compliance data snapshot which is captured on a periodic basis. Any non-compliant resource that is updated between the snapshot schedule will continue to be remediated based on the last known compliance data snapshot. This means that in some cases auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources, since the bootstrap processor uses a database that can have stale evaluation results based on the last known compliance data snapshot.
A remediation exception is when a specified resource is no longer considered for auto-remediation. This API adds a new exception or updates an existing exception for a specified resource with a specified Config rule. Exceptions block auto remediation Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs running a remediation action for a specified resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared. Manual remediation is recommended when placing an exception When placing an exception on an Amazon Web Services resource, it is recommended that remediation is set as manual remediation until the given Config rule for the specified resource evaluates the resource as NON_COMPLIANT. Once the resource has been evaluated as NON_COMPLIANT, you can add remediation exceptions and change the remediation type back from Manual to Auto if you want to use auto-remediation. Otherwise, using auto-remediation before a NON_COMPLIANT evaluation result can delete resources before the exception is applied. Exceptions can only be performed on non-compliant resources Placing an exception can only be performed on resources that are NON_COMPLIANT. If you use this API for COMPLIANT resources or resources that are NOT_APPLICABLE, a remediation exception will not be generated. For more information on the conditions that initiate the possible Config evaluation results, see Concepts | Config Rules in the Config Developer Guide. Exceptions cannot be placed on service-linked remediation actions You cannot place an exception on service-linked remediation actions, such as remediation actions put by an organizational conformance pack. Auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources If you enable auto remediation for a specific Config rule using the PutRemediationConfigurations API or the Config console, it initiates the remediation process for all non-compliant resources for that specific rule. The auto remediation process relies on the compliance data snapshot which is captured on a periodic basis. Any non-compliant resource that is updated between the snapshot schedule will continue to be remediated based on the last known compliance data snapshot. This means that in some cases auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources, since the bootstrap processor uses a database that can have stale evaluation results based on the last known compliance data snapshot.
Adds or updates the remediation configuration with a specific Config rule with the selected target or action. The API creates the RemediationConfiguration object for the Config rule. The Config rule must already exist for you to add a remediation configuration. The target (SSM document) must exist and have permissions to use the target. Be aware of backward incompatible changes If you make backward incompatible changes to the SSM document, you must call this again to ensure the remediations can run. This API does not support adding remediation configurations for service-linked Config Rules such as Organization Config rules, the rules deployed by conformance packs, and rules deployed by Amazon Web Services Security Hub. Required fields For manual remediation configuration, you need to provide a value for automationAssumeRole or use a value in the assumeRolefield to remediate your resources. The SSM automation document can use either as long as it maps to a valid parameter. However, for automatic remediation configuration, the only valid assumeRole field value is AutomationAssumeRole and you need to provide a value for AutomationAssumeRole to remediate your resources. Auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources If you enable auto remediation for a specific Config rule using the PutRemediationConfigurations API or the Config console, it initiates the remediation process for all non-compliant resources for that specific rule. The auto remediation process relies on the compliance data snapshot which is captured on a periodic basis. Any non-compliant resource that is updated between the snapshot schedule will continue to be remediated based on the last known compliance data snapshot. This means that in some cases auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources, since the bootstrap processor uses a database that can have stale evaluation results based on the last known compliance data snapshot.
Adds or updates the remediation configuration with a specific Config rule with the selected target or action. The API creates the RemediationConfiguration object for the Config rule. The Config rule must already exist for you to add a remediation configuration. The target (SSM document) must exist and have permissions to use the target. Be aware of backward incompatible changes If you make backward incompatible changes to the SSM document, you must call this again to ensure the remediations can run. This API does not support adding remediation configurations for service-linked Config Rules such as Organization Config rules, the rules deployed by conformance packs, and rules deployed by Amazon Web Services Security Hub. Required fields For manual remediation configuration, you need to provide a value for automationAssumeRole or use a value in the assumeRolefield to remediate your resources. The SSM automation document can use either as long as it maps to a valid parameter. However, for automatic remediation configuration, the only valid assumeRole field value is AutomationAssumeRole and you need to provide a value for AutomationAssumeRole to remediate your resources. Auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources If you enable auto remediation for a specific Config rule using the PutRemediationConfigurations API or the Config console, it initiates the remediation process for all non-compliant resources for that specific rule. The auto remediation process relies on the compliance data snapshot which is captured on a periodic basis. Any non-compliant resource that is updated between the snapshot schedule will continue to be remediated based on the last known compliance data snapshot. This means that in some cases auto remediation can be initiated even for compliant resources, since the bootstrap processor uses a database that can have stale evaluation results based on the last known compliance data snapshot.
Deploys conformance packs across member accounts in an Amazon Web Services Organization. For information on how many organization conformance packs and how many Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. Only a management account and a delegated administrator can call this API. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. An organization can have up to 3 delegated administrators. When you use PutOrganizationConformancePack to deploy conformance packs across member accounts, the operation can create Config rules and remediation actions without requiring config:PutConfigRule or config:PutRemediationConfigurations permissions in member account IAM policies. This API uses the AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms service-linked role in each member account to create conformance pack resources. This service-linked role includes the permissions to create Config rules and remediation configurations, even if member account IAM policies explicitly deny these actions. This API enables organization service access for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com through the EnableAWSServiceAccess action and creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigMultiAccountSetup in the management or delegated administrator account of your organization. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in the caller account. To use this API with delegated administrator, register a delegated administrator by calling Amazon Web Services Organization register-delegate-admin for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com. Prerequisite: Ensure you call EnableAllFeatures API to enable all features in an organization. You must specify either the TemplateS3Uri or the TemplateBody parameter, but not both. If you provide both Config uses the TemplateS3Uri parameter and ignores the TemplateBody parameter. Config sets the state of a conformance pack to CREATE_IN_PROGRESS and UPDATE_IN_PROGRESS until the conformance pack is created or updated. You cannot update a conformance pack while it is in this state.
Deploys conformance packs across member accounts in an Amazon Web Services Organization. For information on how many organization conformance packs and how many Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. Only a management account and a delegated administrator can call this API. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. An organization can have up to 3 delegated administrators. When you use PutOrganizationConformancePack to deploy conformance packs across member accounts, the operation can create Config rules and remediation actions without requiring config:PutConfigRule or config:PutRemediationConfigurations permissions in member account IAM policies. This API uses the AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms service-linked role in each member account to create conformance pack resources. This service-linked role includes the permissions to create Config rules and remediation configurations, even if member account IAM policies explicitly deny these actions. This API enables organization service access for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com through the EnableAWSServiceAccess action and creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigMultiAccountSetup in the management or delegated administrator account of your organization. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in the caller account. To use this API with delegated administrator, register a delegated administrator by calling Amazon Web Services Organization register-delegate-admin for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com. Prerequisite: Ensure you call EnableAllFeatures API to enable all features in an organization. You must specify either the TemplateS3Uri or the TemplateBody parameter, but not both. If you provide both Config uses the TemplateS3Uri parameter and ignores the TemplateBody parameter. Config sets the state of a conformance pack to CREATE_IN_PROGRESS and UPDATE_IN_PROGRESS until the conformance pack is created or updated. You cannot update a conformance pack while it is in this state.
Adds or updates an Config rule for your entire organization to evaluate if your Amazon Web Services resources comply with your desired configurations. For information on how many organization Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. Only a management account and a delegated administrator can create or update an organization Config rule. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. An organization can have up to 3 delegated administrators. This API enables organization service access through the EnableAWSServiceAccess action and creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigMultiAccountSetup in the management or delegated administrator account of your organization. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in the caller account. Config verifies the existence of role with GetRole action. To use this API with delegated administrator, register a delegated administrator by calling Amazon Web Services Organization register-delegated-administrator for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com. There are two types of rules: Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. You can use PutOrganizationConfigRule to create both Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of Config Managed Rules. If you are adding an Config managed rule, you must specify the rule's identifier for the RuleIdentifier key. Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create Config custom rules: with Lambda functions ( Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. Config custom rules created with Lambda are called Config Custom Lambda Rules and Config custom rules created with Guard are called Config Custom Policy Rules. If you are adding a new Config Custom Lambda rule, you first need to create an Lambda function in the management account or a delegated administrator that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. You also need to create an IAM role in the managed account that can be assumed by the Lambda function. When you use PutOrganizationConfigRule to add a Custom Lambda rule to Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that Lambda assigns to the function. Prerequisite: Ensure you call EnableAllFeatures API to enable all features in an organization. Make sure to specify one of either OrganizationCustomPolicyRuleMetadata for Custom Policy rules, OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata for Custom Lambda rules, or OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata for managed rules.
Adds or updates an Config rule for your entire organization to evaluate if your Amazon Web Services resources comply with your desired configurations. For information on how many organization Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. Only a management account and a delegated administrator can create or update an organization Config rule. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. An organization can have up to 3 delegated administrators. This API enables organization service access through the EnableAWSServiceAccess action and creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigMultiAccountSetup in the management or delegated administrator account of your organization. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in the caller account. Config verifies the existence of role with GetRole action. To use this API with delegated administrator, register a delegated administrator by calling Amazon Web Services Organization register-delegated-administrator for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com. There are two types of rules: Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. You can use PutOrganizationConfigRule to create both Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of Config Managed Rules. If you are adding an Config managed rule, you must specify the rule's identifier for the RuleIdentifier key. Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create Config custom rules: with Lambda functions ( Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. Config custom rules created with Lambda are called Config Custom Lambda Rules and Config custom rules created with Guard are called Config Custom Policy Rules. If you are adding a new Config Custom Lambda rule, you first need to create an Lambda function in the management account or a delegated administrator that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. You also need to create an IAM role in the managed account that can be assumed by the Lambda function. When you use PutOrganizationConfigRule to add a Custom Lambda rule to Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that Lambda assigns to the function. Prerequisite: Ensure you call EnableAllFeatures API to enable all features in an organization. Make sure to specify one of either OrganizationCustomPolicyRuleMetadata for Custom Policy rules, OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata for Custom Lambda rules, or OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata for managed rules.
Add or updates the evaluations for process checks. This API checks if the rule is a process check when the name of the Config rule is provided.
Add or updates the evaluations for process checks. This API checks if the rule is a process check when the name of the Config rule is provided.
The input for the PutDeliveryChannel action.
Creates or updates a conformance pack. A conformance pack is a collection of Config rules that can be easily deployed in an account and a region and across an organization. For information on how many conformance packs you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. When you use PutConformancePack to deploy conformance packs in your account, the operation can create Config rules and remediation actions without requiring config:PutConfigRule or config:PutRemediationConfigurations permissions in your account IAM policies. This API uses the AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms service-linked role in your account to create conformance pack resources. This service-linked role includes the permissions to create Config rules and remediation configurations, even if your account IAM policies explicitly deny these actions. This API creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms in your account. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in your account. You must specify only one of the follow parameters: TemplateS3Uri, TemplateBody or TemplateSSMDocumentDetails. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutConformancePack is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won't create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Creates or updates a conformance pack. A conformance pack is a collection of Config rules that can be easily deployed in an account and a region and across an organization. For information on how many conformance packs you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. When you use PutConformancePack to deploy conformance packs in your account, the operation can create Config rules and remediation actions without requiring config:PutConfigRule or config:PutRemediationConfigurations permissions in your account IAM policies. This API uses the AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms service-linked role in your account to create conformance pack resources. This service-linked role includes the permissions to create Config rules and remediation configurations, even if your account IAM policies explicitly deny these actions. This API creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigConforms in your account. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in your account. You must specify only one of the follow parameters: TemplateS3Uri, TemplateBody or TemplateSSMDocumentDetails. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutConformancePack is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won't create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
The input for the PutConfigurationRecorder action.
Creates and updates the configuration aggregator with the selected source accounts and regions. The source account can be individual account(s) or an organization. accountIds that are passed will be replaced with existing accounts. If you want to add additional accounts into the aggregator, call DescribeConfigurationAggregators to get the previous accounts and then append new ones. Config should be enabled in source accounts and regions you want to aggregate. If your source type is an organization, you must be signed in to the management account or a registered delegated administrator and all the features must be enabled in your organization. If the caller is a management account, Config calls EnableAwsServiceAccess API to enable integration between Config and Organizations. If the caller is a registered delegated administrator, Config calls ListDelegatedAdministrators API to verify whether the caller is a valid delegated administrator. To register a delegated administrator, see Register a Delegated Administrator in the Config developer guide. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutConfigurationAggregator is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Creates and updates the configuration aggregator with the selected source accounts and regions. The source account can be individual account(s) or an organization. accountIds that are passed will be replaced with existing accounts. If you want to add additional accounts into the aggregator, call DescribeConfigurationAggregators to get the previous accounts and then append new ones. Config should be enabled in source accounts and regions you want to aggregate. If your source type is an organization, you must be signed in to the management account or a registered delegated administrator and all the features must be enabled in your organization. If the caller is a management account, Config calls EnableAwsServiceAccess API to enable integration between Config and Organizations. If the caller is a registered delegated administrator, Config calls ListDelegatedAdministrators API to verify whether the caller is a valid delegated administrator. To register a delegated administrator, see Register a Delegated Administrator in the Config developer guide. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutConfigurationAggregator is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Adds or updates an Config rule to evaluate if your Amazon Web Services resources comply with your desired configurations. For information on how many Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide. There are two types of rules: Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. You can use PutConfigRule to create both Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of Config Managed Rules. If you are adding an Config managed rule, you must specify the rule's identifier for the SourceIdentifier key. Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create Config custom rules: with Lambda functions ( Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. Config custom rules created with Lambda are called Config Custom Lambda Rules and Config custom rules created with Guard are called Config Custom Policy Rules. If you are adding a new Config Custom Lambda rule, you first need to create an Lambda function that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. When you use PutConfigRule to add a Custom Lambda rule to Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that Lambda assigns to the function. You specify the ARN in the SourceIdentifier key. This key is part of the Source object, which is part of the ConfigRule object. For any new Config rule that you add, specify the ConfigRuleName in the ConfigRule object. Do not specify the ConfigRuleArn or the ConfigRuleId. These values are generated by Config for new rules. If you are updating a rule that you added previously, you can specify the rule by ConfigRuleName, ConfigRuleId, or ConfigRuleArn in the ConfigRule data type that you use in this request. For more information about developing and using Config rules, see Evaluating Resources with Config Rules in the Config Developer Guide. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutConfigRule is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Authorizes the aggregator account and region to collect data from the source account and region. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutAggregationAuthorization is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
Authorizes the aggregator account and region to collect data from the source account and region. Tags are added at creation and cannot be updated with this operation PutAggregationAuthorization is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different. Use TagResource and UntagResource to update tags after creation.
The specified Amazon S3 bucket does not exist.
There is no delivery channel available to record configurations.
You have reached the limit of the number of delivery channels you can create.
You have reached the limit of the number of configuration recorders you can create.
Failed to add the Config rule because the account already contains the maximum number of 1000 rules. Consider deleting any deactivated rules before you add new rules.
You have reached the limit of active custom resource types in your account. There is a limit of 100,000. Delete unused resources using DeleteResourceConfig .
List the tags for Config resource.
List the tags for Config resource.
Lists the stored queries for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. The default is 100.
Lists the stored queries for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region. The default is 100.
Returns a list of proactive resource evaluations.
Returns a list of proactive resource evaluations.
Returns a list of conformance pack compliance scores. A compliance score is the percentage of the number of compliant rule-resource combinations in a conformance pack compared to the number of total possible rule-resource combinations in the conformance pack. This metric provides you with a high-level view of the compliance state of your conformance packs. You can use it to identify, investigate, and understand the level of compliance in your conformance packs. Conformance packs with no evaluation results will have a compliance score of INSUFFICIENT_DATA.
Returns a list of conformance pack compliance scores. A compliance score is the percentage of the number of compliant rule-resource combinations in a conformance pack compared to the number of total possible rule-resource combinations in the conformance pack. This metric provides you with a high-level view of the compliance state of your conformance packs. You can use it to identify, investigate, and understand the level of compliance in your conformance packs. Conformance packs with no evaluation results will have a compliance score of INSUFFICIENT_DATA.
Returns a list of configuration recorders depending on the filters you specify.
Returns a list of configuration recorders depending on the filters you specify.
Accepts a resource type and returns a list of resource identifiers that are aggregated for a specific resource type across accounts and regions. A resource identifier includes the resource type, ID, (if available) the custom resource name, source account, and source region. You can narrow the results to include only resources that have specific resource IDs, or a resource name, or source account ID, or source region. For example, if the input consists of accountID 12345678910 and the region is us-east-1 for resource type AWS::EC2::Instance then the API returns all the EC2 instance identifiers of accountID 12345678910 and region us-east-1.
Accepts a resource type and returns a list of resource identifiers that are aggregated for a specific resource type across accounts and regions. A resource identifier includes the resource type, ID, (if available) the custom resource name, source account, and source region. You can narrow the results to include only resources that have specific resource IDs, or a resource name, or source account ID, or source region. For example, if the input consists of accountID 12345678910 and the region is us-east-1 for resource type AWS::EC2::Instance then the API returns all the EC2 instance identifiers of accountID 12345678910 and region us-east-1.
You cannot delete the delivery channel you specified because the customer managed configuration recorder is running.
The specified Amazon SNS topic does not exist.
The specified Amazon KMS Key ARN is not valid.
The specified Amazon S3 key prefix is not valid.
One of the following errors: You have provided a combination of parameter values that is not valid. For example: Setting the allSupported field of RecordingGroup to true, but providing a non-empty list for the resourceTypesfield of RecordingGroup. Setting the allSupported field of RecordingGroup to true, but also setting the useOnly field of RecordingStrategy to EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES. Every parameter is either null, false, or empty. You have reached the limit of the number of resource types you can provide for the recording group. You have provided resource types or a recording strategy that are not valid.
The specified delivery channel name is not valid.
The configuration recorder name is not valid. The prefix "AWSConfigurationRecorderFor" is reserved for service-linked configuration recorders.
Your Amazon S3 bucket policy does not allow Config to write to it.
Returns the details of a specific stored query.
Returns the details of a specific stored query.
Returns a summary of resource evaluation for the specified resource evaluation ID from the proactive rules that were run. The results indicate which evaluation context was used to evaluate the rules, which resource details were evaluated, the evaluation mode that was run, and whether the resource details comply with the configuration of the proactive rules. To see additional information about the evaluation result, such as which rule flagged a resource as NON_COMPLIANT, use the GetComplianceDetailsByResource API. For more information, see the Examples section.
Returns a summary of resource evaluation for the specified resource evaluation ID from the proactive rules that were run. The results indicate which evaluation context was used to evaluate the rules, which resource details were evaluated, the evaluation mode that was run, and whether the resource details comply with the configuration of the proactive rules. To see additional information about the evaluation result, such as which rule flagged a resource as NON_COMPLIANT, use the GetComplianceDetailsByResource API. For more information, see the Examples section.
The output for the GetResourceConfigHistory action.
The input for the GetResourceConfigHistory action.
Returns the policy definition containing the logic for your organization Config Custom Policy rule.
Returns the policy definition containing the logic for your organization Config Custom Policy rule.
Returns detailed status for each member account within an organization for a given organization conformance pack.
Returns detailed status for each member account within an organization for a given organization conformance pack.
Returns detailed status for each member account within an organization for a given organization Config rule.
Returns detailed status for each member account within an organization for a given organization Config rule.
Returns the resource types, the number of each resource type, and the total number of resources that Config is recording in this region for your Amazon Web Services account. Example Config is recording three resource types in the US East (Ohio) Region for your account: 25 EC2 instances, 20 IAM users, and 15 S3 buckets. You make a call to the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action and specify that you want all resource types. Config returns the following: The resource types (EC2 instances, IAM users, and S3 buckets). The number of each resource type (25, 20, and 15). The total number of all resources (60). The response is paginated. By default, Config lists 100 ResourceCount objects on each page. You can customize this number with the limit parameter. The response includes a nextToken string. To get the next page of results, run the request again and specify the string for the nextToken parameter. If you make a call to the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action, you might not immediately receive resource counts in the following situations: You are a new Config customer. You just enabled resource recording. It might take a few minutes for Config to record and count your resources. Wait a few minutes and then retry the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action.
Returns the resource types, the number of each resource type, and the total number of resources that Config is recording in this region for your Amazon Web Services account. Example Config is recording three resource types in the US East (Ohio) Region for your account: 25 EC2 instances, 20 IAM users, and 15 S3 buckets. You make a call to the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action and specify that you want all resource types. Config returns the following: The resource types (EC2 instances, IAM users, and S3 buckets). The number of each resource type (25, 20, and 15). The total number of all resources (60). The response is paginated. By default, Config lists 100 ResourceCount objects on each page. You can customize this number with the limit parameter. The response includes a nextToken string. To get the next page of results, run the request again and specify the string for the nextToken parameter. If you make a call to the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action, you might not immediately receive resource counts in the following situations: You are a new Config customer. You just enabled resource recording. It might take a few minutes for Config to record and count your resources. Wait a few minutes and then retry the GetDiscoveredResourceCounts action.
Returns the policy definition containing the logic for your Config Custom Policy rule.
Returns the policy definition containing the logic for your Config Custom Policy rule.
Returns compliance details for the conformance pack based on the cumulative compliance results of all the rules in that conformance pack.
Returns compliance details for the conformance pack based on the cumulative compliance results of all the rules in that conformance pack.
Returns compliance details of a conformance pack for all Amazon Web Services resources that are monitered by conformance pack.
Returns compliance details of a conformance pack for all Amazon Web Services resources that are monitered by conformance pack.
Returns configuration item that is aggregated for your specific resource in a specific source account and region. The API does not return results for deleted resources.
Returns configuration item that is aggregated for your specific resource in a specific source account and region. The API does not return results for deleted resources.
Returns the resource counts across accounts and regions that are present in your Config aggregator. You can request the resource counts by providing filters and GroupByKey. For example, if the input contains accountID 12345678910 and region us-east-1 in filters, the API returns the count of resources in account ID 12345678910 and region us-east-1. If the input contains ACCOUNT_ID as a GroupByKey, the API returns resource counts for all source accounts that are present in your aggregator.
Returns the resource counts across accounts and regions that are present in your Config aggregator. You can request the resource counts by providing filters and GroupByKey. For example, if the input contains accountID 12345678910 and region us-east-1 in filters, the API returns the count of resources in account ID 12345678910 and region us-east-1. If the input contains ACCOUNT_ID as a GroupByKey, the API returns resource counts for all source accounts that are present in your aggregator.
Returns the count of compliant and noncompliant conformance packs across all Amazon Web Services accounts and Amazon Web Services Regions in an aggregator. You can filter based on Amazon Web Services account ID or Amazon Web Services Region. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns the count of compliant and noncompliant conformance packs across all Amazon Web Services accounts and Amazon Web Services Regions in an aggregator. You can filter based on Amazon Web Services account ID or Amazon Web Services Region. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns the number of compliant and noncompliant rules for one or more accounts and regions in an aggregator. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns the number of compliant and noncompliant rules for one or more accounts and regions in an aggregator. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns the evaluation results for the specified Config rule for a specific resource in a rule. The results indicate which Amazon Web Services resources were evaluated by the rule, when each resource was last evaluated, and whether each resource complies with the rule. The results can return an empty result page. But if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns the evaluation results for the specified Config rule for a specific resource in a rule. The results indicate which Amazon Web Services resources were evaluated by the rule, when each resource was last evaluated, and whether each resource complies with the rule. The results can return an empty result page. But if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Removes all resource types specified in the ResourceTypes list from the RecordingGroup of configuration recorder and excludes these resource types when recording. For this operation, the configuration recorder must use a RecordingStrategy that is either INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES or EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES.
Removes all resource types specified in the ResourceTypes list from the RecordingGroup of configuration recorder and excludes these resource types when recording. For this operation, the configuration recorder must use a RecordingStrategy that is either INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES or EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES.
Returns the details of one or more retention configurations. If the retention configuration name is not specified, this operation returns the details for all the retention configurations for that account. Currently, Config supports only one retention configuration per region in your account.
Returns the details of one or more retention configurations. If the retention configuration name is not specified, this operation returns the details for all the retention configurations for that account. Currently, Config supports only one retention configuration per region in your account.
Provides a detailed view of a Remediation Execution for a set of resources including state, timestamps for when steps for the remediation execution occur, and any error messages for steps that have failed. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response.
Provides a detailed view of a Remediation Execution for a set of resources including state, timestamps for when steps for the remediation execution occur, and any error messages for steps that have failed. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response.
Returns the details of one or more remediation exceptions. A detailed view of a remediation exception for a set of resources that includes an explanation of an exception and the time when the exception will be deleted. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs executing a remediation action to a specific resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you request resources in batch. It is only applicable, when you request all resources.
Returns the details of one or more remediation exceptions. A detailed view of a remediation exception for a set of resources that includes an explanation of an exception and the time when the exception will be deleted. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs executing a remediation action to a specific resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you request resources in batch. It is only applicable, when you request all resources.
Returns the details of one or more remediation configurations.
Returns the details of one or more remediation configurations.
Returns a list of all pending aggregation requests.
Returns a list of all pending aggregation requests.
Returns a list of organization conformance packs. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization conformance packs names. They are only applicable, when you request all the organization conformance packs. For accounts within an organization If you deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in an organization administrator account, and then establish a delegated administrator and deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account, you won't be able to see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the organization administrator account from the delegated administrator account or see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account from organization administrator account. The DescribeOrganizationConfigRules and DescribeOrganizationConformancePacks APIs can only see and interact with the organization-related resource that were deployed from within the account calling those APIs.
Returns a list of organization conformance packs. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization conformance packs names. They are only applicable, when you request all the organization conformance packs. For accounts within an organization If you deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in an organization administrator account, and then establish a delegated administrator and deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account, you won't be able to see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the organization administrator account from the delegated administrator account or see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account from organization administrator account. The DescribeOrganizationConfigRules and DescribeOrganizationConformancePacks APIs can only see and interact with the organization-related resource that were deployed from within the account calling those APIs.
Provides organization conformance pack deployment status for an organization. The status is not considered successful until organization conformance pack is successfully deployed in all the member accounts with an exception of excluded accounts. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization conformance pack names. They are only applicable, when you request all the organization conformance packs.
Provides organization conformance pack deployment status for an organization. The status is not considered successful until organization conformance pack is successfully deployed in all the member accounts with an exception of excluded accounts. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization conformance pack names. They are only applicable, when you request all the organization conformance packs.
Returns a list of organization Config rules. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization Config rule names. It is only applicable, when you request all the organization Config rules. For accounts within an organization If you deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in an organization administrator account, and then establish a delegated administrator and deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account, you won't be able to see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the organization administrator account from the delegated administrator account or see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account from organization administrator account. The DescribeOrganizationConfigRules and DescribeOrganizationConformancePacks APIs can only see and interact with the organization-related resource that were deployed from within the account calling those APIs.
Returns a list of organization Config rules. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization Config rule names. It is only applicable, when you request all the organization Config rules. For accounts within an organization If you deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in an organization administrator account, and then establish a delegated administrator and deploy an organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account, you won't be able to see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the organization administrator account from the delegated administrator account or see the organizational rule or conformance pack in the delegated administrator account from organization administrator account. The DescribeOrganizationConfigRules and DescribeOrganizationConformancePacks APIs can only see and interact with the organization-related resource that were deployed from within the account calling those APIs.
Provides organization Config rule deployment status for an organization. The status is not considered successful until organization Config rule is successfully deployed in all the member accounts with an exception of excluded accounts. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization Config rule names. It is only applicable, when you request all the organization Config rules.
Provides organization Config rule deployment status for an organization. The status is not considered successful until organization Config rule is successfully deployed in all the member accounts with an exception of excluded accounts. When you specify the limit and the next token, you receive a paginated response. Limit and next token are not applicable if you specify organization Config rule names. It is only applicable, when you request all the organization Config rules.
The output for the DescribeDeliveryChannels action.
The input for the DescribeDeliveryChannels action.
The output for the DescribeDeliveryChannelStatus action.
The input for the DeliveryChannelStatus action.
Returns a list of one or more conformance packs.
Returns a list of one or more conformance packs.
Provides one or more conformance packs deployment status. If there are no conformance packs then you will see an empty result.
Provides one or more conformance packs deployment status. If there are no conformance packs then you will see an empty result.
Returns compliance details for each rule in that conformance pack. You must provide exact rule names.
Returns compliance details for each rule in that conformance pack. You must provide exact rule names.
The output for the DescribeConfigurationRecorders action.
The input for the DescribeConfigurationRecorders action.
The output for the DescribeConfigurationRecorderStatus action, in JSON format.
The input for the DescribeConfigurationRecorderStatus action.
Returns the details of one or more configuration aggregators. If the configuration aggregator is not specified, this operation returns the details for all the configuration aggregators associated with the account.
Returns the details of one or more configuration aggregators. If the configuration aggregator is not specified, this operation returns the details for all the configuration aggregators associated with the account.
Returns status information for sources within an aggregator. The status includes information about the last time Config verified authorization between the source account and an aggregator account. In case of a failure, the status contains the related error code or message.
Returns status information for sources within an aggregator. The status includes information about the last time Config verified authorization between the source account and an aggregator account. In case of a failure, the status contains the related error code or message.
Returns a list of authorizations granted to various aggregator accounts and regions.
Returns a list of authorizations granted to various aggregator accounts and regions.
Returns a list of the existing and deleted conformance packs and their associated compliance status with the count of compliant and noncompliant Config rules within each conformance pack. Also returns the total rule count which includes compliant rules, noncompliant rules, and rules that cannot be evaluated due to insufficient data. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns a list of the existing and deleted conformance packs and their associated compliance status with the count of compliant and noncompliant Config rules within each conformance pack. Also returns the total rule count which includes compliant rules, noncompliant rules, and rules that cannot be evaluated due to insufficient data. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns a list of compliant and noncompliant rules with the number of resources for compliant and noncompliant rules. Does not display rules that do not have compliance results. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
Returns a list of compliant and noncompliant rules with the number of resources for compliant and noncompliant rules. Does not display rules that do not have compliance results. The results can return an empty result page, but if you have a nextToken, the results are displayed on the next page.
The output for the DeliverConfigSnapshot action, in JSON format.
The input for the DeliverConfigSnapshot action.
Deletes the stored query for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region.
Deletes the stored query for a single Amazon Web Services account and a single Amazon Web Services Region.
Deletes an existing service-linked configuration recorder. This operation does not delete the configuration information that was previously recorded. You will be able to access the previously recorded information by using the GetResourceConfigHistory operation, but you will not be able to access this information in the Config console until you have created a new service-linked configuration recorder for the same service. The recording scope determines if you receive configuration items The recording scope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder and determines whether you receive configuration items (CIs) in the delivery channel. If the recording scope is internal, you will not receive CIs in the delivery channel.
Deletes an existing service-linked configuration recorder. This operation does not delete the configuration information that was previously recorded. You will be able to access the previously recorded information by using the GetResourceConfigHistory operation, but you will not be able to access this information in the Config console until you have created a new service-linked configuration recorder for the same service. The recording scope determines if you receive configuration items The recording scope is set by the service that is linked to the configuration recorder and determines whether you receive configuration items (CIs) in the delivery channel. If the recording scope is internal, you will not receive CIs in the delivery channel.
Deletes the retention configuration.
Records the configuration state for a custom resource that has been deleted. This API records a new ConfigurationItem with a ResourceDeleted status. You can retrieve the ConfigurationItems recorded for this resource in your Config History.
Deletes one or more remediation exceptions mentioned in the resource keys. Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs executing a remediation action to a specific resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared.
Deletes one or more remediation exceptions mentioned in the resource keys. Config generates a remediation exception when a problem occurs executing a remediation action to a specific resource. Remediation exceptions blocks auto-remediation until the exception is cleared.
Deletes the remediation configuration.
Deletes the remediation configuration.
Deletes pending authorization requests for a specified aggregator account in a specified region.
Deletes the specified organization conformance pack and all of the Config rules and remediation actions from all member accounts in that organization. Only a management account or a delegated administrator account can delete an organization conformance pack. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. Config sets the state of a conformance pack to DELETE_IN_PROGRESS until the deletion is complete. You cannot update a conformance pack while it is in this state. Recommendation: Consider excluding the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type from recording before deleting rules Deleting rules creates configuration items (CIs) for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance that can affect your costs for the configuration recorder. If you are deleting rules which evaluate a large number of resource types, this can lead to a spike in the number of CIs recorded. To avoid the associated costs, you can opt to disable recording for the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type before deleting rules, and re-enable recording after the rules have been deleted. However, since deleting rules is an asynchronous process, it might take an hour or more to complete. During the time when recording is disabled for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance, rule evaluations will not be recorded in the associated resource’s history.
Deletes the specified organization Config rule and all of its evaluation results from all member accounts in that organization. Only a management account and a delegated administrator account can delete an organization Config rule. When calling this API with a delegated administrator, you must ensure Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. Config sets the state of a rule to DELETE_IN_PROGRESS until the deletion is complete. You cannot update a rule while it is in this state. Recommendation: Consider excluding the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type from recording before deleting rules Deleting rules creates configuration items (CIs) for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance that can affect your costs for the configuration recorder. If you are deleting rules which evaluate a large number of resource types, this can lead to a spike in the number of CIs recorded. To avoid the associated costs, you can opt to disable recording for the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type before deleting rules, and re-enable recording after the rules have been deleted. However, since deleting rules is an asynchronous process, it might take an hour or more to complete. During the time when recording is disabled for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance, rule evaluations will not be recorded in the associated resource’s history.
The output when you delete the evaluation results for the specified Config rule.
The input for the DeleteDeliveryChannel action. The action accepts the following data, in JSON format.
Deletes the specified conformance pack and all the Config rules, remediation actions, and all evaluation results within that conformance pack. Config sets the conformance pack to DELETE_IN_PROGRESS until the deletion is complete. You cannot update a conformance pack while it is in this state. Recommendation: Consider excluding the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type from recording before deleting rules Deleting rules creates configuration items (CIs) for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance that can affect your costs for the configuration recorder. If you are deleting rules which evaluate a large number of resource types, this can lead to a spike in the number of CIs recorded. To avoid the associated costs, you can opt to disable recording for the AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance resource type before deleting rules, and re-enable recording after the rules have been deleted. However, since deleting rules is an asynchronous process, it might take an hour or more to complete. During the time when recording is disabled for AWS::Config::ResourceCompliance, rule evaluations will not be recorded in the associated resource’s history.
The request object for the DeleteConfigurationRecorder operation.
Deletes the specified configuration aggregator and the aggregated data associated with the aggregator.
Deletes the authorization granted to the specified configuration aggregator account in a specified region.
Returns the BaseConfigurationItem for one or more requested resources. The operation also returns a list of resources that are not processed in the current request. If there are no unprocessed resources, the operation returns an empty unprocessedResourceKeys list. The API does not return results for deleted resources. The API does not return any tags for the requested resources. This information is filtered out of the supplementaryConfiguration section of the API response.
Returns the BaseConfigurationItem for one or more requested resources. The operation also returns a list of resources that are not processed in the current request. If there are no unprocessed resources, the operation returns an empty unprocessedResourceKeys list. The API does not return results for deleted resources. The API does not return any tags for the requested resources. This information is filtered out of the supplementaryConfiguration section of the API response.
Returns the current configuration items for resources that are present in your Config aggregator. The operation also returns a list of resources that are not processed in the current request. If there are no unprocessed resources, the operation returns an empty unprocessedResourceIdentifiers list. The API does not return results for deleted resources. The API does not return tags and relationships.
Returns the current configuration items for resources that are present in your Config aggregator. The operation also returns a list of resources that are not processed in the current request. If there are no unprocessed resources, the operation returns an empty unprocessedResourceIdentifiers list. The API does not return results for deleted resources. The API does not return tags and relationships.
Adds all resource types specified in the ResourceTypes list to the RecordingGroup of specified configuration recorder and includes those resource types when recording. For this operation, the specified configuration recorder must use a RecordingStrategy that is either INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES or EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES.
Adds all resource types specified in the ResourceTypes list to the RecordingGroup of specified configuration recorder and includes those resource types when recording. For this operation, the specified configuration recorder must use a RecordingStrategy that is either INCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES or EXCLUSION_BY_RESOURCE_TYPES.