@Stability(value=Experimental)
See: Description
| Interface | Description |
|---|---|
| AppProps |
(experimental) Initialization props for apps.
|
| ArnComponents | |
| AssetOptions |
(experimental) Asset hash options.
|
| AssetStagingProps |
(experimental) Initialization properties for `AssetStaging`.
|
| BootstraplessSynthesizerProps |
(experimental) Construction properties of
BootstraplessSynthesizer. |
| BundlingOptions |
(experimental) Bundling options.
|
| CfnAutoScalingReplacingUpdate |
(experimental) Specifies whether an Auto Scaling group and the instances it contains are replaced during an update.
|
| CfnAutoScalingRollingUpdate |
(experimental) To specify how AWS CloudFormation handles rolling updates for an Auto Scaling group, use the AutoScalingRollingUpdate policy.
|
| CfnAutoScalingScheduledAction |
(experimental) With scheduled actions, the group size properties of an Auto Scaling group can change at any time.
|
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenAdditionalOptions |
(experimental) Additional options for the blue/green deployment.
|
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenApplication |
(experimental) The application actually being deployed.
|
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenApplicationTarget |
(experimental) Type of the
CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenApplication.target property. |
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenEcsAttributes |
(experimental) The attributes of the ECS Service being deployed.
|
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenHookProps |
(experimental) Construction properties of
CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenHook. |
| CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenLifecycleEventHooks |
(experimental) Lifecycle events for blue-green deployments.
|
| CfnCodeDeployLambdaAliasUpdate |
(experimental) To perform an AWS CodeDeploy deployment when the version changes on an AWS::Lambda::Alias resource, use the CodeDeployLambdaAliasUpdate update policy.
|
| CfnConditionProps | |
| CfnCreationPolicy |
(experimental) Associate the CreationPolicy attribute with a resource to prevent its status from reaching create complete until AWS CloudFormation receives a specified number of success signals or the timeout period is exceeded.
|
| CfnCustomResourceProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::CustomResource`.
|
| CfnDynamicReferenceProps |
(experimental) Properties for a Dynamic Reference.
|
| CfnHookProps |
(experimental) Construction properties of
CfnHook. |
| CfnJsonProps | |
| CfnMacroProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::Macro`.
|
| CfnMappingProps | |
| CfnModuleDefaultVersionProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::ModuleDefaultVersion`.
|
| CfnModuleVersionProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::ModuleVersion`.
|
| CfnOutputProps | |
| CfnParameterProps | |
| CfnResourceAutoScalingCreationPolicy |
(experimental) For an Auto Scaling group replacement update, specifies how many instances must signal success for the update to succeed.
|
| CfnResourceDefaultVersionProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::ResourceDefaultVersion`.
|
| CfnResourceProps | |
| CfnResourceSignal |
(experimental) When AWS CloudFormation creates the associated resource, configures the number of required success signals and the length of time that AWS CloudFormation waits for those signals.
|
| CfnResourceVersion.LoggingConfigProperty | |
| CfnResourceVersionProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::ResourceVersion`.
|
| CfnRuleAssertion |
(experimental) A rule assertion.
|
| CfnRuleProps |
(experimental) A rule can include a RuleCondition property and must include an Assertions property.
|
| CfnStackProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::Stack`.
|
| CfnStackSet.AutoDeploymentProperty | |
| CfnStackSet.DeploymentTargetsProperty | |
| CfnStackSet.OperationPreferencesProperty | |
| CfnStackSet.ParameterProperty | |
| CfnStackSet.StackInstancesProperty | |
| CfnStackSetProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::StackSet`.
|
| CfnTag | |
| CfnTrafficRoute |
(experimental) A traffic route, representing where the traffic is being directed to.
|
| CfnTrafficRouting |
(experimental) Type of the
CfnCodeDeployBlueGreenEcsAttributes.trafficRouting property. |
| CfnTrafficRoutingConfig |
(experimental) Traffic routing configuration settings.
|
| CfnTrafficRoutingTimeBasedCanary |
(experimental) The traffic routing configuration if
CfnTrafficRoutingConfig.type is CfnTrafficRoutingType.TIME_BASED_CANARY. |
| CfnTrafficRoutingTimeBasedLinear |
(experimental) The traffic routing configuration if
CfnTrafficRoutingConfig.type is CfnTrafficRoutingType.TIME_BASED_LINEAR. |
| CfnUpdatePolicy |
(experimental) Use the UpdatePolicy attribute to specify how AWS CloudFormation handles updates to the AWS::AutoScaling::AutoScalingGroup resource.
|
| CfnWaitConditionProps |
Properties for defining a `AWS::CloudFormation::WaitCondition`.
|
| CopyOptions |
(experimental) Options applied when copying directories.
|
| CustomResourceProps |
(experimental) Properties to provide a Lambda-backed custom resource.
|
| CustomResourceProviderProps |
(experimental) Initialization properties for `CustomResourceProvider`.
|
| DefaultStackSynthesizerProps |
(experimental) Configuration properties for DefaultStackSynthesizer.
|
| DockerBuildOptions |
(experimental) Docker build options.
|
| DockerImageAssetLocation |
(experimental) The location of the published docker image.
|
| DockerImageAssetSource | |
| DockerRunOptions |
(experimental) Docker run options.
|
| DockerVolume |
(experimental) A Docker volume.
|
| EncodingOptions |
(experimental) Properties to string encodings.
|
| Environment |
(experimental) The deployment environment for a stack.
|
| ExportValueOptions |
(experimental) Options for the `stack.exportValue()` method.
|
| FileAssetLocation |
(experimental) The location of the published file asset.
|
| FileAssetSource |
(experimental) Represents the source for a file asset.
|
| FileCopyOptions |
(experimental) Options applied when copying directories into the staging location.
|
| FileFingerprintOptions |
(experimental) Options related to calculating source hash.
|
| FingerprintOptions |
(experimental) Options related to calculating source hash.
|
| GetContextKeyOptions | |
| GetContextKeyResult | |
| GetContextValueOptions | |
| GetContextValueResult | |
| IAnyProducer |
(experimental) Interface for lazy untyped value producers.
|
| IAnyProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IAnyProducer. |
| IAspect |
(experimental) Represents an Aspect.
|
| IAspect.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IAspect. |
| IAsset |
(experimental) Common interface for all assets.
|
| IAsset.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IAsset. |
| ICfnConditionExpression |
(experimental) Represents a CloudFormation element that can be used within a Condition.
|
| ICfnConditionExpression.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ICfnConditionExpression. |
| ICfnResourceOptions | |
| ICfnResourceOptions.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ICfnResourceOptions. |
| IFragmentConcatenator |
(experimental) Function used to concatenate symbols in the target document language.
|
| IFragmentConcatenator.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IFragmentConcatenator. |
| IInspectable |
(experimental) Interface for examining a construct and exposing metadata.
|
| IInspectable.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IInspectable. |
| IListProducer |
(experimental) Interface for lazy list producers.
|
| IListProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IListProducer. |
| ILocalBundling |
(experimental) Local bundling.
|
| ILocalBundling.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ILocalBundling. |
| IntrinsicProps |
(experimental) Customization properties for an Intrinsic token.
|
| INumberProducer |
(experimental) Interface for lazy number producers.
|
| INumberProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
INumberProducer. |
| IPostProcessor |
(experimental) A Token that can post-process the complete resolved value, after resolve() has recursed over it.
|
| IPostProcessor.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IPostProcessor. |
| IResolvable |
(experimental) Interface for values that can be resolvable later.
|
| IResolvable.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IResolvable. |
| IResolveContext |
(experimental) Current resolution context for tokens.
|
| IResolveContext.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IResolveContext. |
| IResource |
(experimental) Interface for the Resource construct.
|
| IResource.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IResource. |
| IStableAnyProducer |
(experimental) Interface for (stable) lazy untyped value producers.
|
| IStableAnyProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStableAnyProducer. |
| IStableListProducer |
(experimental) Interface for (stable) lazy list producers.
|
| IStableListProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStableListProducer. |
| IStableNumberProducer |
(experimental) Interface for (stable) lazy number producers.
|
| IStableNumberProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStableNumberProducer. |
| IStableStringProducer |
(experimental) Interface for (stable) lazy string producers.
|
| IStableStringProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStableStringProducer. |
| IStackSynthesizer |
(experimental) Encodes information how a certain Stack should be deployed.
|
| IStackSynthesizer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStackSynthesizer. |
| IStringProducer |
(experimental) Interface for lazy string producers.
|
| IStringProducer.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
IStringProducer. |
| ISynthesisSession |
(experimental) Represents a single session of synthesis.
|
| ISynthesisSession.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ISynthesisSession. |
| ITaggable |
(experimental) Interface to implement tags.
|
| ITaggable.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ITaggable. |
| ITemplateOptions |
(experimental) CloudFormation template options for a stack.
|
| ITemplateOptions.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ITemplateOptions. |
| ITokenMapper |
(experimental) Interface to apply operation to tokens in a string.
|
| ITokenMapper.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ITokenMapper. |
| ITokenResolver |
(experimental) How to resolve tokens.
|
| ITokenResolver.Jsii$Default |
Internal default implementation for
ITokenResolver. |
| LazyAnyValueOptions |
(experimental) Options for creating lazy untyped tokens.
|
| LazyListValueOptions |
(experimental) Options for creating a lazy list token.
|
| LazyStringValueOptions |
(experimental) Options for creating a lazy string token.
|
| NestedStackProps |
(experimental) Initialization props for the `NestedStack` construct.
|
| RemovalPolicyOptions | |
| ResolveChangeContextOptions |
(experimental) Options that can be changed while doing a recursive resolve.
|
| ResolveOptions |
(experimental) Options to the resolve() operation.
|
| ResourceEnvironment |
(experimental) Represents the environment a given resource lives in.
|
| ResourceProps |
(experimental) Construction properties for
Resource. |
| ReverseOptions |
(experimental) Options for the 'reverse()' operation.
|
| SecretsManagerSecretOptions |
(experimental) Options for referencing a secret value from Secrets Manager.
|
| SizeConversionOptions |
(experimental) Options for how to convert time to a different unit.
|
| StackProps | |
| StageProps |
(experimental) Initialization props for a stage.
|
| StageSynthesisOptions |
(experimental) Options for assembly synthesis.
|
| SynthesizeStackArtifactOptions |
(experimental) Stack artifact options.
|
| TagManagerOptions |
(experimental) Options to configure TagManager behavior.
|
| TagProps |
(experimental) Properties for a tag.
|
| TimeConversionOptions |
(experimental) Options for how to convert time to a different unit.
|
| Enum | Description |
|---|---|
| AssetHashType |
(experimental) The type of asset hash.
|
| BundlingOutput |
(experimental) The type of output that a bundling operation is producing.
|
| CfnCapabilities |
(experimental) Capabilities that affect whether CloudFormation is allowed to change IAM resources.
|
| CfnDeletionPolicy |
(experimental) With the DeletionPolicy attribute you can preserve or (in some cases) backup a resource when its stack is deleted.
|
| CfnDynamicReferenceService |
(experimental) The service to retrieve the dynamic reference from.
|
| CfnTrafficRoutingType |
(experimental) The possible types of traffic shifting for the blue-green deployment configuration.
|
| CustomResourceProviderRuntime |
(experimental) The lambda runtime to use for the resource provider.
|
| DockerVolumeConsistency |
(experimental) Supported Docker volume consistency types.
|
| FileAssetPackaging |
(experimental) Packaging modes for file assets.
|
| IgnoreMode |
(experimental) Determines the ignore behavior to use.
|
| RemovalPolicy |
(experimental) Possible values for a resource's Removal Policy.
|
| SizeRoundingBehavior |
(experimental) Rounding behaviour when converting between units of `Size`.
|
| SymlinkFollowMode |
(experimental) Determines how symlinks are followed.
|
| TagType |
The AWS CDK construct library provides APIs to define your CDK application and add CDK constructs to the application.
When upgrading from CDK 1.x, remove all dependencies to individual CDK packages from your dependencies file and follow the rest of the sections.
To use this package, you need to declare this package and the constructs package as
dependencies.
According to the kind of project you are developing:
devDependencies
and peerDependencies sections.dependencies section only.
You can use a classic import to get access to each service namespaces:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 import software.amazon.awscdk.Stack; import software.amazon.awscdk.App; import software.amazon.awscdk.aws_s3; App app = new App(); Stack stack = new Stack(app, "TestStack"); new Bucket(stack, "TestBucket");
Alternatively, you can use "barrel" imports:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 import software.amazon.awscdk.App; import software.amazon.awscdk.Stack; import aws.cdk.lib.aws.s3.Bucket; App app = new App(); Stack stack = new Stack(app, "TestStack"); new Bucket(stack, "TestBucket");
A Stack is the smallest physical unit of deployment, and maps directly onto
a CloudFormation Stack. You define a Stack by defining a subclass of Stack
-- let's call it MyStack -- and instantiating the constructs that make up
your application in MyStack's constructor. You then instantiate this stack
one or more times to define different instances of your application. For example,
you can instantiate it once using few and cheap EC2 instances for testing,
and once again using more and bigger EC2 instances for production.
When your application grows, you may decide that it makes more sense to split it
out across multiple Stack classes. This can happen for a number of reasons:
As soon as your conceptual application starts to encompass multiple stacks, it is convenient to wrap them in another construct that represents your logical application. You can then treat that new unit the same way you used to be able to treat a single stack: by instantiating it multiple times for different instances of your application.
You can define a custom subclass of Construct, holding one or more
Stacks, to represent a single logical instance of your application.
As a final note: Stacks are not a unit of reuse. They describe physical
deployment layouts, and as such are best left to application builders to
organize their deployments with. If you want to vend a reusable construct,
define it as a subclasses of Construct: the consumers of your construct
will decide where to place it in their own stacks.
Nested stacks are stacks created as part of other stacks. You create a nested stack within another stack by using the NestedStack construct.
As your infrastructure grows, common patterns can emerge in which you declare the same components in multiple templates. You can separate out these common components and create dedicated templates for them. Then use the resource in your template to reference other templates, creating nested stacks.
For example, assume that you have a load balancer configuration that you use for most of your stacks. Instead of copying and pasting the same configurations into your templates, you can create a dedicated template for the load balancer. Then, you just use the resource to reference that template from within other templates.
The following example will define a single top-level stack that contains two nested stacks: each one with a single Amazon S3 bucket:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
public class MyNestedStack extends NestedStack {
public MyNestedStack(Construct scope, String id) {
this(scope, id, null);
}
public MyNestedStack(Construct scope, String id, NestedStackProps props) {
super(scope, id, props);
new Bucket(this, "NestedBucket");
}
}
public class MyParentStack extends Stack {
public MyParentStack(Construct scope, String id) {
this(scope, id, null);
}
public MyParentStack(Construct scope, String id, StackProps props) {
super(scope, id, props);
new MyNestedStack(this, "Nested1");
new MyNestedStack(this, "Nested2");
}
}
Resources references across nested/parent boundaries (even with multiple levels of nesting) will be wired by the AWS CDK
through CloudFormation parameters and outputs. When a resource from a parent stack is referenced by a nested stack,
a CloudFormation parameter will automatically be added to the nested stack and assigned from the parent; when a resource
from a nested stack is referenced by a parent stack, a CloudFormation output will be automatically be added to the
nested stack and referenced using Fn::GetAtt "Outputs.Xxx" from the parent.
Nested stacks also support the use of Docker image and file assets.
You can access resources in a different stack, as long as they are in the
same account and AWS Region. The following example defines the stack stack1,
which defines an Amazon S3 bucket. Then it defines a second stack, stack2,
which takes the bucket from stack1 as a constructor property.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Map<String, String> prod = Map.of("account", "123456789012", "region", "us-east-1");
Object stack1 = StackThatProvidesABucket.Builder.create(app, "Stack1").env(prod).build();
// stack2 will take a property { bucket: IBucket }
Object stack2 = StackThatExpectsABucket.Builder.create(app, "Stack2")
.bucket(stack1.getBucket())
.env(prod)
.build();
If the AWS CDK determines that the resource is in the same account and Region, but in a different stack, it automatically synthesizes AWS CloudFormation Exports in the producing stack and an Fn::ImportValue in the consuming stack to transfer that information from one stack to the other.
The automatic references created by CDK when you use resources across stacks are convenient, but may block your deployments if you want to remove the resources that are referenced in this way. You will see an error like:
Export Stack1:ExportsOutputFnGetAtt-****** cannot be deleted as it is in use by Stack1
Let's say there is a Bucket in the stack1, and the stack2 references its
bucket.bucketName. You now want to remove the bucket and run into the error above.
It's not safe to remove stack1.bucket while stack2 is still using it, so
unblocking yourself from this is a two-step process. This is how it works:
DEPLOYMENT 1: break the relationship
stack2 no longer references bucket.bucketName (maybe the consumer
stack now uses its own bucket, or it writes to an AWS DynamoDB table, or maybe you just
remove the Lambda Function altogether).stack1 class, call this.exportValue(this.bucket.bucketName). This
will make sure the CloudFormation Export continues to exist while the relationship
between the two stacks is being broken.stack2, but it's safe to deploy both).DEPLOYMENT 2: remove the resource
bucket resource from stack1.exportValue() call as well.stack1 will be changed -- the bucket will be deleted).
To make specifications of time intervals unambiguous, a single class called
Duration is used throughout the AWS Construct Library by all constructs
that that take a time interval as a parameter (be it for a timeout, a
rate, or something else).
An instance of Duration is constructed by using one of the static factory methods on it:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Duration.seconds(300);// 5 minutes
Duration.minutes(5);// 5 minutes
Duration.hours(1);// 1 hour
Duration.days(7);// 7 days
Duration.parse("PT5M");
To make specification of digital storage quantities unambiguous, a class called
Size is available.
An instance of Size is initialized through one of its static factory methods:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 Size.kibibytes(200);// 200 KiB Size.mebibytes(5);// 5 MiB Size.gibibytes(40);// 40 GiB Size.tebibytes(200);// 200 TiB Size.pebibytes(3);
Instances of Size created with one of the units can be converted into others.
By default, conversion to a higher unit will fail if the conversion does not produce
a whole number. This can be overridden by unsetting integral property.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 Size.mebibytes(2).toKibibytes();// yields 2048 Size.kibibytes(2050).toMebibytes(new SizeConversionOptions().rounding(SizeRoundingBehavior.getFLOOR()));
To help avoid accidental storage of secrets as plain text, we use the SecretValue type to
represent secrets. Any construct that takes a value that should be a secret (such as
a password or an access key) will take a parameter of type SecretValue.
The best practice is to store secrets in AWS Secrets Manager and reference them using SecretValue.secretsManager:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
SecretValue secret = SecretValue.secretsManager("secretId", new SecretsManagerSecretOptions()
.jsonField("password")// optional: key of a JSON field to retrieve (defaults to all content),
.versionId("id")// optional: id of the version (default AWSCURRENT)
.versionStage("stage"));
Using AWS Secrets Manager is the recommended way to reference secrets in a CDK app.
SecretValue also supports the following secret sources:
SecretValue.plainText(secret): stores the secret as plain text in your app and the resulting template (not recommended).SecretValue.ssmSecure(param, version): refers to a secret stored as a SecureString in the SSM Parameter Store.SecretValue.cfnParameter(param): refers to a secret passed through a CloudFormation parameter (must have NoEcho: true).SecretValue.cfnDynamicReference(dynref): refers to a secret described by a CloudFormation dynamic reference (used by ssmSecure and secretsManager).
Sometimes you will need to put together or pick apart Amazon Resource Names
(ARNs). The functions stack.formatArn() and stack.parseArn() exist for
this purpose.
formatArn() can be used to build an ARN from components. It will automatically
use the region and account of the stack you're calling it on:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
// Builds "arn:<PARTITION>:lambda:<REGION>:<ACCOUNT>:function:MyFunction"
stack.formatArn(new ArnComponents()
.service("lambda")
.resource("function")
.sep(":")
.resourceName("MyFunction"));
parseArn() can be used to get a single component from an ARN. parseArn()
will correctly deal with both literal ARNs and deploy-time values (tokens),
but in case of a deploy-time value be aware that the result will be another
deploy-time value which cannot be inspected in the CDK application.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 // Extracts the function name out of an AWS Lambda Function ARN ArnComponents arnComponents = stack.parseArn(arn, ":"); String functionName = arnComponents.getResourceName();
Note that depending on the service, the resource separator can be either
: or /, and the resource name can be either the 6th or 7th
component in the ARN. When using these functions, you will need to know
the format of the ARN you are dealing with.
For an exhaustive list of ARN formats used in AWS, see AWS ARNs and Namespaces in the AWS General Reference.
Sometimes AWS resources depend on other resources, and the creation of one resource must be completed before the next one can be started.
In general, CloudFormation will correctly infer the dependency relationship between resources based on the property values that are used. In the cases where it doesn't, the AWS Construct Library will add the dependency relationship for you.
If you need to add an ordering dependency that is not automatically inferred,
you do so by adding a dependency relationship using
constructA.node.addDependency(constructB). This will add a dependency
relationship between all resources in the scope of constructA and all
resources in the scope of constructB.
If you want a single object to represent a set of constructs that are not
necessarily in the same scope, you can use a ConcreteDependable. The
following creates a single object that represents a dependency on two
constructs, constructB and constructC:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 // Declare the dependable object Object bAndC = new ConcreteDependable(); bAndC.add(constructB); bAndC.add(constructC); // Take the dependency constructA.node.addDependency(bAndC);
Two different stack instances can have a dependency on one another. This
happens when an resource from one stack is referenced in another stack. In
that case, CDK records the cross-stack referencing of resources,
automatically produces the right CloudFormation primitives, and adds a
dependency between the two stacks. You can also manually add a dependency
between two stacks by using the stackA.addDependency(stackB) method.
A stack dependency has the following implications:
stackA is using resources from
stackB, the reverse is not possible anymore.
stackA depends on stackB, running cdk deploy stackA will also
automatically deploy stackB.stackB's deployment will be performed before stackA's deployment.
Custom Resources are CloudFormation resources that are implemented by arbitrary user code. They can do arbitrary lookups or modifications during a CloudFormation deployment.
To define a custom resource, use the CustomResource construct:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
new CustomResource(this, "MyMagicalResource", new CustomResourceProps()
.resourceType("Custom::MyCustomResource")// must start with 'Custom::'
// the resource properties
.properties(Map.of(
"Property1", "foo",
"Property2", "bar"))
// the ARN of the provider (SNS/Lambda) which handles
// CREATE, UPDATE or DELETE events for this resource type
// see next section for details
.serviceToken("ARN"));
Custom resources are backed by a custom resource provider which can be implemented in one of the following ways. The following table compares the various provider types (ordered from low-level to high-level):
| Provider | Compute Type | Error Handling | Submit to CloudFormation | Max Timeout | Language | Footprint | |----------------------------------------------------------------------|:------------:|:--------------:|:------------------------:|:---------------:|:--------:|:---------:| | sns.Topic | Self-managed | Manual | Manual | Unlimited | Any | Depends | | lambda.Function | AWS Lambda | Manual | Manual | 15min | Any | Small | | core.CustomResourceProvider | Lambda | Auto | Auto | 15min | Node.js | Small | | custom-resources.Provider | Lambda | Auto | Auto | Unlimited Async | Any | Large |
Legend:
A NOTE ABOUT SINGLETONS
When defining resources for a custom resource provider, you will likely want to define them as a stack singleton so that only a single instance of the provider is created in your stack and which is used by all custom resources of that type.
Here is a basic pattern for defining stack singletons in the CDK. The following examples ensures that only a single SNS topic is defined:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
public Topic getOrCreate(Construct scope) {
Stack stack = Stack.of(scope);
String uniqueid = "GloballyUniqueIdForSingleton";return (Topic)stack.node.tryFindChild(uniqueid) ?? new Topic(stack, uniqueid)
}
Every time a resource event occurs (CREATE/UPDATE/DELETE), an SNS notification is sent to the SNS topic. Users must process these notifications (e.g. through a fleet of worker hosts) and submit success/failure responses to the CloudFormation service.
Set serviceToken to topic.topicArn in order to use this provider:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Topic topic = new Topic(this, "MyProvider");
new CustomResource(this, "MyResource", new CustomResourceProps()
.serviceToken(topic.getTopicArn()));
An AWS lambda function is called directly by CloudFormation for all resource events. The handler must take care of explicitly submitting a success/failure response to the CloudFormation service and handle various error cases.
Set serviceToken to lambda.functionArn to use this provider:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Function fn = new Function(this, "MyProvider", functionProps);
new CustomResource(this, "MyResource", new CustomResourceProps()
.serviceToken(fn.getFunctionArn()));
core.CustomResourceProvider class
The class @aws-cdk/core.CustomResourceProvider offers a basic low-level
framework designed to implement simple and slim custom resource providers. It
currently only supports Node.js-based user handlers, and it does not have
support for asynchronous waiting (handler cannot exceed the 15min lambda
timeout).
The provider has a built-in singleton method which uses the resource type as a stack-unique identifier and returns the service token:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
String serviceToken = CustomResourceProvider.getOrCreate(this, "Custom::MyCustomResourceType", new CustomResourceProviderProps()
.codeDirectory(String.format("%s/my-handler", __dirname))
.runtime(CustomResourceProviderRuntime.getNODEJS_12_X())
.description("Lambda function created by the custom resource provider"));
new CustomResource(this, "MyResource", new CustomResourceProps()
.resourceType("Custom::MyCustomResourceType")
.serviceToken(serviceToken));
The directory (my-handler in the above example) must include an index.js file. It cannot import
external dependencies or files outside this directory. It must export an async
function named handler. This function accepts the CloudFormation resource
event object and returns an object with the following structure:
exports.handler = async function(event) {
const id = event.PhysicalResourceId; // only for "Update" and "Delete"
const props = event.ResourceProperties;
const oldProps = event.OldResourceProperties; // only for "Update"s
switch (event.RequestType) {
case "Create":
// ...
case "Update":
// ...
// if an error is thrown, a FAILED response will be submitted to CFN
throw new Error('Failed!');
case "Delete":
// ...
}
return {
// (optional) the value resolved from `resource.ref`
// defaults to "event.PhysicalResourceId" or "event.RequestId"
PhysicalResourceId: "REF",
// (optional) calling `resource.getAtt("Att1")` on the custom resource in the CDK app
// will return the value "BAR".
Data: {
Att1: "BAR",
Att2: "BAZ"
},
// (optional) user-visible message
Reason: "User-visible message",
// (optional) hides values from the console
NoEcho: true
};
}
Here is an complete example of a custom resource that summarizes two numbers:
sum-handler/index.js:
exports.handler = async (e) => {
return {
Data: {
Result: e.ResourceProperties.lhs + e.ResourceProperties.rhs,
},
};
};
sum.ts:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
import software.amazon.awscdk.core.Construct;
import software.amazon.awscdk.core.CustomResource;
import software.amazon.awscdk.core.CustomResourceProvider;
import software.amazon.awscdk.core.CustomResourceProviderRuntime;
import software.amazon.awscdk.core.Token;
public class SumProps {
private Number lhs;
public Number getLhs() {
return this.lhs;
}
public SumProps lhs(Number lhs) {
this.lhs = lhs;
return this;
}
private Number rhs;
public Number getRhs() {
return this.rhs;
}
public SumProps rhs(Number rhs) {
this.rhs = rhs;
return this;
}
}
public class Sum extends Construct {
public final Number result;
public Sum(Construct scope, String id, SumProps props) {
super(scope, id);
String resourceType = "Custom::Sum";
String serviceToken = CustomResourceProvider.getOrCreate(this, resourceType, new CustomResourceProviderProps()
.codeDirectory(String.format("%s/sum-handler", __dirname))
.runtime(CustomResourceProviderRuntime.getNODEJS_12_X()));
CustomResource resource = new CustomResource(this, "Resource", new CustomResourceProps()
.resourceType(resourceType)
.serviceToken(serviceToken)
.properties(Map.of(
"lhs", props.getLhs(),
"rhs", props.getRhs())));
this.result = Token.asNumber(resource.getAtt("Result"));
}
}
Usage will look like this:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 Sum sum = new Sum(this, "MySum", new SumProps().lhs(40).rhs(2)); new CfnOutput(this, "Result", new CfnOutputProps().value(Token.asString(sum.getResult())));
To access the ARN of the provider's AWS Lambda function role, use the getOrCreateProvider()
built-in singleton method:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
CustomResourceProvider provider = CustomResourceProvider.getOrCreateProvider(this, "Custom::MyCustomResourceType", new CustomResourceProviderProps()
.codeDirectory(String.format("%s/my-handler", __dirname))
.runtime(CustomResourceProviderRuntime.getNODEJS_12_X()));
String roleArn = provider.getRoleArn();
This role ARN can then be used in resource-based IAM policies.
The @aws-cdk/custom-resources module includes an advanced framework for
implementing custom resource providers.
Handlers are implemented as AWS Lambda functions, which means that they can be
implemented in any Lambda-supported runtime. Furthermore, this provider has an
asynchronous mode, which means that users can provide an isComplete lambda
function which is called periodically until the operation is complete. This
allows implementing providers that can take up to two hours to stabilize.
Set serviceToken to provider.serviceToken to use this type of provider:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Provider provider = new Provider(this, "MyProvider", new ProviderProps()
.onEventHandler(onEventHandler)
.isCompleteHandler(isCompleteHandler));
new CustomResource(this, "MyResource", new CustomResourceProps()
.serviceToken(provider.getServiceToken()));
See the documentation for more details.
A CDK stack synthesizes to an AWS CloudFormation Template. This section explains how this module allows users to access low-level CloudFormation features when needed.
CloudFormation stack outputs and exports are created using
the CfnOutput class:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
new CfnOutput(this, "OutputName", new CfnOutputProps()
.value(myBucket.getBucketName())
.description("The name of an S3 bucket")// Optional
.exportName("TheAwesomeBucket"));
CloudFormation templates support the use of Parameters to customize a template. They enable CloudFormation users to input custom values to a template each time a stack is created or updated. While the CDK design philosophy favors using build-time parameterization, users may need to use CloudFormation in a number of cases (for example, when migrating an existing stack to the AWS CDK).
Template parameters can be added to a stack by using the CfnParameter class:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
new CfnParameter(this, "MyParameter", new CfnParameterProps()
.type("Number")
.default(1337));
The value of parameters can then be obtained using one of the value methods.
As parameters are only resolved at deployment time, the values obtained are
placeholder tokens for the real value (Token.isUnresolved() would return true
for those):
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 CfnParameter param = new CfnParameter(this, "ParameterName", new CfnParameterProps()); // If the parameter is a String param.getValueAsString(); // If the parameter is a Number param.getValueAsNumber(); // If the parameter is a List param.getValueAsList();
CloudFormation supports a number of pseudo parameters,
which resolve to useful values at deployment time. CloudFormation pseudo
parameters can be obtained from static members of the Aws class.
It is generally recommended to access pseudo parameters from the scope's stack
instead, which guarantees the values produced are qualifying the designated
stack, which is essential in cases where resources are shared cross-stack:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 // "this" is the current construct Stack stack = Stack.of(this); stack.getAccount();// Returns the AWS::AccountId for this stack (or the literal value if known) stack.getRegion();// Returns the AWS::Region for this stack (or the literal value if known) stack.getPartition();
CloudFormation resources can also specify resource
attributes. The CfnResource class allows
accessing those through the cfnOptions property:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
CfnBucket rawBucket = new CfnBucket(this, "Bucket", new CfnBucketProps());
// -or-
CfnBucket rawBucketAlt = (CfnBucket)myBucket.node.getDefaultChild();
// then
rawBucket.cfnOptions.getCondition() = new CfnCondition(this, "EnableBucket", new CfnConditionProps());
rawBucket.cfnOptions.getMetadata() = Map.of(
"metadataKey", "MetadataValue");
Resource dependencies (the DependsOn attribute) is modified using the
cfnResource.addDependsOn method:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 CfnResource resourceA = new CfnResource(this, "ResourceA", resourceProps); CfnResource resourceB = new CfnResource(this, "ResourceB", resourceProps); resourceB.addDependsOn(resourceA);
CloudFormation supports intrinsic functions. These functions
can be accessed from the Fn class, which provides type-safe methods for each
intrinsic function as well as condition expressions:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
// To use Fn::Base64
Fn.base64("SGVsbG8gQ0RLIQo=");
// To compose condition expressions:
CfnParameter environmentParameter = new CfnParameter(this, "Environment");
Fn.conditionAnd(Fn.conditionEquals("Production", environmentParameter), Fn.conditionNot(Fn.conditionEquals("us-east-1", Aws.getREGION())));
When working with deploy-time values (those for which Token.isUnresolved
returns true), idiomatic conditionals from the programming language cannot be
used (the value will not be known until deployment time). When conditional logic
needs to be expressed with un-resolved values, it is necessary to use
CloudFormation conditions by means of the CfnCondition class:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
CfnParameter environmentParameter = new CfnParameter(this, "Environment");
CfnCondition isProd = new CfnCondition(this, "IsProduction", new CfnConditionProps()
.expression(Fn.conditionEquals("Production", environmentParameter)));
// Configuration value that is a different string based on IsProduction
String stage = Fn.conditionIf(isProd.logicalId, 'Beta', 'Prod').toString();
// Make Bucket creation condition to IsProduction by accessing
// and overriding the CloudFormation resource
Bucket bucket = new Bucket(this, "Bucket");
CfnBucket cfnBucket = (CfnBucket)myBucket.node.getDefaultChild();
cfnBucket.cfnOptions.getCondition() = isProd;
CloudFormation mappings are created and queried using the
CfnMappings class:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
CfnMapping regionTable = new CfnMapping(this, "RegionTable", new CfnMappingProps()
.mapping(Map.of(
"regionName", Map.of(
"us-east-1", "US East (N. Virginia)",
"us-east-2", "US East (Ohio)"))));
regionTable.findInMap("regionName", Aws.getREGION());
This will yield the following template:
Mappings:
RegionTable:
regionName:
us-east-1: US East (N. Virginia)
us-east-2: US East (Ohio)
CloudFormation supports dynamically resolving values
for SSM parameters (including secure strings) and Secrets Manager. Encoding such
references is done using the CfnDynamicReference class:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826 new CfnDynamicReference(CfnDynamicReferenceService.getSECRETS_MANAGER(), "secret-id:secret-string:json-key:version-stage:version-id");
CloudFormation templates support a number of options, including which Macros or
Transforms to use when deploying the stack. Those can be
configured using the stack.templateOptions property:
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Stack stack = new Stack(app, "StackName");
stack.templateOptions.getDescription() = "This will appear in the AWS console";
stack.templateOptions.getTransforms() = asList("AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31");
stack.templateOptions.getMetadata() = Map.of(
"metadataKey", "MetadataValue");
The CfnResource class allows emitting arbitrary entries in the
Resources section of the CloudFormation template.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
new CfnResource(this, "ResourceId", new CfnResourceProps()
.type("AWS::S3::Bucket")
.properties(Map.of(
"BucketName", "bucket-name")));
As for any other resource, the logical ID in the CloudFormation template will be generated by the AWS CDK, but the type and properties will be copied verbatim in the synthesized template.
When migrating a CloudFormation stack to the AWS CDK, it can be useful to
include fragments of an existing template verbatim in the synthesized template.
This can be achieved using the CfnInclude class.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
new CfnInclude(this, "ID", new CfnIncludeProps()
.template(Map.of(
"Resources", Map.of(
"Bucket", Map.of(
"Type", "AWS::S3::Bucket",
"Properties", Map.of(
"BucketName", "my-shiny-bucket"))))));
You can prevent a stack from being accidentally deleted by enabling termination
protection on the stack. If a user attempts to delete a stack with termination
protection enabled, the deletion fails and the stack--including its status--remains
unchanged. Enabling or disabling termination protection on a stack sets it for any
nested stacks belonging to that stack as well. You can enable termination protection
on a stack by setting the terminationProtection prop to true.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
Stack stack = new Stack(app, "StackName", new StackProps()
.terminationProtection(true));
By default, termination protection is disabled.
CfnJson allows you to postpone the resolution of a JSON blob from
deployment-time. This is useful in cases where the CloudFormation JSON template
cannot express a certain value.
A common example is to use CfnJson in order to render a JSON map which needs
to use intrinsic functions in keys. Since JSON map keys must be strings, it is
impossible to use intrinsics in keys and CfnJson can help.
The following example defines an IAM role which can only be assumed by principals that are tagged with a specific tag.
// Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
CfnParameter tagParam = new CfnParameter(this, "TagName");
CfnJson stringEquals = new CfnJson(this, "ConditionJson", new CfnJsonProps()
.value(Map.of(
String.format("aws:PrincipalTag/%s", tagParam.getValueAsString()), true)));
IPrincipal principal = new iam.AccountRootPrincipal().withConditions(Map.of(
"StringEquals", stringEquals));
new Role(this, "MyRole", new RoleProps().assumedBy(principal));
Explanation: since in this example we pass the tag name through a parameter, it
can only be resolved during deployment. The resolved value can be represented in
the template through a { "Ref": "TagName" }. However, since we want to use
this value inside a aws:PrincipalTag/TAG-NAME
IAM operator, we need it in the key of a StringEquals condition. JSON keys
must be strings, so to circumvent this limitation, we use CfnJson
to "delay" the rendition of this template section to deploy-time. This means
that the value of StringEquals in the template will be { "Fn::GetAtt": [ "ConditionJson", "Value" ] }, and will only "expand" to the operator we synthesized during deployment.
When deploying to AWS CloudFormation, it needs to keep in check the amount of resources being added inside a Stack. Currently it's possible to check the limits in the AWS CloudFormation quotas page.
It's possible to synthesize the project with more Resources than the allowed (or even reduce the number of Resources).
Set the context key @aws-cdk/core:stackResourceLimit with the proper value, being 0 for disable the limit of resources.
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