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AWS SDK for Java 1.x API Reference - 1.12.793

We announced the upcoming end-of-support for AWS SDK for Java (v1). We recommend that you migrate to AWS SDK for Java v2. For dates, additional details, and information on how to migrate, please refer to the linked announcement.
com.amazonaws.services.oam

Interface AWSOAM

  • All Known Subinterfaces:
    AWSOAMAsync
    All Known Implementing Classes:
    AbstractAWSOAM, AbstractAWSOAMAsync, AWSOAMAsyncClient, AWSOAMClient


    @Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator")
    public interface AWSOAM
    Interface for accessing CloudWatch Observability Access Manager.

    Note: Do not directly implement this interface, new methods are added to it regularly. Extend from AbstractAWSOAM instead.

    Use Amazon CloudWatch Observability Access Manager to create and manage links between source accounts and monitoring accounts by using CloudWatch cross-account observability. With CloudWatch cross-account observability, you can monitor and troubleshoot applications that span multiple accounts within a Region. Seamlessly search, visualize, and analyze your metrics, logs, traces, and Application Insights applications in any of the linked accounts without account boundaries.

    Set up one or more Amazon Web Services accounts as monitoring accounts and link them with multiple source accounts. A monitoring account is a central Amazon Web Services account that can view and interact with observability data generated from source accounts. A source account is an individual Amazon Web Services account that generates observability data for the resources that reside in it. Source accounts share their observability data with the monitoring account. The shared observability data can include metrics in Amazon CloudWatch, logs in Amazon CloudWatch Logs, traces in X-Ray, and applications in Amazon CloudWatch Application Insights.

    • Method Detail

      • createLink

        CreateLinkResult createLink(CreateLinkRequest createLinkRequest)

        Creates a link between a source account and a sink that you have created in a monitoring account. After the link is created, data is sent from the source account to the monitoring account. When you create a link, you can optionally specify filters that specify which metric namespaces and which log groups are shared from the source account to the monitoring account.

        Before you create a link, you must create a sink in the monitoring account and create a sink policy in that account. The sink policy must permit the source account to link to it. You can grant permission to source accounts by granting permission to an entire organization or to individual accounts.

        For more information, see CreateSink and PutSinkPolicy.

        Each monitoring account can be linked to as many as 100,000 source accounts.

        Each source account can be linked to as many as five monitoring accounts.

        Parameters:
        createLinkRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the CreateLink operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        InternalServiceException - Unexpected error while processing the request. Retry the request.
        ConflictException - A resource was in an inconsistent state during an update or a deletion.
        MissingRequiredParameterException - A required parameter is missing from the request.
        ServiceQuotaExceededException - The request would cause a service quota to be exceeded.
        InvalidParameterException - A parameter is specified incorrectly.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • createSink

        CreateSinkResult createSink(CreateSinkRequest createSinkRequest)

        Use this to create a sink in the current account, so that it can be used as a monitoring account in CloudWatch cross-account observability. A sink is a resource that represents an attachment point in a monitoring account. Source accounts can link to the sink to send observability data.

        After you create a sink, you must create a sink policy that allows source accounts to attach to it. For more information, see PutSinkPolicy.

        Each account can contain one sink per Region. If you delete a sink, you can then create a new one in that Region.

        Parameters:
        createSinkRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the CreateSink operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        InternalServiceException - Unexpected error while processing the request. Retry the request.
        ConflictException - A resource was in an inconsistent state during an update or a deletion.
        MissingRequiredParameterException - A required parameter is missing from the request.
        ServiceQuotaExceededException - The request would cause a service quota to be exceeded.
        InvalidParameterException - A parameter is specified incorrectly.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • putSinkPolicy

        PutSinkPolicyResult putSinkPolicy(PutSinkPolicyRequest putSinkPolicyRequest)

        Creates or updates the resource policy that grants permissions to source accounts to link to the monitoring account sink. When you create a sink policy, you can grant permissions to all accounts in an organization or to individual accounts.

        You can also use a sink policy to limit the types of data that is shared. The three types that you can allow or deny are:

        • Metrics - Specify with AWS::CloudWatch::Metric

        • Log groups - Specify with AWS::Logs::LogGroup

        • Traces - Specify with AWS::XRay::Trace

        • Application Insights - Applications - Specify with AWS::ApplicationInsights::Application

        See the examples in this section to see how to specify permitted source accounts and data types.

        Parameters:
        putSinkPolicyRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the PutSinkPolicy operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        InternalServiceException - Unexpected error while processing the request. Retry the request.
        MissingRequiredParameterException - A required parameter is missing from the request.
        InvalidParameterException - A parameter is specified incorrectly.
        ResourceNotFoundException - The request references a resource that does not exist.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • tagResource

        TagResourceResult tagResource(TagResourceRequest tagResourceRequest)

        Assigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified resource. Both sinks and links can be tagged.

        Tags can help you organize and categorize your resources. You can also use them to scope user permissions by granting a user permission to access or change only resources with certain tag values.

        Tags don't have any semantic meaning to Amazon Web Services and are interpreted strictly as strings of characters.

        You can use the TagResource action with a resource that already has tags. If you specify a new tag key for the alarm, this tag is appended to the list of tags associated with the alarm. If you specify a tag key that is already associated with the alarm, the new tag value that you specify replaces the previous value for that tag.

        You can associate as many as 50 tags with a resource.

        Unlike tagging permissions in other Amazon Web Services services, to tag or untag links and sinks you must have the oam:ResourceTag permission. The iam:ResourceTag permission does not allow you to tag and untag links and sinks.

        Parameters:
        tagResourceRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the TagResource operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        ValidationException - The value of a parameter in the request caused an error.
        TooManyTagsException - A resource can have no more than 50 tags.
        ResourceNotFoundException - The request references a resource that does not exist.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • untagResource

        UntagResourceResult untagResource(UntagResourceRequest untagResourceRequest)

        Removes one or more tags from the specified resource.

        Unlike tagging permissions in other Amazon Web Services services, to tag or untag links and sinks you must have the oam:ResourceTag permission. The iam:TagResource permission does not allow you to tag and untag links and sinks.

        Parameters:
        untagResourceRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the UntagResource operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        ValidationException - The value of a parameter in the request caused an error.
        ResourceNotFoundException - The request references a resource that does not exist.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • updateLink

        UpdateLinkResult updateLink(UpdateLinkRequest updateLinkRequest)

        Use this operation to change what types of data are shared from a source account to its linked monitoring account sink. You can't change the sink or change the monitoring account with this operation.

        When you update a link, you can optionally specify filters that specify which metric namespaces and which log groups are shared from the source account to the monitoring account.

        To update the list of tags associated with the sink, use TagResource.

        Parameters:
        updateLinkRequest -
        Returns:
        Result of the UpdateLink operation returned by the service.
        Throws:
        InternalServiceException - Unexpected error while processing the request. Retry the request.
        MissingRequiredParameterException - A required parameter is missing from the request.
        InvalidParameterException - A parameter is specified incorrectly.
        ResourceNotFoundException - The request references a resource that does not exist.
        See Also:
        AWS API Documentation
      • shutdown

        void shutdown()
        Shuts down this client object, releasing any resources that might be held open. This is an optional method, and callers are not expected to call it, but can if they want to explicitly release any open resources. Once a client has been shutdown, it should not be used to make any more requests.
      • getCachedResponseMetadata

        ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
        Returns additional metadata for a previously executed successful request, typically used for debugging issues where a service isn't acting as expected. This data isn't considered part of the result data returned by an operation, so it's available through this separate, diagnostic interface.

        Response metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you need to access this extra diagnostic information for an executed request, you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after executing a request.

        Parameters:
        request - The originally executed request.
        Returns:
        The response metadata for the specified request, or null if none is available.
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