CfnTaskDefinition
- class aws_cdk.aws_ecs.CfnTaskDefinition(scope, id, *, container_definitions=None, cpu=None, ephemeral_storage=None, execution_role_arn=None, family=None, inference_accelerators=None, ipc_mode=None, memory=None, network_mode=None, pid_mode=None, placement_constraints=None, proxy_configuration=None, requires_compatibilities=None, runtime_platform=None, tags=None, task_role_arn=None, volumes=None)
Bases:
CfnResource
A CloudFormation
AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition
.The details of a task definition which describes the container and volume definitions of an Amazon Elastic Container Service task. You can specify which Docker images to use, the required resources, and other configurations related to launching the task definition through an Amazon ECS service or task.
- CloudformationResource:
AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition
- Link:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/aws-resource-ecs-taskdefinition.html
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs cfn_task_definition = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition(self, "MyCfnTaskDefinition", container_definitions=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDefinitionProperty( image="image", name="name", # the properties below are optional command=["command"], cpu=123, depends_on=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDependencyProperty( condition="condition", container_name="containerName" )], disable_networking=False, dns_search_domains=["dnsSearchDomains"], dns_servers=["dnsServers"], docker_labels={ "docker_labels_key": "dockerLabels" }, docker_security_options=["dockerSecurityOptions"], entry_point=["entryPoint"], environment=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty( name="name", value="value" )], environment_files=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EnvironmentFileProperty( type="type", value="value" )], essential=False, extra_hosts=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostEntryProperty( hostname="hostname", ip_address="ipAddress" )], firelens_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.FirelensConfigurationProperty( options={ "options_key": "options" }, type="type" ), health_check=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HealthCheckProperty( command=["command"], interval=123, retries=123, start_period=123, timeout=123 ), hostname="hostname", interactive=False, links=["links"], linux_parameters=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LinuxParametersProperty( capabilities=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KernelCapabilitiesProperty( add=["add"], drop=["drop"] ), devices=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DeviceProperty( container_path="containerPath", host_path="hostPath", permissions=["permissions"] )], init_process_enabled=False, max_swap=123, shared_memory_size=123, swappiness=123, tmpfs=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TmpfsProperty( size=123, # the properties below are optional container_path="containerPath", mount_options=["mountOptions"] )] ), log_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LogConfigurationProperty( log_driver="logDriver", # the properties below are optional options={ "options_key": "options" }, secret_options=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )] ), memory=123, memory_reservation=123, mount_points=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.MountPointProperty( container_path="containerPath", read_only=False, source_volume="sourceVolume" )], port_mappings=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.PortMappingProperty( app_protocol="appProtocol", container_port=123, container_port_range="containerPortRange", host_port=123, name="name", protocol="protocol" )], privileged=False, pseudo_terminal=False, readonly_root_filesystem=False, repository_credentials=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.RepositoryCredentialsProperty( credentials_parameter="credentialsParameter" ), resource_requirements=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ResourceRequirementProperty( type="type", value="value" )], secrets=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )], start_timeout=123, stop_timeout=123, system_controls=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SystemControlProperty( namespace="namespace", value="value" )], ulimits=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.UlimitProperty( hard_limit=123, name="name", soft_limit=123 )], user="user", volumes_from=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeFromProperty( read_only=False, source_container="sourceContainer" )], working_directory="workingDirectory" )], cpu="cpu", ephemeral_storage=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EphemeralStorageProperty( size_in_gi_b=123 ), execution_role_arn="executionRoleArn", family="family", inference_accelerators=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.InferenceAcceleratorProperty( device_name="deviceName", device_type="deviceType" )], ipc_mode="ipcMode", memory="memory", network_mode="networkMode", pid_mode="pidMode", placement_constraints=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TaskDefinitionPlacementConstraintProperty( type="type", # the properties below are optional expression="expression" )], proxy_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ProxyConfigurationProperty( container_name="containerName", # the properties below are optional proxy_configuration_properties=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty( name="name", value="value" )], type="type" ), requires_compatibilities=["requiresCompatibilities"], runtime_platform=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.RuntimePlatformProperty( cpu_architecture="cpuArchitecture", operating_system_family="operatingSystemFamily" ), tags=[CfnTag( key="key", value="value" )], task_role_arn="taskRoleArn", volumes=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeProperty( docker_volume_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty( autoprovision=False, driver="driver", driver_opts={ "driver_opts_key": "driverOpts" }, labels={ "labels_key": "labels" }, scope="scope" ), efs_volume_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty( filesystem_id="filesystemId", # the properties below are optional authorization_config=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.AuthorizationConfigProperty( access_point_id="accessPointId", iam="iam" ), root_directory="rootDirectory", transit_encryption="transitEncryption", transit_encryption_port=123 ), host=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostVolumePropertiesProperty( source_path="sourcePath" ), name="name" )] )
Create a new
AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition
.- Parameters:
scope (
Construct
) –scope in which this resource is defined.
id (
str
) –scoped id of the resource.
container_definitions (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[ContainerDefinitionProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
]],None
]) – A list of container definitions in JSON format that describe the different containers that make up your task. For more information about container definition parameters and defaults, see Amazon ECS Task Definitions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .cpu (
Optional
[str
]) – The number ofcpu
units used by the task. If you use the EC2 launch type, this field is optional. Any value can be used. If you use the Fargate launch type, this field is required. You must use one of the following values. The value that you choose determines your range of valid values for thememory
parameter. The CPU units cannot be less than 1 vCPU when you use Windows containers on Fargate. - 256 (.25 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 512 (0.5 GB), 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB) - 512 (.5 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB) - 1024 (1 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB), 5120 (5 GB), 6144 (6 GB), 7168 (7 GB), 8192 (8 GB) - 2048 (2 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 4096 (4 GB) and 16384 (16 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - 4096 (4 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 8192 (8 GB) and 30720 (30 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - 8192 (8 vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 16 GB and 60 GB in 4 GB increments This option requires Linux platform1.4.0
or later. - 16384 (16vCPU) - Availablememory
values: 32GB and 120 GB in 8 GB increments This option requires Linux platform1.4.0
or later.ephemeral_storage (
Union
[IResolvable
,EphemeralStorageProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – The ephemeral storage settings to use for tasks run with the task definition.execution_role_arn (
Optional
[str
]) – The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the task execution role that grants the Amazon ECS container agent permission to make AWS API calls on your behalf. The task execution IAM role is required depending on the requirements of your task. For more information, see Amazon ECS task execution IAM role in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .family (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of a family that this task definition is registered to. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed. A family groups multiple versions of a task definition. Amazon ECS gives the first task definition that you registered to a family a revision number of 1. Amazon ECS gives sequential revision numbers to each task definition that you add. .. epigraph:: To use revision numbers when you update a task definition, specify this property. If you don’t specify a value, AWS CloudFormation generates a new task definition each time that you update it.inference_accelerators (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,InferenceAcceleratorProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) – The Elastic Inference accelerators to use for the containers in the task.ipc_mode (
Optional
[str
]) – The IPC resource namespace to use for the containers in the task. The valid values arehost
,task
, ornone
. Ifhost
is specified, then all containers within the tasks that specified thehost
IPC mode on the same container instance share the same IPC resources with the host Amazon EC2 instance. Iftask
is specified, all containers within the specified task share the same IPC resources. Ifnone
is specified, then IPC resources within the containers of a task are private and not shared with other containers in a task or on the container instance. If no value is specified, then the IPC resource namespace sharing depends on the Docker daemon setting on the container instance. For more information, see IPC settings in the Docker run reference . If thehost
IPC mode is used, be aware that there is a heightened risk of undesired IPC namespace expose. For more information, see Docker security . If you are setting namespaced kernel parameters usingsystemControls
for the containers in the task, the following will apply to your IPC resource namespace. For more information, see System Controls in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . - For tasks that use thehost
IPC mode, IPC namespace relatedsystemControls
are not supported. - For tasks that use thetask
IPC mode, IPC namespace relatedsystemControls
will apply to all containers within a task. .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .memory (
Optional
[str
]) – The amount (in MiB) of memory used by the task. If your tasks runs on Amazon EC2 instances, you must specify either a task-level memory value or a container-level memory value. This field is optional and any value can be used. If a task-level memory value is specified, the container-level memory value is optional. For more information regarding container-level memory and memory reservation, see ContainerDefinition . If your tasks runs on AWS Fargate , this field is required. You must use one of the following values. The value you choose determines your range of valid values for thecpu
parameter. - 512 (0.5 GB), 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB) - Availablecpu
values: 256 (.25 vCPU) - 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB) - Availablecpu
values: 512 (.5 vCPU) - 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB), 5120 (5 GB), 6144 (6 GB), 7168 (7 GB), 8192 (8 GB) - Availablecpu
values: 1024 (1 vCPU) - Between 4096 (4 GB) and 16384 (16 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - Availablecpu
values: 2048 (2 vCPU) - Between 8192 (8 GB) and 30720 (30 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - Availablecpu
values: 4096 (4 vCPU) - Between 16 GB and 60 GB in 4 GB increments - Availablecpu
values: 8192 (8 vCPU) This option requires Linux platform1.4.0
or later. - Between 32GB and 120 GB in 8 GB increments - Availablecpu
values: 16384 (16 vCPU) This option requires Linux platform1.4.0
or later.network_mode (
Optional
[str
]) – The Docker networking mode to use for the containers in the task. The valid values arenone
,bridge
,awsvpc
, andhost
. If no network mode is specified, the default isbridge
. For Amazon ECS tasks on Fargate, theawsvpc
network mode is required. For Amazon ECS tasks on Amazon EC2 Linux instances, any network mode can be used. For Amazon ECS tasks on Amazon EC2 Windows instances,<default>
orawsvpc
can be used. If the network mode is set tonone
, you cannot specify port mappings in your container definitions, and the tasks containers do not have external connectivity. Thehost
andawsvpc
network modes offer the highest networking performance for containers because they use the EC2 network stack instead of the virtualized network stack provided by thebridge
mode. With thehost
andawsvpc
network modes, exposed container ports are mapped directly to the corresponding host port (for thehost
network mode) or the attached elastic network interface port (for theawsvpc
network mode), so you cannot take advantage of dynamic host port mappings. .. epigraph:: When using thehost
network mode, you should not run containers using the root user (UID 0). It is considered best practice to use a non-root user. If the network mode isawsvpc
, the task is allocated an elastic network interface, and you must specify aNetworkConfiguration
value when you create a service or run a task with the task definition. For more information, see Task Networking in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If the network mode ishost
, you cannot run multiple instantiations of the same task on a single container instance when port mappings are used. For more information, see Network settings in the Docker run reference .pid_mode (
Optional
[str
]) –The process namespace to use for the containers in the task. The valid values are
host
ortask
. Ifhost
is specified, then all containers within the tasks that specified thehost
PID mode on the same container instance share the same process namespace with the host Amazon EC2 instance. Iftask
is specified, all containers within the specified task share the same process namespace. If no value is specified, the default is a private namespace. For more information, see PID settings in the Docker run reference . If thehost
PID mode is used, be aware that there is a heightened risk of undesired process namespace expose. For more information, see Docker security . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .placement_constraints (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,TaskDefinitionPlacementConstraintProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) – An array of placement constraint objects to use for tasks. .. epigraph:: This parameter isn’t supported for tasks run on AWS Fargate .proxy_configuration (
Union
[ProxyConfigurationProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
,None
]) – The configuration details for the App Mesh proxy. Your Amazon ECS container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent and at least version 1.26.0-1 of theecs-init
package to use a proxy configuration. If your container instances are launched from the Amazon ECS optimized AMI version20190301
or later, they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .requires_compatibilities (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) – The task launch types the task definition was validated against. For more information, see Amazon ECS launch types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .runtime_platform (
Union
[IResolvable
,RuntimePlatformProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – The operating system that your tasks definitions run on. A platform family is specified only for tasks using the Fargate launch type. When you specify a task definition in a service, this value must match theruntimePlatform
value of the service.tags (
Optional
[Sequence
[Union
[CfnTag
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]]]) – The metadata that you apply to the task definition to help you categorize and organize them. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both of them. The following basic restrictions apply to tags: - Maximum number of tags per resource - 50 - For each resource, each tag key must be unique, and each tag key can have only one value. - Maximum key length - 128 Unicode characters in UTF-8 - Maximum value length - 256 Unicode characters in UTF-8 - If your tagging schema is used across multiple services and resources, remember that other services may have restrictions on allowed characters. Generally allowed characters are: letters, numbers, and spaces representable in UTF-8, and the following characters: + - = . _ : / @. - Tag keys and values are case-sensitive. - Do not useaws:
,AWS:
, or any upper or lowercase combination of such as a prefix for either keys or values as it is reserved for AWS use. You cannot edit or delete tag keys or values with this prefix. Tags with this prefix do not count against your tags per resource limit.task_role_arn (
Optional
[str
]) – The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the AWS Identity and Access Management role that grants containers in the task permission to call AWS APIs on your behalf. For more information, see Amazon ECS Task Role in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . IAM roles for tasks on Windows require that the-EnableTaskIAMRole
option is set when you launch the Amazon ECS-optimized Windows AMI. Your containers must also run some configuration code to use the feature. For more information, see Windows IAM roles for tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .volumes (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,VolumeProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) – The list of data volume definitions for the task. For more information, see Using data volumes in tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:: Thehost
andsourcePath
parameters aren’t supported for tasks run on AWS Fargate .
Methods
- add_deletion_override(path)
Syntactic sugar for
addOverride(path, undefined)
.- Parameters:
path (
str
) – The path of the value to delete.- Return type:
None
- add_depends_on(target)
Indicates that this resource depends on another resource and cannot be provisioned unless the other resource has been successfully provisioned.
This can be used for resources across stacks (or nested stack) boundaries and the dependency will automatically be transferred to the relevant scope.
- Parameters:
target (
CfnResource
)- Return type:
None
- add_metadata(key, value)
Add a value to the CloudFormation Resource Metadata.
- Parameters:
key (
str
)value (
Any
)
- See:
- Return type:
None
Note that this is a different set of metadata from CDK node metadata; this metadata ends up in the stack template under the resource, whereas CDK node metadata ends up in the Cloud Assembly.
- add_override(path, value)
Adds an override to the synthesized CloudFormation resource.
To add a property override, either use
addPropertyOverride
or prefixpath
with “Properties.” (i.e.Properties.TopicName
).If the override is nested, separate each nested level using a dot (.) in the path parameter. If there is an array as part of the nesting, specify the index in the path.
To include a literal
.
in the property name, prefix with a\
. In most programming languages you will need to write this as"\\."
because the\
itself will need to be escaped.For example:
cfn_resource.add_override("Properties.GlobalSecondaryIndexes.0.Projection.NonKeyAttributes", ["myattribute"]) cfn_resource.add_override("Properties.GlobalSecondaryIndexes.1.ProjectionType", "INCLUDE")
would add the overrides Example:
"Properties": { "GlobalSecondaryIndexes": [ { "Projection": { "NonKeyAttributes": [ "myattribute" ] ... } ... }, { "ProjectionType": "INCLUDE" ... }, ] ... }
The
value
argument toaddOverride
will not be processed or translated in any way. Pass raw JSON values in here with the correct capitalization for CloudFormation. If you pass CDK classes or structs, they will be rendered with lowercased key names, and CloudFormation will reject the template.- Parameters:
path (
str
) –The path of the property, you can use dot notation to override values in complex types. Any intermdediate keys will be created as needed.
value (
Any
) –The value. Could be primitive or complex.
- Return type:
None
- add_property_deletion_override(property_path)
Adds an override that deletes the value of a property from the resource definition.
- Parameters:
property_path (
str
) – The path to the property.- Return type:
None
- add_property_override(property_path, value)
Adds an override to a resource property.
Syntactic sugar for
addOverride("Properties.<...>", value)
.- Parameters:
property_path (
str
) – The path of the property.value (
Any
) – The value.
- Return type:
None
- apply_removal_policy(policy=None, *, apply_to_update_replace_policy=None, default=None)
Sets the deletion policy of the resource based on the removal policy specified.
The Removal Policy controls what happens to this resource when it stops being managed by CloudFormation, either because you’ve removed it from the CDK application or because you’ve made a change that requires the resource to be replaced.
The resource can be deleted (
RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
), or left in your AWS account for data recovery and cleanup later (RemovalPolicy.RETAIN
).- Parameters:
policy (
Optional
[RemovalPolicy
])apply_to_update_replace_policy (
Optional
[bool
]) – Apply the same deletion policy to the resource’s “UpdateReplacePolicy”. Default: truedefault (
Optional
[RemovalPolicy
]) – The default policy to apply in case the removal policy is not defined. Default: - Default value is resource specific. To determine the default value for a resoure, please consult that specific resource’s documentation.
- Return type:
None
- get_att(attribute_name)
Returns a token for an runtime attribute of this resource.
Ideally, use generated attribute accessors (e.g.
resource.arn
), but this can be used for future compatibility in case there is no generated attribute.- Parameters:
attribute_name (
str
) – The name of the attribute.- Return type:
- get_metadata(key)
Retrieve a value value from the CloudFormation Resource Metadata.
- Parameters:
key (
str
)- See:
- Return type:
Any
Note that this is a different set of metadata from CDK node metadata; this metadata ends up in the stack template under the resource, whereas CDK node metadata ends up in the Cloud Assembly.
- inspect(inspector)
Examines the CloudFormation resource and discloses attributes.
- Parameters:
inspector (
TreeInspector
) –tree inspector to collect and process attributes.
- Return type:
None
- override_logical_id(new_logical_id)
Overrides the auto-generated logical ID with a specific ID.
- Parameters:
new_logical_id (
str
) – The new logical ID to use for this stack element.- Return type:
None
- to_string()
Returns a string representation of this construct.
- Return type:
str
- Returns:
a string representation of this resource
Attributes
- CFN_RESOURCE_TYPE_NAME = 'AWS::ECS::TaskDefinition'
- attr_task_definition_arn
TaskDefinitionArn
- Type:
cloudformationAttribute
- cfn_options
Options for this resource, such as condition, update policy etc.
- cfn_resource_type
AWS resource type.
- container_definitions
A list of container definitions in JSON format that describe the different containers that make up your task.
For more information about container definition parameters and defaults, see Amazon ECS Task Definitions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- cpu
The number of
cpu
units used by the task.If you use the EC2 launch type, this field is optional. Any value can be used. If you use the Fargate launch type, this field is required. You must use one of the following values. The value that you choose determines your range of valid values for the
memory
parameter.The CPU units cannot be less than 1 vCPU when you use Windows containers on Fargate.
256 (.25 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 512 (0.5 GB), 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB)512 (.5 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB)1024 (1 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB), 5120 (5 GB), 6144 (6 GB), 7168 (7 GB), 8192 (8 GB)2048 (2 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 4096 (4 GB) and 16384 (16 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB)4096 (4 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 8192 (8 GB) and 30720 (30 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB)8192 (8 vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 16 GB and 60 GB in 4 GB increments
This option requires Linux platform
1.4.0
or later.16384 (16vCPU) - Available
memory
values: 32GB and 120 GB in 8 GB increments
This option requires Linux platform
1.4.0
or later.
- creation_stack
return:
the stack trace of the point where this Resource was created from, sourced from the +metadata+ entry typed +aws:cdk:logicalId+, and with the bottom-most node +internal+ entries filtered.
- ephemeral_storage
The ephemeral storage settings to use for tasks run with the task definition.
- execution_role_arn
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the task execution role that grants the Amazon ECS container agent permission to make AWS API calls on your behalf.
The task execution IAM role is required depending on the requirements of your task. For more information, see Amazon ECS task execution IAM role in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- family
The name of a family that this task definition is registered to.
Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed.
A family groups multiple versions of a task definition. Amazon ECS gives the first task definition that you registered to a family a revision number of 1. Amazon ECS gives sequential revision numbers to each task definition that you add. .. epigraph:
To use revision numbers when you update a task definition, specify this property. If you don't specify a value, AWS CloudFormation generates a new task definition each time that you update it.
- inference_accelerators
The Elastic Inference accelerators to use for the containers in the task.
- ipc_mode
The IPC resource namespace to use for the containers in the task.
The valid values are
host
,task
, ornone
. Ifhost
is specified, then all containers within the tasks that specified thehost
IPC mode on the same container instance share the same IPC resources with the host Amazon EC2 instance. Iftask
is specified, all containers within the specified task share the same IPC resources. Ifnone
is specified, then IPC resources within the containers of a task are private and not shared with other containers in a task or on the container instance. If no value is specified, then the IPC resource namespace sharing depends on the Docker daemon setting on the container instance. For more information, see IPC settings in the Docker run reference .If the
host
IPC mode is used, be aware that there is a heightened risk of undesired IPC namespace expose. For more information, see Docker security .If you are setting namespaced kernel parameters using
systemControls
for the containers in the task, the following will apply to your IPC resource namespace. For more information, see System Controls in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .For tasks that use the
host
IPC mode, IPC namespace relatedsystemControls
are not supported.For tasks that use the
task
IPC mode, IPC namespace relatedsystemControls
will apply to all containers within a task.
This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- logical_id
The logical ID for this CloudFormation stack element.
The logical ID of the element is calculated from the path of the resource node in the construct tree.
To override this value, use
overrideLogicalId(newLogicalId)
.- Returns:
the logical ID as a stringified token. This value will only get resolved during synthesis.
- memory
The amount (in MiB) of memory used by the task.
If your tasks runs on Amazon EC2 instances, you must specify either a task-level memory value or a container-level memory value. This field is optional and any value can be used. If a task-level memory value is specified, the container-level memory value is optional. For more information regarding container-level memory and memory reservation, see ContainerDefinition .
If your tasks runs on AWS Fargate , this field is required. You must use one of the following values. The value you choose determines your range of valid values for the
cpu
parameter.512 (0.5 GB), 1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB) - Available
cpu
values: 256 (.25 vCPU)1024 (1 GB), 2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB) - Available
cpu
values: 512 (.5 vCPU)2048 (2 GB), 3072 (3 GB), 4096 (4 GB), 5120 (5 GB), 6144 (6 GB), 7168 (7 GB), 8192 (8 GB) - Available
cpu
values: 1024 (1 vCPU)Between 4096 (4 GB) and 16384 (16 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - Available
cpu
values: 2048 (2 vCPU)Between 8192 (8 GB) and 30720 (30 GB) in increments of 1024 (1 GB) - Available
cpu
values: 4096 (4 vCPU)Between 16 GB and 60 GB in 4 GB increments - Available
cpu
values: 8192 (8 vCPU)
This option requires Linux platform
1.4.0
or later.Between 32GB and 120 GB in 8 GB increments - Available
cpu
values: 16384 (16 vCPU)
This option requires Linux platform
1.4.0
or later.
- network_mode
The Docker networking mode to use for the containers in the task.
The valid values are
none
,bridge
,awsvpc
, andhost
. If no network mode is specified, the default isbridge
.For Amazon ECS tasks on Fargate, the
awsvpc
network mode is required. For Amazon ECS tasks on Amazon EC2 Linux instances, any network mode can be used. For Amazon ECS tasks on Amazon EC2 Windows instances,<default>
orawsvpc
can be used. If the network mode is set tonone
, you cannot specify port mappings in your container definitions, and the tasks containers do not have external connectivity. Thehost
andawsvpc
network modes offer the highest networking performance for containers because they use the EC2 network stack instead of the virtualized network stack provided by thebridge
mode.With the
host
andawsvpc
network modes, exposed container ports are mapped directly to the corresponding host port (for thehost
network mode) or the attached elastic network interface port (for theawsvpc
network mode), so you cannot take advantage of dynamic host port mappings. .. epigraph:When using the ``host`` network mode, you should not run containers using the root user (UID 0). It is considered best practice to use a non-root user.
If the network mode is
awsvpc
, the task is allocated an elastic network interface, and you must specify aNetworkConfiguration
value when you create a service or run a task with the task definition. For more information, see Task Networking in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .If the network mode is
host
, you cannot run multiple instantiations of the same task on a single container instance when port mappings are used.For more information, see Network settings in the Docker run reference .
- node
The construct tree node associated with this construct.
- pid_mode
The process namespace to use for the containers in the task.
The valid values are
host
ortask
. Ifhost
is specified, then all containers within the tasks that specified thehost
PID mode on the same container instance share the same process namespace with the host Amazon EC2 instance. Iftask
is specified, all containers within the specified task share the same process namespace. If no value is specified, the default is a private namespace. For more information, see PID settings in the Docker run reference .If the
host
PID mode is used, be aware that there is a heightened risk of undesired process namespace expose. For more information, see Docker security . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- placement_constraints
An array of placement constraint objects to use for tasks.
This parameter isn’t supported for tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- proxy_configuration
The configuration details for the App Mesh proxy.
Your Amazon ECS container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent and at least version 1.26.0-1 of the
ecs-init
package to use a proxy configuration. If your container instances are launched from the Amazon ECS optimized AMI version20190301
or later, they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- ref
Return a string that will be resolved to a CloudFormation
{ Ref }
for this element.If, by any chance, the intrinsic reference of a resource is not a string, you could coerce it to an IResolvable through
Lazy.any({ produce: resource.ref })
.
- requires_compatibilities
The task launch types the task definition was validated against.
For more information, see Amazon ECS launch types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- runtime_platform
The operating system that your tasks definitions run on.
A platform family is specified only for tasks using the Fargate launch type.
When you specify a task definition in a service, this value must match the
runtimePlatform
value of the service.
- stack
The stack in which this element is defined.
CfnElements must be defined within a stack scope (directly or indirectly).
- tags
The metadata that you apply to the task definition to help you categorize and organize them.
Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both of them.
The following basic restrictions apply to tags:
Maximum number of tags per resource - 50
For each resource, each tag key must be unique, and each tag key can have only one value.
Maximum key length - 128 Unicode characters in UTF-8
Maximum value length - 256 Unicode characters in UTF-8
If your tagging schema is used across multiple services and resources, remember that other services may have restrictions on allowed characters. Generally allowed characters are: letters, numbers, and spaces representable in UTF-8, and the following characters: + - = . _ : / @.
Tag keys and values are case-sensitive.
Do not use
aws:
,AWS:
, or any upper or lowercase combination of such as a prefix for either keys or values as it is reserved for AWS use. You cannot edit or delete tag keys or values with this prefix. Tags with this prefix do not count against your tags per resource limit.
- task_role_arn
The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the AWS Identity and Access Management role that grants containers in the task permission to call AWS APIs on your behalf.
For more information, see Amazon ECS Task Role in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
IAM roles for tasks on Windows require that the
-EnableTaskIAMRole
option is set when you launch the Amazon ECS-optimized Windows AMI. Your containers must also run some configuration code to use the feature. For more information, see Windows IAM roles for tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- volumes
The list of data volume definitions for the task.
For more information, see Using data volumes in tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:
The ``host`` and ``sourcePath`` parameters aren't supported for tasks run on AWS Fargate .
Static Methods
- classmethod is_cfn_element(x)
Returns
true
if a construct is a stack element (i.e. part of the synthesized cloudformation template).Uses duck-typing instead of
instanceof
to allow stack elements from different versions of this library to be included in the same stack.- Parameters:
x (
Any
)- Return type:
bool
- Returns:
The construct as a stack element or undefined if it is not a stack element.
- classmethod is_cfn_resource(construct)
Check whether the given construct is a CfnResource.
- Parameters:
construct (
IConstruct
)- Return type:
bool
- classmethod is_construct(x)
Return whether the given object is a Construct.
- Parameters:
x (
Any
)- Return type:
bool
ContainerDefinitionProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDefinitionProperty(*, image, name, command=None, cpu=None, depends_on=None, disable_networking=None, dns_search_domains=None, dns_servers=None, docker_labels=None, docker_security_options=None, entry_point=None, environment=None, environment_files=None, essential=None, extra_hosts=None, firelens_configuration=None, health_check=None, hostname=None, interactive=None, links=None, linux_parameters=None, log_configuration=None, memory=None, memory_reservation=None, mount_points=None, port_mappings=None, privileged=None, pseudo_terminal=None, readonly_root_filesystem=None, repository_credentials=None, resource_requirements=None, secrets=None, start_timeout=None, stop_timeout=None, system_controls=None, ulimits=None, user=None, volumes_from=None, working_directory=None)
Bases:
object
The
ContainerDefinition
property specifies a container definition.Container definitions are used in task definitions to describe the different containers that are launched as part of a task.
- Parameters:
image (
str
) – The image used to start a container. This string is passed directly to the Docker daemon. By default, images in the Docker Hub registry are available. Other repositories are specified with either*repository-url* / *image* : *tag*
or*repository-url* / *image* @ *digest*
. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, underscores, colons, periods, forward slashes, and number signs are allowed. This parameter maps toImage
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theIMAGE
parameter of docker run . - When a new task starts, the Amazon ECS container agent pulls the latest version of the specified image and tag for the container to use. However, subsequent updates to a repository image aren’t propagated to already running tasks. - Images in Amazon ECR repositories can be specified by either using the fullregistry/repository:tag
orregistry/repository@digest
. For example,012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name>:latest
or012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name>@sha256:94afd1f2e64d908bc90dbca0035a5b567EXAMPLE
. - Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example,ubuntu
ormongo
). - Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name (for example,amazon/amazon-ecs-agent
). - Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example,quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu
).name (
str
) –The name of a container. If you’re linking multiple containers together in a task definition, the
name
of one container can be entered in thelinks
of another container to connect the containers. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. This parameter maps toname
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--name
option to docker run .command (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –The command that’s passed to the container. This parameter maps to
Cmd
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theCOMMAND
parameter to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd . If there are multiple arguments, each argument is a separated string in the array.cpu (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –The number of
cpu
units reserved for the container. This parameter maps toCpuShares
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cpu-shares
option to docker run . This field is optional for tasks using the Fargate launch type, and the only requirement is that the total amount of CPU reserved for all containers within a task be lower than the task-levelcpu
value. .. epigraph:: You can determine the number of CPU units that are available per EC2 instance type by multiplying the vCPUs listed for that instance type on the Amazon EC2 Instances detail page by 1,024. Linux containers share unallocated CPU units with other containers on the container instance with the same ratio as their allocated amount. For example, if you run a single-container task on a single-core instance type with 512 CPU units specified for that container, and that’s the only task running on the container instance, that container could use the full 1,024 CPU unit share at any given time. However, if you launched another copy of the same task on that container instance, each task is guaranteed a minimum of 512 CPU units when needed. Moreover, each container could float to higher CPU usage if the other container was not using it. If both tasks were 100% active all of the time, they would be limited to 512 CPU units. On Linux container instances, the Docker daemon on the container instance uses the CPU value to calculate the relative CPU share ratios for running containers. For more information, see CPU share constraint in the Docker documentation. The minimum valid CPU share value that the Linux kernel allows is 2. However, the CPU parameter isn’t required, and you can use CPU values below 2 in your container definitions. For CPU values below 2 (including null), the behavior varies based on your Amazon ECS container agent version: - Agent versions less than or equal to 1.1.0: Null and zero CPU values are passed to Docker as 0, which Docker then converts to 1,024 CPU shares. CPU values of 1 are passed to Docker as 1, which the Linux kernel converts to two CPU shares. - Agent versions greater than or equal to 1.2.0: Null, zero, and CPU values of 1 are passed to Docker as 2. On Windows container instances, the CPU limit is enforced as an absolute limit, or a quota. Windows containers only have access to the specified amount of CPU that’s described in the task definition. A null or zero CPU value is passed to Docker as0
, which Windows interprets as 1% of one CPU.depends_on (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,ContainerDependencyProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –The dependencies defined for container startup and shutdown. A container can contain multiple dependencies. When a dependency is defined for container startup, for container shutdown it is reversed. For tasks using the EC2 launch type, the container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent to turn on container dependencies. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version 1.26.0-1 of the
ecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms: - Linux platform version1.3.0
or later. - Windows platform version1.0.0
or later. If the task definition is used in a blue/green deployment that uses AWS::CodeDeploy::DeploymentGroup BlueGreenDeploymentConfiguration , thedependsOn
parameter is not supported. For more information see Issue #680 on the on the GitHub website.disable_networking (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –When this parameter is true, networking is off within the container. This parameter maps to
NetworkDisabled
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.dns_search_domains (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –A list of DNS search domains that are presented to the container. This parameter maps to
DnsSearch
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--dns-search
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.dns_servers (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –A list of DNS servers that are presented to the container. This parameter maps to
Dns
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--dns
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.docker_labels (
Union
[IResolvable
,Mapping
[str
,str
],None
]) –A key/value map of labels to add to the container. This parameter maps to
Labels
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--label
option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
docker_security_options (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –A list of strings to provide custom configuration for multiple security systems. For more information about valid values, see Docker Run Security Configuration . This field isn’t valid for containers in tasks using the Fargate launch type. For Linux tasks on EC2, this parameter can be used to reference custom labels for SELinux and AppArmor multi-level security systems. For any tasks on EC2, this parameter can be used to reference a credential spec file that configures a container for Active Directory authentication. For more information, see Using gMSAs for Windows Containers and Using gMSAs for Linux Containers in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . This parameter maps to
SecurityOpt
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--security-opt
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register with theECS_SELINUX_CAPABLE=true
orECS_APPARMOR_CAPABLE=true
environment variables before containers placed on that instance can use these security options. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . For more information about valid values, see Docker Run Security Configuration . Valid values: “no-new-privileges” | “apparmor:PROFILE” | “label:value” | “credentialspec:CredentialSpecFilePath”entry_point (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –Early versions of the Amazon ECS container agent don’t properly handle
entryPoint
parameters. If you have problems usingentryPoint
, update your container agent or enter your commands and arguments ascommand
array items instead. The entry point that’s passed to the container. This parameter maps toEntrypoint
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--entrypoint
option to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#entrypoint .environment (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,KeyValuePairProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –The environment variables to pass to a container. This parameter maps to
Env
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--env
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: We don’t recommend that you use plaintext environment variables for sensitive information, such as credential data.environment_files (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,EnvironmentFileProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –A list of files containing the environment variables to pass to a container. This parameter maps to the
--env-file
option to docker run . You can specify up to ten environment files. The file must have a.env
file extension. Each line in an environment file contains an environment variable inVARIABLE=VALUE
format. Lines beginning with#
are treated as comments and are ignored. For more information about the environment variable file syntax, see Declare default environment variables in file . If there are environment variables specified using theenvironment
parameter in a container definition, they take precedence over the variables contained within an environment file. If multiple environment files are specified that contain the same variable, they’re processed from the top down. We recommend that you use unique variable names. For more information, see Specifying Environment Variables in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .essential (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) – If theessential
parameter of a container is marked astrue
, and that container fails or stops for any reason, all other containers that are part of the task are stopped. If theessential
parameter of a container is marked asfalse
, its failure doesn’t affect the rest of the containers in a task. If this parameter is omitted, a container is assumed to be essential. All tasks must have at least one essential container. If you have an application that’s composed of multiple containers, group containers that are used for a common purpose into components, and separate the different components into multiple task definitions. For more information, see Application Architecture in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .extra_hosts (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,HostEntryProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –A list of hostnames and IP address mappings to append to the
/etc/hosts
file on the container. This parameter maps toExtraHosts
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--add-host
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter isn’t supported for Windows containers or tasks that use theawsvpc
network mode.firelens_configuration (
Union
[IResolvable
,FirelensConfigurationProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – The FireLens configuration for the container. This is used to specify and configure a log router for container logs. For more information, see Custom Log Routing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .health_check (
Union
[IResolvable
,HealthCheckProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) –The container health check command and associated configuration parameters for the container. This parameter maps to
HealthCheck
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theHEALTHCHECK
parameter of docker run .hostname (
Optional
[str
]) –The hostname to use for your container. This parameter maps to
Hostname
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--hostname
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: Thehostname
parameter is not supported if you’re using theawsvpc
network mode.interactive (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –When this parameter is
true
, you can deploy containerized applications that requirestdin
or atty
to be allocated. This parameter maps toOpenStdin
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--interactive
option to docker run .links (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –The
links
parameter allows containers to communicate with each other without the need for port mappings. This parameter is only supported if the network mode of a task definition isbridge
. Thename:internalName
construct is analogous toname:alias
in Docker links. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. For more information about linking Docker containers, go to Legacy container links in the Docker documentation. This parameter maps toLinks
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--link
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers. > Containers that are collocated on a single container instance may be able to communicate with each other without requiring links or host port mappings. Network isolation is achieved on the container instance using security groups and VPC settings.linux_parameters (
Union
[LinuxParametersProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
,None
]) – Linux-specific modifications that are applied to the container, such as Linux kernel capabilities. For more information see KernelCapabilities . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.log_configuration (
Union
[IResolvable
,LogConfigurationProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) –The log configuration specification for the container. This parameter maps to
LogConfig
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--log-driver
option to docker run . By default, containers use the same logging driver that the Docker daemon uses. However, the container may use a different logging driver than the Docker daemon by specifying a log driver with this parameter in the container definition. To use a different logging driver for a container, the log system must be configured properly on the container instance (or on a different log server for remote logging options). For more information on the options for different supported log drivers, see Configure logging drivers in the Docker documentation. .. epigraph:: Amazon ECS currently supports a subset of the logging drivers available to the Docker daemon (shown in the LogConfiguration data type). Additional log drivers may be available in future releases of the Amazon ECS container agent. This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
.. epigraph:: The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that instance with theECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS
environment variable before containers placed on that instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .memory (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –The amount (in MiB) of memory to present to the container. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. The total amount of memory reserved for all containers within a task must be lower than the task
memory
value, if one is specified. This parameter maps toMemory
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--memory
option to docker run . If using the Fargate launch type, this parameter is optional. If using the EC2 launch type, you must specify either a task-level memory value or a container-level memory value. If you specify both a container-levelmemory
andmemoryReservation
value,memory
must be greater thanmemoryReservation
. If you specifymemoryReservation
, then that value is subtracted from the available memory resources for the container instance where the container is placed. Otherwise, the value ofmemory
is used. The Docker 20.10.0 or later daemon reserves a minimum of 6 MiB of memory for a container, so you should not specify fewer than 6 MiB of memory for your containers. The Docker 19.03.13-ce or earlier daemon reserves a minimum of 4 MiB of memory for a container, so you should not specify fewer than 4 MiB of memory for your containers.memory_reservation (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –The soft limit (in MiB) of memory to reserve for the container. When system memory is under heavy contention, Docker attempts to keep the container memory to this soft limit. However, your container can consume more memory when it needs to, up to either the hard limit specified with the
memory
parameter (if applicable), or all of the available memory on the container instance, whichever comes first. This parameter maps toMemoryReservation
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--memory-reservation
option to docker run . If a task-level memory value is not specified, you must specify a non-zero integer for one or both ofmemory
ormemoryReservation
in a container definition. If you specify both,memory
must be greater thanmemoryReservation
. If you specifymemoryReservation
, then that value is subtracted from the available memory resources for the container instance where the container is placed. Otherwise, the value ofmemory
is used. For example, if your container normally uses 128 MiB of memory, but occasionally bursts to 256 MiB of memory for short periods of time, you can set amemoryReservation
of 128 MiB, and amemory
hard limit of 300 MiB. This configuration would allow the container to only reserve 128 MiB of memory from the remaining resources on the container instance, but also allow the container to consume more memory resources when needed. The Docker 20.10.0 or later daemon reserves a minimum of 6 MiB of memory for a container. So, don’t specify less than 6 MiB of memory for your containers. The Docker 19.03.13-ce or earlier daemon reserves a minimum of 4 MiB of memory for a container. So, don’t specify less than 4 MiB of memory for your containers.mount_points (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,MountPointProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –The mount points for data volumes in your container. This parameter maps to
Volumes
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--volume
option to docker run . Windows containers can mount whole directories on the same drive as$env:ProgramData
. Windows containers can’t mount directories on a different drive, and mount point can’t be across drives.port_mappings (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,PortMappingProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –The list of port mappings for the container. Port mappings allow containers to access ports on the host container instance to send or receive traffic. For task definitions that use the
awsvpc
network mode, you should only specify thecontainerPort
. ThehostPort
can be left blank or it must be the same value as thecontainerPort
. Port mappings on Windows use theNetNAT
gateway address rather thanlocalhost
. There is no loopback for port mappings on Windows, so you cannot access a container’s mapped port from the host itself. This parameter maps toPortBindings
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--publish
option to docker run . If the network mode of a task definition is set tonone
, then you can’t specify port mappings. If the network mode of a task definition is set tohost
, then host ports must either be undefined or they must match the container port in the port mapping. .. epigraph:: After a task reaches theRUNNING
status, manual and automatic host and container port assignments are visible in the Network Bindings section of a container description for a selected task in the Amazon ECS console. The assignments are also visible in thenetworkBindings
section DescribeTasks responses.privileged (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated privileges on the host container instance (similar to the
root
user). This parameter maps toPrivileged
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--privileged
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .pseudo_terminal (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –When this parameter is
true
, a TTY is allocated. This parameter maps toTty
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--tty
option to docker run .readonly_root_filesystem (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –When this parameter is true, the container is given read-only access to its root file system. This parameter maps to
ReadonlyRootfs
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--read-only
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.repository_credentials (
Union
[RepositoryCredentialsProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
,None
]) – The private repository authentication credentials to use.resource_requirements (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,ResourceRequirementProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) – The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The only supported resource is a GPU.secrets (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[SecretProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
]],None
]) – The secrets to pass to the container. For more information, see Specifying Sensitive Data in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .start_timeout (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –Time duration (in seconds) to wait before giving up on resolving dependencies for a container. For example, you specify two containers in a task definition with containerA having a dependency on containerB reaching a
COMPLETE
,SUCCESS
, orHEALTHY
status. If astartTimeout
value is specified for containerB and it doesn’t reach the desired status within that time then containerA gives up and not start. This results in the task transitioning to aSTOPPED
state. .. epigraph:: When theECS_CONTAINER_START_TIMEOUT
container agent configuration variable is used, it’s enforced independently from this start timeout value. For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms: - Linux platform version1.3.0
or later. - Windows platform version1.0.0
or later. For tasks using the EC2 launch type, your container instances require at least version1.26.0
of the container agent to use a container start timeout value. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version1.26.0-1
of theecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .stop_timeout (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –Time duration (in seconds) to wait before the container is forcefully killed if it doesn’t exit normally on its own. For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms: - Linux platform version
1.3.0
or later. - Windows platform version1.0.0
or later. The max stop timeout value is 120 seconds and if the parameter is not specified, the default value of 30 seconds is used. For tasks that use the EC2 launch type, if thestopTimeout
parameter isn’t specified, the value set for the Amazon ECS container agent configuration variableECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT
is used. If neither thestopTimeout
parameter or theECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT
agent configuration variable are set, then the default values of 30 seconds for Linux containers and 30 seconds on Windows containers are used. Your container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent to use a container stop timeout value. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version 1.26.0-1 of theecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .system_controls (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,SystemControlProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –A list of namespaced kernel parameters to set in the container. This parameter maps to
Sysctls
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--sysctl
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: We don’t recommended that you specify network-relatedsystemControls
parameters for multiple containers in a single task that also uses either theawsvpc
orhost
network modes. For tasks that use theawsvpc
network mode, the container that’s started last determines whichsystemControls
parameters take effect. For tasks that use thehost
network mode, it changes the container instance’s namespaced kernel parameters as well as the containers.ulimits (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,UlimitProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –A list of
ulimits
to set in the container. This parameter maps toUlimits
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--ulimit
option to docker run . Valid naming values are displayed in the Ulimit data type. This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
.. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.user (
Optional
[str
]) –The user to use inside the container. This parameter maps to
User
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--user
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: When running tasks using thehost
network mode, don’t run containers using the root user (UID 0). We recommend using a non-root user for better security. You can specify theuser
using the following formats. If specifying a UID or GID, you must specify it as a positive integer. -user
-user:group
-uid
-uid:gid
-user:gid
-uid:group
.. epigraph:: This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.volumes_from (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,VolumeFromProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –Data volumes to mount from another container. This parameter maps to
VolumesFrom
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--volumes-from
option to docker run .working_directory (
Optional
[str
]) –The working directory to run commands inside the container in. This parameter maps to
WorkingDir
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--workdir
option to docker run .
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs container_definition_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDefinitionProperty( image="image", name="name", # the properties below are optional command=["command"], cpu=123, depends_on=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDependencyProperty( condition="condition", container_name="containerName" )], disable_networking=False, dns_search_domains=["dnsSearchDomains"], dns_servers=["dnsServers"], docker_labels={ "docker_labels_key": "dockerLabels" }, docker_security_options=["dockerSecurityOptions"], entry_point=["entryPoint"], environment=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty( name="name", value="value" )], environment_files=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EnvironmentFileProperty( type="type", value="value" )], essential=False, extra_hosts=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostEntryProperty( hostname="hostname", ip_address="ipAddress" )], firelens_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.FirelensConfigurationProperty( options={ "options_key": "options" }, type="type" ), health_check=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HealthCheckProperty( command=["command"], interval=123, retries=123, start_period=123, timeout=123 ), hostname="hostname", interactive=False, links=["links"], linux_parameters=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LinuxParametersProperty( capabilities=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KernelCapabilitiesProperty( add=["add"], drop=["drop"] ), devices=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DeviceProperty( container_path="containerPath", host_path="hostPath", permissions=["permissions"] )], init_process_enabled=False, max_swap=123, shared_memory_size=123, swappiness=123, tmpfs=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TmpfsProperty( size=123, # the properties below are optional container_path="containerPath", mount_options=["mountOptions"] )] ), log_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LogConfigurationProperty( log_driver="logDriver", # the properties below are optional options={ "options_key": "options" }, secret_options=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )] ), memory=123, memory_reservation=123, mount_points=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.MountPointProperty( container_path="containerPath", read_only=False, source_volume="sourceVolume" )], port_mappings=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.PortMappingProperty( app_protocol="appProtocol", container_port=123, container_port_range="containerPortRange", host_port=123, name="name", protocol="protocol" )], privileged=False, pseudo_terminal=False, readonly_root_filesystem=False, repository_credentials=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.RepositoryCredentialsProperty( credentials_parameter="credentialsParameter" ), resource_requirements=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ResourceRequirementProperty( type="type", value="value" )], secrets=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )], start_timeout=123, stop_timeout=123, system_controls=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SystemControlProperty( namespace="namespace", value="value" )], ulimits=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.UlimitProperty( hard_limit=123, name="name", soft_limit=123 )], user="user", volumes_from=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeFromProperty( read_only=False, source_container="sourceContainer" )], working_directory="workingDirectory" )
Attributes
- command
The command that’s passed to the container.
This parameter maps to
Cmd
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theCOMMAND
parameter to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd . If there are multiple arguments, each argument is a separated string in the array.
- cpu
The number of
cpu
units reserved for the container.This parameter maps to
CpuShares
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cpu-shares
option to docker run .This field is optional for tasks using the Fargate launch type, and the only requirement is that the total amount of CPU reserved for all containers within a task be lower than the task-level
cpu
value. .. epigraph:You can determine the number of CPU units that are available per EC2 instance type by multiplying the vCPUs listed for that instance type on the `Amazon EC2 Instances <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/>`_ detail page by 1,024.
Linux containers share unallocated CPU units with other containers on the container instance with the same ratio as their allocated amount. For example, if you run a single-container task on a single-core instance type with 512 CPU units specified for that container, and that’s the only task running on the container instance, that container could use the full 1,024 CPU unit share at any given time. However, if you launched another copy of the same task on that container instance, each task is guaranteed a minimum of 512 CPU units when needed. Moreover, each container could float to higher CPU usage if the other container was not using it. If both tasks were 100% active all of the time, they would be limited to 512 CPU units.
On Linux container instances, the Docker daemon on the container instance uses the CPU value to calculate the relative CPU share ratios for running containers. For more information, see CPU share constraint in the Docker documentation. The minimum valid CPU share value that the Linux kernel allows is 2. However, the CPU parameter isn’t required, and you can use CPU values below 2 in your container definitions. For CPU values below 2 (including null), the behavior varies based on your Amazon ECS container agent version:
Agent versions less than or equal to 1.1.0: Null and zero CPU values are passed to Docker as 0, which Docker then converts to 1,024 CPU shares. CPU values of 1 are passed to Docker as 1, which the Linux kernel converts to two CPU shares.
Agent versions greater than or equal to 1.2.0: Null, zero, and CPU values of 1 are passed to Docker as 2.
On Windows container instances, the CPU limit is enforced as an absolute limit, or a quota. Windows containers only have access to the specified amount of CPU that’s described in the task definition. A null or zero CPU value is passed to Docker as
0
, which Windows interprets as 1% of one CPU.
- depends_on
The dependencies defined for container startup and shutdown.
A container can contain multiple dependencies. When a dependency is defined for container startup, for container shutdown it is reversed.
For tasks using the EC2 launch type, the container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent to turn on container dependencies. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version 1.26.0-1 of the
ecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms:
Linux platform version
1.3.0
or later.Windows platform version
1.0.0
or later.
If the task definition is used in a blue/green deployment that uses AWS::CodeDeploy::DeploymentGroup BlueGreenDeploymentConfiguration , the
dependsOn
parameter is not supported. For more information see Issue #680 on the on the GitHub website.
- disable_networking
When this parameter is true, networking is off within the container.
This parameter maps to
NetworkDisabled
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- dns_search_domains
A list of DNS search domains that are presented to the container.
This parameter maps to
DnsSearch
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--dns-search
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- dns_servers
A list of DNS servers that are presented to the container.
This parameter maps to
Dns
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--dns
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- docker_labels
A key/value map of labels to add to the container.
This parameter maps to
Labels
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--label
option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
- docker_security_options
A list of strings to provide custom configuration for multiple security systems.
For more information about valid values, see Docker Run Security Configuration . This field isn’t valid for containers in tasks using the Fargate launch type.
For Linux tasks on EC2, this parameter can be used to reference custom labels for SELinux and AppArmor multi-level security systems.
For any tasks on EC2, this parameter can be used to reference a credential spec file that configures a container for Active Directory authentication. For more information, see Using gMSAs for Windows Containers and Using gMSAs for Linux Containers in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
This parameter maps to
SecurityOpt
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--security-opt
option to docker run . .. epigraph:The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register with the ``ECS_SELINUX_CAPABLE=true`` or ``ECS_APPARMOR_CAPABLE=true`` environment variables before containers placed on that instance can use these security options. For more information, see `Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-config.html>`_ in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide* .
For more information about valid values, see Docker Run Security Configuration .
Valid values: “no-new-privileges” | “apparmor:PROFILE” | “label:value” | “credentialspec:CredentialSpecFilePath”
- entry_point
Early versions of the Amazon ECS container agent don’t properly handle
entryPoint
parameters.If you have problems using
entryPoint
, update your container agent or enter your commands and arguments ascommand
array items instead.The entry point that’s passed to the container. This parameter maps to
Entrypoint
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--entrypoint
option to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#entrypoint .
- environment
The environment variables to pass to a container.
This parameter maps to
Env
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--env
option to docker run . .. epigraph:We don't recommend that you use plaintext environment variables for sensitive information, such as credential data.
- environment_files
A list of files containing the environment variables to pass to a container.
This parameter maps to the
--env-file
option to docker run .You can specify up to ten environment files. The file must have a
.env
file extension. Each line in an environment file contains an environment variable inVARIABLE=VALUE
format. Lines beginning with#
are treated as comments and are ignored. For more information about the environment variable file syntax, see Declare default environment variables in file .If there are environment variables specified using the
environment
parameter in a container definition, they take precedence over the variables contained within an environment file. If multiple environment files are specified that contain the same variable, they’re processed from the top down. We recommend that you use unique variable names. For more information, see Specifying Environment Variables in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- essential
If the
essential
parameter of a container is marked astrue
, and that container fails or stops for any reason, all other containers that are part of the task are stopped.If the
essential
parameter of a container is marked asfalse
, its failure doesn’t affect the rest of the containers in a task. If this parameter is omitted, a container is assumed to be essential.All tasks must have at least one essential container. If you have an application that’s composed of multiple containers, group containers that are used for a common purpose into components, and separate the different components into multiple task definitions. For more information, see Application Architecture in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- extra_hosts
A list of hostnames and IP address mappings to append to the
/etc/hosts
file on the container.This parameter maps to
ExtraHosts
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--add-host
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter isn't supported for Windows containers or tasks that use the ``awsvpc`` network mode.
- firelens_configuration
The FireLens configuration for the container.
This is used to specify and configure a log router for container logs. For more information, see Custom Log Routing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- health_check
The container health check command and associated configuration parameters for the container.
This parameter maps to
HealthCheck
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theHEALTHCHECK
parameter of docker run .
- hostname
The hostname to use for your container.
This parameter maps to
Hostname
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--hostname
option to docker run . .. epigraph:The ``hostname`` parameter is not supported if you're using the ``awsvpc`` network mode.
- image
The image used to start a container.
This string is passed directly to the Docker daemon. By default, images in the Docker Hub registry are available. Other repositories are specified with either
*repository-url* / *image* : *tag*
or*repository-url* / *image* @ *digest*
. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, underscores, colons, periods, forward slashes, and number signs are allowed. This parameter maps toImage
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and theIMAGE
parameter of docker run .When a new task starts, the Amazon ECS container agent pulls the latest version of the specified image and tag for the container to use. However, subsequent updates to a repository image aren’t propagated to already running tasks.
Images in Amazon ECR repositories can be specified by either using the full
registry/repository:tag
orregistry/repository@digest
. For example,012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name>:latest
or012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name>@sha256:94afd1f2e64d908bc90dbca0035a5b567EXAMPLE
.Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example,
ubuntu
ormongo
).Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name (for example,
amazon/amazon-ecs-agent
).Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example,
quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu
).
- interactive
When this parameter is
true
, you can deploy containerized applications that requirestdin
or atty
to be allocated.This parameter maps to
OpenStdin
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--interactive
option to docker run .
- links
The
links
parameter allows containers to communicate with each other without the need for port mappings.This parameter is only supported if the network mode of a task definition is
bridge
. Thename:internalName
construct is analogous toname:alias
in Docker links. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. For more information about linking Docker containers, go to Legacy container links in the Docker documentation. This parameter maps toLinks
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--link
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers. > Containers that are collocated on a single container instance may be able to communicate with each other without requiring links or host port mappings. Network isolation is achieved on the container instance using security groups and VPC settings.
- linux_parameters
Linux-specific modifications that are applied to the container, such as Linux kernel capabilities. For more information see KernelCapabilities .
This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- log_configuration
The log configuration specification for the container.
This parameter maps to
LogConfig
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--log-driver
option to docker run . By default, containers use the same logging driver that the Docker daemon uses. However, the container may use a different logging driver than the Docker daemon by specifying a log driver with this parameter in the container definition. To use a different logging driver for a container, the log system must be configured properly on the container instance (or on a different log server for remote logging options). For more information on the options for different supported log drivers, see Configure logging drivers in the Docker documentation. .. epigraph:Amazon ECS currently supports a subset of the logging drivers available to the Docker daemon (shown in the `LogConfiguration <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/APIReference/API_LogConfiguration.html>`_ data type). Additional log drivers may be available in future releases of the Amazon ECS container agent.
This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:
sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
.. epigraph:The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that instance with the ``ECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS`` environment variable before containers placed on that instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see `Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-config.html>`_ in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide* .
- memory
The amount (in MiB) of memory to present to the container.
If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. The total amount of memory reserved for all containers within a task must be lower than the task
memory
value, if one is specified. This parameter maps toMemory
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--memory
option to docker run .If using the Fargate launch type, this parameter is optional.
If using the EC2 launch type, you must specify either a task-level memory value or a container-level memory value. If you specify both a container-level
memory
andmemoryReservation
value,memory
must be greater thanmemoryReservation
. If you specifymemoryReservation
, then that value is subtracted from the available memory resources for the container instance where the container is placed. Otherwise, the value ofmemory
is used.The Docker 20.10.0 or later daemon reserves a minimum of 6 MiB of memory for a container, so you should not specify fewer than 6 MiB of memory for your containers.
The Docker 19.03.13-ce or earlier daemon reserves a minimum of 4 MiB of memory for a container, so you should not specify fewer than 4 MiB of memory for your containers.
- memory_reservation
The soft limit (in MiB) of memory to reserve for the container.
When system memory is under heavy contention, Docker attempts to keep the container memory to this soft limit. However, your container can consume more memory when it needs to, up to either the hard limit specified with the
memory
parameter (if applicable), or all of the available memory on the container instance, whichever comes first. This parameter maps toMemoryReservation
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--memory-reservation
option to docker run .If a task-level memory value is not specified, you must specify a non-zero integer for one or both of
memory
ormemoryReservation
in a container definition. If you specify both,memory
must be greater thanmemoryReservation
. If you specifymemoryReservation
, then that value is subtracted from the available memory resources for the container instance where the container is placed. Otherwise, the value ofmemory
is used.For example, if your container normally uses 128 MiB of memory, but occasionally bursts to 256 MiB of memory for short periods of time, you can set a
memoryReservation
of 128 MiB, and amemory
hard limit of 300 MiB. This configuration would allow the container to only reserve 128 MiB of memory from the remaining resources on the container instance, but also allow the container to consume more memory resources when needed.The Docker 20.10.0 or later daemon reserves a minimum of 6 MiB of memory for a container. So, don’t specify less than 6 MiB of memory for your containers.
The Docker 19.03.13-ce or earlier daemon reserves a minimum of 4 MiB of memory for a container. So, don’t specify less than 4 MiB of memory for your containers.
- mount_points
The mount points for data volumes in your container.
This parameter maps to
Volumes
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--volume
option to docker run .Windows containers can mount whole directories on the same drive as
$env:ProgramData
. Windows containers can’t mount directories on a different drive, and mount point can’t be across drives.
- name
The name of a container.
If you’re linking multiple containers together in a task definition, the
name
of one container can be entered in thelinks
of another container to connect the containers. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. This parameter maps toname
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--name
option to docker run .
- port_mappings
The list of port mappings for the container.
Port mappings allow containers to access ports on the host container instance to send or receive traffic.
For task definitions that use the
awsvpc
network mode, you should only specify thecontainerPort
. ThehostPort
can be left blank or it must be the same value as thecontainerPort
.Port mappings on Windows use the
NetNAT
gateway address rather thanlocalhost
. There is no loopback for port mappings on Windows, so you cannot access a container’s mapped port from the host itself.This parameter maps to
PortBindings
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--publish
option to docker run . If the network mode of a task definition is set tonone
, then you can’t specify port mappings. If the network mode of a task definition is set tohost
, then host ports must either be undefined or they must match the container port in the port mapping. .. epigraph:After a task reaches the ``RUNNING`` status, manual and automatic host and container port assignments are visible in the *Network Bindings* section of a container description for a selected task in the Amazon ECS console. The assignments are also visible in the ``networkBindings`` section `DescribeTasks <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeTasks.html>`_ responses.
- privileged
When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated privileges on the host container instance (similar to the
root
user).This parameter maps to
Privileged
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--privileged
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers or tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- pseudo_terminal
When this parameter is
true
, a TTY is allocated.This parameter maps to
Tty
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--tty
option to docker run .
- readonly_root_filesystem
When this parameter is true, the container is given read-only access to its root file system.
This parameter maps to
ReadonlyRootfs
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--read-only
option to docker run . .. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- repository_credentials
The private repository authentication credentials to use.
- resource_requirements
The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container.
The only supported resource is a GPU.
- secrets
The secrets to pass to the container.
For more information, see Specifying Sensitive Data in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- start_timeout
Time duration (in seconds) to wait before giving up on resolving dependencies for a container.
For example, you specify two containers in a task definition with containerA having a dependency on containerB reaching a
COMPLETE
,SUCCESS
, orHEALTHY
status. If astartTimeout
value is specified for containerB and it doesn’t reach the desired status within that time then containerA gives up and not start. This results in the task transitioning to aSTOPPED
state. .. epigraph:When the ``ECS_CONTAINER_START_TIMEOUT`` container agent configuration variable is used, it's enforced independently from this start timeout value.
For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms:
Linux platform version
1.3.0
or later.Windows platform version
1.0.0
or later.
For tasks using the EC2 launch type, your container instances require at least version
1.26.0
of the container agent to use a container start timeout value. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version1.26.0-1
of theecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- stop_timeout
Time duration (in seconds) to wait before the container is forcefully killed if it doesn’t exit normally on its own.
For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task or service requires the following platforms:
Linux platform version
1.3.0
or later.Windows platform version
1.0.0
or later.
The max stop timeout value is 120 seconds and if the parameter is not specified, the default value of 30 seconds is used.
For tasks that use the EC2 launch type, if the
stopTimeout
parameter isn’t specified, the value set for the Amazon ECS container agent configuration variableECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT
is used. If neither thestopTimeout
parameter or theECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT
agent configuration variable are set, then the default values of 30 seconds for Linux containers and 30 seconds on Windows containers are used. Your container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent to use a container stop timeout value. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you’re using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version 1.26.0-1 of theecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- system_controls
A list of namespaced kernel parameters to set in the container.
This parameter maps to
Sysctls
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--sysctl
option to docker run . .. epigraph:We don't recommended that you specify network-related ``systemControls`` parameters for multiple containers in a single task that also uses either the ``awsvpc`` or ``host`` network modes. For tasks that use the ``awsvpc`` network mode, the container that's started last determines which ``systemControls`` parameters take effect. For tasks that use the ``host`` network mode, it changes the container instance's namespaced kernel parameters as well as the containers.
- ulimits
A list of
ulimits
to set in the container.This parameter maps to
Ulimits
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--ulimit
option to docker run . Valid naming values are displayed in the Ulimit data type. This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
.. epigraph:This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- user
The user to use inside the container.
This parameter maps to
User
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--user
option to docker run . .. epigraph:When running tasks using the ``host`` network mode, don't run containers using the root user (UID 0). We recommend using a non-root user for better security.
You can specify the
user
using the following formats. If specifying a UID or GID, you must specify it as a positive integer.user
user:group
uid
uid:gid
user:gid
uid:group
This parameter is not supported for Windows containers.
- volumes_from
Data volumes to mount from another container.
This parameter maps to
VolumesFrom
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--volumes-from
option to docker run .
- working_directory
The working directory to run commands inside the container in.
This parameter maps to
WorkingDir
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--workdir
option to docker run .
ContainerDependencyProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDependencyProperty(*, condition=None, container_name=None)
Bases:
object
The
ContainerDependency
property specifies the dependencies defined for container startup and shutdown.A container can contain multiple dependencies. When a dependency is defined for container startup, for container shutdown it is reversed.
Your Amazon ECS container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent to enable container dependencies. However, we recommend using the latest container agent version. For information about checking your agent version and updating to the latest version, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . If you are using an Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI, your instance needs at least version 1.26.0-1 of the
ecs-init
package. If your container instances are launched from version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:For tasks using the Fargate launch type, this parameter requires that the task or service uses platform version 1.3.0 or later.
- Parameters:
condition (
Optional
[str
]) – The dependency condition of the container. The following are the available conditions and their behavior:. -START
- This condition emulates the behavior of links and volumes today. It validates that a dependent container is started before permitting other containers to start. -COMPLETE
- This condition validates that a dependent container runs to completion (exits) before permitting other containers to start. This can be useful for nonessential containers that run a script and then exit. This condition can’t be set on an essential container. -SUCCESS
- This condition is the same asCOMPLETE
, but it also requires that the container exits with azero
status. This condition can’t be set on an essential container. -HEALTHY
- This condition validates that the dependent container passes its Docker health check before permitting other containers to start. This requires that the dependent container has health checks configured. This condition is confirmed only at task startup.container_name (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of a container.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs container_dependency_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ContainerDependencyProperty( condition="condition", container_name="containerName" )
Attributes
- condition
.
START
- This condition emulates the behavior of links and volumes today. It validates that a dependent container is started before permitting other containers to start.COMPLETE
- This condition validates that a dependent container runs to completion (exits) before permitting other containers to start. This can be useful for nonessential containers that run a script and then exit. This condition can’t be set on an essential container.SUCCESS
- This condition is the same asCOMPLETE
, but it also requires that the container exits with azero
status. This condition can’t be set on an essential container.HEALTHY
- This condition validates that the dependent container passes its Docker health check before permitting other containers to start. This requires that the dependent container has health checks configured. This condition is confirmed only at task startup.
- Link:
- Type:
The dependency condition of the container. The following are the available conditions and their behavior
- container_name
The name of a container.
DeviceProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.DeviceProperty(*, container_path=None, host_path=None, permissions=None)
Bases:
object
The
Device
property specifies an object representing a container instance host device.- Parameters:
container_path (
Optional
[str
]) – The path inside the container at which to expose the host device.host_path (
Optional
[str
]) – The path for the device on the host container instance.permissions (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) – The explicit permissions to provide to the container for the device. By default, the container has permissions forread
,write
, andmknod
for the device.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs device_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DeviceProperty( container_path="containerPath", host_path="hostPath", permissions=["permissions"] )
Attributes
- container_path
The path inside the container at which to expose the host device.
- host_path
The path for the device on the host container instance.
- permissions
The explicit permissions to provide to the container for the device.
By default, the container has permissions for
read
,write
, andmknod
for the device.
DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty(*, autoprovision=None, driver=None, driver_opts=None, labels=None, scope=None)
Bases:
object
The
DockerVolumeConfiguration
property specifies a Docker volume configuration and is used when you use Docker volumes.Docker volumes are only supported when you are using the EC2 launch type. Windows containers only support the use of the
local
driver. To use bind mounts, specify ahost
instead.- Parameters:
autoprovision (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) – If this value istrue
, the Docker volume is created if it doesn’t already exist. .. epigraph:: This field is only used if thescope
isshared
.driver (
Optional
[str
]) –The Docker volume driver to use. The driver value must match the driver name provided by Docker because it is used for task placement. If the driver was installed using the Docker plugin CLI, use
docker plugin ls
to retrieve the driver name from your container instance. If the driver was installed using another method, use Docker plugin discovery to retrieve the driver name. For more information, see Docker plugin discovery . This parameter maps toDriver
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxdriver
option to docker volume create .driver_opts (
Union
[IResolvable
,Mapping
[str
,str
],None
]) –A map of Docker driver-specific options passed through. This parameter maps to
DriverOpts
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxopt
option to docker volume create .labels (
Union
[IResolvable
,Mapping
[str
,str
],None
]) –Custom metadata to add to your Docker volume. This parameter maps to
Labels
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxlabel
option to docker volume create .scope (
Optional
[str
]) – The scope for the Docker volume that determines its lifecycle. Docker volumes that are scoped to atask
are automatically provisioned when the task starts and destroyed when the task stops. Docker volumes that are scoped asshared
persist after the task stops.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs docker_volume_configuration_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty( autoprovision=False, driver="driver", driver_opts={ "driver_opts_key": "driverOpts" }, labels={ "labels_key": "labels" }, scope="scope" )
Attributes
- autoprovision
If this value is
true
, the Docker volume is created if it doesn’t already exist.This field is only used if the
scope
isshared
.
- driver
The Docker volume driver to use.
The driver value must match the driver name provided by Docker because it is used for task placement. If the driver was installed using the Docker plugin CLI, use
docker plugin ls
to retrieve the driver name from your container instance. If the driver was installed using another method, use Docker plugin discovery to retrieve the driver name. For more information, see Docker plugin discovery . This parameter maps toDriver
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxdriver
option to docker volume create .
- driver_opts
A map of Docker driver-specific options passed through.
This parameter maps to
DriverOpts
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxopt
option to docker volume create .
- labels
Custom metadata to add to your Docker volume.
This parameter maps to
Labels
in the Create a volume section of the Docker Remote API and thexxlabel
option to docker volume create .
- scope
The scope for the Docker volume that determines its lifecycle.
Docker volumes that are scoped to a
task
are automatically provisioned when the task starts and destroyed when the task stops. Docker volumes that are scoped asshared
persist after the task stops.
EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty(*, filesystem_id, authorization_config=None, root_directory=None, transit_encryption=None, transit_encryption_port=None)
Bases:
object
This parameter is specified when you’re using an Amazon Elastic File System file system for task storage.
For more information, see Amazon EFS volumes in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Parameters:
filesystem_id (
str
) – The Amazon EFS file system ID to use.authorization_config (
Union
[IResolvable
,AuthorizationConfigProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – The authorization configuration details for the Amazon EFS file system.root_directory (
Optional
[str
]) – The directory within the Amazon EFS file system to mount as the root directory inside the host. If this parameter is omitted, the root of the Amazon EFS volume will be used. Specifying/
will have the same effect as omitting this parameter. .. epigraph:: If an EFS access point is specified in theauthorizationConfig
, the root directory parameter must either be omitted or set to/
which will enforce the path set on the EFS access point.transit_encryption (
Optional
[str
]) – Determines whether to use encryption for Amazon EFS data in transit between the Amazon ECS host and the Amazon EFS server. Transit encryption must be turned on if Amazon EFS IAM authorization is used. If this parameter is omitted, the default value ofDISABLED
is used. For more information, see Encrypting data in transit in the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide .transit_encryption_port (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The port to use when sending encrypted data between the Amazon ECS host and the Amazon EFS server. If you do not specify a transit encryption port, it will use the port selection strategy that the Amazon EFS mount helper uses. For more information, see EFS mount helper in the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide .
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs e_fSVolume_configuration_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty( filesystem_id="filesystemId", # the properties below are optional authorization_config=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.AuthorizationConfigProperty( access_point_id="accessPointId", iam="iam" ), root_directory="rootDirectory", transit_encryption="transitEncryption", transit_encryption_port=123 )
Attributes
- authorization_config
The authorization configuration details for the Amazon EFS file system.
- filesystem_id
The Amazon EFS file system ID to use.
- root_directory
The directory within the Amazon EFS file system to mount as the root directory inside the host.
If this parameter is omitted, the root of the Amazon EFS volume will be used. Specifying
/
will have the same effect as omitting this parameter. .. epigraph:If an EFS access point is specified in the ``authorizationConfig`` , the root directory parameter must either be omitted or set to ``/`` which will enforce the path set on the EFS access point.
- transit_encryption
Determines whether to use encryption for Amazon EFS data in transit between the Amazon ECS host and the Amazon EFS server.
Transit encryption must be turned on if Amazon EFS IAM authorization is used. If this parameter is omitted, the default value of
DISABLED
is used. For more information, see Encrypting data in transit in the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide .
- transit_encryption_port
The port to use when sending encrypted data between the Amazon ECS host and the Amazon EFS server.
If you do not specify a transit encryption port, it will use the port selection strategy that the Amazon EFS mount helper uses. For more information, see EFS mount helper in the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide .
EnvironmentFileProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.EnvironmentFileProperty(*, type=None, value=None)
Bases:
object
A list of files containing the environment variables to pass to a container.
You can specify up to ten environment files. The file must have a
.env
file extension. Each line in an environment file should contain an environment variable inVARIABLE=VALUE
format. Lines beginning with#
are treated as comments and are ignored. For more information about the environment variable file syntax, see Declare default environment variables in file .If there are environment variables specified using the
environment
parameter in a container definition, they take precedence over the variables contained within an environment file. If multiple environment files are specified that contain the same variable, they’re processed from the top down. We recommend that you use unique variable names. For more information, see Specifying environment variables in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .This parameter is only supported for tasks hosted on Fargate using the following platform versions:
Linux platform version
1.4.0
or later.Windows platform version
1.0.0
or later.
- Parameters:
type (
Optional
[str
]) – The file type to use. The only supported value iss3
.value (
Optional
[str
]) – The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon S3 object containing the environment variable file.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs environment_file_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EnvironmentFileProperty( type="type", value="value" )
Attributes
- type
The file type to use.
The only supported value is
s3
.
- value
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon S3 object containing the environment variable file.
EphemeralStorageProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.EphemeralStorageProperty(*, size_in_gib=None)
Bases:
object
The amount of ephemeral storage to allocate for the task.
This parameter is used to expand the total amount of ephemeral storage available, beyond the default amount, for tasks hosted on AWS Fargate . For more information, see Fargate task storage in the Amazon ECS User Guide for AWS Fargate . .. epigraph:
For tasks using the Fargate launch type, the task requires the following platforms: - Linux platform version ``1.4.0`` or later. - Windows platform version ``1.0.0`` or later.
- Parameters:
size_in_gib (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The total amount, in GiB, of ephemeral storage to set for the task. The minimum supported value is21
GiB and the maximum supported value is200
GiB.- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs ephemeral_storage_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EphemeralStorageProperty( size_in_gi_b=123 )
Attributes
- size_in_gib
The total amount, in GiB, of ephemeral storage to set for the task.
The minimum supported value is
21
GiB and the maximum supported value is200
GiB.
FirelensConfigurationProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.FirelensConfigurationProperty(*, options=None, type=None)
Bases:
object
The FireLens configuration for the container.
This is used to specify and configure a log router for container logs. For more information, see Custom log routing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Parameters:
options (
Union
[IResolvable
,Mapping
[str
,str
],None
]) – The options to use when configuring the log router. This field is optional and can be used to add additional metadata, such as the task, task definition, cluster, and container instance details to the log event. If specified, valid option keys are: -enable-ecs-log-metadata
, which can betrue
orfalse
-config-file-type
, which can bes3
orfile
-config-file-value
, which is either an S3 ARN or a file pathtype (
Optional
[str
]) – The log router to use. The valid values arefluentd
orfluentbit
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs firelens_configuration_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.FirelensConfigurationProperty( options={ "options_key": "options" }, type="type" )
Attributes
- options
The options to use when configuring the log router.
This field is optional and can be used to add additional metadata, such as the task, task definition, cluster, and container instance details to the log event.
If specified, valid option keys are:
enable-ecs-log-metadata
, which can betrue
orfalse
config-file-type
, which can bes3
orfile
config-file-value
, which is either an S3 ARN or a file path
- type
The log router to use.
The valid values are
fluentd
orfluentbit
.
HealthCheckProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.HealthCheckProperty(*, command=None, interval=None, retries=None, start_period=None, timeout=None)
Bases:
object
The
HealthCheck
property specifies an object representing a container health check.Health check parameters that are specified in a container definition override any Docker health checks that exist in the container image (such as those specified in a parent image or from the image’s Dockerfile). This configuration maps to the
HEALTHCHECK
parameter of docker run . .. epigraph:The Amazon ECS container agent only monitors and reports on the health checks specified in the task definition. Amazon ECS does not monitor Docker health checks that are embedded in a container image and not specified in the container definition. Health check parameters that are specified in a container definition override any Docker health checks that exist in the container image.
If a task is run manually, and not as part of a service, the task will continue its lifecycle regardless of its health status. For tasks that are part of a service, if the task reports as unhealthy then the task will be stopped and the service scheduler will replace it.
The following are notes about container health check support:
Container health checks require version 1.17.0 or greater of the Amazon ECS container agent. For more information, see Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent .
Container health checks are supported for Fargate tasks if you are using platform version 1.1.0 or greater. For more information, see AWS Fargate Platform Versions .
Container health checks are not supported for tasks that are part of a service that is configured to use a Classic Load Balancer.
- Parameters:
command (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –A string array representing the command that the container runs to determine if it is healthy. The string array must start with
CMD
to run the command arguments directly, orCMD-SHELL
to run the command with the container’s default shell. When you use the AWS Management Console JSON panel, the AWS Command Line Interface , or the APIs, enclose the list of commands in double quotes and brackets.[ "CMD-SHELL", "curl -f http://localhost/ || exit 1" ]
You don’t include the double quotes and brackets when you use the AWS Management Console.CMD-SHELL, curl -f http://localhost/ || exit 1
An exit code of 0 indicates success, and non-zero exit code indicates failure. For more information, seeHealthCheck
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API .interval (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The time period in seconds between each health check execution. You may specify between 5 and 300 seconds. The default value is 30 seconds.retries (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The number of times to retry a failed health check before the container is considered unhealthy. You may specify between 1 and 10 retries. The default value is 3.start_period (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The optional grace period to provide containers time to bootstrap before failed health checks count towards the maximum number of retries. You can specify between 0 and 300 seconds. By default, thestartPeriod
is off. .. epigraph:: If a health check succeeds within thestartPeriod
, then the container is considered healthy and any subsequent failures count toward the maximum number of retries.timeout (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The time period in seconds to wait for a health check to succeed before it is considered a failure. You may specify between 2 and 60 seconds. The default value is 5.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs health_check_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HealthCheckProperty( command=["command"], interval=123, retries=123, start_period=123, timeout=123 )
Attributes
- command
A string array representing the command that the container runs to determine if it is healthy.
The string array must start with
CMD
to run the command arguments directly, orCMD-SHELL
to run the command with the container’s default shell.When you use the AWS Management Console JSON panel, the AWS Command Line Interface , or the APIs, enclose the list of commands in double quotes and brackets.
[ "CMD-SHELL", "curl -f http://localhost/ || exit 1" ]
You don’t include the double quotes and brackets when you use the AWS Management Console.
CMD-SHELL, curl -f http://localhost/ || exit 1
An exit code of 0 indicates success, and non-zero exit code indicates failure. For more information, see
HealthCheck
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API .
- interval
The time period in seconds between each health check execution.
You may specify between 5 and 300 seconds. The default value is 30 seconds.
- retries
The number of times to retry a failed health check before the container is considered unhealthy.
You may specify between 1 and 10 retries. The default value is 3.
- start_period
The optional grace period to provide containers time to bootstrap before failed health checks count towards the maximum number of retries.
You can specify between 0 and 300 seconds. By default, the
startPeriod
is off. .. epigraph:If a health check succeeds within the ``startPeriod`` , then the container is considered healthy and any subsequent failures count toward the maximum number of retries.
- timeout
The time period in seconds to wait for a health check to succeed before it is considered a failure.
You may specify between 2 and 60 seconds. The default value is 5.
HostEntryProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.HostEntryProperty(*, hostname=None, ip_address=None)
Bases:
object
The
HostEntry
property specifies a hostname and an IP address that are added to the/etc/hosts
file of a container through theextraHosts
parameter of itsContainerDefinition
resource.- Parameters:
hostname (
Optional
[str
]) – The hostname to use in the/etc/hosts
entry.ip_address (
Optional
[str
]) – The IP address to use in the/etc/hosts
entry.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs host_entry_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostEntryProperty( hostname="hostname", ip_address="ipAddress" )
Attributes
- hostname
The hostname to use in the
/etc/hosts
entry.
- ip_address
The IP address to use in the
/etc/hosts
entry.
HostVolumePropertiesProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.HostVolumePropertiesProperty(*, source_path=None)
Bases:
object
The
HostVolumeProperties
property specifies details on a container instance bind mount host volume.- Parameters:
source_path (
Optional
[str
]) – When thehost
parameter is used, specify asourcePath
to declare the path on the host container instance that’s presented to the container. If this parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon has assigned a host path for you. If thehost
parameter contains asourcePath
file location, then the data volume persists at the specified location on the host container instance until you delete it manually. If thesourcePath
value doesn’t exist on the host container instance, the Docker daemon creates it. If the location does exist, the contents of the source path folder are exported. If you’re using the Fargate launch type, thesourcePath
parameter is not supported.- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs host_volume_properties_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostVolumePropertiesProperty( source_path="sourcePath" )
Attributes
- source_path
When the
host
parameter is used, specify asourcePath
to declare the path on the host container instance that’s presented to the container.If this parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon has assigned a host path for you. If the
host
parameter contains asourcePath
file location, then the data volume persists at the specified location on the host container instance until you delete it manually. If thesourcePath
value doesn’t exist on the host container instance, the Docker daemon creates it. If the location does exist, the contents of the source path folder are exported.If you’re using the Fargate launch type, the
sourcePath
parameter is not supported.
InferenceAcceleratorProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.InferenceAcceleratorProperty(*, device_name=None, device_type=None)
Bases:
object
Details on an Elastic Inference accelerator.
For more information, see Working with Amazon Elastic Inference on Amazon ECS in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Parameters:
device_name (
Optional
[str
]) – The Elastic Inference accelerator device name. ThedeviceName
must also be referenced in a container definition as a ResourceRequirement .device_type (
Optional
[str
]) – The Elastic Inference accelerator type to use.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs inference_accelerator_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.InferenceAcceleratorProperty( device_name="deviceName", device_type="deviceType" )
Attributes
- device_name
The Elastic Inference accelerator device name.
The
deviceName
must also be referenced in a container definition as a ResourceRequirement .
- device_type
The Elastic Inference accelerator type to use.
KernelCapabilitiesProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.KernelCapabilitiesProperty(*, add=None, drop=None)
Bases:
object
The
KernelCapabilities
property specifies the Linux capabilities for the container that are added to or dropped from the default configuration that is provided by Docker.For more information on the default capabilities and the non-default available capabilities, see Runtime privilege and Linux capabilities in the Docker run reference . For more detailed information on these Linux capabilities, see the capabilities(7) Linux manual page.
- Parameters:
add (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –The Linux capabilities for the container that have been added to the default configuration provided by Docker. This parameter maps to
CapAdd
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cap-add
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: Tasks launched on AWS Fargate only support adding theSYS_PTRACE
kernel capability. Valid values:"ALL" | "AUDIT_CONTROL" | "AUDIT_WRITE" | "BLOCK_SUSPEND" | "CHOWN" | "DAC_OVERRIDE" | "DAC_READ_SEARCH" | "FOWNER" | "FSETID" | "IPC_LOCK" | "IPC_OWNER" | "KILL" | "LEASE" | "LINUX_IMMUTABLE" | "MAC_ADMIN" | "MAC_OVERRIDE" | "MKNOD" | "NET_ADMIN" | "NET_BIND_SERVICE" | "NET_BROADCAST" | "NET_RAW" | "SETFCAP" | "SETGID" | "SETPCAP" | "SETUID" | "SYS_ADMIN" | "SYS_BOOT" | "SYS_CHROOT" | "SYS_MODULE" | "SYS_NICE" | "SYS_PACCT" | "SYS_PTRACE" | "SYS_RAWIO" | "SYS_RESOURCE" | "SYS_TIME" | "SYS_TTY_CONFIG" | "SYSLOG" | "WAKE_ALARM"
drop (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) –The Linux capabilities for the container that have been removed from the default configuration provided by Docker. This parameter maps to
CapDrop
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cap-drop
option to docker run . Valid values:"ALL" | "AUDIT_CONTROL" | "AUDIT_WRITE" | "BLOCK_SUSPEND" | "CHOWN" | "DAC_OVERRIDE" | "DAC_READ_SEARCH" | "FOWNER" | "FSETID" | "IPC_LOCK" | "IPC_OWNER" | "KILL" | "LEASE" | "LINUX_IMMUTABLE" | "MAC_ADMIN" | "MAC_OVERRIDE" | "MKNOD" | "NET_ADMIN" | "NET_BIND_SERVICE" | "NET_BROADCAST" | "NET_RAW" | "SETFCAP" | "SETGID" | "SETPCAP" | "SETUID" | "SYS_ADMIN" | "SYS_BOOT" | "SYS_CHROOT" | "SYS_MODULE" | "SYS_NICE" | "SYS_PACCT" | "SYS_PTRACE" | "SYS_RAWIO" | "SYS_RESOURCE" | "SYS_TIME" | "SYS_TTY_CONFIG" | "SYSLOG" | "WAKE_ALARM"
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs kernel_capabilities_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KernelCapabilitiesProperty( add=["add"], drop=["drop"] )
Attributes
- add
The Linux capabilities for the container that have been added to the default configuration provided by Docker.
This parameter maps to
CapAdd
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cap-add
option to docker run . .. epigraph:Tasks launched on AWS Fargate only support adding the ``SYS_PTRACE`` kernel capability.
Valid values:
"ALL" | "AUDIT_CONTROL" | "AUDIT_WRITE" | "BLOCK_SUSPEND" | "CHOWN" | "DAC_OVERRIDE" | "DAC_READ_SEARCH" | "FOWNER" | "FSETID" | "IPC_LOCK" | "IPC_OWNER" | "KILL" | "LEASE" | "LINUX_IMMUTABLE" | "MAC_ADMIN" | "MAC_OVERRIDE" | "MKNOD" | "NET_ADMIN" | "NET_BIND_SERVICE" | "NET_BROADCAST" | "NET_RAW" | "SETFCAP" | "SETGID" | "SETPCAP" | "SETUID" | "SYS_ADMIN" | "SYS_BOOT" | "SYS_CHROOT" | "SYS_MODULE" | "SYS_NICE" | "SYS_PACCT" | "SYS_PTRACE" | "SYS_RAWIO" | "SYS_RESOURCE" | "SYS_TIME" | "SYS_TTY_CONFIG" | "SYSLOG" | "WAKE_ALARM"
- drop
The Linux capabilities for the container that have been removed from the default configuration provided by Docker.
This parameter maps to
CapDrop
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--cap-drop
option to docker run .Valid values:
"ALL" | "AUDIT_CONTROL" | "AUDIT_WRITE" | "BLOCK_SUSPEND" | "CHOWN" | "DAC_OVERRIDE" | "DAC_READ_SEARCH" | "FOWNER" | "FSETID" | "IPC_LOCK" | "IPC_OWNER" | "KILL" | "LEASE" | "LINUX_IMMUTABLE" | "MAC_ADMIN" | "MAC_OVERRIDE" | "MKNOD" | "NET_ADMIN" | "NET_BIND_SERVICE" | "NET_BROADCAST" | "NET_RAW" | "SETFCAP" | "SETGID" | "SETPCAP" | "SETUID" | "SYS_ADMIN" | "SYS_BOOT" | "SYS_CHROOT" | "SYS_MODULE" | "SYS_NICE" | "SYS_PACCT" | "SYS_PTRACE" | "SYS_RAWIO" | "SYS_RESOURCE" | "SYS_TIME" | "SYS_TTY_CONFIG" | "SYSLOG" | "WAKE_ALARM"
KeyValuePairProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty(*, name=None, value=None)
Bases:
object
A key-value pair object.
- Parameters:
name (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.value (
Optional
[str
]) – The value of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs key_value_pair_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty( name="name", value="value" )
Attributes
- name
The name of the key-value pair.
For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.
- value
The value of the key-value pair.
For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.
LinuxParametersProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.LinuxParametersProperty(*, capabilities=None, devices=None, init_process_enabled=None, max_swap=None, shared_memory_size=None, swappiness=None, tmpfs=None)
Bases:
object
The Linux-specific options that are applied to the container, such as Linux KernelCapabilities .
- Parameters:
capabilities (
Union
[IResolvable
,KernelCapabilitiesProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – The Linux capabilities for the container that are added to or dropped from the default configuration provided by Docker. .. epigraph:: For tasks that use the Fargate launch type,capabilities
is supported for all platform versions but theadd
parameter is only supported if using platform version 1.4.0 or later.devices (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,DeviceProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –Any host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to
Devices
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--device
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: If you’re using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, thedevices
parameter isn’t supported.init_process_enabled (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) –Run an
init
process inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes. This parameter maps to the--init
option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
max_swap (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use. This parameter will be translated to the
--memory-swap
option to docker run where the value would be the sum of the container memory plus themaxSwap
value. If amaxSwap
value of0
is specified, the container will not use swap. Accepted values are0
or any positive integer. If themaxSwap
parameter is omitted, the container will use the swap configuration for the container instance it is running on. AmaxSwap
value must be set for theswappiness
parameter to be used. .. epigraph:: If you’re using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, themaxSwap
parameter isn’t supported. If you’re using tasks on Amazon Linux 2023 theswappiness
parameter isn’t supported.shared_memory_size (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –The value for the size (in MiB) of the
/dev/shm
volume. This parameter maps to the--shm-size
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: If you are using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, thesharedMemorySize
parameter is not supported.swappiness (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) –This allows you to tune a container’s memory swappiness behavior. A
swappiness
value of0
will cause swapping to not happen unless absolutely necessary. Aswappiness
value of100
will cause pages to be swapped very aggressively. Accepted values are whole numbers between0
and100
. If theswappiness
parameter is not specified, a default value of60
is used. If a value is not specified formaxSwap
then this parameter is ignored. This parameter maps to the--memory-swappiness
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: If you’re using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, theswappiness
parameter isn’t supported. If you’re using tasks on Amazon Linux 2023 theswappiness
parameter isn’t supported.tmpfs (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,TmpfsProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) –The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the tmpfs mount. This parameter maps to the
--tmpfs
option to docker run . .. epigraph:: If you’re using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, thetmpfs
parameter isn’t supported.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs linux_parameters_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LinuxParametersProperty( capabilities=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KernelCapabilitiesProperty( add=["add"], drop=["drop"] ), devices=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DeviceProperty( container_path="containerPath", host_path="hostPath", permissions=["permissions"] )], init_process_enabled=False, max_swap=123, shared_memory_size=123, swappiness=123, tmpfs=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TmpfsProperty( size=123, # the properties below are optional container_path="containerPath", mount_options=["mountOptions"] )] )
Attributes
- capabilities
The Linux capabilities for the container that are added to or dropped from the default configuration provided by Docker.
For tasks that use the Fargate launch type,
capabilities
is supported for all platform versions but theadd
parameter is only supported if using platform version 1.4.0 or later.
- devices
Any host devices to expose to the container.
This parameter maps to
Devices
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--device
option to docker run . .. epigraph:If you're using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, the ``devices`` parameter isn't supported.
- init_process_enabled
Run an
init
process inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes.This parameter maps to the
--init
option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
- max_swap
The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use.
This parameter will be translated to the
--memory-swap
option to docker run where the value would be the sum of the container memory plus themaxSwap
value.If a
maxSwap
value of0
is specified, the container will not use swap. Accepted values are0
or any positive integer. If themaxSwap
parameter is omitted, the container will use the swap configuration for the container instance it is running on. AmaxSwap
value must be set for theswappiness
parameter to be used. .. epigraph:If you're using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, the ``maxSwap`` parameter isn't supported. If you're using tasks on Amazon Linux 2023 the ``swappiness`` parameter isn't supported.
The value for the size (in MiB) of the
/dev/shm
volume.This parameter maps to the
--shm-size
option to docker run . .. epigraph:If you are using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, the ``sharedMemorySize`` parameter is not supported.
- swappiness
This allows you to tune a container’s memory swappiness behavior.
A
swappiness
value of0
will cause swapping to not happen unless absolutely necessary. Aswappiness
value of100
will cause pages to be swapped very aggressively. Accepted values are whole numbers between0
and100
. If theswappiness
parameter is not specified, a default value of60
is used. If a value is not specified formaxSwap
then this parameter is ignored. This parameter maps to the--memory-swappiness
option to docker run . .. epigraph:If you're using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, the ``swappiness`` parameter isn't supported. If you're using tasks on Amazon Linux 2023 the ``swappiness`` parameter isn't supported.
- tmpfs
The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the tmpfs mount.
This parameter maps to the
--tmpfs
option to docker run . .. epigraph:If you're using tasks that use the Fargate launch type, the ``tmpfs`` parameter isn't supported.
LogConfigurationProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.LogConfigurationProperty(*, log_driver, options=None, secret_options=None)
Bases:
object
The
LogConfiguration
property specifies log configuration options to send to a custom log driver for the container.- Parameters:
log_driver (
str
) –The log driver to use for the container. For tasks on AWS Fargate , the supported log drivers are
awslogs
,splunk
, andawsfirelens
. For tasks hosted on Amazon EC2 instances, the supported log drivers areawslogs
,fluentd
,gelf
,json-file
,journald
,logentries
,syslog
,splunk
, andawsfirelens
. For more information about using theawslogs
log driver, see Using the awslogs log driver in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . For more information about using theawsfirelens
log driver, see Custom log routing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:: If you have a custom driver that isn’t listed, you can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that’s available on GitHub and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that you would like to have included. However, we don’t currently provide support for running modified copies of this software.options (
Union
[IResolvable
,Mapping
[str
,str
],None
]) – The configuration options to send to the log driver. This parameter requires version 1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
secret_options (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[SecretProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],IResolvable
]],None
]) –The secrets to pass to the log configuration. For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs log_configuration_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.LogConfigurationProperty( log_driver="logDriver", # the properties below are optional options={ "options_key": "options" }, secret_options=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )] )
Attributes
- log_driver
The log driver to use for the container.
For tasks on AWS Fargate , the supported log drivers are
awslogs
,splunk
, andawsfirelens
.For tasks hosted on Amazon EC2 instances, the supported log drivers are
awslogs
,fluentd
,gelf
,json-file
,journald
,logentries
,syslog
,splunk
, andawsfirelens
.For more information about using the
awslogs
log driver, see Using the awslogs log driver in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .For more information about using the
awsfirelens
log driver, see Custom log routing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:If you have a custom driver that isn't listed, you can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that's `available on GitHub <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/https://github.com/aws/amazon-ecs-agent>`_ and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that you would like to have included. However, we don't currently provide support for running modified copies of this software.
- options
The configuration options to send to the log driver.
This parameter requires version 1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command:
sudo docker version --format '{{.Server.APIVersion}}'
- secret_options
The secrets to pass to the log configuration.
For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
MountPointProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.MountPointProperty(*, container_path=None, read_only=None, source_volume=None)
Bases:
object
The details for a volume mount point that’s used in a container definition.
- Parameters:
container_path (
Optional
[str
]) – The path on the container to mount the host volume at.read_only (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) – If this value istrue
, the container has read-only access to the volume. If this value isfalse
, then the container can write to the volume. The default value isfalse
.source_volume (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of the volume to mount. Must be a volume name referenced in thename
parameter of task definitionvolume
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs mount_point_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.MountPointProperty( container_path="containerPath", read_only=False, source_volume="sourceVolume" )
Attributes
- container_path
The path on the container to mount the host volume at.
- read_only
If this value is
true
, the container has read-only access to the volume.If this value is
false
, then the container can write to the volume. The default value isfalse
.
- source_volume
The name of the volume to mount.
Must be a volume name referenced in the
name
parameter of task definitionvolume
.
PortMappingProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.PortMappingProperty(*, app_protocol=None, container_port=None, container_port_range=None, host_port=None, name=None, protocol=None)
Bases:
object
The
PortMapping
property specifies a port mapping.Port mappings allow containers to access ports on the host container instance to send or receive traffic. Port mappings are specified as part of the container definition.
If you are using containers in a task with the
awsvpc
orhost
network mode, exposed ports should be specified usingcontainerPort
. ThehostPort
can be left blank or it must be the same value as thecontainerPort
.After a task reaches the
RUNNING
status, manual and automatic host and container port assignments are visible in thenetworkBindings
section of DescribeTasks API responses.- Parameters:
app_protocol (
Optional
[str
]) – The application protocol that’s used for the port mapping. This parameter only applies to Service Connect. We recommend that you set this parameter to be consistent with the protocol that your application uses. If you set this parameter, Amazon ECS adds protocol-specific connection handling to the Service Connect proxy. If you set this parameter, Amazon ECS adds protocol-specific telemetry in the Amazon ECS console and CloudWatch. If you don’t set a value for this parameter, then TCP is used. However, Amazon ECS doesn’t add protocol-specific telemetry for TCP. Tasks that run in a namespace can use short names to connect to services in the namespace. Tasks can connect to services across all of the clusters in the namespace. Tasks connect through a managed proxy container that collects logs and metrics for increased visibility. Only the tasks that Amazon ECS services create are supported with Service Connect. For more information, see Service Connect in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .container_port (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The port number on the container that’s bound to the user-specified or automatically assigned host port. If you use containers in a task with theawsvpc
orhost
network mode, specify the exposed ports usingcontainerPort
. If you use containers in a task with thebridge
network mode and you specify a container port and not a host port, your container automatically receives a host port in the ephemeral port range. For more information, seehostPort
. Port mappings that are automatically assigned in this way do not count toward the 100 reserved ports limit of a container instance.container_port_range (
Optional
[str
]) – The port number range on the container that’s bound to the dynamically mapped host port range. The following rules apply when you specify acontainerPortRange
: - You must use either thebridge
network mode or theawsvpc
network mode. - This parameter is available for both the EC2 and AWS Fargate launch types. - This parameter is available for both the Linux and Windows operating systems. - The container instance must have at least version 1.67.0 of the container agent and at least version 1.67.0-1 of theecs-init
package - You can specify a maximum of 100 port ranges per container. - You do not specify ahostPortRange
. The value of thehostPortRange
is set as follows: - For containers in a task with theawsvpc
network mode, thehostPort
is set to the same value as thecontainerPort
. This is a static mapping strategy. - For containers in a task with thebridge
network mode, the Amazon ECS agent finds open host ports from the default ephemeral range and passes it to docker to bind them to the container ports. - ThecontainerPortRange
valid values are between 1 and 65535. - A port can only be included in one port mapping per container. - You cannot specify overlapping port ranges. - The first port in the range must be less than last port in the range. - Docker recommends that you turn off the docker-proxy in the Docker daemon config file when you have a large number of ports. For more information, see Issue #11185 on the Github website. For information about how to turn off the docker-proxy in the Docker daemon config file, see Docker daemon in the Amazon ECS Developer Guide . You can call`DescribeTasks
<https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeTasks.html>`_ to view thehostPortRange
which are the host ports that are bound to the container ports.host_port (
Union
[int
,float
,None
]) – The port number on the container instance to reserve for your container. If you specify acontainerPortRange
, leave this field empty and the value of thehostPort
is set as follows: - For containers in a task with theawsvpc
network mode, thehostPort
is set to the same value as thecontainerPort
. This is a static mapping strategy. - For containers in a task with thebridge
network mode, the Amazon ECS agent finds open ports on the host and automatically binds them to the container ports. This is a dynamic mapping strategy. If you use containers in a task with theawsvpc
orhost
network mode, thehostPort
can either be left blank or set to the same value as thecontainerPort
. If you use containers in a task with thebridge
network mode, you can specify a non-reserved host port for your container port mapping, or you can omit thehostPort
(or set it to0
) while specifying acontainerPort
and your container automatically receives a port in the ephemeral port range for your container instance operating system and Docker version. The default ephemeral port range for Docker version 1.6.0 and later is listed on the instance under/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
. If this kernel parameter is unavailable, the default ephemeral port range from 49153 through 65535 is used. Do not attempt to specify a host port in the ephemeral port range as these are reserved for automatic assignment. In general, ports below 32768 are outside of the ephemeral port range. The default reserved ports are 22 for SSH, the Docker ports 2375 and 2376, and the Amazon ECS container agent ports 51678-51680. Any host port that was previously specified in a running task is also reserved while the task is running. That is, after a task stops, the host port is released. The current reserved ports are displayed in theremainingResources
of DescribeContainerInstances output. A container instance can have up to 100 reserved ports at a time. This number includes the default reserved ports. Automatically assigned ports aren’t included in the 100 reserved ports quota.name (
Optional
[str
]) –The name that’s used for the port mapping. This parameter only applies to Service Connect. This parameter is the name that you use in the
serviceConnectConfiguration
of a service. The name can include up to 64 characters. The characters can include lowercase letters, numbers, underscores (_), and hyphens (-). The name can’t start with a hyphen. For more information, see Service Connect in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .protocol (
Optional
[str
]) – The protocol used for the port mapping. Valid values aretcp
andudp
. The default istcp
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs port_mapping_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.PortMappingProperty( app_protocol="appProtocol", container_port=123, container_port_range="containerPortRange", host_port=123, name="name", protocol="protocol" )
Attributes
- app_protocol
The application protocol that’s used for the port mapping.
This parameter only applies to Service Connect. We recommend that you set this parameter to be consistent with the protocol that your application uses. If you set this parameter, Amazon ECS adds protocol-specific connection handling to the Service Connect proxy. If you set this parameter, Amazon ECS adds protocol-specific telemetry in the Amazon ECS console and CloudWatch.
If you don’t set a value for this parameter, then TCP is used. However, Amazon ECS doesn’t add protocol-specific telemetry for TCP.
Tasks that run in a namespace can use short names to connect to services in the namespace. Tasks can connect to services across all of the clusters in the namespace. Tasks connect through a managed proxy container that collects logs and metrics for increased visibility. Only the tasks that Amazon ECS services create are supported with Service Connect. For more information, see Service Connect in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- container_port
The port number on the container that’s bound to the user-specified or automatically assigned host port.
If you use containers in a task with the
awsvpc
orhost
network mode, specify the exposed ports usingcontainerPort
.If you use containers in a task with the
bridge
network mode and you specify a container port and not a host port, your container automatically receives a host port in the ephemeral port range. For more information, seehostPort
. Port mappings that are automatically assigned in this way do not count toward the 100 reserved ports limit of a container instance.
- container_port_range
The port number range on the container that’s bound to the dynamically mapped host port range.
The following rules apply when you specify a
containerPortRange
:You must use either the
bridge
network mode or theawsvpc
network mode.This parameter is available for both the EC2 and AWS Fargate launch types.
This parameter is available for both the Linux and Windows operating systems.
The container instance must have at least version 1.67.0 of the container agent and at least version 1.67.0-1 of the
ecs-init
packageYou can specify a maximum of 100 port ranges per container.
You do not specify a
hostPortRange
. The value of thehostPortRange
is set as follows:For containers in a task with the
awsvpc
network mode, thehostPort
is set to the same value as thecontainerPort
. This is a static mapping strategy.For containers in a task with the
bridge
network mode, the Amazon ECS agent finds open host ports from the default ephemeral range and passes it to docker to bind them to the container ports.The
containerPortRange
valid values are between 1 and 65535.A port can only be included in one port mapping per container.
You cannot specify overlapping port ranges.
The first port in the range must be less than last port in the range.
Docker recommends that you turn off the docker-proxy in the Docker daemon config file when you have a large number of ports.
For more information, see Issue #11185 on the Github website.
For information about how to turn off the docker-proxy in the Docker daemon config file, see Docker daemon in the Amazon ECS Developer Guide .
You can call
`DescribeTasks
<https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeTasks.html>`_ to view thehostPortRange
which are the host ports that are bound to the container ports.
- host_port
The port number on the container instance to reserve for your container.
If you specify a
containerPortRange
, leave this field empty and the value of thehostPort
is set as follows:For containers in a task with the
awsvpc
network mode, thehostPort
is set to the same value as thecontainerPort
. This is a static mapping strategy.For containers in a task with the
bridge
network mode, the Amazon ECS agent finds open ports on the host and automatically binds them to the container ports. This is a dynamic mapping strategy.
If you use containers in a task with the
awsvpc
orhost
network mode, thehostPort
can either be left blank or set to the same value as thecontainerPort
.If you use containers in a task with the
bridge
network mode, you can specify a non-reserved host port for your container port mapping, or you can omit thehostPort
(or set it to0
) while specifying acontainerPort
and your container automatically receives a port in the ephemeral port range for your container instance operating system and Docker version.The default ephemeral port range for Docker version 1.6.0 and later is listed on the instance under
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
. If this kernel parameter is unavailable, the default ephemeral port range from 49153 through 65535 is used. Do not attempt to specify a host port in the ephemeral port range as these are reserved for automatic assignment. In general, ports below 32768 are outside of the ephemeral port range.The default reserved ports are 22 for SSH, the Docker ports 2375 and 2376, and the Amazon ECS container agent ports 51678-51680. Any host port that was previously specified in a running task is also reserved while the task is running. That is, after a task stops, the host port is released. The current reserved ports are displayed in the
remainingResources
of DescribeContainerInstances output. A container instance can have up to 100 reserved ports at a time. This number includes the default reserved ports. Automatically assigned ports aren’t included in the 100 reserved ports quota.
- name
The name that’s used for the port mapping.
This parameter only applies to Service Connect. This parameter is the name that you use in the
serviceConnectConfiguration
of a service. The name can include up to 64 characters. The characters can include lowercase letters, numbers, underscores (_), and hyphens (-). The name can’t start with a hyphen.For more information, see Service Connect in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- protocol
The protocol used for the port mapping.
Valid values are
tcp
andudp
. The default istcp
.
ProxyConfigurationProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.ProxyConfigurationProperty(*, container_name, proxy_configuration_properties=None, type=None)
Bases:
object
The configuration details for the App Mesh proxy.
For tasks that use the EC2 launch type, the container instances require at least version 1.26.0 of the container agent and at least version 1.26.0-1 of the
ecs-init
package to use a proxy configuration. If your container instances are launched from the Amazon ECS optimized AMI version20190301
or later, then they contain the required versions of the container agent andecs-init
. For more information, see Amazon ECS-optimized Linux AMI- Parameters:
container_name (
str
) – The name of the container that will serve as the App Mesh proxy.proxy_configuration_properties (
Union
[IResolvable
,Sequence
[Union
[IResolvable
,KeyValuePairProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
]]],None
]) – The set of network configuration parameters to provide the Container Network Interface (CNI) plugin, specified as key-value pairs. -IgnoredUID
- (Required) The user ID (UID) of the proxy container as defined by theuser
parameter in a container definition. This is used to ensure the proxy ignores its own traffic. IfIgnoredGID
is specified, this field can be empty. -IgnoredGID
- (Required) The group ID (GID) of the proxy container as defined by theuser
parameter in a container definition. This is used to ensure the proxy ignores its own traffic. IfIgnoredUID
is specified, this field can be empty. -AppPorts
- (Required) The list of ports that the application uses. Network traffic to these ports is forwarded to theProxyIngressPort
andProxyEgressPort
. -ProxyIngressPort
- (Required) Specifies the port that incoming traffic to theAppPorts
is directed to. -ProxyEgressPort
- (Required) Specifies the port that outgoing traffic from theAppPorts
is directed to. -EgressIgnoredPorts
- (Required) The egress traffic going to the specified ports is ignored and not redirected to theProxyEgressPort
. It can be an empty list. -EgressIgnoredIPs
- (Required) The egress traffic going to the specified IP addresses is ignored and not redirected to theProxyEgressPort
. It can be an empty list.type (
Optional
[str
]) – The proxy type. The only supported value isAPPMESH
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs proxy_configuration_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ProxyConfigurationProperty( container_name="containerName", # the properties below are optional proxy_configuration_properties=[ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.KeyValuePairProperty( name="name", value="value" )], type="type" )
Attributes
- container_name
The name of the container that will serve as the App Mesh proxy.
- proxy_configuration_properties
The set of network configuration parameters to provide the Container Network Interface (CNI) plugin, specified as key-value pairs.
IgnoredUID
- (Required) The user ID (UID) of the proxy container as defined by theuser
parameter in a container definition. This is used to ensure the proxy ignores its own traffic. IfIgnoredGID
is specified, this field can be empty.IgnoredGID
- (Required) The group ID (GID) of the proxy container as defined by theuser
parameter in a container definition. This is used to ensure the proxy ignores its own traffic. IfIgnoredUID
is specified, this field can be empty.AppPorts
- (Required) The list of ports that the application uses. Network traffic to these ports is forwarded to theProxyIngressPort
andProxyEgressPort
.ProxyIngressPort
- (Required) Specifies the port that incoming traffic to theAppPorts
is directed to.ProxyEgressPort
- (Required) Specifies the port that outgoing traffic from theAppPorts
is directed to.EgressIgnoredPorts
- (Required) The egress traffic going to the specified ports is ignored and not redirected to theProxyEgressPort
. It can be an empty list.EgressIgnoredIPs
- (Required) The egress traffic going to the specified IP addresses is ignored and not redirected to theProxyEgressPort
. It can be an empty list.
- type
The proxy type.
The only supported value is
APPMESH
.
RepositoryCredentialsProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.RepositoryCredentialsProperty(*, credentials_parameter=None)
Bases:
object
The repository credentials for private registry authentication.
- Parameters:
credentials_parameter (
Optional
[str
]) – The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the secret containing the private repository credentials. .. epigraph:: When you use the Amazon ECS API, AWS CLI , or AWS SDK, if the secret exists in the same Region as the task that you’re launching then you can use either the full ARN or the name of the secret. When you use the AWS Management Console, you must specify the full ARN of the secret.- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs repository_credentials_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.RepositoryCredentialsProperty( credentials_parameter="credentialsParameter" )
Attributes
- credentials_parameter
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the secret containing the private repository credentials.
When you use the Amazon ECS API, AWS CLI , or AWS SDK, if the secret exists in the same Region as the task that you’re launching then you can use either the full ARN or the name of the secret. When you use the AWS Management Console, you must specify the full ARN of the secret.
ResourceRequirementProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.ResourceRequirementProperty(*, type, value)
Bases:
object
The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container.
The supported resource types are GPUs and Elastic Inference accelerators. For more information, see Working with GPUs on Amazon ECS or Working with Amazon Elastic Inference on Amazon ECS in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide
- Parameters:
type (
str
) – The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported values areGPU
orInferenceAccelerator
.value (
str
) – The value for the specified resource type. If theGPU
type is used, the value is the number of physicalGPUs
the Amazon ECS container agent reserves for the container. The number of GPUs that’s reserved for all containers in a task can’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the container instance that the task is launched on. If theInferenceAccelerator
type is used, thevalue
matches thedeviceName
for an InferenceAccelerator specified in a task definition.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs resource_requirement_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.ResourceRequirementProperty( type="type", value="value" )
Attributes
- type
The type of resource to assign to a container.
The supported values are
GPU
orInferenceAccelerator
.
- value
The value for the specified resource type.
If the
GPU
type is used, the value is the number of physicalGPUs
the Amazon ECS container agent reserves for the container. The number of GPUs that’s reserved for all containers in a task can’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the container instance that the task is launched on.If the
InferenceAccelerator
type is used, thevalue
matches thedeviceName
for an InferenceAccelerator specified in a task definition.
RuntimePlatformProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.RuntimePlatformProperty(*, cpu_architecture=None, operating_system_family=None)
Bases:
object
Information about the platform for the Amazon ECS service or task.
For more information about
RuntimePlatform
, see RuntimePlatform in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .- Parameters:
cpu_architecture (
Optional
[str
]) – The CPU architecture. You can run your Linux tasks on an ARM-based platform by setting the value toARM64
. This option is available for tasks that run on Linux Amazon EC2 instance or Linux containers on Fargate.operating_system_family (
Optional
[str
]) – The operating system.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs runtime_platform_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.RuntimePlatformProperty( cpu_architecture="cpuArchitecture", operating_system_family="operatingSystemFamily" )
Attributes
- cpu_architecture
The CPU architecture.
You can run your Linux tasks on an ARM-based platform by setting the value to
ARM64
. This option is available for tasks that run on Linux Amazon EC2 instance or Linux containers on Fargate.
- operating_system_family
The operating system.
SecretProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty(*, name, value_from)
Bases:
object
An object representing the secret to expose to your container.
Secrets can be exposed to a container in the following ways:
To inject sensitive data into your containers as environment variables, use the
secrets
container definition parameter.To reference sensitive information in the log configuration of a container, use the
secretOptions
container definition parameter.
For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Parameters:
name (
str
) – The name of the secret.value_from (
str
) –The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the SSM Parameter Store. For information about the require AWS Identity and Access Management permissions, see Required IAM permissions for Amazon ECS secrets (for Secrets Manager) or Required IAM permissions for Amazon ECS secrets (for Systems Manager Parameter store) in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:: If the SSM Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the task you’re launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs secret_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SecretProperty( name="name", value_from="valueFrom" )
Attributes
- name
The name of the secret.
- value_from
The secret to expose to the container.
The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the SSM Parameter Store.
For information about the require AWS Identity and Access Management permissions, see Required IAM permissions for Amazon ECS secrets (for Secrets Manager) or Required IAM permissions for Amazon ECS secrets (for Systems Manager Parameter store) in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:
If the SSM Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the task you're launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.
SystemControlProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.SystemControlProperty(*, namespace=None, value=None)
Bases:
object
A list of namespaced kernel parameters to set in the container.
This parameter maps to
Sysctls
in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the--sysctl
option to docker run .We don’t recommend that you specify network-related
systemControls
parameters for multiple containers in a single task. This task also uses either theawsvpc
orhost
network mode. It does it for the following reasons.For tasks that use the
awsvpc
network mode, if you setsystemControls
for any container, it applies to all containers in the task. If you set differentsystemControls
for multiple containers in a single task, the container that’s started last determines whichsystemControls
take effect.For tasks that use the
host
network mode, thesystemControls
parameter applies to the container instance’s kernel parameter and that of all containers of any tasks running on that container instance.
- Parameters:
namespace (
Optional
[str
]) – The namespaced kernel parameter to set avalue
for.value (
Optional
[str
]) – The value for the namespaced kernel parameter that’s specified innamespace
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs system_control_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.SystemControlProperty( namespace="namespace", value="value" )
Attributes
- namespace
The namespaced kernel parameter to set a
value
for.
- value
The value for the namespaced kernel parameter that’s specified in
namespace
.
TaskDefinitionPlacementConstraintProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.TaskDefinitionPlacementConstraintProperty(*, type, expression=None)
Bases:
object
The constraint on task placement in the task definition.
For more information, see Task placement constraints in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide . .. epigraph:
Task placement constraints aren't supported for tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- Parameters:
type (
str
) – The type of constraint. TheMemberOf
constraint restricts selection to be from a group of valid candidates.expression (
Optional
[str
]) – A cluster query language expression to apply to the constraint. For more information, see Cluster query language in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs task_definition_placement_constraint_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TaskDefinitionPlacementConstraintProperty( type="type", # the properties below are optional expression="expression" )
Attributes
- expression
A cluster query language expression to apply to the constraint.
For more information, see Cluster query language in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
- type
The type of constraint.
The
MemberOf
constraint restricts selection to be from a group of valid candidates.
TmpfsProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.TmpfsProperty(*, size, container_path=None, mount_options=None)
Bases:
object
The container path, mount options, and size of the tmpfs mount.
- Parameters:
size (
Union
[int
,float
]) – The maximum size (in MiB) of the tmpfs volume.container_path (
Optional
[str
]) – The absolute file path where the tmpfs volume is to be mounted.mount_options (
Optional
[Sequence
[str
]]) – The list of tmpfs volume mount options. Valid values:"defaults" | "ro" | "rw" | "suid" | "nosuid" | "dev" | "nodev" | "exec" | "noexec" | "sync" | "async" | "dirsync" | "remount" | "mand" | "nomand" | "atime" | "noatime" | "diratime" | "nodiratime" | "bind" | "rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" | "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime" | "norelatime" | "strictatime" | "nostrictatime" | "mode" | "uid" | "gid" | "nr_inodes" | "nr_blocks" | "mpol"
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs tmpfs_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.TmpfsProperty( size=123, # the properties below are optional container_path="containerPath", mount_options=["mountOptions"] )
Attributes
- container_path
The absolute file path where the tmpfs volume is to be mounted.
- mount_options
The list of tmpfs volume mount options.
Valid values:
"defaults" | "ro" | "rw" | "suid" | "nosuid" | "dev" | "nodev" | "exec" | "noexec" | "sync" | "async" | "dirsync" | "remount" | "mand" | "nomand" | "atime" | "noatime" | "diratime" | "nodiratime" | "bind" | "rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" | "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime" | "norelatime" | "strictatime" | "nostrictatime" | "mode" | "uid" | "gid" | "nr_inodes" | "nr_blocks" | "mpol"
- size
The maximum size (in MiB) of the tmpfs volume.
UlimitProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.UlimitProperty(*, hard_limit, name, soft_limit)
Bases:
object
The
ulimit
settings to pass to the container.Amazon ECS tasks hosted on AWS Fargate use the default resource limit values set by the operating system with the exception of the
nofile
resource limit parameter which AWS Fargate overrides. Thenofile
resource limit sets a restriction on the number of open files that a container can use. The defaultnofile
soft limit is1024
and the default hard limit is4096
.You can specify the
ulimit
settings for a container in a task definition.- Parameters:
hard_limit (
Union
[int
,float
]) – The hard limit for theulimit
type.name (
str
) – Thetype
of theulimit
.soft_limit (
Union
[int
,float
]) – The soft limit for theulimit
type.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs ulimit_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.UlimitProperty( hard_limit=123, name="name", soft_limit=123 )
Attributes
- hard_limit
The hard limit for the
ulimit
type.
- name
The
type
of theulimit
.
- soft_limit
The soft limit for the
ulimit
type.
VolumeFromProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeFromProperty(*, read_only=None, source_container=None)
Bases:
object
Details on a data volume from another container in the same task definition.
- Parameters:
read_only (
Union
[bool
,IResolvable
,None
]) – If this value istrue
, the container has read-only access to the volume. If this value isfalse
, then the container can write to the volume. The default value isfalse
.source_container (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of another container within the same task definition to mount volumes from.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs volume_from_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeFromProperty( read_only=False, source_container="sourceContainer" )
Attributes
- read_only
If this value is
true
, the container has read-only access to the volume.If this value is
false
, then the container can write to the volume. The default value isfalse
.
- source_container
The name of another container within the same task definition to mount volumes from.
VolumeProperty
- class CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeProperty(*, docker_volume_configuration=None, efs_volume_configuration=None, host=None, name=None)
Bases:
object
The
Volume
property specifies a data volume used in a task definition.For tasks that use a Docker volume, specify a
DockerVolumeConfiguration
. For tasks that use a bind mount host volume, specify ahost
and optionalsourcePath
. For more information abouthost
and optionalsourcePath
, see Volumes and Using Data Volumes in Tasks .- Parameters:
docker_volume_configuration (
Union
[IResolvable
,DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – This parameter is specified when you use Docker volumes. Windows containers only support the use of thelocal
driver. To use bind mounts, specify thehost
parameter instead. .. epigraph:: Docker volumes aren’t supported by tasks run on AWS Fargate .efs_volume_configuration (
Union
[IResolvable
,EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – This parameter is specified when you use an Amazon Elastic File System file system for task storage.host (
Union
[IResolvable
,HostVolumePropertiesProperty
,Dict
[str
,Any
],None
]) – This parameter is specified when you use bind mount host volumes. The contents of thehost
parameter determine whether your bind mount host volume persists on the host container instance and where it’s stored. If thehost
parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume. However, the data isn’t guaranteed to persist after the containers that are associated with it stop running. Windows containers can mount whole directories on the same drive as$env:ProgramData
. Windows containers can’t mount directories on a different drive, and mount point can’t be across drives. For example, you can mountC:\my\path:C:\my\path
andD:\:D:\
, but notD:\my\path:C:\my\path
orD:\:C:\my\path
.name (
Optional
[str
]) – The name of the volume. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. This name is referenced in thesourceVolume
parameter of container definitionmountPoints
.
- Link:
- ExampleMetadata:
fixture=_generated
Example:
# The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type. # The values are placeholders you should change. import aws_cdk.aws_ecs as ecs volume_property = ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.VolumeProperty( docker_volume_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.DockerVolumeConfigurationProperty( autoprovision=False, driver="driver", driver_opts={ "driver_opts_key": "driverOpts" }, labels={ "labels_key": "labels" }, scope="scope" ), efs_volume_configuration=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.EFSVolumeConfigurationProperty( filesystem_id="filesystemId", # the properties below are optional authorization_config=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.AuthorizationConfigProperty( access_point_id="accessPointId", iam="iam" ), root_directory="rootDirectory", transit_encryption="transitEncryption", transit_encryption_port=123 ), host=ecs.CfnTaskDefinition.HostVolumePropertiesProperty( source_path="sourcePath" ), name="name" )
Attributes
- docker_volume_configuration
This parameter is specified when you use Docker volumes.
Windows containers only support the use of the
local
driver. To use bind mounts, specify thehost
parameter instead. .. epigraph:Docker volumes aren't supported by tasks run on AWS Fargate .
- efs_volume_configuration
This parameter is specified when you use an Amazon Elastic File System file system for task storage.
- host
This parameter is specified when you use bind mount host volumes.
The contents of the
host
parameter determine whether your bind mount host volume persists on the host container instance and where it’s stored. If thehost
parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume. However, the data isn’t guaranteed to persist after the containers that are associated with it stop running.Windows containers can mount whole directories on the same drive as
$env:ProgramData
. Windows containers can’t mount directories on a different drive, and mount point can’t be across drives. For example, you can mountC:\my\path:C:\my\path
andD:\:D:\
, but notD:\my\path:C:\my\path
orD:\:C:\my\path
.
- name
The name of the volume.
Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, underscores, and hyphens are allowed. This name is referenced in the
sourceVolume
parameter of container definitionmountPoints
.