InstanceRecommendation - AWS Compute Optimizer

InstanceRecommendation

Describes an Amazon EC2 instance recommendation.

Contents

accountId

The AWS account ID of the instance.

Type: String

Required: No

currentInstanceGpuInfo

Describes the GPU accelerator settings for the current instance type.

Type: GpuInfo object

Required: No

currentInstanceType

The instance type of the current instance.

Type: String

Required: No

currentPerformanceRisk

The risk of the current instance not meeting the performance needs of its workloads. The higher the risk, the more likely the current instance cannot meet the performance requirements of its workload.

Type: String

Valid Values: VeryLow | Low | Medium | High

Required: No

effectiveRecommendationPreferences

An object that describes the effective recommendation preferences for the instance.

Type: EffectiveRecommendationPreferences object

Required: No

externalMetricStatus

An object that describes Compute Optimizer's integration status with your external metrics provider.

Type: ExternalMetricStatus object

Required: No

finding

The finding classification of the instance.

Findings for instances include:

  • Underprovisioned —An instance is considered under-provisioned when at least one specification of your instance, such as CPU, memory, or network, does not meet the performance requirements of your workload. Under-provisioned instances may lead to poor application performance.

  • Overprovisioned —An instance is considered over-provisioned when at least one specification of your instance, such as CPU, memory, or network, can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload, and no specification is under-provisioned. Over-provisioned instances may lead to unnecessary infrastructure cost.

  • Optimized —An instance is considered optimized when all specifications of your instance, such as CPU, memory, and network, meet the performance requirements of your workload and is not over provisioned. For optimized resources, AWS Compute Optimizer might recommend a new generation instance type.

Note

The valid values in your API responses appear as OVER_PROVISIONED, UNDER_PROVISIONED, or OPTIMIZED.

Type: String

Valid Values: Underprovisioned | Overprovisioned | Optimized | NotOptimized

Required: No

findingReasonCodes

The reason for the finding classification of the instance.

Finding reason codes for instances include:

  • CPUOverprovisioned — The instance’s CPU configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the CPUUtilization metric of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • CPUUnderprovisioned — The instance’s CPU configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better CPU performance. This is identified by analyzing the CPUUtilization metric of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • MemoryOverprovisioned — The instance’s memory configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the memory utilization metric of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • MemoryUnderprovisioned — The instance’s memory configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better memory performance. This is identified by analyzing the memory utilization metric of the current instance during the look-back period.

    Note

    Memory utilization is analyzed only for resources that have the unified CloudWatch agent installed on them. For more information, see Enabling memory utilization with the Amazon CloudWatch Agent in the AWS Compute Optimizer User Guide. On Linux instances, Compute Optimizer analyses the mem_used_percent metric in the CWAgent namespace, or the legacy MemoryUtilization metric in the System/Linux namespace. On Windows instances, Compute Optimizer analyses the Memory % Committed Bytes In Use metric in the CWAgent namespace.

  • EBSThroughputOverprovisioned — The instance’s EBS throughput configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the VolumeReadBytes and VolumeWriteBytes metrics of EBS volumes attached to the current instance during the look-back period.

  • EBSThroughputUnderprovisioned — The instance’s EBS throughput configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better EBS throughput performance. This is identified by analyzing the VolumeReadBytes and VolumeWriteBytes metrics of EBS volumes attached to the current instance during the look-back period.

  • EBSIOPSOverprovisioned — The instance’s EBS IOPS configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the VolumeReadOps and VolumeWriteOps metric of EBS volumes attached to the current instance during the look-back period.

  • EBSIOPSUnderprovisioned — The instance’s EBS IOPS configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better EBS IOPS performance. This is identified by analyzing the VolumeReadOps and VolumeWriteOps metric of EBS volumes attached to the current instance during the look-back period.

  • NetworkBandwidthOverprovisioned — The instance’s network bandwidth configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the NetworkIn and NetworkOut metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • NetworkBandwidthUnderprovisioned — The instance’s network bandwidth configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better network bandwidth performance. This is identified by analyzing the NetworkIn and NetworkOut metrics of the current instance during the look-back period. This finding reason happens when the NetworkIn or NetworkOut performance of an instance is impacted.

  • NetworkPPSOverprovisioned — The instance’s network PPS (packets per second) configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the NetworkPacketsIn and NetworkPacketsIn metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • NetworkPPSUnderprovisioned — The instance’s network PPS (packets per second) configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better network PPS performance. This is identified by analyzing the NetworkPacketsIn and NetworkPacketsIn metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • DiskIOPSOverprovisioned — The instance’s disk IOPS configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the DiskReadOps and DiskWriteOps metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • DiskIOPSUnderprovisioned — The instance’s disk IOPS configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better disk IOPS performance. This is identified by analyzing the DiskReadOps and DiskWriteOps metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • DiskThroughputOverprovisioned — The instance’s disk throughput configuration can be sized down while still meeting the performance requirements of your workload. This is identified by analyzing the DiskReadBytes and DiskWriteBytes metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

  • DiskThroughputUnderprovisioned — The instance’s disk throughput configuration doesn't meet the performance requirements of your workload and there is an alternative instance type that provides better disk throughput performance. This is identified by analyzing the DiskReadBytes and DiskWriteBytes metrics of the current instance during the look-back period.

Note

For more information about instance metrics, see List the available CloudWatch metrics for your instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information about EBS volume metrics, see Amazon CloudWatch metrics for Amazon EBS in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.

Type: Array of strings

Valid Values: CPUOverprovisioned | CPUUnderprovisioned | MemoryOverprovisioned | MemoryUnderprovisioned | EBSThroughputOverprovisioned | EBSThroughputUnderprovisioned | EBSIOPSOverprovisioned | EBSIOPSUnderprovisioned | NetworkBandwidthOverprovisioned | NetworkBandwidthUnderprovisioned | NetworkPPSOverprovisioned | NetworkPPSUnderprovisioned | DiskIOPSOverprovisioned | DiskIOPSUnderprovisioned | DiskThroughputOverprovisioned | DiskThroughputUnderprovisioned | GPUUnderprovisioned | GPUOverprovisioned | GPUMemoryUnderprovisioned | GPUMemoryOverprovisioned

Required: No

idle

Describes if an Amazon EC2 instance is idle.

Type: String

Valid Values: True | False

Required: No

inferredWorkloadTypes

The applications that might be running on the instance as inferred by Compute Optimizer.

Compute Optimizer can infer if one of the following applications might be running on the instance:

  • AmazonEmr - Infers that Amazon EMR might be running on the instance.

  • ApacheCassandra - Infers that Apache Cassandra might be running on the instance.

  • ApacheHadoop - Infers that Apache Hadoop might be running on the instance.

  • Memcached - Infers that Memcached might be running on the instance.

  • NGINX - Infers that NGINX might be running on the instance.

  • PostgreSql - Infers that PostgreSQL might be running on the instance.

  • Redis - Infers that Redis might be running on the instance.

  • Kafka - Infers that Kafka might be running on the instance.

  • SQLServer - Infers that SQLServer might be running on the instance.

Type: Array of strings

Valid Values: AmazonEmr | ApacheCassandra | ApacheHadoop | Memcached | Nginx | PostgreSql | Redis | Kafka | SQLServer

Required: No

instanceArn

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the current instance.

Type: String

Required: No

instanceName

The name of the current instance.

Type: String

Required: No

instanceState

The state of the instance when the recommendation was generated.

Type: String

Valid Values: pending | running | shutting-down | terminated | stopping | stopped

Required: No

lastRefreshTimestamp

The timestamp of when the instance recommendation was last generated.

Type: Timestamp

Required: No

lookBackPeriodInDays

The number of days for which utilization metrics were analyzed for the instance.

Type: Double

Required: No

recommendationOptions

An array of objects that describe the recommendation options for the instance.

Type: Array of InstanceRecommendationOption objects

Required: No

recommendationSources

An array of objects that describe the source resource of the recommendation.

Type: Array of RecommendationSource objects

Required: No

tags

A list of tags assigned to your Amazon EC2 instance recommendations.

Type: Array of Tag objects

Required: No

utilizationMetrics

An array of objects that describe the utilization metrics of the instance.

Type: Array of UtilizationMetric objects

Required: No

See Also

For more information about using this API in one of the language-specific AWS SDKs, see the following: