Amazon CloudWatch metrics for Amazon RDS
Amazon CloudWatch metrics provide insights into the performance and health of Amazon RDS instances and clusters, allowing you to monitor system behavior and make data-driven decisions. These metrics help track resource utilization, database activity, and operational efficiency, offering visibility into how your instances are performing.
This reference outlines the specific metrics available for Amazon RDS and explains how to interpret and use them to optimize database performance, troubleshoot issues, and ensure high availability.
Amazon RDS publishes metrics to Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS/RDS
and AWS/Usage
namespaces.
Topics
Amazon CloudWatch instance-level metrics for Amazon RDS
The AWS/RDS
namespace in Amazon CloudWatch includes the following instance-level metrics.
Note
The Amazon RDS console might display metrics in units that are different from the units sent to Amazon CloudWatch. For example, the Amazon RDS console might display a metric in megabytes (MB), while the metric is sent to Amazon CloudWatch in bytes.
Metric | Description | Applies to | Units |
---|---|---|---|
|
The amount of disk space occupied by binary logs. If automatic backups are enabled for MySQL and MariaDB instances, including read replicas, binary logs are created. |
MariaDB MySQL |
Bytes |
|
The percent of General Purpose SSD (gp2) burst-bucket I/O credits available. |
All |
Percent |
|
The amount of time since the most recent checkpoint. |
Seconds |
|
|
The number of attempts to connect to an instance, whether successful or not. |
MySQL |
Count |
|
The percentage of CPU utilization. |
All |
Percentage |
|
The number of CPU credits spent by the instance for CPU utilization. One CPU credit equals one vCPU running at 100 percent utilization for one minute or an equivalent combination of vCPUs, utilization, and time. For example, you might have one vCPU running at 50 percent utilization for two minutes or two vCPUs running at 25 percent utilization for two minutes. This metric applies only todb.t2 , db.t3 , and db.t4g instances.NoteWe recommend using the T DB instance classes only for development and test servers, or other non-production servers. For more details on the T instance classes, see DB instance class types CPU credit metrics are available at a five-minute frequency
only. If you specify a period greater than five minutes, use the
|
Credits (vCPU-minutes) |
|
|
The number of earned CPU credits that an instance has accrued
since it was launched or started. For T2 Standard, the
Credits are accrued in the credit balance after they are earned, and removed from the credit balance when they are spent. The credit balance has a maximum limit, determined by the instance size. After the limit is reached, any new credits that are earned are discarded. For T2 Standard, launch credits don't count towards the limit. The credits in the
When an
instance is running, credits in the CPU credit metrics are available at a five-minute frequency only. This metric applies only todb.t2 , db.t3 , and
db.t4g instances.NoteWe recommend using the T DB instance classes only for development and test servers, or other non-production servers. For more details on the T instance classes, see DB instance class types Launch credits work the same way in Amazon RDS as they do in Amazon EC2. For more information, see Launch credits in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances. |
Credits (vCPU-minutes) |
|
|
The number of surplus credits that have been spent by an unlimited instance
when its The CPU credit metrics are available at a 5-minute frequency only. |
All |
Credits (vCPU-minutes) |
|
The number of spent surplus credits that are not paid down by earned CPU credits, and which thus incur an additional charge. Spent surplus credits are charged when any of the following occurs:
CPU credit metrics are available at a 5-minute frequency only. |
All |
Credits (vCPU-minutes) |
|
The number of client network connections to the database instance. The number of database sessions can be higher than the metric value because the metric value doesn't include the following:
|
All |
Count |
|
The number of outstanding I/Os (read/write requests) waiting to access the disk. |
All |
Count |
|
The number of outstanding I/Os (read/write requests) waiting to access the log volume disk. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Count |
|
The percentage of throughput credits remaining in the burst bucket of your RDS database. This metric is available for basic monitoring only. The metric value is based on the throughput of all volumes, including the root volume, rather than on only those volumes containing database files. To find the instance sizes that support this metric, see the instance sizes with an asterisk (*) in the EBS optimized by default
table in Amazon EC2 User Guide. The |
All |
Percentage |
|
The percentage of I/O credits remaining in the burst bucket of your RDS database. This metric is available for basic monitoring only. The metric value is based on the IOPS of all volumes, including the root volume, rather than on only those volumes containing database files. To find the instance sizes that support this metric, see
Amazon EBS–optimized instance types in
Amazon EC2 User Guide. The This metric is different from |
All |
Percentage |
|
The number of failed Microsoft SQL Server Agent jobs during the last minute. |
Microsoft SQL Server |
Count per minute |
|
The amount of available random access memory. For MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, and PostgreSQL DB instances, this metric reports the value of the
|
All |
Bytes |
|
The amount of available local storage space. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Bytes |
|
|
The percentage of available local storage space. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Percentage |
|
|
The amount of available storage space. |
All |
Bytes |
|
The amount of available storage space on the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Bytes |
|
The maximum transaction IDs that have been used. |
PostgreSQL |
Count |
|
The incoming (receive) network traffic on the DB instance, including both customer database traffic and Amazon RDS traffic used for monitoring and replication. |
All |
Bytes per second |
|
The outgoing (transmit) network traffic on the DB instance, including both customer database traffic and Amazon RDS traffic used for monitoring and replication. |
All |
Bytes per second |
|
The lagging size of the replica lagging the most in terms of write-ahead log (WAL) data received. |
PostgreSQL |
Bytes |
|
The average number of disk read I/O operations per second. |
All |
Count per second |
|
The average number of disk read I/O operations to local storage per second. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Count per second |
|
|
The average number of disk read I/O operations per second for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Count per second |
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation. |
All |
Seconds |
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation for local storage. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Seconds |
|
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Seconds |
|
The average number of bytes read from disk per second. |
All |
Bytes per second |
|
The average number of bytes read from disk per second for local storage. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Bytes per second |
|
|
The average number of bytes read from disk per second for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Bytes per second |
|
For read replica configurations, the amount of time a read replica DB instance lags behind the source DB instance. Applies to MariaDB, Microsoft SQL Server, MySQL, Oracle, and PostgreSQL read replicas. For Multi-AZ DB clusters, the difference in time between the latest transaction on the writer DB instance and the latest applied transaction on a reader DB instance. |
Seconds |
|
|
For multi-source replica configurations, the amount of time a particular channel on the multi-source replica lags behind the source DB instance. For more information, see Monitoring multi-source replication channels. |
MySQL |
Seconds |
|
The disk space used by replication slot files. |
PostgreSQL |
Bytes |
|
The amount of swap space used on the DB instance. |
MariaDB MySQL Oracle PostgreSQL |
Bytes |
|
The disk space used by transaction logs. |
PostgreSQL |
Bytes |
|
The size of transaction logs generated per second. |
PostgreSQL |
Bytes per second |
|
The average number of disk write I/O operations per second. |
All |
Count per second |
|
The average number of disk write I/O operations per second on local storage. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Count per second |
|
|
The average number of disk write I/O operations per second for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Count per second |
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation. |
All |
Seconds |
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation on local storage. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Seconds |
|
|
The average amount of time taken per disk I/O operation for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Seconds |
|
The average number of bytes written to disk per second. |
All |
Bytes per second |
|
The average number of bytes written to disk per second for the log volume. |
DB instances with dedicated log volume enabled |
Bytes per second |
|
The average number of bytes written to disk per second for local storage. This metric only applies to DB instance classes with NVMe SSD instance store volumes. For information about Amazon EC2 instances with NVMe SSD instance store volumes, see Instance store volumes. The equivalent RDS DB instance classes have the same instance store volumes. For example, the db.m6gd and db.r6gd DB instance classes have NVMe SSD instance store volumes. |
Bytes per second |
Amazon CloudWatch usage metrics for Amazon RDS
The AWS/Usage
namespace in Amazon CloudWatch includes account-level usage metrics for your Amazon RDS service quotas. CloudWatch collects usage
metrics automatically for all AWS Regions.
For more information, see CloudWatch usage metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide. For more information about quotas, see Quotas and constraints for Amazon RDS and Requesting a quota increase in the Service Quotas User Guide.
Metric | Description | Units* |
---|---|---|
AllocatedStorage |
The total storage for all DB instances. The sum excludes temporary migration instances. |
Gigabytes |
AuthorizationsPerDBSecurityGroup |
The number of ingress rules per DB security group in your AWS account. The used value is the highest number of ingress rules in a DB security group in the account. Other DB security groups in the account might have a lower number of ingress rules. |
Count |
CustomEndpointsPerDBCluster |
The number of custom endpoints per DB cluster in your AWS account. The used value is the highest number of custom endpoints in a DB cluster in the account. Other DB clusters in the account might have a lower number of custom endpoints. |
Count |
CustomEngineVersions |
The number of custom engine versions (CEVs) for Amazon RDS Custom in your AWS account. |
Count |
DBClusterParameterGroups |
The number of DB cluster parameter groups in your AWS account. The count excludes default parameter groups. |
Count |
DBClusterRoles |
The number of associated AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles per DB cluster in your AWS account. The used value is the highest number of associated IAM roles for a DB cluster in the account. Other DB clusters in the account might have a lower number of associated IAM roles. |
Count |
DBClusters |
The number of Amazon Aurora DB clusters in your AWS account. |
Count |
DBInstanceRoles |
The number of associated AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles per DB instance in your AWS account. The used value is the highest number of associated IAM roles for a DB instance in the account. Other DB instances in the account might have a lower number of associated IAM roles. |
Count |
DBInstances |
The number of DB instances in your AWS account. |
Count |
DBParameterGroups |
The number of DB parameter groups in your AWS account. The count excludes the default DB parameter groups. |
Count |
DBSecurityGroups |
The number of security groups in your AWS account. The count excludes the default security group and the default VPC security group. |
Count |
DBSubnetGroups
|
The number of DB subnet groups in your AWS account. The count excludes the default subnet group. |
Count |
ManualClusterSnapshots |
The number of manually created DB cluster snapshots in your AWS account. The count excludes invalid snapshots. |
Count |
ManualSnapshots |
The number of manually created DB snapshots in your AWS account. The count excludes invalid snapshots. |
Count |
OptionGroups |
The number of option groups in your AWS account. The count excludes the default option groups. |
Count |
Proxies |
The number of RDS proxies in your AWS account. |
Count |
ReadReplicasPerMaster |
The number of read replicas per DB instance in your account. The used value is the highest number of read replicas for a DB instance in the account. Other DB instances in the account might have a lower number of read replicas. |
Count |
ReservedDBInstances |
The number of reserved DB instances in your AWS account. The count excludes retired or declined instances. |
Count |
SubnetsPerDBSubnetGroup |
The number of subnets per DB subnet group in your AWS account. The highest number of subnets for a DB subnet group in the account. Other DB subnet groups in the account might have a lower number of subnets. |
Count |
Note
Amazon RDS doesn't publish units for usage metrics to CloudWatch. The units only appear in the documentation.