PutMetricData
Publishes metric data to Amazon CloudWatch. CloudWatch associates the data with the specified metric. If the specified metric does not exist, CloudWatch creates the metric. When CloudWatch creates a metric, it can take up to fifteen minutes for the metric to appear in calls to ListMetrics.
You can publish metrics with associated entity data (so that related telemetry can be
found and viewed together), or publish metric data by itself. To send entity data with
your metrics, use the EntityMetricData
parameter. To send metrics without
entity data, use the MetricData
parameter. The
EntityMetricData
structure includes MetricData
structures
for the metric data.
You can publish either individual values in the Value
field, or arrays of
values and the number of times each value occurred during the period by using the
Values
and Counts
fields in the MetricData
structure. Using the Values
and Counts
method enables you to
publish up to 150 values per metric with one PutMetricData
request, and
supports retrieving percentile statistics on this data.
Each PutMetricData
request is limited to 1 MB in size for HTTP POST
requests. You can send a payload compressed by gzip. Each request is also limited to no
more than 1000 different metrics (across both the MetricData
and
EntityMetricData
properties).
Although the Value
parameter accepts numbers of type Double
,
CloudWatch rejects values that are either too small or too large. Values must be in the
range of -2^360 to 2^360. In addition, special values (for example, NaN, +Infinity,
-Infinity) are not supported.
You can use up to 30 dimensions per metric to further clarify what data the metric collects. Each dimension consists of a Name and Value pair. For more information about specifying dimensions, see Publishing Metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
You specify the time stamp to be associated with each data point. You can specify time stamps that are as much as two weeks before the current date, and as much as 2 hours after the current day and time.
Data points with time stamps from 24 hours ago or longer can take at least 48 hours to become available for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics from the time they are submitted. Data points with time stamps between 3 and 24 hours ago can take as much as 2 hours to become available for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics.
CloudWatch needs raw data points to calculate percentile statistics. If you publish data using a statistic set instead, you can only retrieve percentile statistics for this data if one of the following conditions is true:
-
The
SampleCount
value of the statistic set is 1 andMin
,Max
, andSum
are all equal. -
The
Min
andMax
are equal, andSum
is equal toMin
multiplied bySampleCount
.
Request Parameters
For information about the parameters that are common to all actions, see Common Parameters.
- EntityMetricData.member.N
-
Data for metrics that contain associated entity information. You can include up to two
EntityMetricData
objects, each of which can contain a singleEntity
and associated metrics.The limit of metrics allowed, 1000, is the sum of both
EntityMetricData
andMetricData
metrics.Type: Array of EntityMetricData objects
Required: No
- MetricData.member.N
-
The data for the metrics. Use this parameter if your metrics do not contain associated entities. The array can include no more than 1000 metrics per call.
The limit of metrics allowed, 1000, is the sum of both
EntityMetricData
andMetricData
metrics.Type: Array of MetricDatum objects
Required: No
- Namespace
-
The namespace for the metric data. You can use ASCII characters for the namespace, except for control characters which are not supported.
To avoid conflicts with AWS service namespaces, you should not specify a namespace that begins with
AWS/
Type: String
Length Constraints: Minimum length of 1. Maximum length of 255.
Pattern:
[^:].*
Required: Yes
- StrictEntityValidation
-
Whether to accept valid metric data when an invalid entity is sent.
-
When set to
true
: Any validation error (for entity or metric data) will fail the entire request, and no data will be ingested. The failed operation will return a 400 result with the error. -
When set to
false
: Validation errors in the entity will not associate the metric with the entity, but the metric data will still be accepted and ingested. Validation errors in the metric data will fail the entire request, and no data will be ingested.In the case of an invalid entity, the operation will return a
200
status, but an additional response header will contain information about the validation errors. The new header,X-Amzn-Failure-Message
is an enumeration of the following values:-
InvalidEntity
- The provided entity is invalid. -
InvalidKeyAttributes
- The providedKeyAttributes
of an entity is invalid. -
InvalidAttributes
- The providedAttributes
of an entity is invalid. -
InvalidTypeValue
- The providedType
in theKeyAttributes
of an entity is invalid. -
EntitySizeTooLarge
- The number ofEntityMetricData
objects allowed is 2. -
MissingRequiredFields
- There are missing required fields in theKeyAttributes
for the providedType
.
For details of the requirements for specifying an entity, see How to add related information to telemetry in the CloudWatch User Guide.
-
This parameter is required when
EntityMetricData
is included.Type: Boolean
Required: No
-
Errors
For information about the errors that are common to all actions, see Common Errors.
- InternalServiceError
-
Request processing has failed due to some unknown error, exception, or failure.
HTTP Status Code: 500
- InvalidParameterCombination
-
Parameters were used together that cannot be used together.
HTTP Status Code: 400
- InvalidParameterValue
-
The value of an input parameter is bad or out-of-range.
HTTP Status Code: 400
- MissingParameter
-
An input parameter that is required is missing.
HTTP Status Code: 400
Examples
Example
The following example puts data for a single metric containing one dimension:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&MetricData.member.1.MetricName=buffers
&MetricData.member.1.Unit=Bytes
&MetricData.member.1.Value=231434333
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceType
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=m1.small
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example puts data for a single metric containing two dimensions:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&MetricData.member.1.MetricName=buffers
&MetricData.member.1.Unit=Bytes
&MetricData.member.1.Value=231434333
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Name=InstanceType
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Value=m1.small
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example puts data for two metrics, each with two dimensions:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&MetricData.member.1.MetricName=buffers
&MetricData.member.1.Unit=Bytes
&MetricData.member.1.Value=231434333
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Name=InstanceType
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Value=m1.small
&MetricData.member.2.MetricName=latency
&MetricData.member.2.Unit=Milliseconds
&MetricData.member.2.Value=23
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.2.Name=InstanceType
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.2.Value=m1.small
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example puts data for a high-resolution metric:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&Namespace=HighResolutionMetric
&MetricData.member.1.MetricName=HighResdata
&MetricData.member.1.Unit=Bytes
&MetricData.member.1.Value=542868
&MetricData.member.1.StorageResolution=1
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example puts multiple values for each of two metrics, using
Values
and Counts
arrays:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&MetricData.member.1.MetricName=Reads
&MetricData.member.1.Unit=Count
&MetricData.member.1.Values.member.1=5
&MetricData.member.1.Values.member.2=8
&MetricData.member.1.Values.member.3=10
&MetricData.member.1.Values.member.4=9
&MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.1=1
&MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.2=5
&MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.3=6
&MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.4=5
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&MetricData.member.2.MetricName=Writes
&MetricData.member.2.Unit=Count
&MetricData.member.2.Values.member.1=2
&MetricData.member.2.Values.member.2=3
&MetricData.member.2.Values.member.3=0
&MetricData.member.2.Counts.member.1=2
&MetricData.member.2.Counts.member.2=2
&MetricData.member.2.Counts.member.3=1
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&MetricData.member.2.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example uses EntityMetricData
to put a metric
with entity data for a service running in Amazon EC2:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&StrictEntityValidation=true
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.1.key=Type
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.1.value=Service
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.2.key=Name
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.2.value=MyTestService
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.3.key=Environment
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.3.value=MyTestEnvironment
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.1.key=PlatformType
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.1.value=AWS::EC2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.2.key=EC2.InstanceId
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.2.value=i-1234567890abcdef0
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.MetricName=buffers
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Timestamp=2024-11-06T02:16:28Z
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Unit=Count
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.1=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.2=3
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.3=0
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.1=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.2=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.3=1
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Name=InstanceType
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Value=m1.small
&AUTHPARAMS
Example
The following example uses EntityMetricData
to put a metric
with entity data for a service running in Lambda:
Sample Request
https://monitoring.&api-domain;/doc/2010-08-01/
?Action=PutMetricData
&Version=2010-08-01
&StrictEntityValidation=true
&Namespace=TestNamespace
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.1.key=Type
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.1.value=Service
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.2.key=Name
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.2.value=MyTestService
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.3.key=Environment
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.KeyAttributes.entry.3.value=MyTestEnvironment
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.1.key=PlatformType
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.1.value=AWS::Lambda
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.2.key=Lambda.Function
&EntityMetricData.member.1.Entity.Attributes.entry.2.value=MyTestFunction
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.MetricName=faults
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Timestamp=2024-11-06T02:16:28Z
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Unit=Count
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.1=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.2=3
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Values.member.3=0
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.1=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.2=2
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Counts.member.3=1
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Name=InstanceID
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.1.Value=i-aaba32d4
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Name=InstanceType
&EntityMetricData.member.1.MetricData.member.1.Dimensions.member.2.Value=m1.small
&AUTHPARAMS
See Also
For more information about using this API in one of the language-specific AWS SDKs, see the following: