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Container for the parameters to the PutAccountPolicy operation. Creates an account-level data protection policy, subscription filter policy, or field index policy that applies to all log groups or a subset of log groups in the account.
To use this operation, you must be signed on with the correct permissions depending on the type of policy that you are creating.
To create a data protection policy, you must have the logs:PutDataProtectionPolicy
and logs:PutAccountPolicy
permissions.
To create a subscription filter policy, you must have the logs:PutSubscriptionFilter
and logs:PutccountPolicy
permissions.
To create a transformer policy, you must have the logs:PutTransformer
and logs:PutAccountPolicy
permissions.
To create a field index policy, you must have the logs:PutIndexPolicy
and logs:PutAccountPolicy
permissions.
Data protection policy
A data protection policy can help safeguard sensitive data that's ingested by your log groups by auditing and masking the sensitive log data. Each account can have only one account-level data protection policy.
Sensitive data is detected and masked when it is ingested into a log group. When you set a data protection policy, log events ingested into the log groups before that time are not masked.
If you use PutAccountPolicy
to create a data protection policy for your whole
account, it applies to both existing log groups and all log groups that are created
later in this account. The account-level policy is applied to existing log groups
with eventual consistency. It might take up to 5 minutes before sensitive data in
existing log groups begins to be masked.
By default, when a user views a log event that includes masked data, the sensitive
data is replaced by asterisks. A user who has the logs:Unmask
permission can
use a GetLogEvents
or FilterLogEvents
operation with the unmask
parameter set to true
to view the unmasked
log events. Users with the logs:Unmask
can also view unmasked data in the CloudWatch
Logs console by running a CloudWatch Logs Insights query with the unmask
query
command.
For more information, including a list of types of data that can be audited and masked, see Protect sensitive log data with masking.
To use the PutAccountPolicy
operation for a data protection policy, you must
be signed on with the logs:PutDataProtectionPolicy
and logs:PutAccountPolicy
permissions.
The PutAccountPolicy
operation applies to all log groups in the account. You
can use PutDataProtectionPolicy
to create a data protection policy that applies to just one log group. If a log group
has its own data protection policy and the account also has an account-level data
protection policy, then the two policies are cumulative. Any sensitive term specified
in either policy is masked.
Subscription filter policy
A subscription filter policy sets up a real-time feed of log events from CloudWatch Logs to other Amazon Web Services services. Account-level subscription filter policies apply to both existing log groups and log groups that are created later in this account. Supported destinations are Kinesis Data Streams, Firehose, and Lambda. When log events are sent to the receiving service, they are Base64 encoded and compressed with the GZIP format.
The following destinations are supported for subscription filters:
An Kinesis Data Streams data stream in the same account as the subscription policy, for same-account delivery.
An Firehose data stream in the same account as the subscription policy, for same-account delivery.
A Lambda function in the same account as the subscription policy, for same-account delivery.
A logical destination in a different account created with PutDestination, for cross-account delivery. Kinesis Data Streams and Firehose are supported as logical destinations.
Each account can have one account-level subscription filter policy per Region. If
you are updating an existing filter, you must specify the correct name in PolicyName
.
To perform a PutAccountPolicy
subscription filter operation for any destination
except a Lambda function, you must also have the iam:PassRole
permission.
Transformer policy
Creates or updates a log transformer policy for your account. You use log transformers to transform log events into a different format, making them easier for you to process and analyze. You can also transform logs from different sources into standardized formats that contain relevant, source-specific information. After you have created a transformer, CloudWatch Logs performs this transformation at the time of log ingestion. You can then refer to the transformed versions of the logs during operations such as querying with CloudWatch Logs Insights or creating metric filters or subscription filters.
You can also use a transformer to copy metadata from metadata keys into the log events themselves. This metadata can include log group name, log stream name, account ID and Region.
A transformer for a log group is a series of processors, where each processor applies one type of transformation to the log events ingested into this log group. For more information about the available processors to use in a transformer, see Processors that you can use.
Having log events in standardized format enables visibility across your applications for your log analysis, reporting, and alarming needs. CloudWatch Logs provides transformation for common log types with out-of-the-box transformation templates for major Amazon Web Services log sources such as VPC flow logs, Lambda, and Amazon RDS. You can use pre-built transformation templates or create custom transformation policies.
You can create transformers only for the log groups in the Standard log class.
You can have one account-level transformer policy that applies to all log groups in
the account. Or you can create as many as 20 account-level transformer policies that
are each scoped to a subset of log groups with the selectionCriteria
parameter.
If you have multiple account-level transformer policies with selection criteria, no
two of them can use the same or overlapping log group name prefixes. For example,
if you have one policy filtered to log groups that start with my-log
, you can't
have another field index policy filtered to my-logpprod
or my-logging
.
You can also set up a transformer at the log-group level. For more information, see
PutTransformer.
If there is both a log-group level transformer created with PutTransformer
and an account-level transformer that could apply to the same log group, the log group
uses only the log-group level transformer. It ignores the account-level transformer.
Field index policy
You can use field index policies to create indexes on fields found in log events in the log group. Creating field indexes can help lower the scan volume for CloudWatch Logs Insights queries that reference those fields, because these queries attempt to skip the processing of log events that are known to not match the indexed field. Good fields to index are fields that you often need to query for and fields or values that match only a small fraction of the total log events. Common examples of indexes include request ID, session ID, user IDs, or instance IDs. For more information, see Create field indexes to improve query performance and reduce costs
To find the fields that are in your log group events, use the GetLogGroupFields operation.
For example, suppose you have created a field index for requestId
. Then, any
CloudWatch Logs Insights query on that log group that includes requestId = value
or requestId in [value, value, ...]
will attempt to process
only the log events where the indexed field matches the specified value.
Matches of log events to the names of indexed fields are case-sensitive. For example,
an indexed field of RequestId
won't match a log event containing requestId
.
You can have one account-level field index policy that applies to all log groups in
the account. Or you can create as many as 20 account-level field index policies that
are each scoped to a subset of log groups with the selectionCriteria
parameter.
If you have multiple account-level index policies with selection criteria, no two
of them can use the same or overlapping log group name prefixes. For example, if you
have one policy filtered to log groups that start with my-log
, you can't have
another field index policy filtered to my-logpprod
or my-logging
.
If you create an account-level field index policy in a monitoring account in cross-account observability, the policy is applied only to the monitoring account and not to any source accounts.
If you want to create a field index policy for a single log group, you can use PutIndexPolicy
instead of PutAccountPolicy
. If you do so, that log group will use only that
log-group level policy, and will ignore the account-level policy that you create with
PutAccountPolicy.
Namespace: Amazon.CloudWatchLogs.Model
Assembly: AWSSDK.CloudWatchLogs.dll
Version: 3.x.y.z
public class PutAccountPolicyRequest : AmazonCloudWatchLogsRequest IAmazonWebServiceRequest
The PutAccountPolicyRequest type exposes the following members
Name | Description | |
---|---|---|
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PutAccountPolicyRequest() |
Name | Type | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
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PolicyDocument | System.String |
Gets and sets the property PolicyDocument. Specify the policy, in JSON. Data protection policy A data protection policy must include two JSON blocks:
For an example data protection policy, see the Examples section on this page.
The contents of the two
In addition to the two JSON blocks, the
The JSON specified in Subscription filter policy A subscription filter policy can include the following attributes in a JSON block:
Transformer policy A transformer policy must include one JSON block with the array of processors and their configurations. For more information about available processors, see Processors that you can use. Field index policy A field index filter policy can include the following attribute in a JSON block:
It must contain at least one field index.
The following is an example of an index policy document that creates two indexes,
|
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PolicyName | System.String |
Gets and sets the property PolicyName. A name for the policy. This must be unique within the account. |
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PolicyType | Amazon.CloudWatchLogs.PolicyType |
Gets and sets the property PolicyType. The type of policy that you're creating or updating. |
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Scope | Amazon.CloudWatchLogs.Scope |
Gets and sets the property Scope.
Currently the only valid value for this parameter is |
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SelectionCriteria | System.String |
Gets and sets the property SelectionCriteria. Use this parameter to apply the new policy to a subset of log groups in the account.
Specifing
If
If
The
Using the |
.NET:
Supported in: 8.0 and newer, Core 3.1
.NET Standard:
Supported in: 2.0
.NET Framework:
Supported in: 4.5 and newer, 3.5