The CDK Construct Library for Amazon Bedrock
Project description
Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Construct Library
---The APIs of higher level constructs in this module are experimental and under active development. They are subject to non-backward compatible changes or removal in any future version. These are not subject to the Semantic Versioning model and breaking changes will be announced in the release notes. This means that while you may use them, you may need to update your source code when upgrading to a newer version of this package.
| Language | Package |
|---|---|
@aws-cdk/aws-bedrock-agentcore-alpha |
Amazon Bedrock AgentCore enables you to deploy and operate highly capable AI agents securely, at scale. It offers infrastructure purpose-built for dynamic agent workloads, powerful tools to enhance agents, and essential controls for real-world deployment. AgentCore services can be used together or independently and work with any framework including CrewAI, LangGraph, LlamaIndex, and Strands Agents, as well as any foundation model in or outside of Amazon Bedrock, giving you ultimate flexibility. AgentCore eliminates the undifferentiated heavy lifting of building specialized agent infrastructure, so you can accelerate agents to production.
This construct library facilitates the deployment of Bedrock AgentCore primitives, enabling you to create sophisticated AI applications that can interact with your systems and data sources.
Table of contents
AgentCore Runtime
The AgentCore Runtime construct enables you to deploy containerized agents on Amazon Bedrock AgentCore. This L2 construct simplifies runtime creation just pass your ECR repository name and the construct handles all the configuration with sensible defaults.
Runtime Endpoints
Endpoints provide a stable way to invoke specific versions of your agent runtime, enabling controlled deployments across different environments. When you create an agent runtime, Amazon Bedrock AgentCore automatically creates a "DEFAULT" endpoint which always points to the latest version of runtime.
You can create additional endpoints in two ways:
- Using Runtime.addEndpoint() - Convenient method when creating endpoints alongside the runtime.
- Using RuntimeEndpoint - Flexible approach for existing runtimes.
For example, you might keep a "production" endpoint on a stable version while testing newer versions through a "staging" endpoint. This separation allows you to test changes thoroughly before promoting them to production by simply updating the endpoint to point to the newer version.
AgentCore Runtime Properties
| Name | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
runtimeName |
string |
Yes | The name of the agent runtime. Valid characters are a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _ (underscore). Must start with a letter and can be up to 48 characters long |
agentRuntimeArtifact |
AgentRuntimeArtifact |
Yes | The artifact configuration for the agent runtime containing the container configuration with ECR URI |
executionRole |
iam.IRole |
No | The IAM role that provides permissions for the agent runtime. If not provided, a role will be created automatically |
networkConfiguration |
NetworkConfiguration |
No | Network configuration for the agent runtime. Defaults to RuntimeNetworkConfiguration.usingPublicNetwork() |
description |
string |
No | Optional description for the agent runtime |
protocolConfiguration |
ProtocolType |
No | Protocol configuration for the agent runtime. Defaults to ProtocolType.HTTP |
authorizerConfiguration |
RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration |
No | Authorizer configuration for the agent runtime. Use RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration static methods to create configurations for IAM, Cognito, JWT, or OAuth authentication |
environmentVariables |
{ [key: string]: string } |
No | Environment variables for the agent runtime. Maximum 50 environment variables |
tags |
{ [key: string]: string } |
No | Tags for the agent runtime. A list of key:value pairs of tags to apply to this Runtime resource |
Runtime Endpoint Properties
| Name | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
endpointName |
string |
Yes | The name of the runtime endpoint. Valid characters are a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _ (underscore). Must start with a letter and can be up to 48 characters long |
agentRuntimeId |
string |
Yes | The Agent Runtime ID for this endpoint |
agentRuntimeVersion |
string |
Yes | The Agent Runtime version for this endpoint. Must be between 1 and 5 characters long. |
description |
string |
No | Optional description for the runtime endpoint |
tags |
{ [key: string]: string } |
No | Tags for the runtime endpoint |
Creating a Runtime
Option 1: Use an existing image in ECR
Reference an image available within ECR.
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
# The runtime by default create ECR permission only for the repository available in the account the stack is being deployed
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
# Create runtime using the built image
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact
)
To grant the runtime permission to invoke a Bedrock model or inference profile:
// Note: This example uses @aws-cdk/aws-bedrock-alpha which must be installed separately
import * as bedrock from '@aws-cdk/aws-bedrock-alpha';
// Create a cross-region inference profile for Claude 3.7 Sonnet
const inferenceProfile = bedrock.CrossRegionInferenceProfile.fromConfig({
geoRegion: bedrock.CrossRegionInferenceProfileRegion.US,
model: bedrock.BedrockFoundationModel.ANTHROPIC_CLAUDE_3_7_SONNET_V1_0
});
// Grant the runtime permission to invoke the inference profile
inferenceProfile.grantInvoke(runtime);
Option 2: Use a local asset
Reference a local directory containing a Dockerfile. Images are built from a local Docker context directory (with a Dockerfile), uploaded to Amazon Elastic Container Registry (ECR) by the CDK toolkit,and can be naturally referenced in your CDK app .
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_asset(
path.join(__dirname, "path to agent dockerfile directory"))
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact
)
Runtime Versioning
Amazon Bedrock AgentCore automatically manages runtime versioning to ensure safe deployments and rollback capabilities. When you create an agent runtime, AgentCore automatically creates version 1 (V1). Each subsequent update to the runtime configuration (such as updating the container image, modifying network settings, or changing protocol configurations) creates a new immutable version. These versions contain complete, self-contained configurations that can be referenced by endpoints, allowing you to maintain different versions for different environments or gradually roll out updates.
Managing Endpoints and Versions
Amazon Bedrock AgentCore automatically manages runtime versioning to provide safe deployments and rollback capabilities. You can follow the steps below to understand how to use versioning with runtime for controlled deployments across different environments.
Step 1: Initial Deployment
When you first create an agent runtime, AgentCore automatically creates Version 1 of your runtime. At this point, a DEFAULT endpoint is automatically created that points to Version 1. This DEFAULT endpoint serves as the main access point for your runtime.
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
)
Step 2: Creating Custom Endpoints
After the initial deployment, you can create additional endpoints for different environments. For example, you might create a "production" endpoint that explicitly points to Version 1. This allows you to maintain stable access points for specific environments while keeping the flexibility to test newer versions elsewhere.
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
)
prod_endpoint = runtime.add_endpoint("production",
version="1",
description="Stable production endpoint - pinned to v1"
)
Step 3: Runtime Update Deployment
When you update the runtime configuration (such as updating the container image, modifying network settings, or changing protocol configurations), AgentCore automatically creates a new version (Version 2). Upon this update:
- Version 2 is created automatically with the new configuration
- The DEFAULT endpoint automatically updates to point to Version 2
- Any explicitly pinned endpoints (like the production endpoint) remain on their specified versions
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact_new = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v2.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact_new
)
Step 4: Testing with Staging Endpoints
Once Version 2 exists, you can create a staging endpoint that points to the new version. This staging endpoint allows you to test the new version in a controlled environment before promoting it to production. This separation ensures that production traffic continues to use the stable version while you validate the new version.
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact_new = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v2.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact_new
)
staging_endpoint = runtime.add_endpoint("staging",
version="2",
description="Staging environment for testing new version"
)
Step 5: Promoting to Production
After thoroughly testing the new version through the staging endpoint, you can update the production endpoint to point to Version 2. This controlled promotion process ensures that you can validate changes before they affect production traffic.
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact_new = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v2.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact_new
)
prod_endpoint = runtime.add_endpoint("production",
version="2", # New version added here
description="Stable production endpoint"
)
Creating Standalone Runtime Endpoints
RuntimeEndpoint can also be created as a standalone resource.
Example: Creating an endpoint for an existing runtime
# Reference an existing runtime by its ID
existing_runtime_id = "abc123-runtime-id" # The ID of an existing runtime
# Create a standalone endpoint
endpoint = agentcore.RuntimeEndpoint(self, "MyEndpoint",
endpoint_name="production",
agent_runtime_id=existing_runtime_id,
agent_runtime_version="1", # Specify which version to use
description="Production endpoint for existing runtime"
)
Runtime Authentication Configuration
The AgentCore Runtime supports multiple authentication modes to secure access to your agent endpoints. Authentication is configured during runtime creation using the RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration class's static factory methods.
IAM Authentication (Default)
IAM authentication is the default mode, when no authorizerConfiguration is set then the underlying service use IAM.
Cognito Authentication
To configure AWS Cognito User Pool authentication:
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
authorizer_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration.using_cognito("us-west-2_ABC123", "client123", "us-west-2")
)
JWT Authentication
To configure custom JWT authentication with your own OpenID Connect (OIDC) provider:
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
authorizer_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration.using_jWT("https://example.com/.well-known/openid-configuration", ["client1", "client2"], ["audience1"])
)
Note: The discovery URL must end with /.well-known/openid-configuration.
OAuth Authentication
To configure OAuth 2.0 authentication:
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
authorizer_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeAuthorizerConfiguration.using_oAuth("https://github.com/.well-known/openid-configuration", "oauth_client_123")
)
Using a Custom IAM Role
Instead of using the auto-created execution role, you can provide your own IAM role with specific permissions: The auto-created role includes all necessary baseline permissions for ECR access, CloudWatch logging, and X-Ray tracing. When providing a custom role, ensure these permissions are included.
Runtime Network Configuration
The AgentCore Runtime supports two network modes for deployment:
Public Network Mode (Default)
By default, runtimes are deployed in PUBLIC network mode, which provides internet access suitable for less sensitive or open-use scenarios:
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
# Explicitly using public network (this is the default)
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
network_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network()
)
VPC Network Mode
For enhanced security and network isolation, you can deploy your runtime within a VPC:
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
# Create or use an existing VPC
vpc = ec2.Vpc(self, "MyVpc",
max_azs=2
)
# Configure runtime with VPC
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
network_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=vpc,
vpc_subnets=ec2.SubnetSelection(subnet_type=ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_EGRESS)
)
)
Managing Security Groups with VPC Configuration
When using VPC mode, the Runtime implements ec2.IConnectable, allowing you to manage network access using the connections property:
vpc = ec2.Vpc(self, "MyVpc",
max_azs=2
)
repository = ecr.Repository(self, "TestRepository",
repository_name="test-agent-runtime"
)
agent_runtime_artifact = agentcore.AgentRuntimeArtifact.from_ecr_repository(repository, "v1.0.0")
# Create runtime with VPC configuration
runtime = agentcore.Runtime(self, "MyAgentRuntime",
runtime_name="myAgent",
agent_runtime_artifact=agent_runtime_artifact,
network_configuration=agentcore.RuntimeNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=vpc,
vpc_subnets=ec2.SubnetSelection(subnet_type=ec2.SubnetType.PRIVATE_WITH_EGRESS)
)
)
# Now you can manage network access using the connections property
# Allow inbound HTTPS traffic from a specific security group
web_server_security_group = ec2.SecurityGroup(self, "WebServerSG", vpc=vpc)
runtime.connections.allow_from(web_server_security_group, ec2.Port.tcp(443), "Allow HTTPS from web servers")
# Allow outbound connections to a database
database_security_group = ec2.SecurityGroup(self, "DatabaseSG", vpc=vpc)
runtime.connections.allow_to(database_security_group, ec2.Port.tcp(5432), "Allow PostgreSQL connection")
# Allow outbound HTTPS to anywhere (for external API calls)
runtime.connections.allow_to_any_ipv4(ec2.Port.tcp(443), "Allow HTTPS outbound")
Browser
The Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Browser provides a secure, cloud-based browser that enables AI agents to interact with websites. It includes security features such as session isolation, built-in observability through live viewing, CloudTrail logging, and session replay capabilities.
Additional information about the browser tool can be found in the official documentation
Browser Network modes
The Browser construct supports the following network modes:
-
Public Network Mode (
BrowserNetworkMode.usingPublicNetwork()) - Default- Allows internet access for web browsing and external API calls
- Suitable for scenarios where agents need to interact with publicly available websites
- Enables full web browsing capabilities
- VPC mode is not supported with this option
-
VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) (
BrowserNetworkMode.usingVpc())- Select whether to run the browser in a virtual private cloud (VPC).
- By configuring VPC connectivity, you enable secure access to private resources such as databases, internal APIs, and services within your VPC.
While the VPC itself is mandatory, these are optional:
- Subnets - if not provided, CDK will select appropriate subnets from the VPC
- Security Groups - if not provided, CDK will create a default security group
- Specific subnet selection criteria - you can let CDK choose automatically
For more information on VPC connectivity for Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Browser, please refer to the official documentation.
Browser Properties
| Name | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
browserCustomName |
string |
Yes | The name of the browser. Must start with a letter and can be up to 48 characters long. Pattern: [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]{0,47} |
description |
string |
No | Optional description for the browser. Can have up to 200 characters |
networkConfiguration |
BrowserNetworkConfiguration |
No | Network configuration for browser. Defaults to PUBLIC network mode |
recordingConfig |
RecordingConfig |
No | Recording configuration for browser. Defaults to no recording |
executionRole |
iam.IRole |
No | The IAM role that provides permissions for the browser to access AWS services. A new role will be created if not provided |
tags |
{ [key: string]: string } |
No | Tags to apply to the browser resource |
Basic Browser Creation
# Create a basic browser with public network access
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="A browser for web automation"
)
Browser with Tags
# Create a browser with custom tags
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="A browser for web automation with tags",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
tags={
"Environment": "Production",
"Team": "AI/ML",
"Project": "AgentCore"
}
)
Browser with VPC
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "BrowserVpcWithRecording",
browser_custom_name="browser_recording",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=ec2.Vpc(self, "VPC", restrict_default_security_group=False)
)
)
Browser exposes a connections property. This property returns a connections object, which simplifies the process of defining and managing ingress and egress rules for security groups in your AWS CDK applications. Instead of directly manipulating security group rules, you interact with the Connections object of a construct, which then translates your connectivity requirements into the appropriate security group rules. For instance:
vpc = ec2.Vpc(self, "testVPC")
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "test-browser",
browser_custom_name="test_browser",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=vpc
)
)
browser.connections.add_security_group(ec2.SecurityGroup(self, "AdditionalGroup", vpc=vpc))
So security groups can be added after the browser construct creation. You can use methods like allowFrom() and allowTo() to grant ingress access to/egress access from a specified peer over a given portRange. The Connections object automatically adds the necessary ingress or egress rules to the security group(s) associated with the calling construct.
Browser with Recording Configuration
# Create an S3 bucket for recordings
recording_bucket = s3.Bucket(self, "RecordingBucket",
bucket_name="my-browser-recordings",
removal_policy=RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)
# Create browser with recording enabled
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="Browser with recording enabled",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
recording_config=agentcore.RecordingConfig(
enabled=True,
s3_location=s3.Location(
bucket_name=recording_bucket.bucket_name,
object_key="browser-recordings/"
)
)
)
Browser with Custom Execution Role
# Create a custom execution role
execution_role = iam.Role(self, "BrowserExecutionRole",
assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("bedrock-agentcore.amazonaws.com"),
managed_policies=[
iam.ManagedPolicy.from_aws_managed_policy_name("AmazonBedrockAgentCoreBrowserExecutionRolePolicy")
]
)
# Create browser with custom execution role
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="Browser with custom execution role",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
execution_role=execution_role
)
Browser with S3 Recording and Permissions
# Create an S3 bucket for recordings
recording_bucket = s3.Bucket(self, "RecordingBucket",
bucket_name="my-browser-recordings",
removal_policy=RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)
# Create browser with recording enabled
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="Browser with recording enabled",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
recording_config=agentcore.RecordingConfig(
enabled=True,
s3_location=s3.Location(
bucket_name=recording_bucket.bucket_name,
object_key="browser-recordings/"
)
)
)
Browser IAM Permissions
The Browser construct provides convenient methods for granting IAM permissions:
# Create a browser
browser = agentcore.BrowserCustom(self, "MyBrowser",
browser_custom_name="my_browser",
description="Browser for web automation",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network()
)
# Create a role that needs access to the browser
user_role = iam.Role(self, "UserRole",
assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("lambda.amazonaws.com")
)
# Grant read permissions (Get and List actions)
browser.grant_read(user_role)
# Grant use permissions (Start, Update, Stop actions)
browser.grant_use(user_role)
# Grant specific custom permissions
browser.grant(user_role, "bedrock-agentcore:GetBrowserSession")
Code Interpreter
The Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Code Interpreter enables AI agents to write and execute code securely in sandbox environments, enhancing their accuracy and expanding their ability to solve complex end-to-end tasks. This is critical in Agentic AI applications where the agents may execute arbitrary code that can lead to data compromise or security risks. The AgentCore Code Interpreter tool provides secure code execution, which helps you avoid running into these issues.
For more information about code interpreter, please refer to the official documentation
Code Interpreter Network Modes
The Code Interpreter construct supports the following network modes:
-
Public Network Mode (
CodeInterpreterNetworkMode.usingPublicNetwork()) - Default- Allows internet access for package installation and external API calls
- Suitable for development and testing environments
- Enables downloading Python packages from PyPI
-
Sandbox Network Mode (
CodeInterpreterNetworkMode.usingSandboxNetwork())- Isolated network environment with no internet access
- Suitable for production environments with strict security requirements
- Only allows access to pre-installed packages and local resources
-
VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) (
CodeInterpreterNetworkMode.usingVpc())- Select whether to run the browser in a virtual private cloud (VPC).
- By configuring VPC connectivity, you enable secure access to private resources such as databases, internal APIs, and services within your VPC.
While the VPC itself is mandatory, these are optional:
- Subnets - if not provided, CDK will select appropriate subnets from the VPC
- Security Groups - if not provided, CDK will create a default security group
- Specific subnet selection criteria - you can let CDK choose automatically
For more information on VPC connectivity for Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Browser, please refer to the official documentation.
Code Interpreter Properties
| Name | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
codeInterpreterCustomName |
string |
Yes | The name of the code interpreter. Must start with a letter and can be up to 48 characters long. Pattern: [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]{0,47} |
description |
string |
No | Optional description for the code interpreter. Can have up to 200 characters |
executionRole |
iam.IRole |
No | The IAM role that provides permissions for the code interpreter to access AWS services. A new role will be created if not provided |
networkConfiguration |
CodeInterpreterNetworkConfiguration |
No | Network configuration for code interpreter. Defaults to PUBLIC network mode |
tags |
{ [key: string]: string } |
No | Tags to apply to the code interpreter resource |
Basic Code Interpreter Creation
# Create a basic code interpreter with public network access
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_code_interpreter",
description="A code interpreter for Python execution"
)
Code Interpreter with VPC
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_sandbox_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter with isolated network access",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=ec2.Vpc(self, "VPC", restrict_default_security_group=False)
)
)
Code Interpreter exposes a connections property. This property returns a connections object, which simplifies the process of defining and managing ingress and egress rules for security groups in your AWS CDK applications. Instead of directly manipulating security group rules, you interact with the Connections object of a construct, which then translates your connectivity requirements into the appropriate security group rules. For instance:
vpc = ec2.Vpc(self, "testVPC")
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_sandbox_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter with isolated network access",
network_configuration=agentcore.BrowserNetworkConfiguration.using_vpc(self,
vpc=vpc
)
)
code_interpreter.connections.add_security_group(ec2.SecurityGroup(self, "AdditionalGroup", vpc=vpc))
So security groups can be added after the browser construct creation. You can use methods like allowFrom() and allowTo() to grant ingress access to/egress access from a specified peer over a given portRange. The Connections object automatically adds the necessary ingress or egress rules to the security group(s) associated with the calling construct.
Code Interpreter with Sandbox Network Mode
# Create code interpreter with sandbox network mode (isolated)
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_sandbox_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter with isolated network access",
network_configuration=agentcore.CodeInterpreterNetworkConfiguration.using_sandbox_network()
)
Code Interpreter with Custom Execution Role
# Create a custom execution role
execution_role = iam.Role(self, "CodeInterpreterExecutionRole",
assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("bedrock-agentcore.amazonaws.com")
)
# Create code interpreter with custom execution role
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_code_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter with custom execution role",
network_configuration=agentcore.CodeInterpreterNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
execution_role=execution_role
)
Code Interpreter IAM Permissions
The Code Interpreter construct provides convenient methods for granting IAM permissions:
# Create a code interpreter
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_code_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter for Python execution",
network_configuration=agentcore.CodeInterpreterNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network()
)
# Create a role that needs access to the code interpreter
user_role = iam.Role(self, "UserRole",
assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("lambda.amazonaws.com")
)
# Grant read permissions (Get and List actions)
code_interpreter.grant_read(user_role)
# Grant use permissions (Start, Invoke, Stop actions)
code_interpreter.grant_use(user_role)
# Grant specific custom permissions
code_interpreter.grant(user_role, "bedrock-agentcore:GetCodeInterpreterSession")
Code interpreter with tags
# Create code interpreter with sandbox network mode (isolated)
code_interpreter = agentcore.CodeInterpreterCustom(self, "MyCodeInterpreter",
code_interpreter_custom_name="my_sandbox_interpreter",
description="Code interpreter with isolated network access",
network_configuration=agentcore.CodeInterpreterNetworkConfiguration.using_public_network(),
tags={
"Environment": "Production",
"Team": "AI/ML",
"Project": "AgentCore"
}
)
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