Skip to main content

Amazon EventBridge Construct Library

Project description

Amazon EventBridge Construct Library

---

cfn-resources: Stable

cdk-constructs: Stable


Amazon EventBridge delivers a near real-time stream of system events that describe changes in AWS resources. For example, an AWS CodePipeline emits the State Change event when the pipeline changes it's state.

  • Events: An event indicates a change in your AWS environment. AWS resources can generate events when their state changes. For example, Amazon EC2 generates an event when the state of an EC2 instance changes from pending to running, and Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling generates events when it launches or terminates instances. AWS CloudTrail publishes events when you make API calls. You can generate custom application-level events and publish them to EventBridge. You can also set up scheduled events that are generated on a periodic basis. For a list of services that generate events, and sample events from each service, see EventBridge Event Examples From Each Supported Service.
  • Targets: A target processes events. Targets can include Amazon EC2 instances, AWS Lambda functions, Kinesis streams, Amazon ECS tasks, Step Functions state machines, Amazon SNS topics, Amazon SQS queues, and built-in targets. A target receives events in JSON format.
  • Rules: A rule matches incoming events and routes them to targets for processing. A single rule can route to multiple targets, all of which are processed in parallel. Rules are not processed in a particular order. This enables different parts of an organization to look for and process the events that are of interest to them. A rule can customize the JSON sent to the target, by passing only certain parts or by overwriting it with a constant.
  • EventBuses: An event bus can receive events from your own custom applications or it can receive events from applications and services created by AWS SaaS partners. See Creating an Event Bus.

Rule

The Rule construct defines an EventBridge rule which monitors an event based on an event pattern and invoke event targets when the pattern is matched against a triggered event. Event targets are objects that implement the IRuleTarget interface.

Normally, you will use one of the source.onXxx(name[, target[, options]]) -> Rule methods on the event source to define an event rule associated with the specific activity. You can targets either via props, or add targets using rule.addTarget.

For example, to define an rule that triggers a CodeBuild project build when a commit is pushed to the "master" branch of a CodeCommit repository:

# Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
on_commit_rule = repo.on_commit("OnCommit",
    target=targets.CodeBuildProject(project),
    branches=["master"]
)

You can add additional targets, with optional input transformer using eventRule.addTarget(target[, input]). For example, we can add a SNS topic target which formats a human-readable message for the commit.

For example, this adds an SNS topic as a target:

# Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
on_commit_rule.add_target(targets.SnsTopic(topic,
    message=events.RuleTargetInput.from_text(f"A commit was pushed to the repository {codecommit.ReferenceEvent.repositoryName} on branch {codecommit.ReferenceEvent.referenceName}")
))

Scheduling

You can configure a Rule to run on a schedule (cron or rate).

The following example runs a task every day at 4am:

# Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
from aws_cdk.aws_events import Rule, Schedule
from aws_cdk.aws_events_targets import EcsTask

ecs_task_target = EcsTask(cluster=cluster, task_definition=task_definition, role=role)

Rule(self, "ScheduleRule",
    schedule=Schedule.cron(minute="0", hour="4"),
    targets=[ecs_task_target]
)

More details in ScheduledEvents documentation page.

Event Targets

The @aws-cdk/aws-events-targets module includes classes that implement the IRuleTarget interface for various AWS services.

The following targets are supported:

  • targets.CodeBuildProject: Start an AWS CodeBuild build
  • targets.CodePipeline: Start an AWS CodePipeline pipeline execution
  • targets.EcsTask: Start a task on an Amazon ECS cluster
  • targets.LambdaFunction: Invoke an AWS Lambda function
  • targets.SnsTopic: Publish into an SNS topic
  • targets.SqsQueue: Send a message to an Amazon SQS Queue
  • targets.SfnStateMachine: Trigger an AWS Step Functions state machine
  • targets.BatchJob: Queue an AWS Batch Job
  • targets.AwsApi: Make an AWS API call

Cross-account targets

It's possible to have the source of the event and a target in separate AWS accounts:

# Example automatically generated without compilation. See https://github.com/aws/jsii/issues/826
from aws_cdk.core import App, Stack
import aws_cdk.aws_codebuild as codebuild
import aws_cdk.aws_codecommit as codecommit
import aws_cdk.aws_events_targets as targets

app = App()

stack1 = Stack(app, "Stack1", env=Environment(account=account1, region="us-east-1"))
repo = codecommit.Repository(stack1, "Repository")

stack2 = Stack(app, "Stack2", env=Environment(account=account2, region="us-east-1"))
project = codebuild.Project(stack2, "Project")

repo.on_commit("OnCommit",
    target=targets.CodeBuildProject(project)
)

In this situation, the CDK will wire the 2 accounts together:

  • It will generate a rule in the source stack with the event bus of the target account as the target
  • It will generate a rule in the target stack, with the provided target
  • It will generate a separate stack that gives the source account permissions to publish events to the event bus of the target account in the given region, and make sure its deployed before the source stack

Note: while events can span multiple accounts, they cannot span different regions (that is an EventBridge, not CDK, limitation).

For more information, see the AWS documentation on cross-account events.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

aws-cdk.aws-events-1.60.0.tar.gz (144.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

aws_cdk.aws_events-1.60.0-py3-none-any.whl (141.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file aws-cdk.aws-events-1.60.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: aws-cdk.aws-events-1.60.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 144.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.2.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.24.0 setuptools/39.0.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.48.2 CPython/3.6.5

File hashes

Hashes for aws-cdk.aws-events-1.60.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 6a045a56c436e4c0e0b957182b89e3da5579bff82e7a37cb73e2eae2efaecf2c
MD5 e1d08595089fccfadd86c54305e84f2c
BLAKE2b-256 defe6cae3a337ad17b4c61935fc44b5de61346c398c22e94443646539b3726e0

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file aws_cdk.aws_events-1.60.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: aws_cdk.aws_events-1.60.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 141.7 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.2.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.24.0 setuptools/39.0.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.48.2 CPython/3.6.5

File hashes

Hashes for aws_cdk.aws_events-1.60.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b4edb0d9c981afe6000d04e2b063518c2b0a46dd9611a18515903af481df1d93
MD5 71287f53c6c880a76b6786d847ac12c1
BLAKE2b-256 77318cf44d95d73fd43e100edf96feb5757502b4f3b8c342ce4c32702e137150

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page