Monitoring and logging - AWS AppSync

Monitoring and logging

To monitor your AWS AppSync GraphQL API and help debug issues related to requests, you can turn on logging to Amazon CloudWatch Logs.

Setup and configuration

To turn on automatic logging on a GraphQL API, use the AWS AppSync console.

  1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the AppSync console.

  2. On the APIs page, choose the name of a GraphQL API.

  3. On your API's homepage, in the navigation pane, choose Settings.

  4. Under Logging, do the following:

    1. Turn on Enable Logs.

    2. For detailed request-level logging, select the check box under Include verbose content. (optional)

    3. Under Field resolver log level, choose your preferred field-level logging level (None, Error, or All). (optional)

    4. Under Create or use an existing role, choose New role to create a new AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) that allows AWS AppSync to write logs to CloudWatch. Or, choose Existing role to select the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an existing IAM role in your AWS account.

  5. Choose Save.

Manual IAM role configuration

If you choose to use an existing IAM role, the role must grant AWS AppSync the required permissions to write logs to CloudWatch. To configure this manually, you must provide a service role ARN so that AWS AppSync can assume the role when writing the logs.

In the IAM console, create a new policy with the name AWSAppSyncPushToCloudWatchLogsPolicy that has the following definition:

{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "logs:CreateLogGroup", "logs:CreateLogStream", "logs:PutLogEvents" ], "Resource": "*" } ] }

Next, create a new role with the name AWSAppSyncPushToCloudWatchLogsRole, and attach the newly created policy to the role. Edit the trust relationship for this role to the following:

{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "Service": "appsync.amazonaws.com" }, "Action": "sts:AssumeRole" } ] }

Copy the role ARN and use it when setting up logging for an AWS AppSync GraphQL API.

CloudWatch metrics

You can use CloudWatch metrics to monitor and provide alerts about specific events that can result in HTTP status codes or from latency. The following metrics are emitted:

4XXError

Errors resulting from requests that are not valid due to an incorrect client configuration. Typically, these errors happen anywhere outside of GraphQL processing. For example, these errors can occur when the request includes an incorrect JSON payload or an incorrect query, when the service is throttled, or when the authorization settings are misconfigured.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of these errors.

5XXError

Errors encountered during the running of a GraphQL query. For example, this can occur when invoking a query for an empty or incorrect schema. It can also occur when the Amazon Cognito user pool ID or AWS Region is not valid. Alternatively, this could also happen if AWS AppSync encounters an issue during processing of a request.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of these errors.

Latency

The time between when AWS AppSync receives a request from a client and when it returns a response to the client. This doesn’t include the network latency encountered for a response to reach the end devices.

Unit: Millisecond. Use the Average statistic to evaluate expected latencies.

Requests

The number of requests (queries + mutations) that all APIs in your account have processed, by Region.

Unit: Count. The number of all requests processed in a particular Region.

TokensConsumed

Tokens are allocated to Requests based on the amount of resources (processing time and memory used) that a Request consumes. Usually, each Request consumes one token. However, a Request that consumes large amounts of resources is allocated additional tokens as needed.

Unit: Count. The number of tokens allocated to requests processed in a particular Region.

NetworkBandwidthOutAllowanceExceeded
Note

In the AWS AppSync console, on the cache settings page, the Cache Health Metrics option allows you to enable this cache-related health metric.

The network packets dropped because the throughput exceeded the aggregated bandwidth limit. This is useful for diagnosing bottlenecks in a cache configuration. Data is recorded for a particular API by specifying the API_Id in the appsyncCacheNetworkBandwidthOutAllowanceExceeded metric.

Unit: Count. The number of packets dropped after exceeding the bandwidth limit for an API specified by ID.

EngineCPUUtilization
Note

In the AWS AppSync console, on the cache settings page, the Cache Health Metrics option allows you to enable this cache-related health metric.

The CPU utilization (percentage) allocated to the Redis process. This is useful for diagnosing bottlenecks in a cache configuration. Data is recorded for a particular API by specifying the API_Id in the appsyncCacheEngineCPUUtilization metric.

Unit: Percent. The CPU percentage currently in use by the Redis process for an API specified by ID.

Real-time subscriptions

All metrics are emitted in one dimension: GraphQLAPIId. This means that all metrics are coupled with GraphQL API IDs. The following metrics are related to GraphQL subscriptions over pure WebSockets:

ConnectRequests

The number of WebSocket connection requests made to AWS AppSync, including both successful and unsuccessful attempts.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of connection requests.

ConnectSuccess

The number of successful WebSocket connections to AWS AppSync. It is possible to have connections without subscriptions.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the successful connections.

ConnectClientError

The number of WebSocket connections that were rejected by AWS AppSync because of client-side errors. This could imply that the service is throttled or that the authorization settings are misconfigured.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the client-side connection errors.

ConnectServerError

The number of errors that originated from AWS AppSync while processing connections. This usually happens when an unexpected server-side issue occurs.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the server-side connection errors.

DisconnectSuccess

The number of successful WebSocket disconnections from AWS AppSync.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the successful disconnections.

DisconnectClientError

The number of client errors that originated from AWS AppSync while disconnecting WebSocket connections.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the disconnection errors.

DisconnectServerError

The number of server errors that originated from AWS AppSync while disconnecting WebSocket connections.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the disconnection errors.

SubscribeSuccess

The number of subscriptions that were successfully registered to AWS AppSync through WebSocket. It's possible to have connections without subscriptions, but it's not possible to have subscriptions without connections.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the successful subscriptions.

SubscribeClientError

The number of subscriptions that were rejected by AWS AppSync because of client-side errors. This can occur when a JSON payload is incorrect, the service is throttled, or the authorization settings are misconfigured.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the client-side subscription errors.

SubscribeServerError

The number of errors that originated from AWS AppSync while processing subscriptions. This usually happens when an unexpected server-side issue occurs.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the server-side subscription errors.

UnsubscribeSuccess

The number of unsubscribe requests that were successfully processed.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the successful unsubscribe requests.

UnsubscribeClientError

The number of unsubscribe requests that were rejected by AWS AppSync because of client-side errors.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the client-side unsubscribe request errors.

UnsubscribeServerError

The number of errors that originated from AWS AppSync while processing unsubscribe requests. This usually happens when an unexpected server-side issue occurs.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the server-side unsubscribe request errors.

PublishDataMessageSuccess

The number of subscription event messages that were successfully published.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total of the subscription event messages were successfully published.

PublishDataMessageClientError

The number of subscription event messages that failed to publish because of client-side errors.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the client-side publishing subscription events errors.

PublishDataMessageServerError

The number of errors that originated from AWS AppSync while publishing subscription event messages. This usually happens when an unexpected server-side issue occurs.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total occurrences of the server-side publishing subscription events errors.

PublishDataMessageSize

The size of subscription event messages published.

Unit: Bytes.

ActiveConnections

The number of concurrent WebSocket connections from clients to AWS AppSync in 1 minute.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total opened connections.

ActiveSubscriptions

The number of concurrent subscriptions from clients in 1 minute.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total active subscriptions.

ConnectionDuration

The amount of time that the connection stays open.

Unit: Milliseconds. Use the Average statistic to evaluate connection duration.

OutboundMessages

The number of metered messages successfully published. One metered message equals 5 kB of delivered data.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of successfully published metered messages.

InboundMessageSuccess

The number of inbound messages successfully processed. Each subscription type invoked by a mutation generates one inbound message.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of successfully processed inbound messages.

InboundMessageError

The number of inbound messages that failed processing due to invalid API requests, such as exceeding the 240 kB subscription payload size limit.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of inbound messages with API-related processing failures.

InboundMessageFailure

The number of inbound messages that failed processing due to errors from AWS AppSync.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of inbound messages with AWS AppSync-related processing failures.

InboundMessageDelayed

The number of delayed inbound messages. Inbound messages can be delayed when either the inbound message rate quota or outbound message rate quota is breached.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of inbound messages that were delayed.

InboundMessageDropped

The number of dropped inbound messages. Inbound messages can be dropped when either the inbound message rate quota or outbound message rate quota is breached.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of inbound messages that were dropped.

InvalidationSuccess

The number of subscriptions successfully invalidated (unsubscribed) by a mutation with $extensions.invalidateSubscriptions().

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to retrieve the total number of subscriptions that were successfully unsubscribed.

InvalidationRequestSuccess

The number of invalidation requests successfully processed.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of successfully processed invalidation requests.

InvalidationRequestError

The number of invalidation requests that failed processing due to invalid API requests.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of invalidation requests with API-related processing failures.

InvalidationRequestFailure

The number of invalidation requests that failed processing due to errors from AWS AppSync.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of invalidation requests with AWS AppSync-related processing failures.

InvalidationRequestDropped

The number of invalidation requests dropped when the invalidation request quota was exceeded.

Unit: Count. Use the Sum statistic to get the total number of dropped invalidation requests.

Comparing inbound and outbound messages

When a mutation is executed, subscription fields with the @aws_subscribe directive for that mutation are invoked. Each subscription invocation generates one inbound message. For example, if two subscription fields specify the same mutation in @aws_subscribe, then two inbound messages are generated when that mutation is called.

One outbound message equals 5 kB of data delivered to WebSocket clients. For example, sending 15 kB of data to 10 clients results in 30 outbound messages (15 kB * 10 clients / 5 kB per message = 30 messages).

You can request quota increases for either inbound or outbound messages. For more information, see AWS AppSync endpoints and quotas in the AWS General Reference guide and the instructions for Requesting a quota increase in the Service Quotas User Guide.

Enhanced metrics

Enhanced metrics emit granular data on API usage and performance such as AWS AppSync request and error counts, latency, and cache hits/misses. All enhanced metric data is sent to your CloudWatch account, and you can configure the types of data that will be sent.

Note

Additional charges are applied when using enhanced metrics. For more information, see detailed monitoring pricing tiers in Amazon CloudWatch pricing.

These metrics can be found on various settings pages in the AWS AppSync console. On the API settings page, the Enhanced Metrics section allows you to enable or disable the following items:

  1. Resolver metrics behavior: These options control how additional metrics for resolvers are collected. You can choose to enable full request resolver metrics (metrics enabled for all resolvers in requests) or per-resolver metrics (metrics only enabled for resolvers where the configuration is set to enabled). The following options are available:

    Metric Metric Dimension Metric Name Unit Description
    GraphQL errors per resolver API_Id, Resolver GraphQLError Count The number of GraphQL errors that occured per resolver.
    Requests per resolver API_Id, Resolver Request Count The number of invocations that occurred during a request. This is recorded on a per-resolver basis.
    Latency per resolver API_Id, Resolver Latency Millisecond The time to complete a resolver invocation. Latency is measured in milliseconds and is recorded on a per-resolver basis.
    Cache hits per resolver API_Id, Resolver CacheHit Count The number of cache hits during a request. This will only be emitted if a cache is used. Cache hits are recorded on a per-resolver basis.
    Cache misses per resolver API_Id, Resolver CacheMiss Count The number of cache misses during a request. This will only be emitted if a cache is used. Cache misses are recorded on a per-resolver basis.
  2. Data source metrics behavior: These options control how additional metrics for data sources are collected. You can choose to enable full request data source metrics (metrics enabled for all data sources in requests) or per-data source metrics (metrics only enabled for data sources where the configuration is set to enabled). The following options are available:

    Metric Metric Dimension Metric Name Unit Description
    Requests per data source API_Id, Datasource Request Count The number of invocations that occured during a request. Requests are recorded on a per-data source basis. If full requests are enabled, each data source will have its own entry in CloudWatch.
    Latency per data source API_Id, Datasource Latency Millisecond The time to complete a data source invocation. Latency is recorded on a per-data source basis.
    Errors per data source API_Id, Datasource GraphQLError Count The number of errors that occurred during a data source invocation.
  3. Operation metrics: Enables GraphQL operation-level metrics.

    Metric Metric Dimension Metric Name Unit Description
    Requests per operation API_Id, Operation Request Count The number of times a specified GraphQL operation was called.
    GraphQL errors per operation API_Id, Operation GraphQLError Count The number of GraphQL errors that occurred during a specified GraphQL operation.

CloudWatch logs

You can configure two types of logging on any new or existing GraphQL API: request-level and field-level.

Request-level logs

When request-level logging (Include verbose content) is configured, the following information is logged:

  • The number of tokens consumed

  • The request and response HTTP headers

  • The GraphQL query that is running in the request

  • The overall operation summary

  • New and existing GraphQL subscriptions that are registered

Field-level logs

When field-level logging is configured, the following information is logged:

  • Generated request mapping with source and arguments for each field

  • The transformed response mapping for each field, which includes the data as a result of resolving that field

  • Tracing information for each field

If you turn on logging, AWS AppSync manages the CloudWatch Logs. The process includes creating log groups and log streams, and reporting to the log streams with these logs.

When you turn on logging on a GraphQL API and make requests, AWS AppSync creates a log group and log streams under the log group. The log group is named following the /aws/appsync/apis/{graphql_api_id} format. Within each log group, the logs are further divided into log streams. These are ordered by Last Event Time as logged data is reported.

Every log event is tagged with the x-amzn-RequestId of that request. This helps you filter log events in CloudWatch to get all logged information about that request. You can get the RequestId from the response headers of every GraphQL AWS AppSync request.

The field-Level logging is configured with the following log levels:

  • None - No field-level logs are captured.

  • Error - Logs the following information only for the fields that are in error:
    • The error section in the server response

    • Field-level errors

    • The generated request/response functions that got resolved for error fields

  • All - Logs the following information for all fields in the query:
    • Field-level tracing information

    • The generated request/response functions that got resolved for each field

Benefits of monitoring

You can use logging and metrics to identify, troubleshoot, and optimize your GraphQL queries. For example, these will help you debug latency issues using the tracing information that is logged for each field in the query. To demonstrate this, suppose you are using one or more resolvers nested in a GraphQL query. A sample field operation in CloudWatch Logs might look similar to the following:

{ "path": [ "singlePost", "authors", 0, "name" ], "parentType": "Post", "returnType": "String!", "fieldName": "name", "startOffset": 416563350, "duration": 11247 }

This might correspond to a GraphQL schema, similar to the following:

type Post { id: ID! name: String! authors: [Author] } type Author { id: ID! name: String! } type Query { singlePost(id:ID!): Post }

In the preceding log results, path shows a single item in your data returned from running a query named singlePost(). In this example, it’s representing the name field at the first index (0). The startOffset gives an offset from the start of the GraphQL query operation. The duration is the total time to resolve the field. These values can be useful to troubleshoot why data from a particular data source might be running slower than expected, or if a specific field is slowing down the entire query. For example, you might choose to increase provisioned throughput for an Amazon DynamoDB table, or remove a specific field from a query that is causing the overall operation to perform poorly.

As of May 8, 2019, AWS AppSync generates log events as fully structured JSON. This can help you use log analytics services such as CloudWatch Logs Insights and Amazon OpenSearch Service to understand the performance of your GraphQL requests and usage characteristics of your schema fields. For example, you can easily identify resolvers with large latencies that may be the root cause of a performance issue. You can also identify the most and least frequently used fields in your schema and assess the impact of deprecating GraphQL fields.

Conflict detection and sync logging

If an AWS AppSync API has logging to CloudWatch Logs configured with the Field resolver log level set to All, then AWS AppSync emits conflict detection and resolution information to the log group. This provides granular insight into how the AWS AppSync API responded to a conflict. To help you interpret the response, the following information is provided in the logs:

conflictType

Details whether a conflict occurred due to a version mismatch or the customer-supplied condition.

conflictHandlerConfigured

States the conflict handler configured on the resolver at the time of the request.

message

Provides information on how the conflict was detected and resolved.

syncAttempt

The number of tries the server attempted in order to synchronize the data before ultimately rejecting the request.

data

If the conflict handler configured is Automerge, this field is populated to show what decision Automerge took for each field. Actions provided can be:

  • REJECTED - When Automerge rejects the incoming field value in favor of the value in the server.

  • ADDED - When Automerge adds on the incoming field due to no pre-existing value in the server.

  • APPENDED - When Automerge appends the incoming values to the values for the List that exists in the server.

  • MERGED - When Automerge merges the incoming values to the values for the Set that exists in the server.

Using token counts to optimize your requests

Requests that consume less than or equal to 1,500 KB-seconds of memory and vCPU time are allocated one token. Requests with resource consumption greater than 1,500 KB-seconds receive additional tokens. For example, if a request consumes 3,350 KB-seconds, AWS AppSync allocates three tokens (rounded up to the next integer value) to the request. By default, AWS AppSync allocates a maximum of 2,000 request tokens per second to the APIs in your account, per AWS Region. If your APIs each use an average of two tokens per second, you'll be limited to 1,000 requests per second. If you need more tokens per second than the allotted amount, you can submit a request to increase the default quota for the rate of request tokens. For more information, see AWS AppSync endpoints and quotas in the AWS General Reference guide and Requesting a quota increase in the Service Quotas User Guide.

A high per-request token count could indicate that there's an opportunity to optimize your requests and improve the performance of your API. Factors that can increase your per-request token count include:

  • The size and complexity of your GraphQL schema.

  • The complexity of request and response mapping templates.

  • The number of resolver invocations per request.

  • The amount of data returned from resolvers.

  • The latency of downstream data sources.

  • Schema and query designs that require successive data source calls (as opposed to parallel or batched calls).

  • Logging configuration, particularly field-level and verbose log content.

Note

In addition to AWS AppSync metrics and logs, clients can access the number of tokens consumed in a request via the response header x-amzn-appsync-TokensConsumed.

Log type reference

RequestSummary

  • requestId: Unique identifier for the request.

  • graphQLAPIId: ID of the GraphQL API making the request.

  • statusCode: HTTP status code response.

  • latency: End-to-end latency of the request, in nanoseconds, as an integer.

{ "logType": "RequestSummary", "requestId": "dbe87af3-c114-4b32-ae79-8af11f3f96f1", "graphQLAPIId": "pmo28inf75eepg63qxq4ekoeg4", "statusCode": 200, "latency": 242000000 }

ExecutionSummary

  • requestId: Unique identifier for the request.

  • graphQLAPIId: ID of the GraphQL API making the request.

  • startTime: The start timestamp of GraphQL processing for the request, in RFC 3339 format.

  • endTime: The end timestamp of GraphQL processing for the request, in RFC 3339 format.

  • duration: The total elapsed GraphQL processing time, in nanoseconds, as an integer.

  • version: The schema version of the ExecutionSummary.

  • parsing:
    • startOffset: The start offset for parsing, in nanoseconds, relative to the invocation, as an integer.

    • duration: The time spent parsing, in nanoseconds, as an integer.

  • validation:
    • startOffset: The start offset for validation, in nanoseconds, relative to the invocation, as an integer.

    • duration: The time spent performing validation, in nanoseconds, as an integer.

{ "duration": 217406145, "logType": "ExecutionSummary", "requestId": "dbe87af3-c114-4b32-ae79-8af11f3f96f1", "startTime": "2019-01-01T06:06:18.956Z", "endTime": "2019-01-01T06:06:19.174Z", "parsing": { "startOffset": 49033, "duration": 34784 }, "version": 1, "validation": { "startOffset": 129048, "duration": 69126 }, "graphQLAPIId": "pmo28inf75eepg63qxq4ekoeg4" }

Tracing

  • requestId: Unique identifier for the request.

  • graphQLAPIId: ID of the GraphQL API making the request.

  • startOffset: The start offset for field resolution, in nanoseconds, relative to the invocation, as an integer.

  • duration: The time spent resolving the field, in nanoseconds, as an integer.

  • fieldName: The name of the field being resolved.

  • parentType: The parent type of the field being resolved.

  • returnType: The return type of the field being resolved.

  • path: A list of path segments, starting at the root of the response and ending with the field being resolved.

  • resolverArn: The ARN of the resolver used for field resolution. Might not be present on nested fields.

{ "duration": 216820346, "logType": "Tracing", "path": [ "putItem" ], "fieldName": "putItem", "startOffset": 178156, "resolverArn": "arn:aws:appsync:us-east-1:111111111111:apis/pmo28inf75eepg63qxq4ekoeg4/types/Mutation/fields/putItem", "requestId": "dbe87af3-c114-4b32-ae79-8af11f3f96f1", "parentType": "Mutation", "returnType": "Item", "graphQLAPIId": "pmo28inf75eepg63qxq4ekoeg4" }

Analyzing your logs with CloudWatch Logs Insights

The following are examples of queries you can run to get actionable insights into the performance and health of your GraphQL operations. These examples are available as sample queries in the CloudWatch Logs Insights console. In the CloudWatch console, choose Logs Insights, select the AWS AppSync log group for your GraphQL API, and then choose AWS AppSync queries under Sample queries.

The following query returns the top 10 GraphQL requests with maximum tokens consumed:

filter @message like "Tokens Consumed" | parse @message "* Tokens Consumed: *" as requestId, tokens | sort tokens desc | display requestId, tokens | limit 10

The following query returns the top 10 resolvers with maximum latency:

fields resolverArn, duration | filter logType = "Tracing" | limit 10 | sort duration desc

The following query returns the most frequently invoked resolvers:

fields ispresent(resolverArn) as isRes | stats count() as invocationCount by resolverArn | filter isRes and logType = "Tracing" | limit 10 | sort invocationCount desc

The following query returns resolvers with the most errors in mapping templates:

fields ispresent(resolverArn) as isRes | stats count() as errorCount by resolverArn, logType | filter isRes and (logType = "RequestMapping" or logType = "ResponseMapping") and fieldInError | limit 10 | sort errorCount desc

The following query returns resolver latency statistics:

fields ispresent(resolverArn) as isRes | stats min(duration), max(duration), avg(duration) as avg_dur by resolverArn | filter isRes and logType = "Tracing" | limit 10 | sort avg_dur desc

The following query returns field latency statistics:

stats min(duration), max(duration), avg(duration) as avg_dur by concat(parentType, '/', fieldName) as fieldKey | filter logType = "Tracing" | limit 10 | sort avg_dur desc

The results of CloudWatch Logs Insights queries can be exported to CloudWatch dashboards.

Analyze your logs with OpenSearch Service

You can search, analyze, and visualize your AWS AppSync logs with Amazon OpenSearch Service to identify performance bottlenecks and root causes of operational issues. You can identify resolvers with the maximum latency and errors. In addition, you can use OpenSearch Dashboards to create dashboards with powerful visualizations. OpenSearch Dashboards is an open source data visualization and exploration tool available in OpenSearch Service. Using OpenSearch Dashboards, you can continuously monitor the performance and health of your GraphQL operations. For example, you can create dashboards to visualize the P90 latency of your GraphQL requests and drill down into the P90 latencies of each resolver.

When using OpenSearch Service, use “cwl*” as the filter pattern to search OpenSearch indexes. OpenSearch Service indexes the logs streamed from CloudWatch Logs with a prefix of “cwl-”. To differentiate AWS AppSync API logs from other CloudWatch logs sent to OpenSearch Service, we recommend adding an additional filter expression of graphQLAPIID.keyword=YourGraphQLAPIID to your search.

Log format migration

Log events that AWS AppSync generates on or after May 8, 2019 are formatted as fully structured JSON. To analyze GraphQL requests prior to May 8, 2019, you can migrate older logs to fully structured JSON using a script available in the GitHub Sample. If you need to use the log format prior to May 8, 2019, create a support ticket with the following settings: set Type to Account Management and then set Category to General Account Question.

You can also use metric filters in CloudWatch to turn log data into numerical CloudWatch metrics, so that you can graph or set an alarm on them.