Interface CfnResourceCollection.ResourceCollectionFilterProperty

All Superinterfaces:
software.amazon.jsii.JsiiSerializable
All Known Implementing Classes:
CfnResourceCollection.ResourceCollectionFilterProperty.Jsii$Proxy
Enclosing class:
CfnResourceCollection

@Stability(Stable) public static interface CfnResourceCollection.ResourceCollectionFilterProperty extends software.amazon.jsii.JsiiSerializable
Information about a filter used to specify which AWS resources are analyzed for anomalous behavior by DevOps Guru.

Example:

 // The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type.
 // The values are placeholders you should change.
 import software.amazon.awscdk.services.devopsguru.*;
 ResourceCollectionFilterProperty resourceCollectionFilterProperty = ResourceCollectionFilterProperty.builder()
         .cloudFormation(CloudFormationCollectionFilterProperty.builder()
                 .stackNames(List.of("stackNames"))
                 .build())
         .tags(List.of(TagCollectionProperty.builder()
                 .appBoundaryKey("appBoundaryKey")
                 .tagValues(List.of("tagValues"))
                 .build()))
         .build();
 
  • Method Details

    • getCloudFormation

      @Stability(Stable) @Nullable default Object getCloudFormation()
      Information about AWS CloudFormation stacks.

      You can use up to 500 stacks to specify which AWS resources in your account to analyze. For more information, see Stacks in the AWS CloudFormation User Guide .

    • getTags

      @Stability(Stable) @Nullable default List<CfnResourceCollection.TagCollectionProperty> getTags()
      The AWS tags used to filter the resources in the resource collection.

      Tags help you identify and organize your AWS resources. Many AWS services support tagging, so you can assign the same tag to resources from different services to indicate that the resources are related. For example, you can assign the same tag to an Amazon DynamoDB table resource that you assign to an AWS Lambda function. For more information about using tags, see the Tagging best practices whitepaper.

      Each AWS tag has two parts.

      • A tag key (for example, CostCenter , Environment , Project , or Secret ). Tag keys are case-sensitive.
      • A field known as a tag value (for example, 111122223333 , Production , or a team name). Omitting the tag value is the same as using an empty string. Like tag keys , tag values are case-sensitive. The tag value is a required property when AppBoundaryKey is specified.

      Together these are known as key - value pairs.

      The string used for a key in a tag that you use to define your resource coverage must begin with the prefix Devops-guru- . The tag key might be DevOps-Guru-deployment-application or devops-guru-rds-application . When you create a key , the case of characters in the key can be whatever you choose. After you create a key , it is case-sensitive. For example, DevOps Guru works with a key named devops-guru-rds and a key named DevOps-Guru-RDS , and these act as two different keys . Possible key / value pairs in your application might be Devops-Guru-production-application/RDS or Devops-Guru-production-application/containers .

    • builder

      Returns:
      a CfnResourceCollection.ResourceCollectionFilterProperty.Builder of CfnResourceCollection.ResourceCollectionFilterProperty