Amazon Route 53

2018/10/18 - Amazon Route 53 - 4 updated api methods

Changes  Update route53 client to latest version

CreateHealthCheck (updated) Link ¶
Changes (request, response)
Request
{'HealthCheckConfig': {'Disabled': 'boolean'}}
Response
{'HealthCheck': {'HealthCheckConfig': {'Disabled': 'boolean'}}}

Creates a new health check.

For information about adding health checks to resource record sets, see ResourceRecordSet$HealthCheckId in ChangeResourceRecordSets.

ELB Load Balancers

If you're registering EC2 instances with an Elastic Load Balancing (ELB) load balancer, do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the EC2 instances. When you register an EC2 instance with a load balancer, you configure settings for an ELB health check, which performs a similar function to a Route 53 health check.

Private Hosted Zones

You can associate health checks with failover resource record sets in a private hosted zone. Note the following:

  • Route 53 health checkers are outside the VPC. To check the health of an endpoint within a VPC by IP address, you must assign a public IP address to the instance in the VPC.

  • You can configure a health checker to check the health of an external resource that the instance relies on, such as a database server.

  • You can create a CloudWatch metric, associate an alarm with the metric, and then create a health check that is based on the state of the alarm. For example, you might create a CloudWatch metric that checks the status of the Amazon EC2 StatusCheckFailed metric, add an alarm to the metric, and then create a health check that is based on the state of the alarm. For information about creating CloudWatch metrics and alarms by using the CloudWatch console, see the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

client.create_health_check(
    CallerReference='string',
    HealthCheckConfig={
        'IPAddress': 'string',
        'Port': 123,
        'Type': 'HTTP'|'HTTPS'|'HTTP_STR_MATCH'|'HTTPS_STR_MATCH'|'TCP'|'CALCULATED'|'CLOUDWATCH_METRIC',
        'ResourcePath': 'string',
        'FullyQualifiedDomainName': 'string',
        'SearchString': 'string',
        'RequestInterval': 123,
        'FailureThreshold': 123,
        'MeasureLatency': True|False,
        'Inverted': True|False,
        'Disabled': True|False,
        'HealthThreshold': 123,
        'ChildHealthChecks': [
            'string',
        ],
        'EnableSNI': True|False,
        'Regions': [
            'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
        ],
        'AlarmIdentifier': {
            'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
            'Name': 'string'
        },
        'InsufficientDataHealthStatus': 'Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus'
    }
)
type CallerReference:

string

param CallerReference:

[REQUIRED]

A unique string that identifies the request and that allows you to retry a failed CreateHealthCheck request without the risk of creating two identical health checks:

  • If you send a CreateHealthCheck request with the same CallerReference and settings as a previous request, and if the health check doesn't exist, Amazon Route 53 creates the health check. If the health check does exist, Route 53 returns the settings for the existing health check.

  • If you send a CreateHealthCheck request with the same CallerReference as a deleted health check, regardless of the settings, Route 53 returns a HealthCheckAlreadyExists error.

  • If you send a CreateHealthCheck request with the same CallerReference as an existing health check but with different settings, Route 53 returns a HealthCheckAlreadyExists error.

  • If you send a CreateHealthCheck request with a unique CallerReference but settings identical to an existing health check, Route 53 creates the health check.

type HealthCheckConfig:

dict

param HealthCheckConfig:

[REQUIRED]

A complex type that contains settings for a new health check.

  • IPAddress (string) --

    The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address of the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

    Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

    • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

    • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

    If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance will never change.

    For more information, see HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

    Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

    When the value of Type is CALCULATED or CLOUDWATCH_METRIC, omit IPAddress.

  • Port (integer) --

    The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks. Specify a value for Port only when you specify a value for IPAddress.

  • Type (string) -- [REQUIRED]

    The type of health check that you want to create, which indicates how Amazon Route 53 determines whether an endpoint is healthy.

    You can create the following types of health checks:

    • HTTP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

    • HTTPS: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

    • HTTP_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

    • HTTPS_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

    • TCP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection.

    • CLOUDWATCH_METRIC: The health check is associated with a CloudWatch alarm. If the state of the alarm is OK, the health check is considered healthy. If the state is ALARM, the health check is considered unhealthy. If CloudWatch doesn't have sufficient data to determine whether the state is OK or ALARM, the health check status depends on the setting for InsufficientDataHealthStatus: Healthy, Unhealthy, or LastKnownStatus.

    • CALCULATED: For health checks that monitor the status of other health checks, Route 53 adds up the number of health checks that Route 53 health checkers consider to be healthy and compares that number with the value of HealthThreshold.

    For more information, see How Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

  • ResourcePath (string) --

    The path, if any, that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example, the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

  • FullyQualifiedDomainName (string) --

    Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

    If you specify a value for IPAddress:

    Amazon Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

    When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

    • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

    • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

    • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName:Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

    If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the preceding cases.

    If you don't specify a value for IPAddress :

    Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify for RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that DNS returns, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

    If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

    In addition, if the value that you specify for Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

  • SearchString (string) --

    If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy.

    Route 53 considers case when searching for SearchString in the response body.

  • RequestInterval (integer) --

    The number of seconds between the time that Amazon Route 53 gets a response from your endpoint and the time that it sends the next health check request. Each Route 53 health checker makes requests at this interval.

    If you don't specify a value for RequestInterval, the default value is 30 seconds.

  • FailureThreshold (integer) --

    The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

    If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

  • MeasureLatency (boolean) --

    Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to measure the latency between health checkers in multiple AWS regions and your endpoint, and to display CloudWatch latency graphs on the Health Checks page in the Route 53 console.

  • Inverted (boolean) --

    Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

  • Disabled (boolean) --

    Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

    • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

    • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

    • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

    After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

    Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

  • HealthThreshold (integer) --

    The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks and HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks elements.

    Note the following:

    • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

    • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

  • ChildHealthChecks (list) --

    (CALCULATED Health Checks Only) A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

    • (string) --

  • EnableSNI (boolean) --

    Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

    Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

    The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

  • Regions (list) --

    A complex type that contains one Region element for each region from which you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint.

    If you don't specify any regions, Route 53 health checkers automatically performs checks from all of the regions that are listed under Valid Values.

    If you update a health check to remove a region that has been performing health checks, Route 53 will briefly continue to perform checks from that region to ensure that some health checkers are always checking the endpoint (for example, if you replace three regions with four different regions).

    • (string) --

  • AlarmIdentifier (dict) --

    A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

    • Region (string) -- [REQUIRED]

      For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

      For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

    • Name (string) -- [REQUIRED]

      The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

  • InsufficientDataHealthStatus (string) --

    When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

    • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

    • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

    • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time that CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

rtype:

dict

returns:

Response Syntax

{
    'HealthCheck': {
        'Id': 'string',
        'CallerReference': 'string',
        'LinkedService': {
            'ServicePrincipal': 'string',
            'Description': 'string'
        },
        'HealthCheckConfig': {
            'IPAddress': 'string',
            'Port': 123,
            'Type': 'HTTP'|'HTTPS'|'HTTP_STR_MATCH'|'HTTPS_STR_MATCH'|'TCP'|'CALCULATED'|'CLOUDWATCH_METRIC',
            'ResourcePath': 'string',
            'FullyQualifiedDomainName': 'string',
            'SearchString': 'string',
            'RequestInterval': 123,
            'FailureThreshold': 123,
            'MeasureLatency': True|False,
            'Inverted': True|False,
            'Disabled': True|False,
            'HealthThreshold': 123,
            'ChildHealthChecks': [
                'string',
            ],
            'EnableSNI': True|False,
            'Regions': [
                'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
            ],
            'AlarmIdentifier': {
                'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
                'Name': 'string'
            },
            'InsufficientDataHealthStatus': 'Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus'
        },
        'HealthCheckVersion': 123,
        'CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration': {
            'EvaluationPeriods': 123,
            'Threshold': 123.0,
            'ComparisonOperator': 'GreaterThanOrEqualToThreshold'|'GreaterThanThreshold'|'LessThanThreshold'|'LessThanOrEqualToThreshold',
            'Period': 123,
            'MetricName': 'string',
            'Namespace': 'string',
            'Statistic': 'Average'|'Sum'|'SampleCount'|'Maximum'|'Minimum',
            'Dimensions': [
                {
                    'Name': 'string',
                    'Value': 'string'
                },
            ]
        }
    },
    'Location': 'string'
}

Response Structure

  • (dict) --

    A complex type containing the response information for the new health check.

    • HealthCheck (dict) --

      A complex type that contains identifying information about the health check.

      • Id (string) --

        The identifier that Amazon Route 53assigned to the health check when you created it. When you add or update a resource record set, you use this value to specify which health check to use. The value can be up to 64 characters long.

      • CallerReference (string) --

        A unique string that you specified when you created the health check.

      • LinkedService (dict) --

        If the health check was created by another service, the service that created the health check. When a health check is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • ServicePrincipal (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, the service that created the resource. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • Description (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, an optional description that can be provided by the other service. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

      • HealthCheckConfig (dict) --

        A complex type that contains detailed information about one health check.

        • IPAddress (string) --

          The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address of the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

          • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

          • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

          If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance will never change.

          For more information, see HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

          Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

          When the value of Type is CALCULATED or CLOUDWATCH_METRIC, omit IPAddress.

        • Port (integer) --

          The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks. Specify a value for Port only when you specify a value for IPAddress.

        • Type (string) --

          The type of health check that you want to create, which indicates how Amazon Route 53 determines whether an endpoint is healthy.

          You can create the following types of health checks:

          • HTTP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTPS: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTP_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • HTTPS_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • TCP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection.

          • CLOUDWATCH_METRIC: The health check is associated with a CloudWatch alarm. If the state of the alarm is OK, the health check is considered healthy. If the state is ALARM, the health check is considered unhealthy. If CloudWatch doesn't have sufficient data to determine whether the state is OK or ALARM, the health check status depends on the setting for InsufficientDataHealthStatus: Healthy, Unhealthy, or LastKnownStatus.

          • CALCULATED: For health checks that monitor the status of other health checks, Route 53 adds up the number of health checks that Route 53 health checkers consider to be healthy and compares that number with the value of HealthThreshold.

          For more information, see How Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

        • ResourcePath (string) --

          The path, if any, that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example, the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

        • FullyQualifiedDomainName (string) --

          Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

          If you specify a value for IPAddress:

          Amazon Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

          When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

          • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName:Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

          If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the preceding cases.

          If you don't specify a value for IPAddress :

          Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify for RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that DNS returns, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

          In addition, if the value that you specify for Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

        • SearchString (string) --

          If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy.

          Route 53 considers case when searching for SearchString in the response body.

        • RequestInterval (integer) --

          The number of seconds between the time that Amazon Route 53 gets a response from your endpoint and the time that it sends the next health check request. Each Route 53 health checker makes requests at this interval.

          If you don't specify a value for RequestInterval, the default value is 30 seconds.

        • FailureThreshold (integer) --

          The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

          If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

        • MeasureLatency (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to measure the latency between health checkers in multiple AWS regions and your endpoint, and to display CloudWatch latency graphs on the Health Checks page in the Route 53 console.

        • Inverted (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

        • Disabled (boolean) --

          Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

          • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

          • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

          • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

          After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

          Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

        • HealthThreshold (integer) --

          The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks and HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks elements.

          Note the following:

          • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

          • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

        • ChildHealthChecks (list) --

          (CALCULATED Health Checks Only) A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

          • (string) --

        • EnableSNI (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

          Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

          The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

        • Regions (list) --

          A complex type that contains one Region element for each region from which you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint.

          If you don't specify any regions, Route 53 health checkers automatically performs checks from all of the regions that are listed under Valid Values.

          If you update a health check to remove a region that has been performing health checks, Route 53 will briefly continue to perform checks from that region to ensure that some health checkers are always checking the endpoint (for example, if you replace three regions with four different regions).

          • (string) --

        • AlarmIdentifier (dict) --

          A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

          • Region (string) --

            For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

            For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

          • Name (string) --

            The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

        • InsufficientDataHealthStatus (string) --

          When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

          • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

          • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

          • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time that CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

      • HealthCheckVersion (integer) --

        The version of the health check. You can optionally pass this value in a call to UpdateHealthCheck to prevent overwriting another change to the health check.

      • CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration (dict) --

        A complex type that contains information about the CloudWatch alarm that Amazon Route 53 is monitoring for this health check.

        • EvaluationPeriods (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the number of periods that the metric is compared to the threshold.

        • Threshold (float) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value the metric is compared with.

        • ComparisonOperator (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the arithmetic operation that is used for the comparison.

        • Period (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the duration of one evaluation period in seconds.

        • MetricName (string) --

          The name of the CloudWatch metric that the alarm is associated with.

        • Namespace (string) --

          The namespace of the metric that the alarm is associated with. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

        • Statistic (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the statistic that is applied to the metric.

        • Dimensions (list) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about the dimensions for the metric. For information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

          • (dict) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about one dimension.

            • Name (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the name of one dimension.

            • Value (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value of one dimension.

    • Location (string) --

      The unique URL representing the new health check.

GetHealthCheck (updated) Link ¶
Changes (response)
{'HealthCheck': {'HealthCheckConfig': {'Disabled': 'boolean'}}}

Gets information about a specified health check.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

client.get_health_check(
    HealthCheckId='string'
)
type HealthCheckId:

string

param HealthCheckId:

[REQUIRED]

The identifier that Amazon Route 53 assigned to the health check when you created it. When you add or update a resource record set, you use this value to specify which health check to use. The value can be up to 64 characters long.

rtype:

dict

returns:

Response Syntax

{
    'HealthCheck': {
        'Id': 'string',
        'CallerReference': 'string',
        'LinkedService': {
            'ServicePrincipal': 'string',
            'Description': 'string'
        },
        'HealthCheckConfig': {
            'IPAddress': 'string',
            'Port': 123,
            'Type': 'HTTP'|'HTTPS'|'HTTP_STR_MATCH'|'HTTPS_STR_MATCH'|'TCP'|'CALCULATED'|'CLOUDWATCH_METRIC',
            'ResourcePath': 'string',
            'FullyQualifiedDomainName': 'string',
            'SearchString': 'string',
            'RequestInterval': 123,
            'FailureThreshold': 123,
            'MeasureLatency': True|False,
            'Inverted': True|False,
            'Disabled': True|False,
            'HealthThreshold': 123,
            'ChildHealthChecks': [
                'string',
            ],
            'EnableSNI': True|False,
            'Regions': [
                'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
            ],
            'AlarmIdentifier': {
                'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
                'Name': 'string'
            },
            'InsufficientDataHealthStatus': 'Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus'
        },
        'HealthCheckVersion': 123,
        'CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration': {
            'EvaluationPeriods': 123,
            'Threshold': 123.0,
            'ComparisonOperator': 'GreaterThanOrEqualToThreshold'|'GreaterThanThreshold'|'LessThanThreshold'|'LessThanOrEqualToThreshold',
            'Period': 123,
            'MetricName': 'string',
            'Namespace': 'string',
            'Statistic': 'Average'|'Sum'|'SampleCount'|'Maximum'|'Minimum',
            'Dimensions': [
                {
                    'Name': 'string',
                    'Value': 'string'
                },
            ]
        }
    }
}

Response Structure

  • (dict) --

    A complex type that contains the response to a GetHealthCheck request.

    • HealthCheck (dict) --

      A complex type that contains information about one health check that is associated with the current AWS account.

      • Id (string) --

        The identifier that Amazon Route 53assigned to the health check when you created it. When you add or update a resource record set, you use this value to specify which health check to use. The value can be up to 64 characters long.

      • CallerReference (string) --

        A unique string that you specified when you created the health check.

      • LinkedService (dict) --

        If the health check was created by another service, the service that created the health check. When a health check is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • ServicePrincipal (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, the service that created the resource. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • Description (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, an optional description that can be provided by the other service. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

      • HealthCheckConfig (dict) --

        A complex type that contains detailed information about one health check.

        • IPAddress (string) --

          The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address of the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

          • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

          • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

          If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance will never change.

          For more information, see HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

          Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

          When the value of Type is CALCULATED or CLOUDWATCH_METRIC, omit IPAddress.

        • Port (integer) --

          The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks. Specify a value for Port only when you specify a value for IPAddress.

        • Type (string) --

          The type of health check that you want to create, which indicates how Amazon Route 53 determines whether an endpoint is healthy.

          You can create the following types of health checks:

          • HTTP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTPS: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTP_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • HTTPS_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • TCP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection.

          • CLOUDWATCH_METRIC: The health check is associated with a CloudWatch alarm. If the state of the alarm is OK, the health check is considered healthy. If the state is ALARM, the health check is considered unhealthy. If CloudWatch doesn't have sufficient data to determine whether the state is OK or ALARM, the health check status depends on the setting for InsufficientDataHealthStatus: Healthy, Unhealthy, or LastKnownStatus.

          • CALCULATED: For health checks that monitor the status of other health checks, Route 53 adds up the number of health checks that Route 53 health checkers consider to be healthy and compares that number with the value of HealthThreshold.

          For more information, see How Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

        • ResourcePath (string) --

          The path, if any, that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example, the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

        • FullyQualifiedDomainName (string) --

          Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

          If you specify a value for IPAddress:

          Amazon Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

          When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

          • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName:Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

          If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the preceding cases.

          If you don't specify a value for IPAddress :

          Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify for RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that DNS returns, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

          In addition, if the value that you specify for Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

        • SearchString (string) --

          If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy.

          Route 53 considers case when searching for SearchString in the response body.

        • RequestInterval (integer) --

          The number of seconds between the time that Amazon Route 53 gets a response from your endpoint and the time that it sends the next health check request. Each Route 53 health checker makes requests at this interval.

          If you don't specify a value for RequestInterval, the default value is 30 seconds.

        • FailureThreshold (integer) --

          The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

          If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

        • MeasureLatency (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to measure the latency between health checkers in multiple AWS regions and your endpoint, and to display CloudWatch latency graphs on the Health Checks page in the Route 53 console.

        • Inverted (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

        • Disabled (boolean) --

          Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

          • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

          • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

          • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

          After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

          Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

        • HealthThreshold (integer) --

          The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks and HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks elements.

          Note the following:

          • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

          • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

        • ChildHealthChecks (list) --

          (CALCULATED Health Checks Only) A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

          • (string) --

        • EnableSNI (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

          Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

          The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

        • Regions (list) --

          A complex type that contains one Region element for each region from which you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint.

          If you don't specify any regions, Route 53 health checkers automatically performs checks from all of the regions that are listed under Valid Values.

          If you update a health check to remove a region that has been performing health checks, Route 53 will briefly continue to perform checks from that region to ensure that some health checkers are always checking the endpoint (for example, if you replace three regions with four different regions).

          • (string) --

        • AlarmIdentifier (dict) --

          A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

          • Region (string) --

            For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

            For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

          • Name (string) --

            The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

        • InsufficientDataHealthStatus (string) --

          When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

          • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

          • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

          • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time that CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

      • HealthCheckVersion (integer) --

        The version of the health check. You can optionally pass this value in a call to UpdateHealthCheck to prevent overwriting another change to the health check.

      • CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration (dict) --

        A complex type that contains information about the CloudWatch alarm that Amazon Route 53 is monitoring for this health check.

        • EvaluationPeriods (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the number of periods that the metric is compared to the threshold.

        • Threshold (float) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value the metric is compared with.

        • ComparisonOperator (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the arithmetic operation that is used for the comparison.

        • Period (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the duration of one evaluation period in seconds.

        • MetricName (string) --

          The name of the CloudWatch metric that the alarm is associated with.

        • Namespace (string) --

          The namespace of the metric that the alarm is associated with. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

        • Statistic (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the statistic that is applied to the metric.

        • Dimensions (list) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about the dimensions for the metric. For information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

          • (dict) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about one dimension.

            • Name (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the name of one dimension.

            • Value (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value of one dimension.

ListHealthChecks (updated) Link ¶
Changes (response)
{'HealthChecks': {'HealthCheckConfig': {'Disabled': 'boolean'}}}

Retrieve a list of the health checks that are associated with the current AWS account.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

client.list_health_checks(
    Marker='string',
    MaxItems='string'
)
type Marker:

string

param Marker:

If the value of IsTruncated in the previous response was true, you have more health checks. To get another group, submit another ListHealthChecks request.

For the value of marker, specify the value of NextMarker from the previous response, which is the ID of the first health check that Amazon Route 53 will return if you submit another request.

If the value of IsTruncated in the previous response was false, there are no more health checks to get.

type MaxItems:

string

param MaxItems:

The maximum number of health checks that you want ListHealthChecks to return in response to the current request. Amazon Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items. If you set MaxItems to a value greater than 100, Route 53 returns only the first 100 health checks.

rtype:

dict

returns:

Response Syntax

{
    'HealthChecks': [
        {
            'Id': 'string',
            'CallerReference': 'string',
            'LinkedService': {
                'ServicePrincipal': 'string',
                'Description': 'string'
            },
            'HealthCheckConfig': {
                'IPAddress': 'string',
                'Port': 123,
                'Type': 'HTTP'|'HTTPS'|'HTTP_STR_MATCH'|'HTTPS_STR_MATCH'|'TCP'|'CALCULATED'|'CLOUDWATCH_METRIC',
                'ResourcePath': 'string',
                'FullyQualifiedDomainName': 'string',
                'SearchString': 'string',
                'RequestInterval': 123,
                'FailureThreshold': 123,
                'MeasureLatency': True|False,
                'Inverted': True|False,
                'Disabled': True|False,
                'HealthThreshold': 123,
                'ChildHealthChecks': [
                    'string',
                ],
                'EnableSNI': True|False,
                'Regions': [
                    'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
                ],
                'AlarmIdentifier': {
                    'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
                    'Name': 'string'
                },
                'InsufficientDataHealthStatus': 'Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus'
            },
            'HealthCheckVersion': 123,
            'CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration': {
                'EvaluationPeriods': 123,
                'Threshold': 123.0,
                'ComparisonOperator': 'GreaterThanOrEqualToThreshold'|'GreaterThanThreshold'|'LessThanThreshold'|'LessThanOrEqualToThreshold',
                'Period': 123,
                'MetricName': 'string',
                'Namespace': 'string',
                'Statistic': 'Average'|'Sum'|'SampleCount'|'Maximum'|'Minimum',
                'Dimensions': [
                    {
                        'Name': 'string',
                        'Value': 'string'
                    },
                ]
            }
        },
    ],
    'Marker': 'string',
    'IsTruncated': True|False,
    'NextMarker': 'string',
    'MaxItems': 'string'
}

Response Structure

  • (dict) --

    A complex type that contains the response to a ListHealthChecks request.

    • HealthChecks (list) --

      A complex type that contains one HealthCheck element for each health check that is associated with the current AWS account.

      • (dict) --

        A complex type that contains information about one health check that is associated with the current AWS account.

        • Id (string) --

          The identifier that Amazon Route 53assigned to the health check when you created it. When you add or update a resource record set, you use this value to specify which health check to use. The value can be up to 64 characters long.

        • CallerReference (string) --

          A unique string that you specified when you created the health check.

        • LinkedService (dict) --

          If the health check was created by another service, the service that created the health check. When a health check is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

          • ServicePrincipal (string) --

            If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, the service that created the resource. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

          • Description (string) --

            If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, an optional description that can be provided by the other service. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • HealthCheckConfig (dict) --

          A complex type that contains detailed information about one health check.

          • IPAddress (string) --

            The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address of the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

            Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

            • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

            • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

            If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance will never change.

            For more information, see HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

            Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

            When the value of Type is CALCULATED or CLOUDWATCH_METRIC, omit IPAddress.

          • Port (integer) --

            The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks. Specify a value for Port only when you specify a value for IPAddress.

          • Type (string) --

            The type of health check that you want to create, which indicates how Amazon Route 53 determines whether an endpoint is healthy.

            You can create the following types of health checks:

            • HTTP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

            • HTTPS: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

            • HTTP_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

            • HTTPS_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

            • TCP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection.

            • CLOUDWATCH_METRIC: The health check is associated with a CloudWatch alarm. If the state of the alarm is OK, the health check is considered healthy. If the state is ALARM, the health check is considered unhealthy. If CloudWatch doesn't have sufficient data to determine whether the state is OK or ALARM, the health check status depends on the setting for InsufficientDataHealthStatus: Healthy, Unhealthy, or LastKnownStatus.

            • CALCULATED: For health checks that monitor the status of other health checks, Route 53 adds up the number of health checks that Route 53 health checkers consider to be healthy and compares that number with the value of HealthThreshold.

            For more information, see How Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

          • ResourcePath (string) --

            The path, if any, that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example, the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

          • FullyQualifiedDomainName (string) --

            Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

            If you specify a value for IPAddress:

            Amazon Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

            When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

            • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

            • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

            • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName:Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

            If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the preceding cases.

            If you don't specify a value for IPAddress :

            Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify for RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that DNS returns, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

            If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

            In addition, if the value that you specify for Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

          • SearchString (string) --

            If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy.

            Route 53 considers case when searching for SearchString in the response body.

          • RequestInterval (integer) --

            The number of seconds between the time that Amazon Route 53 gets a response from your endpoint and the time that it sends the next health check request. Each Route 53 health checker makes requests at this interval.

            If you don't specify a value for RequestInterval, the default value is 30 seconds.

          • FailureThreshold (integer) --

            The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

            If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

          • MeasureLatency (boolean) --

            Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to measure the latency between health checkers in multiple AWS regions and your endpoint, and to display CloudWatch latency graphs on the Health Checks page in the Route 53 console.

          • Inverted (boolean) --

            Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

          • Disabled (boolean) --

            Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

            • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

            • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

            • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

            After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

            Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

          • HealthThreshold (integer) --

            The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks and HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks elements.

            Note the following:

            • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

            • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

          • ChildHealthChecks (list) --

            (CALCULATED Health Checks Only) A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

            • (string) --

          • EnableSNI (boolean) --

            Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

            Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

            The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

          • Regions (list) --

            A complex type that contains one Region element for each region from which you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint.

            If you don't specify any regions, Route 53 health checkers automatically performs checks from all of the regions that are listed under Valid Values.

            If you update a health check to remove a region that has been performing health checks, Route 53 will briefly continue to perform checks from that region to ensure that some health checkers are always checking the endpoint (for example, if you replace three regions with four different regions).

            • (string) --

          • AlarmIdentifier (dict) --

            A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

            • Region (string) --

              For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

              For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

            • Name (string) --

              The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

          • InsufficientDataHealthStatus (string) --

            When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

            • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

            • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

            • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time that CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

        • HealthCheckVersion (integer) --

          The version of the health check. You can optionally pass this value in a call to UpdateHealthCheck to prevent overwriting another change to the health check.

        • CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration (dict) --

          A complex type that contains information about the CloudWatch alarm that Amazon Route 53 is monitoring for this health check.

          • EvaluationPeriods (integer) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the number of periods that the metric is compared to the threshold.

          • Threshold (float) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value the metric is compared with.

          • ComparisonOperator (string) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the arithmetic operation that is used for the comparison.

          • Period (integer) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the duration of one evaluation period in seconds.

          • MetricName (string) --

            The name of the CloudWatch metric that the alarm is associated with.

          • Namespace (string) --

            The namespace of the metric that the alarm is associated with. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

          • Statistic (string) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the statistic that is applied to the metric.

          • Dimensions (list) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about the dimensions for the metric. For information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

            • (dict) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about one dimension.

              • Name (string) --

                For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the name of one dimension.

              • Value (string) --

                For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value of one dimension.

    • Marker (string) --

      For the second and subsequent calls to ListHealthChecks, Marker is the value that you specified for the marker parameter in the previous request.

    • IsTruncated (boolean) --

      A flag that indicates whether there are more health checks to be listed. If the response was truncated, you can get the next group of health checks by submitting another ListHealthChecks request and specifying the value of NextMarker in the marker parameter.

    • NextMarker (string) --

      If IsTruncated is true, the value of NextMarker identifies the first health check that Amazon Route 53 returns if you submit another ListHealthChecks request and specify the value of NextMarker in the marker parameter.

    • MaxItems (string) --

      The value that you specified for the maxitems parameter in the call to ListHealthChecks that produced the current response.

UpdateHealthCheck (updated) Link ¶
Changes (request, response)
Request
{'Disabled': 'boolean'}
Response
{'HealthCheck': {'HealthCheckConfig': {'Disabled': 'boolean'}}}

Updates an existing health check. Note that some values can't be updated.

For more information about updating health checks, see Creating, Updating, and Deleting Health Checks in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

client.update_health_check(
    HealthCheckId='string',
    HealthCheckVersion=123,
    IPAddress='string',
    Port=123,
    ResourcePath='string',
    FullyQualifiedDomainName='string',
    SearchString='string',
    FailureThreshold=123,
    Inverted=True|False,
    Disabled=True|False,
    HealthThreshold=123,
    ChildHealthChecks=[
        'string',
    ],
    EnableSNI=True|False,
    Regions=[
        'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
    ],
    AlarmIdentifier={
        'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
        'Name': 'string'
    },
    InsufficientDataHealthStatus='Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus',
    ResetElements=[
        'FullyQualifiedDomainName'|'Regions'|'ResourcePath'|'ChildHealthChecks',
    ]
)
type HealthCheckId:

string

param HealthCheckId:

[REQUIRED]

The ID for the health check for which you want detailed information. When you created the health check, CreateHealthCheck returned the ID in the response, in the HealthCheckId element.

type HealthCheckVersion:

integer

param HealthCheckVersion:

A sequential counter that Amazon Route 53 sets to 1 when you create a health check and increments by 1 each time you update settings for the health check.

We recommend that you use GetHealthCheck or ListHealthChecks to get the current value of HealthCheckVersion for the health check that you want to update, and that you include that value in your UpdateHealthCheck request. This prevents Route 53 from overwriting an intervening update:

  • If the value in the UpdateHealthCheck request matches the value of HealthCheckVersion in the health check, Route 53 updates the health check with the new settings.

  • If the value of HealthCheckVersion in the health check is greater, the health check was changed after you got the version number. Route 53 does not update the health check, and it returns a HealthCheckVersionMismatch error.

type IPAddress:

string

param IPAddress:

The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address for the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address that is returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

  • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

  • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance never changes. For more information, see the applicable documentation:

For more information, see UpdateHealthCheckRequest$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

type Port:

integer

param Port:

The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks.

type ResourcePath:

string

param ResourcePath:

The path that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

Specify this value only if you want to change it.

type FullyQualifiedDomainName:

string

param FullyQualifiedDomainName:

Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

If you specify a value for IPAddress:

Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

  • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

  • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

  • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName: Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the above cases.

If you don't specify a value for IPAddress:

If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that is returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

In addition, if the value of Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

type SearchString:

string

param SearchString:

If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy. (You can't change the value of Type when you update a health check.)

type FailureThreshold:

integer

param FailureThreshold:

The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

type Inverted:

boolean

param Inverted:

Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

type Disabled:

boolean

param Disabled:

Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

  • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

  • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

  • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

type HealthThreshold:

integer

param HealthThreshold:

The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the ChildHealthChecks and ChildHealthCheck elements.

Note the following:

  • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

  • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

type ChildHealthChecks:

list

param ChildHealthChecks:

A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

  • (string) --

type EnableSNI:

boolean

param EnableSNI:

Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

type Regions:

list

param Regions:

A complex type that contains one Region element for each region that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint from.

  • (string) --

type AlarmIdentifier:

dict

param AlarmIdentifier:

A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

  • Region (string) -- [REQUIRED]

    For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

    For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

  • Name (string) -- [REQUIRED]

    The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

type InsufficientDataHealthStatus:

string

param InsufficientDataHealthStatus:

When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

  • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

  • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

  • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

type ResetElements:

list

param ResetElements:

A complex type that contains one ResettableElementName element for each element that you want to reset to the default value. Valid values for ResettableElementName include the following:

  • ChildHealthChecks: Amazon Route 53 resets HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks to null.

  • FullyQualifiedDomainName: Route 53 resets HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName to null.

  • Regions: Route 53 resets the HealthCheckConfig$Regions list to the default set of regions.

  • ResourcePath: Route 53 resets HealthCheckConfig$ResourcePath to null.

  • (string) --

rtype:

dict

returns:

Response Syntax

{
    'HealthCheck': {
        'Id': 'string',
        'CallerReference': 'string',
        'LinkedService': {
            'ServicePrincipal': 'string',
            'Description': 'string'
        },
        'HealthCheckConfig': {
            'IPAddress': 'string',
            'Port': 123,
            'Type': 'HTTP'|'HTTPS'|'HTTP_STR_MATCH'|'HTTPS_STR_MATCH'|'TCP'|'CALCULATED'|'CLOUDWATCH_METRIC',
            'ResourcePath': 'string',
            'FullyQualifiedDomainName': 'string',
            'SearchString': 'string',
            'RequestInterval': 123,
            'FailureThreshold': 123,
            'MeasureLatency': True|False,
            'Inverted': True|False,
            'Disabled': True|False,
            'HealthThreshold': 123,
            'ChildHealthChecks': [
                'string',
            ],
            'EnableSNI': True|False,
            'Regions': [
                'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'sa-east-1',
            ],
            'AlarmIdentifier': {
                'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-east-2'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'ca-central-1'|'eu-central-1'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-west-2'|'eu-west-3'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'ap-northeast-3'|'sa-east-1',
                'Name': 'string'
            },
            'InsufficientDataHealthStatus': 'Healthy'|'Unhealthy'|'LastKnownStatus'
        },
        'HealthCheckVersion': 123,
        'CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration': {
            'EvaluationPeriods': 123,
            'Threshold': 123.0,
            'ComparisonOperator': 'GreaterThanOrEqualToThreshold'|'GreaterThanThreshold'|'LessThanThreshold'|'LessThanOrEqualToThreshold',
            'Period': 123,
            'MetricName': 'string',
            'Namespace': 'string',
            'Statistic': 'Average'|'Sum'|'SampleCount'|'Maximum'|'Minimum',
            'Dimensions': [
                {
                    'Name': 'string',
                    'Value': 'string'
                },
            ]
        }
    }
}

Response Structure

  • (dict) --

    • HealthCheck (dict) --

      A complex type that contains the response to an UpdateHealthCheck request.

      • Id (string) --

        The identifier that Amazon Route 53assigned to the health check when you created it. When you add or update a resource record set, you use this value to specify which health check to use. The value can be up to 64 characters long.

      • CallerReference (string) --

        A unique string that you specified when you created the health check.

      • LinkedService (dict) --

        If the health check was created by another service, the service that created the health check. When a health check is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • ServicePrincipal (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, the service that created the resource. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

        • Description (string) --

          If the health check or hosted zone was created by another service, an optional description that can be provided by the other service. When a resource is created by another service, you can't edit or delete it using Amazon Route 53.

      • HealthCheckConfig (dict) --

        A complex type that contains detailed information about one health check.

        • IPAddress (string) --

          The IPv4 or IPv6 IP address of the endpoint that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks on. If you don't specify a value for IPAddress, Route 53 sends a DNS request to resolve the domain name that you specify in FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify in RequestInterval. Using an IP address returned by DNS, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          Use one of the following formats for the value of IPAddress:

          • IPv4 address: four values between 0 and 255, separated by periods (.), for example, 192.0.2.44.

          • IPv6 address: eight groups of four hexadecimal values, separated by colons (:), for example, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:abcd:0001:2345. You can also shorten IPv6 addresses as described in RFC 5952, for example, 2001:db8:85a3::abcd:1:2345.

          If the endpoint is an EC2 instance, we recommend that you create an Elastic IP address, associate it with your EC2 instance, and specify the Elastic IP address for IPAddress. This ensures that the IP address of your instance will never change.

          For more information, see HealthCheckConfig$FullyQualifiedDomainName.

          Constraints: Route 53 can't check the health of endpoints for which the IP address is in local, private, non-routable, or multicast ranges. For more information about IP addresses for which you can't create health checks, see the following documents:

          When the value of Type is CALCULATED or CLOUDWATCH_METRIC, omit IPAddress.

        • Port (integer) --

          The port on the endpoint on which you want Amazon Route 53 to perform health checks. Specify a value for Port only when you specify a value for IPAddress.

        • Type (string) --

          The type of health check that you want to create, which indicates how Amazon Route 53 determines whether an endpoint is healthy.

          You can create the following types of health checks:

          • HTTP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTPS: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and waits for an HTTP status code of 200 or greater and less than 400.

          • HTTP_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTP request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • HTTPS_STR_MATCH: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection. If successful, Route 53 submits an HTTPS request and searches the first 5,120 bytes of the response body for the string that you specify in SearchString.

          • TCP: Route 53 tries to establish a TCP connection.

          • CLOUDWATCH_METRIC: The health check is associated with a CloudWatch alarm. If the state of the alarm is OK, the health check is considered healthy. If the state is ALARM, the health check is considered unhealthy. If CloudWatch doesn't have sufficient data to determine whether the state is OK or ALARM, the health check status depends on the setting for InsufficientDataHealthStatus: Healthy, Unhealthy, or LastKnownStatus.

          • CALCULATED: For health checks that monitor the status of other health checks, Route 53 adds up the number of health checks that Route 53 health checkers consider to be healthy and compares that number with the value of HealthThreshold.

          For more information, see How Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

        • ResourcePath (string) --

          The path, if any, that you want Amazon Route 53 to request when performing health checks. The path can be any value for which your endpoint will return an HTTP status code of 2xx or 3xx when the endpoint is healthy, for example, the file /docs/route53-health-check.html. You can also include query string parameters, for example, /welcome.html?language=jp&login=y.

        • FullyQualifiedDomainName (string) --

          Amazon Route 53 behavior depends on whether you specify a value for IPAddress.

          If you specify a value for IPAddress:

          Amazon Route 53 sends health check requests to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 address and passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header for all health checks except TCP health checks. This is typically the fully qualified DNS name of the endpoint on which you want Route 53 to perform health checks.

          When Route 53 checks the health of an endpoint, here is how it constructs the Host header:

          • If you specify a value of 80 for Port and HTTP or HTTP_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify a value of 443 for Port and HTTPS or HTTPS_STR_MATCH for Type, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the Host header.

          • If you specify another value for Port and any value except TCP for Type, Route 53 passes FullyQualifiedDomainName:Port to the endpoint in the Host header.

          If you don't specify a value for FullyQualifiedDomainName, Route 53 substitutes the value of IPAddress in the Host header in each of the preceding cases.

          If you don't specify a value for IPAddress :

          Route 53 sends a DNS request to the domain that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName at the interval that you specify for RequestInterval. Using an IPv4 address that DNS returns, Route 53 then checks the health of the endpoint.

          If you want to check the health of weighted, latency, or failover resource record sets and you choose to specify the endpoint only by FullyQualifiedDomainName, we recommend that you create a separate health check for each endpoint. For example, create a health check for each HTTP server that is serving content for www.example.com. For the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName, specify the domain name of the server (such as us-east-2-www.example.com), not the name of the resource record sets (www.example.com).

          In addition, if the value that you specify for Type is HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP_STR_MATCH, or HTTPS_STR_MATCH, Route 53 passes the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName in the Host header, as it does when you specify a value for IPAddress. If the value of Type is TCP, Route 53 doesn't pass a Host header.

        • SearchString (string) --

          If the value of Type is HTTP_STR_MATCH or HTTP_STR_MATCH, the string that you want Amazon Route 53 to search for in the response body from the specified resource. If the string appears in the response body, Route 53 considers the resource healthy.

          Route 53 considers case when searching for SearchString in the response body.

        • RequestInterval (integer) --

          The number of seconds between the time that Amazon Route 53 gets a response from your endpoint and the time that it sends the next health check request. Each Route 53 health checker makes requests at this interval.

          If you don't specify a value for RequestInterval, the default value is 30 seconds.

        • FailureThreshold (integer) --

          The number of consecutive health checks that an endpoint must pass or fail for Amazon Route 53 to change the current status of the endpoint from unhealthy to healthy or vice versa. For more information, see How Amazon Route 53 Determines Whether an Endpoint Is Healthy in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.

          If you don't specify a value for FailureThreshold, the default value is three health checks.

        • MeasureLatency (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to measure the latency between health checkers in multiple AWS regions and your endpoint, and to display CloudWatch latency graphs on the Health Checks page in the Route 53 console.

        • Inverted (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to invert the status of a health check, for example, to consider a health check unhealthy when it otherwise would be considered healthy.

        • Disabled (boolean) --

          Stops Route 53 from performing health checks. When you disable a health check, here's what happens:

          • Health checks that check the health of endpoints: Route 53 stops submitting requests to your application, server, or other resource.

          • Calculated health checks: Route 53 stops aggregating the status of the referenced health checks.

          • Health checks that monitor CloudWatch alarms: Route 53 stops monitoring the corresponding CloudWatch metrics.

          After you disable a health check, Route 53 considers the status of the health check to always be healthy. If you configured DNS failover, Route 53 continues to route traffic to the corresponding resources. If you want to stop routing traffic to a resource, change the value of UpdateHealthCheckRequest$Inverted.

          Charges for a health check still apply when the health check is disabled. For more information, see Amazon Route 53 Pricing.

        • HealthThreshold (integer) --

          The number of child health checks that are associated with a CALCULATED health that Amazon Route 53 must consider healthy for the CALCULATED health check to be considered healthy. To specify the child health checks that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check, use the HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks and HealthCheckConfig$ChildHealthChecks elements.

          Note the following:

          • If you specify a number greater than the number of child health checks, Route 53 always considers this health check to be unhealthy.

          • If you specify 0, Route 53 always considers this health check to be healthy.

        • ChildHealthChecks (list) --

          (CALCULATED Health Checks Only) A complex type that contains one ChildHealthCheck element for each health check that you want to associate with a CALCULATED health check.

          • (string) --

        • EnableSNI (boolean) --

          Specify whether you want Amazon Route 53 to send the value of FullyQualifiedDomainName to the endpoint in the client_hello message during TLS negotiation. This allows the endpoint to respond to HTTPS health check requests with the applicable SSL/TLS certificate.

          Some endpoints require that HTTPS requests include the host name in the client_hello message. If you don't enable SNI, the status of the health check will be SSL alert handshake_failure. A health check can also have that status for other reasons. If SNI is enabled and you're still getting the error, check the SSL/TLS configuration on your endpoint and confirm that your certificate is valid.

          The SSL/TLS certificate on your endpoint includes a domain name in the Common Name field and possibly several more in the Subject Alternative Names field. One of the domain names in the certificate should match the value that you specify for FullyQualifiedDomainName. If the endpoint responds to the client_hello message with a certificate that does not include the domain name that you specified in FullyQualifiedDomainName, a health checker will retry the handshake. In the second attempt, the health checker will omit FullyQualifiedDomainName from the client_hello message.

        • Regions (list) --

          A complex type that contains one Region element for each region from which you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to check the specified endpoint.

          If you don't specify any regions, Route 53 health checkers automatically performs checks from all of the regions that are listed under Valid Values.

          If you update a health check to remove a region that has been performing health checks, Route 53 will briefly continue to perform checks from that region to ensure that some health checkers are always checking the endpoint (for example, if you replace three regions with four different regions).

          • (string) --

        • AlarmIdentifier (dict) --

          A complex type that identifies the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether the specified health check is healthy.

          • Region (string) --

            For the CloudWatch alarm that you want Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy, the region that the alarm was created in.

            For the current list of CloudWatch regions, see Amazon CloudWatch in the AWS Regions and Endpoints chapter of the Amazon Web Services General Reference.

          • Name (string) --

            The name of the CloudWatch alarm that you want Amazon Route 53 health checkers to use to determine whether this health check is healthy.

        • InsufficientDataHealthStatus (string) --

          When CloudWatch has insufficient data about the metric to determine the alarm state, the status that you want Amazon Route 53 to assign to the health check:

          • Healthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be healthy.

          • Unhealthy: Route 53 considers the health check to be unhealthy.

          • LastKnownStatus: Route 53 uses the status of the health check from the last time that CloudWatch had sufficient data to determine the alarm state. For new health checks that have no last known status, the default status for the health check is healthy.

      • HealthCheckVersion (integer) --

        The version of the health check. You can optionally pass this value in a call to UpdateHealthCheck to prevent overwriting another change to the health check.

      • CloudWatchAlarmConfiguration (dict) --

        A complex type that contains information about the CloudWatch alarm that Amazon Route 53 is monitoring for this health check.

        • EvaluationPeriods (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the number of periods that the metric is compared to the threshold.

        • Threshold (float) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value the metric is compared with.

        • ComparisonOperator (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the arithmetic operation that is used for the comparison.

        • Period (integer) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the duration of one evaluation period in seconds.

        • MetricName (string) --

          The name of the CloudWatch metric that the alarm is associated with.

        • Namespace (string) --

          The namespace of the metric that the alarm is associated with. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

        • Statistic (string) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the statistic that is applied to the metric.

        • Dimensions (list) --

          For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about the dimensions for the metric. For information, see Amazon CloudWatch Namespaces, Dimensions, and Metrics Reference in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.

          • (dict) --

            For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, a complex type that contains information about one dimension.

            • Name (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the name of one dimension.

            • Value (string) --

              For the metric that the CloudWatch alarm is associated with, the value of one dimension.