putTargets method
Adds the specified targets to the specified rule, or updates the targets if they are already associated with the rule.
Targets are the resources that are invoked when a rule is triggered.
You can configure the following as targets for Events:
- EC2 instances
- SSM Run Command
- SSM Automation
- AWS Lambda functions
- Data streams in Amazon Kinesis Data Streams
- Data delivery streams in Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose
- Amazon ECS tasks
- AWS Step Functions state machines
- AWS Batch jobs
- AWS CodeBuild projects
- Pipelines in AWS CodePipeline
- Amazon Inspector assessment templates
- Amazon SNS topics
- Amazon SQS queues, including FIFO queues
- The default event bus of another AWS account
- Amazon API Gateway REST APIs
- Redshift Clusters to invoke Data API ExecuteStatement on
EC2 CreateSnapshot API
call
, EC2 RebootInstances API call
, EC2
StopInstances API call
, and EC2 TerminateInstances API
call
.
For some target types, PutTargets
provides target-specific
parameters. If the target is a Kinesis data stream, you can optionally
specify which shard the event goes to by using the
KinesisParameters
argument. To invoke a command on multiple
EC2 instances with one rule, you can use the
RunCommandParameters
field.
To be able to make API calls against the resources that you own, Amazon
EventBridge (CloudWatch Events) needs the appropriate permissions. For AWS
Lambda and Amazon SNS resources, EventBridge relies on resource-based
policies. For EC2 instances, Kinesis data streams, AWS Step Functions
state machines and API Gateway REST APIs, EventBridge relies on IAM roles
that you specify in the RoleARN
argument in
PutTargets
. For more information, see Authentication
and Access Control in the Amazon EventBridge User Guide.
If another AWS account is in the same region and has granted you
permission (using PutPermission
), you can send events to that
account. Set that account's event bus as a target of the rules in your
account. To send the matched events to the other account, specify that
account's event bus as the Arn
value when you run
PutTargets
. If your account sends events to another account,
your account is charged for each sent event. Each event sent to another
account is charged as a custom event. The account receiving the event is
not charged. For more information, see Amazon EventBridge
(CloudWatch Events) Pricing.
If you are setting the event bus of another account as the target, and
that account granted permission to your account through an organization
instead of directly by the account ID, then you must specify a
RoleArn
with proper permissions in the Target
structure. For more information, see Sending
and Receiving Events Between AWS Accounts in the Amazon EventBridge
User Guide.
For more information about enabling cross-account events, see PutPermission.
Input, InputPath, and InputTransformer are mutually exclusive and optional parameters of a target. When a rule is triggered due to a matched event:
- If none of the following arguments are specified for a target, then the entire event is passed to the target in JSON format (unless the target is Amazon EC2 Run Command or Amazon ECS task, in which case nothing from the event is passed to the target).
- If Input is specified in the form of valid JSON, then the matched event is overridden with this constant.
-
If InputPath is specified in the form of JSONPath (for example,
$.detail
), then only the part of the event specified in the path is passed to the target (for example, only the detail part of the event is passed). - If InputTransformer is specified, then one or more specified JSONPaths are extracted from the event and used as values in a template that you specify as the input to the target.
InputPath
or InputTransformer
,
you must use JSON dot notation, not bracket notation.
When you add targets to a rule and the associated rule triggers soon after, new or updated targets might not be immediately invoked. Allow a short period of time for changes to take effect.
This action can partially fail if too many requests are made at the same
time. If that happens, FailedEntryCount
is non-zero in the
response and each entry in FailedEntries
provides the ID of
the failed target and the error code.
May throw ResourceNotFoundException. May throw ConcurrentModificationException. May throw LimitExceededException. May throw ManagedRuleException. May throw InternalException.
Parameter rule
:
The name of the rule.
Parameter targets
:
The targets to update or add to the rule.
Parameter eventBusName
:
The name or ARN of the event bus associated with the rule. If you omit
this, the default event bus is used.
Implementation
Future<PutTargetsResponse> putTargets({
required String rule,
required List<Target> targets,
String? eventBusName,
}) async {
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(rule, 'rule');
_s.validateStringLength(
'rule',
rule,
1,
64,
isRequired: true,
);
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(targets, 'targets');
_s.validateStringLength(
'eventBusName',
eventBusName,
1,
1600,
);
final headers = <String, String>{
'Content-Type': 'application/x-amz-json-1.1',
'X-Amz-Target': 'AWSEvents.PutTargets'
};
final jsonResponse = await _protocol.send(
method: 'POST',
requestUri: '/',
exceptionFnMap: _exceptionFns,
// TODO queryParams
headers: headers,
payload: {
'Rule': rule,
'Targets': targets,
if (eventBusName != null) 'EventBusName': eventBusName,
},
);
return PutTargetsResponse.fromJson(jsonResponse.body);
}