2022/09/08 - Amazon Simple Systems Manager (SSM) - 4 updated api methods
Changes This release adds support for Systems Manager State Manager Association tagging.
{'ResourceType': {'Association'}}
Adds or overwrites one or more tags for the specified resource. Tags are metadata that you can assign to your automations, documents, managed nodes, maintenance windows, Parameter Store parameters, and patch baselines. Tags enable you to categorize your resources in different ways, for example, by purpose, owner, or environment. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value, both of which you define. For example, you could define a set of tags for your account's managed nodes that helps you track each node's owner and stack level. For example:
Key=Owner,Value=DbAdmin
Key=Owner,Value=SysAdmin
Key=Owner,Value=Dev
Key=Stack,Value=Production
Key=Stack,Value=Pre-Production
Key=Stack,Value=Test
Most resources can have a maximum of 50 tags. Automations can have a maximum of 5 tags.
We recommend that you devise a set of tag keys that meets your needs for each resource type. Using a consistent set of tag keys makes it easier for you to manage your resources. You can search and filter the resources based on the tags you add. Tags don't have any semantic meaning to and are interpreted strictly as a string of characters.
For more information about using tags with Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances, see Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.add_tags_to_resource( ResourceType='Document'|'ManagedInstance'|'MaintenanceWindow'|'Parameter'|'PatchBaseline'|'OpsItem'|'OpsMetadata'|'Automation'|'Association', ResourceId='string', Tags=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'Value': 'string' }, ] )
string
[REQUIRED]
Specifies the type of resource you are tagging.
Note
The ManagedInstance type for this API operation is for on-premises managed nodes. You must specify the name of the managed node in the following format: mi-*ID_number* `` . For example, ``mi-1a2b3c4d5e6f .
string
[REQUIRED]
The resource ID you want to tag.
Use the ID of the resource. Here are some examples:
MaintenanceWindow : mw-012345abcde
PatchBaseline : pb-012345abcde
Automation : example-c160-4567-8519-012345abcde
OpsMetadata object: ResourceID for tagging is created from the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the object. Specifically, ResourceID is created from the strings that come after the word opsmetadata in the ARN. For example, an OpsMetadata object with an ARN of arn:aws:ssm:us-east-2:1234567890:opsmetadata/aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager has a ResourceID of either aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager or /aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager .
For the Document and Parameter values, use the name of the resource.
ManagedInstance : mi-012345abcde
Note
The ManagedInstance type for this API operation is only for on-premises managed nodes. You must specify the name of the managed node in the following format: mi-*ID_number* `` . For example, ``mi-1a2b3c4d5e6f .
list
[REQUIRED]
One or more tags. The value parameter is required.
Warning
Don't enter personally identifiable information in this field.
(dict) --
Metadata that you assign to your Amazon Web Services resources. Tags enable you to categorize your resources in different ways, for example, by purpose, owner, or environment. In Amazon Web Services Systems Manager, you can apply tags to Systems Manager documents (SSM documents), managed nodes, maintenance windows, parameters, patch baselines, OpsItems, and OpsMetadata.
Key (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The name of the tag.
Value (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The value of the tag.
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
(dict) --
{'Tags': [{'Key': 'string', 'Value': 'string'}]}
A State Manager association defines the state that you want to maintain on your managed nodes. For example, an association can specify that anti-virus software must be installed and running on your managed nodes, or that certain ports must be closed. For static targets, the association specifies a schedule for when the configuration is reapplied. For dynamic targets, such as an Amazon Web Services resource group or an Amazon Web Services autoscaling group, State Manager, a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager applies the configuration when new managed nodes are added to the group. The association also specifies actions to take when applying the configuration. For example, an association for anti-virus software might run once a day. If the software isn't installed, then State Manager installs it. If the software is installed, but the service isn't running, then the association might instruct State Manager to start the service.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.create_association( Name='string', DocumentVersion='string', InstanceId='string', Parameters={ 'string': [ 'string', ] }, Targets=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'Values': [ 'string', ] }, ], ScheduleExpression='string', OutputLocation={ 'S3Location': { 'OutputS3Region': 'string', 'OutputS3BucketName': 'string', 'OutputS3KeyPrefix': 'string' } }, AssociationName='string', AutomationTargetParameterName='string', MaxErrors='string', MaxConcurrency='string', ComplianceSeverity='CRITICAL'|'HIGH'|'MEDIUM'|'LOW'|'UNSPECIFIED', SyncCompliance='AUTO'|'MANUAL', ApplyOnlyAtCronInterval=True|False, CalendarNames=[ 'string', ], TargetLocations=[ { 'Accounts': [ 'string', ], 'Regions': [ 'string', ], 'TargetLocationMaxConcurrency': 'string', 'TargetLocationMaxErrors': 'string', 'ExecutionRoleName': 'string' }, ], ScheduleOffset=123, TargetMaps=[ { 'string': [ 'string', ] }, ], Tags=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'Value': 'string' }, ] )
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the SSM Command document or Automation runbook that contains the configuration information for the managed node.
You can specify Amazon Web Services-predefined documents, documents you created, or a document that is shared with you from another account.
For Systems Manager documents (SSM documents) that are shared with you from other Amazon Web Services accounts, you must specify the complete SSM document ARN, in the following format:
``arn:partition :ssm:region :account-id :document/document-name ``
For example:
arn:aws:ssm:us-east-2:12345678912:document/My-Shared-Document
For Amazon Web Services-predefined documents and SSM documents you created in your account, you only need to specify the document name. For example, AWS-ApplyPatchBaseline or My-Document .
string
The document version you want to associate with the target(s). Can be a specific version or the default version.
Warning
State Manager doesn't support running associations that use a new version of a document if that document is shared from another account. State Manager always runs the default version of a document if shared from another account, even though the Systems Manager console shows that a new version was processed. If you want to run an association using a new version of a document shared form another account, you must set the document version to default .
string
The managed node ID.
Note
InstanceId has been deprecated. To specify a managed node ID for an association, use the Targets parameter. Requests that include the parameter InstanceID with Systems Manager documents (SSM documents) that use schema version 2.0 or later will fail. In addition, if you use the parameter InstanceId , you can't use the parameters AssociationName , DocumentVersion , MaxErrors , MaxConcurrency , OutputLocation , or ScheduleExpression . To use these parameters, you must use the Targets parameter.
dict
The parameters for the runtime configuration of the document.
(string) --
(list) --
(string) --
list
The targets for the association. You can target managed nodes by using tags, Amazon Web Services resource groups, all managed nodes in an Amazon Web Services account, or individual managed node IDs. You can target all managed nodes in an Amazon Web Services account by specifying the InstanceIds key with a value of * . For more information about choosing targets for an association, see Using targets and rate controls with State Manager associations in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
(dict) --
An array of search criteria that targets managed nodes using a key-value pair that you specify.
Note
One or more targets must be specified for maintenance window Run Command-type tasks. Depending on the task, targets are optional for other maintenance window task types (Automation, Lambda, and Step Functions). For more information about running tasks that don't specify targets, see Registering maintenance window tasks without targets in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
Supported formats include the following.
Key=InstanceIds,Values=<instance-id-1>,<instance-id-2>,<instance-id-3>
Key=tag:<my-tag-key>,Values=<my-tag-value-1>,<my-tag-value-2>
Key=tag-key,Values=<my-tag-key-1>,<my-tag-key-2>
Run Command and Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:Name,Values=<resource-group-name>
Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:ResourceTypeFilters,Values=<resource-type-1>,<resource-type-2>
Automation targets only : Key=ResourceGroup;Values=<resource-group-name>
For example:
Key=InstanceIds,Values=i-02573cafcfEXAMPLE,i-0471e04240EXAMPLE,i-07782c72faEXAMPLE
Key=tag:CostCenter,Values=CostCenter1,CostCenter2,CostCenter3
Key=tag-key,Values=Name,Instance-Type,CostCenter
Run Command and Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:Name,Values=ProductionResourceGroup This example demonstrates how to target all resources in the resource group ProductionResourceGroup in your maintenance window.
Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:ResourceTypeFilters,Values=AWS::EC2::INSTANCE,AWS::EC2::VPC This example demonstrates how to target only Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances and VPCs in your maintenance window.
Automation targets only : Key=ResourceGroup,Values=MyResourceGroup
State Manager association targets only : Key=InstanceIds,Values=* This example demonstrates how to target all managed instances in the Amazon Web Services Region where the association was created.
For more information about how to send commands that target managed nodes using Key,Value parameters, see Targeting multiple instances in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
Key (string) --
User-defined criteria for sending commands that target managed nodes that meet the criteria.
Values (list) --
User-defined criteria that maps to Key . For example, if you specified tag:ServerRole , you could specify value:WebServer to run a command on instances that include EC2 tags of ServerRole,WebServer .
Depending on the type of target, the maximum number of values for a key might be lower than the global maximum of 50.
(string) --
string
A cron expression when the association will be applied to the target(s).
dict
An Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) bucket where you want to store the output details of the request.
S3Location (dict) --
An S3 bucket where you want to store the results of this request.
OutputS3Region (string) --
The Amazon Web Services Region of the S3 bucket.
OutputS3BucketName (string) --
The name of the S3 bucket.
OutputS3KeyPrefix (string) --
The S3 bucket subfolder.
string
Specify a descriptive name for the association.
string
Choose the parameter that will define how your automation will branch out. This target is required for associations that use an Automation runbook and target resources by using rate controls. Automation is a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager.
string
The number of errors that are allowed before the system stops sending requests to run the association on additional targets. You can specify either an absolute number of errors, for example 10, or a percentage of the target set, for example 10%. If you specify 3, for example, the system stops sending requests when the fourth error is received. If you specify 0, then the system stops sending requests after the first error is returned. If you run an association on 50 managed nodes and set MaxError to 10%, then the system stops sending the request when the sixth error is received.
Executions that are already running an association when MaxErrors is reached are allowed to complete, but some of these executions may fail as well. If you need to ensure that there won't be more than max-errors failed executions, set MaxConcurrency to 1 so that executions proceed one at a time.
string
The maximum number of targets allowed to run the association at the same time. You can specify a number, for example 10, or a percentage of the target set, for example 10%. The default value is 100%, which means all targets run the association at the same time.
If a new managed node starts and attempts to run an association while Systems Manager is running MaxConcurrency associations, the association is allowed to run. During the next association interval, the new managed node will process its association within the limit specified for MaxConcurrency .
string
The severity level to assign to the association.
string
The mode for generating association compliance. You can specify AUTO or MANUAL . In AUTO mode, the system uses the status of the association execution to determine the compliance status. If the association execution runs successfully, then the association is COMPLIANT . If the association execution doesn't run successfully, the association is NON-COMPLIANT .
In MANUAL mode, you must specify the AssociationId as a parameter for the PutComplianceItems API operation. In this case, compliance data isn't managed by State Manager. It is managed by your direct call to the PutComplianceItems API operation.
By default, all associations use AUTO mode.
boolean
By default, when you create a new association, the system runs it immediately after it is created and then according to the schedule you specified. Specify this option if you don't want an association to run immediately after you create it. This parameter isn't supported for rate expressions.
list
The names or Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) of the Change Calendar type documents you want to gate your associations under. The associations only run when that change calendar is open. For more information, see Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Change Calendar .
(string) --
list
A location is a combination of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts where you want to run the association. Use this action to create an association in multiple Regions and multiple accounts.
(dict) --
The combination of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts targeted by the current Automation execution.
Accounts (list) --
The Amazon Web Services accounts targeted by the current Automation execution.
(string) --
Regions (list) --
The Amazon Web Services Regions targeted by the current Automation execution.
(string) --
TargetLocationMaxConcurrency (string) --
The maximum number of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts allowed to run the Automation concurrently.
TargetLocationMaxErrors (string) --
The maximum number of errors allowed before the system stops queueing additional Automation executions for the currently running Automation.
ExecutionRoleName (string) --
The Automation execution role used by the currently running Automation. If not specified, the default value is AWS-SystemsManager-AutomationExecutionRole .
integer
Number of days to wait after the scheduled day to run an association. For example, if you specified a cron schedule of cron(0 0 ? * THU#2 *) , you could specify an offset of 3 to run the association each Sunday after the second Thursday of the month. For more information about cron schedules for associations, see Reference: Cron and rate expressions for Systems Manager in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
Note
To use offsets, you must specify the ApplyOnlyAtCronInterval parameter. This option tells the system not to run an association immediately after you create it.
list
A key-value mapping of document parameters to target resources. Both Targets and TargetMaps can't be specified together.
(dict) --
(string) --
(list) --
(string) --
list
Adds or overwrites one or more tags for a State Manager association. Tags are metadata that you can assign to your Amazon Web Services resources. Tags enable you to categorize your resources in different ways, for example, by purpose, owner, or environment. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value, both of which you define.
(dict) --
Metadata that you assign to your Amazon Web Services resources. Tags enable you to categorize your resources in different ways, for example, by purpose, owner, or environment. In Amazon Web Services Systems Manager, you can apply tags to Systems Manager documents (SSM documents), managed nodes, maintenance windows, parameters, patch baselines, OpsItems, and OpsMetadata.
Key (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The name of the tag.
Value (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The value of the tag.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'AssociationDescription': { 'Name': 'string', 'InstanceId': 'string', 'AssociationVersion': 'string', 'Date': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'LastUpdateAssociationDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Status': { 'Date': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Name': 'Pending'|'Success'|'Failed', 'Message': 'string', 'AdditionalInfo': 'string' }, 'Overview': { 'Status': 'string', 'DetailedStatus': 'string', 'AssociationStatusAggregatedCount': { 'string': 123 } }, 'DocumentVersion': 'string', 'AutomationTargetParameterName': 'string', 'Parameters': { 'string': [ 'string', ] }, 'AssociationId': 'string', 'Targets': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Values': [ 'string', ] }, ], 'ScheduleExpression': 'string', 'OutputLocation': { 'S3Location': { 'OutputS3Region': 'string', 'OutputS3BucketName': 'string', 'OutputS3KeyPrefix': 'string' } }, 'LastExecutionDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'LastSuccessfulExecutionDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'AssociationName': 'string', 'MaxErrors': 'string', 'MaxConcurrency': 'string', 'ComplianceSeverity': 'CRITICAL'|'HIGH'|'MEDIUM'|'LOW'|'UNSPECIFIED', 'SyncCompliance': 'AUTO'|'MANUAL', 'ApplyOnlyAtCronInterval': True|False, 'CalendarNames': [ 'string', ], 'TargetLocations': [ { 'Accounts': [ 'string', ], 'Regions': [ 'string', ], 'TargetLocationMaxConcurrency': 'string', 'TargetLocationMaxErrors': 'string', 'ExecutionRoleName': 'string' }, ], 'ScheduleOffset': 123, 'TargetMaps': [ { 'string': [ 'string', ] }, ] } }
Response Structure
(dict) --
AssociationDescription (dict) --
Information about the association.
Name (string) --
The name of the SSM document.
InstanceId (string) --
The managed node ID.
AssociationVersion (string) --
The association version.
Date (datetime) --
The date when the association was made.
LastUpdateAssociationDate (datetime) --
The date when the association was last updated.
Status (dict) --
The association status.
Date (datetime) --
The date when the status changed.
Name (string) --
The status.
Message (string) --
The reason for the status.
AdditionalInfo (string) --
A user-defined string.
Overview (dict) --
Information about the association.
Status (string) --
The status of the association. Status can be: Pending, Success, or Failed.
DetailedStatus (string) --
A detailed status of the association.
AssociationStatusAggregatedCount (dict) --
Returns the number of targets for the association status. For example, if you created an association with two managed nodes, and one of them was successful, this would return the count of managed nodes by status.
(string) --
(integer) --
DocumentVersion (string) --
The document version.
AutomationTargetParameterName (string) --
Choose the parameter that will define how your automation will branch out. This target is required for associations that use an Automation runbook and target resources by using rate controls. Automation is a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager.
Parameters (dict) --
A description of the parameters for a document.
(string) --
(list) --
(string) --
AssociationId (string) --
The association ID.
Targets (list) --
The managed nodes targeted by the request.
(dict) --
An array of search criteria that targets managed nodes using a key-value pair that you specify.
Note
One or more targets must be specified for maintenance window Run Command-type tasks. Depending on the task, targets are optional for other maintenance window task types (Automation, Lambda, and Step Functions). For more information about running tasks that don't specify targets, see Registering maintenance window tasks without targets in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
Supported formats include the following.
Key=InstanceIds,Values=<instance-id-1>,<instance-id-2>,<instance-id-3>
Key=tag:<my-tag-key>,Values=<my-tag-value-1>,<my-tag-value-2>
Key=tag-key,Values=<my-tag-key-1>,<my-tag-key-2>
Run Command and Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:Name,Values=<resource-group-name>
Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:ResourceTypeFilters,Values=<resource-type-1>,<resource-type-2>
Automation targets only : Key=ResourceGroup;Values=<resource-group-name>
For example:
Key=InstanceIds,Values=i-02573cafcfEXAMPLE,i-0471e04240EXAMPLE,i-07782c72faEXAMPLE
Key=tag:CostCenter,Values=CostCenter1,CostCenter2,CostCenter3
Key=tag-key,Values=Name,Instance-Type,CostCenter
Run Command and Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:Name,Values=ProductionResourceGroup This example demonstrates how to target all resources in the resource group ProductionResourceGroup in your maintenance window.
Maintenance window targets only : Key=resource-groups:ResourceTypeFilters,Values=AWS::EC2::INSTANCE,AWS::EC2::VPC This example demonstrates how to target only Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances and VPCs in your maintenance window.
Automation targets only : Key=ResourceGroup,Values=MyResourceGroup
State Manager association targets only : Key=InstanceIds,Values=* This example demonstrates how to target all managed instances in the Amazon Web Services Region where the association was created.
For more information about how to send commands that target managed nodes using Key,Value parameters, see Targeting multiple instances in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide .
Key (string) --
User-defined criteria for sending commands that target managed nodes that meet the criteria.
Values (list) --
User-defined criteria that maps to Key . For example, if you specified tag:ServerRole , you could specify value:WebServer to run a command on instances that include EC2 tags of ServerRole,WebServer .
Depending on the type of target, the maximum number of values for a key might be lower than the global maximum of 50.
(string) --
ScheduleExpression (string) --
A cron expression that specifies a schedule when the association runs.
OutputLocation (dict) --
An S3 bucket where you want to store the output details of the request.
S3Location (dict) --
An S3 bucket where you want to store the results of this request.
OutputS3Region (string) --
The Amazon Web Services Region of the S3 bucket.
OutputS3BucketName (string) --
The name of the S3 bucket.
OutputS3KeyPrefix (string) --
The S3 bucket subfolder.
LastExecutionDate (datetime) --
The date on which the association was last run.
LastSuccessfulExecutionDate (datetime) --
The last date on which the association was successfully run.
AssociationName (string) --
The association name.
MaxErrors (string) --
The number of errors that are allowed before the system stops sending requests to run the association on additional targets. You can specify either an absolute number of errors, for example 10, or a percentage of the target set, for example 10%. If you specify 3, for example, the system stops sending requests when the fourth error is received. If you specify 0, then the system stops sending requests after the first error is returned. If you run an association on 50 managed nodes and set MaxError to 10%, then the system stops sending the request when the sixth error is received.
Executions that are already running an association when MaxErrors is reached are allowed to complete, but some of these executions may fail as well. If you need to ensure that there won't be more than max-errors failed executions, set MaxConcurrency to 1 so that executions proceed one at a time.
MaxConcurrency (string) --
The maximum number of targets allowed to run the association at the same time. You can specify a number, for example 10, or a percentage of the target set, for example 10%. The default value is 100%, which means all targets run the association at the same time.
If a new managed node starts and attempts to run an association while Systems Manager is running MaxConcurrency associations, the association is allowed to run. During the next association interval, the new managed node will process its association within the limit specified for MaxConcurrency .
ComplianceSeverity (string) --
The severity level that is assigned to the association.
SyncCompliance (string) --
The mode for generating association compliance. You can specify AUTO or MANUAL . In AUTO mode, the system uses the status of the association execution to determine the compliance status. If the association execution runs successfully, then the association is COMPLIANT . If the association execution doesn't run successfully, the association is NON-COMPLIANT .
In MANUAL mode, you must specify the AssociationId as a parameter for the PutComplianceItems API operation. In this case, compliance data isn't managed by State Manager, a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager. It is managed by your direct call to the PutComplianceItems API operation.
By default, all associations use AUTO mode.
ApplyOnlyAtCronInterval (boolean) --
By default, when you create a new associations, the system runs it immediately after it is created and then according to the schedule you specified. Specify this option if you don't want an association to run immediately after you create it. This parameter isn't supported for rate expressions.
CalendarNames (list) --
The names or Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) of the Change Calendar type documents your associations are gated under. The associations only run when that change calendar is open. For more information, see Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Change Calendar .
(string) --
TargetLocations (list) --
The combination of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts where you want to run the association.
(dict) --
The combination of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts targeted by the current Automation execution.
Accounts (list) --
The Amazon Web Services accounts targeted by the current Automation execution.
(string) --
Regions (list) --
The Amazon Web Services Regions targeted by the current Automation execution.
(string) --
TargetLocationMaxConcurrency (string) --
The maximum number of Amazon Web Services Regions and Amazon Web Services accounts allowed to run the Automation concurrently.
TargetLocationMaxErrors (string) --
The maximum number of errors allowed before the system stops queueing additional Automation executions for the currently running Automation.
ExecutionRoleName (string) --
The Automation execution role used by the currently running Automation. If not specified, the default value is AWS-SystemsManager-AutomationExecutionRole .
ScheduleOffset (integer) --
Number of days to wait after the scheduled day to run an association.
TargetMaps (list) --
A key-value mapping of document parameters to target resources. Both Targets and TargetMaps can't be specified together.
(dict) --
(string) --
(list) --
(string) --
{'ResourceType': {'Association'}}
Returns a list of the tags assigned to the specified resource.
For information about the ID format for each supported resource type, see AddTagsToResource .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.list_tags_for_resource( ResourceType='Document'|'ManagedInstance'|'MaintenanceWindow'|'Parameter'|'PatchBaseline'|'OpsItem'|'OpsMetadata'|'Automation'|'Association', ResourceId='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
Returns a list of tags for a specific resource type.
string
[REQUIRED]
The resource ID for which you want to see a list of tags.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'TagList': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Value': 'string' }, ] }
Response Structure
(dict) --
TagList (list) --
A list of tags.
(dict) --
Metadata that you assign to your Amazon Web Services resources. Tags enable you to categorize your resources in different ways, for example, by purpose, owner, or environment. In Amazon Web Services Systems Manager, you can apply tags to Systems Manager documents (SSM documents), managed nodes, maintenance windows, parameters, patch baselines, OpsItems, and OpsMetadata.
Key (string) --
The name of the tag.
Value (string) --
The value of the tag.
{'ResourceType': {'Association'}}
Removes tag keys from the specified resource.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.remove_tags_from_resource( ResourceType='Document'|'ManagedInstance'|'MaintenanceWindow'|'Parameter'|'PatchBaseline'|'OpsItem'|'OpsMetadata'|'Automation'|'Association', ResourceId='string', TagKeys=[ 'string', ] )
string
[REQUIRED]
The type of resource from which you want to remove a tag.
Note
The ManagedInstance type for this API operation is only for on-premises managed nodes. Specify the name of the managed node in the following format: mi-*ID_number* `` . For example, ``mi-1a2b3c4d5e6f .
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the resource from which you want to remove tags. For example:
ManagedInstance: mi-012345abcde
MaintenanceWindow: mw-012345abcde
Automation : example-c160-4567-8519-012345abcde
PatchBaseline: pb-012345abcde
OpsMetadata object: ResourceID for tagging is created from the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the object. Specifically, ResourceID is created from the strings that come after the word opsmetadata in the ARN. For example, an OpsMetadata object with an ARN of arn:aws:ssm:us-east-2:1234567890:opsmetadata/aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager has a ResourceID of either aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager or /aws/ssm/MyGroup/appmanager .
For the Document and Parameter values, use the name of the resource.
Note
The ManagedInstance type for this API operation is only for on-premises managed nodes. Specify the name of the managed node in the following format: mi-ID_number. For example, mi-1a2b3c4d5e6f.
list
[REQUIRED]
Tag keys that you want to remove from the specified resource.
(string) --
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
(dict) --