2026/02/24 - Amazon CloudWatch - 4 new api methods
Changes This release adds the APIs (PutAlarmMuteRule, ListAlarmMuteRules, GetAlarmMuteRule and DeleteAlarmMuteRule) to manage a new Cloudwatch resource, AlarmMuteRules. AlarmMuteRules allow customers to temporarily mute alarm notifications during expected downtime periods.
Retrieves details for a specific alarm mute rule.
This operation returns complete information about the mute rule, including its configuration, status, targeted alarms, and metadata.
The returned status indicates the current state of the mute rule:
SCHEDULED: The mute rule is configured and will become active in the future
ACTIVE: The mute rule is currently muting alarm actions
EXPIRED: The mute rule has passed its expiration date and will no longer become active
Permissions
To retrieve details for a mute rule, you need the cloudwatch:GetAlarmMuteRule permission on the alarm mute rule resource.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.get_alarm_mute_rule(
AlarmMuteRuleName='string'
)
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the alarm mute rule to retrieve.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'Name': 'string',
'AlarmMuteRuleArn': 'string',
'Description': 'string',
'Rule': {
'Schedule': {
'Expression': 'string',
'Duration': 'string',
'Timezone': 'string'
}
},
'MuteTargets': {
'AlarmNames': [
'string',
]
},
'StartDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'ExpireDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'Status': 'SCHEDULED'|'ACTIVE'|'EXPIRED',
'LastUpdatedTimestamp': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'MuteType': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
Name (string) --
The name of the alarm mute rule.
AlarmMuteRuleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the alarm mute rule.
Description (string) --
The description of the alarm mute rule.
Rule (dict) --
The configuration that defines when and how long alarms are muted.
Schedule (dict) --
The schedule configuration that defines when the mute rule activates and how long it remains active.
Expression (string) --
The schedule expression that defines when the mute rule activates. The expression must be between 1 and 256 characters in length.
You can use one of two expression formats:
Cron expressions - For recurring mute windows. Format: cron(Minutes Hours Day-of-month Month Day-of-week) Examples:
cron(0 2 * * *) - Activates daily at 2:00 AM
cron(0 2 * * SUN) - Activates every Sunday at 2:00 AM for weekly system maintenance
cron(0 1 1 * *) - Activates on the first day of each month at 1:00 AM for monthly database maintenance
cron(0 18 * * FRI) - Activates every Friday at 6:00 PM
cron(0 23 * * *) - Activates every day at 11:00 PM during nightly backup operations
The characters *, -, and , are supported in all fields. English names can be used for the month (JAN-DEC) and day of week (SUN-SAT) fields.
At expressions - For one-time mute windows. Format: at(yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm) Examples:
at(2024-05-10T14:00) - Activates once on May 10, 2024 at 2:00 PM during an active incident response session
at(2024-12-23T00:00) - Activates once on December 23, 2024 at midnight during annual company shutdown
Duration (string) --
The length of time that alarms remain muted when the schedule activates. The duration must be between 1 and 50 characters in length.
Specify the duration using ISO 8601 duration format with a minimum of 1 minute ( PT1M) and maximum of 15 days ( P15D).
Examples:
PT4H - 4 hours for weekly system maintenance
P2DT12H - 2 days and 12 hours for weekend muting from Friday 6:00 PM to Monday 6:00 AM
PT6H - 6 hours for monthly database maintenance
PT2H - 2 hours for nightly backup operations
P7D - 7 days for annual company shutdown
The duration begins when the schedule expression time is reached. For recurring schedules, the duration applies to each occurrence.
Timezone (string) --
The time zone to use when evaluating the schedule expression. The time zone must be between 1 and 50 characters in length.
Specify the time zone using standard timezone identifiers (for example, America/New_York, Europe/London, or Asia/Tokyo).
If you don't specify a time zone, UTC is used by default. The time zone affects how cron and at expressions are interpreted, as well as start and expire dates you specify
Examples:
America/New_York - Eastern Time (US)
America/Los_Angeles - Pacific Time (US)
Europe/London - British Time
Asia/Tokyo - Japan Standard Time
UTC - Coordinated Universal Time
MuteTargets (dict) --
Specifies which alarms this rule applies to.
AlarmNames (list) --
The list of alarm names that this mute rule targets. You can specify up to 100 alarm names.
Each alarm name must be between 1 and 255 characters in length. The alarm names must match existing alarms in your Amazon Web Services account and region.
(string) --
StartDate (datetime) --
The date and time when the mute rule becomes active. If not set, the rule is active immediately.
ExpireDate (datetime) --
The date and time when the mute rule expires and is no longer evaluated.
Status (string) --
The current status of the alarm mute rule. Valid values are SCHEDULED, ACTIVE, or EXPIRED.
LastUpdatedTimestamp (datetime) --
The date and time when the mute rule was last updated.
MuteType (string) --
Indicates whether the mute rule is one-time or recurring. Valid values are ONE_TIME or RECURRING.
Lists alarm mute rules in your Amazon Web Services account and region.
You can filter the results by alarm name to find all mute rules targeting a specific alarm, or by status to find rules that are scheduled, active, or expired.
This operation supports pagination for accounts with many mute rules. Use the MaxRecords and NextToken parameters to retrieve results in multiple calls.
Permissions
To list mute rules, you need the cloudwatch:ListAlarmMuteRules permission.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.list_alarm_mute_rules(
AlarmName='string',
Statuses=[
'SCHEDULED'|'ACTIVE'|'EXPIRED',
],
MaxRecords=123,
NextToken='string'
)
string
Filter results to show only mute rules that target the specified alarm name.
list
Filter results to show only mute rules with the specified statuses. Valid values are SCHEDULED, ACTIVE, or EXPIRED.
(string) --
integer
The maximum number of mute rules to return in one call. The default is 50.
string
The token returned from a previous call to indicate where to continue retrieving results.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'AlarmMuteRuleSummaries': [
{
'AlarmMuteRuleArn': 'string',
'ExpireDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'Status': 'SCHEDULED'|'ACTIVE'|'EXPIRED',
'MuteType': 'string',
'LastUpdatedTimestamp': datetime(2015, 1, 1)
},
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
AlarmMuteRuleSummaries (list) --
A list of alarm mute rule summaries.
(dict) --
Summary information about an alarm mute rule, including its name, status, and configuration details.
AlarmMuteRuleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the alarm mute rule.
ExpireDate (datetime) --
The date and time when the mute rule expires and is no longer evaluated. This field is only present if an expiration date was configured.
Status (string) --
The current status of the alarm mute rule. Valid values are SCHEDULED, ACTIVE, or EXPIRED.
MuteType (string) --
Indicates whether the mute rule is one-time or recurring. Valid values are ONE_TIME or RECURRING.
LastUpdatedTimestamp (datetime) --
The date and time when the mute rule was last updated.
NextToken (string) --
The token to use when requesting the next set of results. If this field is absent, there are no more results to retrieve.
Creates or updates an alarm mute rule.
Alarm mute rules automatically mute alarm actions during predefined time windows. When a mute rule is active, targeted alarms continue to evaluate metrics and transition between states, but their configured actions (such as Amazon SNS notifications or Auto Scaling actions) are muted.
You can create mute rules with recurring schedules using cron expressions or one-time mute windows using at expressions. Each mute rule can target up to 100 specific alarms by name.
If you specify a rule name that already exists, this operation updates the existing rule with the new configuration.
Permissions
To create or update a mute rule, you must have the cloudwatch:PutAlarmMuteRule permission on two types of resources: the alarm mute rule resource itself, and each alarm that the rule targets.
For example, If you want to allow a user to create mute rules that target only specific alarms named "WebServerCPUAlarm" and "DatabaseConnectionAlarm", you would create an IAM policy with one statement granting cloudwatch:PutAlarmMuteRule on the alarm mute rule resource ( arn:aws:cloudwatch:[REGION]:123456789012:alarm-mute:*), and another statement granting cloudwatch:PutAlarmMuteRule on the targeted alarm resources ( arn:aws:cloudwatch:[REGION]:123456789012:alarm:WebServerCPUAlarm and arn:aws:cloudwatch:[REGION]:123456789012:alarm:DatabaseConnectionAlarm).
You can also use IAM policy conditions to allow targeting alarms based on resource tags. For example, you can restrict users to create/update mute rules to only target alarms that have a specific tag key-value pair, such as Team=TeamA.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.put_alarm_mute_rule(
Name='string',
Description='string',
Rule={
'Schedule': {
'Expression': 'string',
'Duration': 'string',
'Timezone': 'string'
}
},
MuteTargets={
'AlarmNames': [
'string',
]
},
Tags=[
{
'Key': 'string',
'Value': 'string'
},
],
StartDate=datetime(2015, 1, 1),
ExpireDate=datetime(2015, 1, 1)
)
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the alarm mute rule. This name must be unique within your Amazon Web Services account and region.
string
A description of the alarm mute rule that helps you identify its purpose.
dict
[REQUIRED]
The configuration that defines when and how long alarms should be muted.
Schedule (dict) -- [REQUIRED]
The schedule configuration that defines when the mute rule activates and how long it remains active.
Expression (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The schedule expression that defines when the mute rule activates. The expression must be between 1 and 256 characters in length.
You can use one of two expression formats:
Cron expressions - For recurring mute windows. Format: cron(Minutes Hours Day-of-month Month Day-of-week) Examples:
cron(0 2 * * *) - Activates daily at 2:00 AM
cron(0 2 * * SUN) - Activates every Sunday at 2:00 AM for weekly system maintenance
cron(0 1 1 * *) - Activates on the first day of each month at 1:00 AM for monthly database maintenance
cron(0 18 * * FRI) - Activates every Friday at 6:00 PM
cron(0 23 * * *) - Activates every day at 11:00 PM during nightly backup operations
The characters *, -, and , are supported in all fields. English names can be used for the month (JAN-DEC) and day of week (SUN-SAT) fields.
At expressions - For one-time mute windows. Format: at(yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm) Examples:
at(2024-05-10T14:00) - Activates once on May 10, 2024 at 2:00 PM during an active incident response session
at(2024-12-23T00:00) - Activates once on December 23, 2024 at midnight during annual company shutdown
Duration (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The length of time that alarms remain muted when the schedule activates. The duration must be between 1 and 50 characters in length.
Specify the duration using ISO 8601 duration format with a minimum of 1 minute ( PT1M) and maximum of 15 days ( P15D).
Examples:
PT4H - 4 hours for weekly system maintenance
P2DT12H - 2 days and 12 hours for weekend muting from Friday 6:00 PM to Monday 6:00 AM
PT6H - 6 hours for monthly database maintenance
PT2H - 2 hours for nightly backup operations
P7D - 7 days for annual company shutdown
The duration begins when the schedule expression time is reached. For recurring schedules, the duration applies to each occurrence.
Timezone (string) --
The time zone to use when evaluating the schedule expression. The time zone must be between 1 and 50 characters in length.
Specify the time zone using standard timezone identifiers (for example, America/New_York, Europe/London, or Asia/Tokyo).
If you don't specify a time zone, UTC is used by default. The time zone affects how cron and at expressions are interpreted, as well as start and expire dates you specify
Examples:
America/New_York - Eastern Time (US)
America/Los_Angeles - Pacific Time (US)
Europe/London - British Time
Asia/Tokyo - Japan Standard Time
UTC - Coordinated Universal Time
dict
Specifies which alarms this rule applies to.
AlarmNames (list) -- [REQUIRED]
The list of alarm names that this mute rule targets. You can specify up to 100 alarm names.
Each alarm name must be between 1 and 255 characters in length. The alarm names must match existing alarms in your Amazon Web Services account and region.
(string) --
list
A list of key-value pairs to associate with the alarm mute rule. You can use tags to categorize and manage your mute rules.
(dict) --
A key-value pair associated with a CloudWatch resource.
Key (string) -- [REQUIRED]
A string that you can use to assign a value. The combination of tag keys and values can help you organize and categorize your resources.
Value (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The value for the specified tag key.
datetime
The date and time after which the mute rule takes effect. If not specified, the mute rule takes effect immediately upon creation and the mutes are applied as per the schedule expression. This date and time is interpreted according to the schedule timezone, or UTC if no timezone is specified.
datetime
The date and time when the mute rule expires and is no longer evaluated. After this time, the rule status becomes EXPIRED and will no longer mute the targeted alarms. This date and time is interpreted according to the schedule timezone, or UTC if no timezone is specified.
None
Deletes a specific alarm mute rule.
When you delete a mute rule, any alarms that are currently being muted by that rule are immediately unmuted. If those alarms are in an ALARM state, their configured actions will trigger.
This operation is idempotent. If you delete a mute rule that does not exist, the operation succeeds without returning an error.
Permissions
To delete a mute rule, you need the cloudwatch:DeleteAlarmMuteRule permission on the alarm mute rule resource.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
client.delete_alarm_mute_rule(
AlarmMuteRuleName='string'
)
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the alarm mute rule to delete.
None