aws-cdk-aws-kinesisfirehose 1.204.0


pip install aws-cdk-aws-kinesisfirehose

  Latest version

Released: Jun 19, 2023

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Meta
Author: Amazon Web Services
Requires Python: ~=3.7

Classifiers

Intended Audience
  • Developers

Operating System
  • OS Independent

Programming Language
  • JavaScript
  • Python :: 3 :: Only
  • Python :: 3.7
  • Python :: 3.8
  • Python :: 3.9
  • Python :: 3.10
  • Python :: 3.11

Typing
  • Typed

Development Status
  • 7 - Inactive

License
  • OSI Approved

Framework
  • AWS CDK
  • AWS CDK :: 1

Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose Construct Library

---

End-of-Support

AWS CDK v1 has reached End-of-Support on 2023-06-01. This package is no longer being updated, and users should migrate to AWS CDK v2.

For more information on how to migrate, see the Migrating to AWS CDK v2 guide.


Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose is a service for fully-managed delivery of real-time streaming data to storage services such as Amazon S3, Amazon Redshift, Amazon Elasticsearch, Splunk, or any custom HTTP endpoint or third-party services such as Datadog, Dynatrace, LogicMonitor, MongoDB, New Relic, and Sumo Logic.

Kinesis Data Firehose delivery streams are distinguished from Kinesis data streams in their models of consumtpion. Whereas consumers read from a data stream by actively pulling data from the stream, a delivery stream pushes data to its destination on a regular cadence. This means that data streams are intended to have consumers that do on-demand processing, like AWS Lambda or Amazon EC2. On the other hand, delivery streams are intended to have destinations that are sources for offline processing and analytics, such as Amazon S3 and Amazon Redshift.

This module is part of the AWS Cloud Development Kit project. It allows you to define Kinesis Data Firehose delivery streams.

Defining a Delivery Stream

In order to define a Delivery Stream, you must specify a destination. An S3 bucket can be used as a destination. More supported destinations are covered below.

bucket = s3.Bucket(self, "Bucket")
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destinations.S3Bucket(bucket)]
)

The above example defines the following resources:

  • An S3 bucket
  • A Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream with Direct PUT as the source and CloudWatch error logging turned on.
  • An IAM role which gives the delivery stream permission to write to the S3 bucket.

Sources

There are two main methods of sourcing input data: Kinesis Data Streams and via a "direct put".

See: Sending Data to a Delivery Stream in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Kinesis Data Stream

A delivery stream can read directly from a Kinesis data stream as a consumer of the data stream. Configure this behaviour by providing a data stream in the sourceStream property when constructing a delivery stream:

# destination: firehose.IDestination

source_stream = kinesis.Stream(self, "Source Stream")
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    source_stream=source_stream,
    destinations=[destination]
)

Direct Put

Data must be provided via "direct put", ie., by using a PutRecord or PutRecordBatch API call. There are a number of ways of doing so, such as:

  • Kinesis Agent: a standalone Java application that monitors and delivers files while handling file rotation, checkpointing, and retries. See: Writing to Kinesis Data Firehose Using Kinesis Agent in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.
  • AWS SDK: a general purpose solution that allows you to deliver data to a delivery stream from anywhere using Java, .NET, Node.js, Python, or Ruby. See: Writing to Kinesis Data Firehose Using the AWS SDK in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.
  • CloudWatch Logs: subscribe to a log group and receive filtered log events directly into a delivery stream. See: logs-destinations.
  • Eventbridge: add an event rule target to send events to a delivery stream based on the rule filtering. See: events-targets.
  • SNS: add a subscription to send all notifications from the topic to a delivery stream. See: sns-subscriptions.
  • IoT: add an action to an IoT rule to send various IoT information to a delivery stream

Destinations

The following destinations are supported. See kinesisfirehose-destinations for the implementations of these destinations.

S3

Defining a delivery stream with an S3 bucket destination:

# bucket: s3.Bucket

s3_destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket)

firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[s3_destination]
)

The S3 destination also supports custom dynamic prefixes. prefix will be used for files successfully delivered to S3. errorOutputPrefix will be added to failed records before writing them to S3.

# bucket: s3.Bucket

s3_destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    data_output_prefix="myFirehose/DeliveredYear=!{timestamp:yyyy}/anyMonth/rand=!{firehose:random-string}",
    error_output_prefix="myFirehoseFailures/!{firehose:error-output-type}/!{timestamp:yyyy}/anyMonth/!{timestamp:dd}"
)

See: Custom S3 Prefixes in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Server-side Encryption

Enabling server-side encryption (SSE) requires Kinesis Data Firehose to encrypt all data sent to delivery stream when it is stored at rest. This means that data is encrypted before being written to the service's internal storage layer and decrypted after it is received from the internal storage layer. The service manages keys and cryptographic operations so that sources and destinations do not need to, as the data is encrypted and decrypted at the boundaries of the service (ie., before the data is delivered to a destination). By default, delivery streams do not have SSE enabled.

The Key Management Service (KMS) Customer Managed Key (CMK) used for SSE can either be AWS-owned or customer-managed. AWS-owned CMKs are keys that an AWS service (in this case Kinesis Data Firehose) owns and manages for use in multiple AWS accounts. As a customer, you cannot view, use, track, or manage these keys, and you are not charged for their use. On the other hand, customer-managed CMKs are keys that are created and owned within your account and managed entirely by you. As a customer, you are responsible for managing access, rotation, aliases, and deletion for these keys, and you are changed for their use. See: Customer master keys in the KMS Developer Guide.

# destination: firehose.IDestination
# SSE with an customer-managed CMK that is explicitly specified
# key: kms.Key


# SSE with an AWS-owned CMK
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream AWS Owned",
    encryption=firehose.StreamEncryption.AWS_OWNED,
    destinations=[destination]
)
# SSE with an customer-managed CMK that is created automatically by the CDK
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream Implicit Customer Managed",
    encryption=firehose.StreamEncryption.CUSTOMER_MANAGED,
    destinations=[destination]
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream Explicit Customer Managed",
    encryption_key=key,
    destinations=[destination]
)

See: Data Protection in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Monitoring

Kinesis Data Firehose is integrated with CloudWatch, so you can monitor the performance of your delivery streams via logs and metrics.

Logs

Kinesis Data Firehose will send logs to CloudWatch when data transformation or data delivery fails. The CDK will enable logging by default and create a CloudWatch LogGroup and LogStream for your Delivery Stream.

You can provide a specific log group to specify where the CDK will create the log streams where log events will be sent:

import aws_cdk.aws_logs as logs
# bucket: s3.Bucket

# destination: firehose.IDestination


log_group = logs.LogGroup(self, "Log Group")
destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    log_group=log_group
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destination]
)

Logging can also be disabled:

# bucket: s3.Bucket

destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    logging=False
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destination]
)

See: Monitoring using CloudWatch Logs in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Metrics

Kinesis Data Firehose sends metrics to CloudWatch so that you can collect and analyze the performance of the delivery stream, including data delivery, data ingestion, data transformation, format conversion, API usage, encryption, and resource usage. You can then use CloudWatch alarms to alert you, for example, when data freshness (the age of the oldest record in the delivery stream) exceeds the buffering limit (indicating that data is not being delivered to your destination), or when the rate of incoming records exceeds the limit of records per second (indicating data is flowing into your delivery stream faster than it is configured to process).

CDK provides methods for accessing delivery stream metrics with default configuration, such as metricIncomingBytes, and metricIncomingRecords (see IDeliveryStream for a full list). CDK also provides a generic metric method that can be used to produce metric configurations for any metric provided by Kinesis Data Firehose; the configurations are pre-populated with the correct dimensions for the delivery stream.

import aws_cdk.aws_cloudwatch as cloudwatch
# delivery_stream: firehose.DeliveryStream


# Alarm that triggers when the per-second average of incoming bytes exceeds 90% of the current service limit
incoming_bytes_percent_of_limit = cloudwatch.MathExpression(
    expression="incomingBytes / 300 / bytePerSecLimit",
    using_metrics={
        "incoming_bytes": delivery_stream.metric_incoming_bytes(statistic=cloudwatch.Statistic.SUM),
        "byte_per_sec_limit": delivery_stream.metric("BytesPerSecondLimit")
    }
)

cloudwatch.Alarm(self, "Alarm",
    metric=incoming_bytes_percent_of_limit,
    threshold=0.9,
    evaluation_periods=3
)

See: Monitoring Using CloudWatch Metrics in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Compression

Your data can automatically be compressed when it is delivered to S3 as either a final or an intermediary/backup destination. Supported compression formats are: gzip, Snappy, Hadoop-compatible Snappy, and ZIP, except for Redshift destinations, where Snappy (regardless of Hadoop-compatibility) and ZIP are not supported. By default, data is delivered to S3 without compression.

# Compress data delivered to S3 using Snappy
# bucket: s3.Bucket

s3_destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    compression=destinations.Compression.SNAPPY
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[s3_destination]
)

Buffering

Incoming data is buffered before it is delivered to the specified destination. The delivery stream will wait until the amount of incoming data has exceeded some threshold (the "buffer size") or until the time since the last data delivery occurred exceeds some threshold (the "buffer interval"), whichever happens first. You can configure these thresholds based on the capabilities of the destination and your use-case. By default, the buffer size is 5 MiB and the buffer interval is 5 minutes.

# Increase the buffer interval and size to 10 minutes and 8 MiB, respectively
# bucket: s3.Bucket

destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    buffering_interval=Duration.minutes(10),
    buffering_size=Size.mebibytes(8)
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destination]
)

See: Data Delivery Frequency in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Destination Encryption

Your data can be automatically encrypted when it is delivered to S3 as a final or an intermediary/backup destination. Kinesis Data Firehose supports Amazon S3 server-side encryption with AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) for encrypting delivered data in Amazon S3. You can choose to not encrypt the data or to encrypt with a key from the list of AWS KMS keys that you own. For more information, see Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with AWS KMS–Managed Keys (SSE-KMS). Data is not encrypted by default.

# bucket: s3.Bucket
# key: kms.Key

destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    encryption_key=key
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destination]
)

Backup

A delivery stream can be configured to backup data to S3 that it attempted to deliver to the configured destination. Backed up data can be all the data that the delivery stream attempted to deliver or just data that it failed to deliver (Redshift and S3 destinations can only backup all data). CDK can create a new S3 bucket where it will back up data or you can provide a bucket where data will be backed up. You can also provide a prefix under which your backed-up data will be placed within the bucket. By default, source data is not backed up to S3.

# Enable backup of all source records (to an S3 bucket created by CDK).
# bucket: s3.Bucket
# Explicitly provide an S3 bucket to which all source records will be backed up.
# backup_bucket: s3.Bucket

firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream Backup All",
    destinations=[
        destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
            s3_backup=destinations.DestinationS3BackupProps(
                mode=destinations.BackupMode.ALL
            )
        )
    ]
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream Backup All Explicit Bucket",
    destinations=[
        destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
            s3_backup=destinations.DestinationS3BackupProps(
                bucket=backup_bucket
            )
        )
    ]
)
# Explicitly provide an S3 prefix under which all source records will be backed up.
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream Backup All Explicit Prefix",
    destinations=[
        destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
            s3_backup=destinations.DestinationS3BackupProps(
                mode=destinations.BackupMode.ALL,
                data_output_prefix="mybackup"
            )
        )
    ]
)

If any Data Processing or Transformation is configured on your Delivery Stream, the source records will be backed up in their original format.

Data Processing/Transformation

Data can be transformed before being delivered to destinations. There are two types of data processing for delivery streams: record transformation with AWS Lambda, and record format conversion using a schema stored in an AWS Glue table. If both types of data processing are configured, then the Lambda transformation is performed first. By default, no data processing occurs. This construct library currently only supports data transformation with AWS Lambda. See #15501 to track the status of adding support for record format conversion.

Data transformation with AWS Lambda

To transform the data, Kinesis Data Firehose will call a Lambda function that you provide and deliver the data returned in place of the source record. The function must return a result that contains records in a specific format, including the following fields:

  • recordId -- the ID of the input record that corresponds the results.
  • result -- the status of the transformation of the record: "Ok" (success), "Dropped" (not processed intentionally), or "ProcessingFailed" (not processed due to an error).
  • data -- the transformed data, Base64-encoded.

The data is buffered up to 1 minute and up to 3 MiB by default before being sent to the function, but can be configured using bufferInterval and bufferSize in the processor configuration (see: Buffering). If the function invocation fails due to a network timeout or because of hitting an invocation limit, the invocation is retried 3 times by default, but can be configured using retries in the processor configuration.

# bucket: s3.Bucket
# Provide a Lambda function that will transform records before delivery, with custom
# buffering and retry configuration
lambda_function = lambda_.Function(self, "Processor",
    runtime=lambda_.Runtime.NODEJS_14_X,
    handler="index.handler",
    code=lambda_.Code.from_asset(path.join(__dirname, "process-records"))
)
lambda_processor = firehose.LambdaFunctionProcessor(lambda_function,
    buffer_interval=Duration.minutes(5),
    buffer_size=Size.mebibytes(5),
    retries=5
)
s3_destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
    processor=lambda_processor
)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[s3_destination]
)
import path as path
import aws_cdk.aws_kinesisfirehose as firehose
import aws_cdk.aws_kms as kms
import aws_cdk.aws_lambda_nodejs as lambdanodejs
import aws_cdk.aws_logs as logs
import aws_cdk.aws_s3 as s3
import aws_cdk.core as cdk
import aws_cdk.aws_kinesisfirehose_destinations as destinations

app = cdk.App()

stack = cdk.Stack(app, "aws-cdk-firehose-delivery-stream-s3-all-properties")

bucket = s3.Bucket(stack, "Bucket",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY,
    auto_delete_objects=True
)

backup_bucket = s3.Bucket(stack, "BackupBucket",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY,
    auto_delete_objects=True
)
log_group = logs.LogGroup(stack, "LogGroup",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

data_processor_function = lambdanodejs.NodejsFunction(stack, "DataProcessorFunction",
    entry=path.join(__dirname, "lambda-data-processor.js"),
    timeout=cdk.Duration.minutes(1)
)

processor = firehose.LambdaFunctionProcessor(data_processor_function,
    buffer_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
    buffer_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
    retries=1
)

key = kms.Key(stack, "Key",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

backup_key = kms.Key(stack, "BackupKey",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

firehose.DeliveryStream(stack, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
        logging=True,
        log_group=log_group,
        processor=processor,
        compression=destinations.Compression.GZIP,
        data_output_prefix="regularPrefix",
        error_output_prefix="errorPrefix",
        buffering_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
        buffering_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
        encryption_key=key,
        s3_backup=destinations.DestinationS3BackupProps(
            mode=destinations.BackupMode.ALL,
            bucket=backup_bucket,
            compression=destinations.Compression.ZIP,
            data_output_prefix="backupPrefix",
            error_output_prefix="backupErrorPrefix",
            buffering_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
            buffering_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
            encryption_key=backup_key
        )
    )]
)

app.synth()

!cdk-integ pragma:ignore-assets

import path as path
import aws_cdk.aws_kinesisfirehose as firehose
import aws_cdk.aws_kms as kms
import aws_cdk.aws_lambda_nodejs as lambdanodejs
import aws_cdk.aws_logs as logs
import aws_cdk.aws_s3 as s3
import aws_cdk.core as cdk
import aws_cdk.aws_kinesisfirehose_destinations as destinations

app = cdk.App()

stack = cdk.Stack(app, "aws-cdk-firehose-delivery-stream-s3-all-properties")

bucket = s3.Bucket(stack, "Bucket",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY,
    auto_delete_objects=True
)

backup_bucket = s3.Bucket(stack, "BackupBucket",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY,
    auto_delete_objects=True
)
log_group = logs.LogGroup(stack, "LogGroup",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

data_processor_function = lambdanodejs.NodejsFunction(stack, "DataProcessorFunction",
    entry=path.join(__dirname, "lambda-data-processor.js"),
    timeout=cdk.Duration.minutes(1)
)

processor = firehose.LambdaFunctionProcessor(data_processor_function,
    buffer_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
    buffer_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
    retries=1
)

key = kms.Key(stack, "Key",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

backup_key = kms.Key(stack, "BackupKey",
    removal_policy=cdk.RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
)

firehose.DeliveryStream(stack, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destinations.S3Bucket(bucket,
        logging=True,
        log_group=log_group,
        processor=processor,
        compression=destinations.Compression.GZIP,
        data_output_prefix="regularPrefix",
        error_output_prefix="errorPrefix",
        buffering_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
        buffering_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
        encryption_key=key,
        s3_backup=destinations.DestinationS3BackupProps(
            mode=destinations.BackupMode.ALL,
            bucket=backup_bucket,
            compression=destinations.Compression.ZIP,
            data_output_prefix="backupPrefix",
            error_output_prefix="backupErrorPrefix",
            buffering_interval=cdk.Duration.seconds(60),
            buffering_size=cdk.Size.mebibytes(1),
            encryption_key=backup_key
        )
    )]
)

app.synth()

See: Data Transformation in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Specifying an IAM role

The DeliveryStream class automatically creates IAM service roles with all the minimum necessary permissions for Kinesis Data Firehose to access the resources referenced by your delivery stream. One service role is created for the delivery stream that allows Kinesis Data Firehose to read from a Kinesis data stream (if one is configured as the delivery stream source) and for server-side encryption. Another service role is created for each destination, which gives Kinesis Data Firehose write access to the destination resource, as well as the ability to invoke data transformers and read schemas for record format conversion. If you wish, you may specify your own IAM role for either the delivery stream or the destination service role, or both. It must have the correct trust policy (it must allow Kinesis Data Firehose to assume it) or delivery stream creation or data delivery will fail. Other required permissions to destination resources, encryption keys, etc., will be provided automatically.

# Specify the roles created above when defining the destination and delivery stream.
# bucket: s3.Bucket
# Create service roles for the delivery stream and destination.
# These can be used for other purposes and granted access to different resources.
# They must include the Kinesis Data Firehose service principal in their trust policies.
# Two separate roles are shown below, but the same role can be used for both purposes.
delivery_stream_role = iam.Role(self, "Delivery Stream Role",
    assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("firehose.amazonaws.com")
)
destination_role = iam.Role(self, "Destination Role",
    assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("firehose.amazonaws.com")
)
destination = destinations.S3Bucket(bucket, role=destination_role)
firehose.DeliveryStream(self, "Delivery Stream",
    destinations=[destination],
    role=delivery_stream_role
)

See Controlling Access in the Kinesis Data Firehose Developer Guide.

Granting application access to a delivery stream

IAM roles, users or groups which need to be able to work with delivery streams should be granted IAM permissions.

Any object that implements the IGrantable interface (ie., has an associated principal) can be granted permissions to a delivery stream by calling:

  • grantPutRecords(principal) - grants the principal the ability to put records onto the delivery stream
  • grant(principal, ...actions) - grants the principal permission to a custom set of actions
# Give the role permissions to write data to the delivery stream
# delivery_stream: firehose.DeliveryStream
lambda_role = iam.Role(self, "Role",
    assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("lambda.amazonaws.com")
)
delivery_stream.grant_put_records(lambda_role)

The following write permissions are provided to a service principal by the grantPutRecords() method:

  • firehose:PutRecord
  • firehose:PutRecordBatch

Granting a delivery stream access to a resource

Conversely to the above, Kinesis Data Firehose requires permissions in order for delivery streams to interact with resources that you own. For example, if an S3 bucket is specified as a destination of a delivery stream, the delivery stream must be granted permissions to put and get objects from the bucket. When using the built-in AWS service destinations found in the @aws-cdk/aws-kinesisfirehose-destinations module, the CDK grants the permissions automatically. However, custom or third-party destinations may require custom permissions. In this case, use the delivery stream as an IGrantable, as follows:

# delivery_stream: firehose.DeliveryStream
fn = lambda_.Function(self, "Function",
    code=lambda_.Code.from_inline("exports.handler = (event) => {}"),
    runtime=lambda_.Runtime.NODEJS_14_X,
    handler="index.handler"
)
fn.grant_invoke(delivery_stream)

Multiple destinations

Though the delivery stream allows specifying an array of destinations, only one destination per delivery stream is currently allowed. This limitation is enforced at CDK synthesis time and will throw an error.

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1.110.1 Jun 28, 2021
1.110.0 Jun 24, 2021
1.109.0 Jun 17, 2021
1.108.1 Jun 11, 2021
1.108.0 Jun 09, 2021
1.107.0 Jun 02, 2021
1.106.1 May 26, 2021
1.106.0 May 25, 2021
1.105.0 May 19, 2021
1.104.0 May 15, 2021
1.103.0 May 10, 2021
1.102.0 May 04, 2021
1.101.0 Apr 28, 2021
1.100.0 Apr 20, 2021
1.99.0 Apr 19, 2021
1.98.0 Apr 12, 2021
1.97.0 Apr 06, 2021
1.96.0 Apr 01, 2021
1.95.2 Apr 01, 2021
1.95.1 Mar 26, 2021
1.95.0 Mar 25, 2021
1.94.1 Mar 17, 2021
1.94.0 Mar 16, 2021
1.93.0 Mar 11, 2021
1.92.0 Mar 06, 2021
1.91.0 Feb 23, 2021
1.90.1 Feb 19, 2021
1.90.0 Feb 17, 2021
1.89.0 Feb 09, 2021
1.88.0 Feb 04, 2021
1.87.1 Jan 28, 2021
1.87.0 Jan 27, 2021
1.86.0 Jan 21, 2021
1.85.0 Jan 14, 2021
1.84.0 Jan 12, 2021
1.83.0 Jan 06, 2021
1.82.0 Jan 03, 2021
1.81.0 Dec 31, 2020
1.80.0 Dec 22, 2020
1.79.0 Dec 17, 2020
1.78.0 Dec 12, 2020
1.77.0 Dec 07, 2020
1.76.0 Dec 01, 2020
1.75.0 Nov 24, 2020
1.74.0 Nov 17, 2020
1.73.0 Nov 11, 2020
1.72.0 Nov 06, 2020
1.71.0 Oct 29, 2020
1.70.0 Oct 24, 2020
1.69.0 Oct 19, 2020
1.68.0 Oct 15, 2020
1.67.0 Oct 07, 2020
1.66.0 Oct 02, 2020
1.65.0 Oct 01, 2020
1.64.1 Sep 25, 2020
1.64.0 Sep 24, 2020
1.63.0 Sep 14, 2020
1.62.0 Sep 04, 2020
1.61.1 Aug 28, 2020
1.61.0 Aug 27, 2020
1.60.0 Aug 20, 2020
1.59.0 Aug 15, 2020
1.58.0 Aug 12, 2020
1.57.0 Aug 07, 2020
1.56.0 Aug 01, 2020
1.55.0 Jul 28, 2020
1.54.0 Jul 22, 2020
1.53.0 Jul 20, 2020
1.52.0 Jul 18, 2020
1.51.0 Jul 09, 2020
1.50.0 Jul 07, 2020
1.49.1 Jul 02, 2020
1.49.0 Jul 02, 2020
1.48.0 Jul 01, 2020
1.47.1 Jun 30, 2020
1.47.0 Jun 24, 2020
1.46.0 Jun 20, 2020
1.45.0 Jun 09, 2020
1.44.0 Jun 04, 2020
1.43.0 Jun 04, 2020
1.42.1 Jun 01, 2020
1.42.0 May 27, 2020
1.41.0 May 21, 2020
1.40.0 May 20, 2020
1.39.0 May 16, 2020
1.38.0 May 08, 2020
1.37.0 May 05, 2020
1.36.1 Apr 29, 2020
1.36.0 Apr 28, 2020
1.35.0 Apr 24, 2020
1.34.1 Apr 22, 2020
1.34.0 Apr 21, 2020
1.33.1 Apr 19, 2020
1.33.0 Apr 17, 2020
1.32.2 Apr 10, 2020
1.32.1 Apr 09, 2020
1.32.0 Apr 07, 2020
1.31.0 Mar 24, 2020
1.30.0 Mar 18, 2020
1.29.0 Mar 18, 2020
1.28.0 Mar 16, 2020
1.27.0 Mar 03, 2020
1.26.0 Feb 26, 2020
1.25.0 Feb 19, 2020
1.24.0 Feb 14, 2020
1.23.0 Feb 07, 2020
1.22.0 Jan 23, 2020
1.21.1 Jan 16, 2020
1.21.0 Jan 16, 2020
1.20.0 Jan 07, 2020
1.19.0 Dec 17, 2019
1.18.0 Nov 25, 2019
1.17.1 Nov 19, 2019
1.17.0 Nov 19, 2019
1.16.3 Nov 13, 2019
1.16.2 Nov 12, 2019
1.16.1 Nov 12, 2019
1.16.0 Nov 11, 2019
1.15.0 Oct 28, 2019
1.14.0 Oct 22, 2019
1.13.1 Oct 15, 2019
1.13.0 Oct 15, 2019
1.12.0 Oct 07, 2019
1.11.0 Oct 02, 2019
1.10.1 Oct 01, 2019
1.10.0 Sep 30, 2019
1.9.0 Sep 20, 2019
1.8.0 Sep 10, 2019
1.7.0 Sep 06, 2019
1.6.1 Aug 29, 2019
1.6.0 Aug 27, 2019
1.5.0 Aug 21, 2019
1.4.0 Aug 14, 2019
1.3.0 Aug 02, 2019
1.2.0 Jul 25, 2019
1.1.0 Jul 19, 2019
1.0.0 Jul 11, 2019
0.39.0 Jul 09, 2019
0.38.0 Jul 08, 2019
0.37.0 Jul 04, 2019
0.36.2 Jul 03, 2019
0.36.1 Jul 01, 2019
0.36.0 Jun 25, 2019
0.35.0 Jun 19, 2019
0.34.0 Jun 10, 2019
0.33.0 May 30, 2019
0.32.0 May 24, 2019
0.31.0 May 07, 2019
0.30.0 May 02, 2019
0.29.0 Apr 24, 2019
0.28.0 Apr 04, 2019
0.27.0 Mar 28, 2019
0.26.0 Mar 28, 2019
Extras: None
Dependencies:
aws-cdk.aws-cloudwatch (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-ec2 (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-iam (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-kinesis (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-kms (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-lambda (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-logs (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.aws-s3 (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.core (==1.204.0)
aws-cdk.region-info (==1.204.0)
constructs (<4.0.0,>=3.3.69)
jsii (<2.0.0,>=1.84.0)
publication (>=0.0.3)
typeguard (~=2.13.3)