#AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge announces direct delivery to cross-account targets

Amazon EventBridge Event Bus now allows you to deliver events directly to AWS services in another account. This feature enables you to use multiple accounts to improve security and streaml...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge #AmazonSqs
Amazon EventBridge announces direct delivery to cross-account targets
Amazon EventBridge Event Bus now allows you to deliver events directly to AWS services in another account. This feature enables you to use multiple accounts to improve security and streamline business processes while reducing the overall cost and complexity of your architecture. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event broker that enables you to create scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. This launch allows you to directly target services in another account, without the need for additional infrastructure such as an intermediary EventBridge Event Bus or Lambda function, simplifying your architecture and reducing cost. For example, you can now route events from your EventBridge Event Bus directly to a different team's SQS queue in a different account. The team receiving events does not need to learn about or maintain EventBridge resources and simply needs to grant IAM permissions to provide access to the queue. Events can be delivered cross-account to EventBridge targets that support resource-based IAM policies such as Amazon SQS, AWS Lambda, Amazon Kinesis Data Streams, Amazon SNS, and Amazon API Gateway. Direct delivery to cross-account targets is now available in all commercial AWS Regions. To learn more, please read our https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/compute/introducing-cross-account-targets-for-amazon-eventbridge-event-buses/ or visit our https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/eb-service-cross-account.html. Pricing information is available on the EventBridge https://aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/pricing/.
aws.amazon.com
January 21, 2025 at 9:05 PM
Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh

Amazon EventBridge API destinations now support proactive OAuth token refresh for public and private OAuth authorization endpoints. This capability helps you to preemptively mitigate delays and...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh
Amazon EventBridge API destinations now support proactive OAuth token refresh for public and private OAuth authorization endpoints. This capability helps you to preemptively mitigate delays and errors during invocations when the OAuth access token is close to expiration. EventBridge API destinations are HTTPS endpoints that you can invoke as the target of an event bus rule, or pipe, similar to how you invoke an AWS service or resource as a target. Using API destinations, you can route events between AWS services, integrated software as a service (SaaS) applications, and public or private applications by using API calls. Now, when you invoke an API destination with an OAuth token that is close to expiration, EventBridge asynchronously requests a new token from your OAuth endpoint, reducing authorization errors and delays due to expired tokens. Amazon EventBridge API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh is available at no additional cost across all AWS Regions where EventBridge API destinations https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/. Please refer to the API destinations https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/eb-api-destinations.html for details.  
aws.amazon.com
January 19, 2025 at 10:05 PM
#うひーメモ
2023-11-03 23:01:35
[SAA-C03]EventBridge (CloudWatch Events)
#Program
#amazoneventbridge
#eventbrige
#ntbridgecloudwatchevents
[SAA-C03]EventBridge (CloudWatch Events)
更新日初回AmazonEventBridgeこれ何AWSサービス既存システムSaaSにおいてイベント駆動型アプリケーションを構築する仕組み何が便利イベント駆動というところがポイントEventBrigeスケジューラで大規模なイベントの作成・起動・管理を容易に行える
qiita.com
November 3, 2023 at 2:01 PM
🆕 Amazon SageMaker now offers unified scheduling for visual ETL and query editors, simplifying scheduling via Amazon EventBridge Scheduler. This new feature is available in all AWS regions where Amazon SageMaker is supported.

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge #AwsGlue #AmazonSagemaker
Amazon SageMaker scheduling experience for Visual ETL and Query editors
Amazon SageMaker now offers a unified scheduling experience for visual ETL flows and queries. The next generation of Amazon SageMaker is the center for all your data, analytics, and AI, and includes SageMaker Unified Studio, a single data and AI development environment. Visual ETL in Amazon SageMaker provides a drag-and-drop interface for building ETL flows and authoring flows with Amazon Q. The query editor tool provides a place to write and run queries, view results, and share your work with your team. This new scheduling experience simplifies the scheduling process for Visual ETL and Query editor users. With unified scheduling you can now schedule your workloads with Amazon EventBridge Scheduler from the same visual interface you use to author your query or visual ETL flow. Previously, you needed to create a code-based workflow in order to run a single flow or query on schedule. You can also view, modify or pause/resume these schedules and monitor the runs they invoked. This new feature is now available in all AWS regions where Amazon SageMaker is available. Access the supported region list for the most up-to-date availability information. To learn more, visit our Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio documentation, blog post and Amazon EventBridge Scheduler pricing page.
aws.amazon.com
April 30, 2025 at 10:40 PM
Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh

Amazon EventBridge API destinations now support proactive OAuth token refresh for public and private OAuth authorization endpoints. This capability helps you to preemptively mitigate delays and...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh
Amazon EventBridge API destinations now support proactive OAuth token refresh for public and private OAuth authorization endpoints. This capability helps you to preemptively mitigate delays and errors during invocations when the OAuth access token is close to expiration. EventBridge API destinations are HTTPS endpoints that you can invoke as the target of an event bus rule, or pipe, similar to how you invoke an AWS service or resource as a target. Using API destinations, you can route events between AWS services, integrated software as a service (SaaS) applications, and public or private applications by using API calls. Now, when you invoke an API destination with an OAuth token that is close to expiration, EventBridge asynchronously requests a new token from your OAuth endpoint, reducing authorization errors and delays due to expired tokens. Amazon EventBridge API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh is available at no additional cost across all AWS Regions where EventBridge API destinations https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/. Please refer to the API destinations https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/eb-api-destinations.html for details.  
aws.amazon.com
December 20, 2024 at 9:05 PM
Amazon EventBridge Archive and Replay now supports Customer Managed KMS Keys

Amazon EventBridge Archive and Replay now supports AWS Key Management Service (KMS) customer managed keys for encrypting archived events. This expands your encryption options by letting you ch...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge Archive and Replay now supports Customer Managed KMS Keys
Amazon EventBridge Archive and Replay now supports AWS Key Management Service (KMS) customer managed keys for encrypting archived events. This expands your encryption options by letting you choose between default AWS owned keys for simpler, automated data protection or customer managed keys to help meet your organization's specific security and governance requirements. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus receives and routes events between your applications, SaaS applications, and AWS services. The Archive and Replay feature enhances this capability by allowing you to store events from an event bus and replay them later, helping you build more durable event-driven applications. You can archive events using custom filters, set flexible retention periods, and replay events to specific rules within your chosen time ranges on the original event bus. With customer managed KMS keys, you can help meet your organization's compliance and governance requirements for encrypting archived events and use https://aws.amazon.com/cloudtrail/ to audit and track encryption key usage. Customer managed key support for EventBridge Archive and Replay is available in all AWS Regions where the Archive and Replay feature is offered. Using this feature incurs no additional cost, but standard AWS KMS pricing applies. To get started, refer to the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/encryption-archives.html. For details about customer managed keys, see the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/kms/latest/developerguide/concepts.html#customer-cmk
aws.amazon.com
April 7, 2025 at 6:05 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge Connector for Apache Kafka Connect is now available, easing event integration across AWS and partners without custom code. Supports dynamic filtering and scalable routing. Download from GitHub; see AWS docs for implementation.

#AWS #AwsGovcloudUs #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge Connector for Apache Kafka Connect now generally available
The Amazon EventBridge connector for Apache Kafka Connect is now generally available. This open-source connector streamlines event integration of Kafka environments with dozens of AWS services and partner integrations without writing custom integration code or running multiple connectors for each target. The connector includes built-in support for Kafka schema registries, offloading large event payloads to S3, and IAM role-based authentication, and is available under the Apache 2.0 license in the AWS GitHub organization. Amazon EventBridge is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. With the EventBridge Connector for Apache Kafka Connect, customers can leverage advanced features such as dynamic event filtering, transformation, and scalable routing through a unified connector in Kafka environments. The connector simplifies event routing from Kafka to AWS targets, custom applications and third-party SaaS services. Organizations can deploy the connector on any Apache Kafka Connect installation, including Amazon Managed Streaming for Kafka (MSK) Connect. This feature is available in all AWS Regions, including AWS GovCloud (US). To get started, download the latest release from GitHub, configure it in your Kafka Connect environment, and refer to our developer documentation for detailed implementation guidance. Amazon MSK users can find specific instructions in the MSK Connect developer guide.
aws.amazon.com
April 15, 2025 at 5:40 PM
Amazon EventBridge Scheduler now supports AWS PrivateLink

Amazon EventBridge Scheduler now supports https://aws.amazon.com/privatelink/, providing you access to Scheduler from within your Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) without using the public inter...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge #AwsPrivatelink
Amazon EventBridge Scheduler now supports AWS PrivateLink
Amazon EventBridge Scheduler now supports https://aws.amazon.com/privatelink/, providing you access to Scheduler from within your Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) without using the public internet. This feature eliminates the need for an internet gateway, firewall rules, or proxy servers when accessing EventBridge Scheduler from a private subnet. With Amazon EventBridge Scheduler, you can create billions of scheduled events and tasks that run across more than 270 AWS services, without provisioning or managing infrastructure. You can set up one-time schedules for specific dates and times, or create recurring schedules using cron and rate expressions, with support for time zones and daylight savings. With AWS PrivateLink support in EventBridge Scheduler, you can reduce the infrastructure required to create and manage your schedules when making API calls to Scheduler from within your VPC. AWS PrivateLink support for EventBridge Scheduler is available in all AWS Regions where EventBridge Scheduler is offered. Using this feature incurs no additional cost, but standard AWS PrivateLink pricing applies. For PrivateLink configuration instructions, refer to the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/en_us/vpc/latest/privatelink/privatelink-access-aws-services.html. To learn more about Amazon EventBridge Scheduler and its capabilities, see the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/scheduler/latest/UserGuide/what-is-scheduler.html  
aws.amazon.com
March 25, 2025 at 7:05 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge announces up to 94% improvement in end-to-end latency for Event Buses

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge #AwsGovcloudUs
Amazon EventBridge announces up to 94% improvement in end-to-end latency for Event Buses
Amazon EventBridge Event Buses announces up to 94% improvement in end-to-end latency for Event Buses, since January 2023, enabling you to handle highly latency sensitive applications, including fraud detection and prevention, industrial automation, and gaming applications. End-to-End latency is measured by the time taken from event ingestion to first event invocation attempt. This lower latency enables you to build highly responsive and efficient event-driven architectures for your time-sensitive applications. You can now detect and respond to critical events more quickly, enabling rapid innovation, faster decision-making, and improved operational efficiency. For latency-sensitive mission-critical applications, even small delays can have a big impact. To address this, Amazon EventBridge Event Bus has been able to significantly reduce its average latency from 2235.23ms measured in January 2023, to just 129.33ms measured in August 2024 at P99. This significant improvement in latency allows EventBridge to deliver events in real-time to your mission critical applications. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus’ lower latency is applied by default across all AWS Regions where Amazon EventBridge is available, including the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, at no additional cost to you. Customers can monitor these improvements through the IngestionToInvocationStartLatency or the end-to-end IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency metrics available in the EventBridge console dashboard or via Amazon CloudWatch. This benefits customers globally, and ensures consistent low-latency event processing for customers, regardless of your geographic location. For more information on Amazon EventBridge Event Bus, please visit our documentation. To get started with Amazon EventBridge, visit the AWS Console and follow these instructions from the user guide.
aws.amazon.com
November 12, 2024 at 6:23 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions announce integration with private APIs

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions announce integration with private APIs
Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions now support integration with private APIs powered by AWS PrivateLink and Amazon VPC Lattice, making it easier for customers to accelerate innovation and simplify modernization of distributed applications across public and private networks, both on-premises and in the cloud. This allows customers to bring the capabilities of AWS cloud to new and existing workloads, achieving higher performance, agility, and lower costs. Enterprises across industries are modernizing their applications to drive growth, reduce costs, and foster innovation. However, integrating applications across siloed VPCs and on-premises environments can be challenging, often requiring custom code and complex configurations. With fully-managed connectivity to private HTTPS-based APIs, customers can now securely integrate their legacy systems with cloud-native applications using event-driven architectures and workflow orchestration, allowing them to accelerate their innovation on AWS while driving higher security and regulatory compliance. These advancements allow customers to achieve faster time to market by eliminating the need to write and maintain custom networking or integration code, enabling developers to build extensible systems and add new capabilities easily. Integration with private APIs in Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions are now generally available in Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Mumbai), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Europe (Frankfurt), Europe (Ireland), Europe (London), Europe (Paris), Europe (Stockholm), South America (Sao Paulo), US East (N. Virginia), US East (Ohio), US West (N. California), and US West (Oregon). You can start using private APIs with Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions from the AWS Management Console or using the AWS CLI and SDK. To learn more, please read the launch blog, Amazon EventBridge user guide and AWS Step Functions documentation.
aws.amazon.com
December 2, 2024 at 4:53 AM
✍️ New blog post by Damien Jones

Low-Code S3 Key Validation With AWS Step Functions & JSONata

#amazoneventbridge #amazons3 #awsstepfunctions #jsonata
Low-Code S3 Key Validation With AWS Step Functions & JSONata
In this post, I use JSONata to add low-code S3 object key validation to an AWS Step Functions state...
dev.to
May 1, 2025 at 10:39 AM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge now supports Customer Managed Keys (CMK) for API destinations, allowing you to encrypt HTTPS endpoint credentials with your own keys for enhanced security and compliance, available in all regions where EventBridge API destinations is supported.

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge now supports Customer Managed Keys (CMK) in API destinations connections
Amazon EventBridge announces support for Amazon Key Management Service (KMS) Customer Managed Keys (CMK) in API destinations connections. This enhancement enables you to encrypt your HTTPS endpoint authentication credentials managed by API destinations with your own keys instead of an AWS owned key (which is used by default). With CMK support, you now have more granular security control over your authentication credentials used in API destinations, helping you meet your organization's security requirements and governance policies. Customer managed Keys (CMK) are KMS keys that you create and manage by yourself. You can also audit and track usage of your keys via CloudTrail. EventBridge API destinations are private and public HTTPS endpoints that you can invoke as the target of an event bus rule or pipe, similar to how you invoke an AWS service or resource as a target. API destinations provides flexible authentication options for HTTPS endpoints, such as API key and OAuth, storing and managing credentials securely in AWS Secrets Manager on your behalf. CMK support for EventBridge API destinations connections is now available across all AWS Regions where EventBridge API destinations is available. Please refer to the EventBridge user guide and KMS documentation for details.
aws.amazon.com
April 17, 2025 at 10:41 PM
Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions announce integration with private APIs

Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions now support integration with private APIs powered by AWS PrivateLink and Amazon VPC Lattice, making it easier for customers to accelerate innovati...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions announce integration with private APIs
Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions now support integration with private APIs powered by AWS PrivateLink and Amazon VPC Lattice, making it easier for customers to accelerate innovation and simplify modernization of distributed applications across public and private networks, both on-premises and in the cloud. This allows customers to bring the capabilities of AWS cloud to new and existing workloads, achieving higher performance, agility, and lower costs. Enterprises across industries are modernizing their applications to drive growth, reduce costs, and foster innovation. However, integrating applications across siloed VPCs and on-premises environments can be challenging, often requiring custom code and complex configurations. With fully-managed connectivity to private HTTPS-based APIs, customers can now securely integrate their legacy systems with cloud-native applications using event-driven architectures and workflow orchestration, allowing them to accelerate their innovation on AWS while driving higher security and regulatory compliance. These advancements allow customers to achieve faster time to market by eliminating the need to write and maintain custom networking or integration code, enabling developers to build extensible systems and add new capabilities easily. Integration with private APIs in Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions are now generally available in Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Mumbai), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Europe (Frankfurt), Europe (Ireland), Europe (London), Europe (Paris), Europe (Stockholm), South America (Sao Paulo), US East (N. Virginia), US East (Ohio), US West (N. California), and US West (Oregon). You can start using private APIs with Amazon EventBridge and AWS Step Functions from the AWS Management Console or using the AWS CLI and SDK. To learn more, please read the https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/securely-share-aws-resources-across-vpc-and-account-boundaries-with-privatelink-vpc-lattice-eventbridge-and-step-functions/, Amazon EventBridge https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/eb-api-destinations.html and AWS Step Functions https://docs.aws.amazon.com/step-functions/latest/dg/call-https-apis.html.  
aws.amazon.com
December 2, 2024 at 5:05 AM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge announces API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh
Amazon EventBridge API destinations now support proactive OAuth token refresh for public and private OAuth authorization endpoints. This capability helps you to preemptively mitigate delays and errors during invocations when the OAuth access token is close to expiration. EventBridge API destinations are HTTPS endpoints that you can invoke as the target of an event bus rule, or pipe, similar to how you invoke an AWS service or resource as a target. Using API destinations, you can route events between AWS services, integrated software as a service (SaaS) applications, and public or private applications by using API calls. Now, when you invoke an API destination with an OAuth token that is close to expiration, EventBridge asynchronously requests a new token from your OAuth endpoint, reducing authorization errors and delays due to expired tokens. Amazon EventBridge API destinations proactive OAuth token refresh is available at no additional cost across all AWS Regions where EventBridge API destinations is available. Please refer to the API destinations user guide for details.
aws.amazon.com
December 20, 2024 at 8:23 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge SaaS partner integrations now live in AWS GovCloud (US), allowing government and regulated sectors to link AWS apps with third-party SaaS for automated responses without custom code, available in US-East and US-West.

#AWS #AwsGovcloudUs #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge SaaS partner integrations now available in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions
Amazon EventBridge now supports Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) partner integrations in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, enabling government customers and organizations in regulated industries to build event-driven architectures that connect their AWS applications with supported third-party SaaS partners. With EventBridge partner integrations, customers can receive events from supported SaaS providers without writing custom code for API integration. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. You can set up routing rules to determine where to send your events, allowing your application to react to changes in your systems as they occur. Event buses make it easier to build event-driven applications by facilitating event ingestion, delivery, security, authorization, and error handling. This integration enables you to enhance your operational efficiency through automated responses to SaaS partner events. For example, government organizations using third-party partners for infrastructure and application monitoring can automatically trigger remediation actions when the partner detects performance anomalies or system alerts. This could include automatically scaling resources, creating incident tickets, or notifying operations teams through AWS services like AWS Lambda, or AWS Step Functions. This feature is now available in AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West) Regions. To get started with EventBridge partner integrations, visit the Amazon EventBridge Integration page or refer to the documentation for detailed implementation guidelines and best practices.
aws.amazon.com
March 11, 2025 at 4:10 AM
Securely share AWS resources across VPC and account boundaries with PrivateLink, VPC Lattice, EventBridge, and Step Functions

Orchestrate hybrid workflows accessing private HTTPS endpoints - no more Lambda/SQS workarounds. Eve...

#AWS #AmazonEventbridge #AmazonVpc #AwsStepFunctions #Launch #News
Securely share AWS resources across VPC and account boundaries with PrivateLink, VPC Lattice, EventBridge, and Step Functions
Orchestrate hybrid workflows accessing private HTTPS endpoints - no more Lambda/SQS workarounds. EventBridge and Step Functions natively support private resources, simplifying cloud modernization.
aws.amazon.com
December 2, 2024 at 4:05 AM
#うひーメモ
2023-11-28 16:05:59
AWS Step FunctionsとAmazon Event Bridgeを使って、プログラムコードを書かずにStripeと連携する
#Program
#awsstepfunctions
#amazoneventbridge
#httpsapi
AWS Step FunctionsとAmazon Event Bridgeを使って、プログラムコードを書かずにStripeと連携する
年月日にAWSがStepFunctionsから外部のHTTPSAPIをよびだせるようになったとのアナウンスがありました
qiita.com
November 28, 2023 at 7:06 AM
#うひーメモ
2023-12-08 00:18:57
Amazon EventBridgeをCfnで作成するときのcron式
#Program
#amazoneventbridge
#cloudformation
#cron
Amazon EventBridgeをCfnで作成するときのcron式
はじめにECの夜間停止設定を行うときにCloudFormationを使いましたその時にややこしかったcron式についてまとめます問題ECを起動しておきたい時間帯は
qiita.com
December 7, 2023 at 3:19 PM
Amazon EventBridge event delivery latency metric now in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions

The Amazon EventBridge Event Bus end-to-end event delivery latency metric in Amazon CloudWatch that tracks the duration between event ingestion and successful delivery ...

#AWS #AwsGovcloudUs #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge event delivery latency metric now in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions
The Amazon EventBridge Event Bus end-to-end event delivery latency metric in Amazon CloudWatch that tracks the duration between event ingestion and successful delivery to the targets on your Event Bus is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West) Regions. This new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency allows you to now detect and respond to event processing delays caused by under-performing, under-scaled, or unresponsive targets. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. You can set up rules to determine where to send your events, allowing for applications to react to changes in your systems as they occur. With the new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency metric you can now better monitor and understand event delivery latency to your targets, increasing the observability of your event-driven architecture. To learn more about the new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency metric for Amazon EventBridge Event Buses, please read our https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/compute/monitoring-best-practices-for-event-delivery-with-amazon-eventbridge/ and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/userguide/eb-monitoring.html.  
aws.amazon.com
November 15, 2024 at 9:06 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge event delivery latency metric now in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions

#AWS #AwsGovcloudUs #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge event delivery latency metric now in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions
The Amazon EventBridge Event Bus end-to-end event delivery latency metric in Amazon CloudWatch that tracks the duration between event ingestion and successful delivery to the targets on your Event Bus is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West) Regions. This new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency allows you to now detect and respond to event processing delays caused by under-performing, under-scaled, or unresponsive targets. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. You can set up rules to determine where to send your events, allowing for applications to react to changes in your systems as they occur. With the new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency metric you can now better monitor and understand event delivery latency to your targets, increasing the observability of your event-driven architecture. To learn more about the new IngestionToInvocationSuccessLatency metric for Amazon EventBridge Event Buses, please read our blog post and documentation.
aws.amazon.com
November 15, 2024 at 8:23 PM
🆕 Amazon EventBridge enhances event source discovery in the console

#AWS #AmazonEventBridge
Amazon EventBridge enhances event source discovery in the console
The Amazon EventBridge console now displays the source and detail type of all available AWS service events when you create a rule in the EventBridge console. This makes it easier for customers to discover and utilize the full range of AWS service events when building event-driven architectures. Additionally, the EventBridge documentation now includes an automatically updated list of all AWS service events, facilitating access to the most current information. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. With this update, developers can quickly search and filter through all available AWS service events, including event types, within the EventBridge console, when configuring event patterns in the sandbox and rules, and in the documentation, enabling customers to more efficiently create event-driven integrations and reduce misconfiguration. This feature in the EventBridge console is available in all commercial AWS Regions. To learn more about discovering and using AWS service events in Amazon EventBridge, see the updated list of AWS service events in the documentation here.
aws.amazon.com
January 31, 2025 at 7:23 PM
#うひーメモ
2023-11-26 10:01:34
[アップデート] Amazon EventBridge で Amazon QuickSight でのアセット操作関係のイベントが拾えるようになり、QuickSight でもイベントドリブンな自動処理を実装しやすくなりました
#技術系ブログ等
#アップデート
#amazoneventbridge
#amazonquicksight
[アップデート] Amazon EventBridge で Amazon QuickSight でのアセット操作関係のイベントが拾えるようになり、QuickSight でもイベントドリブンな自動処理を実装しやすくなりました
いわさです先日のアップデートでAmazonQuickSightがEventBridge経由でのアセットイベントをサポートしたとアナウンスされましたQuickSightは色とまだAWSの基本的な部
dev.classmethod.jp
November 26, 2023 at 1:02 AM
Amazon EventBridge expands enhanced event source discovery to AWS GovCloud (US) Regions

Amazon EventBridge enhanced event source discovery, which displays the source and detail type of all AWS service events during rule creation in the AWS console, is no...

#AWS #AwsGovcloudUs #AmazonEventbridge
Amazon EventBridge expands enhanced event source discovery to AWS GovCloud (US) Regions
Amazon EventBridge enhanced event source discovery, which displays the source and detail type of all AWS service events during rule creation in the AWS console, is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions. This makes it easier for customers to discover and utilize the full range of AWS service events when building event-driven architectures. Additionally, the EventBridge documentation now includes an automatically updated list of all AWS service events, providing a single source of truth and ensuring developers always have access to accurate, reliable information. Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create highly scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. With this update, developers can quickly search and filter through all available AWS service events, including event types, within the EventBridge console, when configuring event patterns in the sandbox and rules. This enables customers to create event-driven integrations more efficiently while reducing the risk of misconfiguration. This feature is now available in the AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West) Regions. You can get started by navigating to the EventBridge https://console.aws.amazon.com/console/home, where you can access the Sandbox or Create Rule page to see the list of all events when building the event pattern. You can also see the updated list of AWS service events in the documentation https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eventbridge/latest/ref/welcome.html.
aws.amazon.com
March 10, 2025 at 7:05 PM