Module Smaws_Client_ConfigService.PutConfigRule

val request : Smaws_Lib.Context.t -> put_config_rule_request -> (unit, [> Smaws_Lib.Protocols.AwsJson.error | `InsufficientPermissionsException of insufficient_permissions_exception | `InvalidParameterValueException of invalid_parameter_value_exception | `MaxNumberOfConfigRulesExceededException of max_number_of_config_rules_exceeded_exception | `NoAvailableConfigurationRecorderException of no_available_configuration_recorder_exception | `ResourceInUseException of resource_in_use_exception ]) Stdlib.result

Adds or updates an Config rule to evaluate if your Amazon Web Services resources comply with your desired configurations. For information on how many Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the Config Developer Guide.

There are two types of rules: Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules. You can use PutConfigRule to create both Config Managed Rules and Config Custom Rules.

Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of Config Managed Rules. If you are adding an Config managed rule, you must specify the rule's identifier for the SourceIdentifier key.

Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create Config custom rules: with Lambda functions (Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. Config custom rules created with Lambda are called Config Custom Lambda Rules and Config custom rules created with Guard are called Config Custom Policy Rules.

If you are adding a new Config Custom Lambda rule, you first need to create an Lambda function that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. When you use PutConfigRule to add a Custom Lambda rule to Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that Lambda assigns to the function. You specify the ARN in the SourceIdentifier key. This key is part of the Source object, which is part of the ConfigRule object.

For any new Config rule that you add, specify the ConfigRuleName in the ConfigRule object. Do not specify the ConfigRuleArn or the ConfigRuleId. These values are generated by Config for new rules.

If you are updating a rule that you added previously, you can specify the rule by ConfigRuleName, ConfigRuleId, or ConfigRuleArn in the ConfigRule data type that you use in this request.

For more information about developing and using Config rules, see Evaluating Resources with Config Rules in the Config Developer Guide.

PutConfigRule is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if one was already created. If a following request has different tags values, Config will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they are different.