Optional
stackProps: StackPropsReadonly
Internal
_crossReadonly
Internal
_versionWhether version reporting is enabled for this stack
Controls whether the CDK Metadata resource is injected
Readonly
accountThe AWS account into which this stack will be deployed.
This value is resolved according to the following rules:
env.account
when the stack is defined. This can
either be a concrete account (e.g. 585695031111
) or the
Aws.ACCOUNT_ID
token.Aws.ACCOUNT_ID
, which represents the CloudFormation intrinsic reference
{ "Ref": "AWS::AccountId" }
encoded as a string token.Preferably, you should use the return value as an opaque string and not
attempt to parse it to implement your logic. If you do, you must first
check that it is a concrete value an not an unresolved token. If this
value is an unresolved token (Token.isUnresolved(stack.account)
returns
true
), this implies that the user wishes that this stack will synthesize
into a account-agnostic template. In this case, your code should either
fail (throw an error, emit a synth error using Annotations.of(construct).addError()
) or
implement some other region-agnostic behavior.
Readonly
artifactThe ID of the cloud assembly artifact for this stack.
Readonly
bastionReadonly
credentialsReadonly
dbReadonly
encryptionReadonly
environmentThe environment coordinates in which this stack is deployed. In the form
aws://account/region
. Use stack.account
and stack.region
to obtain
the specific values, no need to parse.
You can use this value to determine if two stacks are targeting the same environment.
If either stack.account
or stack.region
are not concrete values (e.g.
Aws.ACCOUNT_ID
or Aws.REGION
) the special strings unknown-account
and/or
unknown-region
will be used respectively to indicate this stack is
region/account-agnostic.
Optional
Readonly
nestedIf this is a nested stack, this represents its AWS::CloudFormation::Stack
resource. undefined
for top-level (non-nested) stacks.
Readonly
nodeThe tree node.
Readonly
propsReadonly
regionThe AWS region into which this stack will be deployed (e.g. us-west-2
).
This value is resolved according to the following rules:
env.region
when the stack is defined. This can
either be a concrete region (e.g. us-west-2
) or the Aws.REGION
token.Aws.REGION
, which is represents the CloudFormation intrinsic reference
{ "Ref": "AWS::Region" }
encoded as a string token.Preferably, you should use the return value as an opaque string and not
attempt to parse it to implement your logic. If you do, you must first
check that it is a concrete value an not an unresolved token. If this
value is an unresolved token (Token.isUnresolved(stack.region)
returns
true
), this implies that the user wishes that this stack will synthesize
into a region-agnostic template. In this case, your code should either
fail (throw an error, emit a synth error using Annotations.of(construct).addError()
) or
implement some other region-agnostic behavior.
Readonly
synthesizerSynthesis method for this stack
Readonly
tagsTags to be applied to the stack.
Readonly
templateThe name of the CloudFormation template file emitted to the output directory during synthesis.
Example value: MyStack.template.json
Readonly
templateOptions for CloudFormation template (like version, transform, description).
Returns the list of AZs that are available in the AWS environment (account/region) associated with this stack.
If the stack is environment-agnostic (either account and/or region are
tokens), this property will return an array with 2 tokens that will resolve
at deploy-time to the first two availability zones returned from CloudFormation's
Fn::GetAZs
intrinsic function.
If they are not available in the context, returns a set of dummy values and
reports them as missing, and let the CLI resolve them by calling EC2
DescribeAvailabilityZones
on the target environment.
To specify a different strategy for selecting availability zones override this method.
Indicates whether the stack requires bundling or not
Return the stacks this stack depends on
Private
maxMaximum number of resources in the stack
Set to 0 to mean "unlimited".
Indicates if this is a nested stack, in which case parentStack
will include a reference to it's parent.
If this is a nested stack, returns it's parent stack.
Returns the list of notification Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) for the current stack.
The partition in which this stack is defined
Private
permissionsIf a permissions boundary has been applied on this scope or any parent scope then this will return the ARN of the permissions boundary.
This will return the permissions boundary that has been applied to the most specific scope.
For example:
const stage = new Stage(app, 'stage', { permissionsBoundary: PermissionsBoundary.fromName('stage-pb'), });
const stack = new Stack(stage, 'Stack', { permissionsBoundary: PermissionsBoundary.fromName('some-other-pb'), });
Stack.permissionsBoundaryArn === 'arn:${AWS::Partition}:iam::${AWS::AccountId}:policy/some-other-pb';
the name of the permissions boundary or undefined if not set
The ID of the stack
// After resolving, looks like
'arn:aws:cloudformation:us-west-2:123456789012:stack/teststack/51af3dc0-da77-11e4-872e-1234567db123'
The concrete CloudFormation physical stack name.
This is either the name defined explicitly in the stackName
prop or
allocated based on the stack's location in the construct tree. Stacks that
are directly defined under the app use their construct id
as their stack
name. Stacks that are defined deeper within the tree will use a hashed naming
scheme based on the construct path to ensure uniqueness.
If you wish to obtain the deploy-time AWS::StackName intrinsic,
you can use Aws.STACK_NAME
directly.
Whether termination protection is enabled for this stack.
The Amazon domain suffix for the region in which this stack is defined
Internal
Called implicitly by the addDependency
helper function in order to
realize a dependency between two top-level stacks at the assembly level.
Use stack.addDependency
to define the dependency between any two stacks,
and take into account nested stack relationships.
Optional
reason: StackDependencyReasonInternal
Called implicitly by the obtainDependencies
helper function in order to
collect resource dependencies across two top-level stacks at the assembly level.
Use stack.obtainDependencies
to see the dependencies between any two stacks.
Internal
Called implicitly by the removeDependency
helper function in order to
remove a dependency between two top-level stacks at the assembly level.
Use stack.addDependency
to define the dependency between any two stacks,
and take into account nested stack relationships.
Optional
reasonFilter: StackDependencyReasonProtected
_toProtected
_validateAdd a Transform to this stack. A Transform is a macro that AWS CloudFormation uses to process your template.
Duplicate values are removed when stack is synthesized.
The transform to add
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSCloudFormation/latest/UserGuide/transform-section-structure.html
declare const stack: Stack;
stack.addTransform('AWS::Serverless-2016-10-31')
Protected
allocateReturns the naming scheme used to allocate logical IDs. By default, uses
the HashedAddressingScheme
but this method can be overridden to customize
this behavior.
In order to make sure logical IDs are unique and stable, we hash the resource construct tree path (i.e. toplevel/secondlevel/.../myresource) and add it as a suffix to the path components joined without a separator (CloudFormation IDs only allow alphanumeric characters).
The result will be:
<path.join('')><md5(path.join('/')> "human" "hash"
If the "human" part of the ID exceeds 240 characters, we simply trim it so the total ID doesn't exceed CloudFormation's 255 character limit.
We only take 8 characters from the md5 hash (0.000005 chance of collision).
Special cases:
L1/L2/Pipeline/Pipeline
), they will be de-duplicated to make the
resulting human portion of the ID more pleasing: L1L2Pipeline<HASH>
instead of L1L2PipelinePipeline<HASH>
The element for which the logical ID is allocated.
Create a CloudFormation Export for a string list value
Returns a string list representing the corresponding Fn.importValue()
expression for this Export. The export expression is automatically wrapped with an
Fn::Join
and the import value with an Fn::Split
, since CloudFormation can only
export strings. You can control the name for the export by passing the name
option.
If you don't supply a value for name
, the value you're exporting must be
a Resource attribute (for example: bucket.bucketName
) and it will be
given the same name as the automatic cross-stack reference that would be created
if you used the attribute in another Stack.
One of the uses for this method is to remove the relationship between two Stacks established by automatic cross-stack references. It will temporarily ensure that the CloudFormation Export still exists while you remove the reference from the consuming stack. After that, you can remove the resource and the manual export.
See exportValue
for an example of this process.
Optional
options: ExportValueOptionsCreate a CloudFormation Export for a string value
Returns a string representing the corresponding Fn.importValue()
expression for this Export. You can control the name for the export by
passing the name
option.
If you don't supply a value for name
, the value you're exporting must be
a Resource attribute (for example: bucket.bucketName
) and it will be
given the same name as the automatic cross-stack reference that would be created
if you used the attribute in another Stack.
One of the uses for this method is to remove the relationship between two Stacks established by automatic cross-stack references. It will temporarily ensure that the CloudFormation Export still exists while you remove the reference from the consuming stack. After that, you can remove the resource and the manual export.
Here is how the process works. Let's say there are two stacks,
producerStack
and consumerStack
, and producerStack
has a bucket
called bucket
, which is referenced by consumerStack
(perhaps because
an AWS Lambda Function writes into it, or something like that).
It is not safe to remove producerStack.bucket
because as the bucket is being
deleted, consumerStack
might still be using it.
Instead, the process takes two deployments:
consumerStack
no longer references bucket.bucketName
(maybe the consumer
stack now uses its own bucket, or it writes to an AWS DynamoDB table, or maybe you just
remove the Lambda Function altogether).ProducerStack
class, call this.exportValue(this.bucket.bucketName)
. This
will make sure the CloudFormation Export continues to exist while the relationship
between the two stacks is being broken.consumerStack
, but it's safe to deploy both).bucket
resource from producerStack
.exportValue()
call as well.producerStack
will be changed -- the bucket will be deleted).Optional
options: ExportValueOptionsCreates an ARN from components.
If partition
, region
or account
are not specified, the stack's
partition, region and account will be used.
If any component is the empty string, an empty string will be inserted into the generated ARN at the location that component corresponds to.
The ARN will be formatted as follows:
arn:{partition}:{service}:{region}:{account}:{resource}{sep}{resource-name}
The required ARN pieces that are omitted will be taken from the stack that the 'scope' is attached to. If all ARN pieces are supplied, the supplied scope can be 'undefined'.
Allocates a stack-unique CloudFormation-compatible logical identity for a specific resource.
This method is called when a CfnElement
is created and used to render the
initial logical identity of resources. Logical ID renames are applied at
this stage.
This method uses the protected method allocateLogicalId
to render the
logical ID for an element. To modify the naming scheme, extend the Stack
class and override this method.
The CloudFormation element for which a logical identity is needed.
Look up a fact value for the given fact for the region of this stack
Will return a definite value only if the region of the current stack is resolved. If not, a lookup map will be added to the stack and the lookup will be done at CDK deployment time.
What regions will be included in the lookup map is controlled by the
@aws-cdk/core:target-partitions
context value: it must be set to a list
of partitions, and only regions from the given partitions will be included.
If no such context key is set, all regions will be included.
This function is intended to be used by construct library authors. Application builders can rely on the abstractions offered by construct libraries and do not have to worry about regional facts.
If defaultValue
is not given, it is an error if the fact is unknown for
the given region.
Optional
defaultValue: stringSplits the provided ARN into its components. Works both if 'arn' is a string like 'arn:aws:s3:::bucket', and a Token representing a dynamic CloudFormation expression (in which case the returned components will also be dynamic CloudFormation expressions, encoded as Tokens).
the ARN to split into its components
the expected format of 'arn' - depends on what format the service 'arn' represents uses
Static
isChecks if x
is a construct.
Use this method instead of instanceof
to properly detect Construct
instances, even when the construct library is symlinked.
Explanation: in JavaScript, multiple copies of the constructs
library on
disk are seen as independent, completely different libraries. As a
consequence, the class Construct
in each copy of the constructs
library
is seen as a different class, and an instance of one class will not test as
instanceof
the other class. npm install
will not create installations
like this, but users may manually symlink construct libraries together or
use a monorepo tool: in those cases, multiple copies of the constructs
library can be accidentally installed, and instanceof
will behave
unpredictably. It is safest to avoid using instanceof
, and using
this type-testing method instead.
Any object
true if x
is an object created from a class which extends Construct
.
Static
isStatic
ofGenerated using TypeDoc
Whether cross region references are enabled for this stack