What is Internet Monitor? - Amazon CloudWatch
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What is Internet Monitor?

With a monitor in Internet Monitor, you can monitor your application's internet performance and availability, so that you can visualize data and get insights and suggestions about your Amazon application's internet traffic.

Key features of Internet Monitor

  • Internet Monitor suggests insights and recommendations that can help you improve your end users' experience. You can explore, in near real-time, how to improve the projected latency of your application by switching to use other services, or by rerouting traffic to your workload through different Amazon Web Services Regions.

  • Internet Monitor stores internet measurements for pairs of your client locations and ASNs, or city-networks. Internet Monitor also creates aggregated CloudWatch metrics for traffic to your application, and to each Amazon Web Services Region and edge location. With the Internet Monitor dashboard, you can quickly identify what's impacting your application's performance and availability, so that you can track down and address issues.

  • Internet Monitor also publishes internet measurements to CloudWatch Logs and CloudWatch Metrics, to support using CloudWatch tools to explore data for city-networks that are specific to your monitored application traffic. Optionally, you can also publish internet measurements to Amazon S3.

  • Internet Monitor sends overall (global) health events to Amazon EventBridge so that you can set up notifications. (Local health events are not published to EventBridge.) If an issue is caused by the Amazon network, you also automatically receive an Amazon Health Dashboard notification with the steps that Amazon is taking to mitigate the problem.

How to use Internet Monitor

To use Internet Monitor, you create a monitor and associate your application's resources with it—VPCs, Network Load Balancers, CloudFront distributions, or WorkSpaces directories—to enable Internet Monitor to know where your application's internet-facing traffic is. Internet Monitor then publishes internet measurements from Amazon that are specific to the city-networks, that is, the client locations and ASNs (typically internet service providers or ISPs), where clients access your application. For more information, see How Internet Monitor works. To begin working with Internet Monitor, see Getting started with Internet Monitor using the console.