Amazon RDS examples using Amazon CLI - Amazon Command Line Interface
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Amazon RDS examples using Amazon CLI

The following code examples show you how to perform actions and implement common scenarios by using the Amazon Command Line Interface with Amazon RDS.

Actions are code excerpts from larger programs and must be run in context. While actions show you how to call individual service functions, you can see actions in context in their related scenarios and cross-service examples.

Scenarios are code examples that show you how to accomplish a specific task by calling multiple functions within the same service.

Each example includes a link to GitHub, where you can find instructions on how to set up and run the code in context.

Topics

Actions

The following code example shows how to use add-option-to-option-group.

Amazon CLI

To add an option to an option group

The following add-option-to-option-group example adds an option to the specified option group.

aws rds add-option-to-option-group \ --option-group-name myoptiongroup \ --options OptionName=OEM,Port=5500,DBSecurityGroupMemberships=default \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "OptionGroup": { "OptionGroupName": "myoptiongroup", "OptionGroupDescription": "Test Option Group", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "12.1", "Options": [ { "OptionName": "Timezone", "OptionDescription": "Change time zone", "Persistent": true, "Permanent": false, "OptionSettings": [ { "Name": "TIME_ZONE", "Value": "Australia/Sydney", "DefaultValue": "UTC", "Description": "Specifies the timezone the user wants to change the system time to", "ApplyType": "DYNAMIC", "DataType": "STRING", "AllowedValues": "Africa/Cairo,Africa/Casablanca,Africa/Harare,Africa/Lagos,Africa/Luanda,Africa/Monrovia,Africa/Nairobi,Africa/Tripoli,Africa/Windhoek,America/Araguaina,America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires,America/Asuncion,America/Bogota,America/Caracas,America/Chicago,America/Chihuahua,America/Cuiaba,America/Denver,America/Detroit,America/Fortaleza,America/Godthab,America/Guatemala,America/Halifax,America/Lima,America/Los_Angeles,America/Manaus,America/Matamoros,America/Mexico_City,America/Monterrey,America/Montevideo,America/New_York,America/Phoenix,America/Santiago,America/Sao_Paulo,America/Tijuana,America/Toronto,Asia/Amman,Asia/Ashgabat,Asia/Baghdad,Asia/Baku,Asia/Bangkok,Asia/Beirut,Asia/Calcutta,Asia/Damascus,Asia/Dhaka,Asia/Hong_Kong,Asia/Irkutsk,Asia/Jakarta,Asia/Jerusalem,Asia/Kabul,Asia/Karachi,Asia/Kathmandu,Asia/Kolkata,Asia/Krasnoyarsk,Asia/Magadan,Asia/Manila,Asia/Muscat,Asia/Novosibirsk,Asia/Rangoon,Asia/Riyadh,Asia/Seoul,Asia/Shanghai,Asia/Singapore,Asia/Taipei,Asia/Tehran,Asia/Tokyo,Asia/Ulaanbaatar,Asia/Vladivostok,Asia/Yakutsk,Asia/Yerevan,Atlantic/Azores,Atlantic/Cape_Verde,Australia/Adelaide,Australia/Brisbane,Australia/Darwin,Australia/Eucla,Australia/Hobart,Australia/Lord_Howe,Australia/Perth,Australia/Sydney,Brazil/DeNoronha,Brazil/East,Canada/Newfoundland,Canada/Saskatchewan,Etc/GMT-3,Europe/Amsterdam,Europe/Athens,Europe/Berlin,Europe/Dublin,Europe/Helsinki,Europe/Kaliningrad,Europe/London,Europe/Madrid,Europe/Moscow,Europe/Paris,Europe/Prague,Europe/Rome,Europe/Sarajevo,Pacific/Apia,Pacific/Auckland,Pacific/Chatham,Pacific/Fiji,Pacific/Guam,Pacific/Honolulu,Pacific/Kiritimati,Pacific/Marquesas,Pacific/Samoa,Pacific/Tongatapu,Pacific/Wake,US/Alaska,US/Central,US/East-Indiana,US/Eastern,US/Pacific,UTC", "IsModifiable": true, "IsCollection": false } ], "DBSecurityGroupMemberships": [], "VpcSecurityGroupMemberships": [] }, { "OptionName": "OEM", "OptionDescription": "Oracle 12c EM Express", "Persistent": false, "Permanent": false, "Port": 5500, "OptionSettings": [], "DBSecurityGroupMemberships": [ { "DBSecurityGroupName": "default", "Status": "authorized" } ], "VpcSecurityGroupMemberships": [] } ], "AllowsVpcAndNonVpcInstanceMemberships": false, "OptionGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:og:myoptiongroup" } }

For more information, see Adding an Option to an Option Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use add-role-to-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To associate an Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM) role with a DB cluster

The following add-role-to-db-cluster example associates a role with a DB cluster.

aws rds add-role-to-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster \ --role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/RDSLoadFromS3

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Associating an IAM role with an Amazon Aurora MySQL DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use add-role-to-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To associate an Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM) role with a DB instance

The following add-role-to-db-instance example adds the role to an Oracle DB instance named test-instance.

aws rds add-role-to-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --feature-name S3_INTEGRATION \ --role-arn arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/rds-s3-integration-role

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Prerequisites for Amazon RDS Oracle Integration with Amazon S3 in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use add-source-identifier-to-subscription.

Amazon CLI

To add a source identifier to a subscription

The following add-source-identifier example adds another source identifier to an existing subscription.

aws rds add-source-identifier-to-subscription \ --subscription-name my-instance-events \ --source-identifier test-instance-repl

Output:

{ "EventSubscription": { "SubscriptionCreationTime": "Tue Jul 31 23:22:01 UTC 2018", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "Enabled": false, "Status": "modifying", "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events", "SourceType": "db-instance", "SourceIdsList": [ "test-instance", "test-instance-repl" ] } }

The following code example shows how to use add-tags-to-resource.

Amazon CLI

To add tags to a resource

The following add-tags-to-resource example add tags to an RDS database.

aws rds add-tags-to-resource \ --resource-name arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:database-mysql \ --tags "[{\"Key\": \"Name\",\"Value\": \"MyDatabase\"},{\"Key\": \"Environment\",\"Value\": \"test\"}]"

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS Resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use apply-pending-maintenance-action.

Amazon CLI

To apply pending maintenance actions

The following apply-pending-maintenance-action example applies the pending maintenance actions for a DB cluster.

aws rds apply-pending-maintenance-action \ --resource-identifier arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-db-cluster \ --apply-action system-update \ --opt-in-type immediate

Output:

{ "ResourcePendingMaintenanceActions": { "ResourceIdentifier": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-db-cluster", "PendingMaintenanceActionDetails": [ { "Action": "system-update", "OptInStatus": "immediate", "CurrentApplyDate": "2021-01-23T01:07:36.100Z", "Description": "Upgrade to Aurora PostgreSQL 3.3.2" } ] } }

For more information, see Maintaining a DB instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Maintaining an Amazon Aurora DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use authorize-db-security-group-ingress.

Amazon CLI

To associate an Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM) role with a DB instance

The following authorize-db-security-group-ingress example configures the default security group with an ingress rule for the CIDR IP range 192.0.2.0/24.

aws rds authorize-db-security-group-ingress \ --db-security-group-name default \ --cidrip 192.0.2.0/24

Output:

{ "DBSecurityGroup": { "OwnerId": "123456789012", "DBSecurityGroupName": "default", "DBSecurityGroupDescription": "default", "EC2SecurityGroups": [], "IPRanges": [ { "Status": "authorizing", "CIDRIP": "192.0.2.0/24" } ], "DBSecurityGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:111122223333:secgrp:default" } }

For more information, see Authorizing Network Access to a DB Security Group from an IP Range in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use backtrack-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To backtrack an Aurora DB cluster

The following backtrack-db-cluster example backtracks the specified DB cluster sample-cluster to March 19, 2018, at 10 a.m.

aws rds backtrack-db-cluster --db-cluster-identifier sample-cluster --backtrack-to 2018-03-19T10:00:00+00:00

This command outputs a JSON block that acknowledges the change to the RDS resource.

The following code example shows how to use cancel-export-task.

Amazon CLI

To cancel a snapshot export to Amazon S3

The following cancel-export-task example cancels an export task in progress that is exporting a snapshot to Amazon S3.

aws rds cancel-export-task \ --export-task-identifier my-s3-export-1

Output:

{ "ExportTaskIdentifier": "my-s3-export-1", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:publisher-final-snapshot", "SnapshotTime": "2019-03-24T20:01:09.815Z", "S3Bucket": "mybucket", "S3Prefix": "", "IamRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/export-snap-S3-role", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/abcd0000-7bfd-4594-af38-aabbccddeeff", "Status": "CANCELING", "PercentProgress": 0, "TotalExtractedDataInGB": 0 }

For more information, see Canceling a snapshot export task in the Amazon RDS User Guide or Canceling a snapshot export task in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use copy-db-cluster-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To copy a DB cluster parameter group

The following copy-db-cluster-parameter-group example makes a copy of a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds copy-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --source-db-cluster-parameter-group-identifier mydbclusterpg \ --target-db-cluster-parameter-group-identifier mydbclusterpgcopy \ --target-db-cluster-parameter-group-description "Copy of mydbclusterpg parameter group"

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroup": { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclusterpgcopy", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:mydbclusterpgcopy", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-mysql5.7", "Description": "Copy of mydbclusterpg parameter group" } }

For more information, see Copying a DB Cluster Parameter Group in the Amazon Aurora Users Guide.

The following code example shows how to use copy-db-cluster-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To copy a DB cluster snapshot

The following copy-db-cluster-snapshot example creates a copy of a DB cluster snapshot, including its tags.

aws rds copy-db-cluster-snapshot \ --source-db-cluster-snapshot-identifier arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-snapshot:rds:myaurora-2019-06-04-09-16 --target-db-cluster-snapshot-identifier myclustersnapshotcopy \ --copy-tags

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshot": { "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "myclustersnapshotcopy", "DBClusterIdentifier": "myaurora", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-04T09:16:42.649Z", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 0, "Status": "available", "Port": 0, "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LicenseModel": "aurora-mysql", "SnapshotType": "manual", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-snapshot:myclustersnapshotcopy", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false } }

For more information, see Copying a Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use copy-db-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To copy a DB cluster parameter group

The following copy-db-parameter-group example makes a copy of a DB parameter group.

aws rds copy-db-parameter-group \ --source-db-parameter-group-identifier mydbpg \ --target-db-parameter-group-identifier mydbpgcopy \ --target-db-parameter-group-description "Copy of mydbpg parameter group"

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroup": { "DBParameterGroupName": "mydbpgcopy", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:814387698303:pg:mydbpgcopy", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "mysql5.7", "Description": "Copy of mydbpg parameter group" } }

For more information, see Copying a DB Parameter Group in the Amazon RDS Users Guide.

The following code example shows how to use copy-db-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To copy a DB snapshot

The following copy-db-snapshot example creates a copy of a DB snapshot.

aws rds copy-db-snapshot \ --source-db-snapshot-identifier rds:database-mysql-2019-06-06-08-38 --target-db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshotcopy

Output:

{ "DBSnapshot": { "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "Status": "creating", "Encrypted": true, "SourceDBSnapshotIdentifier": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:rds:database-mysql-2019-06-06-08-38", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Iops": 1000, "Port": 3306, "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "DBSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:mydbsnapshotcopy", "EngineVersion": "5.6.40", "OptionGroupName": "default:mysql-5-6", "ProcessorFeatures": [], "Engine": "mysql", "StorageType": "io1", "DbiResourceId": "db-ZI7UJ5BLKMBYFGX7FDENCKADC4", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "SnapshotType": "manual", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "SourceRegion": "us-east-1", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-mysql", "InstanceCreateTime": "2019-04-30T15:45:53.663Z", "AvailabilityZone": "us-east-1f", "PercentProgress": 0, "AllocatedStorage": 100, "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshotcopy" } }

For more information, see Copying a Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

  • For API details, see CopyDbSnapshot in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use copy-option-group.

Amazon CLI

To copy an option group

The following copy-option-group example makes a copy of an option group.

aws rds copy-option-group \ --source-option-group-identifier myoptiongroup \ --target-option-group-identifier new-option-group \ --target-option-group-description "My option group copy"

Output:

{ "OptionGroup": { "Options": [], "OptionGroupName": "new-option-group", "MajorEngineVersion": "11.2", "OptionGroupDescription": "My option group copy", "AllowsVpcAndNonVpcInstanceMemberships": true, "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "OptionGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:og:new-option-group" } }

For more information, see Making a Copy of an Option Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-blue-green-deployment.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To create a blue/green deployment for an RDS for MySQL DB instance

The following create-blue-green-deployment example creates a blue/green deployment for a MySQL DB instance.

aws rds create-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-name bgd-cli-test-instance \ --source arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance \ --target-engine-version 8.0 \ --target-db-parameter-group-name mysql-80-group

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-v53303651eexfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "bgd-cli-test-instance", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "CONFIGURE_BACKUPS", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "CREATING_TOPOLOGY_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "PENDING" } ], "Status": "PROVISIONING", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:18:51.183000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Creating a blue/green deployment in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To create a blue/green deployment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster

The following create-blue-green-deployment example creates a blue/green deployment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster.

aws rds create-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-name my-blue-green-deployment \ --source arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster \ --target-engine-version 8.0 \ --target-db-cluster-parameter-group-name ams-80-binlog-enabled \ --target-db-parameter-group-name mysql-80-cluster-group

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Status": "PROVISIONING" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "Status": "PROVISIONING" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "Status": "PROVISIONING" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "Status": "PROVISIONING" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "Status": "PROVISIONING" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "Status": "PROVISIONING" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "PENDING" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "PENDING" } ], "Status": "PROVISIONING", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:12:00.288000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Creating a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-cluster-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To create a custom DB cluster endpoint

The following create-db-cluster-endpoint example creates a custom DB cluster endpoint and associate it with the specified Aurora DB cluster.

aws rds create-db-cluster-endpoint \ --db-cluster-endpoint-identifier mycustomendpoint \ --endpoint-type reader \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster \ --static-members dbinstance1 dbinstance2

Output:

{ "DBClusterEndpointIdentifier": "mycustomendpoint", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "DBClusterEndpointResourceIdentifier": "cluster-endpoint-ANPAJ4AE5446DAEXAMPLE", "Endpoint": "mycustomendpoint.cluster-custom-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "creating", "EndpointType": "CUSTOM", "CustomEndpointType": "READER", "StaticMembers": [ "dbinstance1", "dbinstance2" ], "ExcludedMembers": [], "DBClusterEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:mycustomendpoint" }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora Connection Management in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-cluster-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB cluster parameter group

The following create-db-cluster-parameter-group example creates a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds create-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclusterparametergroup \ --db-parameter-group-family aurora5.6 \ --description "My new cluster parameter group"

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroup": { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclusterparametergroup", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora5.6", "Description": "My new cluster parameter group", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:mydbclusterparametergroup" } }

For more information, see Creating a DB Cluster Parameter Group in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-cluster-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB cluster snapshot

The following create-db-cluster-snapshot example creates a DB cluster snapshot.

aws rds create-db-cluster-snapshot \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster \ --db-cluster-snapshot-identifier mydbclustersnapshot

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshot": { "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbclustersnapshot", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-18T21:21:00.469Z", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 1, "Status": "creating", "Port": 0, "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LicenseModel": "aurora-mysql", "SnapshotType": "manual", "PercentProgress": 0, "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-snapshot:mydbclustersnapshot", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false } }

For more information, see Creating a DB Cluster Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To create a MySQL 5.7--compatible DB cluster

The following create-db-cluster example creates a MySQL 5.7-compatible DB cluster using the default engine version. Replace the sample password secret99 with a secure password. When you use the console to create a DB cluster, Amazon RDS automatically creates the writer DB instance for your DB cluster. However, when you use the Amazon CLI to create a DB cluster, you must explicitly create the writer DB instance for your DB cluster using the create-db-instance Amazon CLI command.

aws rds create-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier sample-cluster \ --engine aurora-mysql \ --engine-version 5.7 \ --master-username admin \ --master-user-password secret99 \ --db-subnet-group-name default \ --vpc-security-group-ids sg-0b9130572daf3dc16

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-0b9130572daf3dc16", "Status": "active" } ], "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AssociatedRoles": [], "PreferredBackupWindow": "09:12-09:42", "ClusterCreateTime": "2023-02-27T23:21:33.048Z", "DeletionProtection": false, "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "EngineMode": "provisioned", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "StorageEncrypted": false, "MultiAZ": false, "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "mon:04:31-mon:05:01", "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-ANPAJ4AE5446DAEXAMPLE", "DBClusterIdentifier": "sample-cluster", "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "MasterUsername": "master", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.11.1", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:sample-cluster", "DBClusterMembers": [], "Port": 3306, "Status": "creating", "Endpoint": "sample-cluster.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-mysql5.7", "HostedZoneId": "Z2R2ITUGPM61AM", "ReaderEndpoint": "sample-cluster.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false } }

Example 2: To create a PostgreSQL--compatible DB cluster

The following create-db-cluster example creates a PostgreSQL-compatible DB cluster using the default engine version. Replace the example password secret99 with a secure password. When you use the console to create a DB cluster, Amazon RDS automatically creates the writer DB instance for your DB cluster. However, when you use the Amazon CLI to create a DB cluster, you must explicitly create the writer DB instance for your DB cluster using the create-db-instance Amazon CLI command.

aws rds create-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier sample-pg-cluster \ --engine aurora-postgresql \ --master-username master \ --master-user-password secret99 \ --db-subnet-group-name default \ --vpc-security-group-ids sg-0b9130572daf3dc16

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "Endpoint": "sample-pg-cluster.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "DBClusterMembers": [], "EngineMode": "provisioned", "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "HostedZoneId": "Z2R2ITUGPM61AM", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "AllocatedStorage": 1, "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-0b9130572daf3dc16", "Status": "active" } ], "DeletionProtection": false, "StorageEncrypted": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "PreferredBackupWindow": "09:56-10:26", "ClusterCreateTime": "2023-02-27T23:26:08.371Z", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-postgresql13", "EngineVersion": "13.7", "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "Status": "creating", "DBClusterIdentifier": "sample-pg-cluster", "MultiAZ": false, "Port": 5432, "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:sample-pg-cluster", "AssociatedRoles": [], "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-ANPAJ4AE5446DAEXAMPLE", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "wed:03:33-wed:04:03", "ReaderEndpoint": "sample-pg-cluster.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "MasterUsername": "master", "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1c" ], "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBSubnetGroup": "default" } }

For more information, see Creating an Amazon Aurora DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-instance-read-replica.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB instance read replica

This example creates a read replica of an existing DB instance named test-instance. The read replica is named test-instance-repl.

aws rds create-db-instance-read-replica \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance-repl \ --source-db-instance-identifier test-instance

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "MonitoringInterval": 0, "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:test-instance-repl", "ReadReplicaSourceDBInstanceIdentifier": "test-instance", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "test-instance-repl", ...some output truncated... } }

The following code example shows how to use create-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB instance

The following create-db-instance example uses the required options to launch a new DB instance.

aws rds create-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-mysql-instance \ --db-instance-class db.t3.micro \ --engine mysql \ --master-username admin \ --master-user-password secret99 \ --allocated-storage 20

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "test-mysql-instance", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.micro", "Engine": "mysql", "DBInstanceStatus": "creating", "MasterUsername": "admin", "AllocatedStorage": 20, "PreferredBackupWindow": "12:55-13:25", "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DBSecurityGroups": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-12345abc", "Status": "active" } ], "DBParameterGroups": [ { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.mysql5.7", "ParameterApplyStatus": "in-sync" } ], "DBSubnetGroup": { "DBSubnetGroupName": "default", "DBSubnetGroupDescription": "default", "VpcId": "vpc-2ff2ff2f", "SubnetGroupStatus": "Complete", "Subnets": [ { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2c" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2d" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2a" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2b" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" } ] }, "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "sun:08:07-sun:08:37", "PendingModifiedValues": { "MasterUserPassword": "****" }, "MultiAZ": false, "EngineVersion": "5.7.22", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": true, "ReadReplicaDBInstanceIdentifiers": [], "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "OptionGroupMemberships": [ { "OptionGroupName": "default:mysql-5-7", "Status": "in-sync" } ], "PubliclyAccessible": true, "StorageType": "gp2", "DbInstancePort": 0, "StorageEncrypted": false, "DbiResourceId": "db-5555EXAMPLE44444444EXAMPLE", "CACertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-2019", "DomainMemberships": [], "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "MonitoringInterval": 0, "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:db:test-mysql-instance", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "PerformanceInsightsEnabled": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "AssociatedRoles": [] } }

For more information, see Creating an Amazon RDS DB Instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB parameter group

The following create-db-parameter-group example creates a DB parameter group.

aws rds create-db-parameter-group \ --db-parameter-group-name mydbparametergroup \ --db-parameter-group-family MySQL5.6 \ --description "My new parameter group"

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroup": { "DBParameterGroupName": "mydbparametergroup", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "mysql5.6", "Description": "My new parameter group", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:pg:mydbparametergroup" } }

For more information, see Creating a DB Parameter Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-proxy-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB proxy endpoint for an RDS database

The following create-db-proxy-endpoint example creates a DB proxy endpoint.

aws rds create-db-proxy-endpoint \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --db-proxy-endpoint-name "proxyep1" \ --vpc-subnet-ids subnetgroup1 subnetgroup2

Output:

{ "DBProxyEndpoint": { "DBProxyEndpointName": "proxyep1", "DBProxyEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy-endpoint:prx-endpoint-0123a01b12345c0ab", "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "Status": "creating", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234", "sg-5678" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Endpoint": "proxyep1.endpoint.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "TargetRole": "READ_WRITE", "IsDefault": false } }

For more information, see Creating a proxy endpoint in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Creating a proxy endpoint in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-proxy.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB proxy for an RDS database

The following create-db-proxy example creates a DB proxy.

aws rds create-db-proxy \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --engine-family MYSQL \ --auth Description="proxydescription1",AuthScheme="SECRETS",SecretArn="arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:secretName-1234f",IAMAuth="DISABLED",ClientPasswordAuthType="MYSQL_NATIVE_PASSWORD" \ --role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789123:role/ProxyRole \ --vpc-subnet-ids subnetgroup1 subnetgroup2

Output:

{ "DBProxy": { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "DBProxyArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy:prx-0123a01b12345c0ab", "EngineFamily": "MYSQL", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecuritytGroupIds": [ "sg-1234", "sg-5678", "sg-9101" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Auth": "[ { "Description": "proxydescription1", "AuthScheme": "SECRETS", "SecretArn": "arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:proxysecret1-Abcd1e", "IAMAuth": "DISABLED" } ]", "RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::12345678912:role/ProxyRole", "Endpoint": "proxyExample.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RequireTLS": false, "IdleClientTimeout": 1800, "DebuggingLogging": false, "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Creating an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Creating an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

  • For API details, see CreateDbProxy in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-security-group.

Amazon CLI

To create an Amazon RDS DB security group

The following create-db-security-group command creates a new Amazon RDS DB security group:

aws rds create-db-security-group --db-security-group-name mysecgroup --db-security-group-description "My Test Security Group"

In the example, the new DB security group is named mysecgroup and has a description.

Output:

{ "DBSecurityGroup": { "OwnerId": "123456789012", "DBSecurityGroupName": "mysecgroup", "DBSecurityGroupDescription": "My Test Security Group", "VpcId": "vpc-a1b2c3d4", "EC2SecurityGroups": [], "IPRanges": [], "DBSecurityGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:secgrp:mysecgroup" } }

The following code example shows how to use create-db-shard-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To create an Aurora PostgreSQL primary DB cluster

The following create-db-cluster example creates an Aurora PostgreSQL SQL primary DB cluster that's compatible with Aurora Serverless v2 and Aurora Limitless Database.

aws rds create-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier my-sv2-cluster \ --engine aurora-postgresql \ --engine-version 15.2-limitless \ --storage-type aurora-iopt1 \ --serverless-v2-scaling-configuration MinCapacity=2,MaxCapacity=16 \ --enable-limitless-database \ --master-username myuser \ --master-user-password mypassword \ --enable-cloudwatch-logs-exports postgresql

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-2b", "us-east-2c", "us-east-2a" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-postgresql15", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "creating", "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.cluster-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.cluster-ro-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "EngineVersion": "15.2-limitless", "Port": 5432, "MasterUsername": "myuser", "PreferredBackupWindow": "06:05-06:35", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "mon:08:25-mon:08:55", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-########", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z2XHWR1EXAMPLE", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-XYEDT6ML6FHIXH4Q2J1EXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-2:123456789012:cluster:my-sv2-cluster", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ClusterCreateTime": "2024-02-19T16:24:07.771000+00:00", "EnabledCloudwatchLogsExports": [ "postgresql" ], "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "CrossAccountClone": false, "DomainMemberships": [], "TagList": [], "StorageType": "aurora-iopt1", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": true, "ServerlessV2ScalingConfiguration": { "MinCapacity": 2.0, "MaxCapacity": 16.0 }, "NetworkType": "IPV4", "IOOptimizedNextAllowedModificationTime": "2024-03-21T16:24:07.781000+00:00", "LimitlessDatabase": { "Status": "not-in-use", "MinRequiredACU": 96.0 } } }

Example 2: To create the primary (writer) DB instance

The following create-db-instance example creates an Aurora Serverless v2 primary (writer) DB instance. When you use the console to create a DB cluster, Amazon RDS automatically creates the writer DB instance for your DB cluster. However, when you use the Amazon CLI to create a DB cluster, you must explicitly create the writer DB instance for your DB cluster using the create-db-instance Amazon CLI command.

aws rds create-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier my-sv2-instance \ --db-cluster-identifier my-sv2-cluster \ --engine aurora-postgresql \ --db-instance-class db.serverless

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "my-sv2-instance", "DBInstanceClass": "db.serverless", "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "DBInstanceStatus": "creating", "MasterUsername": "myuser", "AllocatedStorage": 1, "PreferredBackupWindow": "06:05-06:35", "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DBSecurityGroups": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-########", "Status": "active" } ], "DBParameterGroups": [ { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.aurora-postgresql15", "ParameterApplyStatus": "in-sync" } ], "DBSubnetGroup": { "DBSubnetGroupName": "default", "DBSubnetGroupDescription": "default", "VpcId": "vpc-########", "SubnetGroupStatus": "Complete", "Subnets": [ { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-2c" }, "SubnetOutpost": {}, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-2a" }, "SubnetOutpost": {}, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-########", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-2b" }, "SubnetOutpost": {}, "SubnetStatus": "Active" } ] }, "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "fri:09:01-fri:09:31", "PendingModifiedValues": { "PendingCloudwatchLogsExports": { "LogTypesToEnable": [ "postgresql" ] } }, "MultiAZ": false, "EngineVersion": "15.2-limitless", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": true, "ReadReplicaDBInstanceIdentifiers": [], "LicenseModel": "postgresql-license", "OptionGroupMemberships": [ { "OptionGroupName": "default:aurora-postgresql-15", "Status": "in-sync" } ], "PubliclyAccessible": false, "StorageType": "aurora-iopt1", "DbInstancePort": 0, "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DbiResourceId": "db-BIQTE3B3K3RM7M74SK5EXAMPLE", "CACertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-rsa2048-g1", "DomainMemberships": [], "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "MonitoringInterval": 0, "PromotionTier": 1, "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-2:123456789012:db:my-sv2-instance", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "PerformanceInsightsEnabled": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "AssociatedRoles": [], "TagList": [], "CustomerOwnedIpEnabled": false, "BackupTarget": "region", "NetworkType": "IPV4", "StorageThroughput": 0, "CertificateDetails": { "CAIdentifier": "rds-ca-rsa2048-g1" }, "DedicatedLogVolume": false } }

Example 3: To create the DB shard group

The following create-db-shard-group example creates a DB shard group in your Aurora PostgreSQL primary DB cluster.

aws rds create-db-shard-group \ --db-shard-group-identifier my-db-shard-group \ --db-cluster-identifier my-sv2-cluster \ --max-acu 768

Output:

{ "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "creating", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" }

For more information, see Using Aurora Serverless v2 in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB snapshot

The following create-db-snapshot example creates a DB snapshot.

aws rds create-db-snapshot \ --db-instance-identifier database-mysql \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot

Output:

{ "DBSnapshot": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-mysql", "Engine": "mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 100, "Status": "creating", "Port": 3306, "AvailabilityZone": "us-east-1b", "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "InstanceCreateTime": "2019-04-30T15:45:53.663Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "EngineVersion": "5.6.40", "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "SnapshotType": "manual", "Iops": 1000, "OptionGroupName": "default:mysql-5-6", "PercentProgress": 0, "StorageType": "io1", "Encrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:mydbsnapshot", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ProcessorFeatures": [], "DbiResourceId": "db-AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" } }

For more information, see Creating a DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-db-subnet-group.

Amazon CLI

To create a DB subnet group

The following create-db-subnet-group example creates a DB subnet group called mysubnetgroup using existing subnets.

aws rds create-db-subnet-group \ --db-subnet-group-name mysubnetgroup \ --db-subnet-group-description "test DB subnet group" \ --subnet-ids '["subnet-0a1dc4e1a6f123456","subnet-070dd7ecb3aaaaaaa","subnet-00f5b198bc0abcdef"]'

Output:

{ "DBSubnetGroup": { "DBSubnetGroupName": "mysubnetgroup", "DBSubnetGroupDescription": "test DB subnet group", "VpcId": "vpc-0f08e7610a1b2c3d4", "SubnetGroupStatus": "Complete", "Subnets": [ { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-070dd7ecb3aaaaaaa", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2b" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-00f5b198bc0abcdef", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2d" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-0a1dc4e1a6f123456", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2b" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" } ], "DBSubnetGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:0123456789012:subgrp:mysubnetgroup" } }

For more information, see Creating a DB Instance in a VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-event-subscription.

Amazon CLI

To create an event subscription

The following create-event-subscription example creates a subscription for backup and recovery events for DB instances in the current Amazon account. Notifications are sent to an Amazon Simple Notification Service topic, specified by --sns-topic-arn.

aws rds create-event-subscription \ --subscription-name my-instance-events \ --source-type db-instance \ --event-categories '["backup","recovery"]' \ --sns-topic-arn arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events

Output:

{ "EventSubscription": { "Status": "creating", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "SubscriptionCreationTime": "Tue Jul 31 23:22:01 UTC 2018", "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events", "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "SourceType": "db-instance", "Enabled": true } }

The following code example shows how to use create-global-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To create a global DB cluster

The following create-global-cluster example creates a new Aurora MySQL-compatible global DB cluster.

aws rds create-global-cluster \ --global-cluster-identifier myglobalcluster \ --engine aurora-mysql

Output:

{ "GlobalCluster": { "GlobalClusterIdentifier": "myglobalcluster", "GlobalClusterResourceId": "cluster-f0e523bfe07aabb", "GlobalClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds::123456789012:global-cluster:myglobalcluster", "Status": "available", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.07.2", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "GlobalClusterMembers": [] } }

For more information, see Creating an Aurora global database in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use create-option-group.

Amazon CLI

To Create an Amazon RDS option group

The following create-option-group command creates a new Amazon RDS option group for Oracle Enterprise Edition version 11.2`, is named ``MyOptionGroup and includes a description.

aws rds create-option-group \ --option-group-name MyOptionGroup \ --engine-name oracle-ee \ --major-engine-version 11.2 \ --option-group-description "Oracle Database Manager Database Control"

Output:

{ "OptionGroup": { "OptionGroupName": "myoptiongroup", "OptionGroupDescription": "Oracle Database Manager Database Control", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "11.2", "Options": [], "AllowsVpcAndNonVpcInstanceMemberships": true, "OptionGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:og:myoptiongroup" } }

The following code example shows how to use delete-blue-green-deployment.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To delete resources in green environment for an RDS for MySQL DB instance

The following delete-blue-green-deployment example deletes the resources in a green environment for an RDS for MySQL DB instance.

aws rds delete-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-v53303651eexfake \ --delete-target

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-v53303651eexfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "bgd-cli-test-instance", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-rkfbpe", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-rkfbpe", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1-green-j382ha", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2-green-ejv4ao", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3-green-vlpz3t", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CONFIGURE_BACKUPS", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATING_TOPOLOGY_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "DELETING", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:18:51.183000+00:00", "DeleteTime": "2022-02-25T22:25:31.331000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Deleting a blue/green deployment in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To delete resources in green environment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster

The following delete-blue-green-deployment example deletes the resources in a green environment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster.

aws rds delete-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake \ --delete-target

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1-green-gpmaxf", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2-green-j2oajq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3-green-mkxies", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint-green-4sqjrq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint-green-gwwzlg", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "DELETING", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:12:00.288000+00:00", "DeleteTime": "2022-02-25T22:29:11.336000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Deleting a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-cluster-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To delete a custom DB cluster endpoint

The following delete-db-cluster-endpoint example deletes the specified custom DB cluster endpoint.

aws rds delete-db-cluster-endpoint \ --db-cluster-endpoint-identifier mycustomendpoint

Output:

{ "DBClusterEndpointIdentifier": "mycustomendpoint", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "DBClusterEndpointResourceIdentifier": "cluster-endpoint-ANPAJ4AE5446DAEXAMPLE", "Endpoint": "mycustomendpoint.cluster-custom-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "deleting", "EndpointType": "CUSTOM", "CustomEndpointType": "READER", "StaticMembers": [ "dbinstance1", "dbinstance2", "dbinstance3" ], "ExcludedMembers": [], "DBClusterEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:mycustomendpoint" }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora Connection Management in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-cluster-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB cluster parameter group

The following delete-db-cluster-parameter-group example deletes the specified DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds delete-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclusterparametergroup

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups and DB Cluster Parameter Groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-cluster-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB cluster snapshot

The following delete-db-cluster-snapshot example deletes the specified DB cluster snapshot.

aws rds delete-db-cluster-snapshot \ --db-cluster-snapshot-identifier mydbclustersnapshot

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshot": { "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbclustersnapshot", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-18T21:21:00.469Z", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 0, "Status": "available", "Port": 0, "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LicenseModel": "aurora-mysql", "SnapshotType": "manual", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-snapshot:mydbclustersnapshot", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false } }

For more information, see Deleting a Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To delete a DB instance in a DB cluster

The following delete-db-instance example deletes the final DB instance in a DB cluster. You can't delete a DB cluster if it contains DB instances that aren't in the deleting state. You can't take a final snapshot when deleting a DB instance in a DB cluster.

aws rds delete-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier database-3

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-3", "DBInstanceClass": "db.r4.large", "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "DBInstanceStatus": "deleting", ...output omitted... } }

For more information, see Deleting a DB Instance in an Aurora DB Cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To delete a DB cluster

The following delete-db-cluster example deletes the DB cluster named mycluster and takes a final snapshot named mycluster-final-snapshot. The status of the DB cluster is available while the snapshot is being taken. To follow the progress of the deletion, use the describe-db-clusters CLI command.

aws rds delete-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mycluster \ --no-skip-final-snapshot \ --final-db-snapshot-identifier mycluster-final-snapshot

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 20, "AvailabilityZones": [ "eu-central-1b", "eu-central-1c", "eu-central-1a" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DBClusterIdentifier": "mycluster", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-postgresql10", "DBSubnetGroup": "default-vpc-aa11bb22", "Status": "available", ...output omitted... } }

For more information, see Aurora Clusters with a Single DB Instance in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-instance-automated-backup.

Amazon CLI

To delete a replicated automated backup from a Region

The following delete-db-instance-automated-backup example deletes the automated backup with the specified Amazon Resource Name (ARN).

aws rds delete-db-instance-automated-backup \ --db-instance-automated-backups-arn "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example"

Output:

{ "DBInstanceAutomatedBackup": { "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db", "DbiResourceId": "db-JKIB2GFQ5RV7REPLZA4EXAMPLE", "Region": "us-east-1", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "new-orcl-db", "RestoreWindow": {}, "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "deleting", "Port": 1521, "AvailabilityZone": "us-east-1b", "VpcId": "vpc-########", "InstanceCreateTime": "2020-12-04T15:28:31Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Engine": "oracle-se2", "EngineVersion": "12.1.0.2.v21", "LicenseModel": "bring-your-own-license", "OptionGroupName": "default:oracle-se2-12-1", "Encrypted": false, "StorageType": "gp2", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DBInstanceAutomatedBackupsArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example" } }

For more information, see Deleting replicated backups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB instance

The following delete-db-instance example deletes the specified DB instance after creating a final DB snapshot named test-instance-final-snap.

aws rds delete-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --final-db-snapshot-identifier test-instance-final-snap

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "test-instance", "DBInstanceStatus": "deleting", ...some output truncated... } }

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB parameter group

The following command example deletes a DB parameter group.

aws rds delete-db-parameter-group \ --db-parameter-group-name mydbparametergroup

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-proxy-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB proxy endpoint for an RDS database

The following delete-db-proxy-endpoint example deletes a DB proxy endpoint for the target database.

aws rds delete-db-proxy-endpoint \ --db-proxy-endpoint-name proxyEP1

Output:

{ "DBProxyEndpoint": { "DBProxyEndpointName": "proxyEP1", "DBProxyEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy-endpoint:prx-endpoint-0123a01b12345c0ab", "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "Status": "deleting", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234", "sg-5678" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Endpoint": "proxyEP1.endpoint.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CreatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00", "TargetRole": "READ_ONLY", "IsDefault": false } }

For more information, see Deleting a proxy endpoint in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Deleting a proxy endpoint in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-proxy.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB proxy for an RDS database

The following delete-db-proxy example deletes a DB proxy.

aws rds delete-db-proxy \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample

Output:

{ "DBProxy": { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "DBProxyArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy:prx-0123a01b12345c0ab", "Status": "deleting", "EngineFamily": "PostgreSQL", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234", "sg-5678" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Auth": "[ { "Description": "proxydescription`" "AuthScheme": "SECRETS", "SecretArn": "arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:proxysecret1-Abcd1e", "IAMAuth": "DISABLED" } ], "RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::12345678912:role/ProxyPostgreSQLRole", "Endpoint": "proxyExample.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RequireTLS": false, "IdleClientTimeout": 1800, "DebuggingLogging": false, "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Deleting an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Deleting an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

  • For API details, see DeleteDbProxy in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-security-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB security group

The following delete-db-security-group example deletes a DB security group named mysecuritygroup.

aws rds delete-db-security-group \ --db-security-group-name mysecuritygroup

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Working with DB security groups (EC2-Classic platform) in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-shard-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To delete a DB shard group unsuccessfully

The following delete-db-shard-group example shows the error that occurs when you try to delete a DB shard group before deleting all of your databases and schemas.

aws rds delete-db-shard-group \ --db-shard-group-identifier limitless-test-shard-grp

Output:

An error occurred (InvalidDBShardGroupState) when calling the DeleteDBShardGroup operation: Unable to delete the DB shard group limitless-test-db-shard-group. Delete all of your Limitless Database databases and schemas, then try again.

Example 2: To delete a DB shard group successfully

The following delete-db-shard-group example deletes a DB shard group after you've deleted all of your databases and schemas, including the public schema.

aws rds delete-db-shard-group \ --db-shard-group-identifier limitless-test-shard-grp

Output:

{ "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-7bb446329da94788b3f957746example", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "limitless-test-shard-grp", "DBClusterIdentifier": "limitless-test-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "deleting", "PubliclyAccessible": true, "Endpoint": "limitless-test-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" }

For more information, see Deleting Aurora DB clusters and DB instances in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB snapshot

The following delete-db-snapshot example deletes the specified DB snapshot.

aws rds delete-db-snapshot \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot

Output:

{ "DBSnapshot": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-mysql", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-18T22:08:40.702Z", "Engine": "mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 100, "Status": "deleted", "Port": 3306, "AvailabilityZone": "us-east-1b", "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "InstanceCreateTime": "2019-04-30T15:45:53.663Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "EngineVersion": "5.6.40", "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "SnapshotType": "manual", "Iops": 1000, "OptionGroupName": "default:mysql-5-6", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageType": "io1", "Encrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:mydbsnapshot", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ProcessorFeatures": [], "DbiResourceId": "db-AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" } }

For more information, see Deleting a Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-db-subnet-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete a DB subnet group

The following delete-db-subnet-group example deletes the DB subnet group called mysubnetgroup.

aws rds delete-db-subnet-group --db-subnet-group-name mysubnetgroup

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Working with a DB Instance in a VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-event-subscription.

Amazon CLI

To delete an event subscription

The following delete-event-subscription example deletes the specified event subscription.

aws rds delete-event-subscription --subscription-name my-instance-events

Output:

{ "EventSubscription": { "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "Enabled": false, "SourceIdsList": [ "test-instance" ], "SourceType": "db-instance", "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "SubscriptionCreationTime": "2018-07-31 23:22:01.893", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events", "Status": "deleting" } }

The following code example shows how to use delete-global-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To delete a global DB cluster

The following delete-global-cluster example deletes an Aurora MySQL-compatible global DB cluster. The output shows the cluster that you're deleting, but subsequent describe-global-clusters commands don't list that DB cluster.

aws rds delete-global-cluster \ --global-cluster-identifier myglobalcluster

Output:

{ "GlobalCluster": { "GlobalClusterIdentifier": "myglobalcluster", "GlobalClusterResourceId": "cluster-f0e523bfe07aabb", "GlobalClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds::123456789012:global-cluster:myglobalcluster", "Status": "available", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.07.2", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "GlobalClusterMembers": [] } }

For more information, see Deleting an Aurora global database in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-option-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete an option group

The following delete-option-group example deletes the specified option group.

aws rds delete-option-group \ --option-group-name myoptiongroup

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Deleting an Option Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use deregister-db-proxy-targets.

Amazon CLI

To deregister a DB proxy target from database target group

The following deregister-db-proxy-targets example removes the association between the proxy proxyExample and its target.

aws rds deregister-db-proxy-targets \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --db-instance-identifiers database-1

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Deleting an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Deleting an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-account-attributes.

Amazon CLI

To describe account attributes

The following describe-account-attributes example retrieves the attributes for the current Amazon account.

aws rds describe-account-attributes

Output:

{ "AccountQuotas": [ { "Max": 40, "Used": 4, "AccountQuotaName": "DBInstances" }, { "Max": 40, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "ReservedDBInstances" }, { "Max": 100000, "Used": 40, "AccountQuotaName": "AllocatedStorage" }, { "Max": 25, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "DBSecurityGroups" }, { "Max": 20, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "AuthorizationsPerDBSecurityGroup" }, { "Max": 50, "Used": 1, "AccountQuotaName": "DBParameterGroups" }, { "Max": 100, "Used": 3, "AccountQuotaName": "ManualSnapshots" }, { "Max": 20, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "EventSubscriptions" }, { "Max": 50, "Used": 1, "AccountQuotaName": "DBSubnetGroups" }, { "Max": 20, "Used": 1, "AccountQuotaName": "OptionGroups" }, { "Max": 20, "Used": 6, "AccountQuotaName": "SubnetsPerDBSubnetGroup" }, { "Max": 5, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "ReadReplicasPerMaster" }, { "Max": 40, "Used": 1, "AccountQuotaName": "DBClusters" }, { "Max": 50, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "DBClusterParameterGroups" }, { "Max": 5, "Used": 0, "AccountQuotaName": "DBClusterRoles" } ] }

The following code example shows how to use describe-blue-green-deployments.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe a blue/green deployment of an RDS DB instance after creation completes

The following describe-blue-green-deployment example retrieves the details of a blue/green deployment after creation completes.

aws rds describe-blue-green-deployments \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-v53303651eexfake

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployments": [ { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-v53303651eexfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "bgd-cli-test-instance", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-rkfbpe", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-rkfbpe", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1-green-j382ha", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2-green-ejv4ao", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3-green-vlpz3t", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CONFIGURE_BACKUPS", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATING_TOPOLOGY_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "AVAILABLE", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:18:51.183000+00:00" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a blue/green deployment in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To describe a blue/green deployment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster

The following describe-blue-green-deployment example retrieves the details of a blue/green deployment.

aws rds describe-blue-green-deployments \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployments": [ { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1-green-gpmaxf", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2-green-j2oajq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3-green-mkxies", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint-green-4sqjrq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint-green-gwwzlg", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "AVAILABLE", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:12:00.288000+00:00" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 3: To describe a blue/green deployment for an Aurora MySQL cluster after switchover

The following describe-blue-green-deployment example retrieves the details about a blue/green deployment after the green environment is promoted to be the production environment.

aws rds describe-blue-green-deployments \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployments": [ { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-old1", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T22:38:49.522000+00:00" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 4: To describe a combined blue/green deployment

The following describe-blue-green-deployment example retrieves the details of a combined blue/green deployment.

aws rds describe-blue-green-deployments

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployments": [ { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzgfakelccs", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3rnukl", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1-green-gpmaxf", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2-green-j2oajq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3-green-mkxies", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint-green-4sqjrq", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint-green-gwwzlg", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "AVAILABLE", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T21:12:00.288000+00:00" }, { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-v5330365fake1eex", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "bgd-cli-test-instance", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-old1", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3-old1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3", "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CONFIGURE_BACKUPS", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATING_TOPOLOGY_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "SWITCHOVER_COMPLETED", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T22:33:22.225000+00:00" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a blue/green deployment in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-certificates.

Amazon CLI

To describe certificates

The following describe-certificates example retrieves the details of the certificate associated with the user's default region.

aws rds describe-certificates

Output:

{ "Certificates": [ { "CertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-ecc384-g1", "CertificateType": "CA", "Thumbprint": "2ee3dcc06e50192559b13929e73484354f23387d", "ValidFrom": "2021-05-24T22:06:59+00:00", "ValidTill": "2121-05-24T23:06:59+00:00", "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2::cert:rds-ca-ecc384-g1", "CustomerOverride": false }, { "CertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-rsa4096-g1", "CertificateType": "CA", "Thumbprint": "19da4f2af579a8ae1f6a0fa77aa5befd874b4cab", "ValidFrom": "2021-05-24T22:03:20+00:00", "ValidTill": "2121-05-24T23:03:20+00:00", "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2::cert:rds-ca-rsa4096-g1", "CustomerOverride": false }, { "CertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-rsa2048-g1", "CertificateType": "CA", "Thumbprint": "7c40cb42714b6fdb2b296f9bbd0e8bb364436a76", "ValidFrom": "2021-05-24T21:59:00+00:00", "ValidTill": "2061-05-24T22:59:00+00:00", "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2::cert:rds-ca-rsa2048-g1", "CustomerOverride": true, "CustomerOverrideValidTill": "2061-05-24T22:59:00+00:00" }, { "CertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-2019", "CertificateType": "CA", "Thumbprint": "d40ddb29e3750dffa671c3140bbf5f478d1c8096", "ValidFrom": "2019-08-22T17:08:50+00:00", "ValidTill": "2024-08-22T17:08:50+00:00", "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2::cert:rds-ca-2019", "CustomerOverride": false } ], "DefaultCertificateForNewLaunches": "rds-ca-rsa2048-g1" }

For more information, see Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-backtracks.

Amazon CLI

To describe backtracks for a DB cluster

The following describe-db-cluster-backtracks example retrieves details about the specified DB cluster.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-backtracks \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster

Output:

{ "DBClusterBacktracks": [ { "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "BacktrackIdentifier": "2f5f5294-0dd2-44c9-9f50-EXAMPLE", "BacktrackTo": "2021-02-12T04:59:22Z", "BacktrackedFrom": "2021-02-12T14:37:31.640Z", "BacktrackRequestCreationTime": "2021-02-12T14:36:18.819Z", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "BacktrackIdentifier": "3c7a6421-af2a-4ea3-ae95-EXAMPLE", "BacktrackTo": "2021-02-11T22:53:46Z", "BacktrackedFrom": "2021-02-12T00:09:27.006Z", "BacktrackRequestCreationTime": "2021-02-12T00:07:53.487Z", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ] }

For more information, see Backtracking an Aurora DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-endpoints.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe DB cluster endpoints

The following describe-db-cluster-endpoints example retrieves details for your DB cluster endpoints. The most common kinds of Aurora clusters have two endpoints. One endpoint has type WRITER. You can use this endpoint for all SQL statements. The other endpoint has type READER. You can use this endpoint only for SELECT and other read-only SQL statements.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-endpoints

Output:

{ "DBClusterEndpoints": [ { "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-database-1", "Endpoint": "my-database-1.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "creating", "EndpointType": "WRITER" }, { "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-database-1", "Endpoint": "my-database-1.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "creating", "EndpointType": "READER" }, { "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "Endpoint": "mydbcluster.cluster-cnpexamle.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "EndpointType": "WRITER" }, { "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "Endpoint": "mydbcluster.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "EndpointType": "READER" } ] }

Example 2: To describe DB cluster endpoints of a single DB cluster

The following describe-db-cluster-endpoints example retrieves details for the DB cluster endpoints of a single specified DB cluster. Aurora Serverless clusters have only a single endpoint with a type of WRITER.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-endpoints \ --db-cluster-identifier serverless-cluster

Output:

{ "DBClusterEndpoints": [ { "Status": "available", "Endpoint": "serverless-cluster.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "DBClusterIdentifier": "serverless-cluster", "EndpointType": "WRITER" } ] }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora Connection Management in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-parameter-groups.

Amazon CLI

To describe DB cluster parameter groups

The following describe-db-cluster-parameter-groups example retrieves details for your DB cluster parameter groups.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameter-groups

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroups": [ { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "default.aurora-mysql5.7", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-mysql5.7", "Description": "Default cluster parameter group for aurora-mysql5.7", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:default.aurora-mysql5.7" }, { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "default.aurora-postgresql9.6", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-postgresql9.6", "Description": "Default cluster parameter group for aurora-postgresql9.6", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:default.aurora-postgresql9.6" }, { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "default.aurora5.6", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora5.6", "Description": "Default cluster parameter group for aurora5.6", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:default.aurora5.6" }, { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclusterpg", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-mysql5.7", "Description": "My DB cluster parameter group", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:mydbclusterpg" }, { "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclusterpgcopy", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-mysql5.7", "Description": "Copy of mydbclusterpg parameter group", "DBClusterParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-pg:mydbclusterpgcopy" } ] }

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups and DB Cluster Parameter Groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-parameters.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe the parameters in a DB cluster parameter group

The following describe-db-cluster-parameters example retrieves details about the parameters in a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameters \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclusterpg

Output:

{ "Parameters": [ { "ParameterName": "allow-suspicious-udfs", "Description": "Controls whether user-defined functions that have only an xxx symbol for the main function can be loaded", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "static", "DataType": "boolean", "AllowedValues": "0,1", "IsModifiable": false, "ApplyMethod": "pending-reboot", "SupportedEngineModes": [ "provisioned" ] }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_lab_mode", "ParameterValue": "0", "Description": "Enables new features in the Aurora engine.", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "static", "DataType": "boolean", "AllowedValues": "0,1", "IsModifiable": true, "ApplyMethod": "pending-reboot", "SupportedEngineModes": [ "provisioned" ] }, ...some output truncated... ] }

Example 2: To list only the parameter names in a DB cluster parameter group

The following describe-db-cluster-parameters example retrieves only the names of the parameters in a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameters \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name default.aurora-mysql5.7 \ --query 'Parameters[].{ParameterName:ParameterName}'

Output:

[ { "ParameterName": "allow-suspicious-udfs" }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_read_buffer_size" }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_replication_max_yield_seconds" }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_use_large_read_buffer" }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_lab_mode" }, ...some output truncated... } ]

Example 3: To describe only the modifiable parameters in a DB cluster parameter group

The following describe-db-cluster-parameters example retrieves the names of only the parameters that you can modify in a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameters \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name default.aurora-mysql5.7 \ --query 'Parameters[].{ParameterName:ParameterName,IsModifiable:IsModifiable} | [?IsModifiable == `true`]'

Output:

[ { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_read_buffer_size", "IsModifiable": true }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_replication_max_yield_seconds", "IsModifiable": true }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_use_large_read_buffer", "IsModifiable": true }, { "ParameterName": "aurora_lab_mode", "IsModifiable": true }, ...some output truncated... } ]

Example 4: To describe only the modifable Boolean parameters in a DB cluster parameter group

The following describe-db-cluster-parameters example retrieves the names of only the parameters that you can modify in a DB cluster parameter group and that have a Boolean data type.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameters \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name default.aurora-mysql5.7 \ --query 'Parameters[].{ParameterName:ParameterName,DataType:DataType,IsModifiable:IsModifiable} | [?DataType == `boolean`] | [?IsModifiable == `true`]'

Output:

[ { "DataType": "boolean", "ParameterName": "aurora_binlog_use_large_read_buffer", "IsModifiable": true }, { "DataType": "boolean", "ParameterName": "aurora_lab_mode", "IsModifiable": true }, { "DataType": "boolean", "ParameterName": "autocommit", "IsModifiable": true }, { "DataType": "boolean", "ParameterName": "automatic_sp_privileges", "IsModifiable": true }, ...some output truncated... } ]

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups and DB Cluster Parameter Groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-snapshot-attributes.

Amazon CLI

To describe the attribute names and values for a DB cluster snapshot

The following describe-db-cluster-snapshot-attributes example retrieves details of the attribute names and values for the specified DB cluster snapshot.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-snapshot-attributes \ --db-cluster-snapshot-identifier myclustersnapshot

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "myclustersnapshot", "DBClusterSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "123456789012" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Sharing a DB Cluster Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-cluster-snapshots.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB cluster snapshot for a DB cluster

The following describe-db-cluster-snapshots example retrieves the details for the DB cluster snapshots for the specified DB cluster.

aws rds describe-db-cluster-snapshots \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshots": [ { "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "myclustersnapshotcopy", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-04T09:16:42.649Z", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 0, "Status": "available", "Port": 0, "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LicenseModel": "aurora-mysql", "SnapshotType": "manual", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:123456789012:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:814387698303:cluster-snapshot:myclustersnapshotcopy", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false }, { "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "rds:mydbcluster-2019-06-20-09-16", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2019-06-20T09:16:26.569Z", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 0, "Status": "available", "Port": 0, "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LicenseModel": "aurora-mysql", "SnapshotType": "automated", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:814387698303:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-snapshot:rds:mydbcluster-2019-06-20-09-16", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false } ] }

For more information, see Creating a DB Cluster Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-clusters.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe a DB cluster

The following describe-db-clusters example retrieves the details of the specified DB cluster.

aws rds describe-db-clusters \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster

Output:

{ "DBClusters": [ { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1e" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DatabaseName": "mydbcluster", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-mysql5.7", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "available", "EarliestRestorableTime": "2019-06-19T09:16:28.210Z", "Endpoint": "mydbcluster.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "mydbcluster.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": true, "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.04.2", "LatestRestorableTime": "2019-06-20T22:38:14.908Z", "Port": 3306, "MasterUsername": "myadmin", "PreferredBackupWindow": "09:09-09:39", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "sat:04:09-sat:04:39", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [ { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "dbinstance3", "IsClusterWriter": false, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 }, { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "dbinstance1", "IsClusterWriter": false, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 }, { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "dbinstance2", "IsClusterWriter": false, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 }, { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "IsClusterWriter": false, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 }, { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "mydbcluster-us-east-1b", "IsClusterWriter": false, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 }, { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "IsClusterWriter": true, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 } ], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-0b9130572daf3dc16", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z2R2ITUGPM61AM", "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:814387698303:key/AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:mydbcluster", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ClusterCreateTime": "2019-04-15T14:18:42.785Z", "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false } ] }

Example 2: To list certain attributes of all DB clusters

The following describe-db-clusters example retrieves only the DBClusterIdentifier, Endpoint, and ReaderEndpoint attributes of all your DB clusters in the current Amazon Region.

aws rds describe-db-clusters \ --query 'DBClusters[].{DBClusterIdentifier:DBClusterIdentifier,Endpoint:Endpoint,ReaderEndpoint:ReaderEndpoint}'

Output:

[ { "Endpoint": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-2270.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-2270.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "DBClusterIdentifier": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-2270" }, { "Endpoint": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-4615.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-4615.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "DBClusterIdentifier": "cluster-57-2020-05-01-4615" }, { "Endpoint": "pg2-cluster.cluster-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "pg2-cluster.cluster-ro-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "DBClusterIdentifier": "pg2-cluster" }, ...output omitted... } ]

Example 3: To list DB clusters with a specific attribute

The following describe-db-clusters example retrieves only the DBClusterIdentifier and Engine attributes of your DB clusters that use the aurora-postgresql DB engine.

aws rds describe-db-clusters \ --query 'DBClusters[].{DBClusterIdentifier:DBClusterIdentifier,Engine:Engine} | [?Engine == `aurora-postgresql`]'

Output:

[ { "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "DBClusterIdentifier": "pg2-cluster" } ]

For more information, see Amazon Aurora DB Clusters in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-engine-versions.

Amazon CLI

To describe the DB engine versions for the MySQL DB engine

The following describe-db-engine-versions example displays details about each of the DB engine versions for the specified DB engine.

aws rds describe-db-engine-versions \ --engine mysql

Output:

{ "DBEngineVersions": [ { "Engine": "mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.5.46", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "mysql5.5", "DBEngineDescription": "MySQL Community Edition", "DBEngineVersionDescription": "MySQL 5.5.46", "ValidUpgradeTarget": [ { "Engine": "mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.5.53", "Description": "MySQL 5.5.53", "AutoUpgrade": false, "IsMajorVersionUpgrade": false }, { "Engine": "mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.5.54", "Description": "MySQL 5.5.54", "AutoUpgrade": false, "IsMajorVersionUpgrade": false }, { "Engine": "mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.5.57", "Description": "MySQL 5.5.57", "AutoUpgrade": false, "IsMajorVersionUpgrade": false }, ...some output truncated... ] }

For more information, see What Is Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS)? in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-instance-automated-backups.

Amazon CLI

To describe the automated backups for a DB instance

The following describe-db-instance-automated-backups example displays details about the automated backups for the specified DB instance. The details include replicated automated backups in other Amazon Regions.

aws rds describe-db-instance-automated-backups \ --db-instance-identifier new-orcl-db

Output:

{ "DBInstanceAutomatedBackups": [ { "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db", "DbiResourceId": "db-JKIB2GFQ5RV7REPLZA4EXAMPLE", "Region": "us-east-1", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "new-orcl-db", "RestoreWindow": { "EarliestTime": "2020-12-07T21:05:20.939Z", "LatestTime": "2020-12-07T21:05:20.939Z" }, "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "replicating", "Port": 1521, "InstanceCreateTime": "2020-12-04T15:28:31Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Engine": "oracle-se2", "EngineVersion": "12.1.0.2.v21", "LicenseModel": "bring-your-own-license", "OptionGroupName": "default:oracle-se2-12-1", "Encrypted": false, "StorageType": "gp2", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 14, "DBInstanceAutomatedBackupsArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example" } ] }

For more information, see Finding information about replicated backups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-instances.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB instance

The following describe-db-instances example retrieves details about the specified DB instance.

aws rds describe-db-instances \ --db-instance-identifier mydbinstancecf

Output:

{ "DBInstances": [ { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "mydbinstancecf", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.small", "Engine": "mysql", "DBInstanceStatus": "available", "MasterUsername": "masterawsuser", "Endpoint": { "Address": "mydbinstancecf.abcexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Port": 3306, "HostedZoneId": "Z2R2ITUGPM61AM" }, ...some output truncated... } ] }

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-log-files.

Amazon CLI

To describe the log files for a DB instance

The following describe-db-log-files example retrieves details about the log files for the specified DB instance.

aws rds describe-db-log-files -\ -db-instance-identifier test-instance

Output:

{ "DescribeDBLogFiles": [ { "Size": 0, "LastWritten": 1533060000000, "LogFileName": "error/mysql-error-running.log" }, { "Size": 2683, "LastWritten": 1532994300000, "LogFileName": "error/mysql-error-running.log.0" }, { "Size": 107, "LastWritten": 1533057300000, "LogFileName": "error/mysql-error-running.log.18" }, { "Size": 13105, "LastWritten": 1532991000000, "LogFileName": "error/mysql-error-running.log.23" }, { "Size": 0, "LastWritten": 1533061200000, "LogFileName": "error/mysql-error.log" }, { "Size": 3519, "LastWritten": 1532989252000, "LogFileName": "mysqlUpgrade" } ] }

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-parameter-groups.

Amazon CLI

To describe your DB parameter group

The following describe-db-parameter-groups example retrieves details about your DB parameter groups.

aws rds describe-db-parameter-groups

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroups": [ { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.aurora-mysql5.7", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-mysql5.7", "Description": "Default parameter group for aurora-mysql5.7", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:pg:default.aurora-mysql5.7" }, { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.aurora-postgresql9.6", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora-postgresql9.6", "Description": "Default parameter group for aurora-postgresql9.6", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:pg:default.aurora-postgresql9.6" }, { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.aurora5.6", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "aurora5.6", "Description": "Default parameter group for aurora5.6", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:pg:default.aurora5.6" }, { "DBParameterGroupName": "default.mariadb10.1", "DBParameterGroupFamily": "mariadb10.1", "Description": "Default parameter group for mariadb10.1", "DBParameterGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:pg:default.mariadb10.1" }, ...some output truncated... ] }

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-parameters.

Amazon CLI

To describe the parameters in a DB parameter group

The following describe-db-parameters example retrieves the details of the specified DB parameter group.

aws rds describe-db-parameters \ --db-parameter-group-name mydbpg

Output:

{ "Parameters": [ { "ParameterName": "allow-suspicious-udfs", "Description": "Controls whether user-defined functions that have only an xxx symbol for the main function can be loaded", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "static", "DataType": "boolean", "AllowedValues": "0,1", "IsModifiable": false, "ApplyMethod": "pending-reboot" }, { "ParameterName": "auto_generate_certs", "Description": "Controls whether the server autogenerates SSL key and certificate files in the data directory, if they do not already exist.", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "static", "DataType": "boolean", "AllowedValues": "0,1", "IsModifiable": false, "ApplyMethod": "pending-reboot" }, ...some output truncated... ] }

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-proxies.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB proxy for an RDS database

The following describe-db-proxies example returns information about DB proxies.

aws rds describe-db-proxies

Output:

{ "DBProxies": [ { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample1", "DBProxyArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy:prx-0123a01b12345c0ab", "Status": "available", "EngineFamily": "PostgreSQL", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Auth": "[ { "Description": "proxydescription1" "AuthScheme": "SECRETS", "SecretArn": "arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:secretName-1234f", "IAMAuth": "DISABLED" } ]", "RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::12345678912??:role/ProxyPostgreSQLRole", "Endpoint": "proxyExample1.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RequireTLS": false, "IdleClientTimeout": 1800, "DebuggingLogging": false, "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00" }, { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample2", "DBProxyArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy:prx-1234a12b23456c1ab", "Status": "available", "EngineFamily": "PostgreSQL", "VpcId": "sg-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Auth": "[ { "Description": "proxydescription2" "AuthScheme": "SECRETS", "SecretArn": "aarn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:secretName-1234f", "IAMAuth": "DISABLED" } ]", "RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::12345678912:role/ProxyPostgreSQLRole", "Endpoint": "proxyExample2.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RequireTLS": false, "IdleClientTimeout": 1800, "DebuggingLogging": false, "CreatedDate": "2022-01-05T16:19:33.452000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00" } ] }

For more information, see Viewing an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-proxy-endpoints.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB proxy endpoints

The following describe-db-proxy-endpoints example returns information about DB proxy endpoints.

aws rds describe-db-proxy-endpoints

Output:

{ "DBProxyEndpoints": [ { "DBProxyEndpointName": "proxyEndpoint1", "DBProxyEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy-endpoint:prx-endpoint-0123a01b12345c0ab", "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "Status": "available", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Endpoint": "proxyEndpoint1.endpoint.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "TargetRole": "READ_WRITE", "IsDefault": false }, { "DBProxyEndpointName": "proxyEndpoint2", "DBProxyEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy-endpoint:prx-endpoint-4567a01b12345c0ab", "DBProxyName": "proxyExample2", "Status": "available", "VpcId": "vpc1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-5678" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Endpoint": "proxyEndpoint2.endpoint.proxy-cd1ef2klmnop.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "TargetRole": "READ_WRITE", "IsDefault": false } ] }

For more information, see Viewing a proxy endpoint in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Creating a proxy endpoint in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-proxy-target-groups.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB proxy endpoints

The following describe-db-proxy-target-groups example returns information about DB proxy target groups.

aws rds describe-db-proxy-target-groups \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample

Output:

{ "TargetGroups": { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "TargetGroupName": "default", "TargetGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:target-group:prx-tg-0123a01b12345c0ab", "IsDefault": true, "Status": "available", "ConnectionPoolConfig": { "MaxConnectionsPercent": 100, "MaxIdleConnectionsPercent": 50, "ConnectionBorrowTimeout": 120, "SessionPinningFilters": [] }, "CreatedDate": "2023-05-02T18:41:19.495000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-05-02T18:41:21.762000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Viewing an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-proxy-targets.

Amazon CLI

To describe DB proxy targets

The following describe-db-proxy-targets example returns information about DB proxy targets.

aws rds describe-db-proxy-targets \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample

Output:

{ "Targets": [ { "Endpoint": "database1.ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "TrackedClusterId": "database1", "RdsResourceId": "database1-instance-1", "Port": 3306, "Type": "RDS_INSTANCE", "Role": "READ_WRITE", "TargetHealth": { "State": "UNAVAILABLE", "Reason": "PENDING_PROXY_CAPACITY", "Description": "DBProxy Target is waiting for proxy to scale to desired capacity" } } ] }

For more information, see Viewing an RDS proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing an RDS proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-recommendations.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To list all DB recommendations

The following describe-db-recommendations example lists all DB recommendations in your Amazon account.

aws rds describe-db-recommendations

Output:

{ "DBRecommendations": [ { "RecommendationId": "12ab3cde-f456-7g8h-9012-i3j45678k9lm", "TypeId": "config_recommendation::old_minor_version", "Severity": "informational", "ResourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:111122223333:db:database-1", "Status": "active", "CreatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19.292000+00:00", "UpdatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19+00:00", "Detection": "**[resource-name]** is not running the latest minor DB engine version", "Recommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Description": "Your database resources aren't running the latest minor DB engine version. The latest minor version contains the latest security fixes and other improvements.", "RecommendedActions": [ { "ActionId": "12ab34c5de6fg7h89i0jk1lm234n5678", "Operation": "modifyDbInstance", "Parameters": [ { "Key": "EngineVersion", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "DBInstanceIdentifier", "Value": "database-1" } ], "ApplyModes": [ "immediately", "next-maintenance-window" ], "Status": "ready", "ContextAttributes": [ { "Key": "Recommended value", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "Current engine version", "Value": "5.7.42" } ] } ], "Category": "security", "Source": "RDS", "TypeDetection": "**[resource-count] resources** are not running the latest minor DB engine version", "TypeRecommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Impact": "Reduced database performance and data security at risk", "AdditionalInfo": "We recommend that you maintain your database with the latest DB engine minor version as this version includes the latest security and functionality fixes. The DB engine minor version upgrades contain only the changes which are backward-compatible with earlier minor versions of the same major version of the DB engine.", "Links": [ { "Text": "Upgrading an RDS DB instance engine version", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/USER_UpgradeDBInstance.Upgrading.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon Aurora", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/AuroraUserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon RDS", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" } ] } ] }

For more information, see Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To list high severity DB recommendations

The following describe-db-recommendations example lists high severity DB recommendations in your Amazon account.

aws rds describe-db-recommendations \ --filters Name=severity,Values=high

Output:

{ "DBRecommendations": [ { "RecommendationId": "12ab3cde-f456-7g8h-9012-i3j45678k9lm", "TypeId": "config_recommendation::rds_extended_support", "Severity": "high", "ResourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:111122223333:db:database-1", "Status": "active", "CreatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19.392000+00:00", "UpdatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19+00:00", "Detection": "Your databases will be auto-enrolled to RDS Extended Support on February 29", "Recommendation": "Upgrade your major version before February 29, 2024 to avoid additional charges", "Description": "Your PostgreSQL 11 and MySQL 5.7 databases will be automatically enrolled into RDS Extended Support on February 29, 2024. To avoid the increase in charges due to RDS Extended Support, we recommend upgrading your databases to a newer major engine version before February 29, 2024.\nTo learn more about the RDS Extended Support pricing, refer to the pricing page.", "RecommendedActions": [ { "ActionId": "12ab34c5de6fg7h89i0jk1lm234n5678", "Parameters": [], "ApplyModes": [ "manual" ], "Status": "ready", "ContextAttributes": [] } ], "Category": "cost optimization", "Source": "RDS", "TypeDetection": "Your database will be auto-enrolled to RDS Extended Support on February 29", "TypeRecommendation": "Upgrade your major version before February 29, 2024 to avoid additional charges", "Impact": "Increase in charges due to RDS Extended Support", "AdditionalInfo": "With Amazon RDS Extended Support, you can continue running your database on a major engine version past the RDS end of standard support date for an additional cost. This paid feature gives you more time to upgrade to a supported major engine version.\nDuring Extended Support, Amazon RDS will supply critical CVE patches and bug fixes.", "Links": [ { "Text": "Amazon RDS Extended Support pricing for RDS for MySQL", "Url": "https://aws.amazon.com/rds/mysql/pricing/" }, { "Text": "Amazon RDS Extended Support for RDS for MySQL and PostgreSQL databases", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/extended-support.html" }, { "Text": "Amazon RDS Extended Support pricing for Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL", "Url": "https://aws.amazon.com/rds/aurora/pricing/" }, { "Text": "Amazon RDS Extended Support for Aurora PostgreSQL databases", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/AuroraUserGuide/extended-support.html" }, { "Text": "Amazon RDS Extended Support pricing for RDS for PostgreSQL", "Url": "https://aws.amazon.com/rds/postgresql/pricing/" } ] } ] }

For more information, see Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 3: To list DB recommendations for a specified DB instance

The following describe-db-recommendations example lists all DB recommendations for a specified DB instance.

aws rds describe-db-recommendations \ --filters Name=dbi-resource-id,Values=database-1

Output:

{ "DBRecommendations": [ { "RecommendationId": "12ab3cde-f456-7g8h-9012-i3j45678k9lm", "TypeId": "config_recommendation::old_minor_version", "Severity": "informational", "ResourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:111122223333:db:database-1", "Status": "active", "CreatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19.292000+00:00", "UpdatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19+00:00", "Detection": "**[resource-name]** is not running the latest minor DB engine version", "Recommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Description": "Your database resources aren't running the latest minor DB engine version. The latest minor version contains the latest security fixes and other improvements.", "RecommendedActions": [ { "ActionId": "12ab34c5de6fg7h89i0jk1lm234n5678", "Operation": "modifyDbInstance", "Parameters": [ { "Key": "EngineVersion", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "DBInstanceIdentifier", "Value": "database-1" } ], "ApplyModes": [ "immediately", "next-maintenance-window" ], "Status": "ready", "ContextAttributes": [ { "Key": "Recommended value", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "Current engine version", "Value": "5.7.42" } ] } ], "Category": "security", "Source": "RDS", "TypeDetection": "**[resource-count] resources** are not running the latest minor DB engine version", "TypeRecommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Impact": "Reduced database performance and data security at risk", "AdditionalInfo": "We recommend that you maintain your database with the latest DB engine minor version as this version includes the latest security and functionality fixes. The DB engine minor version upgrades contain only the changes which are backward-compatible with earlier minor versions of the same major version of the DB engine.", "Links": [ { "Text": "Upgrading an RDS DB instance engine version", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/USER_UpgradeDBInstance.Upgrading.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon Aurora", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/AuroraUserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon RDS", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" } ] } ] }

For more information, see Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 4: To list all active DB recommendations

The following describe-db-recommendations example lists all active DB recommendations in your Amazon account.

aws rds describe-db-recommendations \ --filters Name=status,Values=active

Output:

{ "DBRecommendations": [ { "RecommendationId": "12ab3cde-f456-7g8h-9012-i3j45678k9lm", "TypeId": "config_recommendation::old_minor_version", "Severity": "informational", "ResourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:111122223333:db:database-1", "Status": "active", "CreatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19.292000+00:00", "UpdatedTime": "2024-02-21T23:14:19+00:00", "Detection": "**[resource-name]** is not running the latest minor DB engine version", "Recommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Description": "Your database resources aren't running the latest minor DB engine version. The latest minor version contains the latest security fixes and other improvements.", "RecommendedActions": [ { "ActionId": "12ab34c5de6fg7h89i0jk1lm234n5678", "Operation": "modifyDbInstance", "Parameters": [ { "Key": "EngineVersion", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "DBInstanceIdentifier", "Value": "database-1" } ], "ApplyModes": [ "immediately", "next-maintenance-window" ], "Status": "ready", "ContextAttributes": [ { "Key": "Recommended value", "Value": "5.7.44" }, { "Key": "Current engine version", "Value": "5.7.42" } ] } ], "Category": "security", "Source": "RDS", "TypeDetection": "**[resource-count] resources** are not running the latest minor DB engine version", "TypeRecommendation": "Upgrade to latest engine version", "Impact": "Reduced database performance and data security at risk", "AdditionalInfo": "We recommend that you maintain your database with the latest DB engine minor version as this version includes the latest security and functionality fixes. The DB engine minor version upgrades contain only the changes which are backward-compatible with earlier minor versions of the same major version of the DB engine.", "Links": [ { "Text": "Upgrading an RDS DB instance engine version", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/USER_UpgradeDBInstance.Upgrading.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon Aurora", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/AuroraUserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" }, { "Text": "Using Amazon RDS Blue/Green Deployments for database updates for Amazon RDS", "Url": "https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/blue-green-deployments.html" } ] } ] }

For more information, see Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Viewing and responding to Amazon RDS recommendations in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-security-groups.

Amazon CLI

To list DB security groups

The following describe-db-security-groups example lists DB security groups.

aws rds describe-db-security-groups

Output:

{ "DBSecurityGroups": [ { "OwnerId": "123456789012", "DBSecurityGroupName": "default", "DBSecurityGroupDescription": "default", "EC2SecurityGroups": [], "IPRanges": [], "DBSecurityGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-1:111122223333:secgrp:default" }, { "OwnerId": "123456789012", "DBSecurityGroupName": "mysecgroup", "DBSecurityGroupDescription": "My Test Security Group", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567f", "EC2SecurityGroups": [], "IPRanges": [], "DBSecurityGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-1:111122223333:secgrp:mysecgroup" } ] }

For more information, see Listing Available DB Security Groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-shard-groups.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe DB shard groups

The following describe-db-shard-groups example retrieves the details of your DB shard groups.

aws rds describe-db-shard-groups

Output:

{ "DBShardGroups": [ { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-7bb446329da94788b3f957746example", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "limitless-test-shard-grp", "DBClusterIdentifier": "limitless-test-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": true, "Endpoint": "limitless-test-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" }, { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" } ] }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora DB Clusters in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-snapshot-attributes.

Amazon CLI

To describe the attribute names and values for a DB snapshot

The following describe-db-snapshot-attributes example describes the attribute names and values for a DB snapshot.

aws rds describe-db-snapshot-attributes \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot

Output:

{ "DBSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "123456789012", "210987654321" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Sharing a DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-snapshots.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To describe a DB snapshot for a DB instance

The following describe-db-snapshots example retrieves the details of a DB snapshot for a DB instance.

aws rds describe-db-snapshots \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot

Output:

{ "DBSnapshots": [ { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "mysqldb", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2018-02-08T22:28:08.598Z", "Engine": "mysql", "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "available", "Port": 3306, "AvailabilityZone": "us-east-1f", "VpcId": "vpc-6594f31c", "InstanceCreateTime": "2018-02-08T22:24:55.973Z", "MasterUsername": "mysqladmin", "EngineVersion": "5.6.37", "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "SnapshotType": "manual", "OptionGroupName": "default:mysql-5-6", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageType": "gp2", "Encrypted": false, "DBSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:snapshot:mydbsnapshot", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ProcessorFeatures": [], "DbiResourceId": "db-AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE" } ] }

For more information, see Creating a DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To find the number of manual snapshots taken

The following describe-db-snapshots example uses the length operator in the --query option to return the number of manual snapshots that have been taken in a particular Amazon Region.

aws rds describe-db-snapshots \ --snapshot-type manual \ --query "length(*[].{DBSnapshots:SnapshotType})" \ --region eu-central-1

Output:

35

For more information, see Creating a DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-db-subnet-groups.

Amazon CLI

To describe a DB subnet group

The following describe-db-subnet-groups example retrieves the details of the specified DB subnet group.

aws rds describe-db-subnet-groups

Output:

{ "DBSubnetGroups": [ { "DBSubnetGroupName": "mydbsubnetgroup", "DBSubnetGroupDescription": "My DB Subnet Group", "VpcId": "vpc-971c12ee", "SubnetGroupStatus": "Complete", "Subnets": [ { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-d8c8e7f4", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-1a" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-718fdc7d", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-1f" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-cbc8e7e7", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-1a" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-0ccde220", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-east-1a" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" } ], "DBSubnetGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:subgrp:mydbsubnetgroup" } ] }

For more information, see Amazon Virtual Private Cloud VPCs and Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-engine-default-cluster-parameters.

Amazon CLI

To describe the default engine and system parameter information for the Aurora database engine

The following describe-engine-default-cluster-parameters example retrieves the details of the default engine and system parameter information for Aurora DB clusters with MySQL 5.7 compatibility.

aws rds describe-engine-default-cluster-parameters \ --db-parameter-group-family aurora-mysql5.7

Output:

{ "EngineDefaults": { "Parameters": [ { "ParameterName": "aurora_load_from_s3_role", "Description": "IAM role ARN used to load data from AWS S3", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "dynamic", "DataType": "string", "IsModifiable": true, "SupportedEngineModes": [ "provisioned" ] }, ...some output truncated... ] } }

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups and DB Cluster Parameter Groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-engine-default-parameters.

Amazon CLI

To describe the default engine and system parameter information for the database engine

The following describe-engine-default-parameters example retrieves details for the default engine and system parameter information for MySQL 5.7 DB instances.

aws rds describe-engine-default-parameters \ --db-parameter-group-family mysql5.7

Output:

{ "EngineDefaults": { "Parameters": [ { "ParameterName": "allow-suspicious-udfs", "Description": "Controls whether user-defined functions that have only an xxx symbol for the main function can be loaded", "Source": "engine-default", "ApplyType": "static", "DataType": "boolean", "AllowedValues": "0,1", "IsModifiable": false }, ...some output truncated... ] } }

For more information, see Working with DB Parameter Groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-event-categories.

Amazon CLI

To describe event categories

The following describe-event-categories example retrieves details about the event categories for all available event sources.

aws rds describe-event-categories

Output:

{ "EventCategoriesMapList": [ { "SourceType": "db-instance", "EventCategories": [ "deletion", "read replica", "failover", "restoration", "maintenance", "low storage", "configuration change", "backup", "creation", "availability", "recovery", "failure", "backtrack", "notification" ] }, { "SourceType": "db-security-group", "EventCategories": [ "configuration change", "failure" ] }, { "SourceType": "db-parameter-group", "EventCategories": [ "configuration change" ] }, { "SourceType": "db-snapshot", "EventCategories": [ "deletion", "creation", "restoration", "notification" ] }, { "SourceType": "db-cluster", "EventCategories": [ "failover", "failure", "notification" ] }, { "SourceType": "db-cluster-snapshot", "EventCategories": [ "backup" ] } ] }

The following code example shows how to use describe-event-subscriptions.

Amazon CLI

To describe event subscriptions

This example describes all of the Amazon RDS event subscriptions for the current Amazon account.

aws rds describe-event-subscriptions

Output:

{ "EventSubscriptionsList": [ { "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "Enabled": true, "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "Status": "creating", "SourceType": "db-instance", "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "SubscriptionCreationTime": "2018-07-31 23:22:01.893", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events" }, ...some output truncated... ] }

The following code example shows how to use describe-events.

Amazon CLI

To describe events

The following describe-events example retrieves details for the events that have occurred for the specified DB instance.

aws rds describe-events \ --source-identifier test-instance \ --source-type db-instance

Output:

{ "Events": [ { "SourceType": "db-instance", "SourceIdentifier": "test-instance", "EventCategories": [ "backup" ], "Message": "Backing up DB instance", "Date": "2018-07-31T23:09:23.983Z", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:test-instance" }, { "SourceType": "db-instance", "SourceIdentifier": "test-instance", "EventCategories": [ "backup" ], "Message": "Finished DB Instance backup", "Date": "2018-07-31T23:15:13.049Z", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:test-instance" } ] }
  • For API details, see DescribeEvents in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use describe-export-tasks.

Amazon CLI

To describe snapshot export tasks

The following describe-export-tasks example returns information about snapshot exports to Amazon S3.

aws rds describe-export-tasks

Output:

{ "ExportTasks": [ { "ExportTaskIdentifier": "test-snapshot-export", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:snapshot:test-snapshot", "SnapshotTime": "2020-03-02T18:26:28.163Z", "TaskStartTime": "2020-03-02T18:57:56.896Z", "TaskEndTime": "2020-03-02T19:10:31.985Z", "S3Bucket": "mybucket", "S3Prefix": "", "IamRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/ExportRole", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/abcd0000-7fca-4128-82f2-aabbccddeeff", "Status": "COMPLETE", "PercentProgress": 100, "TotalExtractedDataInGB": 0 }, { "ExportTaskIdentifier": "my-s3-export", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:snapshot:db5-snapshot-test", "SnapshotTime": "2020-03-27T20:48:42.023Z", "S3Bucket": "mybucket", "S3Prefix": "", "IamRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/ExportRole", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/abcd0000-7fca-4128-82f2-aabbccddeeff", "Status": "STARTING", "PercentProgress": 0, "TotalExtractedDataInGB": 0 } ] }

For more information, see Monitoring Snapshot Exports in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-global-clusters.

Amazon CLI

To describe global DB clusters

The following describe-global-clusters example lists Aurora global DB clusters in the current Amazon Region.

aws rds describe-global-clusters

Output:

{ "GlobalClusters": [ { "GlobalClusterIdentifier": "myglobalcluster", "GlobalClusterResourceId": "cluster-f5982077e3b5aabb", "GlobalClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds::123456789012:global-cluster:myglobalcluster", "Status": "available", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.07.2", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "GlobalClusterMembers": [] } ] }

For more information, see Managing an Aurora global database in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-option-group-options.

Amazon CLI

To describe all available options

The following describe-option-group-options example lists two options for an Oracle Database 19c instance.

aws rds describe-option-group-options \ --engine-name oracle-ee \ --major-engine-version 19 \ --max-items 2

Output:

{ "OptionGroupOptions": [ { "Name": "APEX", "Description": "Oracle Application Express Runtime Environment", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "19", "MinimumRequiredMinorEngineVersion": "0.0.0.ru-2019-07.rur-2019-07.r1", "PortRequired": false, "OptionsDependedOn": [], "OptionsConflictsWith": [], "Persistent": false, "Permanent": false, "RequiresAutoMinorEngineVersionUpgrade": false, "VpcOnly": false, "SupportsOptionVersionDowngrade": false, "OptionGroupOptionSettings": [], "OptionGroupOptionVersions": [ { "Version": "19.1.v1", "IsDefault": true }, { "Version": "19.2.v1", "IsDefault": false } ] }, { "Name": "APEX-DEV", "Description": "Oracle Application Express Development Environment", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "19", "MinimumRequiredMinorEngineVersion": "0.0.0.ru-2019-07.rur-2019-07.r1", "PortRequired": false, "OptionsDependedOn": [ "APEX" ], "OptionsConflictsWith": [], "Persistent": false, "Permanent": false, "RequiresAutoMinorEngineVersionUpgrade": false, "VpcOnly": false, "OptionGroupOptionSettings": [] } ], "NextToken": "eyJNYXJrZXIiOiBudWxsLCAiYm90b190cnVuY2F0ZV9hbW91bnQiOiAyfQ==" }

For more information, see Listing the Options and Option Settings for an Option Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-option-groups.

Amazon CLI

To describe the available option groups

The following describe-option-groups example lists the options groups for an Oracle Database 19c instance.

aws rds describe-option-groups \ --engine-name oracle-ee \ --major-engine-version 19

Output:

{ "OptionGroupsList": [ { "OptionGroupName": "default:oracle-ee-19", "OptionGroupDescription": "Default option group for oracle-ee 19", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "19", "Options": [], "AllowsVpcAndNonVpcInstanceMemberships": true, "OptionGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-1:111122223333:og:default:oracle-ee-19" } ] }

For more information, see Listing the Options and Option Settings for an Option Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-orderable-db-instance-options.

Amazon CLI

To describe orderable DB instance options

The following describe-orderable-db-instance-options example retrieves details about the orderable options for a DB instances running the MySQL DB engine.

aws rds describe-orderable-db-instance-options \ --engine mysql

Output:

{ "OrderableDBInstanceOptions": [ { "MinStorageSize": 5, "ReadReplicaCapable": true, "MaxStorageSize": 6144, "AvailabilityZones": [ { "Name": "us-east-1a" }, { "Name": "us-east-1b" }, { "Name": "us-east-1c" }, { "Name": "us-east-1d" } ], "SupportsIops": false, "AvailableProcessorFeatures": [], "MultiAZCapable": true, "DBInstanceClass": "db.m1.large", "Vpc": true, "StorageType": "gp2", "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", "EngineVersion": "5.5.46", "SupportsStorageEncryption": false, "SupportsEnhancedMonitoring": true, "Engine": "mysql", "SupportsIAMDatabaseAuthentication": false, "SupportsPerformanceInsights": false } ] ...some output truncated... }

The following code example shows how to use describe-pending-maintenance-actions.

Amazon CLI

To list resources with at least one pending maintenance action

The following describe-pending-maintenance-actions example lists the pending maintenace action for a DB instance.

aws rds describe-pending-maintenance-actions

Output:

{ "PendingMaintenanceActions": [ { "ResourceIdentifier": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:global-db1-cl1", "PendingMaintenanceActionDetails": [ { "Action": "system-update", "Description": "Upgrade to Aurora PostgreSQL 2.4.2" } ] } ] }

For more information, see Maintaining a DB Instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-reserved-db-instances-offerings.

Amazon CLI

To describe reserved DB instance offerings

The following describe-reserved-db-instances-offerings example retrieves details about reserved DB instance options for oracle.

aws rds describe-reserved-db-instances-offerings \ --product-description oracle

Output:

{ "ReservedDBInstancesOfferings": [ { "CurrencyCode": "USD", "UsagePrice": 0.0, "ProductDescription": "oracle-se2(li)", "ReservedDBInstancesOfferingId": "005bdee3-9ef4-4182-aa0c-58ef7cb6c2f8", "MultiAZ": true, "DBInstanceClass": "db.m4.xlarge", "OfferingType": "Partial Upfront", "RecurringCharges": [ { "RecurringChargeAmount": 0.594, "RecurringChargeFrequency": "Hourly" } ], "FixedPrice": 4089.0, "Duration": 31536000 }, ...some output truncated... }

The following code example shows how to use describe-reserved-db-instances.

Amazon CLI

To describe reserved DB instances

The following describe-reserved-db-instances example retrieves details about any reserved DB instances in the current Amazon account.

aws rds describe-reserved-db-instances

Output:

{ "ReservedDBInstances": [ { "ReservedDBInstanceId": "myreservedinstance", "ReservedDBInstancesOfferingId": "12ab34cd-59af-4b2c-a660-1abcdef23456", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.micro", "StartTime": "2020-06-01T13:44:21.436Z", "Duration": 31536000, "FixedPrice": 0.0, "UsagePrice": 0.0, "CurrencyCode": "USD", "DBInstanceCount": 1, "ProductDescription": "sqlserver-ex(li)", "OfferingType": "No Upfront", "MultiAZ": false, "State": "payment-pending", "RecurringCharges": [ { "RecurringChargeAmount": 0.014, "RecurringChargeFrequency": "Hourly" } ], "ReservedDBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:ri:myreservedinstance", "LeaseId": "a1b2c3d4-6b69-4a59-be89-5e11aa446666" } ] }

For more information, see Reserved DB Instances for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-source-regions.

Amazon CLI

To describe source Regions

The following describe-source-regions example retrieves details about all source Amazon Regions. It also shows that automated backups can be replicated only from US West (Oregon) to the destination Amazon Region, US East (N. Virginia).

aws rds describe-source-regions \ --region us-east-1

Output:

{ "SourceRegions": [ { "RegionName": "af-south-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.af-south-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "ap-east-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "ap-northeast-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "ap-northeast-2", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-northeast-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "ap-northeast-3", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-northeast-3.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "ap-south-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "ap-southeast-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "ap-southeast-2", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "ap-southeast-3", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ap-southeast-3.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "ca-central-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.ca-central-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "eu-north-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "eu-south-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.eu-south-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "eu-west-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "eu-west-2", "Endpoint": "https://rds.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "eu-west-3", "Endpoint": "https://rds.eu-west-3.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "me-central-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.me-central-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "me-south-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.me-south-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": false }, { "RegionName": "sa-east-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.sa-east-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "us-east-2", "Endpoint": "https://rds.us-east-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "us-west-1", "Endpoint": "https://rds.us-west-1.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true }, { "RegionName": "us-west-2", "Endpoint": "https://rds.us-west-2.amazonaws.com", "Status": "available", "SupportsDBInstanceAutomatedBackupsReplication": true } ] }

For more information, see Finding information about replicated backups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-valid-db-instance-modifications.

Amazon CLI

To describe valid modifications for a DB instance

The following describe-valid-db-instance-modifications example retrieves details about the valid modifications for the specified DB instance.

aws rds describe-valid-db-instance-modifications \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance

Output:

{ "ValidDBInstanceModificationsMessage": { "ValidProcessorFeatures": [], "Storage": [ { "StorageSize": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 20, "From": 20 }, { "Step": 1, "To": 6144, "From": 22 } ], "ProvisionedIops": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 0, "From": 0 } ], "IopsToStorageRatio": [ { "To": 0.0, "From": 0.0 } ], "StorageType": "gp2" }, { "StorageSize": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 6144, "From": 100 } ], "ProvisionedIops": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 40000, "From": 1000 } ], "IopsToStorageRatio": [ { "To": 50.0, "From": 1.0 } ], "StorageType": "io1" }, { "StorageSize": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 20, "From": 20 }, { "Step": 1, "To": 3072, "From": 22 } ], "ProvisionedIops": [ { "Step": 1, "To": 0, "From": 0 } ], "IopsToStorageRatio": [ { "To": 0.0, "From": 0.0 } ], "StorageType": "magnetic" } ] } }

The following code example shows how to use download-db-log-file-portion.

Amazon CLI

To download a DB log file

The following download-db-log-file-portion example downloads only the latest part of your log file, saving it to a local file named tail.txt.

aws rds download-db-log-file-portion \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --log-file-name log.txt \ --output text > tail.txt

To download the entire file, you need to include the --starting-token 0 parameter. The following example saves the output to a local file named full.txt.

aws rds download-db-log-file-portion \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --log-file-name log.txt \ --starting-token 0 \ --output text > full.txt

The saved file might contain blank lines. They appear at the end of each part of the log file while being downloaded. This generally doesn't cause any trouble in your log file analysis.

The following code example shows how to use generate-auth-token.

Amazon CLI

To generate an authentication token

The following generate-db-auth-token example generates an authentication token for use with IAM database authentication.

aws rds generate-db-auth-token \ --hostname aurmysql-test.cdgmuqiadpid.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com \ --port 3306 \ --region us-east-1 \ --username jane_doe

Output:

aurmysql-test.cdgmuqiadpid.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com:3306/?Action=connect&DBUser=jane_doe&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=AKIAIESZCNJ3OEXAMPLE%2F20180731%2Fus-east-1%2Frds-db%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20180731T235209Z&X-Amz-Expires=900&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=5a8753ebEXAMPLEa2c724e5667797EXAMPLE9d6ec6e3f427191fa41aeEXAMPLE

The following code example shows how to use generate-db-auth-token.

Amazon CLI

To generate an IAM authentication token

The following generate-db-auth-token example generates IAM authentication token to connect to a database.

aws rds generate-db-auth-token \ --hostname mydb.123456789012.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com \ --port 3306 \ --region us-east-1 \ --username db_user

Output:

mydb.123456789012.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com:3306/?Action=connect&DBUser=db_user&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=AKIAIEXAMPLE%2Fus-east-1%2Frds-db%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20210123T011543Z&X-Amz-Expires=900&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=88987EXAMPLE1EXAMPLE2EXAMPLE3EXAMPLE4EXAMPLE5EXAMPLE6

For more information, see Connecting to your DB instance using IAM authentication in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Connecting to your DB cluster using IAM authentication in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use list-tags-for-resource.

Amazon CLI

To list tags on an Amazon RDS resource

The following list-tags-for-resource example lists all tags on a DB instance.

aws rds list-tags-for-resource \ --resource-name arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:orcl1

Output:

{ "TagList": [ { "Key": "Environment", "Value": "test" }, { "Key": "Name", "Value": "MyDatabase" } ] }

For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS Resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-certificates.

Amazon CLI

To temporarily override the system-default SSL/TLS certificate for new DB instances

The following modify-certificates example temporarily overrides the system-default SSL/TLS certificate for new DB instances.

aws rds modify-certificates \ --certificate-identifier rds-ca-2019

Output:

{ "Certificate": { "CertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-2019", "CertificateType": "CA", "Thumbprint": "EXAMPLE123456789012", "ValidFrom": "2019-09-19T18:16:53Z", "ValidTill": "2024-08-22T17:08:50Z", "CertificateArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1::cert:rds-ca-2019", "CustomerOverride": true, "CustomerOverrideValidTill": "2024-08-22T17:08:50Z" } }

For more information, see Rotating your SSL/TLS certificate in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Rotating your SSL/TLS certificate in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-current-db-cluster-capacity.

Amazon CLI

To scale the capacity of an Aurora Serverless DB cluster

The following modify-current-db-cluster-capacity example scales the capacity of an Aurora Serverless DB cluster to 8.

aws rds modify-current-db-cluster-capacity \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster \ --capacity 8

Output:

{ "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "PendingCapacity": 8, "CurrentCapacity": 1, "SecondsBeforeTimeout": 300, "TimeoutAction": "ForceApplyCapacityChange" }

For more information, see Scaling Aurora Serverless v1 DB cluster capacity manually in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-cluster-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To modify a custom DB cluster endpoint

The following modify-db-cluster-endpoint example modifies the specified custom DB cluster endpoint.

aws rds modify-db-cluster-endpoint \ --db-cluster-endpoint-identifier mycustomendpoint \ --static-members dbinstance1 dbinstance2 dbinstance3

Output:

{ "DBClusterEndpointIdentifier": "mycustomendpoint", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", "DBClusterEndpointResourceIdentifier": "cluster-endpoint-ANPAJ4AE5446DAEXAMPLE", "Endpoint": "mycustomendpoint.cluster-custom-cnpexample.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "Status": "modifying", "EndpointType": "CUSTOM", "CustomEndpointType": "READER", "StaticMembers": [ "dbinstance1", "dbinstance2", "dbinstance3" ], "ExcludedMembers": [], "DBClusterEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:mycustomendpoint" }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora Connection Management in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-cluster-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To modify parameters in a DB cluster parameter group

The following modify-db-cluster-parameter-group example modifies the values of parameters in a DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds modify-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclusterpg \ --parameters "ParameterName=server_audit_logging,ParameterValue=1,ApplyMethod=immediate" \ "ParameterName=server_audit_logs_upload,ParameterValue=1,ApplyMethod=immediate"

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclusterpg" }

For more information, see Working with DB parameter groups and DB cluster parameter groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-cluster-snapshot-attribute.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB cluster snapshot attribute

The following modify-db-cluster-snapshot-attribute example makes changes to the specified DB cluster snapshot attribute.

aws rds modify-db-cluster-snapshot-attribute \ --db-cluster-snapshot-identifier myclustersnapshot \ --attribute-name restore \ --values-to-add 123456789012

Output:

{ "DBClusterSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBClusterSnapshotIdentifier": "myclustersnapshot", "DBClusterSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "123456789012" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Restoring from a DB Cluster Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To modify a DB cluster

The following modify-db-cluster example changes the master user password for the DB cluster named cluster-2 and sets the backup retention period to 14 days. The --apply-immediately parameter causes the changes to be made immediately, instead of waiting until the next maintenance window.

aws rds modify-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier cluster-2 \ --backup-retention-period 14 \ --master-user-password newpassword99 \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "eu-central-1b", "eu-central-1c", "eu-central-1a" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 14, "DatabaseName": "", "DBClusterIdentifier": "cluster-2", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora5.6", "DBSubnetGroup": "default-vpc-2305ca49", "Status": "available", "EarliestRestorableTime": "2020-06-03T02:07:29.637Z", "Endpoint": "cluster-2.cluster-############.eu-central-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "cluster-2.cluster-ro-############.eu-central-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora", "EngineVersion": "5.6.10a", "LatestRestorableTime": "2020-06-04T15:11:25.748Z", "Port": 3306, "MasterUsername": "admin", "PreferredBackupWindow": "01:55-02:25", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "thu:21:14-thu:21:44", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [ { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "cluster-2-instance-1", "IsClusterWriter": true, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 } ], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-20a5c047", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z1RLNU0EXAMPLE", "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:eu-central-1:123456789012:key/d1bd7c8f-5cdb-49ca-8a62-a1b2c3d4e5f6", "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-AGJ7XI77XVIS6FUXHU1EXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:eu-central-1:123456789012:cluster:cluster-2", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ClusterCreateTime": "2020-04-03T14:44:02.764Z", "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "CopyTagsToSnapshot": true, "CrossAccountClone": false, "DomainMemberships": [] } }

For more information, see Modifying an Amazon Aurora DB Cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To associate VPC security group with a DB cluster

The following modify-db-instance example associates a specific VPC security group and removes DB security groups from a DB cluster.

aws rds modify-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier dbName \ --vpc-security-group-ids sg-ID

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-west-2c", "us-west-2b", "us-west-2a" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DBClusterIdentifier": "dbName", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-mysql8.0", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "available", "EarliestRestorableTime": "2024-02-15T01:12:13.966000+00:00", "Endpoint": "dbName.cluster-abcdefghji.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "dbName.cluster-ro-abcdefghji.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "8.0.mysql_aurora.3.04.1", "LatestRestorableTime": "2024-02-15T02:25:33.696000+00:00", "Port": 3306, "MasterUsername": "admin", "PreferredBackupWindow": "10:59-11:29", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "thu:08:54-thu:09:24", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [ { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "dbName-instance-1", "IsClusterWriter": true, "DBClusterParameterGroupStatus": "in-sync", "PromotionTier": 1 } ], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-ID", "Status": "active" } ], ...output omitted... } }

For more information, see Controlling access with security groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To modify a DB instance

The following modify-db-instance example associates an option group and a parameter group with a compatible Microsoft SQL Server DB instance. The --apply-immediately parameter causes the option and parameter groups to be associated immediately, instead of waiting until the next maintenance window.

aws rds modify-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier database-2 \ --option-group-name test-se-2017 \ --db-parameter-group-name test-sqlserver-se-2017 \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-2", "DBInstanceClass": "db.r4.large", "Engine": "sqlserver-se", "DBInstanceStatus": "available", ...output omitted... "DBParameterGroups": [ { "DBParameterGroupName": "test-sqlserver-se-2017", "ParameterApplyStatus": "applying" } ], "AvailabilityZone": "us-west-2d", ...output omitted... "MultiAZ": true, "EngineVersion": "14.00.3281.6.v1", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": false, "ReadReplicaDBInstanceIdentifiers": [], "LicenseModel": "license-included", "OptionGroupMemberships": [ { "OptionGroupName": "test-se-2017", "Status": "pending-apply" } ], "CharacterSetName": "SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS", "SecondaryAvailabilityZone": "us-west-2c", "PubliclyAccessible": true, "StorageType": "gp2", ...output omitted... "DeletionProtection": false, "AssociatedRoles": [], "MaxAllocatedStorage": 1000 } }

For more information, see Modifying an Amazon RDS DB Instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To associate VPC security group with a DB instance

The following modify-db-instance example associates a specific VPC security group and removes DB security groups from a DB instance:

aws rds modify-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier dbName \ --vpc-security-group-ids sg-ID

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "dbName", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.micro", "Engine": "mysql", "DBInstanceStatus": "available", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Endpoint": { "Address": "dbName.abcdefghijk.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "Port": 3306, "HostedZoneId": "ABCDEFGHIJK1234" }, "AllocatedStorage": 20, "InstanceCreateTime": "2024-02-15T00:37:58.793000+00:00", "PreferredBackupWindow": "11:57-12:27", "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DBSecurityGroups": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-ID", "Status": "active" } ], ... output omitted ... "MultiAZ": false, "EngineVersion": "8.0.35", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": true, "ReadReplicaDBInstanceIdentifiers": [], "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", ... output ommited ... } }

For more information, see Controlling access with security groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB parameter group

The following modify-db-parameter-group example changes the value of the clr enabled parameter in a DB parameter group. The --apply-immediately parameter causes the DB parameter group to be modified immediately, instead of waiting until the next maintenance window.

aws rds modify-db-parameter-group \ --db-parameter-group-name test-sqlserver-se-2017 \ --parameters "ParameterName='clr enabled',ParameterValue=1,ApplyMethod=immediate"

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroupName": "test-sqlserver-se-2017" }

For more information, see Modifying Parameters in a DB Parameter Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-proxy-endpoint.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB proxy endpoint for an RDS database

The following modify-db-proxy-endpoint example modifies a DB proxy endpoint proxyEndpoint to set the read-timeout to 65 seconds.

aws rds modify-db-proxy-endpoint \ --db-proxy-endpoint-name proxyEndpoint \ --cli-read-timeout 65

Output:

{ "DBProxyEndpoint": { "DBProxyEndpointName": "proxyEndpoint", "DBProxyEndpointArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy-endpoint:prx-endpoint-0123a01b12345c0ab", "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "Status": "available", "VpcId": "vpc-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Endpoint": "proxyEndpoint.endpoint.proxyExample-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "TargetRole": "READ_WRITE", "IsDefault": "false" } }

For more information, see Modifying a proxy endpoint in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Modifying a proxy endpoint in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-proxy-target-group.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB proxy endpoints

The following modify-db-proxy-target-group example modifies a DB proxy target group to set the maximum connections to 80 percent and maximum idle connections to 10 percent.

aws rds modify-db-proxy-target-group \ --target-group-name default \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --connection-pool-config MaxConnectionsPercent=80,MaxIdleConnectionsPercent=10

Output:

{ "DBProxyTargetGroup": { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "TargetGroupName": "default", "TargetGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:target-group:prx-tg-0123a01b12345c0ab", "IsDefault": true, "Status": "available", "ConnectionPoolConfig": { "MaxConnectionsPercent": 80, "MaxIdleConnectionsPercent": 10, "ConnectionBorrowTimeout": 120, "SessionPinningFilters": [] }, "CreatedDate": "2023-05-02T18:41:19.495000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-05-02T18:41:21.762000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Modifying an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Modifying an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-proxy.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB proxy for an RDS database

The following modify-db-proxy example modifies a DB proxy named proxyExample to require SSL for its connections.

aws rds modify-db-proxy \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --require-tls

Output:

{ "DBProxy": { "DBProxyName": "proxyExample", "DBProxyArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db-proxy:prx-0123a01b12345c0ab", "Status": "modifying" "EngineFamily": "PostgreSQL", "VpcId": "sg-1234567", "VpcSecurityGroupIds": [ "sg-1234" ], "VpcSubnetIds": [ "subnetgroup1", "subnetgroup2" ], "Auth": "[ { "Description": "proxydescription1", "AuthScheme": "SECRETS", "SecretArn": "arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789123:secret:proxysecret1-Abcd1e", "IAMAuth": "DISABLED" } ]", "RoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::12345678912:role/ProxyPostgreSQLRole", "Endpoint": "proxyExample.proxy-ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RequireTLS": true, "IdleClientTimeout": 1800, "DebuggingLogging": false, "CreatedDate": "2023-04-05T16:09:33.452000+00:00", "UpdatedDate": "2023-04-13T01:49:38.568000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Modify an RDS Proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Creating an RDS Proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

  • For API details, see ModifyDbProxy in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-shard-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To modify a DB shard group

The following modify-db-shard-group example changes the maximum capacity of a DB shard group.

aws rds modify-db-shard-group \ --db-shard-group-identifier my-db-shard-group \ --max-acu 1000

Output:

{ "DBShardGroups": [ { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" } ] }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora DB Clusters in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To describe your DB shard groups

The following describe-db-shard-groups example retrieves the details of your DB shard groups after you run the modify-db-shard-group command. The maximum capacity of the DB shard group my-db-shard-group is now 1000 Aurora capacity units (ACUs).

aws rds describe-db-shard-groups

Output:

{ "DBShardGroups": [ { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-7bb446329da94788b3f957746example", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "limitless-test-shard-grp", "DBClusterIdentifier": "limitless-test-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": true, "Endpoint": "limitless-test-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" }, { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 1000.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" } ] }

For more information, see Amazon Aurora DB Clusters in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-snapshot-attribute.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To enable two Amazon accounts to restore a DB snapshot

The following modify-db-snapshot-attribute example grants permission to two Amazon accounts, with the identifiers 111122223333 and 444455556666, to restore the DB snapshot named mydbsnapshot.

aws rds modify-db-snapshot-attribute \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot \ --attribute-name restore \ --values-to-add {"111122223333","444455556666"}

Output:

{ "DBSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "111122223333", "444455556666" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Sharing a Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To prevent an Amazon account from restoring a DB snapshot

The following modify-db-snapshot-attribute example removes permission from a particular Amazon account to restore the DB snapshot named mydbsnapshot. When specifying a single account, the account identifier can't be surrounded by quotations marks or braces.

aws rds modify-db-snapshot-attribute \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot \ --attribute-name restore \ --values-to-remove 444455556666

Output:

{ "DBSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "111122223333" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Sharing a Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-snapshot-attributes.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB snapshot attribute

The following modify-db-snapshot-attribute example permits two Amazon account identifiers, 111122223333 and 444455556666, to restore the DB snapshot named mydbsnapshot.

aws rds modify-db-snapshot-attribute \ --db-snapshot-identifier mydbsnapshot \ --attribute-name restore \ --values-to-add '["111122223333","444455556666"]'

Output:

{ "DBSnapshotAttributesResult": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "mydbsnapshot", "DBSnapshotAttributes": [ { "AttributeName": "restore", "AttributeValues": [ "111122223333", "444455556666" ] } ] } }

For more information, see Sharing a Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB snapshot

The following modify-db-snapshot example upgrades a PostgeSQL 10.6 snapshot named db5-snapshot-upg-test to PostgreSQL 11.7. The new DB engine version is shown after the snapshot has finished upgrading and its status is available.

aws rds modify-db-snapshot \ --db-snapshot-identifier db5-snapshot-upg-test \ --engine-version 11.7

Output:

{ "DBSnapshot": { "DBSnapshotIdentifier": "db5-snapshot-upg-test", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "database-5", "SnapshotCreateTime": "2020-03-27T20:49:17.092Z", "Engine": "postgres", "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "upgrading", "Port": 5432, "AvailabilityZone": "us-west-2a", "VpcId": "vpc-2ff27557", "InstanceCreateTime": "2020-03-27T19:59:04.735Z", "MasterUsername": "postgres", "EngineVersion": "10.6", "LicenseModel": "postgresql-license", "SnapshotType": "manual", "OptionGroupName": "default:postgres-11", "PercentProgress": 100, "StorageType": "gp2", "Encrypted": false, "DBSnapshotArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:snapshot:db5-snapshot-upg-test", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ProcessorFeatures": [], "DbiResourceId": "db-GJMF75LM42IL6BTFRE4UZJ5YM4" } }

For more information, see Upgrading a PostgreSQL DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-db-subnet-group.

Amazon CLI

To modify a DB subnet group

The following modify-db-subnet-group example adds a subnet with the ID subnet-08e41f9e230222222 to the DB subnet group named mysubnetgroup. To keep the existing subnets in the subnet group, include their IDs as values in the --subnet-ids option. Make sure to have subnets with at least two different Availability Zones in the DB subnet group.

aws rds modify-db-subnet-group \ --db-subnet-group-name mysubnetgroup \ --subnet-ids '["subnet-0a1dc4e1a6f123456","subnet-070dd7ecb3aaaaaaa","subnet-00f5b198bc0abcdef","subnet-08e41f9e230222222"]'

Output:

{ "DBSubnetGroup": { "DBSubnetGroupName": "mysubnetgroup", "DBSubnetGroupDescription": "test DB subnet group", "VpcId": "vpc-0f08e7610a1b2c3d4", "SubnetGroupStatus": "Complete", "Subnets": [ { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-08e41f9e230222222", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2a" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-070dd7ecb3aaaaaaa", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2b" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-00f5b198bc0abcdef", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2d" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" }, { "SubnetIdentifier": "subnet-0a1dc4e1a6f123456", "SubnetAvailabilityZone": { "Name": "us-west-2b" }, "SubnetStatus": "Active" } ], "DBSubnetGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:534026745191:subgrp:mysubnetgroup" } }

For more information, see Step 3: Create a DB Subnet Group in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use modify-event-subscription.

Amazon CLI

To modify an event subscription

The following modify-event-subscription example disables the specified event subscription, so that it no longer publishes notifications to the specified Amazon Simple Notification Service topic.

aws rds modify-event-subscription \ --subscription-name my-instance-events \ --no-enabled

Output:

{ "EventSubscription": { "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "SourceType": "db-instance", "SubscriptionCreationTime": "Tue Jul 31 23:22:01 UTC 2018", "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "Status": "modifying", "Enabled": false } }

The following code example shows how to use modify-global-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To modify a global DB cluster

The following modify-global-cluster example enables deletion protection for an Aurora MySQL-compatible global DB cluster.

aws rds modify-global-cluster \ --global-cluster-identifier myglobalcluster \ --deletion-protection

Output:

{ "GlobalCluster": { "GlobalClusterIdentifier": "myglobalcluster", "GlobalClusterResourceId": "cluster-f0e523bfe07aabb", "GlobalClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds::123456789012:global-cluster:myglobalcluster", "Status": "available", "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.mysql_aurora.2.07.2", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DeletionProtection": true, "GlobalClusterMembers": [] } }

For more information, see Managing an Aurora global database in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use promote-read-replica-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To promote a DB cluster read replica

The following promote-read-replica-db-cluster example promotes the specified read replica to become a standalone DB cluster.

aws rds promote-read-replica-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster-1

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1b", "us-east-1c" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DatabaseName": "", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster-1", ...some output truncated... } }

For more information, see Promoting a read replica to be a DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use promote-read-replica.

Amazon CLI

To promote a read replica

The following promote-read-replica example promotes the specified read replica to become a standalone DB instance.

aws rds promote-read-replica \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance-repl

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:test-instance-repl", "StorageType": "standard", "ReadReplicaSourceDBInstanceIdentifier": "test-instance", "DBInstanceStatus": "modifying", ...some output truncated... } }

The following code example shows how to use purchase-reserved-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To purchase a reserved DB instance offering

The following purchase-reserved-db-instances-offering example purchases a reserved DB instance offering. The reserved-db-instances-offering-id must be a valid offering ID, as returned by the describe-reserved-db-instances-offering command.

aws rds purchase-reserved-db-instances-offering --reserved-db-instances-offering-id 438012d3-4a52-4cc7-b2e3-8dff72e0e706

The following code example shows how to use purchase-reserved-db-instances-offerings.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To find a reserved DB instance to purchase

The following describe-reserved-db-instances-offerings example lists the available reserved MySQL DB instances with the db.t2.micro instance class and a duration of one year. The offering ID is required for purchasing a reserved DB instance.

aws rds describe-reserved-db-instances-offerings \ --product-description mysql \ --db-instance-class db.t2.micro \ --duration 1

Output:

{ "ReservedDBInstancesOfferings": [ { "ReservedDBInstancesOfferingId": "8ba30be1-b9ec-447f-8f23-6114e3f4c7b4", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t2.micro", "Duration": 31536000, "FixedPrice": 51.0, "UsagePrice": 0.0, "CurrencyCode": "USD", "ProductDescription": "mysql", "OfferingType": "Partial Upfront", "MultiAZ": false, "RecurringCharges": [ { "RecurringChargeAmount": 0.006, "RecurringChargeFrequency": "Hourly" } ] }, ... some output truncated ... ] }

For more information, see Reserved DB Instances for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To purchase a reserved DB instance

The following purchase-reserved-db-instances-offering example shows how to buy the reserved DB instance offering from the previous example.

aws rds purchase-reserved-db-instances-offering --reserved-db-instances-offering-id 8ba30be1-b9ec-447f-8f23-6114e3f4c7b4

Output:

{ "ReservedDBInstance": { "ReservedDBInstanceId": "ri-2020-06-29-16-54-57-670", "ReservedDBInstancesOfferingId": "8ba30be1-b9ec-447f-8f23-6114e3f4c7b4", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t2.micro", "StartTime": "2020-06-29T16:54:57.670Z", "Duration": 31536000, "FixedPrice": 51.0, "UsagePrice": 0.0, "CurrencyCode": "USD", "DBInstanceCount": 1, "ProductDescription": "mysql", "OfferingType": "Partial Upfront", "MultiAZ": false, "State": "payment-pending", "RecurringCharges": [ { "RecurringChargeAmount": 0.006, "RecurringChargeFrequency": "Hourly" } ], "ReservedDBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:ri:ri-2020-06-29-16-54-57-670" } }

For more information, see Reserved DB Instances for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use reboot-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To reboot a DB instance

The following reboot-db-instance example starts a reboot of the specified DB instance.

aws rds reboot-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-mysql-instance

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "test-mysql-instance", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.micro", "Engine": "mysql", "DBInstanceStatus": "rebooting", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Endpoint": { "Address": "test-mysql-instance.############.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "Port": 3306, "HostedZoneId": "Z1PVIF0EXAMPLE" }, ... output omitted... } }

For more information, see Rebooting a DB Instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use reboot-db-shard-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To reboot a DB shard group

The following reboot-db-shard-group example reboots a DB shard group.

aws rds reboot-db-shard-group \ --db-shard-group-identifier my-db-shard-group

Output:

{ "DBShardGroups": [ { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 1000.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" } ] }

For more information, see Rebooting an Amazon Aurora DB cluster or Amazon Aurora DB instance in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To describe your DB shard groups

The following describe-db-shard-groups example retrieves the details of your DB shard groups after you run the reboot-db-shard-group command. The DB shard group my-db-shard-group is now rebooting.

aws rds describe-db-shard-groups

Output:

{ "DBShardGroups": [ { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-7bb446329da94788b3f957746example", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "limitless-test-shard-grp", "DBClusterIdentifier": "limitless-test-cluster", "MaxACU": 768.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "available", "PubliclyAccessible": true, "Endpoint": "limitless-test-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" }, { "DBShardGroupResourceId": "shardgroup-a6e3a0226aa243e2ac6c7a1234567890", "DBShardGroupIdentifier": "my-db-shard-group", "DBClusterIdentifier": "my-sv2-cluster", "MaxACU": 1000.0, "ComputeRedundancy": 0, "Status": "rebooting", "PubliclyAccessible": false, "Endpoint": "my-sv2-cluster.limitless-cekycexample.us-east-2.rds.amazonaws.com" } ] }

For more information, see Rebooting an Amazon Aurora DB cluster or Amazon Aurora DB instance in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use register-db-proxy-targets.

Amazon CLI

To register a DB proxy with a database

The following register-db-proxy-targets example creates the association between a database and a proxy.

aws rds register-db-proxy-targets \ --db-proxy-name proxyExample \ --db-cluster-identifiers database-5

Output:

{ "DBProxyTargets": [ { "RdsResourceId": "database-5", "Port": 3306, "Type": "TRACKED_CLUSTER", "TargetHealth": { "State": "REGISTERING" } }, { "Endpoint": "database-5instance-1.ab0cd1efghij.us-east-1.rds.amazonaws.com", "RdsResourceId": "database-5", "Port": 3306, "Type": "RDS_INSTANCE", "TargetHealth": { "State": "REGISTERING" } } ] }

For more information, see Creating an RDS proxy in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Creating an RDS proxy in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use remove-from-global-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To detach an Aurora secondary cluster from an Aurora global database cluster

The following remove-from-global-cluster example detaches an Aurora secondary cluster from an Aurora global database cluster. The cluster changes from being read-only to a standalone cluster with read-write capability.

aws rds remove-from-global-cluster \ --region us-west-2 \ --global-cluster-identifier myglobalcluster \ --db-cluster-identifier arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:DB-1

Output:

{ "GlobalCluster": { "GlobalClusterIdentifier": "myglobalcluster", "GlobalClusterResourceId": "cluster-abc123def456gh", "GlobalClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds::123456789012:global-cluster:myglobalcluster", "Status": "available", "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "EngineVersion": "10.11", "StorageEncrypted": true, "DeletionProtection": false, "GlobalClusterMembers": [ { "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:js-global-cluster", "Readers": [ "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:DB-1" ], "IsWriter": true }, { "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:DB-1", "Readers": [], "IsWriter": false, "GlobalWriteForwardingStatus": "disabled" } ] } }

For more information, see Removing a cluster from an Amazon Aurora global database in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use remove-option-from-option-group.

Amazon CLI

To delete an option from an option group

The following remove-option-from-option-group example removes the OEM option from myoptiongroup.

aws rds remove-option-from-option-group \ --option-group-name myoptiongroup \ --options OEM \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "OptionGroup": { "OptionGroupName": "myoptiongroup", "OptionGroupDescription": "Test", "EngineName": "oracle-ee", "MajorEngineVersion": "19", "Options": [], "AllowsVpcAndNonVpcInstanceMemberships": true, "OptionGroupArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:og:myoptiongroup" } }

For more information, see Removing an Option from an Option Group in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use remove-role-from-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To disassociate an Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM) role from a DB cluster

The following remove-role-from-db-cluster example removes a role from a DB cluster.

aws rds remove-role-from-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster \ --role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/RDSLoadFromS3

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Associating an IAM role with an Amazon Aurora MySQL DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use remove-role-from-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To disassociate an Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM) role from a DB instance

The following remove-role-from-db-instance example removes the role named rds-s3-integration-role from an Oracle DB instance named test-instance.

aws rds remove-role-from-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --feature-name S3_INTEGRATION \ --role-arn arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/rds-s3-integration-role

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Disabling RDS SQL Server Integration with S3 in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use remove-source-identifier-from-subscription.

Amazon CLI

To remove a source identifier from a subscription

The following remove-source-identifier example removes the specified source identifier from an existing subscription.

aws rds remove-source-identifier-from-subscription \ --subscription-name my-instance-events \ --source-identifier test-instance-repl

Output:

{ "EventSubscription": { "EventSubscriptionArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:es:my-instance-events", "SubscriptionCreationTime": "Tue Jul 31 23:22:01 UTC 2018", "EventCategoriesList": [ "backup", "recovery" ], "SnsTopicArn": "arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123456789012:interesting-events", "Status": "modifying", "CustSubscriptionId": "my-instance-events", "CustomerAwsId": "123456789012", "SourceIdsList": [ "test-instance" ], "SourceType": "db-instance", "Enabled": false } }

The following code example shows how to use remove-tags-from-resource.

Amazon CLI

To remove tags from a resource

The following remove-tags-from-resource example removes tags from a resource.

aws rds remove-tags-from-resource \ --resource-name arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:mydbinstance \ --tag-keys Name Environment

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Tagging Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use reset-db-cluster-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To reset all parameters to their default values

The following reset-db-cluster-parameter-group example resets all parameter values in a customer-created DB cluster parameter group to their default values.

aws rds reset-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclpg \ --reset-all-parameters

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclpg" }

For more information, see Working with DB parameter groups and DB cluster parameter groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To reset specific parameters to their default values

The following reset-db-cluster-parameter-group example resets the parameter values for specific parameters to their default values in a customer-created DB cluster parameter group.

aws rds reset-db-cluster-parameter-group \ --db-cluster-parameter-group-name mydbclpgy \ --parameters "ParameterName=max_connections,ApplyMethod=immediate" \ "ParameterName=max_allowed_packet,ApplyMethod=immediate"

Output:

{ "DBClusterParameterGroupName": "mydbclpg" }

For more information, see Working with DB parameter groups and DB cluster parameter groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use reset-db-parameter-group.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To reset all parameters to their default values

The following reset-db-parameter-group example resets all parameter values in a customer-created DB parameter group to their default values.

aws rds reset-db-parameter-group \ --db-parameter-group-name mypg \ --reset-all-parameters

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroupName": "mypg" }

For more information, see Working with DB parameter groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Working with DB parameter groups and DB cluster parameter groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

Example 2: To reset specific parameters to their default values

The following reset-db-parameter-group example resets the parameter values for specific parameters to their default values in a customer-created DB parameter group.

aws rds reset-db-parameter-group \ --db-parameter-group-name mypg \ --parameters "ParameterName=max_connections,ApplyMethod=immediate" \ "ParameterName=max_allowed_packet,ApplyMethod=immediate"

Output:

{ "DBParameterGroupName": "mypg" }

For more information, see Working with DB parameter groups in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Working with DB parameter groups and DB cluster parameter groups in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-cluster-from-s3.

Amazon CLI

To restore an Amazon Aurora DB cluster from Amazon S3

The following restore-db-cluster-from-s3 example restores an Amazon Aurora MySQL version 5.7-compatible DB cluster from a MySQL 5.7 DB backup file in Amazon S3.

aws rds restore-db-cluster-from-s3 \ --db-cluster-identifier cluster-s3-restore \ --engine aurora-mysql \ --master-username admin \ --master-user-password mypassword \ --s3-bucket-name mybucket \ --s3-prefix test-backup \ --s3-ingestion-role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/TestBackup \ --source-engine mysql \ --source-engine-version 5.7.28

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-west-2c", "us-west-2a", "us-west-2b" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DBClusterIdentifier": "cluster-s3-restore", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-mysql5.7", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "creating", "Endpoint": "cluster-s3-restore.cluster-co3xyzabc123.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "cluster-s3-restore.cluster-ro-co3xyzabc123.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora-mysql", "EngineVersion": "5.7.12", "Port": 3306, "MasterUsername": "admin", "PreferredBackupWindow": "11:15-11:45", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "thu:12:19-thu:12:49", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-########", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z1PVIF0EXAMPLE", "StorageEncrypted": false, "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-SU5THYQQHOWCXZZDGXREXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:cluster-s3-restore", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ClusterCreateTime": "2020-07-27T14:22:08.095Z", "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "CrossAccountClone": false, "DomainMemberships": [] } }

For more information, see Migrating Data from MySQL by Using an Amazon S3 Bucket in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-cluster-from-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To restore a DB cluster from a snapshot

The following restore-db-cluster-from-snapshot restores an Aurora PostgreSQL DB cluster compatible with PostgreSQL version 10.7 from a DB cluster snapshot named test-instance-snapshot.

aws rds restore-db-cluster-from-snapshot \ --db-cluster-identifier newdbcluster \ --snapshot-identifier test-instance-snapshot \ --engine aurora-postgresql \ --engine-version 10.7

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-west-2c", "us-west-2a", "us-west-2b" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DatabaseName": "", "DBClusterIdentifier": "newdbcluster", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-postgresql10", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "creating", "Endpoint": "newdbcluster.cluster-############.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "newdbcluster.cluster-ro-############.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "EngineVersion": "10.7", "Port": 5432, "MasterUsername": "postgres", "PreferredBackupWindow": "09:33-10:03", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "sun:12:22-sun:12:52", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-########", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z1PVIF0EXAMPLE", "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/287364e4-33e3-4755-a3b0-a1b2c3d4e5f6", "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-5DSB5IFQDDUVAWOUWM1EXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:newdbcluster", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "ClusterCreateTime": "2020-06-05T15:06:58.634Z", "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "CrossAccountClone": false, "DomainMemberships": [] } }

For more information, see Restoring from a DB Cluster Snapshot in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-cluster-to-point-in-time.

Amazon CLI

To restore a DB cluster to a specified time

The following restore-db-cluster-to-point-in-time example restores the DB cluster named database-4 to the latest possible time. Using copy-on-write as the restore type restores the new DB cluster as a clone of the source DB cluster.

aws rds restore-db-cluster-to-point-in-time \ --source-db-cluster-identifier database-4 \ --db-cluster-identifier sample-cluster-clone \ --restore-type copy-on-write \ --use-latest-restorable-time

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-west-2c", "us-west-2a", "us-west-2b" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DatabaseName": "", "DBClusterIdentifier": "sample-cluster-clone", "DBClusterParameterGroup": "default.aurora-postgresql10", "DBSubnetGroup": "default", "Status": "creating", "Endpoint": "sample-cluster-clone.cluster-############.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "ReaderEndpoint": "sample-cluster-clone.cluster-ro-############.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com", "MultiAZ": false, "Engine": "aurora-postgresql", "EngineVersion": "10.7", "Port": 5432, "MasterUsername": "postgres", "PreferredBackupWindow": "09:33-10:03", "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "sun:12:22-sun:12:52", "ReadReplicaIdentifiers": [], "DBClusterMembers": [], "VpcSecurityGroups": [ { "VpcSecurityGroupId": "sg-########", "Status": "active" } ], "HostedZoneId": "Z1PVIF0EXAMPLE", "StorageEncrypted": true, "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/287364e4-33e3-4755-a3b0-a1b2c3d4e5f6", "DbClusterResourceId": "cluster-BIZ77GDSA2XBSTNPFW1EXAMPLE", "DBClusterArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:cluster:sample-cluster-clone", "AssociatedRoles": [], "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "CloneGroupId": "8d19331a-099a-45a4-b4aa-11aa22bb33cc44dd", "ClusterCreateTime": "2020-03-10T19:57:38.967Z", "EngineMode": "provisioned", "DeletionProtection": false, "HttpEndpointEnabled": false, "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "CrossAccountClone": false } }

For more information, see Restoring a DB Cluster to a Specified Time in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-instance-from-db-snapshot.

Amazon CLI

To restore a DB instance from a DB snapshot

The following restore-db-instance-from-db-snapshot example creates a new DB instance named db7-new-instance with the db.t3.small DB instance class from the specified DB snapshot. The source DB instance from which the snapshot was taken uses a deprecated DB instance class, so you can't upgrade it.

aws rds restore-db-instance-from-db-snapshot \ --db-instance-identifier db7-new-instance \ --db-snapshot-identifier db7-test-snapshot \ --db-instance-class db.t3.small

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "db7-new-instance", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.small", "Engine": "mysql", "DBInstanceStatus": "creating", ...output omitted... "PreferredMaintenanceWindow": "mon:07:37-mon:08:07", "PendingModifiedValues": {}, "MultiAZ": false, "EngineVersion": "5.7.22", "AutoMinorVersionUpgrade": true, "ReadReplicaDBInstanceIdentifiers": [], "LicenseModel": "general-public-license", ...output omitted... "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:db:db7-new-instance", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "PerformanceInsightsEnabled": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "AssociatedRoles": [] } }

For more information, see Restoring from a DB Snapshot in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-instance-from-s3.

Amazon CLI

To restore a DB instance from a backup in Amazon S3

The following restore-db-instance-from-s3 example creates a new DB instance named restored-test-instance from an existing backup in the my-backups S3 bucket.

aws rds restore-db-instance-from-s3 \ --db-instance-identifier restored-test-instance \ --allocated-storage 250 --db-instance-class db.m4.large --engine mysql \ --master-username master --master-user-password secret99 \ --s3-bucket-name my-backups --s3-ingestion-role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/my-role \ --source-engine mysql --source-engine-version 5.6.27

The following code example shows how to use restore-db-instance-to-point-in-time.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To restore a DB instance to a point in time

The following restore-db-instance-to-point-in-time example restores test-instance to a new DB instance named restored-test-instance, as of the specified time.

aws rds restore-db-instance-to-point-in-time \ --source-db-instance-identifier test-instance \ --target-db-instance restored-test-instance \ --restore-time 2018-07-30T23:45:00.000Z

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "AllocatedStorage": 20, "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:restored-test-instance", "DBInstanceStatus": "creating", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "restored-test-instance", ...some output omitted... } }

For more information, see Restoring a DB instance to a specified time in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To restore a DB instance to a specified time from a replicated backup

The following restore-db-instance-to-point-in-time example restores an Oracle DB instance to the specified time from a replicated automated backup.

aws rds restore-db-instance-to-point-in-time \ --source-db-instance-automated-backups-arn "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example" \ --target-db-instance-identifier myorclinstance-from-replicated-backup \ --restore-time 2020-12-08T18:45:00.000Z

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceIdentifier": "myorclinstance-from-replicated-backup", "DBInstanceClass": "db.t3.micro", "Engine": "oracle-se2", "DBInstanceStatus": "creating", "MasterUsername": "admin", "DBName": "ORCL", "AllocatedStorage": 20, "PreferredBackupWindow": "07:45-08:15", "BackupRetentionPeriod": 14, ... some output omitted ... "DbiResourceId": "db-KGLXG75BGVIWKQT7NQ4EXAMPLE", "CACertificateIdentifier": "rds-ca-2019", "DomainMemberships": [], "CopyTagsToSnapshot": false, "MonitoringInterval": 0, "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:db:myorclinstance-from-replicated-backup", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "PerformanceInsightsEnabled": false, "DeletionProtection": false, "AssociatedRoles": [], "TagList": [] } }

For more information, see Restoring to a specified time from a replicated backup in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use start-activity-stream.

Amazon CLI

To start a database activity stream

The following start-activity-stream example starts an asynchronous activity stream to monitor an Aurora cluster named my-pg-cluster.

aws rds start-activity-stream \ --region us-east-1 \ --mode async \ --kms-key-id arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:1234567890123:key/a12c345d-6ef7-890g-h123-456i789jk0l1 \ --resource-arn arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:1234567890123:cluster:my-pg-cluster \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:1234567890123:key/a12c345d-6ef7-890g-h123-456i789jk0l1", "KinesisStreamName": "aws-rds-das-cluster-0ABCDEFGHI1JKLM2NOPQ3R4S", "Status": "starting", "Mode": "async", "ApplyImmediately": true }

For more information, see Starting a database activity stream in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use start-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To start a DB cluster

The following start-db-cluster example starts a DB cluster and its DB instances.

aws rds start-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1e", "us-east-1b" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DatabaseName": "mydb", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", ...some output truncated... } }

For more information, see Stopping and starting an Amazon Aurora DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

  • For API details, see StartDbCluster in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use start-db-instance-automated-backups-replication.

Amazon CLI

To enable cross-Region automated backups

The following start-db-instance-automated-backups-replication example replicates automated backups from a DB instance in the US East (N. Virginia) Region to US West (Oregon). The backup retention period is 14 days.

aws rds start-db-instance-automated-backups-replication \ --region us-west-2 \ --source-db-instance-arn "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db" \ --backup-retention-period 14

Output:

{ "DBInstanceAutomatedBackup": { "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db", "DbiResourceId": "db-JKIB2GFQ5RV7REPLZA4EXAMPLE", "Region": "us-east-1", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "new-orcl-db", "RestoreWindow": {}, "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "pending", "Port": 1521, "InstanceCreateTime": "2020-12-04T15:28:31Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Engine": "oracle-se2", "EngineVersion": "12.1.0.2.v21", "LicenseModel": "bring-your-own-license", "OptionGroupName": "default:oracle-se2-12-1", "Encrypted": false, "StorageType": "gp2", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 14, "DBInstanceAutomatedBackupsArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example" } }

For more information, see Enabling cross-Region automated backups in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use start-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To start a DB instance

The following start-db-instance example starts the specified DB instance.

aws rds start-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceStatus": "starting", ...some output truncated... } }

The following code example shows how to use start-export-task.

Amazon CLI

To export a snapshot to Amazon S3

The following start-export-task example exports a DB snapshot named db5-snapshot-test to the Amazon S3 bucket named mybucket.

aws rds start-export-task \ --export-task-identifier my-s3-export \ --source-arn arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:snapshot:db5-snapshot-test \ --s3-bucket-name mybucket \ --iam-role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/ExportRole \ --kms-key-id arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/abcd0000-7fca-4128-82f2-aabbccddeeff

Output:

{ "ExportTaskIdentifier": "my-s3-export", "SourceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:snapshot:db5-snapshot-test", "SnapshotTime": "2020-03-27T20:48:42.023Z", "S3Bucket": "mybucket", "IamRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/service-role/ExportRole", "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:key/abcd0000-7fca-4128-82f2-aabbccddeeff", "Status": "STARTING", "PercentProgress": 0, "TotalExtractedDataInGB": 0 }

For more information, see Exporting a Snapshot to an Amazon S3 Bucket in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use stop-activity-stream.

Amazon CLI

To stop a database activity stream

The following stop-activity-stream example stops an activity stream in an Aurora cluster named my-pg-cluster.

aws rds stop-activity-stream \ --region us-east-1 \ --resource-arn arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:1234567890123:cluster:my-pg-cluster \ --apply-immediately

Output:

{ "KmsKeyId": "arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:1234567890123:key/a12c345d-6ef7-890g-h123-456i789jk0l1", "KinesisStreamName": "aws-rds-das-cluster-0ABCDEFGHI1JKLM2NOPQ3R4S", "Status": "stopping" }

For more information, see Stopping an activity stream in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use stop-db-cluster.

Amazon CLI

To stop a DB cluster

The following stop-db-cluster example stops a DB cluster and its DB instances.

aws rds stop-db-cluster \ --db-cluster-identifier mydbcluster

Output:

{ "DBCluster": { "AllocatedStorage": 1, "AvailabilityZones": [ "us-east-1a", "us-east-1e", "us-east-1b" ], "BackupRetentionPeriod": 1, "DatabaseName": "mydb", "DBClusterIdentifier": "mydbcluster", ...some output truncated... } }

For more information, see Stopping and starting an Amazon Aurora DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

  • For API details, see StopDbCluster in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use stop-db-instance-automated-backups-replication.

Amazon CLI

To stop replicating automated backups

The following stop-db-instance-automated-backups-replication ends replication of automated backups to the US West (Oregon) Region. Replicated backups are retained according to the set backup retention period.

aws rds stop-db-instance-automated-backups-replication \ --region us-west-2 \ --source-db-instance-arn "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db"

Output:

{ "DBInstanceAutomatedBackup": { "DBInstanceArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:new-orcl-db", "DbiResourceId": "db-JKIB2GFQ5RV7REPLZA4EXAMPLE", "Region": "us-east-1", "DBInstanceIdentifier": "new-orcl-db", "RestoreWindow": { "EarliestTime": "2020-12-04T23:13:21.030Z", "LatestTime": "2020-12-07T19:59:57Z" }, "AllocatedStorage": 20, "Status": "replicating", "Port": 1521, "InstanceCreateTime": "2020-12-04T15:28:31Z", "MasterUsername": "admin", "Engine": "oracle-se2", "EngineVersion": "12.1.0.2.v21", "LicenseModel": "bring-your-own-license", "OptionGroupName": "default:oracle-se2-12-1", "Encrypted": false, "StorageType": "gp2", "IAMDatabaseAuthenticationEnabled": false, "BackupRetentionPeriod": 7, "DBInstanceAutomatedBackupsArn": "arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:auto-backup:ab-jkib2gfq5rv7replzadausbrktni2bn4example" } }

For more information, see Stopping automated backup replication in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

The following code example shows how to use stop-db-instance.

Amazon CLI

To stop a DB instance

The following stop-db-instance example stops the specified DB instance.

aws rds stop-db-instance \ --db-instance-identifier test-instance

Output:

{ "DBInstance": { "DBInstanceStatus": "stopping", ...some output truncated... } }
  • For API details, see StopDbInstance in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use switchover-blue-green-deployment.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To switch a blue/green deployment for an RDS DB instance

The following switchover-blue-green-deployment example promotes the specified green environment as the new production environment.

aws rds switchover-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake \ --switchover-timeout 300

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-v53303651eexfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "bgd-cli-test-instance", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-blhi1e", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-green-blhi1e", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-1-green-k5fv7u", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-2-green-ggsh8m", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-db-instance-replica-3-green-o2vwm0", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CONFIGURE_BACKUPS", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATING_TOPOLOGY_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "SWITCHOVER_IN_PROGRESS", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T22:33:22.225000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Switching a blue/green deployment in the Amazon RDS User Guide.

Example 2: To promote a blue/green deployment for an Aurora MySQL DB cluster

The following switchover-blue-green-deployment example promotes the specified green environment as the new production environment.

aws rds switchover-blue-green-deployment \ --blue-green-deployment-identifier bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake \ --switchover-timeout 300

Output:

{ "BlueGreenDeployment": { "BlueGreenDeploymentIdentifier": "bgd-wi89nwzglccsfake", "BlueGreenDeploymentName": "my-blue-green-deployment", "Source": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "Target": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3ud8z6", "SwitchoverDetails": [ { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-green-3ud8z6", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-1-green-bvxc73", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-2-green-7wc4ie", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:db:my-aurora-mysql-cluster-3-green-p4xxkz", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-excluded-member-endpoint-green-np1ikl", "Status": "AVAILABLE" }, { "SourceMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint", "TargetMember": "arn:aws:rds:us-east-1:123456789012:cluster-endpoint:my-reader-endpoint-green-miszlf", "Status": "AVAILABLE" } ], "Tasks": [ { "Name": "CREATING_READ_REPLICA_OF_SOURCE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "DB_ENGINE_VERSION_UPGRADE", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_DB_INSTANCES_FOR_CLUSTER", "Status": "COMPLETED" }, { "Name": "CREATE_CUSTOM_ENDPOINTS", "Status": "COMPLETED" } ], "Status": "SWITCHOVER_IN_PROGRESS", "CreateTime": "2022-02-25T22:38:49.522000+00:00" } }

For more information, see Switching a blue/green deployment in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.