Amazon GameLift examples using Amazon CLI - Amazon Command Line Interface
Services or capabilities described in Amazon Web Services documentation might vary by Region. To see the differences applicable to the China Regions, see Getting Started with Amazon Web Services in China (PDF).

This documentation is for Version 1 of the Amazon CLI only. For documentation related to Version 2 of the Amazon CLI, see the Version 2 User Guide.

Amazon GameLift 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 GameLift.

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.

Each example includes a link to the complete source code, 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 create-build.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To create a game build from files in an S3 bucket

The following create-build example creates a custom game build resource. It uses zipped files that are stored in an S3 location in an Amazon account that you control. This example assumes that you've already created an IAM role that gives Amazon GameLift permission to access the S3 location. Since the request does not specify an operating system, the new build resource defaults to WINDOWS_2012.

aws gamelift create-build \ --storage-location file://storage-loc.json \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA \ --build-version 12345.678

Contents of storage-loc.json:

{ "Bucket":"MegaFrogRaceServer_NA_build_files" "Key":"MegaFrogRaceServer_build_123.zip" "RoleArn":"arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/gamelift" }

Output:

{ "Build": { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "CreationTime": 1496708916.18, "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "SizeOnDisk": 479303, "Status": "INITIALIZED", "Version": "12345.678" }, "StorageLocation": { "Bucket": "MegaFrogRaceServer_NA_build_files", "Key": "MegaFrogRaceServer_build_123.zip" } }

Example2: To create a game build resource for manually uploading files to GameLift

The following create-build example creates a new build resource. It also gets a storage location and temporary credentials that allow you to manually upload your game build to the GameLift location in Amazon S3. Once you've successfully uploaded your build, the GameLift service validates the build and updates the new build's status.

aws gamelift create-build \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA \ --build-version 12345.678 \ --operating-system AMAZON_LINUX

Output:

{ "Build": { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "CreationTime": 1496708916.18, "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX", "SizeOnDisk": 0, "Status": "INITIALIZED", "Version": "12345.678" }, "StorageLocation": { "Bucket": "gamelift-builds-us-west-2", "Key": "123456789012/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" }, "UploadCredentials": { "AccessKeyId": "AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "SecretAccessKey": "wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY", "SessionToken": "AgoGb3JpZ2luENz...EXAMPLETOKEN==" } }

For more information, see Upload a Custom Server Build to GameLift in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

The following code example shows how to use create-fleet.

Amazon CLI

Example 1: To create a basic Linux fleet

The following create-fleet example creates a minimally configured fleet of on-demand Linux instances to host a custom server build. You can complete the configuration by using update-fleet.

aws gamelift create-fleet \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.v2 \ --description 'Hosts for v2 North America' \ --build-id build-1111aaaa-22bb-33cc-44dd-5555eeee66ff \ --certificate-configuration 'CertificateType=GENERATED' \ --ec2-instance-type c4.large \ --fleet-type ON_DEMAND \ --runtime-configuration 'ServerProcesses=[{LaunchPath=/local/game/release-na/MegaFrogRace_Server.exe,ConcurrentExecutions=1}]'

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": { "BuildId": "build-1111aaaa-22bb-33cc-44dd-5555eeee66ff", "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" }, "CreationTime": 1496365885.44, "Description": "Hosts for v2 North America", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:444455556666:fleet/fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetId": "fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetType": "ON_DEMAND", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "MetricGroups": ["default"], "Name": "MegaFrogRace.NA.v2", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX", "ServerLaunchPath": "/local/game/release-na/MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "Status": "NEW" } }

Example 2: To create a basic Windows fleet

The following create-fleet example creates a minimally configured fleet of spot Windows instances to host a custom server build. You can complete the configuration by using update-fleet.

aws gamelift create-fleet \ --name MegaFrogRace.NA.v2 \ --description 'Hosts for v2 North America' \ --build-id build-2222aaaa-33bb-44cc-55dd-6666eeee77ff \ --certificate-configuration 'CertificateType=GENERATED' \ --ec2-instance-type c4.large \ --fleet-type SPOT \ --runtime-configuration 'ServerProcesses=[{LaunchPath=C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe,ConcurrentExecutions=1}]'

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": { "BuildId": "build-2222aaaa-33bb-44cc-55dd-6666eeee77ff", "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" }, "CreationTime": 1496365885.44, "Description": "Hosts for v2 North America", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:444455556666:fleet/fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetId": "fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetType": "SPOT", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "MetricGroups": ["default"], "Name": "MegaFrogRace.NA.v2", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "ServerLaunchPath": "C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "Status": "NEW" } }

Example 3: To create a fully configured fleet

The following create-fleet example creates a fleet of Spot Windows instances for a custom server build, with most commonly used configuration settings provided.

aws gamelift create-fleet \ --name MegaFrogRace.NA.v2 \ --description 'Hosts for v2 North America' \ --build-id build-2222aaaa-33bb-44cc-55dd-6666eeee77ff \ --certificate-configuration 'CertificateType=GENERATED' \ --ec2-instance-type c4.large \ --ec2-inbound-permissions 'FromPort=33435,ToPort=33435,IpRange=10.24.34.0/23,Protocol=UDP' \ --fleet-type SPOT \ --new-game-session-protection-policy FullProtection \ --runtime-configuration file://runtime-config.json \ --metric-groups default \ --instance-role-arn 'arn:aws:iam::444455556666:role/GameLiftS3Access'

Contents of runtime-config.json:

GameSessionActivationTimeoutSeconds=300, MaxConcurrentGameSessionActivations=2, ServerProcesses=[ {LaunchPath=C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe,Parameters=-debug,ConcurrentExecutions=1}, {LaunchPath=C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe,ConcurrentExecutions=1}]

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": { "InstanceRoleArn": "arn:aws:iam::444455556666:role/GameLiftS3Access", "Status": "NEW", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:444455556666:fleet/fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetId": "fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "Description": "Hosts for v2 North America", "FleetType": "SPOT", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "Name": "MegaFrogRace.NA.v2", "CreationTime": 1569309011.11, "MetricGroups": [ "default" ], "BuildId": "build-2222aaaa-33bb-44cc-55dd-6666eeee77ff", "ServerLaunchParameters": "abc", "ServerLaunchPath": "C:\\game\\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "FullProtection", "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" } } }

Example 4: To create a Realtime Servers fleet

The following create-fleet example creates a fleet of Spot instances with a Realtime configuration script that has been uploaded to Amazon GameLift. All Realtime servers are deployed onto Linux machines. For the purposes of this example, assume that the uploaded Realtime script includes multiple script files, with the Init() function located in the script file called MainScript.js. As shown, this file is identified as the launch script in the runtime configuration.

aws gamelift create-fleet \ --name MegaFrogRace.NA.realtime \ --description 'Mega Frog Race Realtime fleet' \ --script-id script-1111aaaa-22bb-33cc-44dd-5555eeee66ff \ --ec2-instance-type c4.large \ --fleet-type SPOT \ --certificate-configuration 'CertificateType=GENERATED' --runtime-configuration 'ServerProcesses=[{LaunchPath=/local/game/MainScript.js,Parameters=+map Winter444,ConcurrentExecutions=5}]'

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": { "FleetId": "fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "Status": "NEW", "CreationTime": 1569310745.212, "InstanceType": "c4.large", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" }, "Name": "MegaFrogRace.NA.realtime", "ScriptId": "script-1111aaaa-22bb-33cc-44dd-5555eeee66ff", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:444455556666:fleet/fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "FleetType": "SPOT", "MetricGroups": [ "default" ], "Description": "Mega Frog Race Realtime fleet", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX" } }
  • For API details, see CreateFleet in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use create-game-session-queue.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To set up an ordered game session queue

The following create-game-session-queue example creates a new game session queue with destinations in two regions. It also configures the queue so that game session requests time out after waiting 10 minutes for placement. Since no latency policies are defined, GameLift attempts to place all game sessions with the first destination listed.

aws gamelift create-game-session-queue \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer-NA \ --destinations file://destinations.json \ --timeout-in-seconds 600

Contents of destinations.json:

{ "Destinations": [ {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" }, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-1::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222" } ] }

Output:

{ "GameSessionQueues": [ { "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer-NA", "GameSessionQueueArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:123456789012:gamesessionqueue/MegaFrogRaceServer-NA", "TimeoutInSeconds": 600, "Destinations": [ {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-1::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222"} ] } ] }

Example2: To set up a game session queue with player latency policies

The following create-game-session-queue example creates a new game session queue with two player latency policies. The first policy sets a 100ms latency cap that is enforced during the first minute of a game session placement attempt. The second policy raises the latency cap to 200ms until the placement request times out at 3 minutes.

aws gamelift create-game-session-queue \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer-NA \ --destinations file://destinations.json \ --player-latency-policies file://latency-policies.json \ --timeout-in-seconds 180

Contents of destinations.json:

{ "Destinations": [ { "DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" }, { "DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222" } ] }

Contents of latency-policies.json:

{ "PlayerLatencyPolicies": [ {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 200}, {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 100, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 60} ] }

Output:

{ "GameSessionQueue": { "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer-NA", "GameSessionQueueArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:111122223333:gamesessionqueue/MegaFrogRaceServer-NA", "TimeoutInSeconds": 600, "PlayerLatencyPolicies": [ { "MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 100, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 60 }, { "MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 200 } ] "Destinations": [ {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222"} ], } }

For more information, see Create a Queue in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use delete-build.

Amazon CLI

To delete a custom game build

The following delete-build example removes a build from your Amazon GameLift account. After the build is deleted, you cannot use it to create new fleets. This operation cannot be undone.

aws gamelift delete-build \ --build-id build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

This command produces no output.

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

The following code example shows how to use delete-fleet.

Amazon CLI

To delete a fleet that is no longer in use

The following delete-fleet example removes a fleet that has been scaled down to zero instances. If the fleet capacity is greater than zero, the request fails with an HTTP 400 error.

aws gamelift delete-fleet \ --fleet-id fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Manage GameLift Fleets in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

The following code example shows how to use delete-game-session-queue.

Amazon CLI

To delete a game session queue

The following delete-game-session-queue example deletes a specified game session queue.

aws gamelift delete-game-session-queue \ --name MegaFrogRace-NA

This command produces no output.

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

Amazon CLI

To get information on a custom game build

The following describe-build example retrieves properties for a game server build resource.

aws gamelift describe-build \ --build-id build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "Build": { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "CreationTime": 1496708916.18, "Name": "My_Game_Server_Build_One", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX", "SizeOnDisk": 1304924, "Status": "READY", "Version": "12345.678" } }

For more information, see Upload a Custom Server Build to GameLift in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

The following code example shows how to use describe-ec2-instance-limits.

Amazon CLI

To retrieve service limits for an EC2 instance type

The following describe-ec2-instance-limits example displays the maximum allowed instances and current instances in use for the specified EC2 instance type in the current Region. The result indicates that only five of the allowed twenty instances are being used.

aws gamelift describe-ec2-instance-limits \ --ec2-instance-type m5.large

Output:

{ "EC2InstanceLimits": [ { "EC2InstanceType": ""m5.large", "CurrentInstances": 5, "InstanceLimit": 20 } ] }

For more information, see Choose Computing Resources in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

Amazon CLI

Example1: To view attributes for a list of fleets

The following describe-fleet-attributes example retrieves fleet attributes for two specified fleets. As shown, the requested fleets are deployed with the same build, one for On-Demand instances and one for Spot instances, with some minor configuration differences.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-attributes \ --fleet-ids arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": [ { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "FleetType": "ON_DEMAND", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "Description": "On-demand hosts for v2 North America", "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.v2-od", "CreationTime": 1568836191.995, "Status": "ACTIVE", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "ServerLaunchPath": "C:\\game\\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "ServerLaunchParameters": "+gamelift_start_server", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "MetricGroups": [ "default" ], "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "DISABLED" } }, { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "FleetType": "SPOT", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "Description": "On-demand hosts for v2 North America", "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.v2-spot", "CreationTime": 1568838275.379, "Status": "ACTIVATING", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "ServerLaunchPath": "C:\\game\\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "MetricGroups": [ "default" ], "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" } } ] }

Example2: To request attributes for all fleets

The following describe-fleet-attributes returns fleet attributes for all fleets with any status. This example illustrates the use of pagination parameters to return one fleet at a time.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-attributes \ --limit 1

Output:

{ "FleetAttributes": [ { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "FleetArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "FleetType": "SPOT", "InstanceType": "c4.large", "Description": "On-demand hosts for v2 North America", "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.v2-spot", "CreationTime": 1568838275.379, "Status": "ACTIVATING", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "ServerLaunchPath": "C:\\game\\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "NewGameSessionProtectionPolicy": "NoProtection", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "MetricGroups": [ "default" ], "CertificateConfiguration": { "CertificateType": "GENERATED" } } ], "NextToken": "eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjEXAMPLE2" }

The output includes a NextToken value that you can use when you call the command a second time. Pass the value to the --next-token parameter to specify where to pick up the output. The following command returns the second result in the output.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-attributes \ --limit 1 \ --next-token eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjEXAMPLE1

Repeat until the response doesn't include a NextToken value.

For more information, see Setting Up GameLift Fleets in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-fleet-capacity.

Amazon CLI

To view capacity status for a list of fleets

The following describe-fleet-capacity example retrieves current capacity for two specified fleets.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-capacity \ --fleet-ids arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222

Output:

{ "FleetCapacity": [ { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "InstanceType": "c5.large", "InstanceCounts": { "DESIRED": 10, "MINIMUM": 1, "MAXIMUM": 20, "PENDING": 0, "ACTIVE": 10, "IDLE": 3, "TERMINATING": 0 } }, { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "InstanceType": "c5.large", "InstanceCounts": { "DESIRED": 13, "MINIMUM": 1, "MAXIMUM": 20, "PENDING": 0, "ACTIVE": 15, "IDLE": 2, "TERMINATING": 2 } } ] }

For more information, see GameLift Metrics for Fleets in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

Amazon CLI

To request events for a specified time span

The following describe-fleet-events example diplays details of all fleet-related events that occurred during the specified time span.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-events \ --fleet-id arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 \ --start-time 1579647600 \ --end-time 1579649400 \ --limit 5

Output:

{ "Events": [ { "EventId": "a37b6892-5d07-4d3b-8b47-80244ecf66b9", "ResourceId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "EventCode": "FLEET_STATE_ACTIVE", "Message": "Fleet fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 changed state to ACTIVE", "EventTime": 1579649342.191 }, { "EventId": "67da4ec9-92a3-4d95-886a-5d6772c24063", "ResourceId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "EventCode": "FLEET_STATE_ACTIVATING", "Message": "Fleet fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 changed state to ACTIVATING", "EventTime": 1579649321.427 }, { "EventId": "23813a46-a9e6-4a53-8847-f12e6a8381ac", "ResourceId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "EventCode": "FLEET_STATE_BUILDING", "Message": "Fleet fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 changed state to BUILDING", "EventTime": 1579649321.243 }, { "EventId": "3bf217d0-1d44-42f9-9202-433ed475d2e8", "ResourceId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "EventCode": "FLEET_STATE_VALIDATING", "Message": "Fleet fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 changed state to VALIDATING", "EventTime": 1579649197.449 }, { "EventId": "2ecd0130-5986-44eb-99a7-62df27741084", "ResourceId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "EventCode": "FLEET_VALIDATION_LAUNCH_PATH_NOT_FOUND", "Message": "Failed to find a valid path", "EventTime": 1569319075.839, "PreSignedLogUrl": "https://gamelift-event-logs-prod-us-west-2.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/logs/fleet-83422059-8329-42a2-a4d6-c4444386a6f8/events/2ecd0130-5986-44eb-99a7-62df27741084/FLEET_VALIDATION_LAUNCH_PATH_NOT_FOUND.txt?X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEB8aCXVzLXdlc3QtMiJHMEUCIHV5K%2FLPx8h310D%2FAvx0%2FZxsDy5XA3cJOwPdu3T0eBa%2FAiEA1yovokcZYy%2FV4CWW6l26aFyiSHO%2Bxz%2FBMAhEHYHMQNcqkQMImP%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2FARAAGgw3NDEwNjE1OTIxNzEiDI8rsZtzLzlwEDQhXSrlAtl5Ae%2Fgo6FCIzqXPbXfBOnSvFYqeDlriZarEpKqKrUt8mXQv9iqHResqCph9AKo49lwgSYTT2QoSxnrD7%2FUgv%2BZm2pVuczvuKtUA0fcx6s0GxpjIAzdIE%2F5P%2FB7B9M%2BVZ%2F9KF82hbJi0HTE6Y7BjKsEgFCvk4UXILhfjtan9iQl8%2F21ZTurAcJbm7Y5tuLF9SWSK3%2BEa7VXOcCK4D4O1sMjmdRm0q0CKZ%2FIaXoHkNvg0RVTa0hIqdvpaDQlsSBNdqTXbjHTu6fETE9Y9Ky%2BiJK5KiUG%2F59GjCpDcvS1FqKeLUEmKT7wysGmvjMc2n%2Fr%2F9VxQfte7w9srXwlLAQuwhiXAAyI5ICMZ5JvzjzQwTqD4CHTVKUUDwL%2BRZzbuuqkJObZml02CkRGp%2B74RTAzLbWptVqZTIfzctiCTmWxb%2FmKyELRYsVLrwNJ%2BGJ7%2BCrN0RC%2FjlgfLYIZyeAqjPgAu5HjgX%2BM7jCo9M7wBTrnAXKOFQuf9dvA84SuwXOJFp17LYGjrHMKv0qC3GfbTMrZ6kzeNV9awKCpXB2Gnx9z2KvIlJdqirWVpvHVGwKCmJBCesDzjJHrae3neogI1uW%2F9C6%2B4jIZPME3jXmZcEHqqw5uvAVF7aeIavtUZU8pxpDIWT0YE4p3Kriy2AA7ziCRKtVfjV839InyLk8LUjsioWK2qlpg2HXKFLpAXw1QsQyxYmFMB9sGKOUlbL7Jdkk%2BYUq8%2FDTlLxqj1S%2FiO4TI0Wo7ilAo%2FKKWWF4guuNDexj8EOOynSp1yImB%2BZf2Fua3O44W4eEXAMPLE33333&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20170621T231808Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=900&X-Amz-Credential=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE%2F20170621%2Fus-west-2%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY" } ], "NextToken": "eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjEXAMPLE2" }

For more information, see Debug GameLift Fleet Issues in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-fleet-port-settings.

Amazon CLI

To view inbound connection permissions for a fleet

The following describe-fleet-port-settings example retrieves connection settings for a specified fleet.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-port-settings \ --fleet-id arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "InboundPermissions": [ { "FromPort": 33400, "ToPort": 33500, "IpRange": "0.0.0.0/0", "Protocol": "UDP" }, { "FromPort": 1900, "ToPort": 2000, "IpRange": "0.0.0.0/0", "Protocol": "TCP" } ] }

For more information, see Setting Up GameLift Fleets in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-fleet-utilization.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To view usage data for a list of fleets

The following describe-fleet-utilization example retrieves current usage information for one specified fleet.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-utilization \ --fleet-ids arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "FleetUtilization": [ { "FleetId": "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "ActiveServerProcessCount": 100, "ActiveGameSessionCount": 62, "CurrentPlayerSessionCount": 329, "MaximumPlayerSessionCount": 1000 } ] }

Example2: To request usage data for all fleets

The following describe-fleet-utilization returns fleet usage data for all fleets with any status. This example uses pagination parameters to return data for two fleets at a time.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-utilization \ --limit 2

Output:

{ "FleetUtilization": [ { "FleetId": "fleet-1111aaaa-22bb-33cc-44dd-5555eeee66ff", "ActiveServerProcessCount": 100, "ActiveGameSessionCount": 13, "CurrentPlayerSessionCount": 98, "MaximumPlayerSessionCount": 1000 }, { "FleetId": "fleet-2222bbbb-33cc-44dd-55ee-6666ffff77aa", "ActiveServerProcessCount": 100, "ActiveGameSessionCount": 62, "CurrentPlayerSessionCount": 329, "MaximumPlayerSessionCount": 1000 } ], "NextToken": "eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjEXAMPLE2" }

Call the command a second time, passing the NextToken value as the argument to the --next-token parameter to see the next two results.

aws gamelift describe-fleet-utilization \ --limit 2 \ --next-token eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjEXAMPLE2

Repeat until the response no longer includes a NextToken value in the output.

For more information, see GameLift Metrics for Fleets in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-game-session-queues.

Amazon CLI

To view game session queues

The following describe-game-session-queues example retrieves properties for two specified queues.

aws gamelift describe-game-session-queues \ --names MegaFrogRace-NA MegaFrogRace-EU

Output:

{ "GameSessionQueues": [{ "Destinations": [{ "DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" }, { "DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222" } ], "Name": "MegaFrogRace-NA", "TimeoutInSeconds": 600, "GameSessionQueueArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::gamesessionqueue/MegaFrogRace-NA", "PlayerLatencyPolicies": [{ "MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 200 }, { "MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 100, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 60 } ], "FilterConfiguration": { "AllowedLocations": ["us-west-2", "ap-south-1", "us-east-1"] }, "PriorityConfiguration": { "PriorityOrder": ["LOCATION", "FLEET_TYPE", "DESTINATION"], "LocationOrder": ["us-west-2", "ap-south-1", "us-east-1"] } }, { "Destinations": [{ "DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:eu-west-3::fleet/fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222" }], "Name": "MegaFrogRace-EU", "TimeoutInSeconds": 600, "GameSessionQueueArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::gamesessionqueue/MegaFrogRace-EU" } ] }

For more information, see Using Multi-Region Queues in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use describe-runtime-configuration.

Amazon CLI

To request the runtime configuration for a fleet

The following describe-runtime-configuration example retrieves details about the current runtime configuration for a specified fleet.

aws gamelift describe-runtime-configuration \ --fleet-id fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "RuntimeConfiguration": { "ServerProcesses": [ { "LaunchPath": "C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "Parameters": "+gamelift_start_server", "ConcurrentExecutions": 3 }, { "LaunchPath": "C:\game\Bin64.Release.Dedicated\MegaFrogRace_Server.exe", "Parameters": "+gamelift_start_server +debug", "ConcurrentExecutions": 1 } ], "MaxConcurrentGameSessionActivations": 2147483647, "GameSessionActivationTimeoutSeconds": 300 } }

For more information, see Run Multiple Processes on a Fleet in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use list-builds.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To get a list of custom game builds

The following list-builds example retrieves properties for all game server builds in the current Region. The sample request illustrates how to use the pagination parameters, Limit and NextToken, to retrieve the results in sequential sets. The first command retrieves the first two builds. Because there are more than two available, the response includes a NextToken to indicate that more results are available.

aws gamelift list-builds \ --limit 2

Output:

{ "Builds": [ { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "CreationTime": 1495664528.723, "Name": "My_Game_Server_Build_One", "OperatingSystem": "WINDOWS_2012", "SizeOnDisk": 8567781, "Status": "READY", "Version": "12345.678" }, { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "CreationTime": 1495528748.555, "Name": "My_Game_Server_Build_Two", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX_2", "SizeOnDisk": 8567781, "Status": "FAILED", "Version": "23456.789" } ], "NextToken": "eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjJEXAMPLE=" }

You can then call the command again with the --next-token parameter as follows to see the next two builds.

aws gamelift list-builds \ --limit 2 --next-token eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjJEXAMPLE=

Repeat until the response doesn't include a NextToken value.

Example2: To get a list of custom game builds in failure status

The following list-builds example retrieves properties for all game server builds in the current region that currently have status FAILED.

aws gamelift list-builds \ --status FAILED

Output:

{ "Builds": [ { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "CreationTime": 1495528748.555, "Name": "My_Game_Server_Build_Two", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX_2", "SizeOnDisk": 8567781, "Status": "FAILED", "Version": "23456.789" } ] }
  • For API details, see ListBuilds in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use list-fleets.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To get a list of all fleets in a Region

The following list-fleets example displays the fleet IDs of all fleets in the current Region. This example uses pagination parameters to retrieve two fleet IDs at a time. The response includes a next-token attribute, which indicates that there are more results to retrieve.

aws gamelift list-fleets \ --limit 2

Output:

{ "FleetIds": [ "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222" ], "NextToken": "eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC01NWYxZTZmMS1jY2FlLTQ3YTctOWI5ZS1iYjFkYTQwMjJEXAMPLE=" }

You can pass the NextToken value from the previous response in the next command, as shown here to get the next two results.

aws gamelift list-fleets \ --limit 2 \ --next-token eyJhd3NBY2NvdW50SWQiOnsicyI6IjMwMjc3NjAxNjM5OCJ9LCJidWlsZElkIjp7InMiOiJidWlsZC00NDRlZjQxZS1hM2I1LTQ2NDYtODJmMy0zYzI4ZTgxNjVjEXAMPLE=

Example2: To get a list of all fleets in a Region with a specific build or script

The following list-builds example retrieves the IDs of fleets that are deployed with the specified game build. If you're working with Realtime Servers, you can provide a script ID in place of a build ID. Because this example does not specify the limit parameter, the results can include up to 16 fleet IDs.

aws gamelift list-fleets \ --build-id build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "FleetIds": [ "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE22222", "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE33333", "fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE44444" ] }
  • For API details, see ListFleets in Amazon CLI Command Reference.

The following code example shows how to use request-upload-credentials.

Amazon CLI

To refresh access credentials for uploading a build

The following create-build example obtains new, valid access credentials for uploading a GameLift build file to an Amazon S3 location. Credentials have a limited life span. You get the build ID from the response to the original CreateBuild request.

aws gamelift request-upload-credentials \ --build-id build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Output:

{ "StorageLocation": { "Bucket": "gamelift-builds-us-west-2", "Key": "123456789012/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111" }, "UploadCredentials": { "AccessKeyId": "AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE", "SecretAccessKey": "wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY", "SessionToken": "AgoGb3JpZ2luENz...EXAMPLETOKEN==" } }

For more information, see Upload a Custom Server Build to GameLift in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use start-fleet-actions.

Amazon CLI

To restart fleet automatic scaling activity

The following start-fleet-actions example resumes the use of all scaling policies that are defined for the specified fleet but were stopped by calling``stop-fleet-actions``. After starting, the scaling policies immediately begin tracking their respective metrics.

aws gamelift start-fleet-actions \ --fleet-id fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 \ --actions AUTO_SCALING

This command produces no output.

The following code example shows how to use stop-fleet-actions.

Amazon CLI

To stop a fleet's automatic scaling activity

The following stop-fleet-actions example stops the use of all scaling policies that are defined for the specified fleet. After the policies are suspended, fleet capacity remains at the same active instance count unless you adjust it manually.

aws gamelift start-fleet-actions \ --fleet-id fleet-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 \ --actions AUTO_SCALING

This command produces no output.

The following code example shows how to use update-build.

Amazon CLI

To update a custom game build

The following update-build example changes the name and version information that is associated with a specified build resource. The returned build object verifies that the changes were made successfully.

aws gamelift update-build \ --build-id build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111 \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.east \ --build-version 12345.east

Output:

{ "Build": { "BuildArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::build/build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "BuildId": "build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111", "CreationTime": 1496708916.18, "Name": "MegaFrogRaceServer.NA.east", "OperatingSystem": "AMAZON_LINUX_2", "SizeOnDisk": 1304924, "Status": "READY", "Version": "12345.east" } }

For more information, see Update Your Build Files in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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

The following code example shows how to use update-game-session-queue.

Amazon CLI

To update a game session queue configuration

The following update-game-session-queue example adds a new destination and updates the player latency policies for an existing game session queue.

aws gamelift update-game-session-queue \ --name MegaFrogRace-NA \ --destinations file://destinations.json \ --player-latency-policies file://latency-policies.json

Contents of destinations.json:

{ "Destinations": [ {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-1a2b3c4d-5e6f-7a8b-9c0d-1e2f3a4b5c6d"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::fleet/fleet-5c6d3c4d-5e6f-7a8b-9c0d-1e2f3a4b5a2b"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::alias/alias-11aa22bb-3c4d-5e6f-000a-1111aaaa22bb"} ] }

Contents of latency-policies.json:

{ "PlayerLatencyPolicies": [ {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 200}, {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 150, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 120}, {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 100, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 120} ] }

Output:

{ "GameSessionQueue": { "Destinations": [ {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2::fleet/fleet-1a2b3c4d-5e6f-7a8b-9c0d-1e2f3a4b5c6d"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::fleet/fleet-5c6d3c4d-5e6f-7a8b-9c0d-1e2f3a4b5a2b"}, {"DestinationArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-east-1::alias/alias-11aa22bb-3c4d-5e6f-000a-1111aaaa22bb"} ], "GameSessionQueueArn": "arn:aws:gamelift:us-west-2:111122223333:gamesessionqueue/MegaFrogRace-NA", "Name": "MegaFrogRace-NA", "TimeoutInSeconds": 600, "PlayerLatencyPolicies": [ {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 200}, {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 150, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 120}, {"MaximumIndividualPlayerLatencyMilliseconds": 100, "PolicyDurationSeconds": 120} ] } }

For more information, see Using Multi-Region Queues in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

The following code example shows how to use upload-build.

Amazon CLI

Example1: To upload a Linux game server build

The following upload-build example uploads Linux game server build files from a file directory to the GameLift service and creates a build resource.

aws gamelift upload-build \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA \ --build-version 2.0.1 \ --build-root ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na \ --operating-system AMAZON_LINUX_2 --server-sdk-version 4.0.2

Output:

Uploading ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na: 16.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (21.45%) Uploading ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na: 32.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (42.89%) Uploading ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na: 48.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (64.34%) Uploading ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na: 64.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (85.79%) Uploading ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na: 74.6 KiB / 74.6 KiB (100.00%) Successfully uploaded ~/MegaFrogRace_Server/release-na to AWS GameLift Build ID: build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

Example2: To upload a Windows game server build

The following upload-build example uploads Windows game server build files from a directory to the GameLift service and creates a build record.

aws gamelift upload-build \ --name MegaFrogRaceServer.NA \ --build-version 2.0.1 \ --build-root C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na \ --operating-system WINDOWS_2012 --server-sdk-version 4.0.2

Output:

Uploading C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na: 16.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (21.45%) Uploading C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na: 32.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (42.89%) Uploading C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na: 48.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (64.34%) Uploading C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na: 64.0 KiB / 74.6 KiB (85.79%) Uploading C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na: 74.6 KiB / 74.6 KiB (100.00%) Successfully uploaded C:\MegaFrogRace_Server\release-na to AWS GameLift Build ID: build-a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111

For more information, see Upload a Custom Server Build to GameLift in the Amazon GameLift Developer Guide.

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