Using action outputs as inputs - Amazon Systems Manager
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Using action outputs as inputs

Several automation actions return pre-defined outputs. You can pass these outputs as inputs to later steps in your runbook using the format {{stepName.outputName}}. You can also define custom outputs for automation actions in your runbooks. This allows you to run scripts, or invoke API operations for other Amazon Web Services once so you can reuse the values as inputs in later actions. Parameter types in runbooks are static. This means the parameter type can't be changed after it's defined. To define a step output provide the following fields:

  • Name: (Required) The output name which is used to reference the output value in later steps.

  • Selector: (Required) The JSONPath expression that is used to determine the output value.

  • Type: (Optional) The data type of the value returned by the selector field. Valid type values are String, Integer, Boolean, StringList, StringMap, MapList. The default value is String.

If the value of an output doesn't match the data type you've specified, Automation tries to convert the data type. For example, if the value returned is an Integer, but the Type specified is String, the final output value is a String value. The following type conversions are supported:

  • String values can be converted to StringList, Integer and Boolean.

  • Integer values can be converted to String and StringList.

  • Boolean values can be converted to String and StringList.

  • StringList, IntegerList, or BooleanList values containing one element can be converted to String, Integer, or Boolean.

When using parameters or outputs with automation actions, the data type can't be dynamically changed within an action's input.

Here is an example runbook that demonstrates how to define action outputs, and reference the value as input for a later action. The runbooks does the following:

  • Uses the aws:executeAwsApi action to call the Amazon EC2 DescribeImages API operation to get the name of a specific Windows Server 2016 AMI. It outputs the image ID as ImageId.

  • Uses the aws:executeAwsApi action to call the Amazon EC2 RunInstances API operation to launch one instance that uses the ImageId from the previous step. It outputs the instance ID as InstanceId.

  • Uses the aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty action to poll the Amazon EC2 DescribeInstanceStatus API operation to wait for the instance to reach the running state. The action times out in 60 seconds. The step times out if the instance state failed to reach running after 60 seconds of polling.

  • Uses the aws:assertAwsResourceProperty action to call the Amazon EC2 DescribeInstanceStatus API operation to assert that the instance is in the running state. The step fails if the instance state isn't running.

--- description: Sample runbook using Amazon API operations schemaVersion: '0.3' assumeRole: "{{ AutomationAssumeRole }}" parameters: AutomationAssumeRole: type: String description: "(Optional) The ARN of the role that allows Automation to perform the actions on your behalf." default: '' ImageName: type: String description: "(Optional) Image Name to launch EC2 instance with." default: "Windows_Server-2022-English-Full-Base*" mainSteps: - name: getImageId action: aws:executeAwsApi inputs: Service: ec2 Api: DescribeImages Filters: - Name: "name" Values: - "{{ ImageName }}" outputs: - Name: ImageId Selector: "$.Images[0].ImageId" Type: "String" - name: launchOneInstance action: aws:executeAwsApi inputs: Service: ec2 Api: RunInstances ImageId: "{{ getImageId.ImageId }}" MaxCount: 1 MinCount: 1 outputs: - Name: InstanceId Selector: "$.Instances[0].InstanceId" Type: "String" - name: waitUntilInstanceStateRunning action: aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty timeoutSeconds: 60 inputs: Service: ec2 Api: DescribeInstanceStatus InstanceIds: - "{{ launchOneInstance.InstanceId }}" PropertySelector: "$.InstanceStatuses[0].InstanceState.Name" DesiredValues: - running - name: assertInstanceStateRunning action: aws:assertAwsResourceProperty inputs: Service: ec2 Api: DescribeInstanceStatus InstanceIds: - "{{ launchOneInstance.InstanceId }}" PropertySelector: "$.InstanceStatuses[0].InstanceState.Name" DesiredValues: - running outputs: - "launchOneInstance.InstanceId" ...

Each of the previously described automation actions allows you to call a specific API operation by specifying the service namespace, the API operation name, the input parameters, and the output parameters. Inputs are defined by the API operation that you choose. You can view the API operations (also called methods) by choosing a service in the left navigation on the following Services Reference page. Choose a method in the Client section for the service that you want to invoke. For example, all API operations (methods) for Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) are listed on the following page: Amazon RDS methods.

You can view the schema for each automation action in the following locations:

The schemas include descriptions of the required fields for using each action.

Using the Selector/PropertySelector fields

Each Automation action requires that you specify either an output Selector (for aws:executeAwsApi) or a PropertySelector (for aws:assertAwsResourceProperty and aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty). These fields are used to process the JSON response from an Amazon API operation. These fields use the JSONPath syntax.

Here is an example to help illustrate this concept for the aws:executeAwsAPi action.

--- mainSteps: - name: getImageId action: aws:executeAwsApi inputs: Service: ec2 Api: DescribeImages Filters: - Name: "name" Values: - "{{ ImageName }}" outputs: - Name: ImageId Selector: "$.Images[0].ImageId" Type: "String" ...

In the aws:executeAwsApi step getImageId, the automation invokes the DescribeImages API operation and receives a response from ec2. The automation then applies Selector - "$.Images[0].ImageId" to the API response and assigns the selected value to the output ImageId variable. Other steps in the same automation can use the value of ImageId by specifying "{{ getImageId.ImageId }}".

Here is an example to help illustrate this concept for the aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty action.

--- - name: waitUntilInstanceStateRunning action: aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty # timeout is strongly encouraged for action - aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty timeoutSeconds: 60 inputs: Service: ec2 Api: DescribeInstanceStatus InstanceIds: - "{{ launchOneInstance.InstanceId }}" PropertySelector: "$.InstanceStatuses[0].InstanceState.Name" DesiredValues: - running ...

In the aws:waitForAwsResourceProperty step waitUntilInstanceStateRunning, the automation invokes the DescribeInstanceStatus API operation and receives a response from ec2. The automation then applies PropertySelector - "$.InstanceStatuses[0].InstanceState.Name" to the response and checks if the specified returned value matches a value in the DesiredValues list (in this case running). The step repeats the process until the response returns an instance state of running.

Using JSONPath in runbooks

A JSONPath expression is a string beginning with "$." that is used to select one of more components within a JSON element. The following list includes information about JSONPath operators that are supported by Systems Manager Automation:

  • Dot-notated child (.): Use with a JSON object. This operator selects the value of a specific key.

  • Deep-scan (..): Use with a JSON element. This operator scans the JSON element level by level and selects a list of values with the specific key. The return type of this operator is always a JSON array. In the context of an automation action output type, the operator can be either StringList or MapList.

  • Array-Index ([ ]): Use with a JSON array. This operator gets the value of a specific index.

  • Filter ([?(expression)]): Use with a JSON array. This operator filters JSON array values that match the criteria defined in the filter expression. Filter expressions can only use the following operators: ==, !=, >, <, >=, or <=. Combining multiple filter expressions with AND (&&) or OR (||) is not supported. The return type of this operator is always a JSON array.

To better understand JSONPath operators, review the following JSON response from the ec2 DescribeInstances API operation. Following this response are several examples that show different results by applying different JSONPath expressions to the response from the DescribeInstances API operation.

{
    "NextToken": "abcdefg",
    "Reservations": [
        {
            "OwnerId": "123456789012",
            "ReservationId": "r-abcd12345678910",
            "Instances": [
                {
                    "ImageId": "ami-12345678",
                    "BlockDeviceMappings": [
                        {
                            "Ebs": {
                                "DeleteOnTermination": true,
                                "Status": "attached",
                                "VolumeId": "vol-000000000000"
                            },
                            "DeviceName": "/dev/xvda"
                        }
                    ],
                    "State": {
                        "Code": 16,
                        "Name": "running"
                    }
                }
            ],
            "Groups": []
        },
        {
            "OwnerId": "123456789012",
            "ReservationId": "r-12345678910abcd",
            "Instances": [
                {
                    "ImageId": "ami-12345678",
                    "BlockDeviceMappings": [
                        {
                            "Ebs": {
                                "DeleteOnTermination": true,
                                "Status": "attached",
                                "VolumeId": "vol-111111111111"
                            },
                            "DeviceName": "/dev/xvda"
                        }
                    ],
                    "State": {
                        "Code": 80,
                        "Name": "stopped"
                    }
                }
            ],
            "Groups": []
        }
    ]
}

JSONPath Example 1: Get a specific String from a JSON response

JSONPath: $.Reservations[0].Instances[0].ImageId Returns: "ami-12345678" Type: String

JSONPath Example 2: Get a specific Boolean from a JSON response

JSONPath: $.Reservations[0].Instances[0].BlockDeviceMappings[0].Ebs.DeleteOnTermination Returns: true Type: Boolean

JSONPath Example 3: Get a specific Integer from a JSON response

JSONPath: $.Reservations[0].Instances[0].State.Code Returns: 16 Type: Integer

JSONPath Example 4: Deep scan a JSON response, then get all of the values for VolumeId as a StringList

JSONPath: $.Reservations..BlockDeviceMappings..VolumeId Returns: [ "vol-000000000000", "vol-111111111111" ] Type: StringList

JSONPath Example 5: Get a specific BlockDeviceMappings object as a StringMap

JSONPath: $.Reservations[0].Instances[0].BlockDeviceMappings[0] Returns: { "Ebs" : { "DeleteOnTermination" : true, "Status" : "attached", "VolumeId" : "vol-000000000000" }, "DeviceName" : "/dev/xvda" } Type: StringMap

JSONPath Example 6: Deep scan a JSON response, then get all of the State objects as a MapList

JSONPath: $.Reservations..Instances..State Returns: [ { "Code" : 16, "Name" : "running" }, { "Code" : 80, "Name" : "stopped" } ] Type: MapList

JSONPath Example 7: Filter for instances in the running state

JSONPath: $.Reservations..Instances[?(@.State.Name == 'running')] Returns: [ { "ImageId": "ami-12345678", "BlockDeviceMappings": [ { "Ebs": { "DeleteOnTermination": true, "Status": "attached", "VolumeId": "vol-000000000000" }, "DeviceName": "/dev/xvda" } ], "State": { "Code": 16, "Name": "running" } } ] Type: MapList

JSONPath Example 8: Return the ImageId of instances which aren't in the running state

JSONPath: $.Reservations..Instances[?(@.State.Name != 'running')].ImageId Returns: [ "ami-12345678" ] Type: StringList | String