Container for the parameters to the PutConfigRule operation. Adds or updates an AWS Config rule for evaluating whether your AWS resources comply with your desired configurations.
You can use this action for custom Config rules and AWS managed Config rules. A custom Config rule is a rule that you develop and maintain. An AWS managed Config rule is a customizable, predefined rule that AWS Config provides.
If you are adding a new custom Config rule, you must first create the AWS Lambda function that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. When you use the PutConfigRule
action to add the rule to AWS Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that AWS Lambda assigns to the function. Specify the ARN for the SourceIdentifier
key. This key is part of the Source
object, which is part of the ConfigRule
object.
If you are adding a new AWS managed Config rule, specify the rule's identifier for the SourceIdentifier
key. To reference AWS managed Config rule identifiers, see Using AWS Managed Config Rules.
For any new rule that you add, specify the ConfigRuleName
in the ConfigRule
object. Do not specify the ConfigRuleArn
or the ConfigRuleId
. These values are generated by AWS Config for new rules.
If you are updating a rule that you added previously, you can specify the rule by ConfigRuleName
, ConfigRuleId
, or ConfigRuleArn
in the ConfigRule
data type that you use in this request.
The maximum number of rules that AWS Config supports is 50.
For more information about requesting a rule limit increase, see AWS Config Limits in the AWS General Reference Guide.
For more information about developing and using AWS Config rules, see Evaluating AWS Resource Configurations with AWS Config in the AWS Config Developer Guide.