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@aws-cdk/aws-iot-alpha
Advanced tools
The APIs of higher level constructs in this module are experimental and under active development. They are subject to non-backward compatible changes or removal in any future version. These are not subject to the Semantic Versioning model and breaking changes will be announced in the release notes. This means that while you may use them, you may need to update your source code when upgrading to a newer version of this package.
AWS IoT Core lets you connect billions of IoT devices and route trillions of messages to AWS services without managing infrastructure.
TopicRuleCreate a topic rule that give your devices the ability to interact with AWS services. You can create a topic rule with an action that invoke the Lambda action as following:
const func = new lambda.Function(this, 'MyFunction', {
runtime: lambda.Runtime.NODEJS_LATEST,
handler: 'index.handler',
code: lambda.Code.fromInline(`
exports.handler = (event) => {
console.log("It is test for lambda action of AWS IoT Rule.", event);
};`
),
});
new iot.TopicRule(this, 'TopicRule', {
topicRuleName: 'MyTopicRule', // optional
description: 'invokes the lambda function', // optional
sql: iot.IotSql.fromStringAsVer20160323("SELECT topic(2) as device_id, timestamp() as timestamp FROM 'device/+/data'"),
actions: [new actions.LambdaFunctionAction(func)],
});
Or, you can add an action after constructing the TopicRule instance as following:
declare const func: lambda.Function;
const topicRule = new iot.TopicRule(this, 'TopicRule', {
sql: iot.IotSql.fromStringAsVer20160323("SELECT topic(2) as device_id, timestamp() as timestamp FROM 'device/+/data'"),
});
topicRule.addAction(new actions.LambdaFunctionAction(func));
You can also supply errorAction as following,
and the IoT Rule will trigger it if a rule's action is unable to perform:
import * as logs from 'aws-cdk-lib/aws-logs';
const logGroup = new logs.LogGroup(this, 'MyLogGroup');
new iot.TopicRule(this, 'TopicRule', {
sql: iot.IotSql.fromStringAsVer20160323("SELECT topic(2) as device_id, timestamp() as timestamp FROM 'device/+/data'"),
errorAction: new actions.CloudWatchLogsAction(logGroup),
});
If you wanna make the topic rule disable, add property enabled: false as following:
new iot.TopicRule(this, 'TopicRule', {
sql: iot.IotSql.fromStringAsVer20160323("SELECT topic(2) as device_id, timestamp() as timestamp FROM 'device/+/data'"),
enabled: false,
});
See also @aws-cdk/aws-iot-actions-alpha for other actions.
AWS IoT provides a logging feature that allows you to monitor and log AWS IoT activity.
You can enable IoT logging with the following code:
new iot.Logging(this, 'Logging', {
logLevel: iot.LogLevel.INFO,
});
Note: All logs are forwarded to the AWSIotLogsV2 log group in CloudWatch.
An AWS IoT Device Defender audit looks at account- and device-related settings and policies to ensure security measures are in place. An audit can help you detect any drifts from security best practices or access policies.
The IoT audit includes various audit checks, and it is necessary to configure settings to enable those checks.
You can enable an account audit configuration with the following code:
// Audit notification are sent to the SNS topic
declare const targetTopic: sns.ITopic;
new iot.AccountAuditConfiguration(this, 'AuditConfiguration', {
targetTopic,
});
By default, all audit checks are enabled, but it is also possible to enable only specific audit checks.
new iot.AccountAuditConfiguration(this, 'AuditConfiguration', {
checkConfiguration: {
// enabled
authenticatedCognitoRoleOverlyPermissiveCheck: true,
// enabled by default
caCertificateExpiringCheck: undefined,
// disabled
caCertificateKeyQualityCheck: false,
conflictingClientIdsCheck: false,
deviceCertificateAgeCheck: false,
deviceCertificateExpiringCheck: false,
deviceCertificateKeyQualityCheck: false,
deviceCertificateSharedCheck: false,
intermediateCaRevokedForActiveDeviceCertificatesCheck: false,
ioTPolicyPotentialMisConfigurationCheck: false,
iotPolicyOverlyPermissiveCheck: false,
iotRoleAliasAllowsAccessToUnusedServicesCheck: false,
iotRoleAliasOverlyPermissiveCheck: false,
loggingDisabledCheck: false,
revokedCaCertificateStillActiveCheck: false,
revokedDeviceCertificateStillActiveCheck: false,
unauthenticatedCognitoRoleOverlyPermissiveCheck: false,
},
});
To configure the device certificate age check, you can specify the duration for the check:
import { Duration } from 'aws-cdk-lib';
new iot.AccountAuditConfiguration(this, 'AuditConfiguration', {
checkConfiguration: {
deviceCertificateAgeCheck: true,
// The default value is 365 days
// Valid values range from 30 days (minimum) to 3650 days (10 years, maximum)
deviceCertificateAgeCheckDuration: Duration.days(365),
},
});
You can create a scheduled audit that is run at a specified time interval. Checks must be enabled for your account by creating AccountAuditConfiguration.
declare const config: iot.AccountAuditConfiguration;
// Daily audit
const dailyAudit = new iot.ScheduledAudit(this, 'DailyAudit', {
accountAuditConfiguration: config,
frequency: iot.Frequency.DAILY,
auditChecks: [
iot.AuditCheck.AUTHENTICATED_COGNITO_ROLE_OVERLY_PERMISSIVE_CHECK,
],
})
// Weekly audit
const weeklyAudit = new iot.ScheduledAudit(this, 'WeeklyAudit', {
accountAuditConfiguration: config,
frequency: iot.Frequency.WEEKLY,
dayOfWeek: iot.DayOfWeek.SUNDAY,
auditChecks: [
iot.AuditCheck.CA_CERTIFICATE_EXPIRING_CHECK,
],
});
// Monthly audit
const monthlyAudit = new iot.ScheduledAudit(this, 'MonthlyAudit', {
accountAuditConfiguration: config,
frequency: iot.Frequency.MONTHLY,
dayOfMonth: iot.DayOfMonth.of(1),
auditChecks: [
iot.AuditCheck.CA_CERTIFICATE_KEY_QUALITY_CHECK,
],
});
FAQs
The CDK Construct Library for AWS::IoT
The npm package @aws-cdk/aws-iot-alpha receives a total of 4,132 weekly downloads. As such, @aws-cdk/aws-iot-alpha popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @aws-cdk/aws-iot-alpha demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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