[ aws . batch ]

describe-job-definitions

Description

Describes a list of job definitions. You can specify a status (such as ACTIVE ) to only return job definitions that match that status.

See also: AWS API Documentation

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

describe-job-definitions is a paginated operation. Multiple API calls may be issued in order to retrieve the entire data set of results. You can disable pagination by providing the --no-paginate argument. When using --output text and the --query argument on a paginated response, the --query argument must extract data from the results of the following query expressions: jobDefinitions

Synopsis

  describe-job-definitions
[--job-definitions <value>]
[--job-definition-name <value>]
[--status <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--starting-token <value>]
[--page-size <value>]
[--max-items <value>]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]

Options

--job-definitions (list)

A list of up to 100 job definition names or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) entries.

(string)

Syntax:

"string" "string" ...

--job-definition-name (string)

The name of the job definition to describe.

--status (string)

The status used to filter job definitions.

--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml (string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml.

--starting-token (string)

A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken from a previously truncated response.

For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide .

--page-size (integer)

The size of each page to get in the AWS service call. This does not affect the number of items returned in the command’s output. Setting a smaller page size results in more calls to the AWS service, retrieving fewer items in each call. This can help prevent the AWS service calls from timing out.

For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide .

--max-items (integer)

The total number of items to return in the command’s output. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified, a NextToken is provided in the command’s output. To resume pagination, provide the NextToken value in the starting-token argument of a subsequent command. Do not use the NextToken response element directly outside of the AWS CLI.

For usage examples, see Pagination in the AWS Command Line Interface User Guide .

--generate-cli-skeleton (string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json. Similarly, if provided yaml-input it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml. If provided with the value output, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command.

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Examples

To describe active job definitions

This example describes all of your active job definitions.

Command:

aws batch describe-job-definitions --status ACTIVE

Output:

{
    "jobDefinitions": [
        {
            "status": "ACTIVE",
            "jobDefinitionArn": "arn:aws:batch:us-east-1:012345678910:job-definition/sleep60:1",
            "containerProperties": {
                "mountPoints": [],
                "parameters": {},
                "image": "busybox",
                "environment": {},
                "vcpus": 1,
                "command": [
                    "sleep",
                    "60"
                ],
                "volumes": [],
                "memory": 128,
                "ulimits": []
            },
            "type": "container",
            "jobDefinitionName": "sleep60",
            "revision": 1
        }
    ]
}

Output

jobDefinitions -> (list)

The list of job definitions.

(structure)

An object representing an AWS Batch job definition.

jobDefinitionName -> (string)

The name of the job definition.

jobDefinitionArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the job definition.

revision -> (integer)

The revision of the job definition.

status -> (string)

The status of the job definition.

type -> (string)

The type of job definition. If the job is run on Fargate resources, then multinode isn’t supported. For more information about multi-node parallel jobs, see Creating a multi-node parallel job definition in the AWS Batch User Guide .

parameters -> (map)

Default parameters or parameter substitution placeholders that are set in the job definition. Parameters are specified as a key-value pair mapping. Parameters in a SubmitJob request override any corresponding parameter defaults from the job definition. For more information about specifying parameters, see Job Definition Parameters in the AWS Batch User Guide .

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

retryStrategy -> (structure)

The retry strategy to use for failed jobs that are submitted with this job definition.

attempts -> (integer)

The number of times to move a job to the RUNNABLE status. You can specify between 1 and 10 attempts. If the value of attempts is greater than one, the job is retried on failure the same number of attempts as the value.

evaluateOnExit -> (list)

Array of up to 5 objects that specify conditions under which the job should be retried or failed. If this parameter is specified, then the attempts parameter must also be specified.

(structure)

Specifies a set of conditions to be met, and an action to take (RETRY or EXIT ) if all conditions are met.

onStatusReason -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the StatusReason returned for a job. The patten can be up to 512 characters long, can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (spaces, tabs). and can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

onReason -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the Reason returned for a job. The patten can be up to 512 characters long, can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (spaces, tabs), and can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

onExitCode -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the decimal representation of the ExitCode returned for a job. The patten can be up to 512 characters long, can contain only numbers, and can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

action -> (string)

Specifies the action to take if all of the specified conditions (onStatusReason , onReason , and onExitCode ) are met. The values are not case sensitive.

containerProperties -> (structure)

An object with various properties specific to container-based jobs.

image -> (string)

The image used to start a container. This string is passed directly to the Docker daemon. Images in the Docker Hub registry are available by default. Other repositories are specified with `` repository-url /image :tag `` . Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, underscores, colons, periods, forward slashes, and number signs are allowed. This parameter maps to Image in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the IMAGE parameter of docker run .

Note

Docker image architecture must match the processor architecture of the compute resources that they’re scheduled on. For example, ARM-based Docker images can only run on ARM-based compute resources.

  • Images in Amazon ECR repositories use the full registry and repository URI (for example, 012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name> ).

  • Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example, ubuntu or mongo ).

  • Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name (for example, amazon/amazon-ecs-agent ).

  • Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example, quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu ).

vcpus -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated and not supported for jobs run on Fargate resources, see resourceRequirement . The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. Jobs running on EC2 resources can specify the vCPU requirement for the job using resourceRequirements but the vCPU requirements can’t be specified both here and in the resourceRequirement structure. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. You must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places. It must be specified for each node at least once.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided. Jobs running on Fargate resources must specify the vCPU requirement for the job using resourceRequirements .

memory -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated and not supported for jobs run on Fargate resources, use ResourceRequirement . For jobs run on EC2 resources can specify the memory requirement using the ResourceRequirement structure. The hard limit (in MiB) of memory to present to the container. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory Management in the AWS Batch User Guide .

command -> (list)

The command that’s passed to the container. This parameter maps to Cmd in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the COMMAND parameter to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd .

(string)

jobRoleArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that the container can assume for AWS permissions. For more information, see IAM Roles for Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

executionRoleArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the execution role that AWS Batch can assume. Jobs running on Fargate resources must provide an execution role. For more information, see AWS Batch execution IAM role in the AWS Batch User Guide .

volumes -> (list)

A list of data volumes used in a job.

(structure)

A data volume used in a job’s container properties.

host -> (structure)

The contents of the host parameter determine whether your data volume persists on the host container instance and where it is stored. If the host parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume. However, the data isn’t guaranteed to persist after the containers associated with it stop running.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

sourcePath -> (string)

The path on the host container instance that’s presented to the container. If this parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon has assigned a host path for you. If this parameter contains a file location, then the data volume persists at the specified location on the host container instance until you delete it manually. If the source path location does not exist on the host container instance, the Docker daemon creates it. If the location does exist, the contents of the source path folder are exported.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

name -> (string)

The name of the volume. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed. This name is referenced in the sourceVolume parameter of container definition mountPoints .

environment -> (list)

The environment variables to pass to a container. This parameter maps to Env in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --env option to docker run .

Warning

We don’t recommend using plaintext environment variables for sensitive information, such as credential data.

Note

Environment variables must not start with AWS_BATCH ; this naming convention is reserved for variables that are set by the AWS Batch service.

(structure)

A key-value pair object.

name -> (string)

The name of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.

value -> (string)

The value of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.

mountPoints -> (list)

The mount points for data volumes in your container. This parameter maps to Volumes in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --volume option to docker run .

(structure)

Details on a Docker volume mount point that’s used in a job’s container properties. This parameter maps to Volumes in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --volume option to docker run.

containerPath -> (string)

The path on the container where the host volume is mounted.

readOnly -> (boolean)

If this value is true , the container has read-only access to the volume. Otherwise, the container can write to the volume. The default value is false .

sourceVolume -> (string)

The name of the volume to mount.

readonlyRootFilesystem -> (boolean)

When this parameter is true, the container is given read-only access to its root file system. This parameter maps to ReadonlyRootfs in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --read-only option to docker run .

privileged -> (boolean)

When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated permissions on the host container instance (similar to the root user). This parameter maps to Privileged in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --privileged option to docker run . The default value is false.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided, or specified as false.

ulimits -> (list)

A list of ulimits to set in the container. This parameter maps to Ulimits in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --ulimit option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

The ulimit settings to pass to the container.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources.

hardLimit -> (integer)

The hard limit for the ulimit type.

name -> (string)

The type of the ulimit .

softLimit -> (integer)

The soft limit for the ulimit type.

user -> (string)

The user name to use inside the container. This parameter maps to User in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --user option to docker run .

instanceType -> (string)

The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job. All node groups in a multi-node parallel job must use the same instance type.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to single-node container jobs or for jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

resourceRequirements -> (list)

The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

(structure)

The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

value -> (string)

The quantity of the specified resource to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the type specified.

type=”GPU”

The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. The number of GPUs reserved for all containers in a job shouldn’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched on.

Note

GPUs are not available for jobs running on Fargate resources.

type=”MEMORY”

For jobs running on EC2 resources, the hard limit (in MiB) of memory to present to the container. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places for multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. It must be specified for each node at least once. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run .

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory Management in the AWS Batch User Guide .

For jobs running on Fargate resources, then value is the hard limit (in MiB), and must match one of the supported values and the VCPU values must be one of the values supported for that memory value.

value = 512

VCPU = 0.25

value = 1024

VCPU = 0.25 or 0.5

value = 2048

VCPU = 0.25, 0.5, or 1

value = 3072

VCPU = 0.5, or 1

value = 4096

VCPU = 0.5, 1, or 2

value = 5120, 6144, or 7168

VCPU = 1 or 2

value = 8192

VCPU = 1, 2, or 4

value = 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

VCPU = 2 or 4

value = 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

VCPU = 4

type=”VCPU”

The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2 resources, you must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

For jobs running on Fargate resources, then value must match one of the supported values and the MEMORY values must be one of the values supported for that VCPU value. The supported values are 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, and 4

value = 0.25

MEMORY = 512, 1024, or 2048

value = 0.5

MEMORY = 1024, 2048, 3072, or 4096

value = 1

MEMORY = 2048, 3072, 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, or 8192

value = 2

MEMORY = 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

value = 4

MEMORY = 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, 16384, 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

type -> (string)

The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

linuxParameters -> (structure)

Linux-specific modifications that are applied to the container, such as details for device mappings.

devices -> (list)

Any host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to Devices in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --device option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

An object representing a container instance host device.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

hostPath -> (string)

The path for the device on the host container instance.

containerPath -> (string)

The path inside the container used to expose the host device. By default the hostPath value is used.

permissions -> (list)

The explicit permissions to provide to the container for the device. By default, the container has permissions for read , write , and mknod for the device.

(string)

initProcessEnabled -> (boolean)

If true, run an init process inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes. This parameter maps to the --init option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

sharedMemorySize -> (integer)

The value for the size (in MiB) of the /dev/shm volume. This parameter maps to the --shm-size option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

tmpfs -> (list)

The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the tmpfs mount. This parameter maps to the --tmpfs option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

The container path, mount options, and size of the tmpfs mount.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources.

containerPath -> (string)

The absolute file path in the container where the tmpfs volume is mounted.

size -> (integer)

The size (in MiB) of the tmpfs volume.

mountOptions -> (list)

The list of tmpfs volume mount options.

Valid values: “defaults ” | “ro ” | “rw ” | “suid ” | “nosuid ” | “dev ” | “nodev ” | “exec ” | “noexec ” | “sync ” | “async ” | “dirsync ” | “remount ” | “mand ” | “nomand ” | “atime ” | “noatime ” | “diratime ” | “nodiratime ” | “bind ” | “rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" | "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime ” | “norelatime ” | “strictatime ” | “nostrictatime ” | “mode ” | “uid ” | “gid ” | “nr_inodes ” | “nr_blocks ” | “mpol

(string)

maxSwap -> (integer)

The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use. This parameter is translated to the --memory-swap option to docker run where the value is the sum of the container memory plus the maxSwap value. For more information, see ` --memory-swap details <https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/resource_constraints/#–memory-swap-details>`__ in the Docker documentation.

If a maxSwap value of 0 is specified, the container doesn’t use swap. Accepted values are 0 or any positive integer. If the maxSwap parameter is omitted, the container doesn’t use the swap configuration for the container instance it is running on. A maxSwap value must be set for the swappiness parameter to be used.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

swappiness -> (integer)

This allows you to tune a container’s memory swappiness behavior. A swappiness value of 0 causes swapping not to happen unless absolutely necessary. A swappiness value of 100 causes pages to be swapped very aggressively. Accepted values are whole numbers between 0 and 100 . If the swappiness parameter isn’t specified, a default value of 60 is used. If a value isn’t specified for maxSwap then this parameter is ignored. If maxSwap is set to 0, the container doesn’t use swap. This parameter maps to the --memory-swappiness option to docker run .

Consider the following when you use a per-container swap configuration.

  • Swap space must be enabled and allocated on the container instance for the containers to use.

Note

The Amazon ECS optimized AMIs don’t have swap enabled by default. You must enable swap on the instance to use this feature. For more information, see Instance Store Swap Volumes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances or How do I allocate memory to work as swap space in an Amazon EC2 instance by using a swap file?

  • The swap space parameters are only supported for job definitions using EC2 resources.

  • If the maxSwap and swappiness parameters are omitted from a job definition, each container will have a default swappiness value of 60 and the total swap usage will be limited to two times the memory reservation of the container.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

logConfiguration -> (structure)

The log configuration specification for the container.

This parameter maps to LogConfig in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --log-driver option to docker run . By default, containers use the same logging driver that the Docker daemon uses. However the container might use a different logging driver than the Docker daemon by specifying a log driver with this parameter in the container definition. To use a different logging driver for a container, the log system must be configured properly on the container instance (or on a different log server for remote logging options). For more information on the options for different supported log drivers, see Configure logging drivers in the Docker documentation.

Note

AWS Batch currently supports a subset of the logging drivers available to the Docker daemon (shown in the LogConfiguration data type).

This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

Note

The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that instance with the ECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS environment variable before containers placed on that instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

logDriver -> (string)

The log driver to use for the container. The valid values listed for this parameter are log drivers that the Amazon ECS container agent can communicate with by default.

The supported log drivers are awslogs , fluentd , gelf , json-file , journald , logentries , syslog , and splunk .

Note

Jobs running on Fargate resources are restricted to the awslogs and splunk log drivers.

awslogs

Specifies the Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver. For more information, see Using the awslogs Log Driver in the AWS Batch User Guide and Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver in the Docker documentation.

fluentd

Specifies the Fluentd logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Fluentd logging driver in the Docker documentation.

gelf

Specifies the Graylog Extended Format (GELF) logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Graylog Extended Format logging driver in the Docker documentation.

journald

Specifies the journald logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Journald logging driver in the Docker documentation.

json-file

Specifies the JSON file logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see JSON File logging driver in the Docker documentation.

splunk

Specifies the Splunk logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Splunk logging driver in the Docker documentation.

syslog

Specifies the syslog logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Syslog logging driver in the Docker documentation.

Note

If you have a custom driver that’sn’t listed earlier that you want to work with the Amazon ECS container agent, you can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that’s available on GitHub and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that you want to have included. However, Amazon Web Services doesn’t currently support running modified copies of this software.

This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

options -> (map)

The configuration options to send to the log driver. This parameter requires version 1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

secretOptions -> (list)

The secrets to pass to the log configuration. For more information, see Specifying Sensitive Data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

(structure)

An object representing the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the following ways:

  • To inject sensitive data into your containers as environment variables, use the secrets container definition parameter.

  • To reference sensitive information in the log configuration of a container, use the secretOptions container definition parameter.

For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

name -> (string)

The name of the secret.

valueFrom -> (string)

The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store.

Note

If the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the job you are launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.

secrets -> (list)

The secrets for the container. For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

(structure)

An object representing the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the following ways:

  • To inject sensitive data into your containers as environment variables, use the secrets container definition parameter.

  • To reference sensitive information in the log configuration of a container, use the secretOptions container definition parameter.

For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

name -> (string)

The name of the secret.

valueFrom -> (string)

The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store.

Note

If the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the job you are launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.

networkConfiguration -> (structure)

The network configuration for jobs running on Fargate resources. Jobs running on EC2 resources must not specify this parameter.

assignPublicIp -> (string)

Indicates whether the job should have a public IP address. For a job running on Fargate resources in a private subnet to send outbound traffic to the internet (for example, in order to pull container images), the private subnet requires a NAT gateway be attached to route requests to the internet. For more information, see Amazon ECS task networking . The default value is “DISABLED”.

fargatePlatformConfiguration -> (structure)

The platform configuration for jobs running on Fargate resources. Jobs running on EC2 resources must not specify this parameter.

platformVersion -> (string)

The AWS Fargate platform version on which the jobs are running. A platform version is specified only for jobs running on Fargate resources. If one isn’t specified, the LATEST platform version is used by default. This will use a recent, approved version of the AWS Fargate platform for compute resources. For more information, see AWS Fargate platform versions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

timeout -> (structure)

The timeout configuration for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. You can specify a timeout duration after which AWS Batch terminates your jobs if they haven’t finished.

attemptDurationSeconds -> (integer)

The time duration in seconds (measured from the job attempt’s startedAt timestamp) after which AWS Batch terminates your jobs if they have not finished. The minimum value for the timeout is 60 seconds.

nodeProperties -> (structure)

An object with various properties specific to multi-node parallel jobs.

Note

If the job runs on Fargate resources, then you must not specify nodeProperties ; use containerProperties instead.

numNodes -> (integer)

The number of nodes associated with a multi-node parallel job.

mainNode -> (integer)

Specifies the node index for the main node of a multi-node parallel job. This node index value must be fewer than the number of nodes.

nodeRangeProperties -> (list)

A list of node ranges and their properties associated with a multi-node parallel job.

(structure)

An object representing the properties of the node range for a multi-node parallel job.

targetNodes -> (string)

The range of nodes, using node index values. A range of 0:3 indicates nodes with index values of 0 through 3 . If the starting range value is omitted (:n ), then 0 is used to start the range. If the ending range value is omitted (n: ), then the highest possible node index is used to end the range. Your accumulative node ranges must account for all nodes (0:n ). You can nest node ranges, for example 0:10 and 4:5 , in which case the 4:5 range properties override the 0:10 properties.

container -> (structure)

The container details for the node range.

image -> (string)

The image used to start a container. This string is passed directly to the Docker daemon. Images in the Docker Hub registry are available by default. Other repositories are specified with `` repository-url /image :tag `` . Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, underscores, colons, periods, forward slashes, and number signs are allowed. This parameter maps to Image in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the IMAGE parameter of docker run .

Note

Docker image architecture must match the processor architecture of the compute resources that they’re scheduled on. For example, ARM-based Docker images can only run on ARM-based compute resources.

  • Images in Amazon ECR repositories use the full registry and repository URI (for example, 012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name> ).

  • Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example, ubuntu or mongo ).

  • Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name (for example, amazon/amazon-ecs-agent ).

  • Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example, quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu ).

vcpus -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated and not supported for jobs run on Fargate resources, see resourceRequirement . The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. Jobs running on EC2 resources can specify the vCPU requirement for the job using resourceRequirements but the vCPU requirements can’t be specified both here and in the resourceRequirement structure. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. You must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places. It must be specified for each node at least once.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided. Jobs running on Fargate resources must specify the vCPU requirement for the job using resourceRequirements .

memory -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated and not supported for jobs run on Fargate resources, use ResourceRequirement . For jobs run on EC2 resources can specify the memory requirement using the ResourceRequirement structure. The hard limit (in MiB) of memory to present to the container. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory Management in the AWS Batch User Guide .

command -> (list)

The command that’s passed to the container. This parameter maps to Cmd in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the COMMAND parameter to docker run . For more information, see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd .

(string)

jobRoleArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that the container can assume for AWS permissions. For more information, see IAM Roles for Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

executionRoleArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the execution role that AWS Batch can assume. Jobs running on Fargate resources must provide an execution role. For more information, see AWS Batch execution IAM role in the AWS Batch User Guide .

volumes -> (list)

A list of data volumes used in a job.

(structure)

A data volume used in a job’s container properties.

host -> (structure)

The contents of the host parameter determine whether your data volume persists on the host container instance and where it is stored. If the host parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume. However, the data isn’t guaranteed to persist after the containers associated with it stop running.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

sourcePath -> (string)

The path on the host container instance that’s presented to the container. If this parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon has assigned a host path for you. If this parameter contains a file location, then the data volume persists at the specified location on the host container instance until you delete it manually. If the source path location does not exist on the host container instance, the Docker daemon creates it. If the location does exist, the contents of the source path folder are exported.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

name -> (string)

The name of the volume. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed. This name is referenced in the sourceVolume parameter of container definition mountPoints .

environment -> (list)

The environment variables to pass to a container. This parameter maps to Env in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --env option to docker run .

Warning

We don’t recommend using plaintext environment variables for sensitive information, such as credential data.

Note

Environment variables must not start with AWS_BATCH ; this naming convention is reserved for variables that are set by the AWS Batch service.

(structure)

A key-value pair object.

name -> (string)

The name of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.

value -> (string)

The value of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.

mountPoints -> (list)

The mount points for data volumes in your container. This parameter maps to Volumes in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --volume option to docker run .

(structure)

Details on a Docker volume mount point that’s used in a job’s container properties. This parameter maps to Volumes in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --volume option to docker run.

containerPath -> (string)

The path on the container where the host volume is mounted.

readOnly -> (boolean)

If this value is true , the container has read-only access to the volume. Otherwise, the container can write to the volume. The default value is false .

sourceVolume -> (string)

The name of the volume to mount.

readonlyRootFilesystem -> (boolean)

When this parameter is true, the container is given read-only access to its root file system. This parameter maps to ReadonlyRootfs in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --read-only option to docker run .

privileged -> (boolean)

When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated permissions on the host container instance (similar to the root user). This parameter maps to Privileged in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --privileged option to docker run . The default value is false.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided, or specified as false.

ulimits -> (list)

A list of ulimits to set in the container. This parameter maps to Ulimits in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --ulimit option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

The ulimit settings to pass to the container.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources.

hardLimit -> (integer)

The hard limit for the ulimit type.

name -> (string)

The type of the ulimit .

softLimit -> (integer)

The soft limit for the ulimit type.

user -> (string)

The user name to use inside the container. This parameter maps to User in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --user option to docker run .

instanceType -> (string)

The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job. All node groups in a multi-node parallel job must use the same instance type.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to single-node container jobs or for jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

resourceRequirements -> (list)

The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

(structure)

The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

value -> (string)

The quantity of the specified resource to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the type specified.

type=”GPU”

The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. The number of GPUs reserved for all containers in a job shouldn’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched on.

Note

GPUs are not available for jobs running on Fargate resources.

type=”MEMORY”

For jobs running on EC2 resources, the hard limit (in MiB) of memory to present to the container. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified here, the container is killed. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places for multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. It must be specified for each node at least once. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run .

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory Management in the AWS Batch User Guide .

For jobs running on Fargate resources, then value is the hard limit (in MiB), and must match one of the supported values and the VCPU values must be one of the values supported for that memory value.

value = 512

VCPU = 0.25

value = 1024

VCPU = 0.25 or 0.5

value = 2048

VCPU = 0.25, 0.5, or 1

value = 3072

VCPU = 0.5, or 1

value = 4096

VCPU = 0.5, 1, or 2

value = 5120, 6144, or 7168

VCPU = 1 or 2

value = 8192

VCPU = 1, 2, or 4

value = 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

VCPU = 2 or 4

value = 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

VCPU = 4

type=”VCPU”

The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2 resources, you must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

For jobs running on Fargate resources, then value must match one of the supported values and the MEMORY values must be one of the values supported for that VCPU value. The supported values are 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, and 4

value = 0.25

MEMORY = 512, 1024, or 2048

value = 0.5

MEMORY = 1024, 2048, 3072, or 4096

value = 1

MEMORY = 2048, 3072, 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, or 8192

value = 2

MEMORY = 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

value = 4

MEMORY = 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, 16384, 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

type -> (string)

The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

linuxParameters -> (structure)

Linux-specific modifications that are applied to the container, such as details for device mappings.

devices -> (list)

Any host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to Devices in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --device option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

An object representing a container instance host device.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

hostPath -> (string)

The path for the device on the host container instance.

containerPath -> (string)

The path inside the container used to expose the host device. By default the hostPath value is used.

permissions -> (list)

The explicit permissions to provide to the container for the device. By default, the container has permissions for read , write , and mknod for the device.

(string)

initProcessEnabled -> (boolean)

If true, run an init process inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes. This parameter maps to the --init option to docker run . This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

sharedMemorySize -> (integer)

The value for the size (in MiB) of the /dev/shm volume. This parameter maps to the --shm-size option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

tmpfs -> (list)

The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the tmpfs mount. This parameter maps to the --tmpfs option to docker run .

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

(structure)

The container path, mount options, and size of the tmpfs mount.

Note

This object isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources.

containerPath -> (string)

The absolute file path in the container where the tmpfs volume is mounted.

size -> (integer)

The size (in MiB) of the tmpfs volume.

mountOptions -> (list)

The list of tmpfs volume mount options.

Valid values: “defaults ” | “ro ” | “rw ” | “suid ” | “nosuid ” | “dev ” | “nodev ” | “exec ” | “noexec ” | “sync ” | “async ” | “dirsync ” | “remount ” | “mand ” | “nomand ” | “atime ” | “noatime ” | “diratime ” | “nodiratime ” | “bind ” | “rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" | "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime ” | “norelatime ” | “strictatime ” | “nostrictatime ” | “mode ” | “uid ” | “gid ” | “nr_inodes ” | “nr_blocks ” | “mpol

(string)

maxSwap -> (integer)

The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use. This parameter is translated to the --memory-swap option to docker run where the value is the sum of the container memory plus the maxSwap value. For more information, see ` --memory-swap details <https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/resource_constraints/#–memory-swap-details>`__ in the Docker documentation.

If a maxSwap value of 0 is specified, the container doesn’t use swap. Accepted values are 0 or any positive integer. If the maxSwap parameter is omitted, the container doesn’t use the swap configuration for the container instance it is running on. A maxSwap value must be set for the swappiness parameter to be used.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

swappiness -> (integer)

This allows you to tune a container’s memory swappiness behavior. A swappiness value of 0 causes swapping not to happen unless absolutely necessary. A swappiness value of 100 causes pages to be swapped very aggressively. Accepted values are whole numbers between 0 and 100 . If the swappiness parameter isn’t specified, a default value of 60 is used. If a value isn’t specified for maxSwap then this parameter is ignored. If maxSwap is set to 0, the container doesn’t use swap. This parameter maps to the --memory-swappiness option to docker run .

Consider the following when you use a per-container swap configuration.

  • Swap space must be enabled and allocated on the container instance for the containers to use.

Note

The Amazon ECS optimized AMIs don’t have swap enabled by default. You must enable swap on the instance to use this feature. For more information, see Instance Store Swap Volumes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances or How do I allocate memory to work as swap space in an Amazon EC2 instance by using a swap file?

  • The swap space parameters are only supported for job definitions using EC2 resources.

  • If the maxSwap and swappiness parameters are omitted from a job definition, each container will have a default swappiness value of 60 and the total swap usage will be limited to two times the memory reservation of the container.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs running on Fargate resources and shouldn’t be provided.

logConfiguration -> (structure)

The log configuration specification for the container.

This parameter maps to LogConfig in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --log-driver option to docker run . By default, containers use the same logging driver that the Docker daemon uses. However the container might use a different logging driver than the Docker daemon by specifying a log driver with this parameter in the container definition. To use a different logging driver for a container, the log system must be configured properly on the container instance (or on a different log server for remote logging options). For more information on the options for different supported log drivers, see Configure logging drivers in the Docker documentation.

Note

AWS Batch currently supports a subset of the logging drivers available to the Docker daemon (shown in the LogConfiguration data type).

This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

Note

The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that instance with the ECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS environment variable before containers placed on that instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

logDriver -> (string)

The log driver to use for the container. The valid values listed for this parameter are log drivers that the Amazon ECS container agent can communicate with by default.

The supported log drivers are awslogs , fluentd , gelf , json-file , journald , logentries , syslog , and splunk .

Note

Jobs running on Fargate resources are restricted to the awslogs and splunk log drivers.

awslogs

Specifies the Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver. For more information, see Using the awslogs Log Driver in the AWS Batch User Guide and Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver in the Docker documentation.

fluentd

Specifies the Fluentd logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Fluentd logging driver in the Docker documentation.

gelf

Specifies the Graylog Extended Format (GELF) logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Graylog Extended Format logging driver in the Docker documentation.

journald

Specifies the journald logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Journald logging driver in the Docker documentation.

json-file

Specifies the JSON file logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see JSON File logging driver in the Docker documentation.

splunk

Specifies the Splunk logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Splunk logging driver in the Docker documentation.

syslog

Specifies the syslog logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see Syslog logging driver in the Docker documentation.

Note

If you have a custom driver that’sn’t listed earlier that you want to work with the Amazon ECS container agent, you can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that’s available on GitHub and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that you want to have included. However, Amazon Web Services doesn’t currently support running modified copies of this software.

This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

options -> (map)

The configuration options to send to the log driver. This parameter requires version 1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your container instance and run the following command: sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

secretOptions -> (list)

The secrets to pass to the log configuration. For more information, see Specifying Sensitive Data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

(structure)

An object representing the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the following ways:

  • To inject sensitive data into your containers as environment variables, use the secrets container definition parameter.

  • To reference sensitive information in the log configuration of a container, use the secretOptions container definition parameter.

For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

name -> (string)

The name of the secret.

valueFrom -> (string)

The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store.

Note

If the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the job you are launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.

secrets -> (list)

The secrets for the container. For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

(structure)

An object representing the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the following ways:

  • To inject sensitive data into your containers as environment variables, use the secrets container definition parameter.

  • To reference sensitive information in the log configuration of a container, use the secretOptions container definition parameter.

For more information, see Specifying sensitive data in the AWS Batch User Guide .

name -> (string)

The name of the secret.

valueFrom -> (string)

The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the AWS Secrets Manager secret or the full ARN of the parameter in the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store.

Note

If the AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the job you are launching, then you can use either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must be specified.

networkConfiguration -> (structure)

The network configuration for jobs running on Fargate resources. Jobs running on EC2 resources must not specify this parameter.

assignPublicIp -> (string)

Indicates whether the job should have a public IP address. For a job running on Fargate resources in a private subnet to send outbound traffic to the internet (for example, in order to pull container images), the private subnet requires a NAT gateway be attached to route requests to the internet. For more information, see Amazon ECS task networking . The default value is “DISABLED”.

fargatePlatformConfiguration -> (structure)

The platform configuration for jobs running on Fargate resources. Jobs running on EC2 resources must not specify this parameter.

platformVersion -> (string)

The AWS Fargate platform version on which the jobs are running. A platform version is specified only for jobs running on Fargate resources. If one isn’t specified, the LATEST platform version is used by default. This will use a recent, approved version of the AWS Fargate platform for compute resources. For more information, see AWS Fargate platform versions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

tags -> (map)

The tags applied to the job definition.

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

propagateTags -> (boolean)

Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding Amazon ECS task. If no value is specified, the tags aren’t propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the FAILED state.

platformCapabilities -> (list)

The platform capabilities required by the job definition. If no value is specified, it defaults to EC2 . Jobs run on Fargate resources specify FARGATE .

(string)

nextToken -> (string)

The nextToken value to include in a future DescribeJobDefinitions request. When the results of a DescribeJobDefinitions request exceed maxResults , this value can be used to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null when there are no more results to return.