ECS / Client / update_task_protection
update_task_protection#
- ECS.Client.update_task_protection(**kwargs)#
Updates the protection status of a task. You can set
protectionEnabled
totrue
to protect your task from termination during scale-in events from Service Autoscaling or deployments.Task-protection, by default, expires after 2 hours at which point Amazon ECS clears the
protectionEnabled
property making the task eligible for termination by a subsequent scale-in event.You can specify a custom expiration period for task protection from 1 minute to up to 2,880 minutes (48 hours). To specify the custom expiration period, set the
expiresInMinutes
property. TheexpiresInMinutes
property is always reset when you invoke this operation for a task that already hasprotectionEnabled
set totrue
. You can keep extending the protection expiration period of a task by invoking this operation repeatedly.To learn more about Amazon ECS task protection, see Task scale-in protection in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .
Note
This operation is only supported for tasks belonging to an Amazon ECS service. Invoking this operation for a standalone task will result in an
TASK_NOT_VALID
failure. For more information, see API failure reasons.Warning
If you prefer to set task protection from within the container, we recommend using the Task scale-in protection endpoint.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_task_protection( cluster='string', tasks=[ 'string', ], protectionEnabled=True|False, expiresInMinutes=123 )
- Parameters:
cluster (string) –
[REQUIRED]
The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that hosts the service that the task sets exist in.
tasks (list) –
[REQUIRED]
A list of up to 10 task IDs or full ARN entries.
(string) –
protectionEnabled (boolean) –
[REQUIRED]
Specify
true
to mark a task for protection andfalse
to unset protection, making it eligible for termination.expiresInMinutes (integer) –
If you set
protectionEnabled
totrue
, you can specify the duration for task protection in minutes. You can specify a value from 1 minute to up to 2,880 minutes (48 hours). During this time, your task will not be terminated by scale-in events from Service Auto Scaling or deployments. After this time period lapses,protectionEnabled
will be reset tofalse
.If you don’t specify the time, then the task is automatically protected for 120 minutes (2 hours).
- Return type:
dict
- Returns:
Response Syntax
{ 'protectedTasks': [ { 'taskArn': 'string', 'protectionEnabled': True|False, 'expirationDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1) }, ], 'failures': [ { 'arn': 'string', 'reason': 'string', 'detail': 'string' }, ] }
Response Structure
(dict) –
protectedTasks (list) –
A list of tasks with the following information.
taskArn
: The task ARN.protectionEnabled
: The protection status of the task. If scale-in protection is turned on for a task, the value istrue
. Otherwise, it isfalse
.expirationDate
: The epoch time when protection for the task will expire.
(dict) –
An object representing the protection status details for a task. You can set the protection status with the UpdateTaskProtection API and get the status of tasks with the GetTaskProtection API.
taskArn (string) –
The task ARN.
protectionEnabled (boolean) –
The protection status of the task. If scale-in protection is on for a task, the value is
true
. Otherwise, it isfalse
.expirationDate (datetime) –
The epoch time when protection for the task will expire.
failures (list) –
Any failures associated with the call.
(dict) –
A failed resource. For a list of common causes, see API failure reasons in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
arn (string) –
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the failed resource.
reason (string) –
The reason for the failure.
detail (string) –
The details of the failure.
Exceptions