2/26/2025, 12:00:00 AM ~ 2/27/2025, 12:00:00 AM (UTC)

Recent Announcements

Amazon RDS now provides visibility into IAM DB Authentication metrics and logs

Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS) IAM Database Authentication (IAM DB Auth) now provides enhanced observability through metrics and logs. It enables customers to investigate and resolve authentication issues when connecting to RDS databases.\n Database connection authentication issues can occur due to multiple reasons such as configuration or permission issues with your IAM policy, using expired tokens, throttling, etc. IAM DB Auth metrics and logs can help troubleshoot authentication issues caused due to all the above issues. Now you will also get visibility into error logs that help you get insights into user specific connection failures. IAM DB Auth metrics are available in Amazon CloudWatch automatically as long as IAM DB Authentication is enabled on your database instance or cluster. IAM DB Auth error logs can be exported to your CloudWatch Logs account via the RDS Export to CloudWatch Logs feature. Amazon RDS IAM DB Auth metrics and logs are supported by RDS for MySQL, RDS for MariaDB, RDS for PostgreSQL, Aurora MySQL-Compatible Edition, and Aurora PostgreSQL-Compatible Edition. To get started with enabling Amazon RDS IAM DB Authentication, visit: Enabling and disabling IAM database authentication - Amazon RDS and Enabling and disabling IAM database authentication - Amazon Aurora. For troubleshooting Amazon RDS database authentication issues using Amazon RDS IAM DB Auth metrics and logs visit this page for Amazon RDS and this page for Amazon Aurora. To learn more about AWS Identity and Access Management, refer the product detail page.

Amazon Connect now supports interactive welcome messages when starting chats

Amazon Connect Chat now enables you to greet customers with interactive messages when starting chats, delivering contextual and personalized experiences that improve engagement and self-service resolution rates. For example, when a customer visits a product page and opens the chat widget, they receive a contextual greeting with options to compare similar products, check store availability, or learn about warranty details.\n To customize the interactive welcome message using Amazon Lex, check the ‘Initialize bot with message’ option in the ‘Get customer input’ block in the Amazon Connect flow designer. You can either manually enter or dynamically set the initial message sent to the chat bot to personalize your customer experience. This new feature is available in all AWS regions where Amazon Connect is available. To learn more and get started, please refer to the help documentation, pricing page, or visit the Amazon Connect website.

Amazon RDS for MariaDB supports minors 11.4.5, 10.11.11, 10.6.21, 10.5.28

Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) for MariaDB now supports MariaDB minor versions 11.4.5, 10.11.11, 10.6.21, and 10.5.28. We recommend that you upgrade to the latest minor versions to fix known security vulnerabilities in prior versions of MariaDB, and to benefit from the bug fixes, performance improvements, and new functionality added by the MariaDB community.\n You can leverage automatic minor version upgrades to automatically upgrade your databases to more recent minor versions during scheduled maintenance windows. You can also leverage Amazon RDS Managed Blue/Green deployments for safer, simpler, and faster updates to your MariaDB instances. Learn more about upgrading your database instances, including automatic minor version upgrades and Blue/Green Deployments, in the Amazon RDS User Guide. Amazon RDS for MariaDB makes it straightforward to set up, operate, and scale MariaDB deployments in the cloud. Learn more about pricing details and regional availability at Amazon RDS for MariaDB. Create or update a fully managed Amazon RDS database in the Amazon RDS Management Console.

AWS CodeBuild adds support for managed webhooks in GitHub Enterprise

AWS CodeBuild’s support for managed webhooks now extends to include GitHub Enterprise. AWS CodeBuild is a fully managed continuous integration service that compiles source code, runs tests, and produces software packages ready for deployment.\n Customers using GitHub Enterprise as their source provider previously had to manually create webhooks for CodeBuild to receive events. CodeBuild now integrates natively to create and manage webhooks on your behalf. Additionally, you can use CloudFormation to define your webhooks in a CodeBuild project. This feature is available in US East (Ohio), US East (N. Virginia), US West (N. California), US West (Oregon), GovCloud (US-East), Asia Pacific (Mumbai), Asia Pacific (Seoul), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Canada (Central), Europe (Frankfurt), Europe (Ireland), Europe (London), Europe (Milan), Europe (Paris), Europe (Stockholm), and South America (São Paulo). Get started using GitHub Enterprise by following our sample project. To learn more about how to get started with CodeBuild, visit the AWS CodeBuild product page.

Amazon ECS adds support for additional IAM condition keys

Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) today launched 8 new service-specific condition keys for Identity and Access Management (IAM). These new condition keys let you create IAM policies as well as Service Control Policies (SCPs) to better enforce your organizational policies in containerized environments.\n IAM condition keys allow you to author policies that enforce access control based on API request context. With today’s release, Amazon ECS has added condition keys that allow you to enforce policies related to resource configuration (ecs:task-cpu, ecs:task:memory, and ecs:compute-compatibility), container privileges (ecs:privileged), network configuration (ecs:auto-assign-public-ip and ecs:subnet), and tag propagation (ecs:propagate-tags and ecs:enable-ecs-managed-tags) for your applications deployed on Amazon ECS. For example, you can use the new ecs:auto-assign-public-ip condition key to enforce that tasks in your ECS service are not assigned public IP addresses and the ecs:privileged condition key to prevent registration of task definitions with privileges over the underlying host. The new IAM condition context keys for Amazon ECS are available in all AWS Regions. To see the full list of IAM condition context keys supported by ECS and learn more about using condition keys with Amazon ECS, please refer to our documentation.

AWS CodeBuild adds support for managed runners for GitLab Self-Managed

AWS CodeBuild now supports managed runners for GitLab Self-Managed. Customers can configure their CodeBuild projects to receive GitLab Self-Managed CI/CD job events and run them on CodeBuild ephemeral hosts. AWS CodeBuild is a fully managed continuous integration service that compiles source code, runs tests, and produces software packages ready for deployment.\n This feature allows GitLab Self-Managed jobs to integrate natively with AWS, providing security and convenience through features such as IAM, AWS Secrets Manager, AWS CloudTrail, and Amazon VPC. Customers can access all compute platforms that CodeBuild offers, including Lambda, GPU-enhanced and Arm-based instances. CodeBuild’s integration with GitLab Self-Managed runners is available in all regions where CodeBuild is offered. For more information about the AWS Regions where CodeBuild is available, see the AWS Regions page. Get started by setting up webhooks in a CodeBuild project, and updating your GitLab CI YAML to use self-managed runners hosted on CodeBuild machines. To learn more about runners powered by CodeBuild for GitLab or GitHub, see CodeBuild’s documentation for self-hosted runners in AWS CodeBuild.

Amazon RDS Data API for Aurora is now available in 10 additional AWS regions

RDS Data API for Aurora Serverless v2 and Aurora provisioned PostgreSQL-Compatible and MySQL-Compatible database clusters is now available in Africa (Cape Town), Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Jakarta), Asia Pacific (Malaysia), Asia Pacific (Osaka), Europe (Milan), Europe (Stockholm), Middle East (Bahrain), Middle East (UAE), and South America (São Paulo) regions. RDS Data API allows you to access these Aurora clusters via a secure HTTP endpoint and run SQL statements without the use of database drivers and without managing connections.\n Data API eliminates the use of drivers and improves application scalability by automatically pooling and sharing database connections (connection pooling) rather than requiring customers to manage connections. Customers can call Data API via AWS SDK and CLI. Data API also enables access to Aurora databases via AWS AppSync GraphQL APIs. API commands supported in the Data API for Aurora Serverless v2 and Aurora provisioned are backwards compatible with Data API for Aurora Serverless v1 for easy customer application migrations. Data API supports Aurora PostgreSQL 15.3, 14.8, 13.11 and higher versions, and Aurora MySQL 3.07 and higher versions. Customers currently using Data API for ASv1 are encouraged to migrate to ASv2 to take advantage of the new Data API. To learn more, read the documentation.

AWS Chatbot is now named Amazon Q Developer

AWS Chatbot is now called Amazon Q Developer. The new name recognizes the integration of Amazon Q Developer, the most capable generative AI-powered assistant for software development, in Microsoft Teams and Slack to manage and optimize AWS resources. With Amazon Q Developer, customers can monitor, operate, and troubleshoot AWS resources in chat channels faster. Customers can quickly retrieve telemetry and ask questions to understand the state of their resources. Customers can leverage the existing non-generative AI features to operationalize Dev Ops and incident response processes with customizable notifications, action buttons, and command aliases.\n With this launch, the Microsoft Teams and Slack chat application names will change from AWS Chatbot to Amazon Q Developer. The notifications and responses received will display Amazon Q as the application name instead of AWS. Running tasks will now use “@Amazon Q” mention instead of “@aws”. Slack automation workflows that trigger AWS Chatbot messages within chat channels will continue to work after this renaming. For existing AWS Chatbot customers, there is no other change to how features work, setup, usage, and pricing. The service APIs, SDK, service endpoints, IAM permissions, and region availability are not affected by this change. Customers need to allow permissions to enable generative AI features. Amazon Q Developer generative AI features are available in chat applications at no additional cost. Amazon Q Developer is available in chat applications at no additional cost in AWS Regions where this capability is offered. Get started with using Amazon Q Developer in your chat applications with the free tier by visiting the Amazon Q Developer console. Visit the documentation & blog to learn more.

Amazon Data Firehose is now available in AWS Asia Pacific (Thailand) and Mexico (Central) regions

Amazon Data Firehose is now available in AWS Asia Pacific (Thailand) and Mexico (Central) regions. Amazon Data Firehose is the easiest way to load streaming data into data stores and analytics tools. You can capture, transform, and deliver streaming data into Amazon S3, Apache Iceberg Tables, Amazon S3 Tables, Amazon OpenSearch Service, Amazon Redshift, and third party analytics applications such as Splunk and Datadog, enabling real-time analytics use cases.\n With Amazon Data Firehose, you don’t need to write applications or manage resources. You configure your data producers to send data to Amazon Data Firehose, and it automatically delivers the data to the destination that you specified. You can also configure Amazon Data Firehose to transform your data before delivering it. To get started, you need an AWS account. Once you have an account, you can create a delivery stream in the Amazon Data Firehose Console. To learn more, explore the Amazon Data Firehose Developer Guide. For Amazon Data Firehose availability, refer to the AWS Region Table.

Amazon EC2 M6a instances now available in AWS Europe (Paris)

Starting today, the general-purpose Amazon EC2 M6a instances are now available in AWS Europe (Paris) region. M6a instances are powered by third-generation AMD EPYC processors, and deliver up to 35% better price performance than comparable M5a instances. These instances offer 10% lower cost than comparable x86-based EC2 instances.\n With this additional region, M6a instances are available in the following AWS Regions: US East (Ohio, N. Virginia), US West (N. California, Oregon), Asia Pacific (Hyderabad, Mumbai, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo), Canada (Central), Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, London, Milan, Paris), and South America (Sao Paulo). These instances can be purchased as Savings Plans, Reserved, On-Demand, and Spot instances. To get started, visit the AWS Management Console, AWS Command Line Interface (CLI), and AWS SDKs. To learn more, visit the M6a instances pages.

AWS CodeBuild now supports merging parallel test reports and new compute options

You can now automatically merge your tests reports into a consolidated report when you execute test cases in parallel. This enhancement also allows you to select a mix of on-demand instances, reserved capacity fleets, or Lambda compute resources for your parallel tests. AWS CodeBuild is a fully managed continuous integration service that compiles source code, runs tests, and produces ready-to-deploy software packages.\n As the number of tests in a project grows, the total test execution time also increases when using a single compute resource. CodeBuild runs your tests in parallel across new compute environments and now also merges the test results into a single report. This leads to faster feedback cycles and improved developer productivity. The parallel testing feature is available in all regions where CodeBuild is offered. For more information about the AWS Regions where CodeBuild is available, see the AWS Regions page. To learn more about CodeBuild’s test splitting, please visit our documentation. To learn more about how to get started with CodeBuild, visit the AWS CodeBuild product page.

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