See: Description
Interface | Description |
---|---|
ApplicationAutoScalingAsyncClient |
Service client for accessing null asynchronously.
|
ApplicationAutoScalingAsyncClientBuilder |
A builder for creating an instance of
ApplicationAutoScalingAsyncClient . |
ApplicationAutoScalingBaseClientBuilder<B extends ApplicationAutoScalingBaseClientBuilder<B,C>,C> |
This includes configuration specific to null that is supported by both
ApplicationAutoScalingClientBuilder
and ApplicationAutoScalingAsyncClientBuilder . |
ApplicationAutoScalingClient |
Service client for accessing null.
|
ApplicationAutoScalingClientBuilder |
A builder for creating an instance of
ApplicationAutoScalingClient . |
With Application Auto Scaling, you can automatically scale your AWS resources. The experience is similar to that of Auto Scaling. You can use Application Auto Scaling to accomplish the following tasks:
Define scaling policies to automatically scale your AWS resources
Scale your resources in response to CloudWatch alarms
View the history of your scaling events
Application Auto Scaling can scale the following AWS resources:
Amazon ECS services. For more information, see Service Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Container Service Developer Guide.
Amazon EC2 Spot fleets. For more information, see Automatic Scaling for Spot Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Amazon EMR clusters. For more information, see Using Automatic Scaling in Amazon EMR in the Amazon EMR Management Guide.
AppStream 2.0 fleets. For more information, see Fleet Auto Scaling for Amazon AppStream 2.0 in the Amazon AppStream 2.0 Developer Guide.
Provisioned read and write capacity for Amazon DynamoDB tables and global secondary indexes. For more information, see Managing Throughput Capacity Automatically with DynamoDB Auto Scaling in the Amazon DynamoDB Developer Guide.
Amazon Aurora Replicas. For more information, see Using Application Auto Scaling with an Amazon Aurora DB Cluster.
For a list of supported regions, see AWS Regions and Endpoints: Application Auto Scaling in the AWS General Reference.
Copyright © 2017 Amazon Web Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.