CloudFormation / Client / create_stack
create_stack#
- CloudFormation.Client.create_stack(**kwargs)#
Creates a stack as specified in the template. After the call completes successfully, the stack creation starts. You can check the status of the stack through the DescribeStacksoperation.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_stack( StackName='string', TemplateBody='string', TemplateURL='string', Parameters=[ { 'ParameterKey': 'string', 'ParameterValue': 'string', 'UsePreviousValue': True|False, 'ResolvedValue': 'string' }, ], DisableRollback=True|False, RollbackConfiguration={ 'RollbackTriggers': [ { 'Arn': 'string', 'Type': 'string' }, ], 'MonitoringTimeInMinutes': 123 }, TimeoutInMinutes=123, NotificationARNs=[ 'string', ], Capabilities=[ 'CAPABILITY_IAM'|'CAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM'|'CAPABILITY_AUTO_EXPAND', ], ResourceTypes=[ 'string', ], RoleARN='string', OnFailure='DO_NOTHING'|'ROLLBACK'|'DELETE', StackPolicyBody='string', StackPolicyURL='string', Tags=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'Value': 'string' }, ], ClientRequestToken='string', EnableTerminationProtection=True|False )
- Parameters:
StackName (string) –
[REQUIRED]
The name that’s associated with the stack. The name must be unique in the Region in which you are creating the stack.
Note
A stack name can contain only alphanumeric characters (case sensitive) and hyphens. It must start with an alphabetical character and can’t be longer than 128 characters.
TemplateBody (string) –
Structure containing the template body with a minimum length of 1 byte and a maximum length of 51,200 bytes. For more information, go to Template anatomy in the CloudFormation User Guide.
Conditional: You must specify either the
TemplateBody
or theTemplateURL
parameter, but not both.TemplateURL (string) –
Location of file containing the template body. The URL must point to a template (max size: 460,800 bytes) that’s located in an Amazon S3 bucket or a Systems Manager document. For more information, go to the Template anatomy in the CloudFormation User Guide.
Conditional: You must specify either the
TemplateBody
or theTemplateURL
parameter, but not both.Parameters (list) –
A list of
Parameter
structures that specify input parameters for the stack. For more information, see the Parameter data type.(dict) –
The Parameter data type.
ParameterKey (string) –
The key associated with the parameter. If you don’t specify a key and value for a particular parameter, CloudFormation uses the default value that’s specified in your template.
ParameterValue (string) –
The input value associated with the parameter.
UsePreviousValue (boolean) –
During a stack update, use the existing parameter value that the stack is using for a given parameter key. If you specify
true
, do not specify a parameter value.ResolvedValue (string) –
Read-only. The value that corresponds to a SSM parameter key. This field is returned only for SSM parameter types in the template.
DisableRollback (boolean) –
Set to
true
to disable rollback of the stack if stack creation failed. You can specify eitherDisableRollback
orOnFailure
, but not both.Default:
false
RollbackConfiguration (dict) –
The rollback triggers for CloudFormation to monitor during stack creation and updating operations, and for the specified monitoring period afterwards.
RollbackTriggers (list) –
The triggers to monitor during stack creation or update actions.
By default, CloudFormation saves the rollback triggers specified for a stack and applies them to any subsequent update operations for the stack, unless you specify otherwise. If you do specify rollback triggers for this parameter, those triggers replace any list of triggers previously specified for the stack. This means:
To use the rollback triggers previously specified for this stack, if any, don’t specify this parameter.
To specify new or updated rollback triggers, you must specify all the triggers that you want used for this stack, even triggers you’ve specified before (for example, when creating the stack or during a previous stack update). Any triggers that you don’t include in the updated list of triggers are no longer applied to the stack.
To remove all currently specified triggers, specify an empty list for this parameter.
If a specified trigger is missing, the entire stack operation fails and is rolled back.
(dict) –
A rollback trigger CloudFormation monitors during creation and updating of stacks. If any of the alarms you specify goes to ALARM state during the stack operation or within the specified monitoring period afterwards, CloudFormation rolls back the entire stack operation.
Arn (string) – [REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the rollback trigger.
If a specified trigger is missing, the entire stack operation fails and is rolled back.
Type (string) – [REQUIRED]
The resource type of the rollback trigger. Specify either AWS::CloudWatch::Alarm or AWS::CloudWatch::CompositeAlarm resource types.
MonitoringTimeInMinutes (integer) –
The amount of time, in minutes, during which CloudFormation should monitor all the rollback triggers after the stack creation or update operation deploys all necessary resources.
The default is 0 minutes.
If you specify a monitoring period but don’t specify any rollback triggers, CloudFormation still waits the specified period of time before cleaning up old resources after update operations. You can use this monitoring period to perform any manual stack validation desired, and manually cancel the stack creation or update (using CancelUpdateStack, for example) as necessary.
If you specify 0 for this parameter, CloudFormation still monitors the specified rollback triggers during stack creation and update operations. Then, for update operations, it begins disposing of old resources immediately once the operation completes.
TimeoutInMinutes (integer) – The amount of time that can pass before the stack status becomes CREATE_FAILED; if
DisableRollback
is not set or is set tofalse
, the stack will be rolled back.NotificationARNs (list) –
The Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic ARNs to publish stack related events. You can find your Amazon SNS topic ARNs using the Amazon SNS console or your Command Line Interface (CLI).
(string) –
Capabilities (list) –
In some cases, you must explicitly acknowledge that your stack template contains certain capabilities in order for CloudFormation to create the stack.
CAPABILITY_IAM
andCAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM
Some stack templates might include resources that can affect permissions in your Amazon Web Services account; for example, by creating new Identity and Access Management (IAM) users. For those stacks, you must explicitly acknowledge this by specifying one of these capabilities. The following IAM resources require you to specify either theCAPABILITY_IAM
orCAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM
capability.If you have IAM resources, you can specify either capability.
If you have IAM resources with custom names, you must specify
CAPABILITY_NAMED_IAM
.If you don’t specify either of these capabilities, CloudFormation returns an
InsufficientCapabilities
error.
If your stack template contains these resources, we recommend that you review all permissions associated with them and edit their permissions if necessary.
For more information, see Acknowledging IAM Resources in CloudFormation Templates.
CAPABILITY_AUTO_EXPAND
Some template contain macros. Macros perform custom processing on templates; this can include simple actions like find-and-replace operations, all the way to extensive transformations of entire templates. Because of this, users typically create a change set from the processed template, so that they can review the changes resulting from the macros before actually creating the stack. If your stack template contains one or more macros, and you choose to create a stack directly from the processed template, without first reviewing the resulting changes in a change set, you must acknowledge this capability. This includes the AWS::Include and AWS::Serverless transforms, which are macros hosted by CloudFormation. If you want to create a stack from a stack template that contains macros and nested stacks, you must create the stack directly from the template using this capability.
Warning
You should only create stacks directly from a stack template that contains macros if you know what processing the macro performs. Each macro relies on an underlying Lambda service function for processing stack templates. Be aware that the Lambda function owner can update the function operation without CloudFormation being notified.
For more information, see Using CloudFormation macros to perform custom processing on templates.
(string) –
ResourceTypes (list) –
The template resource types that you have permissions to work with for this create stack action, such as
AWS::EC2::Instance
,AWS::EC2::*
, orCustom::MyCustomInstance
. Use the following syntax to describe template resource types:AWS::*
(for all Amazon Web Services resources),Custom::*
(for all custom resources),Custom::logical_ID
(for a specific custom resource),AWS::service_name::*
(for all resources of a particular Amazon Web Services service), andAWS::service_name::resource_logical_ID
(for a specific Amazon Web Services resource).If the list of resource types doesn’t include a resource that you’re creating, the stack creation fails. By default, CloudFormation grants permissions to all resource types. Identity and Access Management (IAM) uses this parameter for CloudFormation-specific condition keys in IAM policies. For more information, see Controlling Access with Identity and Access Management.
(string) –
RoleARN (string) –
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an Identity and Access Management (IAM) role that CloudFormation assumes to create the stack. CloudFormation uses the role’s credentials to make calls on your behalf. CloudFormation always uses this role for all future operations on the stack. Provided that users have permission to operate on the stack, CloudFormation uses this role even if the users don’t have permission to pass it. Ensure that the role grants least privilege.
If you don’t specify a value, CloudFormation uses the role that was previously associated with the stack. If no role is available, CloudFormation uses a temporary session that’s generated from your user credentials.
OnFailure (string) –
Determines what action will be taken if stack creation fails. This must be one of:
DO_NOTHING
,ROLLBACK
, orDELETE
. You can specify eitherOnFailure
orDisableRollback
, but not both.Default:
ROLLBACK
StackPolicyBody (string) – Structure containing the stack policy body. For more information, go to Prevent Updates to Stack Resources in the CloudFormation User Guide. You can specify either the
StackPolicyBody
or theStackPolicyURL
parameter, but not both.StackPolicyURL (string) – Location of a file containing the stack policy. The URL must point to a policy (maximum size: 16 KB) located in an S3 bucket in the same Region as the stack. You can specify either the
StackPolicyBody
or theStackPolicyURL
parameter, but not both.Tags (list) –
Key-value pairs to associate with this stack. CloudFormation also propagates these tags to the resources created in the stack. A maximum number of 50 tags can be specified.
(dict) –
The Tag type enables you to specify a key-value pair that can be used to store information about an CloudFormation stack.
Key (string) – [REQUIRED]
Required. A string used to identify this tag. You can specify a maximum of 128 characters for a tag key. Tags owned by Amazon Web Services (Amazon Web Services) have the reserved prefix:
aws:
.Value (string) – [REQUIRED]
Required. A string containing the value for this tag. You can specify a maximum of 256 characters for a tag value.
ClientRequestToken (string) –
A unique identifier for this
CreateStack
request. Specify this token if you plan to retry requests so that CloudFormation knows that you’re not attempting to create a stack with the same name. You might retryCreateStack
requests to ensure that CloudFormation successfully received them.All events initiated by a given stack operation are assigned the same client request token, which you can use to track operations. For example, if you execute a
CreateStack
operation with the tokentoken1
, then all theStackEvents
generated by that operation will haveClientRequestToken
set astoken1
.In the console, stack operations display the client request token on the Events tab. Stack operations that are initiated from the console use the token format Console-StackOperation-ID, which helps you easily identify the stack operation . For example, if you create a stack using the console, each stack event would be assigned the same token in the following format:
Console-CreateStack-7f59c3cf-00d2-40c7-b2ff-e75db0987002
.EnableTerminationProtection (boolean) –
Whether to enable termination protection on the specified stack. If a user attempts to delete a stack with termination protection enabled, the operation fails and the stack remains unchanged. For more information, see Protecting a Stack From Being Deleted in the CloudFormation User Guide. Termination protection is deactivated on stacks by default.
For nested stacks, termination protection is set on the root stack and can’t be changed directly on the nested stack.
- Return type:
dict
- Returns:
Response Syntax
{ 'StackId': 'string' }
Response Structure
(dict) –
The output for a CreateStack action.
StackId (string) –
Unique identifier of the stack.
Exceptions
CloudFormation.Client.exceptions.LimitExceededException
CloudFormation.Client.exceptions.AlreadyExistsException
CloudFormation.Client.exceptions.TokenAlreadyExistsException
CloudFormation.Client.exceptions.InsufficientCapabilitiesException