WAF.Client.
update_web_acl
(**kwargs)¶Note
This is AWS WAF Classic documentation. For more information, see AWS WAF Classic in the developer guide.
For the latest version of AWS WAF , use the AWS WAFV2 API and see the AWS WAF Developer Guide. With the latest version, AWS WAF has a single set of endpoints for regional and global use.
Inserts or deletes ActivatedRule objects in a WebACL
. Each Rule
identifies web requests that you want to allow, block, or count. When you update a WebACL
, you specify the following values:
WebACL
, either ALLOW
or BLOCK
. AWS WAF performs the default action if a request doesn't match the criteria in any of the Rules
in a WebACL
.Rules
that you want to add or delete. If you want to replace one Rule
with another, you delete the existing Rule
and add the new one.Rule
, whether you want AWS WAF to allow requests, block requests, or count requests that match the conditions in the Rule
.Rules
in a WebACL
. If you add more than one Rule
to a WebACL
, AWS WAF evaluates each request against the Rules
in order based on the value of Priority
. (The Rule
that has the lowest value for Priority
is evaluated first.) When a web request matches all the predicates (such as ByteMatchSets
and IPSets
) in a Rule
, AWS WAF immediately takes the corresponding action, allow or block, and doesn't evaluate the request against the remaining Rules
in the WebACL
, if any.To create and configure a WebACL
, perform the following steps:
Rules
. For more information, see CreateByteMatchSet, UpdateByteMatchSet, CreateIPSet, UpdateIPSet, CreateSqlInjectionMatchSet, and UpdateSqlInjectionMatchSet.Rules
that you want to include in the WebACL
. For more information, see CreateRule and UpdateRule.WebACL
. See CreateWebACL.GetChangeToken
to get the change token that you provide in the ChangeToken
parameter of an UpdateWebACL request.UpdateWebACL
request to specify the Rules
that you want to include in the WebACL
, to specify the default action, and to associate the WebACL
with a CloudFront distribution. The ActivatedRule
can be a rule group. If you specify a rule group as your ActivatedRule
, you can exclude specific rules from that rule group. If you already have a rule group associated with a web ACL and want to submit an UpdateWebACL
request to exclude certain rules from that rule group, you must first remove the rule group from the web ACL, the re-insert it again, specifying the excluded rules. For details, see ActivatedRule$ExcludedRules .Be aware that if you try to add a RATE_BASED rule to a web ACL without setting the rule type when first creating the rule, the UpdateWebACL request will fail because the request tries to add a REGULAR rule (the default rule type) with the specified ID, which does not exist.
For more information about how to use the AWS WAF API to allow or block HTTP requests, see the AWS WAF Developer Guide.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_web_acl(
WebACLId='string',
ChangeToken='string',
Updates=[
{
'Action': 'INSERT'|'DELETE',
'ActivatedRule': {
'Priority': 123,
'RuleId': 'string',
'Action': {
'Type': 'BLOCK'|'ALLOW'|'COUNT'
},
'OverrideAction': {
'Type': 'NONE'|'COUNT'
},
'Type': 'REGULAR'|'RATE_BASED'|'GROUP',
'ExcludedRules': [
{
'RuleId': 'string'
},
]
}
},
],
DefaultAction={
'Type': 'BLOCK'|'ALLOW'|'COUNT'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The WebACLId
of the WebACL that you want to update. WebACLId
is returned by CreateWebACL and by ListWebACLs.
[REQUIRED]
The value returned by the most recent call to GetChangeToken.
An array of updates to make to the WebACL.
An array of WebACLUpdate
objects that you want to insert into or delete from a WebACL. For more information, see the applicable data types:
Action
and ActivatedRule
Action
, OverrideAction
, Priority
, RuleId
, and Type
. ActivatedRule|OverrideAction
applies only when updating or adding a RuleGroup
to a WebACL
. In this case, you do not use ActivatedRule|Action
. For all other update requests, ActivatedRule|Action
is used instead of ActivatedRule|OverrideAction
.Type
Note
This is AWS WAF Classic documentation. For more information, see AWS WAF Classic in the developer guide.
For the latest version of AWS WAF , use the AWS WAFV2 API and see the AWS WAF Developer Guide. With the latest version, AWS WAF has a single set of endpoints for regional and global use.
Specifies whether to insert a Rule
into or delete a Rule
from a WebACL
.
Specifies whether to insert a Rule
into or delete a Rule
from a WebACL
.
The ActivatedRule
object in an UpdateWebACL request specifies a Rule
that you want to insert or delete, the priority of the Rule
in the WebACL
, and the action that you want AWS WAF to take when a web request matches the Rule
( ALLOW
, BLOCK
, or COUNT
).
Specifies the order in which the Rules
in a WebACL
are evaluated. Rules with a lower value for Priority
are evaluated before Rules
with a higher value. The value must be a unique integer. If you add multiple Rules
to a WebACL
, the values don't need to be consecutive.
The RuleId
for a Rule
. You use RuleId
to get more information about a Rule
(see GetRule ), update a Rule
(see UpdateRule ), insert a Rule
into a WebACL
or delete a one from a WebACL
(see UpdateWebACL ), or delete a Rule
from AWS WAF (see DeleteRule ).
RuleId
is returned by CreateRule and by ListRules.
Specifies the action that CloudFront or AWS WAF takes when a web request matches the conditions in the Rule
. Valid values for Action
include the following:
ALLOW
: CloudFront responds with the requested object.BLOCK
: CloudFront responds with an HTTP 403 (Forbidden) status code.COUNT
: AWS WAF increments a counter of requests that match the conditions in the rule and then continues to inspect the web request based on the remaining rules in the web ACL.ActivatedRule|OverrideAction
applies only when updating or adding aRuleGroup
to aWebACL
. In this case, you do not useActivatedRule|Action
. For all other update requests,ActivatedRule|Action
is used instead ofActivatedRule|OverrideAction
.
Specifies how you want AWS WAF to respond to requests that match the settings in a Rule
. Valid settings include the following:
ALLOW
: AWS WAF allows requestsBLOCK
: AWS WAF blocks requestsCOUNT
: AWS WAF increments a counter of the requests that match all of the conditions in the rule. AWS WAF then continues to inspect the web request based on the remaining rules in the web ACL. You can't specify COUNT
for the default action for a WebACL
.Use the OverrideAction
to test your RuleGroup
.
Any rule in a RuleGroup
can potentially block a request. If you set the OverrideAction
to None
, the RuleGroup
will block a request if any individual rule in the RuleGroup
matches the request and is configured to block that request. However if you first want to test the RuleGroup
, set the OverrideAction
to Count
. The RuleGroup
will then override any block action specified by individual rules contained within the group. Instead of blocking matching requests, those requests will be counted. You can view a record of counted requests using GetSampledRequests.
ActivatedRule|OverrideAction
applies only when updating or adding aRuleGroup
to aWebACL
. In this case you do not useActivatedRule|Action
. For all other update requests,ActivatedRule|Action
is used instead ofActivatedRule|OverrideAction
.
COUNT
overrides the action specified by the individual rule within aRuleGroup
. If set toNONE
, the rule's action will take place.
The rule type, either REGULAR
, as defined by Rule, RATE_BASED
, as defined by RateBasedRule, or GROUP
, as defined by RuleGroup. The default is REGULAR. Although this field is optional, be aware that if you try to add a RATE_BASED rule to a web ACL without setting the type, the UpdateWebACL request will fail because the request tries to add a REGULAR rule with the specified ID, which does not exist.
An array of rules to exclude from a rule group. This is applicable only when the ActivatedRule
refers to a RuleGroup
.
Sometimes it is necessary to troubleshoot rule groups that are blocking traffic unexpectedly (false positives). One troubleshooting technique is to identify the specific rule within the rule group that is blocking the legitimate traffic and then disable (exclude) that particular rule. You can exclude rules from both your own rule groups and AWS Marketplace rule groups that have been associated with a web ACL.
Specifying ExcludedRules
does not remove those rules from the rule group. Rather, it changes the action for the rules to COUNT
. Therefore, requests that match an ExcludedRule
are counted but not blocked. The RuleGroup
owner will receive COUNT metrics for each ExcludedRule
.
If you want to exclude rules from a rule group that is already associated with a web ACL, perform the following steps:
Updates:Action
should be DELETE
and Updates:ActivatedRule:RuleId
should be the rule group that contains the rules that you want to exclude.Updates:Action
should be INSERT
, Updates:ActivatedRule:RuleId
should be the rule group that you just removed, and ExcludedRules
should contain the rules that you want to exclude.Note
This is AWS WAF Classic documentation. For more information, see AWS WAF Classic in the developer guide.
For the latest version of AWS WAF , use the AWS WAFV2 API and see the AWS WAF Developer Guide. With the latest version, AWS WAF has a single set of endpoints for regional and global use.
The rule to exclude from a rule group. This is applicable only when the ActivatedRule
refers to a RuleGroup
. The rule must belong to the RuleGroup
that is specified by the ActivatedRule
.
The unique identifier for the rule to exclude from the rule group.
A default action for the web ACL, either ALLOW or BLOCK. AWS WAF performs the default action if a request doesn't match the criteria in any of the rules in a web ACL.
Specifies how you want AWS WAF to respond to requests that match the settings in a Rule
. Valid settings include the following:
ALLOW
: AWS WAF allows requestsBLOCK
: AWS WAF blocks requestsCOUNT
: AWS WAF increments a counter of the requests that match all of the conditions in the rule. AWS WAF then continues to inspect the web request based on the remaining rules in the web ACL. You can't specify COUNT
for the default action for a WebACL
.dict
Response Syntax
{
'ChangeToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
ChangeToken (string) --
The ChangeToken
that you used to submit the UpdateWebACL
request. You can also use this value to query the status of the request. For more information, see GetChangeTokenStatus.
Exceptions
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFStaleDataException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFInternalErrorException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFInvalidAccountException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFInvalidOperationException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFInvalidParameterException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFNonexistentContainerException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFNonexistentItemException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFReferencedItemException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFLimitsExceededException
WAF.Client.exceptions.WAFSubscriptionNotFoundException
Examples
The following example deletes an ActivatedRule object in a WebACL with the ID webacl-1472061481310.
response = client.update_web_acl(
ChangeToken='abcd12f2-46da-4fdb-b8d5-fbd4c466928f',
DefaultAction={
'Type': 'ALLOW',
},
Updates=[
{
'Action': 'DELETE',
'ActivatedRule': {
'Action': {
'Type': 'ALLOW',
},
'Priority': 1,
'RuleId': 'WAFRule-1-Example',
},
},
],
WebACLId='webacl-1472061481310',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'ChangeToken': 'abcd12f2-46da-4fdb-b8d5-fbd4c466928f',
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}