Documentation for Automation with AWS AWS 1.1 – other releases are available in the Automation with AWS Documentation Directory.
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Automation with AWS is an Amazon Web Services (AWS) integration add-on that provides remote actions via Amazon Web Services. Administering the add-on comprises regular add-on maintenance as well as AWS integration and resource management.

Administration

Maintaining the Add-on

The following topics are applicable to regular add-on maintenance:

Managing AWS Resources

The following topics are applicable to AWS resource management:

Configuring Advanced Scenarios

The following topics are applicable to advanced scenarios only:

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    Enabling Labs Features — Labs features are giving you a sneak preview of new features coming in future releases of Automation with AWS. You can enable/disable each feature individually at any time.
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    Configuring an Outbound HTTP(S) Proxy — If your Atlassian product instance is running behind a firewall, the app will reuse the proxy configuration from the Atlassian host application.
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    Configuring an Outbound HTTP(S) Proxy — If your Bamboo or Jira instance is running behind a firewall, the app will reuse the proxy configuration from the Atlassian host application.
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    Configuring an Outbound HTTP(S) Proxy — If your Atlassian product instance is running behind a firewall, the app will reuse the proxy configuration from the Atlassian host application.
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    Configuring the AWS Client — The AWS API is eventually consistent only and also exhibits a customer specific dynamic throttling policy, both of which require respective retry logic to be in place. While the facilitated AWS SDK for Java features an exponential backoff strategy, it defaults to 2-3 retries only (accumulating to a retry window of up to ~4 seconds), which has proven to be too low for the use case at hand. The values are configurable accordingly, with an increased default of 7 retries (accumulating to a retry window of up to ~1 minute).
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    Enabling Labs Features — Labs features are giving you a sneak preview of new features coming in future releases of Tasks for AWS. You can enable/disable each feature individually at any time.
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    Configuring the AWS Client — The AWS API is eventually consistent only and also exhibits a customer specific dynamic throttling policy, both of which require respective retry logic to be in place. Accordingly the facilitated AWS SDK for Java features an exponential backoff strategy already, but its default retry number of 2-3 (accumulating to a retry window of up to ~4 seconds) has proven to be too low for the use case at hand. The values are configurable accordingly, with an increased default retry number of 7 (accumulating to a retry window of up to ~1 minute).
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    Enabling Labs Features — Labs features are giving you a sneak preview of new features coming in future releases of Identity Federation for AWS. You can enable/disable each feature individually at any time.

How-to Articles

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

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