- Observability: other versions:
- What is Elastic Observability?
- What’s new in 8.7
- Send data to Elasticsearch
- Spin up the Elastic Stack
- Deploy Elastic Agent to send data
- Deploy Beats to send data
- Elastic Serverless Forwarder for AWS
- Deploy serverless forwarder
- Configuration options
- Troubleshooting
- Observability overview page
- Application performance monitoring (APM)
- Application logs
- Log monitoring
- Infrastructure monitoring
- Uptime
- Synthetics (beta)
- Get started
- Scripting browser monitors
- Configure lightweight monitors
- Manage monitors
- Analyze monitor data
- Monitor resources on private networks
- Use the CLI
- Configure projects
- Configure Synthetics settings
- Grant users access to secured resources
- Manage data retention
- Use Synthetics with traffic filters
- Migrate from the Elastic Synthetics integration
- User Experience
- Universal Profiling
- Alerting
- Cases
- CI/CD observability
- Troubleshooting
- Fields reference
- Tutorials
- Monitor Amazon Web Services (AWS) with Elastic Agent
- Monitor Amazon Web Services (AWS) with Beats
- Monitor Google Cloud Platform
- Monitor a Java application
- Monitor Kubernetes
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with Elastic Agent
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with the native Azure integration
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with Beats
IMPORTANT: No additional bug fixes or documentation updates
will be released for this version. For the latest information, see the
current release documentation.
Execution timeout
editExecution timeout
editThere is a grace period of 2 minutes before the timeout of the Lambda function where no more ingestion will occur. Instead, during this grace period the forwarder will collect and handle any unprocessed payloads in the batch of the input used as trigger.
For CloudWatch Logs event, Kinesis data stream, S3 SQS Event Notifications and direct SQS message payload inputs, the unprocessed batch will be sent to the SQS continuing queue.
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