
Choose Databases from the navigation pane, and then choose the name of the DB instance that you want to monitor.Choose the AWS Region where you created the Aurora MySQL-Compatible DB cluster.Open the Amazon Relational Database Service console.View the VolumeBytesUsed in the RDS console Enter AuroraVolumeBytesLeftTotal in the search box, and select the metric.įor more information, see Viewing available metrics.Choose Metrics from the navigation pane.View the AuroraVolumeBytesLeftTotal in the CloudWatch console For more information, see Aurora storage scaling. Important: Dynamically reducing the billed storage on deleting data is possible on certain Aurora MySQL-Compatible versions. As the data grows in your cluster, the value for VolumeBytesUsed increases. VolumeBytesUsed is the amount of storage used by the Aurora MySQL-Compatible DB cluster in bytes.Note: The AuroraVolumeBytesLeftTotal metric is available only on Aurora MySQL-Compatible version 1.19.5 or higher, and on Aurora MySQL-Compatible version 2.04.5 or higher. This value can help you identify when the cluster is approaching its size limit. As the data grows in your cluster, the value for AuroraVolumeBytesLeftTotal decreases. AuroraVolumeBytesLeftTotal is the remaining available space for the cluster volume, as measured in bytes.You can review the storage that is used by the Aurora MySQL-Compatible cluster by using the following the Amazon CloudWatch metrics: For all previous versions, a database can be scaled up to a maximum of 64 TiB.


A database can be scaled up to a maximum of 128 tebibytes (TiB) in Aurora MySQL-Compatible versions 1.23.0 or higher, 2.09.0 or higher, and 3.01.0 or higher. Aurora MySQL-Compatible cluster volume automatically scales up as the amount of data in your database increases.
