Announcing managed daemon support for Amazon ECS Managed Instances

Amazon ECS now supports managed daemons for Managed Instances, allowing platform engineers to independently manage operational tools like monitoring and logging agents. This decoupling ensures consistent daemon deployment across infrastructure without requiring application redeployments.
Announcing managed daemon support for Amazon ECS Managed Instances
Today, we’re announcing managed daemon support for Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) Managed Instances. This new capability extends the managed instances experience we introduced in September 2025, by giving platform engineers independent control over software agents such as monitoring, logging, and tracing tools, without requiring coordination with application development teams, while also improving reliability by ensuring every instance consistently runs required daemons and enabling comprehensive host-level monitoring.
When running containerized workloads at scale, platform engineers manage a wide range of responsibilities, from scaling and patching infrastructure to keeping applications running reliably and maintaining the operational agents that support those applications. Until now, many of these concerns were tightly coupled. Updating a monitoring agent meant coordinating with application teams, modifying task definitions, and redeploying entire applications, a significant operational burden when you’re managing hundreds or thousands of services.
Decoupled lifecycle management for daemons Amazon ECS now introduces a dedicated managed daemons construct that enables platform teams to centrally manage operational tooling. This separation of concerns allows platform engineers to independently deploy and update monitoring, logging, and tracing agents to infrastructure, while enforcing consistent use of required tools across all instances, without requiring application teams to redeploy their services. Daemons are guaranteed to start before application tasks and drain last, ensuring that logging, tracing, and monitoring are always available when your application needs them.
Platform engineers can deploy managed daemons across multiple capacity providers, or target specific capacity providers, giving them flexibility in how they roll out agents across their infrastructure. Resource management is also centralized, allowing teams to define daemon CPU and memory parameters separately from application configurations with no need to rebuild AMIs or update task definitions, while optimizing resource utilization since each instance runs exactly one daemon copy shared across multiple application tasks.
How it works
The managed daemon experience introduces a new daemon task definition that is separate from task definitions, with its own parameters and validation scheme. A new daemon_bridge network mode enables daemons to communicate with application tasks while remaining isolated from application networking configurations. Managed daemons support advanced host-level access capabilities that are essential for operational tooling. Platform engineers can configure daemon tasks as privileged containers, add additional Linux capabilities, and mount paths from the underlying host filesystem. These capabilities are particularly valuable for monitoring and security agents that require deep visibility into host-level metrics, processes, and system calls.
When a daemon is deployed, ECS launches exactly one daemon process per container instance before placing application tasks. This guarantees that operational tooling is in place before your application starts receiving traffic. ECS also supports rolling deployments with automatic rollbacks, so you can update agents with confidence.
Now available Managed daemon support for Amazon ECS Managed Instances is available today in all AWS Regions. To get started, visit the Amazon ECS console or review the Amazon ECS documentation. There is no additional cost to use managed daemons. You pay only for the standard compute resources consumed by your daemon tasks.
Source: AWS News Blog















