# WARNING ABOUT GENERATED CODE
#
# This file is generated. See the contributing guide for more information:
# https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-ruby/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md
#
# WARNING ABOUT GENERATED CODE
require 'seahorse/client/plugins/content_length.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/credentials_configuration.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/logging.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/param_converter.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/param_validator.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/user_agent.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/helpful_socket_errors.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/retry_errors.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/global_configuration.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/regional_endpoint.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/response_paging.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/stub_responses.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/idempotency_token.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/jsonvalue_converter.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/signature_v4.rb'
require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/protocols/json_rpc.rb'
Aws::Plugins::GlobalConfiguration.add_identifier(:ecs)
module Aws::ECS
class Client < Seahorse::Client::Base
include Aws::ClientStubs
@identifier = :ecs
set_api(ClientApi::API)
add_plugin(Seahorse::Client::Plugins::ContentLength)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::CredentialsConfiguration)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::Logging)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ParamConverter)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ParamValidator)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::UserAgent)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::HelpfulSocketErrors)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::RetryErrors)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::GlobalConfiguration)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::RegionalEndpoint)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ResponsePaging)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::StubResponses)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::IdempotencyToken)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::JsonvalueConverter)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::SignatureV4)
add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::Protocols::JsonRpc)
# @option options [required, Aws::CredentialProvider] :credentials
# Your AWS credentials. This can be an instance of any one of the
# following classes:
#
# * `Aws::Credentials` - Used for configuring static, non-refreshing
# credentials.
#
# * `Aws::InstanceProfileCredentials` - Used for loading credentials
# from an EC2 IMDS on an EC2 instance.
#
# * `Aws::SharedCredentials` - Used for loading credentials from a
# shared file, such as `~/.aws/config`.
#
# * `Aws::AssumeRoleCredentials` - Used when you need to assume a role.
#
# When `:credentials` are not configured directly, the following
# locations will be searched for credentials:
#
# * `Aws.config[:credentials]`
# * The `:access_key_id`, `:secret_access_key`, and `:session_token` options.
# * ENV['AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID'], ENV['AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY']
# * `~/.aws/credentials`
# * `~/.aws/config`
# * EC2 IMDS instance profile - When used by default, the timeouts are
# very aggressive. Construct and pass an instance of
# `Aws::InstanceProfileCredentails` to enable retries and extended
# timeouts.
#
# @option options [required, String] :region
# The AWS region to connect to. The configured `:region` is
# used to determine the service `:endpoint`. When not passed,
# a default `:region` is search for in the following locations:
#
# * `Aws.config[:region]`
# * `ENV['AWS_REGION']`
# * `ENV['AMAZON_REGION']`
# * `ENV['AWS_DEFAULT_REGION']`
# * `~/.aws/credentials`
# * `~/.aws/config`
#
# @option options [String] :access_key_id
#
# @option options [Boolean] :convert_params (true)
# When `true`, an attempt is made to coerce request parameters into
# the required types.
#
# @option options [String] :endpoint
# The client endpoint is normally constructed from the `:region`
# option. You should only configure an `:endpoint` when connecting
# to test endpoints. This should be avalid HTTP(S) URI.
#
# @option options [Aws::Log::Formatter] :log_formatter (Aws::Log::Formatter.default)
# The log formatter.
#
# @option options [Symbol] :log_level (:info)
# The log level to send messages to the `:logger` at.
#
# @option options [Logger] :logger
# The Logger instance to send log messages to. If this option
# is not set, logging will be disabled.
#
# @option options [String] :profile ("default")
# Used when loading credentials from the shared credentials file
# at HOME/.aws/credentials. When not specified, 'default' is used.
#
# @option options [Integer] :retry_limit (3)
# The maximum number of times to retry failed requests. Only
# ~ 500 level server errors and certain ~ 400 level client errors
# are retried. Generally, these are throttling errors, data
# checksum errors, networking errors, timeout errors and auth
# errors from expired credentials.
#
# @option options [String] :secret_access_key
#
# @option options [String] :session_token
#
# @option options [Boolean] :simple_json (false)
# Disables request parameter conversion, validation, and formatting.
# Also disable response data type conversions. This option is useful
# when you want to ensure the highest level of performance by
# avoiding overhead of walking request parameters and response data
# structures.
#
# When `:simple_json` is enabled, the request parameters hash must
# be formatted exactly as the DynamoDB API expects.
#
# @option options [Boolean] :stub_responses (false)
# Causes the client to return stubbed responses. By default
# fake responses are generated and returned. You can specify
# the response data to return or errors to raise by calling
# {ClientStubs#stub_responses}. See {ClientStubs} for more information.
#
# ** Please note ** When response stubbing is enabled, no HTTP
# requests are made, and retries are disabled.
#
# @option options [Boolean] :validate_params (true)
# When `true`, request parameters are validated before
# sending the request.
#
def initialize(*args)
super
end
# @!group API Operations
# Creates a new Amazon ECS cluster. By default, your account receives a
# `default` cluster when you launch your first container instance.
# However, you can create your own cluster with a unique name with the
# `CreateCluster` action.
#
# When you call the CreateCluster API operation, Amazon ECS attempts to
# create the service-linked role for your account so that required
# resources in other AWS services can be managed on your behalf.
# However, if the IAM user that makes the call does not have permissions
# to create the service-linked role, it is not created. For more
# information, see [Using Service-Linked Roles for Amazon ECS][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/using-service-linked-roles.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster_name
# The name of your cluster. If you do not specify a name for your
# cluster, you create a cluster named `default`. Up to 255 letters
# (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are
# allowed.
#
# @return [Types::CreateClusterResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::CreateClusterResponse#cluster #cluster} => Types::Cluster
#
#
# @example Example: To create a new cluster
#
# # This example creates a cluster in your default region.
#
# resp = client.create_cluster({
# cluster_name: "my_cluster",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# cluster: {
# active_services_count: 0,
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:cluster/my_cluster",
# cluster_name: "my_cluster",
# pending_tasks_count: 0,
# registered_container_instances_count: 0,
# running_tasks_count: 0,
# status: "ACTIVE",
# },
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.create_cluster({
# cluster_name: "String",
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.cluster.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.cluster.cluster_name #=> String
# resp.cluster.status #=> String
# resp.cluster.registered_container_instances_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.active_services_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.statistics #=> Array
# resp.cluster.statistics[0].name #=> String
# resp.cluster.statistics[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/CreateCluster AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload create_cluster(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def create_cluster(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:create_cluster, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Runs and maintains a desired number of tasks from a specified task
# definition. If the number of tasks running in a service drops below
# `desiredCount`, Amazon ECS spawns another copy of the task in the
# specified cluster. To update an existing service, see UpdateService.
#
# In addition to maintaining the desired count of tasks in your service,
# you can optionally run your service behind a load balancer. The load
# balancer distributes traffic across the tasks that are associated with
# the service. For more information, see [Service Load Balancing][1] in
# the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
# You can optionally specify a deployment configuration for your
# service. During a deployment, the service scheduler uses the
# `minimumHealthyPercent` and `maximumPercent` parameters to determine
# the deployment strategy. The deployment is triggered by changing the
# task definition or the desired count of a service with an
# UpdateService operation.
#
# The `minimumHealthyPercent` represents a lower limit on the number of
# your service's tasks that must remain in the `RUNNING` state during a
# deployment, as a percentage of the `desiredCount` (rounded up to the
# nearest integer). This parameter enables you to deploy without using
# additional cluster capacity. For example, if your service has a
# `desiredCount` of four tasks and a `minimumHealthyPercent` of 50%, the
# scheduler can stop two existing tasks to free up cluster capacity
# before starting two new tasks. Tasks for services that *do not* use a
# load balancer are considered healthy if they are in the `RUNNING`
# state. Tasks for services that *do* use a load balancer are considered
# healthy if they are in the `RUNNING` state and the container instance
# they are hosted on is reported as healthy by the load balancer. The
# default value for `minimumHealthyPercent` is 50% in the console and
# 100% for the AWS CLI, the AWS SDKs, and the APIs.
#
# The `maximumPercent` parameter represents an upper limit on the number
# of your service's tasks that are allowed in the `RUNNING` or
# `PENDING` state during a deployment, as a percentage of the
# `desiredCount` (rounded down to the nearest integer). This parameter
# enables you to define the deployment batch size. For example, if your
# service has a `desiredCount` of four tasks and a `maximumPercent`
# value of 200%, the scheduler can start four new tasks before stopping
# the four older tasks (provided that the cluster resources required to
# do this are available). The default value for `maximumPercent` is
# 200%.
#
# When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task
# placement in your cluster using the following logic:
#
# * Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can
# support your service's task definition (for example, they have the
# required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
#
# * By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across
# Availability Zones in this manner (although you can choose a
# different placement strategy) with the `placementStrategy`
# parameter):
#
# * Sort the valid container instances by the fewest number of running
# tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the
# instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and
# zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either
# zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
#
# * Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an
# optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring
# container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for
# this service.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/service-load-balancing.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster on
# which to run your service. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :service_name
# The name of your service. Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase),
# numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed. Service names must be
# unique within a cluster, but you can have similarly named services in
# multiple clusters within a region or across multiple regions.
#
# @option params [required, String] :task_definition
# The `family` and `revision` (`family:revision`) or full ARN of the
# task definition to run in your service. If a `revision` is not
# specified, the latest `ACTIVE` revision is used.
#
# @option params [Array] :load_balancers
# A load balancer object representing the load balancer to use with your
# service. Currently, you are limited to one load balancer or target
# group per service. After you create a service, the load balancer name
# or target group ARN, container name, and container port specified in
# the service definition are immutable.
#
# For Classic Load Balancers, this object must contain the load balancer
# name, the container name (as it appears in a container definition),
# and the container port to access from the load balancer. When a task
# from this service is placed on a container instance, the container
# instance is registered with the load balancer specified here.
#
# For Application Load Balancers and Network Load Balancers, this object
# must contain the load balancer target group ARN, the container name
# (as it appears in a container definition), and the container port to
# access from the load balancer. When a task from this service is placed
# on a container instance, the container instance and port combination
# is registered as a target in the target group specified here.
#
# @option params [required, Integer] :desired_count
# The number of instantiations of the specified task definition to place
# and keep running on your cluster.
#
# @option params [String] :client_token
# Unique, case-sensitive identifier you provide to ensure the
# idempotency of the request. Up to 32 ASCII characters are allowed.
#
# @option params [String] :launch_type
# The launch type on which to run your service.
#
# @option params [String] :platform_version
# The platform version on which to run your service. If one is not
# specified, the latest version is used by default.
#
# @option params [String] :role
# The name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that
# allows Amazon ECS to make calls to your load balancer on your behalf.
# This parameter is only permitted if you are using a load balancer with
# your service and your task definition does not use the `awsvpc`
# network mode. If you specify the `role` parameter, you must also
# specify a load balancer object with the `loadBalancers` parameter.
#
# If your account has already created the Amazon ECS service-linked
# role, that role is used by default for your service unless you specify
# a role here. The service-linked role is required if your task
# definition uses the `awsvpc` network mode, in which case you should
# not specify a role here. For more information, see [Using
# Service-Linked Roles for Amazon ECS][1] in the *Amazon Elastic
# Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
# If your specified role has a path other than `/`, then you must either
# specify the full role ARN (this is recommended) or prefix the role
# name with the path. For example, if a role with the name `bar` has a
# path of `/foo/` then you would specify `/foo/bar` as the role name.
# For more information, see [Friendly Names and Paths][2] in the *IAM
# User Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/using-service-linked-roles.html
# [2]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_identifiers.html#identifiers-friendly-names
#
# @option params [Types::DeploymentConfiguration] :deployment_configuration
# Optional deployment parameters that control how many tasks run during
# the deployment and the ordering of stopping and starting tasks.
#
# @option params [Array] :placement_constraints
# An array of placement constraint objects to use for tasks in your
# service. You can specify a maximum of 10 constraints per task (this
# limit includes constraints in the task definition and those specified
# at run time).
#
# @option params [Array] :placement_strategy
# The placement strategy objects to use for tasks in your service. You
# can specify a maximum of five strategy rules per service.
#
# @option params [Types::NetworkConfiguration] :network_configuration
# The network configuration for the service. This parameter is required
# for task definitions that use the `awsvpc` network mode to receive
# their own Elastic Network Interface, and it is not supported for other
# network modes. For more information, see [Task Networking][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html
#
# @return [Types::CreateServiceResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::CreateServiceResponse#service #service} => Types::Service
#
#
# @example Example: To create a new service
#
# # This example creates a service in your default region called ``ecs-simple-service``. The service uses the
# # ``hello_world`` task definition and it maintains 10 copies of that task.
#
# resp = client.create_service({
# desired_count: 10,
# service_name: "ecs-simple-service",
# task_definition: "hello_world",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# service: {
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:cluster/default",
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:13:47.298Z"),
# deployment_configuration: {
# maximum_percent: 200,
# minimum_healthy_percent: 100,
# },
# deployments: [
# {
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:13:47.298Z"),
# desired_count: 10,
# id: "ecs-svc/9223370564342348388",
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# status: "PRIMARY",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/hello_world:6",
# updated_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:13:47.298Z"),
# },
# {
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T15:52:44.481Z"),
# desired_count: 0,
# id: "ecs-svc/9223370564343611322",
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# status: "ACTIVE",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/hello_world:6",
# updated_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:11:38.941Z"),
# },
# ],
# desired_count: 10,
# events: [
# ],
# load_balancers: [
# ],
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# service_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:service/ecs-simple-service",
# service_name: "ecs-simple-service",
# status: "ACTIVE",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/hello_world:6",
# },
# }
#
# @example Example: To create a new service behind a load balancer
#
# # This example creates a service in your default region called ``ecs-simple-service-elb``. The service uses the
# # ``ecs-demo`` task definition and it maintains 10 copies of that task. You must reference an existing load balancer in
# # the same region by its name.
#
# resp = client.create_service({
# desired_count: 10,
# load_balancers: [
# {
# container_name: "simple-app",
# container_port: 80,
# load_balancer_name: "EC2Contai-EcsElast-15DCDAURT3ZO2",
# },
# ],
# role: "ecsServiceRole",
# service_name: "ecs-simple-service-elb",
# task_definition: "console-sample-app-static",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# service: {
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:cluster/default",
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:02:54.884Z"),
# deployment_configuration: {
# maximum_percent: 200,
# minimum_healthy_percent: 100,
# },
# deployments: [
# {
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:02:54.884Z"),
# desired_count: 10,
# id: "ecs-svc/9223370564343000923",
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# status: "PRIMARY",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/console-sample-app-static:6",
# updated_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:02:54.884Z"),
# },
# ],
# desired_count: 10,
# events: [
# ],
# load_balancers: [
# {
# container_name: "simple-app",
# container_port: 80,
# load_balancer_name: "EC2Contai-EcsElast-15DCDAURT3ZO2",
# },
# ],
# pending_count: 0,
# role_arn: "arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/ecsServiceRole",
# running_count: 0,
# service_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:service/ecs-simple-service-elb",
# service_name: "ecs-simple-service-elb",
# status: "ACTIVE",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/console-sample-app-static:6",
# },
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.create_service({
# cluster: "String",
# service_name: "String", # required
# task_definition: "String", # required
# load_balancers: [
# {
# target_group_arn: "String",
# load_balancer_name: "String",
# container_name: "String",
# container_port: 1,
# },
# ],
# desired_count: 1, # required
# client_token: "String",
# launch_type: "EC2", # accepts EC2, FARGATE
# platform_version: "String",
# role: "String",
# deployment_configuration: {
# maximum_percent: 1,
# minimum_healthy_percent: 1,
# },
# placement_constraints: [
# {
# type: "distinctInstance", # accepts distinctInstance, memberOf
# expression: "String",
# },
# ],
# placement_strategy: [
# {
# type: "random", # accepts random, spread, binpack
# field: "String",
# },
# ],
# network_configuration: {
# awsvpc_configuration: {
# subnets: ["String"], # required
# security_groups: ["String"],
# assign_public_ip: "ENABLED", # accepts ENABLED, DISABLED
# },
# },
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.service.service_arn #=> String
# resp.service.service_name #=> String
# resp.service.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers #=> Array
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].target_group_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].load_balancer_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.service.status #=> String
# resp.service.desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.maximum_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.minimum_healthy_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].status #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].updated_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.deployments[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
# resp.service.role_arn #=> String
# resp.service.events #=> Array
# resp.service.events[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.events[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.events[0].message #=> String
# resp.service.created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "distinctInstance", "memberOf"
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.service.placement_strategy #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].type #=> String, one of "random", "spread", "binpack"
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].field #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/CreateService AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload create_service(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def create_service(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:create_service, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Deletes one or more custom attributes from an Amazon ECS resource.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# contains the resource to delete attributes. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :attributes
# The attributes to delete from your resource. You can specify up to 10
# attributes per request. For custom attributes, specify the attribute
# name and target ID, but do not specify the value. If you specify the
# target ID using the short form, you must also specify the target type.
#
# @return [Types::DeleteAttributesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DeleteAttributesResponse#attributes #attributes} => Array<Types::Attribute>
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.delete_attributes({
# cluster: "String",
# attributes: [ # required
# {
# name: "String", # required
# value: "String",
# target_type: "container-instance", # accepts container-instance
# target_id: "String",
# },
# ],
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.attributes #=> Array
# resp.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DeleteAttributes AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload delete_attributes(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def delete_attributes(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:delete_attributes, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Deletes the specified cluster. You must deregister all container
# instances from this cluster before you may delete it. You can list the
# container instances in a cluster with ListContainerInstances and
# deregister them with DeregisterContainerInstance.
#
# @option params [required, String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster to
# delete.
#
# @return [Types::DeleteClusterResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DeleteClusterResponse#cluster #cluster} => Types::Cluster
#
#
# @example Example: To delete an empty cluster
#
# # This example deletes an empty cluster in your default region.
#
# resp = client.delete_cluster({
# cluster: "my_cluster",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# cluster: {
# active_services_count: 0,
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:cluster/my_cluster",
# cluster_name: "my_cluster",
# pending_tasks_count: 0,
# registered_container_instances_count: 0,
# running_tasks_count: 0,
# status: "INACTIVE",
# },
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.delete_cluster({
# cluster: "String", # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.cluster.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.cluster.cluster_name #=> String
# resp.cluster.status #=> String
# resp.cluster.registered_container_instances_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.active_services_count #=> Integer
# resp.cluster.statistics #=> Array
# resp.cluster.statistics[0].name #=> String
# resp.cluster.statistics[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DeleteCluster AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload delete_cluster(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def delete_cluster(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:delete_cluster, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Deletes a specified service within a cluster. You can delete a service
# if you have no running tasks in it and the desired task count is zero.
# If the service is actively maintaining tasks, you cannot delete it,
# and you must update the service to a desired task count of zero. For
# more information, see UpdateService.
#
# When you delete a service, if there are still running tasks that
# require cleanup, the service status moves from `ACTIVE` to `DRAINING`,
# and the service is no longer visible in the console or in ListServices
# API operations. After the tasks have stopped, then the service status
# moves from `DRAINING` to `INACTIVE`. Services in the `DRAINING` or
# `INACTIVE` status can still be viewed with DescribeServices API
# operations. However, in the future, `INACTIVE` services may be cleaned
# up and purged from Amazon ECS record keeping, and DescribeServices API
# operations on those services return a `ServiceNotFoundException`
# error.
#
#
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the service to delete. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :service
# The name of the service to delete.
#
# @return [Types::DeleteServiceResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DeleteServiceResponse#service #service} => Types::Service
#
#
# @example Example: To delete a service
#
# # This example deletes the my-http-service service. The service must have a desired count and running count of 0 before
# # you can delete it.
#
# resp = client.delete_service({
# service: "my-http-service",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.delete_service({
# cluster: "String",
# service: "String", # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.service.service_arn #=> String
# resp.service.service_name #=> String
# resp.service.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers #=> Array
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].target_group_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].load_balancer_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.service.status #=> String
# resp.service.desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.maximum_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.minimum_healthy_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].status #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].updated_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.deployments[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
# resp.service.role_arn #=> String
# resp.service.events #=> Array
# resp.service.events[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.events[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.events[0].message #=> String
# resp.service.created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "distinctInstance", "memberOf"
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.service.placement_strategy #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].type #=> String, one of "random", "spread", "binpack"
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].field #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DeleteService AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload delete_service(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def delete_service(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:delete_service, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Deregisters an Amazon ECS container instance from the specified
# cluster. This instance is no longer available to run tasks.
#
# If you intend to use the container instance for some other purpose
# after deregistration, you should stop all of the tasks running on the
# container instance before deregistration. That prevents any orphaned
# tasks from consuming resources.
#
# Deregistering a container instance removes the instance from a
# cluster, but it does not terminate the EC2 instance; if you are
# finished using the instance, be sure to terminate it in the Amazon EC2
# console to stop billing.
#
# If you terminate a running container instance, Amazon ECS
# automatically deregisters the instance from your cluster (stopped
# container instances or instances with disconnected agents are not
# automatically deregistered when terminated).
#
#
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the container instance to deregister. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :container_instance
# The container instance ID or full ARN of the container instance to
# deregister. The ARN contains the `arn:aws:ecs` namespace, followed by
# the region of the container instance, the AWS account ID of the
# container instance owner, the `container-instance` namespace, and then
# the container instance ID. For example,
# `arn:aws:ecs:region:aws_account_id:container-instance/container_instance_ID
# `.
#
# @option params [Boolean] :force
# Forces the deregistration of the container instance. If you have tasks
# running on the container instance when you deregister it with the
# `force` option, these tasks remain running until you terminate the
# instance or the tasks stop through some other means, but they are
# orphaned (no longer monitored or accounted for by Amazon ECS). If an
# orphaned task on your container instance is part of an Amazon ECS
# service, then the service scheduler starts another copy of that task,
# on a different container instance if possible.
#
# Any containers in orphaned service tasks that are registered with a
# Classic Load Balancer or an Application Load Balancer target group are
# deregistered. They begin connection draining according to the settings
# on the load balancer or target group.
#
# @return [Types::DeregisterContainerInstanceResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DeregisterContainerInstanceResponse#container_instance #container_instance} => Types::ContainerInstance
#
#
# @example Example: To deregister a container instance from a cluster
#
# # This example deregisters a container instance from the specified cluster in your default region. If there are still
# # tasks running on the container instance, you must either stop those tasks before deregistering, or use the force option.
#
# resp = client.deregister_container_instance({
# cluster: "default",
# container_instance: "container_instance_UUID",
# force: true,
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.deregister_container_instance({
# cluster: "String",
# container_instance: "String", # required
# force: false,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instance.container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.container_instance.ec2_instance_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_hash #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.docker_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.agent_connected #=> Boolean
# resp.container_instance.running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.agent_update_status #=> String, one of "PENDING", "STAGING", "STAGED", "UPDATING", "UPDATED", "FAILED"
# resp.container_instance.attributes #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_at #=> Time
# resp.container_instance.attachments #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DeregisterContainerInstance AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload deregister_container_instance(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def deregister_container_instance(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:deregister_container_instance, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Deregisters the specified task definition by family and revision. Upon
# deregistration, the task definition is marked as `INACTIVE`. Existing
# tasks and services that reference an `INACTIVE` task definition
# continue to run without disruption. Existing services that reference
# an `INACTIVE` task definition can still scale up or down by modifying
# the service's desired count.
#
# You cannot use an `INACTIVE` task definition to run new tasks or
# create new services, and you cannot update an existing service to
# reference an `INACTIVE` task definition (although there may be up to a
# 10-minute window following deregistration where these restrictions
# have not yet taken effect).
#
# At this time, `INACTIVE` task definitions remain discoverable in your
# account indefinitely; however, this behavior is subject to change in
# the future, so you should not rely on `INACTIVE` task definitions
# persisting beyond the lifecycle of any associated tasks and services.
#
#
#
# @option params [required, String] :task_definition
# The `family` and `revision` (`family:revision`) or full Amazon
# Resource Name (ARN) of the task definition to deregister. You must
# specify a `revision`.
#
# @return [Types::DeregisterTaskDefinitionResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DeregisterTaskDefinitionResponse#task_definition #task_definition} => Types::TaskDefinition
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.deregister_task_definition({
# task_definition: "String", # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task_definition.task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].image #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].essential #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].source_volume #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].source_container #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].host_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions[0] #=> String, one of "read", "write", "mknod"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.init_process_enabled #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].user #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].working_directory #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].disable_networking #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].privileged #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].readonly_root_filesystem #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].ip_address #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].name #=> String, one of "core", "cpu", "data", "fsize", "locks", "memlock", "msgqueue", "nice", "nofile", "nproc", "rss", "rtprio", "rttime", "sigpending", "stack"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].soft_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].hard_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.log_driver #=> String, one of "json-file", "syslog", "journald", "gelf", "fluentd", "awslogs", "splunk"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.family #=> String
# resp.task_definition.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.network_mode #=> String, one of "bridge", "host", "awsvpc", "none"
# resp.task_definition.revision #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.volumes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].host.source_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.status #=> String, one of "ACTIVE", "INACTIVE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "memberOf"
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.cpu #=> String
# resp.task_definition.memory #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DeregisterTaskDefinition AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload deregister_task_definition(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def deregister_task_definition(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:deregister_task_definition, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Describes one or more of your clusters.
#
# @option params [Array] :clusters
# A list of up to 100 cluster names or full cluster Amazon Resource Name
# (ARN) entries. If you do not specify a cluster, the default cluster is
# assumed.
#
# @option params [Array] :include
# Additional information about your clusters to be separated by launch
# type, including:
#
# * runningEC2TasksCount
#
# * RunningFargateTasksCount
#
# * pendingEC2TasksCount
#
# * pendingFargateTasksCount
#
# * activeEC2ServiceCount
#
# * activeFargateServiceCount
#
# * drainingEC2ServiceCount
#
# * drainingFargateServiceCount
#
# @return [Types::DescribeClustersResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DescribeClustersResponse#clusters #clusters} => Array<Types::Cluster>
# * {Types::DescribeClustersResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
#
# @example Example: To describe a cluster
#
# # This example provides a description of the specified cluster in your default region.
#
# resp = client.describe_clusters({
# clusters: [
# "default",
# ],
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# clusters: [
# {
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:aws_account_id:cluster/default",
# cluster_name: "default",
# status: "ACTIVE",
# },
# ],
# failures: [
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.describe_clusters({
# clusters: ["String"],
# include: ["STATISTICS"], # accepts STATISTICS
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.clusters #=> Array
# resp.clusters[0].cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.clusters[0].cluster_name #=> String
# resp.clusters[0].status #=> String
# resp.clusters[0].registered_container_instances_count #=> Integer
# resp.clusters[0].running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.clusters[0].pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.clusters[0].active_services_count #=> Integer
# resp.clusters[0].statistics #=> Array
# resp.clusters[0].statistics[0].name #=> String
# resp.clusters[0].statistics[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DescribeClusters AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload describe_clusters(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def describe_clusters(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:describe_clusters, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Describes Amazon Elastic Container Service container instances.
# Returns metadata about registered and remaining resources on each
# container instance requested.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the container instances to describe. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :container_instances
# A list of container instance IDs or full ARN entries.
#
# @return [Types::DescribeContainerInstancesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DescribeContainerInstancesResponse#container_instances #container_instances} => Array<Types::ContainerInstance>
# * {Types::DescribeContainerInstancesResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
#
# @example Example: To describe container instance
#
# # This example provides a description of the specified container instance in your default region, using the container
# # instance UUID as an identifier.
#
# resp = client.describe_container_instances({
# cluster: "default",
# container_instances: [
# "f2756532-8f13-4d53-87c9-aed50dc94cd7",
# ],
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# container_instances: [
# {
# agent_connected: true,
# container_instance_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:container-instance/f2756532-8f13-4d53-87c9-aed50dc94cd7",
# ec2_instance_id: "i-807f3249",
# pending_tasks_count: 0,
# registered_resources: [
# {
# name: "CPU",
# type: "INTEGER",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 2048,
# long_value: 0,
# },
# {
# name: "MEMORY",
# type: "INTEGER",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 3768,
# long_value: 0,
# },
# {
# name: "PORTS",
# type: "STRINGSET",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 0,
# long_value: 0,
# string_set_value: [
# "2376",
# "22",
# "51678",
# "2375",
# ],
# },
# ],
# remaining_resources: [
# {
# name: "CPU",
# type: "INTEGER",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 1948,
# long_value: 0,
# },
# {
# name: "MEMORY",
# type: "INTEGER",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 3668,
# long_value: 0,
# },
# {
# name: "PORTS",
# type: "STRINGSET",
# double_value: 0.0,
# integer_value: 0,
# long_value: 0,
# string_set_value: [
# "2376",
# "22",
# "80",
# "51678",
# "2375",
# ],
# },
# ],
# running_tasks_count: 1,
# status: "ACTIVE",
# },
# ],
# failures: [
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.describe_container_instances({
# cluster: "String",
# container_instances: ["String"], # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instances #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].ec2_instance_id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.agent_version #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.agent_hash #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.docker_version #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].agent_connected #=> Boolean
# resp.container_instances[0].running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].agent_update_status #=> String, one of "PENDING", "STAGING", "STAGED", "UPDATING", "UPDATED", "FAILED"
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_at #=> Time
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DescribeContainerInstances AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload describe_container_instances(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def describe_container_instances(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:describe_container_instances, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Describes the specified services running in your cluster.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN)the cluster that
# hosts the service to describe. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :services
# A list of services to describe. You may specify up to 10 services to
# describe in a single operation.
#
# @return [Types::DescribeServicesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DescribeServicesResponse#services #services} => Array<Types::Service>
# * {Types::DescribeServicesResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
#
# @example Example: To describe a service
#
# # This example provides descriptive information about the service named ``ecs-simple-service``.
#
# resp = client.describe_services({
# services: [
# "ecs-simple-service",
# ],
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# failures: [
# ],
# services: [
# {
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:cluster/default",
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:25:52.130Z"),
# deployment_configuration: {
# maximum_percent: 200,
# minimum_healthy_percent: 100,
# },
# deployments: [
# {
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:25:52.130Z"),
# desired_count: 1,
# id: "ecs-svc/9223370564341623665",
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# status: "PRIMARY",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/hello_world:6",
# updated_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:25:52.130Z"),
# },
# ],
# desired_count: 1,
# events: [
# {
# created_at: Time.parse("2016-08-29T16:25:58.520Z"),
# id: "38c285e5-d335-4b68-8b15-e46dedc8e88d",
# message: "(service ecs-simple-service) was unable to place a task because no container instance met all of its requirements. The closest matching (container-instance 3f4de1c5-ffdd-4954-af7e-75b4be0c8841) is already using a port required by your task. For more information, see the Troubleshooting section of the Amazon ECS Developer Guide.", # In this example, there is a service event that shows unavailable cluster resources.
# },
# ],
# load_balancers: [
# ],
# pending_count: 0,
# running_count: 0,
# service_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:service/ecs-simple-service",
# service_name: "ecs-simple-service",
# status: "ACTIVE",
# task_definition: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task-definition/hello_world:6",
# },
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.describe_services({
# cluster: "String",
# services: ["String"], # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.services #=> Array
# resp.services[0].service_arn #=> String
# resp.services[0].service_name #=> String
# resp.services[0].cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.services[0].load_balancers #=> Array
# resp.services[0].load_balancers[0].target_group_arn #=> String
# resp.services[0].load_balancers[0].load_balancer_name #=> String
# resp.services[0].load_balancers[0].container_name #=> String
# resp.services[0].load_balancers[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].status #=> String
# resp.services[0].desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].running_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.services[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.services[0].task_definition #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployment_configuration.maximum_percent #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].deployment_configuration.minimum_healthy_percent #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].deployments #=> Array
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].id #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].status #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].task_definition #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].running_count #=> Integer
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].updated_at #=> Time
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.services[0].deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
# resp.services[0].role_arn #=> String
# resp.services[0].events #=> Array
# resp.services[0].events[0].id #=> String
# resp.services[0].events[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.services[0].events[0].message #=> String
# resp.services[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.services[0].placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.services[0].placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "distinctInstance", "memberOf"
# resp.services[0].placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.services[0].placement_strategy #=> Array
# resp.services[0].placement_strategy[0].type #=> String, one of "random", "spread", "binpack"
# resp.services[0].placement_strategy[0].field #=> String
# resp.services[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.services[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.services[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.services[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.services[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DescribeServices AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload describe_services(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def describe_services(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:describe_services, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Describes a task definition. You can specify a `family` and `revision`
# to find information about a specific task definition, or you can
# simply specify the family to find the latest `ACTIVE` revision in that
# family.
#
# You can only describe `INACTIVE` task definitions while an active task
# or service references them.
#
#
#
# @option params [required, String] :task_definition
# The `family` for the latest `ACTIVE` revision, `family` and `revision`
# (`family:revision`) for a specific revision in the family, or full
# Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the task definition to describe.
#
# @return [Types::DescribeTaskDefinitionResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DescribeTaskDefinitionResponse#task_definition #task_definition} => Types::TaskDefinition
#
#
# @example Example: To describe a task definition
#
# # This example provides a description of the specified task definition.
#
# resp = client.describe_task_definition({
# task_definition: "hello_world:8",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_definition: {
# container_definitions: [
# {
# name: "wordpress",
# cpu: 10,
# environment: [
# ],
# essential: true,
# image: "wordpress",
# links: [
# "mysql",
# ],
# memory: 500,
# mount_points: [
# ],
# port_mappings: [
# {
# container_port: 80,
# host_port: 80,
# },
# ],
# volumes_from: [
# ],
# },
# {
# name: "mysql",
# cpu: 10,
# environment: [
# {
# name: "MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD",
# value: "password",
# },
# ],
# essential: true,
# image: "mysql",
# memory: 500,
# mount_points: [
# ],
# port_mappings: [
# ],
# volumes_from: [
# ],
# },
# ],
# family: "hello_world",
# revision: 8,
# task_definition_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/hello_world:8",
# volumes: [
# ],
# },
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.describe_task_definition({
# task_definition: "String", # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task_definition.task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].image #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].essential #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].source_volume #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].source_container #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].host_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions[0] #=> String, one of "read", "write", "mknod"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.init_process_enabled #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].user #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].working_directory #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].disable_networking #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].privileged #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].readonly_root_filesystem #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].ip_address #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].name #=> String, one of "core", "cpu", "data", "fsize", "locks", "memlock", "msgqueue", "nice", "nofile", "nproc", "rss", "rtprio", "rttime", "sigpending", "stack"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].soft_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].hard_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.log_driver #=> String, one of "json-file", "syslog", "journald", "gelf", "fluentd", "awslogs", "splunk"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.family #=> String
# resp.task_definition.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.network_mode #=> String, one of "bridge", "host", "awsvpc", "none"
# resp.task_definition.revision #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.volumes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].host.source_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.status #=> String, one of "ACTIVE", "INACTIVE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "memberOf"
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.cpu #=> String
# resp.task_definition.memory #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DescribeTaskDefinition AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload describe_task_definition(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def describe_task_definition(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:describe_task_definition, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Describes a specified task or tasks.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the task to describe. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :tasks
# A list of up to 100 task IDs or full ARN entries.
#
# @return [Types::DescribeTasksResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DescribeTasksResponse#tasks #tasks} => Array<Types::Task>
# * {Types::DescribeTasksResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
#
# @example Example: To describe a task
#
# # This example provides a description of the specified task, using the task UUID as an identifier.
#
# resp = client.describe_tasks({
# tasks: [
# "c5cba4eb-5dad-405e-96db-71ef8eefe6a8",
# ],
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# failures: [
# ],
# tasks: [
# {
# cluster_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::cluster/default",
# container_instance_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::container-instance/18f9eda5-27d7-4c19-b133-45adc516e8fb",
# containers: [
# {
# name: "ecs-demo",
# container_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::container/7c01765b-c588-45b3-8290-4ba38bd6c5a6",
# last_status: "RUNNING",
# network_bindings: [
# {
# bind_ip: "0.0.0.0",
# container_port: 80,
# host_port: 80,
# },
# ],
# task_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::task/c5cba4eb-5dad-405e-96db-71ef8eefe6a8",
# },
# ],
# desired_status: "RUNNING",
# last_status: "RUNNING",
# overrides: {
# container_overrides: [
# {
# name: "ecs-demo",
# },
# ],
# },
# started_by: "ecs-svc/9223370608528463088",
# task_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::task/c5cba4eb-5dad-405e-96db-71ef8eefe6a8",
# task_definition_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:::task-definition/amazon-ecs-sample:1",
# },
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.describe_tasks({
# cluster: "String",
# tasks: ["String"], # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.tasks #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].desired_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cpu #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].memory #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].container_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].exit_code #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].bind_ip #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].attachment_id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].private_ipv_4_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].ipv6_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].started_by #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].version #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity #=> String, one of "CONNECTED", "DISCONNECTED"
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].execution_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopping_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].group #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.tasks[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DescribeTasks AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload describe_tasks(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def describe_tasks(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:describe_tasks, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not
# intended for use outside of the agent.
#
#
#
# Returns an endpoint for the Amazon ECS agent to poll for updates.
#
# @option params [String] :container_instance
# The container instance ID or full ARN of the container instance. The
# ARN contains the `arn:aws:ecs` namespace, followed by the region of
# the container instance, the AWS account ID of the container instance
# owner, the `container-instance` namespace, and then the container
# instance ID. For example,
# `arn:aws:ecs:region:aws_account_id:container-instance/container_instance_ID
# `.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# the container instance belongs to.
#
# @return [Types::DiscoverPollEndpointResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::DiscoverPollEndpointResponse#endpoint #endpoint} => String
# * {Types::DiscoverPollEndpointResponse#telemetry_endpoint #telemetry_endpoint} => String
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.discover_poll_endpoint({
# container_instance: "String",
# cluster: "String",
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.endpoint #=> String
# resp.telemetry_endpoint #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/DiscoverPollEndpoint AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload discover_poll_endpoint(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def discover_poll_endpoint(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:discover_poll_endpoint, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Lists the attributes for Amazon ECS resources within a specified
# target type and cluster. When you specify a target type and cluster,
# `ListAttributes` returns a list of attribute objects, one for each
# attribute on each resource. You can filter the list of results to a
# single attribute name to only return results that have that name. You
# can also filter the results by attribute name and value, for example,
# to see which container instances in a cluster are running a Linux AMI
# (`ecs.os-type=linux`).
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster to
# list attributes. If you do not specify a cluster, the default cluster
# is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :target_type
# The type of the target with which to list attributes.
#
# @option params [String] :attribute_name
# The name of the attribute with which to filter the results.
#
# @option params [String] :attribute_value
# The value of the attribute with which to filter results. You must also
# specify an attribute name to use this parameter.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListAttributes` request where `maxResults` was used and the results
# exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the
# end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken` value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of cluster results returned by `ListAttributes` in
# paginated output. When this parameter is used, `ListAttributes` only
# returns `maxResults` results in a single page along with a `nextToken`
# response element. The remaining results of the initial request can be
# seen by sending another `ListAttributes` request with the returned
# `nextToken` value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this
# parameter is not used, then `ListAttributes` returns up to 100 results
# and a `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @return [Types::ListAttributesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListAttributesResponse#attributes #attributes} => Array<Types::Attribute>
# * {Types::ListAttributesResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_attributes({
# cluster: "String",
# target_type: "container-instance", # required, accepts container-instance
# attribute_name: "String",
# attribute_value: "String",
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.attributes #=> Array
# resp.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListAttributes AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_attributes(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_attributes(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_attributes, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Returns a list of existing clusters.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListClusters` request where `maxResults` was used and the results
# exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the
# end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken` value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of cluster results returned by `ListClusters` in
# paginated output. When this parameter is used, `ListClusters` only
# returns `maxResults` results in a single page along with a `nextToken`
# response element. The remaining results of the initial request can be
# seen by sending another `ListClusters` request with the returned
# `nextToken` value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this
# parameter is not used, then `ListClusters` returns up to 100 results
# and a `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @return [Types::ListClustersResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListClustersResponse#cluster_arns #cluster_arns} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListClustersResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list your available clusters
#
# # This example lists all of your available clusters in your default region.
#
# resp = client.list_clusters({
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# cluster_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::cluster/test",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::cluster/default",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_clusters({
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.cluster_arns #=> Array
# resp.cluster_arns[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListClusters AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_clusters(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_clusters(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_clusters, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Returns a list of container instances in a specified cluster. You can
# filter the results of a `ListContainerInstances` operation with
# cluster query language statements inside the `filter` parameter. For
# more information, see [Cluster Query Language][1] in the *Amazon
# Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/cluster-query-language.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the container instances to list. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [String] :filter
# You can filter the results of a `ListContainerInstances` operation
# with cluster query language statements. For more information, see
# [Cluster Query Language][1] in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service
# Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/cluster-query-language.html
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListContainerInstances` request where `maxResults` was used and the
# results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues
# from the end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken`
# value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of container instance results returned by
# `ListContainerInstances` in paginated output. When this parameter is
# used, `ListContainerInstances` only returns `maxResults` results in a
# single page along with a `nextToken` response element. The remaining
# results of the initial request can be seen by sending another
# `ListContainerInstances` request with the returned `nextToken` value.
# This value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter is not used,
# then `ListContainerInstances` returns up to 100 results and a
# `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @option params [String] :status
# Filters the container instances by status. For example, if you specify
# the `DRAINING` status, the results include only container instances
# that have been set to `DRAINING` using UpdateContainerInstancesState.
# If you do not specify this parameter, the default is to include
# container instances set to `ACTIVE` and `DRAINING`.
#
# @return [Types::ListContainerInstancesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListContainerInstancesResponse#container_instance_arns #container_instance_arns} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListContainerInstancesResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list your available container instances in a cluster
#
# # This example lists all of your available container instances in the specified cluster in your default region.
#
# resp = client.list_container_instances({
# cluster: "default",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# container_instance_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::container-instance/f6bbb147-5370-4ace-8c73-c7181ded911f",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::container-instance/ffe3d344-77e2-476c-a4d0-bf560ad50acb",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_container_instances({
# cluster: "String",
# filter: "String",
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# status: "ACTIVE", # accepts ACTIVE, DRAINING
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instance_arns #=> Array
# resp.container_instance_arns[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListContainerInstances AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_container_instances(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_container_instances(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_container_instances, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Lists the services that are running in a specified cluster.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the services to list. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListServices` request where `maxResults` was used and the results
# exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the
# end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken` value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of service results returned by `ListServices` in
# paginated output. When this parameter is used, `ListServices` only
# returns `maxResults` results in a single page along with a `nextToken`
# response element. The remaining results of the initial request can be
# seen by sending another `ListServices` request with the returned
# `nextToken` value. This value can be between 1 and 10. If this
# parameter is not used, then `ListServices` returns up to 10 results
# and a `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @option params [String] :launch_type
# The launch type for services you want to list.
#
# @return [Types::ListServicesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListServicesResponse#service_arns #service_arns} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListServicesResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list the services in a cluster
#
# # This example lists the services running in the default cluster for an account.
#
# resp = client.list_services({
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# service_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:service/my-http-service",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_services({
# cluster: "String",
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# launch_type: "EC2", # accepts EC2, FARGATE
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.service_arns #=> Array
# resp.service_arns[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListServices AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_services(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_services(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_services, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Returns a list of task definition families that are registered to your
# account (which may include task definition families that no longer
# have any `ACTIVE` task definition revisions).
#
# You can filter out task definition families that do not contain any
# `ACTIVE` task definition revisions by setting the `status` parameter
# to `ACTIVE`. You can also filter the results with the `familyPrefix`
# parameter.
#
# @option params [String] :family_prefix
# The `familyPrefix` is a string that is used to filter the results of
# `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies`. If you specify a `familyPrefix`, only
# task definition family names that begin with the `familyPrefix` string
# are returned.
#
# @option params [String] :status
# The task definition family status with which to filter the
# `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies` results. By default, both `ACTIVE` and
# `INACTIVE` task definition families are listed. If this parameter is
# set to `ACTIVE`, only task definition families that have an `ACTIVE`
# task definition revision are returned. If this parameter is set to
# `INACTIVE`, only task definition families that do not have any
# `ACTIVE` task definition revisions are returned. If you paginate the
# resulting output, be sure to keep the `status` value constant in each
# subsequent request.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies` request where `maxResults` was used and
# the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues
# from the end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken`
# value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of task definition family results returned by
# `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies` in paginated output. When this parameter
# is used, `ListTaskDefinitions` only returns `maxResults` results in a
# single page along with a `nextToken` response element. The remaining
# results of the initial request can be seen by sending another
# `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies` request with the returned `nextToken`
# value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter is not
# used, then `ListTaskDefinitionFamilies` returns up to 100 results and
# a `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @return [Types::ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResponse#families #families} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list your registered task definition families
#
# # This example lists all of your registered task definition families.
#
# resp = client.list_task_definition_families({
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# families: [
# "node-js-app",
# "web-timer",
# "hpcc",
# "hpcc-c4-8xlarge",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Example: To filter your registered task definition families
#
# # This example lists the task definition revisions that start with "hpcc".
#
# resp = client.list_task_definition_families({
# family_prefix: "hpcc",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# families: [
# "hpcc",
# "hpcc-c4-8xlarge",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_task_definition_families({
# family_prefix: "String",
# status: "ACTIVE", # accepts ACTIVE, INACTIVE, ALL
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.families #=> Array
# resp.families[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListTaskDefinitionFamilies AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_task_definition_families(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_task_definition_families(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_task_definition_families, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Returns a list of task definitions that are registered to your
# account. You can filter the results by family name with the
# `familyPrefix` parameter or by status with the `status` parameter.
#
# @option params [String] :family_prefix
# The full family name with which to filter the `ListTaskDefinitions`
# results. Specifying a `familyPrefix` limits the listed task
# definitions to task definition revisions that belong to that family.
#
# @option params [String] :status
# The task definition status with which to filter the
# `ListTaskDefinitions` results. By default, only `ACTIVE` task
# definitions are listed. By setting this parameter to `INACTIVE`, you
# can view task definitions that are `INACTIVE` as long as an active
# task or service still references them. If you paginate the resulting
# output, be sure to keep the `status` value constant in each subsequent
# request.
#
# @option params [String] :sort
# The order in which to sort the results. Valid values are `ASC` and
# `DESC`. By default (`ASC`), task definitions are listed
# lexicographically by family name and in ascending numerical order by
# revision so that the newest task definitions in a family are listed
# last. Setting this parameter to `DESC` reverses the sort order on
# family name and revision so that the newest task definitions in a
# family are listed first.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated
# `ListTaskDefinitions` request where `maxResults` was used and the
# results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues
# from the end of the previous results that returned the `nextToken`
# value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of task definition results returned by
# `ListTaskDefinitions` in paginated output. When this parameter is
# used, `ListTaskDefinitions` only returns `maxResults` results in a
# single page along with a `nextToken` response element. The remaining
# results of the initial request can be seen by sending another
# `ListTaskDefinitions` request with the returned `nextToken` value.
# This value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter is not used,
# then `ListTaskDefinitions` returns up to 100 results and a `nextToken`
# value if applicable.
#
# @return [Types::ListTaskDefinitionsResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListTaskDefinitionsResponse#task_definition_arns #task_definition_arns} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListTaskDefinitionsResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list your registered task definitions
#
# # This example lists all of your registered task definitions.
#
# resp = client.list_task_definitions({
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_definition_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/sleep300:2",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/sleep360:1",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:3",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:4",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:5",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:6",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Example: To list the registered task definitions in a family
#
# # This example lists the task definition revisions of a specified family.
#
# resp = client.list_task_definitions({
# family_prefix: "wordpress",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_definition_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:3",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:4",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:5",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/wordpress:6",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_task_definitions({
# family_prefix: "String",
# status: "ACTIVE", # accepts ACTIVE, INACTIVE
# sort: "ASC", # accepts ASC, DESC
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task_definition_arns #=> Array
# resp.task_definition_arns[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListTaskDefinitions AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_task_definitions(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_task_definitions(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_task_definitions, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Returns a list of tasks for a specified cluster. You can filter the
# results by family name, by a particular container instance, or by the
# desired status of the task with the `family`, `containerInstance`, and
# `desiredStatus` parameters.
#
# Recently stopped tasks might appear in the returned results.
# Currently, stopped tasks appear in the returned results for at least
# one hour.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the tasks to list. If you do not specify a cluster, the default
# cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [String] :container_instance
# The container instance ID or full ARN of the container instance with
# which to filter the `ListTasks` results. Specifying a
# `containerInstance` limits the results to tasks that belong to that
# container instance.
#
# @option params [String] :family
# The name of the family with which to filter the `ListTasks` results.
# Specifying a `family` limits the results to tasks that belong to that
# family.
#
# @option params [String] :next_token
# The `nextToken` value returned from a previous paginated `ListTasks`
# request where `maxResults` was used and the results exceeded the value
# of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous
# results that returned the `nextToken` value.
#
# This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is only used
# to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic
# purposes.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :max_results
# The maximum number of task results returned by `ListTasks` in
# paginated output. When this parameter is used, `ListTasks` only
# returns `maxResults` results in a single page along with a `nextToken`
# response element. The remaining results of the initial request can be
# seen by sending another `ListTasks` request with the returned
# `nextToken` value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this
# parameter is not used, then `ListTasks` returns up to 100 results and
# a `nextToken` value if applicable.
#
# @option params [String] :started_by
# The `startedBy` value with which to filter the task results.
# Specifying a `startedBy` value limits the results to tasks that were
# started with that value.
#
# @option params [String] :service_name
# The name of the service with which to filter the `ListTasks` results.
# Specifying a `serviceName` limits the results to tasks that belong to
# that service.
#
# @option params [String] :desired_status
# The task desired status with which to filter the `ListTasks` results.
# Specifying a `desiredStatus` of `STOPPED` limits the results to tasks
# that Amazon ECS has set the desired status to `STOPPED`, which can be
# useful for debugging tasks that are not starting properly or have died
# or finished. The default status filter is `RUNNING`, which shows tasks
# that Amazon ECS has set the desired status to `RUNNING`.
#
# Although you can filter results based on a desired status of
# `PENDING`, this does not return any results because Amazon ECS never
# sets the desired status of a task to that value (only a task's
# `lastStatus` may have a value of `PENDING`).
#
#
#
# @option params [String] :launch_type
# The launch type for services you want to list.
#
# @return [Types::ListTasksResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::ListTasksResponse#task_arns #task_arns} => Array<String>
# * {Types::ListTasksResponse#next_token #next_token} => String
#
#
# @example Example: To list the tasks in a cluster
#
# # This example lists all of the tasks in a cluster.
#
# resp = client.list_tasks({
# cluster: "default",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task/0cc43cdb-3bee-4407-9c26-c0e6ea5bee84",
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task/6b809ef6-c67e-4467-921f-ee261c15a0a1",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Example: To list the tasks on a particular container instance
#
# # This example lists the tasks of a specified container instance. Specifying a ``containerInstance`` value limits the
# # results to tasks that belong to that container instance.
#
# resp = client.list_tasks({
# cluster: "default",
# container_instance: "f6bbb147-5370-4ace-8c73-c7181ded911f",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_arns: [
# "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1:012345678910:task/0cc43cdb-3bee-4407-9c26-c0e6ea5bee84",
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.list_tasks({
# cluster: "String",
# container_instance: "String",
# family: "String",
# next_token: "String",
# max_results: 1,
# started_by: "String",
# service_name: "String",
# desired_status: "RUNNING", # accepts RUNNING, PENDING, STOPPED
# launch_type: "EC2", # accepts EC2, FARGATE
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task_arns #=> Array
# resp.task_arns[0] #=> String
# resp.next_token #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/ListTasks AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload list_tasks(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def list_tasks(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:list_tasks, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Create or update an attribute on an Amazon ECS resource. If the
# attribute does not exist, it is created. If the attribute exists, its
# value is replaced with the specified value. To delete an attribute,
# use DeleteAttributes. For more information, see [Attributes][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-placement-constraints.html#attributes
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# contains the resource to apply attributes. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :attributes
# The attributes to apply to your resource. You can specify up to 10
# custom attributes per resource. You can specify up to 10 attributes in
# a single call.
#
# @return [Types::PutAttributesResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::PutAttributesResponse#attributes #attributes} => Array<Types::Attribute>
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.put_attributes({
# cluster: "String",
# attributes: [ # required
# {
# name: "String", # required
# value: "String",
# target_type: "container-instance", # accepts container-instance
# target_id: "String",
# },
# ],
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.attributes #=> Array
# resp.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/PutAttributes AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload put_attributes(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def put_attributes(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:put_attributes, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not
# intended for use outside of the agent.
#
#
#
# Registers an EC2 instance into the specified cluster. This instance
# becomes available to place containers on.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster with
# which to register your container instance. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [String] :instance_identity_document
# The instance identity document for the EC2 instance to register. This
# document can be found by running the following command from the
# instance: `curl
# http://169.254.169.254/latest/dynamic/instance-identity/document/`
#
# @option params [String] :instance_identity_document_signature
# The instance identity document signature for the EC2 instance to
# register. This signature can be found by running the following command
# from the instance: `curl
# http://169.254.169.254/latest/dynamic/instance-identity/signature/`
#
# @option params [Array] :total_resources
# The resources available on the instance.
#
# @option params [Types::VersionInfo] :version_info
# The version information for the Amazon ECS container agent and Docker
# daemon running on the container instance.
#
# @option params [String] :container_instance_arn
# The ARN of the container instance (if it was previously registered).
#
# @option params [Array] :attributes
# The container instance attributes that this container instance
# supports.
#
# @return [Types::RegisterContainerInstanceResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::RegisterContainerInstanceResponse#container_instance #container_instance} => Types::ContainerInstance
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.register_container_instance({
# cluster: "String",
# instance_identity_document: "String",
# instance_identity_document_signature: "String",
# total_resources: [
# {
# name: "String",
# type: "String",
# double_value: 1.0,
# long_value: 1,
# integer_value: 1,
# string_set_value: ["String"],
# },
# ],
# version_info: {
# agent_version: "String",
# agent_hash: "String",
# docker_version: "String",
# },
# container_instance_arn: "String",
# attributes: [
# {
# name: "String", # required
# value: "String",
# target_type: "container-instance", # accepts container-instance
# target_id: "String",
# },
# ],
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instance.container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.container_instance.ec2_instance_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_hash #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.docker_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.agent_connected #=> Boolean
# resp.container_instance.running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.agent_update_status #=> String, one of "PENDING", "STAGING", "STAGED", "UPDATING", "UPDATED", "FAILED"
# resp.container_instance.attributes #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_at #=> Time
# resp.container_instance.attachments #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/RegisterContainerInstance AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload register_container_instance(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def register_container_instance(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:register_container_instance, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Registers a new task definition from the supplied `family` and
# `containerDefinitions`. Optionally, you can add data volumes to your
# containers with the `volumes` parameter. For more information about
# task definition parameters and defaults, see [Amazon ECS Task
# Definitions][1] in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
# Guide*.
#
# You can specify an IAM role for your task with the `taskRoleArn`
# parameter. When you specify an IAM role for a task, its containers can
# then use the latest versions of the AWS CLI or SDKs to make API
# requests to the AWS services that are specified in the IAM policy
# associated with the role. For more information, see [IAM Roles for
# Tasks][2] in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
# You can specify a Docker networking mode for the containers in your
# task definition with the `networkMode` parameter. The available
# network modes correspond to those described in [Network settings][3]
# in the Docker run reference. If you specify the `awsvpc` network mode,
# the task is allocated an Elastic Network Interface, and you must
# specify a NetworkConfiguration when you create a service or run a task
# with the task definition. For more information, see [Task
# Networking][4] in the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
# Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task_defintions.html
# [2]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-iam-roles.html
# [3]: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/#/network-settings
# [4]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html
#
# @option params [required, String] :family
# You must specify a `family` for a task definition, which allows you to
# track multiple versions of the same task definition. The `family` is
# used as a name for your task definition. Up to 255 letters (uppercase
# and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed.
#
# @option params [String] :task_role_arn
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that
# containers in this task can assume. All containers in this task are
# granted the permissions that are specified in this role. For more
# information, see [IAM Roles for Tasks][1] in the *Amazon Elastic
# Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-iam-roles.html
#
# @option params [String] :execution_role_arn
# The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the task execution role that the
# Amazon ECS container agent and the Docker daemon can assume.
#
# @option params [String] :network_mode
# The Docker networking mode to use for the containers in the task. The
# valid values are `none`, `bridge`, `awsvpc`, and `host`. The default
# Docker network mode is `bridge`. If using the Fargate launch type, the
# `awsvpc` network mode is required. If using the EC2 launch type, any
# network mode can be used. If the network mode is set to `none`, you
# can't specify port mappings in your container definitions, and the
# task's containers do not have external connectivity. The `host` and
# `awsvpc` network modes offer the highest networking performance for
# containers because they use the EC2 network stack instead of the
# virtualized network stack provided by the `bridge` mode.
#
# With the `host` and `awsvpc` network modes, exposed container ports
# are mapped directly to the corresponding host port (for the `host`
# network mode) or the attached elastic network interface port (for the
# `awsvpc` network mode), so you cannot take advantage of dynamic host
# port mappings.
#
# If the network mode is `awsvpc`, the task is allocated an Elastic
# Network Interface, and you must specify a NetworkConfiguration when
# you create a service or run a task with the task definition. For more
# information, see [Task Networking][1] in the *Amazon Elastic Container
# Service Developer Guide*.
#
# If the network mode is `host`, you can't run multiple instantiations
# of the same task on a single container instance when port mappings are
# used.
#
# For more information, see [Network settings][2] in the *Docker run
# reference*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html
# [2]: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/#network-settings
#
# @option params [required, Array] :container_definitions
# A list of container definitions in JSON format that describe the
# different containers that make up your task.
#
# @option params [Array] :volumes
# A list of volume definitions in JSON format that containers in your
# task may use.
#
# @option params [Array] :placement_constraints
# An array of placement constraint objects to use for the task. You can
# specify a maximum of 10 constraints per task (this limit includes
# constraints in the task definition and those specified at run time).
#
# @option params [Array] :requires_compatibilities
# The launch type required by the task. If no value is specified, it
# defaults to `EC2`.
#
# @option params [String] :cpu
# The number of `cpu` units used by the task. If using the EC2 launch
# type, this field is optional and any value can be used. If you are
# using the Fargate launch type, this field is required and you must use
# one of the following values, which determines your range of valid
# values for the `memory` parameter:
#
# * 256 (.25 vCPU) - Available `memory` values: 512MB, 1GB, 2GB
#
# * 512 (.5 vCPU) - Available `memory` values: 1GB, 2GB, 3GB, 4GB
#
# * 1024 (1 vCPU) - Available `memory` values: 2GB, 3GB, 4GB, 5GB, 6GB,
# 7GB, 8GB
#
# * 2048 (2 vCPU) - Available `memory` values: Between 4GB and 16GB in
# 1GB increments
#
# * 4096 (4 vCPU) - Available `memory` values: Between 8GB and 30GB in
# 1GB increments
#
# @option params [String] :memory
# The amount (in MiB) of memory used by the task. If using the EC2
# launch type, this field is optional and any value can be used. If you
# are using the Fargate launch type, this field is required and you must
# use one of the following values, which determines your range of valid
# values for the `cpu` parameter:
#
# * 512MB, 1GB, 2GB - Available `cpu` values: 256 (.25 vCPU)
#
# * 1GB, 2GB, 3GB, 4GB - Available `cpu` values: 512 (.5 vCPU)
#
# * 2GB, 3GB, 4GB, 5GB, 6GB, 7GB, 8GB - Available `cpu` values: 1024 (1
# vCPU)
#
# * Between 4GB and 16GB in 1GB increments - Available `cpu` values:
# 2048 (2 vCPU)
#
# * Between 8GB and 30GB in 1GB increments - Available `cpu` values:
# 4096 (4 vCPU)
#
# @return [Types::RegisterTaskDefinitionResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::RegisterTaskDefinitionResponse#task_definition #task_definition} => Types::TaskDefinition
#
#
# @example Example: To register a task definition
#
# # This example registers a task definition to the specified family.
#
# resp = client.register_task_definition({
# container_definitions: [
# {
# name: "sleep",
# command: [
# "sleep",
# "360",
# ],
# cpu: 10,
# essential: true,
# image: "busybox",
# memory: 10,
# },
# ],
# family: "sleep360",
# task_role_arn: "",
# volumes: [
# ],
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# task_definition: {
# container_definitions: [
# {
# name: "sleep",
# command: [
# "sleep",
# "360",
# ],
# cpu: 10,
# environment: [
# ],
# essential: true,
# image: "busybox",
# memory: 10,
# mount_points: [
# ],
# port_mappings: [
# ],
# volumes_from: [
# ],
# },
# ],
# family: "sleep360",
# revision: 1,
# task_definition_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/sleep360:19",
# volumes: [
# ],
# },
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.register_task_definition({
# family: "String", # required
# task_role_arn: "String",
# execution_role_arn: "String",
# network_mode: "bridge", # accepts bridge, host, awsvpc, none
# container_definitions: [ # required
# {
# name: "String",
# image: "String",
# cpu: 1,
# memory: 1,
# memory_reservation: 1,
# links: ["String"],
# port_mappings: [
# {
# container_port: 1,
# host_port: 1,
# protocol: "tcp", # accepts tcp, udp
# },
# ],
# essential: false,
# entry_point: ["String"],
# command: ["String"],
# environment: [
# {
# name: "String",
# value: "String",
# },
# ],
# mount_points: [
# {
# source_volume: "String",
# container_path: "String",
# read_only: false,
# },
# ],
# volumes_from: [
# {
# source_container: "String",
# read_only: false,
# },
# ],
# linux_parameters: {
# capabilities: {
# add: ["String"],
# drop: ["String"],
# },
# devices: [
# {
# host_path: "String", # required
# container_path: "String",
# permissions: ["read"], # accepts read, write, mknod
# },
# ],
# init_process_enabled: false,
# },
# hostname: "String",
# user: "String",
# working_directory: "String",
# disable_networking: false,
# privileged: false,
# readonly_root_filesystem: false,
# dns_servers: ["String"],
# dns_search_domains: ["String"],
# extra_hosts: [
# {
# hostname: "String", # required
# ip_address: "String", # required
# },
# ],
# docker_security_options: ["String"],
# docker_labels: {
# "String" => "String",
# },
# ulimits: [
# {
# name: "core", # required, accepts core, cpu, data, fsize, locks, memlock, msgqueue, nice, nofile, nproc, rss, rtprio, rttime, sigpending, stack
# soft_limit: 1, # required
# hard_limit: 1, # required
# },
# ],
# log_configuration: {
# log_driver: "json-file", # required, accepts json-file, syslog, journald, gelf, fluentd, awslogs, splunk
# options: {
# "String" => "String",
# },
# },
# },
# ],
# volumes: [
# {
# name: "String",
# host: {
# source_path: "String",
# },
# },
# ],
# placement_constraints: [
# {
# type: "memberOf", # accepts memberOf
# expression: "String",
# },
# ],
# requires_compatibilities: ["EC2"], # accepts EC2, FARGATE
# cpu: "String",
# memory: "String",
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task_definition.task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].image #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].links[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].port_mappings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].essential #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].entry_point[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].source_volume #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].mount_points[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].source_container #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].volumes_from[0].read_only #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.add[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.capabilities.drop[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].host_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].container_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.devices[0].permissions[0] #=> String, one of "read", "write", "mknod"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].linux_parameters.init_process_enabled #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].user #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].working_directory #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].disable_networking #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].privileged #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].readonly_root_filesystem #=> Boolean
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_servers[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].dns_search_domains[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].hostname #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].extra_hosts[0].ip_address #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_security_options[0] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].docker_labels["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].name #=> String, one of "core", "cpu", "data", "fsize", "locks", "memlock", "msgqueue", "nice", "nofile", "nproc", "rss", "rtprio", "rttime", "sigpending", "stack"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].soft_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].ulimits[0].hard_limit #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.log_driver #=> String, one of "json-file", "syslog", "journald", "gelf", "fluentd", "awslogs", "splunk"
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options #=> Hash
# resp.task_definition.container_definitions[0].log_configuration.options["String"] #=> String
# resp.task_definition.family #=> String
# resp.task_definition.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task_definition.network_mode #=> String, one of "bridge", "host", "awsvpc", "none"
# resp.task_definition.revision #=> Integer
# resp.task_definition.volumes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.volumes[0].host.source_path #=> String
# resp.task_definition.status #=> String, one of "ACTIVE", "INACTIVE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.task_definition.requires_attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "memberOf"
# resp.task_definition.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities #=> Array
# resp.task_definition.requires_compatibilities[0] #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task_definition.cpu #=> String
# resp.task_definition.memory #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/RegisterTaskDefinition AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload register_task_definition(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def register_task_definition(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:register_task_definition, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Starts a new task using the specified task definition.
#
# You can allow Amazon ECS to place tasks for you, or you can customize
# how Amazon ECS places tasks using placement constraints and placement
# strategies. For more information, see [Scheduling Tasks][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
# Alternatively, you can use StartTask to use your own scheduler or
# place tasks manually on specific container instances.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/scheduling_tasks.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster on
# which to run your task. If you do not specify a cluster, the default
# cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :task_definition
# The `family` and `revision` (`family:revision`) or full ARN of the
# task definition to run. If a `revision` is not specified, the latest
# `ACTIVE` revision is used.
#
# @option params [Types::TaskOverride] :overrides
# A list of container overrides in JSON format that specify the name of
# a container in the specified task definition and the overrides it
# should receive. You can override the default command for a container
# (that is specified in the task definition or Docker image) with a
# `command` override. You can also override existing environment
# variables (that are specified in the task definition or Docker image)
# on a container or add new environment variables to it with an
# `environment` override.
#
# A total of 8192 characters are allowed for overrides. This limit
# includes the JSON formatting characters of the override structure.
#
#
#
# @option params [Integer] :count
# The number of instantiations of the specified task to place on your
# cluster. You can specify up to 10 tasks per call.
#
# @option params [String] :started_by
# An optional tag specified when a task is started. For example if you
# automatically trigger a task to run a batch process job, you could
# apply a unique identifier for that job to your task with the
# `startedBy` parameter. You can then identify which tasks belong to
# that job by filtering the results of a ListTasks call with the
# `startedBy` value. Up to 36 letters (uppercase and lowercase),
# numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed.
#
# If a task is started by an Amazon ECS service, then the `startedBy`
# parameter contains the deployment ID of the service that starts it.
#
# @option params [String] :group
# The name of the task group to associate with the task. The default
# value is the family name of the task definition (for example,
# family:my-family-name).
#
# @option params [Array] :placement_constraints
# An array of placement constraint objects to use for the task. You can
# specify up to 10 constraints per task (including constraints in the
# task definition and those specified at run time).
#
# @option params [Array] :placement_strategy
# The placement strategy objects to use for the task. You can specify a
# maximum of five strategy rules per task.
#
# @option params [String] :launch_type
# The launch type on which to run your task.
#
# @option params [String] :platform_version
# The platform version on which to run your task. If one is not
# specified, the latest version is used by default.
#
# @option params [Types::NetworkConfiguration] :network_configuration
# The network configuration for the task. This parameter is required for
# task definitions that use the `awsvpc` network mode to receive their
# own Elastic Network Interface, and it is not supported for other
# network modes. For more information, see [Task Networking][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html
#
# @return [Types::RunTaskResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::RunTaskResponse#tasks #tasks} => Array<Types::Task>
# * {Types::RunTaskResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
#
# @example Example: To run a task on your default cluster
#
# # This example runs the specified task definition on your default cluster.
#
# resp = client.run_task({
# cluster: "default",
# task_definition: "sleep360:1",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# tasks: [
# {
# container_instance_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::container-instance/ffe3d344-77e2-476c-a4d0-bf560ad50acb",
# containers: [
# {
# name: "sleep",
# container_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::container/58591c8e-be29-4ddf-95aa-ee459d4c59fd",
# last_status: "PENDING",
# task_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task/a9f21ea7-c9f5-44b1-b8e6-b31f50ed33c0",
# },
# ],
# desired_status: "RUNNING",
# last_status: "PENDING",
# overrides: {
# container_overrides: [
# {
# name: "sleep",
# },
# ],
# },
# task_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task/a9f21ea7-c9f5-44b1-b8e6-b31f50ed33c0",
# task_definition_arn: "arn:aws:ecs:us-east-1::task-definition/sleep360:1",
# },
# ],
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.run_task({
# cluster: "String",
# task_definition: "String", # required
# overrides: {
# container_overrides: [
# {
# name: "String",
# command: ["String"],
# environment: [
# {
# name: "String",
# value: "String",
# },
# ],
# cpu: 1,
# memory: 1,
# memory_reservation: 1,
# },
# ],
# task_role_arn: "String",
# execution_role_arn: "String",
# },
# count: 1,
# started_by: "String",
# group: "String",
# placement_constraints: [
# {
# type: "distinctInstance", # accepts distinctInstance, memberOf
# expression: "String",
# },
# ],
# placement_strategy: [
# {
# type: "random", # accepts random, spread, binpack
# field: "String",
# },
# ],
# launch_type: "EC2", # accepts EC2, FARGATE
# platform_version: "String",
# network_configuration: {
# awsvpc_configuration: {
# subnets: ["String"], # required
# security_groups: ["String"],
# assign_public_ip: "ENABLED", # accepts ENABLED, DISABLED
# },
# },
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.tasks #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].desired_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cpu #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].memory #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].container_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].exit_code #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].bind_ip #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].attachment_id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].private_ipv_4_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].ipv6_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].started_by #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].version #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity #=> String, one of "CONNECTED", "DISCONNECTED"
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].execution_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopping_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].group #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.tasks[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/RunTask AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload run_task(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def run_task(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:run_task, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Starts a new task from the specified task definition on the specified
# container instance or instances.
#
# Alternatively, you can use RunTask to place tasks for you. For more
# information, see [Scheduling Tasks][1] in the *Amazon Elastic
# Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/scheduling_tasks.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster on
# which to start your task. If you do not specify a cluster, the default
# cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :task_definition
# The `family` and `revision` (`family:revision`) or full ARN of the
# task definition to start. If a `revision` is not specified, the latest
# `ACTIVE` revision is used.
#
# @option params [Types::TaskOverride] :overrides
# A list of container overrides in JSON format that specify the name of
# a container in the specified task definition and the overrides it
# should receive. You can override the default command for a container
# (that is specified in the task definition or Docker image) with a
# `command` override. You can also override existing environment
# variables (that are specified in the task definition or Docker image)
# on a container or add new environment variables to it with an
# `environment` override.
#
# A total of 8192 characters are allowed for overrides. This limit
# includes the JSON formatting characters of the override structure.
#
#
#
# @option params [required, Array] :container_instances
# The container instance IDs or full ARN entries for the container
# instances on which you would like to place your task. You can specify
# up to 10 container instances.
#
# @option params [String] :started_by
# An optional tag specified when a task is started. For example if you
# automatically trigger a task to run a batch process job, you could
# apply a unique identifier for that job to your task with the
# `startedBy` parameter. You can then identify which tasks belong to
# that job by filtering the results of a ListTasks call with the
# `startedBy` value. Up to 36 letters (uppercase and lowercase),
# numbers, hyphens, and underscores are allowed.
#
# If a task is started by an Amazon ECS service, then the `startedBy`
# parameter contains the deployment ID of the service that starts it.
#
# @option params [String] :group
# The name of the task group to associate with the task. The default
# value is the family name of the task definition (for example,
# family:my-family-name).
#
# @option params [Types::NetworkConfiguration] :network_configuration
# The VPC subnet and security group configuration for tasks that receive
# their own Elastic Network Interface by using the `awsvpc` networking
# mode.
#
# @return [Types::StartTaskResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::StartTaskResponse#tasks #tasks} => Array<Types::Task>
# * {Types::StartTaskResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.start_task({
# cluster: "String",
# task_definition: "String", # required
# overrides: {
# container_overrides: [
# {
# name: "String",
# command: ["String"],
# environment: [
# {
# name: "String",
# value: "String",
# },
# ],
# cpu: 1,
# memory: 1,
# memory_reservation: 1,
# },
# ],
# task_role_arn: "String",
# execution_role_arn: "String",
# },
# container_instances: ["String"], # required
# started_by: "String",
# group: "String",
# network_configuration: {
# awsvpc_configuration: {
# subnets: ["String"], # required
# security_groups: ["String"],
# assign_public_ip: "ENABLED", # accepts ENABLED, DISABLED
# },
# },
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.tasks #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.container_overrides[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].overrides.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].desired_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].cpu #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].memory #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].container_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].exit_code #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].bind_ip #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_bindings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].attachment_id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].private_ipv_4_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].containers[0].network_interfaces[0].ipv6_address #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].started_by #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].version #=> Integer
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_reason #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity #=> String, one of "CONNECTED", "DISCONNECTED"
# resp.tasks[0].connectivity_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].pull_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].execution_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].started_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopping_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.tasks[0].group #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.tasks[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.tasks[0].attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/StartTask AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload start_task(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def start_task(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:start_task, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Stops a running task.
#
# When StopTask is called on a task, the equivalent of `docker stop` is
# issued to the containers running in the task. This results in a
# `SIGTERM` and a default 30-second timeout, after which `SIGKILL` is
# sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container handles
# the `SIGTERM` gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from receiving
# it, no `SIGKILL` is sent.
#
# The default 30-second timeout can be configured on the Amazon ECS
# container agent with the `ECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT` variable. For
# more information, see [Amazon ECS Container Agent Configuration][1] in
# the *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-config.html
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the task to stop. If you do not specify a cluster, the default
# cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :task
# The task ID or full ARN entry of the task to stop.
#
# @option params [String] :reason
# An optional message specified when a task is stopped. For example, if
# you are using a custom scheduler, you can use this parameter to
# specify the reason for stopping the task here, and the message appears
# in subsequent DescribeTasks API operations on this task. Up to 255
# characters are allowed in this message.
#
# @return [Types::StopTaskResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::StopTaskResponse#task #task} => Types::Task
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.stop_task({
# cluster: "String",
# task: "String", # required
# reason: "String",
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.task.task_arn #=> String
# resp.task.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.task.task_definition_arn #=> String
# resp.task.container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides #=> Array
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].name #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].command #=> Array
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].command[0] #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].environment #=> Array
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].name #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].environment[0].value #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].cpu #=> Integer
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].memory #=> Integer
# resp.task.overrides.container_overrides[0].memory_reservation #=> Integer
# resp.task.overrides.task_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task.overrides.execution_role_arn #=> String
# resp.task.last_status #=> String
# resp.task.desired_status #=> String
# resp.task.cpu #=> String
# resp.task.memory #=> String
# resp.task.containers #=> Array
# resp.task.containers[0].container_arn #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].task_arn #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].name #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].last_status #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].exit_code #=> Integer
# resp.task.containers[0].reason #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].network_bindings #=> Array
# resp.task.containers[0].network_bindings[0].bind_ip #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].network_bindings[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.task.containers[0].network_bindings[0].host_port #=> Integer
# resp.task.containers[0].network_bindings[0].protocol #=> String, one of "tcp", "udp"
# resp.task.containers[0].network_interfaces #=> Array
# resp.task.containers[0].network_interfaces[0].attachment_id #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].network_interfaces[0].private_ipv_4_address #=> String
# resp.task.containers[0].network_interfaces[0].ipv6_address #=> String
# resp.task.started_by #=> String
# resp.task.version #=> Integer
# resp.task.stopped_reason #=> String
# resp.task.connectivity #=> String, one of "CONNECTED", "DISCONNECTED"
# resp.task.connectivity_at #=> Time
# resp.task.pull_started_at #=> Time
# resp.task.pull_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.task.execution_stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.task.created_at #=> Time
# resp.task.started_at #=> Time
# resp.task.stopping_at #=> Time
# resp.task.stopped_at #=> Time
# resp.task.group #=> String
# resp.task.launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.task.platform_version #=> String
# resp.task.attachments #=> Array
# resp.task.attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.task.attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.task.attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.task.attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.task.attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.task.attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/StopTask AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload stop_task(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def stop_task(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:stop_task, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not
# intended for use outside of the agent.
#
#
#
# Sent to acknowledge that a container changed states.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full ARN of the cluster that hosts the container.
#
# @option params [String] :task
# The task ID or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the task that hosts
# the container.
#
# @option params [String] :container_name
# The name of the container.
#
# @option params [String] :status
# The status of the state change request.
#
# @option params [Integer] :exit_code
# The exit code returned for the state change request.
#
# @option params [String] :reason
# The reason for the state change request.
#
# @option params [Array] :network_bindings
# The network bindings of the container.
#
# @return [Types::SubmitContainerStateChangeResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::SubmitContainerStateChangeResponse#acknowledgment #acknowledgment} => String
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.submit_container_state_change({
# cluster: "String",
# task: "String",
# container_name: "String",
# status: "String",
# exit_code: 1,
# reason: "String",
# network_bindings: [
# {
# bind_ip: "String",
# container_port: 1,
# host_port: 1,
# protocol: "tcp", # accepts tcp, udp
# },
# ],
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.acknowledgment #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/SubmitContainerStateChange AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload submit_container_state_change(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def submit_container_state_change(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:submit_container_state_change, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not
# intended for use outside of the agent.
#
#
#
# Sent to acknowledge that a task changed states.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the task.
#
# @option params [String] :task
# The task ID or full ARN of the task in the state change request.
#
# @option params [String] :status
# The status of the state change request.
#
# @option params [String] :reason
# The reason for the state change request.
#
# @option params [Array] :containers
# Any containers associated with the state change request.
#
# @option params [Array] :attachments
# Any attachments associated with the state change request.
#
# @option params [Time,DateTime,Date,Integer,String] :pull_started_at
# The Unix time stamp for when the container image pull began.
#
# @option params [Time,DateTime,Date,Integer,String] :pull_stopped_at
# The Unix time stamp for when the container image pull completed.
#
# @option params [Time,DateTime,Date,Integer,String] :execution_stopped_at
# The Unix timestamp for when the task execution stopped.
#
# @return [Types::SubmitTaskStateChangeResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::SubmitTaskStateChangeResponse#acknowledgment #acknowledgment} => String
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.submit_task_state_change({
# cluster: "String",
# task: "String",
# status: "String",
# reason: "String",
# containers: [
# {
# container_name: "String",
# exit_code: 1,
# network_bindings: [
# {
# bind_ip: "String",
# container_port: 1,
# host_port: 1,
# protocol: "tcp", # accepts tcp, udp
# },
# ],
# reason: "String",
# status: "String",
# },
# ],
# attachments: [
# {
# attachment_arn: "String", # required
# status: "String", # required
# },
# ],
# pull_started_at: Time.now,
# pull_stopped_at: Time.now,
# execution_stopped_at: Time.now,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.acknowledgment #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/SubmitTaskStateChange AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload submit_task_state_change(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def submit_task_state_change(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:submit_task_state_change, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Updates the Amazon ECS container agent on a specified container
# instance. Updating the Amazon ECS container agent does not interrupt
# running tasks or services on the container instance. The process for
# updating the agent differs depending on whether your container
# instance was launched with the Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or another
# operating system.
#
# `UpdateContainerAgent` requires the Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or Amazon
# Linux with the `ecs-init` service installed and running. For help
# updating the Amazon ECS container agent on other operating systems,
# see [Manually Updating the Amazon ECS Container Agent][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-update.html#manually_update_agent
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# your container instance is running on. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :container_instance
# The container instance ID or full ARN entries for the container
# instance on which you would like to update the Amazon ECS container
# agent.
#
# @return [Types::UpdateContainerAgentResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::UpdateContainerAgentResponse#container_instance #container_instance} => Types::ContainerInstance
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.update_container_agent({
# cluster: "String",
# container_instance: "String", # required
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instance.container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.container_instance.ec2_instance_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.agent_hash #=> String
# resp.container_instance.version_info.docker_version #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.remaining_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.registered_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instance.status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.agent_connected #=> Boolean
# resp.container_instance.running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instance.agent_update_status #=> String, one of "PENDING", "STAGING", "STAGED", "UPDATING", "UPDATED", "FAILED"
# resp.container_instance.attributes #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.container_instance.attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.registered_at #=> Time
# resp.container_instance.attachments #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instance.attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/UpdateContainerAgent AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload update_container_agent(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def update_container_agent(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:update_container_agent, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Modifies the status of an Amazon ECS container instance.
#
# You can change the status of a container instance to `DRAINING` to
# manually remove an instance from a cluster, for example to perform
# system updates, update the Docker daemon, or scale down the cluster
# size.
#
# When you set a container instance to `DRAINING`, Amazon ECS prevents
# new tasks from being scheduled for placement on the container instance
# and replacement service tasks are started on other container instances
# in the cluster if the resources are available. Service tasks on the
# container instance that are in the `PENDING` state are stopped
# immediately.
#
# Service tasks on the container instance that are in the `RUNNING`
# state are stopped and replaced according to the service's deployment
# configuration parameters, `minimumHealthyPercent` and
# `maximumPercent`. You can change the deployment configuration of your
# service using UpdateService.
#
# * If `minimumHealthyPercent` is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore
# `desiredCount` temporarily during task replacement. For example,
# `desiredCount` is four tasks, a minimum of 50% allows the scheduler
# to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. If the
# minimum is 100%, the service scheduler can't remove existing tasks
# until the replacement tasks are considered healthy. Tasks for
# services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if
# they are in the `RUNNING` state. Tasks for services that use a load
# balancer are considered healthy if they are in the `RUNNING` state
# and the container instance they are hosted on is reported as healthy
# by the load balancer.
#
# * The `maximumPercent` parameter represents an upper limit on the
# number of running tasks during task replacement, which enables you
# to define the replacement batch size. For example, if `desiredCount`
# of four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before
# stopping the four tasks to be drained (provided that the cluster
# resources required to do this are available). If the maximum is
# 100%, then replacement tasks can't start until the draining tasks
# have stopped.
#
# Any `PENDING` or `RUNNING` tasks that do not belong to a service are
# not affected; you must wait for them to finish or stop them manually.
#
# A container instance has completed draining when it has no more
# `RUNNING` tasks. You can verify this using ListTasks.
#
# When you set a container instance to `ACTIVE`, the Amazon ECS
# scheduler can begin scheduling tasks on the instance again.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# hosts the container instance to update. If you do not specify a
# cluster, the default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, Array] :container_instances
# A list of container instance IDs or full ARN entries.
#
# @option params [required, String] :status
# The container instance state with which to update the container
# instance.
#
# @return [Types::UpdateContainerInstancesStateResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::UpdateContainerInstancesStateResponse#container_instances #container_instances} => Array<Types::ContainerInstance>
# * {Types::UpdateContainerInstancesStateResponse#failures #failures} => Array<Types::Failure>
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.update_container_instances_state({
# cluster: "String",
# container_instances: ["String"], # required
# status: "ACTIVE", # required, accepts ACTIVE, DRAINING
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.container_instances #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].container_instance_arn #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].ec2_instance_id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.agent_version #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.agent_hash #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].version_info.docker_version #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].remaining_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].double_value #=> Float
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].long_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].integer_value #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].string_set_value #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_resources[0].string_set_value[0] #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].agent_connected #=> Boolean
# resp.container_instances[0].running_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].pending_tasks_count #=> Integer
# resp.container_instances[0].agent_update_status #=> String, one of "PENDING", "STAGING", "STAGED", "UPDATING", "UPDATED", "FAILED"
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].value #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].target_type #=> String, one of "container-instance"
# resp.container_instances[0].attributes[0].target_id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].registered_at #=> Time
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].id #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].type #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].status #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details #=> Array
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details[0].name #=> String
# resp.container_instances[0].attachments[0].details[0].value #=> String
# resp.failures #=> Array
# resp.failures[0].arn #=> String
# resp.failures[0].reason #=> String
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/UpdateContainerInstancesState AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload update_container_instances_state(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def update_container_instances_state(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:update_container_instances_state, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# Modifies the desired count, deployment configuration, network
# configuration, or task definition used in a service.
#
# You can add to or subtract from the number of instantiations of a task
# definition in a service by specifying the cluster that the service is
# running in and a new `desiredCount` parameter.
#
# You can use UpdateService to modify your task definition and deploy a
# new version of your service.
#
# You can also update the deployment configuration of a service. When a
# deployment is triggered by updating the task definition of a service,
# the service scheduler uses the deployment configuration parameters,
# `minimumHealthyPercent` and `maximumPercent`, to determine the
# deployment strategy.
#
# * If `minimumHealthyPercent` is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore
# `desiredCount` temporarily during a deployment. For example, if
# `desiredCount` is four tasks, a minimum of 50% allows the scheduler
# to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. Tasks for
# services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if
# they are in the `RUNNING` state. Tasks for services that use a load
# balancer are considered healthy if they are in the `RUNNING` state
# and the container instance they are hosted on is reported as healthy
# by the load balancer.
#
# * The `maximumPercent` parameter represents an upper limit on the
# number of running tasks during a deployment, which enables you to
# define the deployment batch size. For example, if `desiredCount` is
# four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before stopping
# the four older tasks (provided that the cluster resources required
# to do this are available).
#
# When UpdateService stops a task during a deployment, the equivalent of
# `docker stop` is issued to the containers running in the task. This
# results in a `SIGTERM` and a 30-second timeout, after which `SIGKILL`
# is sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container
# handles the `SIGTERM` gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from
# receiving it, no `SIGKILL` is sent.
#
# When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task
# placement in your cluster with the following logic:
#
# * Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can
# support your service's task definition (for example, they have the
# required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
#
# * By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across
# Availability Zones in this manner (although you can choose a
# different placement strategy):
#
# * Sort the valid container instances by the fewest number of running
# tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the
# instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and
# zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either
# zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
#
# * Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an
# optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring
# container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for
# this service.
#
# When the service scheduler stops running tasks, it attempts to
# maintain balance across the Availability Zones in your cluster using
# the following logic:
#
# * Sort the container instances by the largest number of running tasks
# for this service in the same Availability Zone as the instance. For
# example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C
# each have two, container instances in either zone B or C are
# considered optimal for termination.
#
# * Stop the task on a container instance in an optimal Availability
# Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances
# with the largest number of running tasks for this service.
#
# @option params [String] :cluster
# The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster that
# your service is running on. If you do not specify a cluster, the
# default cluster is assumed.
#
# @option params [required, String] :service
# The name of the service to update.
#
# @option params [Integer] :desired_count
# The number of instantiations of the task to place and keep running in
# your service.
#
# @option params [String] :task_definition
# The `family` and `revision` (`family:revision`) or full ARN of the
# task definition to run in your service. If a `revision` is not
# specified, the latest `ACTIVE` revision is used. If you modify the
# task definition with `UpdateService`, Amazon ECS spawns a task with
# the new version of the task definition and then stops an old task
# after the new version is running.
#
# @option params [Types::DeploymentConfiguration] :deployment_configuration
# Optional deployment parameters that control how many tasks run during
# the deployment and the ordering of stopping and starting tasks.
#
# @option params [Types::NetworkConfiguration] :network_configuration
# The network configuration for the service. This parameter is required
# for task definitions that use the `awsvpc` network mode to receive
# their own Elastic Network Interface, and it is not supported for other
# network modes. For more information, see [Task Networking][1] in the
# *Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide*.
#
# Updating a service to add a subnet to a list of existing subnets does
# not trigger a service deployment. For example, if your network
# configuration change is to keep the existing subnets and simply add
# another subnet to the network configuration, this does not trigger a
# new service deployment.
#
#
#
#
#
# [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html
#
# @option params [String] :platform_version
# The platform version you want to update your service to run.
#
# @option params [Boolean] :force_new_deployment
# Whether or not to force a new deployment of the service.
#
# @return [Types::UpdateServiceResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods:
#
# * {Types::UpdateServiceResponse#service #service} => Types::Service
#
#
# @example Example: To change the task definition used in a service
#
# # This example updates the my-http-service service to use the amazon-ecs-sample task definition.
#
# resp = client.update_service({
# service: "my-http-service",
# task_definition: "amazon-ecs-sample",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# }
#
# @example Example: To change the number of tasks in a service
#
# # This example updates the desired count of the my-http-service service to 10.
#
# resp = client.update_service({
# desired_count: 10,
# service: "my-http-service",
# })
#
# resp.to_h outputs the following:
# {
# }
#
# @example Request syntax with placeholder values
#
# resp = client.update_service({
# cluster: "String",
# service: "String", # required
# desired_count: 1,
# task_definition: "String",
# deployment_configuration: {
# maximum_percent: 1,
# minimum_healthy_percent: 1,
# },
# network_configuration: {
# awsvpc_configuration: {
# subnets: ["String"], # required
# security_groups: ["String"],
# assign_public_ip: "ENABLED", # accepts ENABLED, DISABLED
# },
# },
# platform_version: "String",
# force_new_deployment: false,
# })
#
# @example Response structure
#
# resp.service.service_arn #=> String
# resp.service.service_name #=> String
# resp.service.cluster_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers #=> Array
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].target_group_arn #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].load_balancer_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_name #=> String
# resp.service.load_balancers[0].container_port #=> Integer
# resp.service.status #=> String
# resp.service.desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.maximum_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployment_configuration.minimum_healthy_percent #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].status #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].task_definition #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].desired_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].pending_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].running_count #=> Integer
# resp.service.deployments[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].updated_at #=> Time
# resp.service.deployments[0].launch_type #=> String, one of "EC2", "FARGATE"
# resp.service.deployments[0].platform_version #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.deployments[0].network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
# resp.service.role_arn #=> String
# resp.service.events #=> Array
# resp.service.events[0].id #=> String
# resp.service.events[0].created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.events[0].message #=> String
# resp.service.created_at #=> Time
# resp.service.placement_constraints #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].type #=> String, one of "distinctInstance", "memberOf"
# resp.service.placement_constraints[0].expression #=> String
# resp.service.placement_strategy #=> Array
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].type #=> String, one of "random", "spread", "binpack"
# resp.service.placement_strategy[0].field #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.subnets[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups #=> Array
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.security_groups[0] #=> String
# resp.service.network_configuration.awsvpc_configuration.assign_public_ip #=> String, one of "ENABLED", "DISABLED"
#
# @see http://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/ecs-2014-11-13/UpdateService AWS API Documentation
#
# @overload update_service(params = {})
# @param [Hash] params ({})
def update_service(params = {}, options = {})
req = build_request(:update_service, params)
req.send_request(options)
end
# @!endgroup
# @param params ({})
# @api private
def build_request(operation_name, params = {})
handlers = @handlers.for(operation_name)
context = Seahorse::Client::RequestContext.new(
operation_name: operation_name,
operation: config.api.operation(operation_name),
client: self,
params: params,
config: config)
context[:gem_name] = 'aws-sdk-ecs'
context[:gem_version] = '1.5.0'
Seahorse::Client::Request.new(handlers, context)
end
# Polls an API operation until a resource enters a desired state.
#
# ## Basic Usage
#
# A waiter will call an API operation until:
#
# * It is successful
# * It enters a terminal state
# * It makes the maximum number of attempts
#
# In between attempts, the waiter will sleep.
#
# # polls in a loop, sleeping between attempts
# client.waiter_until(waiter_name, params)
#
# ## Configuration
#
# You can configure the maximum number of polling attempts, and the
# delay (in seconds) between each polling attempt. You can pass
# configuration as the final arguments hash.
#
# # poll for ~25 seconds
# client.wait_until(waiter_name, params, {
# max_attempts: 5,
# delay: 5,
# })
#
# ## Callbacks
#
# You can be notified before each polling attempt and before each
# delay. If you throw `:success` or `:failure` from these callbacks,
# it will terminate the waiter.
#
# started_at = Time.now
# client.wait_until(waiter_name, params, {
#
# # disable max attempts
# max_attempts: nil,
#
# # poll for 1 hour, instead of a number of attempts
# before_wait: -> (attempts, response) do
# throw :failure if Time.now - started_at > 3600
# end
# })
#
# ## Handling Errors
#
# When a waiter is unsuccessful, it will raise an error.
# All of the failure errors extend from
# {Aws::Waiters::Errors::WaiterFailed}.
#
# begin
# client.wait_until(...)
# rescue Aws::Waiters::Errors::WaiterFailed
# # resource did not enter the desired state in time
# end
#
# ## Valid Waiters
#
# The following table lists the valid waiter names, the operations they call,
# and the default `:delay` and `:max_attempts` values.
#
# | waiter_name | params | :delay | :max_attempts |
# | ----------------- | -------------------- | -------- | ------------- |
# | services_inactive | {#describe_services} | 15 | 40 |
# | services_stable | {#describe_services} | 15 | 40 |
# | tasks_running | {#describe_tasks} | 6 | 100 |
# | tasks_stopped | {#describe_tasks} | 6 | 100 |
#
# @raise [Errors::FailureStateError] Raised when the waiter terminates
# because the waiter has entered a state that it will not transition
# out of, preventing success.
#
# @raise [Errors::TooManyAttemptsError] Raised when the configured
# maximum number of attempts have been made, and the waiter is not
# yet successful.
#
# @raise [Errors::UnexpectedError] Raised when an error is encounted
# while polling for a resource that is not expected.
#
# @raise [Errors::NoSuchWaiterError] Raised when you request to wait
# for an unknown state.
#
# @return [Boolean] Returns `true` if the waiter was successful.
# @param [Symbol] waiter_name
# @param [Hash] params ({})
# @param [Hash] options ({})
# @option options [Integer] :max_attempts
# @option options [Integer] :delay
# @option options [Proc] :before_attempt
# @option options [Proc] :before_wait
def wait_until(waiter_name, params = {}, options = {})
w = waiter(waiter_name, options)
yield(w.waiter) if block_given? # deprecated
w.wait(params)
end
# @api private
# @deprecated
def waiter_names
waiters.keys
end
private
# @param [Symbol] waiter_name
# @param [Hash] options ({})
def waiter(waiter_name, options = {})
waiter_class = waiters[waiter_name]
if waiter_class
waiter_class.new(options.merge(client: self))
else
raise Aws::Waiters::Errors::NoSuchWaiterError.new(waiter_name, waiters.keys)
end
end
def waiters
{
services_inactive: Waiters::ServicesInactive,
services_stable: Waiters::ServicesStable,
tasks_running: Waiters::TasksRunning,
tasks_stopped: Waiters::TasksStopped
}
end
class << self
# @api private
attr_reader :identifier
# @api private
def errors_module
Errors
end
end
end
end