@aws-sdk/client-batch 3.194.0 → 3.195.0

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Files changed (136) hide show
  1. package/CHANGELOG.md +11 -0
  2. package/README.md +5 -5
  3. package/dist-cjs/BatchClient.js +11 -8
  4. package/dist-cjs/commands/CancelJobCommand.js +10 -0
  5. package/dist-cjs/commands/CreateComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  6. package/dist-cjs/commands/CreateJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  7. package/dist-cjs/commands/CreateSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  8. package/dist-cjs/commands/DeleteComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  9. package/dist-cjs/commands/DeleteJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  10. package/dist-cjs/commands/DeleteSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  11. package/dist-cjs/commands/DeregisterJobDefinitionCommand.js +10 -0
  12. package/dist-cjs/commands/DescribeComputeEnvironmentsCommand.js +10 -0
  13. package/dist-cjs/commands/DescribeJobDefinitionsCommand.js +10 -0
  14. package/dist-cjs/commands/DescribeJobQueuesCommand.js +10 -0
  15. package/dist-cjs/commands/DescribeJobsCommand.js +10 -0
  16. package/dist-cjs/commands/DescribeSchedulingPoliciesCommand.js +10 -0
  17. package/dist-cjs/commands/ListJobsCommand.js +10 -0
  18. package/dist-cjs/commands/ListSchedulingPoliciesCommand.js +10 -0
  19. package/dist-cjs/commands/ListTagsForResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  20. package/dist-cjs/commands/RegisterJobDefinitionCommand.js +10 -0
  21. package/dist-cjs/commands/SubmitJobCommand.js +10 -0
  22. package/dist-cjs/commands/TagResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  23. package/dist-cjs/commands/TerminateJobCommand.js +10 -0
  24. package/dist-cjs/commands/UntagResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  25. package/dist-cjs/commands/UpdateComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  26. package/dist-cjs/commands/UpdateJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  27. package/dist-cjs/commands/UpdateSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  28. package/dist-cjs/endpoint/EndpointParameters.js +13 -0
  29. package/dist-cjs/endpoint/endpointResolver.js +12 -0
  30. package/dist-cjs/endpoint/ruleset.js +368 -0
  31. package/dist-cjs/models/models_0.js +88 -3
  32. package/dist-cjs/protocols/Aws_restJson1.js +448 -0
  33. package/dist-cjs/runtimeConfig.shared.js +3 -3
  34. package/dist-es/BatchClient.js +12 -9
  35. package/dist-es/commands/CancelJobCommand.js +10 -0
  36. package/dist-es/commands/CreateComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  37. package/dist-es/commands/CreateJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  38. package/dist-es/commands/CreateSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  39. package/dist-es/commands/DeleteComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  40. package/dist-es/commands/DeleteJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  41. package/dist-es/commands/DeleteSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  42. package/dist-es/commands/DeregisterJobDefinitionCommand.js +10 -0
  43. package/dist-es/commands/DescribeComputeEnvironmentsCommand.js +10 -0
  44. package/dist-es/commands/DescribeJobDefinitionsCommand.js +10 -0
  45. package/dist-es/commands/DescribeJobQueuesCommand.js +10 -0
  46. package/dist-es/commands/DescribeJobsCommand.js +10 -0
  47. package/dist-es/commands/DescribeSchedulingPoliciesCommand.js +10 -0
  48. package/dist-es/commands/ListJobsCommand.js +10 -0
  49. package/dist-es/commands/ListSchedulingPoliciesCommand.js +10 -0
  50. package/dist-es/commands/ListTagsForResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  51. package/dist-es/commands/RegisterJobDefinitionCommand.js +10 -0
  52. package/dist-es/commands/SubmitJobCommand.js +10 -0
  53. package/dist-es/commands/TagResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  54. package/dist-es/commands/TerminateJobCommand.js +10 -0
  55. package/dist-es/commands/UntagResourceCommand.js +10 -0
  56. package/dist-es/commands/UpdateComputeEnvironmentCommand.js +10 -0
  57. package/dist-es/commands/UpdateJobQueueCommand.js +10 -0
  58. package/dist-es/commands/UpdateSchedulingPolicyCommand.js +10 -0
  59. package/dist-es/endpoint/EndpointParameters.js +8 -0
  60. package/dist-es/endpoint/endpointResolver.js +8 -0
  61. package/dist-es/endpoint/ruleset.js +365 -0
  62. package/dist-es/models/models_0.js +65 -0
  63. package/dist-es/protocols/Aws_restJson1.js +448 -0
  64. package/dist-es/runtimeConfig.shared.js +2 -2
  65. package/dist-types/Batch.d.ts +30 -30
  66. package/dist-types/BatchClient.d.ts +11 -14
  67. package/dist-types/commands/CancelJobCommand.d.ts +5 -3
  68. package/dist-types/commands/CreateComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +22 -20
  69. package/dist-types/commands/CreateJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  70. package/dist-types/commands/CreateSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  71. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  72. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  73. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  74. package/dist-types/commands/DeregisterJobDefinitionCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  75. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeComputeEnvironmentsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  76. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeJobDefinitionsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  77. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeJobQueuesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  78. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeJobsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  79. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeSchedulingPoliciesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  80. package/dist-types/commands/ListJobsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  81. package/dist-types/commands/ListSchedulingPoliciesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  82. package/dist-types/commands/ListTagsForResourceCommand.d.ts +3 -1
  83. package/dist-types/commands/RegisterJobDefinitionCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  84. package/dist-types/commands/SubmitJobCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  85. package/dist-types/commands/TagResourceCommand.d.ts +3 -1
  86. package/dist-types/commands/TerminateJobCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  87. package/dist-types/commands/UntagResourceCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  88. package/dist-types/commands/UpdateComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  89. package/dist-types/commands/UpdateJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  90. package/dist-types/commands/UpdateSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  91. package/dist-types/endpoint/EndpointParameters.d.ts +19 -0
  92. package/dist-types/endpoint/endpointResolver.d.ts +5 -0
  93. package/dist-types/endpoint/ruleset.d.ts +2 -0
  94. package/dist-types/models/models_0.d.ts +1322 -552
  95. package/dist-types/runtimeConfig.browser.d.ts +4 -2
  96. package/dist-types/runtimeConfig.d.ts +4 -2
  97. package/dist-types/runtimeConfig.native.d.ts +4 -2
  98. package/dist-types/runtimeConfig.shared.d.ts +3 -1
  99. package/dist-types/ts3.4/BatchClient.d.ts +15 -8
  100. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/CancelJobCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  101. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/CreateComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  102. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/CreateJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  103. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/CreateSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  104. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DeleteComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  105. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DeleteJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  106. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DeleteSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  107. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DeregisterJobDefinitionCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  108. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DescribeComputeEnvironmentsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  109. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DescribeJobDefinitionsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  110. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DescribeJobQueuesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  111. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DescribeJobsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  112. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/DescribeSchedulingPoliciesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  113. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/ListJobsCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  114. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/ListSchedulingPoliciesCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  115. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/ListTagsForResourceCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  116. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/RegisterJobDefinitionCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  117. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/SubmitJobCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  118. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/TagResourceCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  119. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/TerminateJobCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  120. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/UntagResourceCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  121. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/UpdateComputeEnvironmentCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  122. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/UpdateJobQueueCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  123. package/dist-types/ts3.4/commands/UpdateSchedulingPolicyCommand.d.ts +2 -0
  124. package/dist-types/ts3.4/endpoint/EndpointParameters.d.ts +26 -0
  125. package/dist-types/ts3.4/endpoint/endpointResolver.d.ts +8 -0
  126. package/dist-types/ts3.4/endpoint/ruleset.d.ts +2 -0
  127. package/dist-types/ts3.4/models/models_0.d.ts +177 -0
  128. package/dist-types/ts3.4/runtimeConfig.browser.d.ts +14 -4
  129. package/dist-types/ts3.4/runtimeConfig.d.ts +14 -4
  130. package/dist-types/ts3.4/runtimeConfig.native.d.ts +14 -3
  131. package/dist-types/ts3.4/runtimeConfig.shared.d.ts +6 -1
  132. package/package.json +3 -1
  133. package/dist-cjs/endpoints.js +0 -185
  134. package/dist-es/endpoints.js +0 -181
  135. package/dist-types/endpoints.d.ts +0 -2
  136. package/dist-types/ts3.4/endpoints.d.ts +0 -2
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ export declare enum ArrayJobDependency {
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  SEQUENTIAL = "SEQUENTIAL"
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing an Batch array job.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch array job.</p>
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  */
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  export interface ArrayProperties {
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  /**
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ export interface ArrayProperties {
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  size?: number;
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing the array properties of a job.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents the array properties of a job.</p>
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  */
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  export interface ArrayPropertiesDetail {
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  /**
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ export interface ArrayPropertiesDetail {
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  index?: number;
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing the array properties of a job.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents the array properties of a job.</p>
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  */
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  export interface ArrayPropertiesSummary {
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  /**
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ export declare enum AssignPublicIp {
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  ENABLED = "ENABLED"
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing the elastic network interface for a multi-node parallel job node.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents the elastic network interface for a multi-node parallel job node.</p>
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  */
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  export interface NetworkInterface {
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  /**
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ export interface NetworkInterface {
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  privateIpv4Address?: string;
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing the details of a container that's part of a job attempt.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents the details of a container that's part of a job attempt.</p>
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  */
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  export interface AttemptContainerDetail {
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  /**
@@ -81,45 +81,45 @@ export interface AttemptContainerDetail {
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  */
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  taskArn?: string;
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  /**
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- * <p>The exit code for the job attempt. A non-zero exit code is considered a failure.</p>
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+ * <p>The exit code for the job attempt. A non-zero exit code is considered failed.</p>
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  */
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  exitCode?: number;
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  /**
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- * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details about a running or stopped
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+ * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details for a running or stopped
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  * container.</p>
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  */
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  reason?: string;
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  /**
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- * <p>The name of the CloudWatch Logs log stream associated with the container. The log group for Batch jobs is
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- * <code>/aws/batch/job</code>. Each container attempt receives a log stream name when they reach the
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- * <code>RUNNING</code> status.</p>
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+ * <p>The name of the CloudWatch Logs log stream that's associated with the container. The log group for Batch jobs
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+ * is <code>/aws/batch/job</code>. Each container attempt receives a log stream name when they reach the
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+ * <code>RUNNING</code> status.</p>
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  */
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  logStreamName?: string;
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  /**
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- * <p>The network interfaces associated with the job attempt.</p>
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+ * <p>The network interfaces that are associated with the job attempt.</p>
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  */
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  networkInterfaces?: NetworkInterface[];
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing a job attempt.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents a job attempt.</p>
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  */
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  export interface AttemptDetail {
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  /**
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- * <p>Details about the container in this job attempt.</p>
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+ * <p>The details for the container in this job attempt.</p>
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  */
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  container?: AttemptContainerDetail;
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  /**
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  * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the attempt was started (when the attempt transitioned from the
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- * <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state).</p>
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+ * <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state).</p>
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  */
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  startedAt?: number;
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  /**
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  * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the attempt was stopped (when the attempt transitioned from the
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- * <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or <code>FAILED</code>).</p>
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+ * <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or <code>FAILED</code>).</p>
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  */
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  stoppedAt?: number;
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  /**
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- * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details about the current status of the job attempt.</p>
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+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details for the current status of the job attempt.</p>
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  */
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  statusReason?: string;
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  }
@@ -141,8 +141,9 @@ export interface CancelJobRequest {
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  export interface CancelJobResponse {
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>These errors are usually caused by a client action, such as using an action or resource on behalf of a user that
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- * doesn't have permissions to use the action or resource, or specifying an identifier that's not valid.</p>
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+ * <p>These errors are usually caused by a client action. One example cause is using an action or resource on behalf
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+ * of a user that doesn't have permissions to use the action or resource. Another cause is specifying an identifier
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+ * that's not valid.</p>
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  */
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  export declare class ClientException extends __BaseException {
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  readonly name: "ClientException";
@@ -170,36 +171,64 @@ export declare enum CRAllocationStrategy {
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  }
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  /**
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  * <p>Provides information used to select Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) for instances in the compute environment. If
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- * <code>Ec2Configuration</code> isn't specified, the default is <code>ECS_AL2</code> (<a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon Linux 2</a>).</p>
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+ * <code>Ec2Configuration</code> isn't specified, the default is <code>ECS_AL2</code> (<a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon Linux 2</a>).</p>
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  * <note>
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  * <p>This object isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
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  * </note>
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  */
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  export interface Ec2Configuration {
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  /**
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- * <p>The image type to match with the instance type to select an AMI. If the <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter
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- * isn't specified, then a recent <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI</a>
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- * (<code>ECS_AL2</code>) is used. If a new image type is specified in an update, but neither an <code>imageId</code> nor a <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter is specified, then the latest Amazon ECS optimized AMI for that image type
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- * that's supported by Batch is used.</p>
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+ * <p>The image type to match with the instance type to select an AMI. The supported values are different for
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+ * <code>ECS</code> and <code>EKS</code> resources.</p>
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  * <dl>
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- * <dt>ECS_AL2</dt>
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+ * <dt>ECS</dt>
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  * <dd>
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- * <p>
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- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon Linux
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- * 2</a>− Default for all non-GPU instance families.</p>
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- * </dd>
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- * <dt>ECS_AL2_NVIDIA</dt>
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- * <dd>
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- * <p>
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- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#gpuami">Amazon Linux
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- * 2 (GPU)</a>−Default for all GPU instance families (for example <code>P4</code> and <code>G4</code>) and
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- * can be used for all non Amazon Web Services Graviton-based instance types.</p>
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+ * <p>If the <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter isn't specified, then a recent <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI</a>
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+ * (<code>ECS_AL2</code>) is used. If a new image type is specified in an update, but neither an <code>imageId</code>
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+ * nor a <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter is specified, then the latest Amazon ECS optimized AMI for that image type
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+ * that's supported by Batch is used.</p>
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+ * <dl>
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+ * <dt>ECS_AL2</dt>
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+ * <dd>
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+ * <p>
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+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#al2ami">Amazon
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+ * Linux 2</a>: Default for all non-GPU instance families.</p>
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+ * </dd>
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+ * <dt>ECS_AL2_NVIDIA</dt>
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+ * <dd>
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+ * <p>
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+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#gpuami">Amazon
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+ * Linux 2 (GPU)</a>: Default for all GPU instance families (for example <code>P4</code> and <code>G4</code>)
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+ * and can be used for all non Amazon Web Services Graviton-based instance types.</p>
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+ * </dd>
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+ * <dt>ECS_AL1</dt>
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+ * <dd>
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+ * <p>
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+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#alami">Amazon Linux</a>. Amazon Linux has reached the end-of-life of standard support. For more information, see <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/">Amazon Linux AMI</a>.</p>
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+ * </dd>
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+ * </dl>
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  * </dd>
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- * <dt>ECS_AL1</dt>
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+ * <dt>EKS</dt>
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  * <dd>
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- * <p>
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- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#alami">Amazon Linux</a>.
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- * Amazon Linux is reaching the end-of-life of standard support. For more information, see <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/">Amazon Linux AMI</a>.</p>
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+ * <p>If the <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter isn't specified, then a recent <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/eks-optimized-ami.html">Amazon EKS-optimized Amazon Linux AMI</a>
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+ * (<code>EKS_AL2</code>) is used. If a new image type is specified in an update, but neither an <code>imageId</code>
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+ * nor a <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameter is specified, then the latest Amazon EKS optimized AMI for that image type
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+ * that Batch supports is used.</p>
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+ * <dl>
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+ * <dt>EKS_AL2</dt>
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+ * <dd>
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+ * <p>
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+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/eks-optimized-ami.html">Amazon
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+ * Linux 2</a>: Default for all non-GPU instance families.</p>
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+ * </dd>
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+ * <dt>EKS_AL2_NVIDIA</dt>
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+ * <dd>
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+ * <p>
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+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/eks-optimized-ami.html">Amazon Linux 2
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+ * (accelerated)</a>: Default for all GPU instance families (for example, <code>P4</code> and
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+ * <code>G4</code>) and can be used for all non Amazon Web Services Graviton-based instance types.</p>
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+ * </dd>
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+ * </dl>
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  * </dd>
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  * </dl>
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  */
@@ -217,12 +246,17 @@ export interface Ec2Configuration {
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  * </note>
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  */
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  imageIdOverride?: string;
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+ /**
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+ * <p>The Kubernetes version for the compute environment. If you don't specify a value, the latest version that Batch
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+ * supports is used.</p>
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+ */
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+ imageKubernetesVersion?: string;
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  }
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  /**
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- * <p>An object representing a launch template associated with a compute resource. You must specify either the launch
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- * template ID or launch template name in the request, but not both.</p>
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+ * <p>An object that represents a launch template that's associated with a compute resource. You must specify either
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+ * the launch template ID or launch template name in the request, but not both.</p>
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  * <p>If security groups are specified using both the <code>securityGroupIds</code> parameter of
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- * <code>CreateComputeEnvironment</code> and the launch template, the values in the <code>securityGroupIds</code>
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+ * <code>CreateComputeEnvironment</code> and the launch template, the values in the <code>securityGroupIds</code>
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  * parameter of <code>CreateComputeEnvironment</code> will be used.</p>
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  * <note>
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  * <p>This object isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
@@ -240,16 +274,16 @@ export interface LaunchTemplateSpecification {
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  /**
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  * <p>The version number of the launch template, <code>$Latest</code>, or <code>$Default</code>.</p>
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  * <p>If the value is <code>$Latest</code>, the latest version of the launch template is used. If the value is
243
- * <code>$Default</code>, the default version of the launch template is used.</p>
277
+ * <code>$Default</code>, the default version of the launch template is used.</p>
244
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  * <important>
245
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  * <p>If the AMI ID that's used in a compute environment is from the launch template, the AMI isn't changed when the
246
- * compute environment is updated. It's only changed if the <code>updateToLatestImageVersion</code> parameter for the compute
247
- * environment is set to <code>true</code>. During an infrastructure update, if either <code>$Latest</code> or
248
- * <code>$Default</code> is specified, Batch re-evaluates the launch template version, and it might use a different
280
+ * compute environment is updated. It's only changed if the <code>updateToLatestImageVersion</code> parameter for the
281
+ * compute environment is set to <code>true</code>. During an infrastructure update, if either <code>$Latest</code> or
282
+ * <code>$Default</code> is specified, Batch re-evaluates the launch template version, and it might use a different
249
283
  * version of the launch template. This is the case even if the launch template isn't specified in the update. When
250
284
  * updating a compute environment, changing the launch template requires an infrastructure update of the compute
251
285
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
252
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
286
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
253
287
  * </important>
254
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  * <p>Default: <code>$Default</code>.</p>
255
289
  */
@@ -262,16 +296,16 @@ export declare enum CRType {
262
296
  SPOT = "SPOT"
263
297
  }
264
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  /**
265
- * <p>An object representing an Batch compute resource. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
299
+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch compute resource. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
266
300
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
267
301
  */
268
302
  export interface ComputeResource {
269
303
  /**
270
304
  * <p>The type of compute environment: <code>EC2</code>, <code>SPOT</code>, <code>FARGATE</code>, or
271
- * <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
305
+ * <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
272
306
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
273
307
  * <p> If you choose <code>SPOT</code>, you must also specify an Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet role with the
274
- * <code>spotIamFleetRole</code> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the
308
+ * <code>spotIamFleetRole</code> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the
275
309
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
276
310
  */
277
311
  type: CRType | string | undefined;
@@ -281,54 +315,52 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
281
315
  * information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/allocation-strategies.html">Allocation strategies</a>
282
316
  * in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
283
317
  * <note>
284
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
285
- * specified.</p>
318
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
286
319
  * </note>
287
320
  * <dl>
288
321
  * <dt>BEST_FIT (default)</dt>
289
322
  * <dd>
290
323
  * <p>Batch selects an instance type that best fits the needs of the jobs with a preference for the lowest-cost
291
324
  * instance type. If additional instances of the selected instance type aren't available, Batch waits for the
292
- * additional instances to be available. If there aren't enough instances available, or if the user is reaching
293
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon EC2 service limits</a>
294
- * then additional jobs aren't run until the currently running jobs have completed. This allocation strategy keeps
295
- * costs lower but can limit scaling. If you are using Spot Fleets with <code>BEST_FIT</code> then the Spot Fleet IAM
296
- * Role must be specified. Compute resources that use a <code>BEST_FIT</code> allocation strategy don't support
297
- * infrastructure updates and can't update some parameters. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
298
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
325
+ * additional instances to be available. If there aren't enough instances available or the user is reaching <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon EC2 service limits</a>,
326
+ * additional jobs aren't run until the currently running jobs are completed. This allocation strategy keeps costs
327
+ * lower but can limit scaling. If you're using Spot Fleets with <code>BEST_FIT</code>, the Spot Fleet IAM Role must
328
+ * be specified. Compute resources that use a <code>BEST_FIT</code> allocation strategy don't support infrastructure
329
+ * updates and can't update some parameters. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
330
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
299
331
  * </dd>
300
332
  * <dt>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</dt>
301
333
  * <dd>
302
- * <p>Batch will select additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in
303
- * the queue, with a preference for instance types with a lower cost per unit vCPU. If additional instances of the
304
- * previously selected instance types aren't available, Batch will select new instance types.</p>
334
+ * <p>Batch selects additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in the
335
+ * queue. Its preference is for instance types with lower cost vCPUs. If additional instances of the previously
336
+ * selected instance types aren't available, Batch selects new instance types.</p>
305
337
  * </dd>
306
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  * <dt>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt>
307
339
  * <dd>
308
- * <p>Batch will select one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in
309
- * the queue, with a preference for instance types that are less likely to be interrupted. This allocation strategy
310
- * is only available for Spot Instance compute resources.</p>
340
+ * <p>Batch selects one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in the
341
+ * queue. Its preference is for instance types that are less likely to be interrupted. This allocation strategy is
342
+ * only available for Spot Instance compute resources.</p>
311
343
  * </dd>
312
344
  * </dl>
313
- * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> strategies, Batch might
314
- * need to go above <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds
315
- * <code>maxvCpus</code> by more than a single instance.</p>
345
+ * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> strategies using On-Demand
346
+ * or Spot Instances, and the <code>BEST_FIT</code> strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed
347
+ * <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <code>maxvCpus</code>
348
+ * by more than a single instance.</p>
316
349
  */
317
350
  allocationStrategy?: CRAllocationStrategy | string;
318
351
  /**
319
352
  * <p>The minimum number of Amazon EC2 vCPUs that an environment should maintain (even if the compute environment is
320
- * <code>DISABLED</code>).</p>
353
+ * <code>DISABLED</code>).</p>
321
354
  * <note>
322
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
323
- * specified.</p>
355
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
324
356
  * </note>
325
357
  */
326
358
  minvCpus?: number;
327
359
  /**
328
360
  * <p>The maximum number of Amazon EC2 vCPUs that a compute environment can reach.</p>
329
361
  * <note>
330
- * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> allocation strategies,
331
- * Batch might need to exceed <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never
362
+ * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> allocation strategies
363
+ * using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <code>BEST_FIT</code> strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never
332
364
  * exceeds <code>maxvCpus</code> by more than a single instance. For example, no more than a single instance from among
333
365
  * those specified in your compute environment is allocated.</p>
334
366
  * </note>
@@ -336,10 +368,9 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
336
368
  maxvCpus: number | undefined;
337
369
  /**
338
370
  * <p>The desired number of Amazon EC2 vCPUS in the compute environment. Batch modifies this value between the minimum
339
- * and maximum values, based on job queue demand.</p>
371
+ * and maximum values based on job queue demand.</p>
340
372
  * <note>
341
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
342
- * specified.</p>
373
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
343
374
  * </note>
344
375
  */
345
376
  desiredvCpus?: number;
@@ -349,8 +380,7 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
349
380
  * (such as <code>c5.8xlarge</code>). You can also choose <code>optimal</code> to select instance types (from the C4,
350
381
  * M4, and R4 instance families) that match the demand of your job queues.</p>
351
382
  * <note>
352
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
353
- * specified.</p>
383
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
354
384
  * </note>
355
385
  * <note>
356
386
  * <p>When you create a compute environment, the instance types that you select for the compute environment must
@@ -359,7 +389,7 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
359
389
  * </note>
360
390
  * <note>
361
391
  * <p>Currently, <code>optimal</code> uses instance types from the C4, M4, and R4 instance families. In Regions that
362
- * don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types from the C5, M5. and R5 instance families are
392
+ * don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types from the C5, M5, and R5 instance families are
363
393
  * used.</p>
364
394
  * </note>
365
395
  */
@@ -370,8 +400,7 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
370
400
  * <p>The Amazon Machine Image (AMI) ID used for instances launched in the compute environment. This parameter is
371
401
  * overridden by the <code>imageIdOverride</code> member of the <code>Ec2Configuration</code> structure.</p>
372
402
  * <note>
373
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
374
- * specified.</p>
403
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
375
404
  * </note>
376
405
  * <note>
377
406
  * <p>The AMI that you choose for a compute environment must match the architecture of the instance types that
@@ -386,13 +415,13 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
386
415
  /**
387
416
  * <p>The VPC subnets where the compute resources are launched. These subnets must be within the same VPC. Fargate
388
417
  * compute resources can contain up to 16 subnets. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/VPC_Subnets.html">VPCs and subnets</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User
389
- * Guide</i>.</p>
418
+ * Guide</i>.</p>
390
419
  */
391
420
  subnets: string[] | undefined;
392
421
  /**
393
- * <p>The Amazon EC2 security groups associated with instances launched in the compute environment. One or more security
394
- * groups must be specified, either in <code>securityGroupIds</code> or using a launch template referenced in
395
- * <code>launchTemplate</code>. This parameter is required for jobs that are running on Fargate resources and must
422
+ * <p>The Amazon EC2 security groups that are associated with instances launched in the compute environment. One or more
423
+ * security groups must be specified, either in <code>securityGroupIds</code> or using a launch template referenced in
424
+ * <code>launchTemplate</code>. This parameter is required for jobs that are running on Fargate resources and must
396
425
  * contain at least one security group. Fargate doesn't support launch templates. If security groups are specified
397
426
  * using both <code>securityGroupIds</code> and <code>launchTemplate</code>, the values in <code>securityGroupIds</code>
398
427
  * are used.</p>
@@ -402,38 +431,34 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
402
431
  * <p>The Amazon EC2 key pair that's used for instances launched in the compute environment. You can use this key pair to
403
432
  * log in to your instances with SSH.</p>
404
433
  * <note>
405
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
406
- * specified.</p>
434
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
407
435
  * </note>
408
436
  */
409
437
  ec2KeyPair?: string;
410
438
  /**
411
439
  * <p>The Amazon ECS instance profile applied to Amazon EC2 instances in a compute environment. You can specify the short name
412
- * or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example,
413
- * <code>
440
+ * or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example, <code>
414
441
  * <i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
415
442
  * </code> or
416
- * <code>arn:aws:iam::<i><aws_account_id></i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
443
+ * <code>arn:aws:iam::<i><aws_account_id></i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
417
444
  * </code>.
418
445
  * For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/instance_IAM_role.html">Amazon ECS instance
419
- * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
446
+ * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
420
447
  * <note>
421
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
422
- * specified.</p>
448
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
423
449
  * </note>
424
450
  */
425
451
  instanceRole?: string;
426
452
  /**
427
453
  * <p>Key-value pair tags to be applied to EC2 resources that are launched in the compute environment. For Batch,
428
- * these take the form of "String1": "String2", where String1 is the tag key and String2 is the tag value−for
429
- * example, <code>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</code>. This is helpful for recognizing your Batch
430
- * instances in the Amazon EC2 console. Updating these tags requires an infrastructure update to the compute environment. For
431
- * more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute
432
- * environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>. These tags aren't seen when using the Batch
433
- * <code>ListTagsForResource</code> API operation.</p>
434
- * <note>
435
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
436
- * specified.</p>
454
+ * these take the form of <code>"String1": "String2"</code>, where <code>String1</code> is the tag key and
455
+ * <code>String2</code> is the tag value-for example, <code>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</code>. This is
456
+ * helpful for recognizing your Batch instances in the Amazon EC2 console. Updating these tags requires an infrastructure
457
+ * update to the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
458
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. These tags aren't seen when using the Batch <code>ListTagsForResource</code>
459
+ * API operation.</p>
460
+ * <note>
461
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
437
462
  * </note>
438
463
  */
439
464
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
@@ -442,10 +467,9 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
442
467
  * jobs to your compute environment, you should consider creating a cluster placement group and associate it with your
443
468
  * compute resources. This keeps your multi-node parallel job on a logical grouping of instances within a single
444
469
  * Availability Zone with high network flow potential. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/placement-groups.html">Placement groups</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for
445
- * Linux Instances</i>.</p>
470
+ * Linux Instances</i>.</p>
446
471
  * <note>
447
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
448
- * specified.</p>
472
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
449
473
  * </note>
450
474
  */
451
475
  placementGroup?: string;
@@ -456,8 +480,7 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
456
480
  * never more than your maximum percentage. If you leave this field empty, the default value is 100% of the On-Demand
457
481
  * price.</p>
458
482
  * <note>
459
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
460
- * specified.</p>
483
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
461
484
  * </note>
462
485
  */
463
486
  bidPercentage?: number;
@@ -465,15 +488,14 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
465
488
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet IAM role applied to a <code>SPOT</code> compute environment. This role is
466
489
  * required if the allocation strategy set to <code>BEST_FIT</code> or if the allocation strategy isn't specified. For
467
490
  * more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon EC2 spot fleet
468
- * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
491
+ * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
469
492
  * <note>
470
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
471
- * specified.</p>
493
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
472
494
  * </note>
473
495
  * <important>
474
496
  * <p>To tag your Spot Instances on creation, the Spot Fleet IAM role specified here must use the newer <b>AmazonEC2SpotFleetTaggingRole</b> managed policy. The previously recommended <b>AmazonEC2SpotFleetRole</b> managed policy doesn't have the required permissions to tag Spot
475
497
  * Instances. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#spot-instance-no-tag">Spot instances not tagged on creation</a> in the
476
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
498
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
477
499
  * </important>
478
500
  */
479
501
  spotIamFleetRole?: string;
@@ -484,22 +506,40 @@ export interface ComputeResource {
484
506
  * information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/launch-templates.html">Launch template support</a> in
485
507
  * the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
486
508
  * <note>
487
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
488
- * specified.</p>
509
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
489
510
  * </note>
490
511
  */
491
512
  launchTemplate?: LaunchTemplateSpecification;
492
513
  /**
493
- * <p>Provides information used to select Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) for EC2 instances in the compute environment.
494
- * If <code>Ec2Configuration</code> isn't specified, the default is <code>ECS_AL2</code>.</p>
514
+ * <p>Provides information that's used to select Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) for EC2 instances in the compute
515
+ * environment. If <code>Ec2Configuration</code> isn't specified, the default is <code>ECS_AL2</code>.</p>
495
516
  * <p>One or two values can be provided.</p>
496
517
  * <note>
497
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
498
- * specified.</p>
518
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
499
519
  * </note>
500
520
  */
501
521
  ec2Configuration?: Ec2Configuration[];
502
522
  }
523
+ /**
524
+ * <p>Configuration for the Amazon EKS cluster that supports the Batch compute environment. The cluster must exist before
525
+ * the compute environment can be created.</p>
526
+ */
527
+ export interface EksConfiguration {
528
+ /**
529
+ * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon EKS cluster. An example is
530
+ * <code>arn:<i>aws</i>:eks:<i>us-east-1</i>:<i>123456789012</i>:cluster/<i>ClusterForBatch</i>
531
+ * </code>.
532
+ * </p>
533
+ */
534
+ eksClusterArn: string | undefined;
535
+ /**
536
+ * <p>The namespace of the Amazon EKS cluster. Batch manages pods in this namespace. The value can't left empty or
537
+ * null. It must be fewer than 64 characters long, can't be set to <code>default</code>, can't start with
538
+ * "<code>kube-</code>," and must match this regular expression: <code>^[a-z0-9]([-a-z0-9]*[a-z0-9])?$</code>. For more
539
+ * information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/namespaces/">Namespaces</a> in the Kubernetes documentation.</p>
540
+ */
541
+ kubernetesNamespace: string | undefined;
542
+ }
503
543
  export declare enum CEState {
504
544
  DISABLED = "DISABLED",
505
545
  ENABLED = "ENABLED"
@@ -513,7 +553,7 @@ export declare enum CEType {
513
553
  */
514
554
  export interface CreateComputeEnvironmentRequest {
515
555
  /**
516
- * <p>The name for your compute environment. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain uppercase and
556
+ * <p>The name for your compute environment. It can be up to 128 characters long. It can contain uppercase and
517
557
  * lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</p>
518
558
  */
519
559
  computeEnvironmentName: string | undefined;
@@ -561,8 +601,8 @@ export interface CreateComputeEnvironmentRequest {
561
601
  * </important>
562
602
  * <p>If your specified role has a path other than <code>/</code>, then you must specify either the full role ARN
563
603
  * (recommended) or prefix the role name with the path. For example, if a role with the name <code>bar</code> has a path
564
- * of <code>/foo/</code> then you would specify <code>/foo/bar</code> as the role name. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_identifiers.html#identifiers-friendly-names">Friendly names
565
- * and paths</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>
604
+ * of <code>/foo/</code>, specify <code>/foo/bar</code> as the role name. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_identifiers.html#identifiers-friendly-names">Friendly names
605
+ * and paths</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</p>
566
606
  * <note>
567
607
  * <p>Depending on how you created your Batch service role, its ARN might contain the <code>service-role</code>
568
608
  * path prefix. When you only specify the name of the service role, Batch assumes that your ARN doesn't use the
@@ -579,10 +619,14 @@ export interface CreateComputeEnvironmentRequest {
579
619
  * propagate to the underlying compute resources.</p>
580
620
  */
581
621
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
622
+ /**
623
+ * <p>The details for the Amazon EKS cluster that supports the compute environment.</p>
624
+ */
625
+ eksConfiguration?: EksConfiguration;
582
626
  }
583
627
  export interface CreateComputeEnvironmentResponse {
584
628
  /**
585
- * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain uppercase and
629
+ * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 characters long. It can contain uppercase and
586
630
  * lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</p>
587
631
  */
588
632
  computeEnvironmentName?: string;
@@ -592,10 +636,10 @@ export interface CreateComputeEnvironmentResponse {
592
636
  computeEnvironmentArn?: string;
593
637
  }
594
638
  /**
595
- * <p>The order in which compute environments are tried for job placement within a queue. Compute environments are
639
+ * <p>The order that compute environments are tried in for job placement within a queue. Compute environments are
596
640
  * tried in ascending order. For example, if two compute environments are associated with a job queue, the compute
597
641
  * environment with a lower order integer value is tried for job placement first. Compute environments must be in the
598
- * <code>VALID</code> state before you can associate them with a job queue. All of the compute environments must be
642
+ * <code>VALID</code> state before you can associate them with a job queue. All of the compute environments must be
599
643
  * either EC2 (<code>EC2</code> or <code>SPOT</code>) or Fargate (<code>FARGATE</code> or <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>);
600
644
  * EC2 and Fargate compute environments can't be mixed.</p>
601
645
  * <note>
@@ -642,7 +686,7 @@ export interface CreateJobQueueRequest {
642
686
  * <code>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i>
643
687
  * </code>.
644
688
  * An example is
645
- * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:012345678910:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
689
+ * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
646
690
  */
647
691
  schedulingPolicyArn?: string;
648
692
  /**
@@ -691,11 +735,11 @@ export interface ShareAttributes {
691
735
  /**
692
736
  * <p>A fair share identifier or fair share identifier prefix. If the string ends with an asterisk (*), this entry
693
737
  * specifies the weight factor to use for fair share identifiers that start with that prefix. The list of fair share
694
- * identifiers in a fair share policy cannot overlap. For example, you can't have one that specifies a
695
- * <code>shareIdentifier</code> of <code>UserA*</code> and another that specifies a <code>shareIdentifier</code> of
696
- * <code>UserA-1</code>.</p>
738
+ * identifiers in a fair share policy can't overlap. For example, you can't have one that specifies a
739
+ * <code>shareIdentifier</code> of <code>UserA*</code> and another that specifies a <code>shareIdentifier</code> of
740
+ * <code>UserA-1</code>.</p>
697
741
  * <p>There can be no more than 500 fair share identifiers active in a job queue.</p>
698
- * <p>The string is limited to 255 alphanumeric characters, optionally followed by an asterisk (*).</p>
742
+ * <p>The string is limited to 255 alphanumeric characters, and can be followed by an asterisk (*).</p>
699
743
  */
700
744
  shareIdentifier: string | undefined;
701
745
  /**
@@ -711,25 +755,25 @@ export interface ShareAttributes {
711
755
  */
712
756
  export interface FairsharePolicy {
713
757
  /**
714
- * <p>The time period to use to calculate a fair share percentage for each fair share identifier in use, in seconds. A
715
- * value of zero (0) indicates that only current usage should be measured. The decay allows for more recently run jobs
758
+ * <p>The amount of time (in seconds) to use to calculate a fair share percentage for each fair share identifier in
759
+ * use. A value of zero (0) indicates that only current usage is measured. The decay allows for more recently run jobs
716
760
  * to have more weight than jobs that ran earlier. The maximum supported value is 604800 (1 week).</p>
717
761
  */
718
762
  shareDecaySeconds?: number;
719
763
  /**
720
- * <p>A value used to reserve some of the available maximum vCPU for fair share identifiers that have not yet been
764
+ * <p>A value used to reserve some of the available maximum vCPU for fair share identifiers that aren't already
721
765
  * used.</p>
722
766
  * <p>The reserved ratio is
723
- * <code>(<i>computeReservation</i>/100)^<i>ActiveFairShares</i>
767
+ * <code>(<i>computeReservation</i>/100)^<i>ActiveFairShares</i>
724
768
  * </code> where
725
- * <code>
769
+ * <code>
726
770
  * <i>ActiveFairShares</i>
727
771
  * </code> is the number of active fair share identifiers.</p>
728
- * <p>For example, a <code>computeReservation</code> value of 50 indicates that Batch should reserve 50% of the
729
- * maximum available vCPU if there is only one fair share identifier, 25% if there are two fair share identifiers, and
730
- * 12.5% if there are three fair share identifiers. A <code>computeReservation</code> value of 25 indicates that Batch
731
- * should reserve 25% of the maximum available vCPU if there is only one fair share identifier, 6.25% if there are two
732
- * fair share identifiers, and 1.56% if there are three fair share identifiers.</p>
772
+ * <p>For example, a <code>computeReservation</code> value of 50 indicates that Batchreserves 50% of the maximum
773
+ * available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier. It reserves 25% if there are two fair share identifiers. It
774
+ * reserves 12.5% if there are three fair share identifiers. A <code>computeReservation</code> value of 25 indicates
775
+ * that Batch should reserve 25% of the maximum available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier, 6.25% if
776
+ * there are two fair share identifiers, and 1.56% if there are three fair share identifiers.</p>
733
777
  * <p>The minimum value is 0 and the maximum value is 99.</p>
734
778
  */
735
779
  computeReservation?: number;
@@ -770,7 +814,7 @@ export interface CreateSchedulingPolicyResponse {
770
814
  * <code>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i>
771
815
  * </code>.
772
816
  * For example,
773
- * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:012345678910:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
817
+ * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
774
818
  */
775
819
  arn: string | undefined;
776
820
  }
@@ -839,12 +883,16 @@ export interface DescribeComputeEnvironmentsRequest {
839
883
  * continues from the end of the previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is
840
884
  * <code>null</code> when there are no more results to return.</p>
841
885
  * <note>
842
- * <p>This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that's only used to
886
+ * <p>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to
843
887
  * retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</p>
844
888
  * </note>
845
889
  */
846
890
  nextToken?: string;
847
891
  }
892
+ export declare enum OrchestrationType {
893
+ ECS = "ECS",
894
+ EKS = "EKS"
895
+ }
848
896
  export declare enum CEStatus {
849
897
  CREATING = "CREATING",
850
898
  DELETED = "DELETED",
@@ -855,8 +903,8 @@ export declare enum CEStatus {
855
903
  }
856
904
  /**
857
905
  * <p>Specifies the infrastructure update policy for the compute environment. For more information about
858
- * infrastructure updates, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/infrastructure-updates.html">Infrastructure updates</a>
859
- * in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
906
+ * infrastructure updates, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/infrastructure-updates.html">Infrastructure
907
+ * updates</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
860
908
  */
861
909
  export interface UpdatePolicy {
862
910
  /**
@@ -865,17 +913,17 @@ export interface UpdatePolicy {
865
913
  */
866
914
  terminateJobsOnUpdate?: boolean;
867
915
  /**
868
- * <p>Specifies the job timeout, in minutes, when the compute environment infrastructure is updated. The default value
916
+ * <p>Specifies the job timeout (in minutes) when the compute environment infrastructure is updated. The default value
869
917
  * is 30.</p>
870
918
  */
871
919
  jobExecutionTimeoutMinutes?: number;
872
920
  }
873
921
  /**
874
- * <p>An object representing an Batch compute environment.</p>
922
+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch compute environment.</p>
875
923
  */
876
924
  export interface ComputeEnvironmentDetail {
877
925
  /**
878
- * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain uppercase and
926
+ * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 characters long. It can contain uppercase and
879
927
  * lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</p>
880
928
  */
881
929
  computeEnvironmentName: string | undefined;
@@ -888,7 +936,7 @@ export interface ComputeEnvironmentDetail {
888
936
  */
889
937
  unmanagedvCpus?: number;
890
938
  /**
891
- * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the underlying Amazon ECS cluster used by the compute environment.</p>
939
+ * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the underlying Amazon ECS cluster that the compute environment uses.</p>
892
940
  */
893
941
  ecsClusterArn?: string;
894
942
  /**
@@ -897,19 +945,19 @@ export interface ComputeEnvironmentDetail {
897
945
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
898
946
  /**
899
947
  * <p>The type of the compute environment: <code>MANAGED</code> or <code>UNMANAGED</code>. For more information, see
900
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
901
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
948
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
949
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
902
950
  */
903
951
  type?: CEType | string;
904
952
  /**
905
953
  * <p>The state of the compute environment. The valid values are <code>ENABLED</code> or <code>DISABLED</code>.</p>
906
954
  * <p>If the state is <code>ENABLED</code>, then the Batch scheduler can attempt to place jobs from an associated
907
955
  * job queue on the compute resources within the environment. If the compute environment is managed, then it can scale
908
- * its instances out or in automatically, based on the job queue demand.</p>
956
+ * its instances out or in automatically based on the job queue demand.</p>
909
957
  * <p>If the state is <code>DISABLED</code>, then the Batch scheduler doesn't attempt to place jobs within the
910
958
  * environment. Jobs in a <code>STARTING</code> or <code>RUNNING</code> state continue to progress normally. Managed
911
959
  * compute environments in the <code>DISABLED</code> state don't scale out. However, they scale in to
912
- * <code>minvCpus</code> value after instances become idle.</p>
960
+ * <code>minvCpus</code> value after instances become idle.</p>
913
961
  */
914
962
  state?: CEState | string;
915
963
  /**
@@ -917,7 +965,7 @@ export interface ComputeEnvironmentDetail {
917
965
  */
918
966
  status?: CEStatus | string;
919
967
  /**
920
- * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details about the current status of the compute
968
+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details for the current status of the compute
921
969
  * environment.</p>
922
970
  */
923
971
  statusReason?: string;
@@ -927,17 +975,31 @@ export interface ComputeEnvironmentDetail {
927
975
  */
928
976
  computeResources?: ComputeResource;
929
977
  /**
930
- * <p>The service role associated with the compute environment that allows Batch to make calls to Amazon Web Services API
978
+ * <p>The service role that's associated with the compute environment that allows Batch to make calls to Amazon Web Services API
931
979
  * operations on your behalf. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/service_IAM_role.html">Batch service IAM role</a> in the
932
980
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
933
981
  */
934
982
  serviceRole?: string;
935
983
  /**
936
984
  * <p>Specifies the infrastructure update policy for the compute environment. For more information about
937
- * infrastructure updates, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute
938
- * environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
985
+ * infrastructure updates, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
986
+ * compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
939
987
  */
940
988
  updatePolicy?: UpdatePolicy;
989
+ /**
990
+ * <p>The configuration for the Amazon EKS cluster that supports the Batch compute environment. Only specify this
991
+ * parameter if the <code>containerOrchestrationType</code> is <code>EKS</code>.</p>
992
+ */
993
+ eksConfiguration?: EksConfiguration;
994
+ /**
995
+ * <p>The orchestration type of the compute environment. The valid values are <code>ECS</code> (default) or
996
+ * <code>EKS</code>.</p>
997
+ */
998
+ containerOrchestrationType?: OrchestrationType | string;
999
+ /**
1000
+ * <p>Unique identifier for the compute environment.</p>
1001
+ */
1002
+ uuid?: string;
941
1003
  }
942
1004
  export interface DescribeComputeEnvironmentsResponse {
943
1005
  /**
@@ -986,7 +1048,7 @@ export interface DescribeJobDefinitionsRequest {
986
1048
  * from the end of the previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is <code>null</code>
987
1049
  * when there are no more results to return.</p>
988
1050
  * <note>
989
- * <p>This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that's only used to
1051
+ * <p>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to
990
1052
  * retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</p>
991
1053
  * </note>
992
1054
  */
@@ -1025,7 +1087,7 @@ export declare enum DeviceCgroupPermission {
1025
1087
  WRITE = "WRITE"
1026
1088
  }
1027
1089
  /**
1028
- * <p>An object representing a container instance host device.</p>
1090
+ * <p>An object that represents a container instance host device.</p>
1029
1091
  * <note>
1030
1092
  * <p>This object isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be provided.</p>
1031
1093
  * </note>
@@ -1047,30 +1109,30 @@ export interface Device {
1047
1109
  permissions?: (DeviceCgroupPermission | string)[];
1048
1110
  }
1049
1111
  /**
1050
- * <p>The container path, mount options, and size of the tmpfs mount.</p>
1112
+ * <p>The container path, mount options, and size of the <code>tmpfs</code> mount.</p>
1051
1113
  * <note>
1052
1114
  * <p>This object isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
1053
1115
  * </note>
1054
1116
  */
1055
1117
  export interface Tmpfs {
1056
1118
  /**
1057
- * <p>The absolute file path in the container where the tmpfs volume is mounted.</p>
1119
+ * <p>The absolute file path in the container where the <code>tmpfs</code> volume is mounted.</p>
1058
1120
  */
1059
1121
  containerPath: string | undefined;
1060
1122
  /**
1061
- * <p>The size (in MiB) of the tmpfs volume.</p>
1123
+ * <p>The size (in MiB) of the <code>tmpfs</code> volume.</p>
1062
1124
  */
1063
1125
  size: number | undefined;
1064
1126
  /**
1065
- * <p>The list of tmpfs volume mount options.</p>
1127
+ * <p>The list of <code>tmpfs</code> volume mount options.</p>
1066
1128
  * <p>Valid values: "<code>defaults</code>" | "<code>ro</code>" | "<code>rw</code>" | "<code>suid</code>" |
1067
- * "<code>nosuid</code>" | "<code>dev</code>" | "<code>nodev</code>" | "<code>exec</code>" | "<code>noexec</code>" |
1068
- * "<code>sync</code>" | "<code>async</code>" | "<code>dirsync</code>" | "<code>remount</code>" | "<code>mand</code>" |
1069
- * "<code>nomand</code>" | "<code>atime</code>" | "<code>noatime</code>" | "<code>diratime</code>" |
1070
- * "<code>nodiratime</code>" | "<code>bind</code>" | "<code>rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" |
1071
- * "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime</code>" | "<code>norelatime</code>" |
1072
- * "<code>strictatime</code>" | "<code>nostrictatime</code>" | "<code>mode</code>" | "<code>uid</code>" |
1073
- * "<code>gid</code>" | "<code>nr_inodes</code>" | "<code>nr_blocks</code>" | "<code>mpol</code>"</p>
1129
+ * "<code>nosuid</code>" | "<code>dev</code>" | "<code>nodev</code>" | "<code>exec</code>" | "<code>noexec</code>" |
1130
+ * "<code>sync</code>" | "<code>async</code>" | "<code>dirsync</code>" | "<code>remount</code>" | "<code>mand</code>" |
1131
+ * "<code>nomand</code>" | "<code>atime</code>" | "<code>noatime</code>" | "<code>diratime</code>" |
1132
+ * "<code>nodiratime</code>" | "<code>bind</code>" | "<code>rbind" | "unbindable" | "runbindable" | "private" |
1133
+ * "rprivate" | "shared" | "rshared" | "slave" | "rslave" | "relatime</code>" | "<code>norelatime</code>" |
1134
+ * "<code>strictatime</code>" | "<code>nostrictatime</code>" | "<code>mode</code>" | "<code>uid</code>" |
1135
+ * "<code>gid</code>" | "<code>nr_inodes</code>" | "<code>nr_blocks</code>" | "<code>mpol</code>"</p>
1074
1136
  */
1075
1137
  mountOptions?: string[];
1076
1138
  }
@@ -1079,11 +1141,11 @@ export interface Tmpfs {
1079
1141
  */
1080
1142
  export interface LinuxParameters {
1081
1143
  /**
1082
- * <p>Any host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to <code>Devices</code> in the
1144
+ * <p>Any of the host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to <code>Devices</code> in the
1083
1145
  * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--device</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1084
1146
  * <note>
1085
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1086
- * provided.</p>
1147
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide it for these
1148
+ * jobs.</p>
1087
1149
  * </note>
1088
1150
  */
1089
1151
  devices?: Device[];
@@ -1091,61 +1153,61 @@ export interface LinuxParameters {
1091
1153
  * <p>If true, run an <code>init</code> process inside the container that forwards signals and reaps processes. This
1092
1154
  * parameter maps to the <code>--init</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.
1093
1155
  * This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your
1094
- * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your
1156
+ * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your
1095
1157
  * container instance and run the following command: <code>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</code>
1096
1158
  * </p>
1097
1159
  */
1098
1160
  initProcessEnabled?: boolean;
1099
1161
  /**
1100
1162
  * <p>The value for the size (in MiB) of the <code>/dev/shm</code> volume. This parameter maps to the
1101
- * <code>--shm-size</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1163
+ * <code>--shm-size</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1102
1164
  * <note>
1103
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1104
- * provided.</p>
1165
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide it for these
1166
+ * jobs.</p>
1105
1167
  * </note>
1106
1168
  */
1107
1169
  sharedMemorySize?: number;
1108
1170
  /**
1109
- * <p>The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the tmpfs mount. This parameter maps to the
1110
- * <code>--tmpfs</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1171
+ * <p>The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the <code>tmpfs</code> mount. This parameter maps to the
1172
+ * <code>--tmpfs</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1111
1173
  * <note>
1112
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1113
- * provided.</p>
1174
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide this parameter
1175
+ * for this resource type.</p>
1114
1176
  * </note>
1115
1177
  */
1116
1178
  tmpfs?: Tmpfs[];
1117
1179
  /**
1118
1180
  * <p>The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use. This parameter is translated to the
1119
- * <code>--memory-swap</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a> where the value is the
1181
+ * <code>--memory-swap</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a> where the value is the
1120
1182
  * sum of the container memory plus the <code>maxSwap</code> value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/resource_constraints/#--memory-swap-details">
1121
1183
  * <code>--memory-swap</code> details</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1122
1184
  * <p>If a <code>maxSwap</code> value of <code>0</code> is specified, the container doesn't use swap. Accepted values
1123
1185
  * are <code>0</code> or any positive integer. If the <code>maxSwap</code> parameter is omitted, the container doesn't
1124
- * use the swap configuration for the container instance it is running on. A <code>maxSwap</code> value must be set for
1125
- * the <code>swappiness</code> parameter to be used.</p>
1186
+ * use the swap configuration for the container instance that it's running on. A <code>maxSwap</code> value must be set
1187
+ * for the <code>swappiness</code> parameter to be used.</p>
1126
1188
  * <note>
1127
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1128
- * provided.</p>
1189
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide it for these
1190
+ * jobs.</p>
1129
1191
  * </note>
1130
1192
  */
1131
1193
  maxSwap?: number;
1132
1194
  /**
1133
- * <p>This allows you to tune a container's memory swappiness behavior. A <code>swappiness</code> value of
1134
- * <code>0</code> causes swapping not to happen unless absolutely necessary. A <code>swappiness</code> value of
1135
- * <code>100</code> causes pages to be swapped very aggressively. Accepted values are whole numbers between
1136
- * <code>0</code> and <code>100</code>. If the <code>swappiness</code> parameter isn't specified, a default value of
1137
- * <code>60</code> is used. If a value isn't specified for <code>maxSwap</code>, then this parameter is ignored. If
1138
- * <code>maxSwap</code> is set to 0, the container doesn't use swap. This parameter maps to the
1139
- * <code>--memory-swappiness</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1195
+ * <p>You can use this parameter to tune a container's memory swappiness behavior. A <code>swappiness</code> value of
1196
+ * <code>0</code> causes swapping to not occur unless absolutely necessary. A <code>swappiness</code> value of
1197
+ * <code>100</code> causes pages to be swapped aggressively. Valid values are whole numbers between <code>0</code> and
1198
+ * <code>100</code>. If the <code>swappiness</code> parameter isn't specified, a default value of <code>60</code> is
1199
+ * used. If a value isn't specified for <code>maxSwap</code>, then this parameter is ignored. If <code>maxSwap</code> is
1200
+ * set to 0, the container doesn't use swap. This parameter maps to the <code>--memory-swappiness</code> option to
1201
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1140
1202
  * <p>Consider the following when you use a per-container swap configuration.</p>
1141
1203
  * <ul>
1142
1204
  * <li>
1143
1205
  * <p>Swap space must be enabled and allocated on the container instance for the containers to use.</p>
1144
1206
  * <note>
1145
- * <p>The Amazon ECS optimized AMIs don't have swap enabled by default. You must enable swap on the instance to use this
1146
- * feature. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instance-store-swap-volumes.html">Instance store swap volumes</a> in the
1147
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i> or <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-memory-swap-file/">How do I allocate memory to work as swap space in an
1148
- * Amazon EC2 instance by using a swap file?</a>
1207
+ * <p>By default, the Amazon ECS optimized AMIs don't have swap enabled. You must enable swap on the instance to use
1208
+ * this feature. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instance-store-swap-volumes.html">Instance store swap volumes</a> in the
1209
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i> or <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-memory-swap-file/">How do I allocate memory to work as swap space in an
1210
+ * Amazon EC2 instance by using a swap file?</a>
1149
1211
  * </p>
1150
1212
  * </note>
1151
1213
  * </li>
@@ -1154,13 +1216,13 @@ export interface LinuxParameters {
1154
1216
  * </li>
1155
1217
  * <li>
1156
1218
  * <p>If the <code>maxSwap</code> and <code>swappiness</code> parameters are omitted from a job definition, each
1157
- * container will have a default <code>swappiness</code> value of 60, and the total swap usage will be limited to two
1158
- * times the memory reservation of the container.</p>
1219
+ * container has a default <code>swappiness</code> value of 60. Moreover, the total swap usage is limited to two times
1220
+ * the memory reservation of the container.</p>
1159
1221
  * </li>
1160
1222
  * </ul>
1161
1223
  * <note>
1162
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1163
- * provided.</p>
1224
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide it for these
1225
+ * jobs.</p>
1164
1226
  * </note>
1165
1227
  */
1166
1228
  swappiness?: number;
@@ -1175,7 +1237,7 @@ export declare enum LogDriver {
1175
1237
  SYSLOG = "syslog"
1176
1238
  }
1177
1239
  /**
1178
- * <p>An object representing the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the
1240
+ * <p>An object that represents the secret to expose to your container. Secrets can be exposed to a container in the
1179
1241
  * following ways:</p>
1180
1242
  * <ul>
1181
1243
  * <li>
@@ -1188,7 +1250,7 @@ export declare enum LogDriver {
1188
1250
  * </li>
1189
1251
  * </ul>
1190
1252
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying
1191
- * sensitive data</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1253
+ * sensitive data</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1192
1254
  */
1193
1255
  export interface Secret {
1194
1256
  /**
@@ -1196,12 +1258,12 @@ export interface Secret {
1196
1258
  */
1197
1259
  name: string | undefined;
1198
1260
  /**
1199
- * <p>The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full ARN of the Secrets Manager secret or the
1200
- * full ARN of the parameter in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Parameter Store.</p>
1261
+ * <p>The secret to expose to the container. The supported values are either the full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Secrets Manager secret or
1262
+ * the full ARN of the parameter in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Parameter Store.</p>
1201
1263
  * <note>
1202
1264
  * <p>If the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Parameter Store parameter exists in the same Region as the job you're launching, then you can use
1203
- * either the full ARN or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN must
1204
- * be specified.</p>
1265
+ * either the full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or name of the parameter. If the parameter exists in a different Region, then the full ARN
1266
+ * must be specified.</p>
1205
1267
  * </note>
1206
1268
  */
1207
1269
  valueFrom: string | undefined;
@@ -1211,10 +1273,10 @@ export interface Secret {
1211
1273
  */
1212
1274
  export interface LogConfiguration {
1213
1275
  /**
1214
- * <p>The log driver to use for the container. The valid values listed for this parameter are log drivers that the
1215
- * Amazon ECS container agent can communicate with by default.</p>
1276
+ * <p>The log driver to use for the container. The valid values that are listed for this parameter are log drivers
1277
+ * that the Amazon ECS container agent can communicate with by default.</p>
1216
1278
  * <p>The supported log drivers are <code>awslogs</code>, <code>fluentd</code>, <code>gelf</code>,
1217
- * <code>json-file</code>, <code>journald</code>, <code>logentries</code>, <code>syslog</code>, and
1279
+ * <code>json-file</code>, <code>journald</code>, <code>logentries</code>, <code>syslog</code>, and
1218
1280
  * <code>splunk</code>.</p>
1219
1281
  * <note>
1220
1282
  * <p>Jobs that are running on Fargate resources are restricted to the <code>awslogs</code> and <code>splunk</code>
@@ -1224,70 +1286,71 @@ export interface LogConfiguration {
1224
1286
  * <dt>awslogs</dt>
1225
1287
  * <dd>
1226
1288
  * <p>Specifies the Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using_awslogs.html">Using the awslogs log driver</a> in the
1227
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i> and <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/awslogs/">Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1289
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i> and <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/awslogs/">Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1228
1290
  * </dd>
1229
1291
  * <dt>fluentd</dt>
1230
1292
  * <dd>
1231
- * <p>Specifies the Fluentd logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/fluentd/">Fluentd logging driver</a> in the Docker
1232
- * documentation.</p>
1293
+ * <p>Specifies the Fluentd logging driver. For more information including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/fluentd/">Fluentd logging driver</a> in the
1294
+ * <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1233
1295
  * </dd>
1234
1296
  * <dt>gelf</dt>
1235
1297
  * <dd>
1236
- * <p>Specifies the Graylog Extended Format (GELF) logging driver. For more information, including usage and
1298
+ * <p>Specifies the Graylog Extended Format (GELF) logging driver. For more information including usage and
1237
1299
  * options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/gelf/">Graylog Extended Format logging
1238
- * driver</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1300
+ * driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1239
1301
  * </dd>
1240
1302
  * <dt>journald</dt>
1241
1303
  * <dd>
1242
- * <p>Specifies the journald logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/journald/">Journald logging driver</a> in the Docker
1243
- * documentation.</p>
1304
+ * <p>Specifies the journald logging driver. For more information including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/journald/">Journald logging driver</a> in the
1305
+ * <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1244
1306
  * </dd>
1245
1307
  * <dt>json-file</dt>
1246
1308
  * <dd>
1247
- * <p>Specifies the JSON file logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/json-file/">JSON File logging driver</a> in the Docker
1248
- * documentation.</p>
1309
+ * <p>Specifies the JSON file logging driver. For more information including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/json-file/">JSON File logging driver</a> in the
1310
+ * <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1249
1311
  * </dd>
1250
1312
  * <dt>splunk</dt>
1251
1313
  * <dd>
1252
- * <p>Specifies the Splunk logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/splunk/">Splunk logging driver</a> in the Docker
1253
- * documentation.</p>
1314
+ * <p>Specifies the Splunk logging driver. For more information including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/splunk/">Splunk logging driver</a> in the
1315
+ * <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1254
1316
  * </dd>
1255
1317
  * <dt>syslog</dt>
1256
1318
  * <dd>
1257
- * <p>Specifies the syslog logging driver. For more information, including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/syslog/">Syslog logging driver</a> in the Docker
1258
- * documentation.</p>
1319
+ * <p>Specifies the syslog logging driver. For more information including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/syslog/">Syslog logging driver</a> in the
1320
+ * <i>Docker documentation</i>.</p>
1259
1321
  * </dd>
1260
1322
  * </dl>
1261
1323
  * <note>
1262
1324
  * <p>If you have a custom driver that's not listed earlier that you want to work with the Amazon ECS container agent, you
1263
1325
  * can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that's <a href="https://github.com/aws/amazon-ecs-agent">available on
1264
- * GitHub</a> and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that
1326
+ * GitHub</a> and customize it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes that
1265
1327
  * you want to have included. However, Amazon Web Services doesn't currently support running modified copies of this
1266
1328
  * software.</p>
1267
1329
  * </note>
1268
1330
  * <p>This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your
1269
- * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your
1331
+ * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your
1270
1332
  * container instance and run the following command: <code>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</code>
1271
1333
  * </p>
1272
1334
  */
1273
1335
  logDriver: LogDriver | string | undefined;
1274
1336
  /**
1275
1337
  * <p>The configuration options to send to the log driver. This parameter requires version 1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your
1276
- * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your
1338
+ * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your
1277
1339
  * container instance and run the following command: <code>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</code>
1278
1340
  * </p>
1279
1341
  */
1280
1342
  options?: Record<string, string>;
1281
1343
  /**
1282
1344
  * <p>The secrets to pass to the log configuration. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying sensitive data</a> in the
1283
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1345
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1284
1346
  */
1285
1347
  secretOptions?: Secret[];
1286
1348
  }
1287
1349
  /**
1288
- * <p>Details on a Docker volume mount point that's used in a job's container properties. This parameter maps to
1289
- * <code>Volumes</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/api/docker_remote_api_v1.19/#create-a-container">Create a
1290
- * container</a> section of the Docker Remote API and the <code>--volume</code> option to docker run.</p>
1350
+ * <p>Details for a Docker volume mount point that's used in a job's container properties. This parameter maps to
1351
+ * <code>Volumes</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/api/docker_remote_api_v1.19/#create-a-container">Create a
1352
+ * container</a> section of the <i>Docker Remote API</i> and the <code>--volume</code> option to
1353
+ * docker run.</p>
1291
1354
  */
1292
1355
  export interface MountPoint {
1293
1356
  /**
@@ -1310,10 +1373,10 @@ export interface MountPoint {
1310
1373
  */
1311
1374
  export interface NetworkConfiguration {
1312
1375
  /**
1313
- * <p>Indicates whether the job should have a public IP address. For a job that is running on Fargate resources in a
1314
- * private subnet to send outbound traffic to the internet (for example, to pull container images), the private subnet
1315
- * requires a NAT gateway be attached to route requests to the internet. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html">Amazon ECS task networking</a>. The
1316
- * default value is "DISABLED".</p>
1376
+ * <p>Indicates whether the job has a public IP address. For a job that's running on Fargate resources in a private
1377
+ * subnet to send outbound traffic to the internet (for example, to pull container images), the private subnet requires
1378
+ * a NAT gateway be attached to route requests to the internet. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html">Amazon ECS task networking</a> in the
1379
+ * <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>. The default value is "<code>DISABLED</code>".</p>
1317
1380
  */
1318
1381
  assignPublicIp?: AssignPublicIp | string;
1319
1382
  }
@@ -1324,19 +1387,20 @@ export declare enum ResourceType {
1324
1387
  }
1325
1388
  /**
1326
1389
  * <p>The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>GPU</code>,
1327
- * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1390
+ * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1328
1391
  */
1329
1392
  export interface ResourceRequirement {
1330
1393
  /**
1331
1394
  * <p>The quantity of the specified resource to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the
1332
- * <code>type</code> specified.</p>
1395
+ * <code>type</code> specified.</p>
1333
1396
  * <dl>
1334
1397
  * <dt>type="GPU"</dt>
1335
1398
  * <dd>
1336
- * <p>The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. The number of GPUs reserved for all containers in a
1337
- * job shouldn't exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched on.</p>
1399
+ * <p>The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. Make sure that the number of GPUs reserved for all
1400
+ * containers in a job doesn't exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched
1401
+ * on.</p>
1338
1402
  * <note>
1339
- * <p>GPUs are not available for jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
1403
+ * <p>GPUs aren't available for jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
1340
1404
  * </note>
1341
1405
  * </dd>
1342
1406
  * <dt>type="MEMORY"</dt>
@@ -1347,12 +1411,12 @@ export interface ResourceRequirement {
1347
1411
  * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--memory</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.
1348
1412
  * You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places for
1349
1413
  * multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. It must be specified for each node at least once. This parameter maps to
1350
- * <code>Memory</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the
1351
- * <code>--memory</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1414
+ * <code>Memory</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the
1415
+ * <code>--memory</code> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>.</p>
1352
1416
  * <note>
1353
1417
  * <p>If you're trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for
1354
1418
  * a particular instance type, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/memory-management.html">Memory
1355
- * management</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1419
+ * management</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1356
1420
  * </note>
1357
1421
  * <p>For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then <code>value</code> is the hard limit (in MiB), and
1358
1422
  * must match one of the supported values and the <code>VCPU</code> values must be one of the values supported for
@@ -1409,7 +1473,7 @@ export interface ResourceRequirement {
1409
1473
  * <dd>
1410
1474
  * <p>The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. This parameter maps to <code>CpuShares</code> in the
1411
1475
  * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--cpu-shares</code> option to
1412
- * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2
1476
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2
1413
1477
  * resources, you must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be
1414
1478
  * specified for each node at least once.</p>
1415
1479
  * <p>For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then <code>value</code> must match one of the supported
@@ -1449,7 +1513,7 @@ export interface ResourceRequirement {
1449
1513
  value: string | undefined;
1450
1514
  /**
1451
1515
  * <p>The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>GPU</code>,
1452
- * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1516
+ * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1453
1517
  */
1454
1518
  type: ResourceType | string | undefined;
1455
1519
  }
@@ -1483,18 +1547,18 @@ export declare enum EFSAuthorizationConfigIAM {
1483
1547
  export interface EFSAuthorizationConfig {
1484
1548
  /**
1485
1549
  * <p>The Amazon EFS access point ID to use. If an access point is specified, the root directory value specified in the
1486
- * <code>EFSVolumeConfiguration</code> must either be omitted or set to <code>/</code> which will enforce the path set
1487
- * on the EFS access point. If an access point is used, transit encryption must be enabled in the
1488
- * <code>EFSVolumeConfiguration</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/efs/latest/ug/efs-access-points.html">Working with Amazon EFS access points</a> in the
1489
- * <i>Amazon Elastic File System User Guide</i>.</p>
1550
+ * <code>EFSVolumeConfiguration</code> must either be omitted or set to <code>/</code> which enforces the path set on
1551
+ * the EFS access point. If an access point is used, transit encryption must be enabled in the
1552
+ * <code>EFSVolumeConfiguration</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/efs/latest/ug/efs-access-points.html">Working with Amazon EFS access points</a> in the
1553
+ * <i>Amazon Elastic File System User Guide</i>.</p>
1490
1554
  */
1491
1555
  accessPointId?: string;
1492
1556
  /**
1493
1557
  * <p>Whether or not to use the Batch job IAM role defined in a job definition when mounting the Amazon EFS file system.
1494
1558
  * If enabled, transit encryption must be enabled in the <code>EFSVolumeConfiguration</code>. If this parameter is
1495
1559
  * omitted, the default value of <code>DISABLED</code> is used. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/efs-volumes.html#efs-volume-accesspoints">Using Amazon EFS access points</a> in the
1496
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. EFS IAM authorization requires that <code>TransitEncryption</code> be
1497
- * <code>ENABLED</code> and that a <code>JobRoleArn</code> is specified.</p>
1560
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. EFS IAM authorization requires that <code>TransitEncryption</code> be
1561
+ * <code>ENABLED</code> and that a <code>JobRoleArn</code> is specified.</p>
1498
1562
  */
1499
1563
  iam?: EFSAuthorizationConfigIAM | string;
1500
1564
  }
@@ -1504,7 +1568,7 @@ export declare enum EFSTransitEncryption {
1504
1568
  }
1505
1569
  /**
1506
1570
  * <p>This is used when you're using an Amazon Elastic File System file system for job storage. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/efs-volumes.html">Amazon EFS Volumes</a> in the
1507
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1571
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1508
1572
  */
1509
1573
  export interface EFSVolumeConfiguration {
1510
1574
  /**
@@ -1525,7 +1589,7 @@ export interface EFSVolumeConfiguration {
1525
1589
  * <p>Determines whether to enable encryption for Amazon EFS data in transit between the Amazon ECS host and the Amazon EFS server.
1526
1590
  * Transit encryption must be enabled if Amazon EFS IAM authorization is used. If this parameter is omitted, the default
1527
1591
  * value of <code>DISABLED</code> is used. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/efs/latest/ug/encryption-in-transit.html">Encrypting data in transit</a> in the
1528
- * <i>Amazon Elastic File System User Guide</i>.</p>
1592
+ * <i>Amazon Elastic File System User Guide</i>.</p>
1529
1593
  */
1530
1594
  transitEncryption?: EFSTransitEncryption | string;
1531
1595
  /**
@@ -1540,9 +1604,9 @@ export interface EFSVolumeConfiguration {
1540
1604
  authorizationConfig?: EFSAuthorizationConfig;
1541
1605
  }
1542
1606
  /**
1543
- * <p>Determine whether your data volume persists on the host container instance and where it is stored. If this
1544
- * parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume, but the data isn't guaranteed to
1545
- * persist after the containers associated with it stop running.</p>
1607
+ * <p>Determine whether your data volume persists on the host container instance and where it's stored. If this
1608
+ * parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path for your data volume. However, the data isn't
1609
+ * guaranteed to persist after the containers that are associated with it stop running.</p>
1546
1610
  */
1547
1611
  export interface Host {
1548
1612
  /**
@@ -1552,20 +1616,21 @@ export interface Host {
1552
1616
  * location doesn't exist on the host container instance, the Docker daemon creates it. If the location does exist, the
1553
1617
  * contents of the source path folder are exported.</p>
1554
1618
  * <note>
1555
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that run on Fargate resources and shouldn't be provided.</p>
1619
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that run on Fargate resources. Don't provide this for these
1620
+ * jobs.</p>
1556
1621
  * </note>
1557
1622
  */
1558
1623
  sourcePath?: string;
1559
1624
  }
1560
1625
  /**
1561
- * <p>A data volume used in a job's container properties.</p>
1626
+ * <p>A data volume that's used in a job's container properties.</p>
1562
1627
  */
1563
1628
  export interface Volume {
1564
1629
  /**
1565
1630
  * <p>The contents of the <code>host</code> parameter determine whether your data volume persists on the host
1566
- * container instance and where it is stored. If the host parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path
1567
- * for your data volume. However, the data isn't guaranteed to persist after the containers associated with it stop
1568
- * running.</p>
1631
+ * container instance and where it's stored. If the host parameter is empty, then the Docker daemon assigns a host path
1632
+ * for your data volume. However, the data isn't guaranteed to persist after the containers that are associated with it
1633
+ * stop running.</p>
1569
1634
  * <note>
1570
1635
  * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be
1571
1636
  * provided.</p>
@@ -1573,30 +1638,32 @@ export interface Volume {
1573
1638
  */
1574
1639
  host?: Host;
1575
1640
  /**
1576
- * <p>The name of the volume. It can be up to 255 letters long. It can contain uppercase and lowercase letters,
1641
+ * <p>The name of the volume. It can be up to 255 characters long. It can contain uppercase and lowercase letters,
1577
1642
  * numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_). This name is referenced in the <code>sourceVolume</code>
1578
1643
  * parameter of container definition <code>mountPoints</code>.</p>
1579
1644
  */
1580
1645
  name?: string;
1581
1646
  /**
1582
- * <p>This parameter is specified when you are using an Amazon Elastic File System file system for job storage. Jobs that are running
1583
- * on Fargate resources must specify a <code>platformVersion</code> of at least <code>1.4.0</code>.</p>
1647
+ * <p>This parameter is specified when you're using an Amazon Elastic File System file system for job storage. Jobs that are running on
1648
+ * Fargate resources must specify a <code>platformVersion</code> of at least <code>1.4.0</code>.</p>
1584
1649
  */
1585
1650
  efsVolumeConfiguration?: EFSVolumeConfiguration;
1586
1651
  }
1587
1652
  /**
1588
- * <p>Container properties are used in job definitions to describe the container that's launched as part of a
1589
- * job.</p>
1653
+ * <p>Container properties are used
1654
+ * for
1655
+ * Amazon ECS based job definitions. These properties to describe the container that's launched as part of
1656
+ * a job.</p>
1590
1657
  */
1591
1658
  export interface ContainerProperties {
1592
1659
  /**
1593
1660
  * <p>The image used to start a container. This string is passed directly to the Docker daemon. Images in the Docker
1594
1661
  * Hub registry are available by default. Other repositories are specified with
1595
- * <code>
1662
+ * <code>
1596
1663
  * <i>repository-url</i>/<i>image</i>:<i>tag</i>
1597
1664
  * </code>.
1598
- * Up to 255 letters (uppercase and lowercase), numbers, hyphens, underscores, colons,
1599
- * periods, forward slashes, and number signs are allowed. This parameter maps to <code>Image</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of
1665
+ * It can be 255 characters long. It can contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers,
1666
+ * hyphens (-), underscores (_), colons (:), periods (.), forward slashes (/), and number signs (#). This parameter maps to <code>Image</code> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of
1600
1667
  * the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>IMAGE</code> parameter of <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
1601
1668
  * run</a>.</p>
1602
1669
  * <note>
@@ -1606,25 +1673,25 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1606
1673
  * <ul>
1607
1674
  * <li>
1608
1675
  * <p>Images in Amazon ECR Public repositories use the full <code>registry/repository[:tag]</code> or
1609
- * <code>registry/repository[@digest]</code> naming conventions. For example,
1610
- * <code>public.ecr.aws/<i>registry_alias</i>/<i>my-web-app</i>:<i>latest</i>
1676
+ * <code>registry/repository[@digest]</code> naming conventions. For example,
1677
+ * <code>public.ecr.aws/<i>registry_alias</i>/<i>my-web-app</i>:<i>latest</i>
1611
1678
  * </code>.</p>
1612
1679
  * </li>
1613
1680
  * <li>
1614
1681
  * <p>Images in Amazon ECR repositories use the full registry and repository URI (for example,
1615
- * <code>012345678910.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name></code>).</p>
1682
+ * <code>123456789012.dkr.ecr.<region-name>.amazonaws.com/<repository-name></code>).</p>
1616
1683
  * </li>
1617
1684
  * <li>
1618
1685
  * <p>Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example, <code>ubuntu</code> or
1619
- * <code>mongo</code>).</p>
1686
+ * <code>mongo</code>).</p>
1620
1687
  * </li>
1621
1688
  * <li>
1622
1689
  * <p>Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name (for example,
1623
- * <code>amazon/amazon-ecs-agent</code>).</p>
1690
+ * <code>amazon/amazon-ecs-agent</code>).</p>
1624
1691
  * </li>
1625
1692
  * <li>
1626
1693
  * <p>Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example,
1627
- * <code>quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu</code>).</p>
1694
+ * <code>quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu</code>).</p>
1628
1695
  * </li>
1629
1696
  * </ul>
1630
1697
  */
@@ -1637,15 +1704,15 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1637
1704
  * the number of vCPUs reserved for the job.</p>
1638
1705
  * <p>Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. This parameter maps to <code>CpuShares</code> in the
1639
1706
  * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--cpu-shares</code> option to
1640
- * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. The number of vCPUs must be specified but can be specified
1641
- * in several places. You must specify it at least once for each node.</p>
1707
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. The number of vCPUs must be specified but can be specified in
1708
+ * several places. You must specify it at least once for each node.</p>
1642
1709
  */
1643
1710
  vcpus?: number;
1644
1711
  /**
1645
1712
  * @deprecated
1646
1713
  *
1647
1714
  * <p>This parameter is deprecated, use <code>resourceRequirements</code> to specify the memory requirements for the
1648
- * job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs running on EC2 resources, it
1715
+ * job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2 resources, it
1649
1716
  * specifies the memory hard limit (in MiB) for a container. If your container attempts to exceed the specified number,
1650
1717
  * it's terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job using this parameter. The memory hard limit can
1651
1718
  * be specified in several places. It must be specified for each node at least once.</p>
@@ -1658,14 +1725,14 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1658
1725
  command?: string[];
1659
1726
  /**
1660
1727
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that the container can assume for Amazon Web Services permissions. For more information, see
1661
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-iam-roles.html">IAM roles for tasks</a>
1728
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-iam-roles.html">IAM roles for tasks</a>
1662
1729
  * in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</p>
1663
1730
  */
1664
1731
  jobRoleArn?: string;
1665
1732
  /**
1666
1733
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the execution role that Batch can assume. For jobs that run on Fargate resources, you must
1667
1734
  * provide an execution role. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/execution-IAM-role.html">Batch execution IAM role</a> in the
1668
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1735
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1669
1736
  */
1670
1737
  executionRoleArn?: string;
1671
1738
  /**
@@ -1680,8 +1747,8 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1680
1747
  * data.</p>
1681
1748
  * </important>
1682
1749
  * <note>
1683
- * <p>Environment variables must not start with <code>AWS_BATCH</code>; this naming
1684
- * convention is reserved for variables that are set by the Batch service.</p>
1750
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
1751
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
1685
1752
  * </note>
1686
1753
  */
1687
1754
  environment?: KeyValuePair[];
@@ -1700,7 +1767,7 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1700
1767
  * <p>When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated permissions on the host container instance (similar
1701
1768
  * to the <code>root</code> user). This parameter maps to <code>Privileged</code> in the
1702
1769
  * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--privileged</code> option to
1703
- * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. The default value is false.</p>
1770
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. The default value is false.</p>
1704
1771
  * <note>
1705
1772
  * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be provided, or
1706
1773
  * specified as false.</p>
@@ -1732,7 +1799,7 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1732
1799
  instanceType?: string;
1733
1800
  /**
1734
1801
  * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>GPU</code>,
1735
- * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1802
+ * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
1736
1803
  */
1737
1804
  resourceRequirements?: ResourceRequirement[];
1738
1805
  /**
@@ -1748,25 +1815,25 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1748
1815
  * definition. To use a different logging driver for a container, the log system must be configured properly on the
1749
1816
  * container instance (or on a different log server for remote logging options). For more information on the options for
1750
1817
  * different supported log drivers, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/admin/logging/overview/">Configure
1751
- * logging drivers</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1818
+ * logging drivers</a> in the Docker documentation.</p>
1752
1819
  * <note>
1753
1820
  * <p>Batch currently supports a subset of the logging drivers available to the Docker daemon (shown in the <a>LogConfiguration</a> data type).</p>
1754
1821
  * </note>
1755
1822
  * <p>This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your
1756
- * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your
1823
+ * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your
1757
1824
  * container instance and run the following command: <code>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</code>
1758
1825
  * </p>
1759
1826
  * <note>
1760
1827
  * <p>The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that
1761
1828
  * instance with the <code>ECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS</code> environment variable before containers placed on that
1762
1829
  * instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-config.html">Amazon ECS container agent configuration</a> in the
1763
- * <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</p>
1830
+ * <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</p>
1764
1831
  * </note>
1765
1832
  */
1766
1833
  logConfiguration?: LogConfiguration;
1767
1834
  /**
1768
1835
  * <p>The secrets for the container. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying sensitive data</a> in the
1769
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1836
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1770
1837
  */
1771
1838
  secrets?: Secret[];
1772
1839
  /**
@@ -1781,15 +1848,370 @@ export interface ContainerProperties {
1781
1848
  fargatePlatformConfiguration?: FargatePlatformConfiguration;
1782
1849
  }
1783
1850
  /**
1784
- * <p>An object representing the properties of the node range for a multi-node parallel job.</p>
1851
+ * <p>An environment variable.</p>
1852
+ */
1853
+ export interface EksContainerEnvironmentVariable {
1854
+ /**
1855
+ * <p>The name of the environment variable.</p>
1856
+ */
1857
+ name: string | undefined;
1858
+ /**
1859
+ * <p>The value of the environment variable.</p>
1860
+ */
1861
+ value?: string;
1862
+ }
1863
+ /**
1864
+ * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>memory</code>,
1865
+ * <code>cpu</code>, and <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/">Resource management for pods
1866
+ * and containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1867
+ */
1868
+ export interface EksContainerResourceRequirements {
1869
+ /**
1870
+ * <p>The type and quantity of the resources to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the
1871
+ * <code>name</code> that's specified. Resources can be requested using either the <code>limits</code> or the
1872
+ * <code>requests</code> objects.</p>
1873
+ * <dl>
1874
+ * <dt>memory</dt>
1875
+ * <dd>
1876
+ * <p>The memory hard limit (in MiB) for the container, using whole integers, with a "Mi" suffix. If your container
1877
+ * attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory
1878
+ * for a job. <code>memory</code> can be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If
1879
+ * <code>memory</code> is specified in both places, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be
1880
+ * equal to the value that's specified in <code>requests</code>.</p>
1881
+ * <note>
1882
+ * <p>To maximize your resource utilization, provide your jobs with as much memory as possible for the specific
1883
+ * instance type that you are using. To learn how, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/memory-management.html">Memory management</a> in the
1884
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1885
+ * </note>
1886
+ * </dd>
1887
+ * <dt>cpu</dt>
1888
+ * <dd>
1889
+ * <p>The number of CPUs that's reserved for the container. Values must be an even multiple of <code>0.25</code>.
1890
+ * <code>cpu</code> can be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If <code>cpu</code> is
1891
+ * specified in both places, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be at least as large as the
1892
+ * value that's specified in <code>requests</code>.</p>
1893
+ * </dd>
1894
+ * <dt>nvidia.com/gpu</dt>
1895
+ * <dd>
1896
+ * <p>The number of GPUs that's reserved for the container. Values must be a whole integer. <code>memory</code> can
1897
+ * be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If <code>memory</code> is specified in both
1898
+ * places, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be equal to the value that's specified in
1899
+ * <code>requests</code>.</p>
1900
+ * </dd>
1901
+ * </dl>
1902
+ */
1903
+ limits?: Record<string, string>;
1904
+ /**
1905
+ * <p>The type and quantity of the resources to request for the container. The values vary based on the
1906
+ * <code>name</code> that's specified. Resources can be requested by using either the <code>limits</code> or the
1907
+ * <code>requests</code> objects.</p>
1908
+ * <dl>
1909
+ * <dt>memory</dt>
1910
+ * <dd>
1911
+ * <p>The memory hard limit (in MiB) for the container, using whole integers, with a "Mi" suffix. If your container
1912
+ * attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory
1913
+ * for a job. <code>memory</code> can be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If
1914
+ * <code>memory</code> is specified in both, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be equal to
1915
+ * the value that's specified in <code>requests</code>.</p>
1916
+ * <note>
1917
+ * <p>If you're trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for
1918
+ * a particular instance type, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/memory-management.html">Memory
1919
+ * management</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1920
+ * </note>
1921
+ * </dd>
1922
+ * <dt>cpu</dt>
1923
+ * <dd>
1924
+ * <p>The number of CPUs that are reserved for the container. Values must be an even multiple of <code>0.25</code>.
1925
+ * <code>cpu</code> can be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If <code>cpu</code> is
1926
+ * specified in both, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be at least as large as the value
1927
+ * that's specified in <code>requests</code>.</p>
1928
+ * </dd>
1929
+ * <dt>nvidia.com/gpu</dt>
1930
+ * <dd>
1931
+ * <p>The number of GPUs that are reserved for the container. Values must be a whole integer.
1932
+ * <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code> can be specified in <code>limits</code>, <code>requests</code>, or both. If
1933
+ * <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code> is specified in both, then the value that's specified in <code>limits</code> must be
1934
+ * equal to the value that's specified in <code>requests</code>.</p>
1935
+ * </dd>
1936
+ * </dl>
1937
+ */
1938
+ requests?: Record<string, string>;
1939
+ }
1940
+ /**
1941
+ * <p>The security context for a job. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/">Configure a security context for a
1942
+ * pod or container</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1943
+ */
1944
+ export interface EksContainerSecurityContext {
1945
+ /**
1946
+ * <p>When this parameter is specified, the container is run as the specified user ID (<code>uid</code>). If this
1947
+ * parameter isn't specified, the default is the user that's specified in the image metadata. This parameter maps to
1948
+ * <code>RunAsUser</code> and <code>MustRanAs</code> policy in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#users-and-groups">Users and groups pod
1949
+ * security policies</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1950
+ */
1951
+ runAsUser?: number;
1952
+ /**
1953
+ * <p>When this parameter is specified, the container is run as the specified group ID (<code>gid</code>). If this
1954
+ * parameter isn't specified, the default is the group that's specified in the image metadata. This parameter maps to
1955
+ * <code>RunAsGroup</code> and <code>MustRunAs</code> policy in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#users-and-groups">Users and groups pod
1956
+ * security policies</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1957
+ */
1958
+ runAsGroup?: number;
1959
+ /**
1960
+ * <p>When this parameter is <code>true</code>, the container is given elevated permissions on the host container
1961
+ * instance. The level of permissions are similar to the <code>root</code> user permissions. The default value is
1962
+ * <code>false</code>. This parameter maps to <code>privileged</code> policy in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#privileged">Privileged pod security
1963
+ * policies</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1964
+ */
1965
+ privileged?: boolean;
1966
+ /**
1967
+ * <p>When this parameter is <code>true</code>, the container is given read-only access to its root file system. The
1968
+ * default value is <code>false</code>. This parameter maps to <code>ReadOnlyRootFilesystem</code> policy in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#volumes-and-file-systems">Volumes and file
1969
+ * systems pod security policies</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1970
+ */
1971
+ readOnlyRootFilesystem?: boolean;
1972
+ /**
1973
+ * <p>When this parameter is specified, the container is run as a user with a <code>uid</code> other than 0. If this
1974
+ * parameter isn't specified, so such rule is enforced. This parameter maps to <code>RunAsUser</code> and
1975
+ * <code>MustRunAsNonRoot</code> policy in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#users-and-groups">Users and groups pod
1976
+ * security policies</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
1977
+ */
1978
+ runAsNonRoot?: boolean;
1979
+ }
1980
+ /**
1981
+ * <p>The volume mounts for a container for an Amazon EKS job. For more information about volumes and volume mounts in
1982
+ * Kubernetes, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/">Volumes</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
1983
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
1984
+ */
1985
+ export interface EksContainerVolumeMount {
1986
+ /**
1987
+ * <p>The name the volume mount. This must match the name of one of the volumes in the pod.</p>
1988
+ */
1989
+ name?: string;
1990
+ /**
1991
+ * <p>The path on the container where the volume is mounted.</p>
1992
+ */
1993
+ mountPath?: string;
1994
+ /**
1995
+ * <p>If this value is <code>true</code>, the container has read-only access to the volume. Otherwise, the container
1996
+ * can write to the volume. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p>
1997
+ */
1998
+ readOnly?: boolean;
1999
+ }
2000
+ /**
2001
+ * <p>EKS container properties are used in job definitions for Amazon EKS based job definitions to describe the properties
2002
+ * for a container node in the pod that's launched as part of a job. This can't be specified for Amazon ECS based job
2003
+ * definitions.</p>
2004
+ */
2005
+ export interface EksContainer {
2006
+ /**
2007
+ * <p>The name of the container. If the name isn't specified, the default name "<code>Default</code>" is used. Each
2008
+ * container in a pod must have a unique name.</p>
2009
+ */
2010
+ name?: string;
2011
+ /**
2012
+ * <p>The Docker image used to start the container.</p>
2013
+ */
2014
+ image: string | undefined;
2015
+ /**
2016
+ * <p>The image pull policy for the container. Supported values are <code>Always</code>, <code>IfNotPresent</code>,
2017
+ * and <code>Never</code>. This parameter defaults to <code>IfNotPresent</code>. However, if the <code>:latest</code>
2018
+ * tag is specified, it defaults to <code>Always</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/containers/images/#updating-images">Updating images</a> in the
2019
+ * <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2020
+ */
2021
+ imagePullPolicy?: string;
2022
+ /**
2023
+ * <p>The entrypoint for the container. This isn't run within a shell. If this isn't specified, the
2024
+ * <code>ENTRYPOINT</code> of the container image is used. Environment variable references are expanded using the
2025
+ * container's environment.</p>
2026
+ * <p>If the referenced environment variable doesn't exist, the reference in the command isn't changed. For example,
2027
+ * if the reference is to "<code>$(NAME1)</code>" and the <code>NAME1</code> environment variable doesn't exist, the
2028
+ * command string will remain "<code>$(NAME1)</code>." <code>$$</code> is replaced with <code>$</code> and the resulting
2029
+ * string isn't expanded. For example, <code>$$(VAR_NAME)</code> will be passed as <code>$(VAR_NAME)</code> whether or
2030
+ * not the <code>VAR_NAME</code> environment variable exists. The entrypoint can't be updated. For more information, see
2031
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#entrypoint">ENTRYPOINT</a> in the
2032
+ * <i>Dockerfile reference</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/define-command-argument-container/">Define a command
2033
+ * and arguments for a container</a> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/#entrypoint">Entrypoint</a> in
2034
+ * the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2035
+ */
2036
+ command?: string[];
2037
+ /**
2038
+ * <p>An array of arguments to the entrypoint. If this isn't specified, the <code>CMD</code> of the container image is
2039
+ * used. This corresponds to the <code>args</code> member in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/#entrypoint">Entrypoint</a>
2040
+ * portion of the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/">Pod</a> in Kubernetes. Environment variable references are expanded using the container's environment.</p>
2041
+ * <p>If the referenced environment variable doesn't exist, the reference in the command isn't changed. For example,
2042
+ * if the reference is to "<code>$(NAME1)</code>" and the <code>NAME1</code> environment variable doesn't exist, the
2043
+ * command string will remain "<code>$(NAME1)</code>." <code>$$</code> is replaced with <code>$</code>, and the
2044
+ * resulting string isn't expanded. For example, <code>$$(VAR_NAME)</code> is passed as <code>$(VAR_NAME)</code> whether
2045
+ * or not the <code>VAR_NAME</code> environment variable exists. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd">CMD</a> in the <i>Dockerfile
2046
+ * reference</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/define-command-argument-container/">Define a command
2047
+ * and arguments for a pod</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2048
+ */
2049
+ args?: string[];
2050
+ /**
2051
+ * <p>The environment variables to pass to a container.</p>
2052
+ * <note>
2053
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
2054
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
2055
+ * </note>
2056
+ */
2057
+ env?: EksContainerEnvironmentVariable[];
2058
+ /**
2059
+ * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>memory</code>,
2060
+ * <code>cpu</code>, and <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/">Resource management for pods
2061
+ * and containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2062
+ */
2063
+ resources?: EksContainerResourceRequirements;
2064
+ /**
2065
+ * <p>The volume mounts for the container. Batch supports <code>emptyDir</code>, <code>hostPath</code>, and
2066
+ * <code>secret</code> volume types. For more information about volumes and volume mounts in Kubernetes, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/">Volumes</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2067
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2068
+ */
2069
+ volumeMounts?: EksContainerVolumeMount[];
2070
+ /**
2071
+ * <p>The security context for a job. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/">Configure a security context for a
2072
+ * pod or container</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2073
+ */
2074
+ securityContext?: EksContainerSecurityContext;
2075
+ }
2076
+ /**
2077
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>emptyDir</code> volume. An <code>emptyDir</code> volume is first
2078
+ * created when a pod is assigned to a node. It exists as long as that pod is running on that node. The
2079
+ * <code>emptyDir</code> volume is initially empty. All containers in the pod can read and write the files in the
2080
+ * <code>emptyDir</code> volume. However, the <code>emptyDir</code> volume can be mounted at the same or different paths
2081
+ * in each container. When a pod is removed from a node for any reason, the data in the <code>emptyDir</code> is
2082
+ * deleted permanently. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#emptydir">emptyDir</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2083
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2084
+ */
2085
+ export interface EksEmptyDir {
2086
+ /**
2087
+ * <p>The medium to store the volume. The default value is an empty string, which uses the storage of the node.</p>
2088
+ * <dl>
2089
+ * <dt>""</dt>
2090
+ * <dd>
2091
+ * <p>
2092
+ * <b>(Default)</b> Use the disk storage of the node.</p>
2093
+ * </dd>
2094
+ * <dt>"Memory"</dt>
2095
+ * <dd>
2096
+ * <p>Use the <code>tmpfs</code> volume that's backed by the RAM of the node. Contents of the volume are lost when
2097
+ * the node reboots, and any storage on the volume counts against the container's memory limit.</p>
2098
+ * </dd>
2099
+ * </dl>
2100
+ */
2101
+ medium?: string;
2102
+ /**
2103
+ * <p>The maximum size of the volume. By default, there's no maximum size defined.</p>
2104
+ */
2105
+ sizeLimit?: string;
2106
+ }
2107
+ /**
2108
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>hostPath</code> volume. A <code>hostPath</code> volume mounts an
2109
+ * existing file or directory from the host node's filesystem into your pod. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#hostpath">hostPath</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2110
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2111
+ */
2112
+ export interface EksHostPath {
2113
+ /**
2114
+ * <p>The path of the file or directory on the host to mount into containers on the pod.</p>
2115
+ */
2116
+ path?: string;
2117
+ }
2118
+ /**
2119
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>secret</code> volume. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#secret">secret</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2120
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2121
+ */
2122
+ export interface EksSecret {
2123
+ /**
2124
+ * <p>The name of the secret. The name must be allowed as a DNS subdomain name. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/names/#dns-subdomain-names">DNS subdomain
2125
+ * names</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2126
+ */
2127
+ secretName: string | undefined;
2128
+ /**
2129
+ * <p>Specifies whether the secret or the secret's keys must be defined.</p>
2130
+ */
2131
+ optional?: boolean;
2132
+ }
2133
+ /**
2134
+ * <p>Specifies an Amazon EKS volume for a job definition.</p>
2135
+ */
2136
+ export interface EksVolume {
2137
+ /**
2138
+ * <p>The name of the volume. The name must be allowed as a DNS subdomain name. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/names/#dns-subdomain-names">DNS subdomain
2139
+ * names</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2140
+ */
2141
+ name: string | undefined;
2142
+ /**
2143
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>hostPath</code> volume. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#hostpath">hostPath</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2144
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2145
+ */
2146
+ hostPath?: EksHostPath;
2147
+ /**
2148
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>emptyDir</code> volume. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#emptydir">emptyDir</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2149
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2150
+ */
2151
+ emptyDir?: EksEmptyDir;
2152
+ /**
2153
+ * <p>Specifies the configuration of a Kubernetes <code>secret</code> volume. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#secret">secret</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2154
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2155
+ */
2156
+ secret?: EksSecret;
2157
+ }
2158
+ /**
2159
+ * <p>The properties for the pod.</p>
2160
+ */
2161
+ export interface EksPodProperties {
2162
+ /**
2163
+ * <p>The name of the service account that's used to run the pod. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/service-accounts.html">Kubernetes service accounts</a> and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/associate-service-account-role.html">Configure a Kubernetes service account
2164
+ * to assume an IAM role</a> in the <i>Amazon EKS User Guide</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-service-account/">Configure service accounts
2165
+ * for pods</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2166
+ */
2167
+ serviceAccountName?: string;
2168
+ /**
2169
+ * <p>Indicates if the pod uses the hosts' network IP address. The default value is <code>true</code>. Setting this
2170
+ * to <code>false</code> enables the Kubernetes pod networking model. Most Batch workloads are egress-only and don't
2171
+ * require the overhead of IP allocation for each pod for incoming connections. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#host-namespaces">Host namespaces</a> and
2172
+ * <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/#pod-networking">Pod networking</a> in the
2173
+ * <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2174
+ */
2175
+ hostNetwork?: boolean;
2176
+ /**
2177
+ * <p>The DNS policy for the pod. The default value is <code>ClusterFirst</code>. If the <code>hostNetwork</code>
2178
+ * parameter is not specified, the default is <code>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</code>. <code>ClusterFirst</code> indicates
2179
+ * that any DNS query that does not match the configured cluster domain suffix is forwarded to the upstream nameserver
2180
+ * inherited from the node. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dns-pod-service/#pod-s-dns-policy">Pod's DNS
2181
+ * policy</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2182
+ * <p>Valid values: <code>Default</code> | <code>ClusterFirst</code> | <code>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</code> |
2183
+ * <code>None</code>
2184
+ * </p>
2185
+ */
2186
+ dnsPolicy?: string;
2187
+ /**
2188
+ * <p>The properties of the container that's used on the Amazon EKS pod.</p>
2189
+ */
2190
+ containers?: EksContainer[];
2191
+ /**
2192
+ * <p>Specifies the volumes for a job definition that uses Amazon EKS resources.</p>
2193
+ */
2194
+ volumes?: EksVolume[];
2195
+ }
2196
+ /**
2197
+ * <p>An object that contains the properties for the Kubernetes resources of a job.</p>
2198
+ */
2199
+ export interface EksProperties {
2200
+ /**
2201
+ * <p>The properties for the Kubernetes pod resources of a job.</p>
2202
+ */
2203
+ podProperties?: EksPodProperties;
2204
+ }
2205
+ /**
2206
+ * <p>An object that represents the properties of the node range for a multi-node parallel job.</p>
1785
2207
  */
1786
2208
  export interface NodeRangeProperty {
1787
2209
  /**
1788
2210
  * <p>The range of nodes, using node index values. A range of <code>0:3</code> indicates nodes with index values of
1789
- * <code>0</code> through <code>3</code>. If the starting range value is omitted (<code>:n</code>), then <code>0</code>
2211
+ * <code>0</code> through <code>3</code>. If the starting range value is omitted (<code>:n</code>), then <code>0</code>
1790
2212
  * is used to start the range. If the ending range value is omitted (<code>n:</code>), then the highest possible node
1791
2213
  * index is used to end the range. Your accumulative node ranges must account for all nodes (<code>0:n</code>). You can
1792
- * nest node ranges, for example <code>0:10</code> and <code>4:5</code>, in which case the <code>4:5</code> range
2214
+ * nest node ranges (for example, <code>0:10</code> and <code>4:5</code>). In this case, the <code>4:5</code> range
1793
2215
  * properties override the <code>0:10</code> properties.</p>
1794
2216
  */
1795
2217
  targetNodes: string | undefined;
@@ -1799,11 +2221,14 @@ export interface NodeRangeProperty {
1799
2221
  container?: ContainerProperties;
1800
2222
  }
1801
2223
  /**
1802
- * <p>An object representing the node properties of a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2224
+ * <p>An object that represents the node properties of a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2225
+ * <note>
2226
+ * <p>Node properties can't be specified for Amazon EKS based job definitions.</p>
2227
+ * </note>
1803
2228
  */
1804
2229
  export interface NodeProperties {
1805
2230
  /**
1806
- * <p>The number of nodes associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2231
+ * <p>The number of nodes that are associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
1807
2232
  */
1808
2233
  numNodes: number | undefined;
1809
2234
  /**
@@ -1812,7 +2237,7 @@ export interface NodeProperties {
1812
2237
  */
1813
2238
  mainNode: number | undefined;
1814
2239
  /**
1815
- * <p>A list of node ranges and their properties associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2240
+ * <p>A list of node ranges and their properties that are associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
1816
2241
  */
1817
2242
  nodeRangeProperties: NodeRangeProperty[] | undefined;
1818
2243
  }
@@ -1825,42 +2250,40 @@ export declare enum RetryAction {
1825
2250
  RETRY = "RETRY"
1826
2251
  }
1827
2252
  /**
1828
- * <p>Specifies a set of conditions to be met, and an action to take (<code>RETRY</code> or <code>EXIT</code>) if all
1829
- * conditions are met.</p>
2253
+ * <p>Specifies an array of up to 5 conditions to be met, and an action to take (<code>RETRY</code> or
2254
+ * <code>EXIT</code>) if all conditions are met. If none of the <code>EvaluateOnExit</code> conditions in a
2255
+ * <code>RetryStrategy</code> match, then the job is retried.</p>
1830
2256
  */
1831
2257
  export interface EvaluateOnExit {
1832
2258
  /**
1833
- * <p>Contains a glob pattern to match against the <code>StatusReason</code> returned for a job. The pattern can be up
1834
- * to 512 characters in length. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (including
1835
- * spaces or tabs).
1836
- * It can optionally end with an
1837
- * asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.</p>
1838
- * <p>The string can be between 1 and 512 characters in length.</p>
2259
+ * <p>Contains a glob pattern to match against the <code>StatusReason</code> returned for a job. The pattern can
2260
+ * contain up to 512 characters. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white spaces (including
2261
+ * spaces or tabs). It can optionally end with
2262
+ * an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.</p>
1839
2263
  */
1840
2264
  onStatusReason?: string;
1841
2265
  /**
1842
- * <p>Contains a glob pattern to match against the <code>Reason</code> returned for a job. The pattern can be up to
1843
- * 512 characters in length. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (including spaces
1844
- * and tabs). It can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact
2266
+ * <p>Contains a glob pattern to match against the <code>Reason</code> returned for a job. The pattern can contain up
2267
+ * to 512 characters. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (including spaces and
2268
+ * tabs). It can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact
1845
2269
  * match.</p>
1846
- * <p>The string can be between 1 and 512 characters in length.</p>
1847
2270
  */
1848
2271
  onReason?: string;
1849
2272
  /**
1850
2273
  * <p>Contains a glob pattern to match against the decimal representation of the <code>ExitCode</code> returned for a
1851
- * job. The pattern can be up to 512 characters in length. It can contain only numbers, and can optionally end with an
1852
- * asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.</p>
1853
- * <p>The string can be between 1 and 512 characters in length.</p>
2274
+ * job. The pattern can be up to 512 characters long. It can contain only numbers, and can end with an asterisk (*) so
2275
+ * that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.</p>
2276
+ * <p>The string can contain up to 512 characters.</p>
1854
2277
  */
1855
2278
  onExitCode?: string;
1856
2279
  /**
1857
2280
  * <p>Specifies the action to take if all of the specified conditions (<code>onStatusReason</code>,
1858
- * <code>onReason</code>, and <code>onExitCode</code>) are met. The values aren't case sensitive.</p>
2281
+ * <code>onReason</code>, and <code>onExitCode</code>) are met. The values aren't case sensitive.</p>
1859
2282
  */
1860
2283
  action: RetryAction | string | undefined;
1861
2284
  }
1862
2285
  /**
1863
- * <p>The retry strategy associated with a job. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/job_retries.html">Automated job retries</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2286
+ * <p>The retry strategy that's associated with a job. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/job_retries.html">Automated job retries</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1864
2287
  */
1865
2288
  export interface RetryStrategy {
1866
2289
  /**
@@ -1870,23 +2293,25 @@ export interface RetryStrategy {
1870
2293
  */
1871
2294
  attempts?: number;
1872
2295
  /**
1873
- * <p>Array of up to 5 objects that specify conditions under which the job should be retried or failed. If this
1874
- * parameter is specified, then the <code>attempts</code> parameter must also be specified.</p>
2296
+ * <p>Array of up to 5 objects that specify the conditions where jobs are retried or failed. If this parameter is
2297
+ * specified, then the <code>attempts</code> parameter must also be specified. If none of the listed conditions match,
2298
+ * then the job is retried.</p>
1875
2299
  */
1876
2300
  evaluateOnExit?: EvaluateOnExit[];
1877
2301
  }
1878
2302
  /**
1879
- * <p>An object representing a job timeout configuration.</p>
2303
+ * <p>An object that represents a job timeout configuration.</p>
1880
2304
  */
1881
2305
  export interface JobTimeout {
1882
2306
  /**
1883
- * <p>The time duration in seconds (measured from the job attempt's <code>startedAt</code> timestamp) after which
1884
- * Batch terminates your jobs if they have not finished. The minimum value for the timeout is 60 seconds.</p>
2307
+ * <p>The job timeout time (in seconds) that's measured from the job attempt's <code>startedAt</code> timestamp. After
2308
+ * this time passes, Batch terminates your jobs if they aren't finished. The minimum value for the timeout is 60
2309
+ * seconds.</p>
1885
2310
  */
1886
2311
  attemptDurationSeconds?: number;
1887
2312
  }
1888
2313
  /**
1889
- * <p>An object representing an Batch job definition.</p>
2314
+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch job definition.</p>
1890
2315
  */
1891
2316
  export interface JobDefinition {
1892
2317
  /**
@@ -1906,10 +2331,10 @@ export interface JobDefinition {
1906
2331
  */
1907
2332
  status?: string;
1908
2333
  /**
1909
- * <p>The type of job definition, either <code>container</code> or <code>multinode</code>. If the job is run on
2334
+ * <p>The type of job definition. It's either <code>container</code> or <code>multinode</code>. If the job is run on
1910
2335
  * Fargate resources, then <code>multinode</code> isn't supported. For more information about multi-node parallel
1911
2336
  * jobs, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/multi-node-job-def.html">Creating a multi-node parallel job
1912
- * definition</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2337
+ * definition</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1913
2338
  */
1914
2339
  type: string | undefined;
1915
2340
  /**
@@ -1921,7 +2346,7 @@ export interface JobDefinition {
1921
2346
  * <p>Default parameters or parameter substitution placeholders that are set in the job definition. Parameters are
1922
2347
  * specified as a key-value pair mapping. Parameters in a <code>SubmitJob</code> request override any corresponding
1923
2348
  * parameter defaults from the job definition. For more information about specifying parameters, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/job_definition_parameters.html">Job definition parameters</a> in the
1924
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2349
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
1925
2350
  */
1926
2351
  parameters?: Record<string, string>;
1927
2352
  /**
@@ -1929,38 +2354,53 @@ export interface JobDefinition {
1929
2354
  */
1930
2355
  retryStrategy?: RetryStrategy;
1931
2356
  /**
1932
- * <p>An object with various properties specific to container-based jobs.</p>
2357
+ * <p>An object with various properties specific to Amazon ECS based jobs. Valid values are
2358
+ * <code>containerProperties</code>, <code>eksProperties</code>, and <code>nodeProperties</code>. Only one can be
2359
+ * specified.</p>
1933
2360
  */
1934
2361
  containerProperties?: ContainerProperties;
1935
2362
  /**
1936
- * <p>The timeout configuration for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. You can specify a timeout
1937
- * duration after which Batch terminates your jobs if they haven't finished.</p>
2363
+ * <p>The timeout time for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. After the amount of time you specify
2364
+ * passes, Batch terminates your jobs if they aren't finished.</p>
1938
2365
  */
1939
2366
  timeout?: JobTimeout;
1940
2367
  /**
1941
- * <p>An object with various properties specific to multi-node parallel jobs.</p>
2368
+ * <p>An object with various properties that are specific to multi-node parallel jobs. Valid values are
2369
+ * <code>containerProperties</code>, <code>eksProperties</code>, and <code>nodeProperties</code>. Only one can be
2370
+ * specified.</p>
1942
2371
  * <note>
1943
- * <p>If the job runs on Fargate resources, then you must not specify <code>nodeProperties</code>; use
1944
- * <code>containerProperties</code> instead.</p>
2372
+ * <p>If the job runs on Fargate resources, don't specify <code>nodeProperties</code>. Use
2373
+ * <code>containerProperties</code> instead.</p>
1945
2374
  * </note>
1946
2375
  */
1947
2376
  nodeProperties?: NodeProperties;
1948
2377
  /**
1949
- * <p>The tags applied to the job definition.</p>
2378
+ * <p>The tags that are applied to the job definition.</p>
1950
2379
  */
1951
2380
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
1952
2381
  /**
1953
2382
  * <p>Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding Amazon ECS task. If no
1954
- * value is specified, the tags aren't propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For
1955
- * tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined tags
1956
- * from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <code>FAILED</code> state.</p>
2383
+ * value is specified, the tags aren't propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks when the tasks are created.
2384
+ * For tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined
2385
+ * tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <code>FAILED</code> state.</p>
1957
2386
  */
1958
2387
  propagateTags?: boolean;
1959
2388
  /**
1960
2389
  * <p>The platform capabilities required by the job definition. If no value is specified, it defaults to
1961
- * <code>EC2</code>. Jobs run on Fargate resources specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
2390
+ * <code>EC2</code>. Jobs run on Fargate resources specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
1962
2391
  */
1963
2392
  platformCapabilities?: (PlatformCapability | string)[];
2393
+ /**
2394
+ * <p>An object with various properties that are specific to Amazon EKS based jobs. Valid values are
2395
+ * <code>containerProperties</code>, <code>eksProperties</code>, and <code>nodeProperties</code>. Only one can be
2396
+ * specified.</p>
2397
+ */
2398
+ eksProperties?: EksProperties;
2399
+ /**
2400
+ * <p>The orchestration type of the compute environment. The valid values are <code>ECS</code> (default) or
2401
+ * <code>EKS</code>.</p>
2402
+ */
2403
+ containerOrchestrationType?: OrchestrationType | string;
1964
2404
  }
1965
2405
  export interface DescribeJobDefinitionsResponse {
1966
2406
  /**
@@ -1997,7 +2437,7 @@ export interface DescribeJobQueuesRequest {
1997
2437
  * end of the previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is <code>null</code> when
1998
2438
  * there are no more results to return.</p>
1999
2439
  * <note>
2000
- * <p>This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that's only used to
2440
+ * <p>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to
2001
2441
  * retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</p>
2002
2442
  * </note>
2003
2443
  */
@@ -2012,11 +2452,11 @@ export declare enum JQStatus {
2012
2452
  VALID = "VALID"
2013
2453
  }
2014
2454
  /**
2015
- * <p>An object representing the details of an Batch job queue.</p>
2455
+ * <p>An object that represents the details for an Batch job queue.</p>
2016
2456
  */
2017
2457
  export interface JobQueueDetail {
2018
2458
  /**
2019
- * <p>The name of the job queue.</p>
2459
+ * <p>The job queue name.</p>
2020
2460
  */
2021
2461
  jobQueueName: string | undefined;
2022
2462
  /**
@@ -2024,17 +2464,17 @@ export interface JobQueueDetail {
2024
2464
  */
2025
2465
  jobQueueArn: string | undefined;
2026
2466
  /**
2027
- * <p>Describes the ability of the queue to accept new jobs. If the job queue state is <code>ENABLED</code>, it's able
2028
- * to accept jobs. If the job queue state is <code>DISABLED</code>, new jobs can't be added to the queue, but jobs
2029
- * already in the queue can finish.</p>
2467
+ * <p>Describes the ability of the queue to accept new jobs. If the job queue state is <code>ENABLED</code>, it can
2468
+ * accept jobs. If the job queue state is <code>DISABLED</code>, new jobs can't be added to the queue, but jobs already
2469
+ * in the queue can finish.</p>
2030
2470
  */
2031
2471
  state: JQState | string | undefined;
2032
2472
  /**
2033
2473
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the scheduling policy. The format is
2034
- * <code>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i>
2474
+ * <code>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i>
2035
2475
  * </code>.
2036
2476
  * For example,
2037
- * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:012345678910:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
2477
+ * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
2038
2478
  */
2039
2479
  schedulingPolicyArn?: string;
2040
2480
  /**
@@ -2042,15 +2482,15 @@ export interface JobQueueDetail {
2042
2482
  */
2043
2483
  status?: JQStatus | string;
2044
2484
  /**
2045
- * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details about the current status of the job queue.</p>
2485
+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details for the current status of the job queue.</p>
2046
2486
  */
2047
2487
  statusReason?: string;
2048
2488
  /**
2049
2489
  * <p>The priority of the job queue. Job queues with a higher priority (or a higher integer value for the
2050
- * <code>priority</code> parameter) are evaluated first when associated with the same compute environment. Priority is
2051
- * determined in descending order, for example, a job queue with a priority value of <code>10</code> is given scheduling
2490
+ * <code>priority</code> parameter) are evaluated first when associated with the same compute environment. Priority is
2491
+ * determined in descending order. For example, a job queue with a priority value of <code>10</code> is given scheduling
2052
2492
  * preference over a job queue with a priority value of <code>1</code>. All of the compute environments must be either
2053
- * EC2 (<code>EC2</code> or <code>SPOT</code>) or Fargate (<code>FARGATE</code> or <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>); EC2 and
2493
+ * EC2 (<code>EC2</code> or <code>SPOT</code>) or Fargate (<code>FARGATE</code> or <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>). EC2 and
2054
2494
  * Fargate compute environments can't be mixed.</p>
2055
2495
  */
2056
2496
  priority: number | undefined;
@@ -2060,7 +2500,7 @@ export interface JobQueueDetail {
2060
2500
  */
2061
2501
  computeEnvironmentOrder: ComputeEnvironmentOrder[] | undefined;
2062
2502
  /**
2063
- * <p>The tags applied to the job queue. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using-tags.html">Tagging your Batch resources</a> in
2503
+ * <p>The tags that are applied to the job queue. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using-tags.html">Tagging your Batch resources</a> in
2064
2504
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2065
2505
  */
2066
2506
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
@@ -2087,7 +2527,7 @@ export interface DescribeJobsRequest {
2087
2527
  jobs: string[] | undefined;
2088
2528
  }
2089
2529
  /**
2090
- * <p>An object representing the details of a container that's part of a job.</p>
2530
+ * <p>An object that represents the details of a container that's part of a job.</p>
2091
2531
  */
2092
2532
  export interface ContainerDetail {
2093
2533
  /**
@@ -2099,9 +2539,9 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2099
2539
  * requirement for the job using <code>resourceRequirements</code>, but you can't specify the vCPU requirements in both
2100
2540
  * the <code>vcpus</code> and <code>resourceRequirements</code> object. This parameter maps to <code>CpuShares</code> in
2101
2541
  * the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a> and the <code>--cpu-shares</code> option to
2102
- * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. You must
2103
- * specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places. It must be specified for each
2104
- * node at least once.</p>
2542
+ * <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker run</a>. Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. You must specify
2543
+ * at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places. It must be specified for each node at
2544
+ * least once.</p>
2105
2545
  * <note>
2106
2546
  * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that run on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on Fargate
2107
2547
  * resources, you must specify the vCPU requirement for the job using <code>resourceRequirements</code>.</p>
@@ -2110,7 +2550,7 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2110
2550
  vcpus?: number;
2111
2551
  /**
2112
2552
  * <p>For jobs running on EC2 resources that didn't specify memory requirements using
2113
- * <code>resourceRequirements</code>, the number of MiB of memory reserved for the job. For other jobs, including all
2553
+ * <code>resourceRequirements</code>, the number of MiB of memory reserved for the job. For other jobs, including all
2114
2554
  * run on Fargate resources, see <code>resourceRequirements</code>.</p>
2115
2555
  */
2116
2556
  memory?: number;
@@ -2119,23 +2559,25 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2119
2559
  */
2120
2560
  command?: string[];
2121
2561
  /**
2122
- * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) associated with the job upon execution.</p>
2562
+ * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that's associated with the job when run.</p>
2123
2563
  */
2124
2564
  jobRoleArn?: string;
2125
2565
  /**
2126
- * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the execution role that Batch can assume. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/execution-IAM-role.html">Batch execution IAM role</a> in the
2127
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2566
+ * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the
2567
+ * execution
2568
+ * role that Batch can assume. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/execution-IAM-role.html">Batch execution IAM role</a> in the
2569
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2128
2570
  */
2129
2571
  executionRoleArn?: string;
2130
2572
  /**
2131
- * <p>A list of volumes associated with the job.</p>
2573
+ * <p>A list of volumes that are associated with the job.</p>
2132
2574
  */
2133
2575
  volumes?: Volume[];
2134
2576
  /**
2135
2577
  * <p>The environment variables to pass to a container.</p>
2136
2578
  * <note>
2137
- * <p>Environment variables must not start with <code>AWS_BATCH</code>; this naming
2138
- * convention is reserved for variables that are set by the Batch service.</p>
2579
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
2580
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
2139
2581
  * </note>
2140
2582
  */
2141
2583
  environment?: KeyValuePair[];
@@ -2161,10 +2603,10 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2161
2603
  ulimits?: Ulimit[];
2162
2604
  /**
2163
2605
  * <p>When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated permissions on the host container instance (similar
2164
- * to the <code>root</code> user). The default value is false.</p>
2606
+ * to the <code>root</code> user). The default value is <code>false</code>.</p>
2165
2607
  * <note>
2166
2608
  * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be provided, or
2167
- * specified as false.</p>
2609
+ * specified as <code>false</code>.</p>
2168
2610
  * </note>
2169
2611
  */
2170
2612
  privileged?: boolean;
@@ -2178,7 +2620,7 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2178
2620
  */
2179
2621
  exitCode?: number;
2180
2622
  /**
2181
- * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details about a running or stopped
2623
+ * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details for a running or stopped
2182
2624
  * container.</p>
2183
2625
  */
2184
2626
  reason?: string;
@@ -2192,9 +2634,9 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2192
2634
  */
2193
2635
  taskArn?: string;
2194
2636
  /**
2195
- * <p>The name of the CloudWatch Logs log stream associated with the container. The log group for Batch jobs is
2196
- * <code>/aws/batch/job</code>. Each container attempt receives a log stream name when they reach the
2197
- * <code>RUNNING</code> status.</p>
2637
+ * <p>The name of the Amazon CloudWatch Logs log stream that's associated with the container. The log group for Batch jobs is
2638
+ * <code>/aws/batch/job</code>. Each container attempt receives a log stream name when they reach the
2639
+ * <code>RUNNING</code> status.</p>
2198
2640
  */
2199
2641
  logStreamName?: string;
2200
2642
  /**
@@ -2205,12 +2647,12 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2205
2647
  */
2206
2648
  instanceType?: string;
2207
2649
  /**
2208
- * <p>The network interfaces associated with the job.</p>
2650
+ * <p>The network interfaces that are associated with the job.</p>
2209
2651
  */
2210
2652
  networkInterfaces?: NetworkInterface[];
2211
2653
  /**
2212
2654
  * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>GPU</code>,
2213
- * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
2655
+ * <code>MEMORY</code>, and <code>VCPU</code>.</p>
2214
2656
  */
2215
2657
  resourceRequirements?: ResourceRequirement[];
2216
2658
  /**
@@ -2232,20 +2674,20 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2232
2674
  * container agent.</p>
2233
2675
  * </note>
2234
2676
  * <p>This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your
2235
- * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log into your
2677
+ * container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your
2236
2678
  * container instance and run the following command: <code>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</code>
2237
2679
  * </p>
2238
2680
  * <note>
2239
2681
  * <p>The Amazon ECS container agent running on a container instance must register the logging drivers available on that
2240
2682
  * instance with the <code>ECS_AVAILABLE_LOGGING_DRIVERS</code> environment variable before containers placed on that
2241
2683
  * instance can use these log configuration options. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-agent-config.html">Amazon ECS container agent configuration</a> in the
2242
- * <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</p>
2684
+ * <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</p>
2243
2685
  * </note>
2244
2686
  */
2245
2687
  logConfiguration?: LogConfiguration;
2246
2688
  /**
2247
2689
  * <p>The secrets to pass to the container. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying sensitive data</a> in the
2248
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2690
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2249
2691
  */
2250
2692
  secrets?: Secret[];
2251
2693
  /**
@@ -2260,11 +2702,11 @@ export interface ContainerDetail {
2260
2702
  fargatePlatformConfiguration?: FargatePlatformConfiguration;
2261
2703
  }
2262
2704
  /**
2263
- * <p>An object representing an Batch job dependency.</p>
2705
+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch job dependency.</p>
2264
2706
  */
2265
2707
  export interface JobDependency {
2266
2708
  /**
2267
- * <p>The job ID of the Batch job associated with this dependency.</p>
2709
+ * <p>The job ID of the Batch job that's associated with this dependency.</p>
2268
2710
  */
2269
2711
  jobId?: string;
2270
2712
  /**
@@ -2273,11 +2715,186 @@ export interface JobDependency {
2273
2715
  type?: ArrayJobDependency | string;
2274
2716
  }
2275
2717
  /**
2276
- * <p>An object representing the details of a multi-node parallel job node.</p>
2718
+ * <p>An object that represents the details for an attempt for a job attempt that an Amazon EKS container runs.</p>
2719
+ */
2720
+ export interface EksAttemptContainerDetail {
2721
+ /**
2722
+ * <p>The exit code for the job attempt. A non-zero exit code is considered failed.</p>
2723
+ */
2724
+ exitCode?: number;
2725
+ /**
2726
+ * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details for a running or stopped
2727
+ * container.</p>
2728
+ */
2729
+ reason?: string;
2730
+ }
2731
+ /**
2732
+ * <p>An object that represents the details of a job attempt for a job attempt by an Amazon EKS container.</p>
2733
+ */
2734
+ export interface EksAttemptDetail {
2735
+ /**
2736
+ * <p>The details for the final status of the containers for this job attempt.</p>
2737
+ */
2738
+ containers?: EksAttemptContainerDetail[];
2739
+ /**
2740
+ * <p>The name of the pod for this job attempt.</p>
2741
+ */
2742
+ podName?: string;
2743
+ /**
2744
+ * <p>The name of the node for this job attempt.</p>
2745
+ */
2746
+ nodeName?: string;
2747
+ /**
2748
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the attempt was started (when the attempt transitioned from the
2749
+ * <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state).</p>
2750
+ */
2751
+ startedAt?: number;
2752
+ /**
2753
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the attempt was stopped. This happens when the attempt
2754
+ * transitioned from the <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or
2755
+ * <code>FAILED</code>.</p>
2756
+ */
2757
+ stoppedAt?: number;
2758
+ /**
2759
+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details for the current status of the job attempt.</p>
2760
+ */
2761
+ statusReason?: string;
2762
+ }
2763
+ /**
2764
+ * <p>The details for container properties that are returned by <code>DescribeJobs</code> for jobs that use
2765
+ * Amazon EKS.</p>
2766
+ */
2767
+ export interface EksContainerDetail {
2768
+ /**
2769
+ * <p>The name of the container. If the name isn't specified, the default name "<code>Default</code>" is used. Each
2770
+ * container in a pod must have a unique name.</p>
2771
+ */
2772
+ name?: string;
2773
+ /**
2774
+ * <p>The Docker image used to start the container.</p>
2775
+ */
2776
+ image?: string;
2777
+ /**
2778
+ * <p>The image pull policy for the container. Supported values are <code>Always</code>, <code>IfNotPresent</code>,
2779
+ * and <code>Never</code>. This parameter defaults to <code>Always</code> if the <code>:latest</code> tag is specified,
2780
+ * <code>IfNotPresent</code> otherwise. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/containers/images/#updating-images">Updating images</a> in the
2781
+ * <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2782
+ */
2783
+ imagePullPolicy?: string;
2784
+ /**
2785
+ * <p>The entrypoint for the container. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/#entrypoint">Entrypoint</a> in
2786
+ * the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2787
+ */
2788
+ command?: string[];
2789
+ /**
2790
+ * <p>An array of arguments to the entrypoint. If this isn't specified, the <code>CMD</code> of the container image is
2791
+ * used. This corresponds to the <code>args</code> member in the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/#entrypoint">Entrypoint</a>
2792
+ * portion of the <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/kubernetes-api/workload-resources/pod-v1/">Pod</a> in Kubernetes. Environment variable references are expanded using the container's environment.</p>
2793
+ * <p>If the referenced environment variable doesn't exist, the reference in the command isn't changed. For example,
2794
+ * if the reference is to "<code>$(NAME1)</code>" and the <code>NAME1</code> environment variable doesn't exist, the
2795
+ * command string will remain "<code>$(NAME1)</code>". <code>$$</code> is replaced with <code>$</code> and the resulting
2796
+ * string isn't expanded. For example, <code>$$(VAR_NAME)</code> is passed as <code>$(VAR_NAME)</code> whether or not
2797
+ * the <code>VAR_NAME</code> environment variable exists. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd">CMD</a> in the <i>Dockerfile
2798
+ * reference</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/define-command-argument-container/">Define a command
2799
+ * and arguments for a pod</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2800
+ */
2801
+ args?: string[];
2802
+ /**
2803
+ * <p>The environment variables to pass to a container.</p>
2804
+ * <note>
2805
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
2806
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
2807
+ * </note>
2808
+ */
2809
+ env?: EksContainerEnvironmentVariable[];
2810
+ /**
2811
+ * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources include <code>memory</code>,
2812
+ * <code>cpu</code>, and <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/">Resource management for pods
2813
+ * and containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2814
+ */
2815
+ resources?: EksContainerResourceRequirements;
2816
+ /**
2817
+ * <p>The exit code for the job attempt. A non-zero exit code is considered failed.</p>
2818
+ */
2819
+ exitCode?: number;
2820
+ /**
2821
+ * <p>A short human-readable string to provide additional details for a running or stopped container. It can be up to
2822
+ * 255 characters long.</p>
2823
+ */
2824
+ reason?: string;
2825
+ /**
2826
+ * <p>The volume mounts for the container. Batch supports <code>emptyDir</code>, <code>hostPath</code>, and
2827
+ * <code>secret</code> volume types. For more information about volumes and volume mounts in Kubernetes, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/">Volumes</a> in the <i>Kubernetes
2828
+ * documentation</i>.</p>
2829
+ */
2830
+ volumeMounts?: EksContainerVolumeMount[];
2831
+ /**
2832
+ * <p>The security context for a job. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/">Configure a security context for a
2833
+ * pod or container</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2834
+ */
2835
+ securityContext?: EksContainerSecurityContext;
2836
+ }
2837
+ /**
2838
+ * <p>The details for the pod.</p>
2839
+ */
2840
+ export interface EksPodPropertiesDetail {
2841
+ /**
2842
+ * <p>The name of the service account that's used to run the pod. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/service-accounts.html">Kubernetes service accounts</a> and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/associate-service-account-role.html">Configure a Kubernetes service account
2843
+ * to assume an IAM role</a> in the <i>Amazon EKS User Guide</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-service-account/">Configure service accounts
2844
+ * for pods</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2845
+ */
2846
+ serviceAccountName?: string;
2847
+ /**
2848
+ * <p>Indicates if the pod uses the hosts' network IP address. The default value is <code>true</code>. Setting this
2849
+ * to <code>false</code> enables the Kubernetes pod networking model. Most Batch workloads are egress-only and don't
2850
+ * require the overhead of IP allocation for each pod for incoming connections. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#host-namespaces">Host namespaces</a> and
2851
+ * <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/#pod-networking">Pod networking</a> in the
2852
+ * <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2853
+ */
2854
+ hostNetwork?: boolean;
2855
+ /**
2856
+ * <p>The DNS policy for the pod. The default value is <code>ClusterFirst</code>. If the <code>hostNetwork</code>
2857
+ * parameter is not specified, the default is <code>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</code>. <code>ClusterFirst</code> indicates
2858
+ * that any DNS query that does not match the configured cluster domain suffix is forwarded to the upstream nameserver
2859
+ * inherited from the node. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dns-pod-service/#pod-s-dns-policy">Pod's DNS
2860
+ * policy</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
2861
+ * <p>Valid values: <code>Default</code> | <code>ClusterFirst</code> | <code>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</code> |
2862
+ * <code>None</code>
2863
+ * </p>
2864
+ */
2865
+ dnsPolicy?: string;
2866
+ /**
2867
+ * <p>The properties of the container that's used on the Amazon EKS pod.</p>
2868
+ */
2869
+ containers?: EksContainerDetail[];
2870
+ /**
2871
+ * <p>Specifies the volumes for a job definition using Amazon EKS resources.</p>
2872
+ */
2873
+ volumes?: EksVolume[];
2874
+ /**
2875
+ * <p>The name of the pod for this job.</p>
2876
+ */
2877
+ podName?: string;
2878
+ /**
2879
+ * <p>The name of the node for this job.</p>
2880
+ */
2881
+ nodeName?: string;
2882
+ }
2883
+ /**
2884
+ * <p>An object that contains the details for the Kubernetes resources of a job.</p>
2885
+ */
2886
+ export interface EksPropertiesDetail {
2887
+ /**
2888
+ * <p>The properties for the Kubernetes pod resources of a job.</p>
2889
+ */
2890
+ podProperties?: EksPodPropertiesDetail;
2891
+ }
2892
+ /**
2893
+ * <p>An object that represents the details of a multi-node parallel job node.</p>
2277
2894
  */
2278
2895
  export interface NodeDetails {
2279
2896
  /**
2280
- * <p>The node index for the node. Node index numbering begins at zero. This index is also available on the node with
2897
+ * <p>The node index for the node. Node index numbering starts at zero. This index is also available on the node with
2281
2898
  * the <code>AWS_BATCH_JOB_NODE_INDEX</code> environment variable.</p>
2282
2899
  */
2283
2900
  nodeIndex?: number;
@@ -2296,7 +2913,7 @@ export declare enum JobStatus {
2296
2913
  SUCCEEDED = "SUCCEEDED"
2297
2914
  }
2298
2915
  /**
2299
- * <p>An object representing an Batch job.</p>
2916
+ * <p>An object that represents an Batch job.</p>
2300
2917
  */
2301
2918
  export interface JobDetail {
2302
2919
  /**
@@ -2304,11 +2921,11 @@ export interface JobDetail {
2304
2921
  */
2305
2922
  jobArn?: string;
2306
2923
  /**
2307
- * <p>The name of the job.</p>
2924
+ * <p>The job name.</p>
2308
2925
  */
2309
2926
  jobName: string | undefined;
2310
2927
  /**
2311
- * <p>The ID for the job.</p>
2928
+ * <p>The job ID.</p>
2312
2929
  */
2313
2930
  jobId: string | undefined;
2314
2931
  /**
@@ -2333,18 +2950,17 @@ export interface JobDetail {
2333
2950
  */
2334
2951
  schedulingPriority?: number;
2335
2952
  /**
2336
- * <p>A list of job attempts associated with this job.</p>
2953
+ * <p>A list of job attempts that are associated with this job.</p>
2337
2954
  */
2338
2955
  attempts?: AttemptDetail[];
2339
2956
  /**
2340
- * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details about the current status of the job.</p>
2957
+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide more details for the current status of the job.</p>
2341
2958
  */
2342
2959
  statusReason?: string;
2343
2960
  /**
2344
2961
  * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the job was created. For non-array jobs and parent array jobs,
2345
- * this is when the job entered the <code>SUBMITTED</code> state (at the time <a>SubmitJob</a> was called).
2346
- * For array child jobs, this is when the child job was spawned by its parent and entered the <code>PENDING</code>
2347
- * state.</p>
2962
+ * this is when the job entered the <code>SUBMITTED</code> state. This is specifically at the time <a>SubmitJob</a> was called. For array child jobs, this is when the child job was spawned by its parent and
2963
+ * entered the <code>PENDING</code> state.</p>
2348
2964
  */
2349
2965
  createdAt?: number;
2350
2966
  /**
@@ -2352,14 +2968,15 @@ export interface JobDetail {
2352
2968
  */
2353
2969
  retryStrategy?: RetryStrategy;
2354
2970
  /**
2355
- * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the job was started (when the job transitioned from the
2356
- * <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state). This parameter isn't provided for child jobs of
2357
- * array jobs or multi-node parallel jobs.</p>
2971
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the job was started. More specifically, it's when the job
2972
+ * transitioned from the <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state. This parameter isn't provided
2973
+ * for child jobs of array jobs or multi-node parallel jobs.</p>
2358
2974
  */
2359
2975
  startedAt: number | undefined;
2360
2976
  /**
2361
- * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the job was stopped (when the job transitioned from the
2362
- * <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or <code>FAILED</code>).</p>
2977
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp (in milliseconds) for when the job was stopped. More specifically, it's when the job
2978
+ * transitioned from the <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or
2979
+ * <code>FAILED</code>.</p>
2363
2980
  */
2364
2981
  stoppedAt?: number;
2365
2982
  /**
@@ -2367,31 +2984,31 @@ export interface JobDetail {
2367
2984
  */
2368
2985
  dependsOn?: JobDependency[];
2369
2986
  /**
2370
- * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job definition that's used by this job.</p>
2987
+ * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job definition that this job uses.</p>
2371
2988
  */
2372
2989
  jobDefinition: string | undefined;
2373
2990
  /**
2374
- * <p>Additional parameters passed to the job that replace parameter substitution placeholders or override any
2375
- * corresponding parameter defaults from the job definition.</p>
2991
+ * <p>Additional parameters that are passed to the job that replace parameter substitution placeholders or override
2992
+ * any corresponding parameter defaults from the job definition.</p>
2376
2993
  */
2377
2994
  parameters?: Record<string, string>;
2378
2995
  /**
2379
- * <p>An object representing the details of the container that's associated with the job.</p>
2996
+ * <p>An object that represents the details for the container that's associated with the job.</p>
2380
2997
  */
2381
2998
  container?: ContainerDetail;
2382
2999
  /**
2383
- * <p>An object representing the details of a node that's associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
3000
+ * <p>An object that represents the details of a node that's associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2384
3001
  */
2385
3002
  nodeDetails?: NodeDetails;
2386
3003
  /**
2387
- * <p>An object representing the node properties of a multi-node parallel job.</p>
3004
+ * <p>An object that represents the node properties of a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2388
3005
  * <note>
2389
3006
  * <p>This isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources.</p>
2390
3007
  * </note>
2391
3008
  */
2392
3009
  nodeProperties?: NodeProperties;
2393
3010
  /**
2394
- * <p>The array properties of the job, if it is an array job.</p>
3011
+ * <p>The array properties of the job, if it's an array job.</p>
2395
3012
  */
2396
3013
  arrayProperties?: ArrayPropertiesDetail;
2397
3014
  /**
@@ -2399,21 +3016,30 @@ export interface JobDetail {
2399
3016
  */
2400
3017
  timeout?: JobTimeout;
2401
3018
  /**
2402
- * <p>The tags applied to the job.</p>
3019
+ * <p>The tags that are applied to the job.</p>
2403
3020
  */
2404
3021
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
2405
3022
  /**
2406
3023
  * <p>Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding Amazon ECS task. If no
2407
- * value is specified, the tags aren't propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For
2408
- * tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined tags
2409
- * from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <code>FAILED</code> state.</p>
3024
+ * value is specified, the tags aren't propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks when the tasks are created.
3025
+ * For tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined
3026
+ * tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <code>FAILED</code> state.</p>
2410
3027
  */
2411
3028
  propagateTags?: boolean;
2412
3029
  /**
2413
3030
  * <p>The platform capabilities required by the job definition. If no value is specified, it defaults to
2414
- * <code>EC2</code>. Jobs run on Fargate resources specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
3031
+ * <code>EC2</code>. Jobs run on Fargate resources specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
2415
3032
  */
2416
3033
  platformCapabilities?: (PlatformCapability | string)[];
3034
+ /**
3035
+ * <p>An object with various properties that are specific to Amazon EKS based jobs. Only one of <code>container</code>,
3036
+ * <code>eksProperties</code>, or <code>nodeDetails</code> is specified.</p>
3037
+ */
3038
+ eksProperties?: EksPropertiesDetail;
3039
+ /**
3040
+ * <p>A list of job attempts that are associated with this job.</p>
3041
+ */
3042
+ eksAttempts?: EksAttemptDetail[];
2417
3043
  }
2418
3044
  export interface DescribeJobsResponse {
2419
3045
  /**
@@ -2440,7 +3066,7 @@ export interface SchedulingPolicyDetail {
2440
3066
  name: string | undefined;
2441
3067
  /**
2442
3068
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the scheduling policy. An example is
2443
- * <code>arn:<i>aws</i>:batch:<i>us-east-1</i>:<i>123456789012</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>HighPriority</i>
3069
+ * <code>arn:<i>aws</i>:batch:<i>us-east-1</i>:<i>123456789012</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>HighPriority</i>
2444
3070
  * </code>.</p>
2445
3071
  */
2446
3072
  arn: string | undefined;
@@ -2451,7 +3077,7 @@ export interface SchedulingPolicyDetail {
2451
3077
  /**
2452
3078
  * <p>The tags that you apply to the scheduling policy to categorize and organize your resources. Each tag consists of
2453
3079
  * a key and an optional value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws_tagging.html">Tagging Amazon Web Services resources</a> in <i>Amazon Web Services General
2454
- * Reference</i>.</p>
3080
+ * Reference</i>.</p>
2455
3081
  */
2456
3082
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
2457
3083
  }
@@ -2514,7 +3140,7 @@ export interface ListJobsRequest {
2514
3140
  * end of the previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is <code>null</code> when
2515
3141
  * there are no more results to return.</p>
2516
3142
  * <note>
2517
- * <p>This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that's only used to
3143
+ * <p>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to
2518
3144
  * retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</p>
2519
3145
  * </note>
2520
3146
  */
@@ -2527,23 +3153,23 @@ export interface ListJobsRequest {
2527
3153
  * <dt>JOB_NAME</dt>
2528
3154
  * <dd>
2529
3155
  * <p>The value of the filter is a case-insensitive match for the job name. If the value ends with an asterisk (*),
2530
- * the filter will match any job name that begins with the string before the '*'. This corresponds to the
2531
- * <code>jobName</code> value. For example, <code>test1</code> matches both <code>Test1</code> and
2532
- * <code>test1</code>, and <code>test1*</code> matches both <code>test1</code> and <code>Test10</code>. When the
2533
- * <code>JOB_NAME</code> filter is used, the results are grouped by the job name and version.</p>
3156
+ * the filter matches any job name that begins with the string before the '*'. This corresponds to the
3157
+ * <code>jobName</code> value. For example, <code>test1</code> matches both <code>Test1</code> and
3158
+ * <code>test1</code>, and <code>test1*</code> matches both <code>test1</code> and <code>Test10</code>. When the
3159
+ * <code>JOB_NAME</code> filter is used, the results are grouped by the job name and version.</p>
2534
3160
  * </dd>
2535
3161
  * <dt>JOB_DEFINITION</dt>
2536
3162
  * <dd>
2537
3163
  * <p>The value for the filter is the name or Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job definition. This corresponds to the
2538
- * <code>jobDefinition</code> value. The value is case sensitive. When the value for the filter is the job
2539
- * definition name, the results include all the jobs that used any revision of that job definition name. If the value
2540
- * ends with an asterisk (*), the filter will match any job definition name that begins with the string before the
2541
- * '*'. For example, <code>jd1</code> matches only <code>jd1</code>, and <code>jd1*</code> matches both
2542
- * <code>jd1</code> and <code>jd1A</code>. The version of the job definition that's used doesn't affect the sort
2543
- * order. When the <code>JOB_DEFINITION</code> filter is used and the ARN is used (which is in the form
2544
- * <code>arn:${Partition}:batch:${Region}:${Account}:job-definition/${JobDefinitionName}:${Revision}</code>), the
2545
- * results include jobs that used the specified revision of the job definition. Asterisk (*) is not supported when
2546
- * the ARN is used.</p>
3164
+ * <code>jobDefinition</code> value. The value is case sensitive. When the value for the filter is the job definition
3165
+ * name, the results include all the jobs that used any revision of that job definition name. If the value ends with
3166
+ * an asterisk (*), the filter matches any job definition name that begins with the string before the '*'. For
3167
+ * example, <code>jd1</code> matches only <code>jd1</code>, and <code>jd1*</code> matches both <code>jd1</code> and
3168
+ * <code>jd1A</code>. The version of the job definition that's used doesn't affect the sort order. When the
3169
+ * <code>JOB_DEFINITION</code> filter is used and the ARN is used (which is in the form
3170
+ * <code>arn:${Partition}:batch:${Region}:${Account}:job-definition/${JobDefinitionName}:${Revision}</code>), the
3171
+ * results include jobs that used the specified revision of the job definition. Asterisk (*) isn't supported when the
3172
+ * ARN is used.</p>
2547
3173
  * </dd>
2548
3174
  * <dt>BEFORE_CREATED_AT</dt>
2549
3175
  * <dd>
@@ -2562,7 +3188,7 @@ export interface ListJobsRequest {
2562
3188
  filters?: KeyValuesPair[];
2563
3189
  }
2564
3190
  /**
2565
- * <p>An object representing summary details of a container within a job.</p>
3191
+ * <p>An object that represents summary details of a container within a job.</p>
2566
3192
  */
2567
3193
  export interface ContainerSummary {
2568
3194
  /**
@@ -2570,13 +3196,13 @@ export interface ContainerSummary {
2570
3196
  */
2571
3197
  exitCode?: number;
2572
3198
  /**
2573
- * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details about a running or stopped
3199
+ * <p>A short (255 max characters) human-readable string to provide additional details for a running or stopped
2574
3200
  * container.</p>
2575
3201
  */
2576
3202
  reason?: string;
2577
3203
  }
2578
3204
  /**
2579
- * <p>An object representing the properties of a node that's associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
3205
+ * <p>An object that represents the properties of a node that's associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2580
3206
  */
2581
3207
  export interface NodePropertiesSummary {
2582
3208
  /**
@@ -2584,7 +3210,7 @@ export interface NodePropertiesSummary {
2584
3210
  */
2585
3211
  isMainNode?: boolean;
2586
3212
  /**
2587
- * <p>The number of nodes associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
3213
+ * <p>The number of nodes that are associated with a multi-node parallel job.</p>
2588
3214
  */
2589
3215
  numNodes?: number;
2590
3216
  /**
@@ -2594,7 +3220,7 @@ export interface NodePropertiesSummary {
2594
3220
  nodeIndex?: number;
2595
3221
  }
2596
3222
  /**
2597
- * <p>An object representing summary details of a job.</p>
3223
+ * <p>An object that represents summary details of a job.</p>
2598
3224
  */
2599
3225
  export interface JobSummary {
2600
3226
  /**
@@ -2602,11 +3228,11 @@ export interface JobSummary {
2602
3228
  */
2603
3229
  jobArn?: string;
2604
3230
  /**
2605
- * <p>The ID of the job.</p>
3231
+ * <p>The job ID.</p>
2606
3232
  */
2607
3233
  jobId: string | undefined;
2608
3234
  /**
2609
- * <p>The name of the job.</p>
3235
+ * <p>The job name.</p>
2610
3236
  */
2611
3237
  jobName: string | undefined;
2612
3238
  /**
@@ -2621,25 +3247,25 @@ export interface JobSummary {
2621
3247
  */
2622
3248
  status?: JobStatus | string;
2623
3249
  /**
2624
- * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide additional details about the current status of the job.</p>
3250
+ * <p>A short, human-readable string to provide more details for the current status of the job.</p>
2625
3251
  */
2626
3252
  statusReason?: string;
2627
3253
  /**
2628
- * <p>The Unix timestamp for when the job was started (when the job transitioned from the <code>STARTING</code> state
2629
- * to the <code>RUNNING</code> state).</p>
3254
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp for when the job was started. More specifically, it's when the job transitioned from the
3255
+ * <code>STARTING</code> state to the <code>RUNNING</code> state.</p>
2630
3256
  */
2631
3257
  startedAt?: number;
2632
3258
  /**
2633
- * <p>The Unix timestamp for when the job was stopped (when the job transitioned from the <code>RUNNING</code> state
2634
- * to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or <code>FAILED</code>).</p>
3259
+ * <p>The Unix timestamp for when the job was stopped. More specifically, it's when the job transitioned from the
3260
+ * <code>RUNNING</code> state to a terminal state, such as <code>SUCCEEDED</code> or <code>FAILED</code>.</p>
2635
3261
  */
2636
3262
  stoppedAt?: number;
2637
3263
  /**
2638
- * <p>An object representing the details of the container that's associated with the job.</p>
3264
+ * <p>An object that represents the details of the container that's associated with the job.</p>
2639
3265
  */
2640
3266
  container?: ContainerSummary;
2641
3267
  /**
2642
- * <p>The array properties of the job, if it is an array job.</p>
3268
+ * <p>The array properties of the job, if it's an array job.</p>
2643
3269
  */
2644
3270
  arrayProperties?: ArrayPropertiesSummary;
2645
3271
  /**
@@ -2681,13 +3307,13 @@ export interface ListSchedulingPoliciesRequest {
2681
3307
  */
2682
3308
  maxResults?: number;
2683
3309
  /**
2684
- * <p>The <code>nextToken</code> value that's returned from a previous paginated <code>ListSchedulingPolicies</code>
2685
- * request where <code>maxResults</code> was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination
2686
- * continues from the end of the previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is
2687
- * <code>null</code> when there are no more results to
2688
- * return.</p>
3310
+ * <p>The <code>nextToken</code> value that's returned from a previous paginated
3311
+ * <code>ListSchedulingPolicies</code> request where <code>maxResults</code> was used and the
3312
+ * results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the
3313
+ * previous results that returned the <code>nextToken</code> value. This value is
3314
+ * <code>null</code> when there are no more results to return.</p>
2689
3315
  * <note>
2690
- * <p>This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that's only used to
3316
+ * <p>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to
2691
3317
  * retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</p>
2692
3318
  * </note>
2693
3319
  */
@@ -2695,7 +3321,7 @@ export interface ListSchedulingPoliciesRequest {
2695
3321
  }
2696
3322
  /**
2697
3323
  * <p>An object that contains the details of a scheduling policy that's returned in a
2698
- * <code>ListSchedulingPolicy</code> action.</p>
3324
+ * <code>ListSchedulingPolicy</code> action.</p>
2699
3325
  */
2700
3326
  export interface SchedulingPolicyListingDetail {
2701
3327
  /**
@@ -2721,7 +3347,7 @@ export interface ListSchedulingPoliciesResponse {
2721
3347
  export interface ListTagsForResourceRequest {
2722
3348
  /**
2723
3349
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that identifies the resource that tags are listed for. Batch resources that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues,
2724
- * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs are not supported.</p>
3350
+ * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs aren't supported.</p>
2725
3351
  */
2726
3352
  resourceArn: string | undefined;
2727
3353
  }
@@ -2759,16 +3385,17 @@ export interface RegisterJobDefinitionRequest {
2759
3385
  */
2760
3386
  parameters?: Record<string, string>;
2761
3387
  /**
2762
- * <p>The scheduling priority for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. This will only affect jobs in job
2763
- * queues with a fair share policy. Jobs with a higher scheduling priority will be scheduled before jobs with a lower
3388
+ * <p>The scheduling priority for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. This only affects jobs in job
3389
+ * queues with a fair share policy. Jobs with a higher scheduling priority are scheduled before jobs with a lower
2764
3390
  * scheduling priority.</p>
2765
3391
  * <p>The minimum supported value is 0 and the maximum supported value is 9999.</p>
2766
3392
  */
2767
3393
  schedulingPriority?: number;
2768
3394
  /**
2769
- * <p>An object with various properties specific to single-node container-based jobs. If the job definition's
2770
- * <code>type</code> parameter is <code>container</code>, then you must specify either <code>containerProperties</code>
2771
- * or <code>nodeProperties</code>.</p>
3395
+ * <p>An object with various properties specific to Amazon ECS based single-node container-based jobs. If the job
3396
+ * definition's <code>type</code> parameter is <code>container</code>, then you must specify either
3397
+ * <code>containerProperties</code> or <code>nodeProperties</code>. This must not be specified for Amazon EKS based job
3398
+ * definitions.</p>
2772
3399
  * <note>
2773
3400
  * <p>If the job runs on Fargate resources, then you must not specify <code>nodeProperties</code>; use only
2774
3401
  * <code>containerProperties</code>.</p>
@@ -2778,12 +3405,14 @@ export interface RegisterJobDefinitionRequest {
2778
3405
  /**
2779
3406
  * <p>An object with various properties specific to multi-node parallel jobs. If you specify node properties for a
2780
3407
  * job, it becomes a multi-node parallel job. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/multi-node-parallel-jobs.html">Multi-node Parallel Jobs</a> in the
2781
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. If the job definition's <code>type</code> parameter is
2782
- * <code>container</code>, then you must specify either <code>containerProperties</code> or
2783
- * <code>nodeProperties</code>.</p>
3408
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. If the job definition's <code>type</code> parameter is <code>container</code>,
3409
+ * then you must specify either <code>containerProperties</code> or <code>nodeProperties</code>.</p>
2784
3410
  * <note>
2785
3411
  * <p>If the job runs on Fargate resources, then you must not specify <code>nodeProperties</code>; use
2786
- * <code>containerProperties</code> instead.</p>
3412
+ * <code>containerProperties</code> instead.</p>
3413
+ * </note>
3414
+ * <note>
3415
+ * <p>If the job runs on Amazon EKS resources, then you must not specify <code>nodeProperties</code>.</p>
2787
3416
  * </note>
2788
3417
  */
2789
3418
  nodeProperties?: NodeProperties;
@@ -2798,6 +3427,9 @@ export interface RegisterJobDefinitionRequest {
2798
3427
  * value is specified, the tags are not propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For
2799
3428
  * tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined tags
2800
3429
  * from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <code>FAILED</code> state.</p>
3430
+ * <note>
3431
+ * <p>If the job runs on Amazon EKS resources, then you must not specify <code>propagateTags</code>.</p>
3432
+ * </note>
2801
3433
  */
2802
3434
  propagateTags?: boolean;
2803
3435
  /**
@@ -2814,9 +3446,17 @@ export interface RegisterJobDefinitionRequest {
2814
3446
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
2815
3447
  /**
2816
3448
  * <p>The platform capabilities required by the job definition. If no value is specified, it defaults to
2817
- * <code>EC2</code>. To run the job on Fargate resources, specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
3449
+ * <code>EC2</code>. To run the job on Fargate resources, specify <code>FARGATE</code>.</p>
3450
+ * <note>
3451
+ * <p>If the job runs on Amazon EKS resources, then you must not specify <code>platformCapabilities</code>.</p>
3452
+ * </note>
2818
3453
  */
2819
3454
  platformCapabilities?: (PlatformCapability | string)[];
3455
+ /**
3456
+ * <p>An object with various properties that are specific to Amazon EKS based jobs. This must not be specified for Amazon ECS
3457
+ * based job definitions.</p>
3458
+ */
3459
+ eksProperties?: EksProperties;
2820
3460
  }
2821
3461
  export interface RegisterJobDefinitionResponse {
2822
3462
  /**
@@ -2840,26 +3480,26 @@ export interface ContainerOverrides {
2840
3480
  * @deprecated
2841
3481
  *
2842
3482
  * <p>This parameter is deprecated, use <code>resourceRequirements</code> to override the <code>vcpus</code> parameter
2843
- * that's set in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs running on EC2
3483
+ * that's set in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2
2844
3484
  * resources, it overrides the <code>vcpus</code> parameter set in the job definition, but doesn't override any vCPU
2845
3485
  * requirement specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition. To override vCPU
2846
3486
  * requirements that are specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition,
2847
- * <code>resourceRequirements</code> must be specified in the <code>SubmitJob</code> request, with <code>type</code>
2848
- * set to <code>VCPU</code> and <code>value</code> set to the new value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't override job
2849
- * definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3487
+ * <code>resourceRequirements</code> must be specified in the <code>SubmitJob</code> request, with <code>type</code> set
3488
+ * to <code>VCPU</code> and <code>value</code> set to the new value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't override job
3489
+ * definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2850
3490
  */
2851
3491
  vcpus?: number;
2852
3492
  /**
2853
3493
  * @deprecated
2854
3494
  *
2855
3495
  * <p>This parameter is deprecated, use <code>resourceRequirements</code> to override the memory requirements
2856
- * specified in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs running on EC2
3496
+ * specified in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2
2857
3497
  * resources, it overrides the <code>memory</code> parameter set in the job definition, but doesn't override any memory
2858
- * requirement specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition. To override memory
2859
- * requirements that are specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition,
2860
- * <code>resourceRequirements</code> must be specified in the <code>SubmitJob</code> request, with <code>type</code>
2861
- * set to <code>MEMORY</code> and <code>value</code> set to the new value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't override job
2862
- * definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3498
+ * requirement that's specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition. To override
3499
+ * memory requirements that are specified in the <code>resourceRequirements</code> structure in the job definition,
3500
+ * <code>resourceRequirements</code> must be specified in the <code>SubmitJob</code> request, with <code>type</code> set
3501
+ * to <code>MEMORY</code> and <code>value</code> set to the new value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't override job
3502
+ * definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
2863
3503
  */
2864
3504
  memory?: number;
2865
3505
  /**
@@ -2880,8 +3520,8 @@ export interface ContainerOverrides {
2880
3520
  * the container at launch, or you can override the existing environment variables from the Docker image or the job
2881
3521
  * definition.</p>
2882
3522
  * <note>
2883
- * <p>Environment variables must not start with <code>AWS_BATCH</code>; this naming
2884
- * convention is reserved for variables that are set by the Batch service.</p>
3523
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
3524
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
2885
3525
  * </note>
2886
3526
  */
2887
3527
  environment?: KeyValuePair[];
@@ -2892,46 +3532,103 @@ export interface ContainerOverrides {
2892
3532
  resourceRequirements?: ResourceRequirement[];
2893
3533
  }
2894
3534
  /**
2895
- * <p>Object representing any node overrides to a job definition that's used in a <a>SubmitJob</a> API
3535
+ * <p>Object representing any Kubernetes overrides to a job definition that's used in a <a>SubmitJob</a> API
2896
3536
  * operation.</p>
2897
3537
  */
3538
+ export interface EksContainerOverride {
3539
+ /**
3540
+ * <p>The override of the Docker image that's used to start the container.</p>
3541
+ */
3542
+ image?: string;
3543
+ /**
3544
+ * <p>The command to send to the container that overrides the default command from the Docker image or the job
3545
+ * definition.</p>
3546
+ */
3547
+ command?: string[];
3548
+ /**
3549
+ * <p>The arguments to the entrypoint to send to the container that overrides the default arguments from the Docker
3550
+ * image or the job definition. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd">CMD</a> in the <i>Dockerfile
3551
+ * reference</i> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/inject-data-application/define-command-argument-container/">Define a command an
3552
+ * arguments for a pod</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
3553
+ */
3554
+ args?: string[];
3555
+ /**
3556
+ * <p>The environment variables to send to the container. You can add new environment variables, which are added to
3557
+ * the container at launch. Or, you can override the existing environment variables from the Docker image or the job
3558
+ * definition.</p>
3559
+ * <note>
3560
+ * <p>Environment variables cannot start with "<code>AWS_BATCH</code>". This naming
3561
+ * convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</p>
3562
+ * </note>
3563
+ */
3564
+ env?: EksContainerEnvironmentVariable[];
3565
+ /**
3566
+ * <p>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. These override the settings in the job definition.
3567
+ * The supported resources include <code>memory</code>, <code>cpu</code>, and <code>nvidia.com/gpu</code>. For more
3568
+ * information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/">Resource
3569
+ * management for pods and containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</p>
3570
+ */
3571
+ resources?: EksContainerResourceRequirements;
3572
+ }
3573
+ /**
3574
+ * <p>An object that contains overrides for the Kubernetes pod properties of a job.</p>
3575
+ */
3576
+ export interface EksPodPropertiesOverride {
3577
+ /**
3578
+ * <p>The overrides for the container that's used on the Amazon EKS pod.</p>
3579
+ */
3580
+ containers?: EksContainerOverride[];
3581
+ }
3582
+ /**
3583
+ * <p>An object that contains overrides for the Kubernetes resources of a job.</p>
3584
+ */
3585
+ export interface EksPropertiesOverride {
3586
+ /**
3587
+ * <p>The overrides for the Kubernetes pod resources of a job.</p>
3588
+ */
3589
+ podProperties?: EksPodPropertiesOverride;
3590
+ }
3591
+ /**
3592
+ * <p>The object that represents any node overrides to a job definition that's used in a <a>SubmitJob</a>
3593
+ * API operation.</p>
3594
+ */
2898
3595
  export interface NodePropertyOverride {
2899
3596
  /**
2900
3597
  * <p>The range of nodes, using node index values, that's used to override. A range of <code>0:3</code> indicates
2901
3598
  * nodes with index values of <code>0</code> through <code>3</code>. If the starting range value is omitted
2902
- * (<code>:n</code>), then <code>0</code> is used to start the range. If the ending range value is omitted
2903
- * (<code>n:</code>), then the highest possible node index is used to end the range.</p>
3599
+ * (<code>:n</code>), then <code>0</code> is used to start the range. If the ending range value is omitted
3600
+ * (<code>n:</code>), then the highest possible node index is used to end the range.</p>
2904
3601
  */
2905
3602
  targetNodes: string | undefined;
2906
3603
  /**
2907
- * <p>The overrides that should be sent to a node range.</p>
3604
+ * <p>The overrides that are sent to a node range.</p>
2908
3605
  */
2909
3606
  containerOverrides?: ContainerOverrides;
2910
3607
  }
2911
3608
  /**
2912
- * <p>Object representing any node overrides to a job definition that's used in a <a>SubmitJob</a> API
2913
- * operation.</p>
3609
+ * <p>An object that represents any node overrides to a job definition that's used in a <a>SubmitJob</a>
3610
+ * API operation.</p>
2914
3611
  * <note>
2915
- * <p>This isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and shouldn't be provided; use
2916
- * <code>containerOverrides</code> instead.</p>
3612
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't provide it for these
3613
+ * jobs. Rather, use <code>containerOverrides</code> instead.</p>
2917
3614
  * </note>
2918
3615
  */
2919
3616
  export interface NodeOverrides {
2920
3617
  /**
2921
3618
  * <p>The number of nodes to use with a multi-node parallel job. This value overrides the number of nodes that are
2922
- * specified in the job definition. To use this override:</p>
3619
+ * specified in the job definition. To use this override, you must meet the following conditions:</p>
2923
3620
  * <ul>
2924
3621
  * <li>
2925
- * <p>There must be at least one node range in your job definition that has an open upper boundary (such as
2926
- * <code>:</code> or <code>n:</code>).</p>
3622
+ * <p>There must be at least one node range in your job definition that has an open upper boundary, such as
3623
+ * <code>:</code> or <code>n:</code>.</p>
2927
3624
  * </li>
2928
3625
  * <li>
2929
- * <p>The lower boundary of the node range specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of nodes
2930
- * specified in the override.</p>
3626
+ * <p>The lower boundary of the node range that's specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of
3627
+ * nodes specified in the override.</p>
2931
3628
  * </li>
2932
3629
  * <li>
2933
- * <p>The main node index specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of nodes specified in the
2934
- * override.</p>
3630
+ * <p>The main node index that's specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of nodes specified in
3631
+ * the override.</p>
2935
3632
  * </li>
2936
3633
  * </ul>
2937
3634
  */
@@ -2955,14 +3652,14 @@ export interface SubmitJobRequest {
2955
3652
  */
2956
3653
  jobQueue: string | undefined;
2957
3654
  /**
2958
- * <p>The share identifier for the job. If the job queue does not have a scheduling policy, then this parameter must
3655
+ * <p>The share identifier for the job. If the job queue doesn't have a scheduling policy, then this parameter must
2959
3656
  * not be specified. If the job queue has a scheduling policy, then this parameter must be specified.</p>
2960
3657
  */
2961
3658
  shareIdentifier?: string;
2962
3659
  /**
2963
- * <p>The scheduling priority for the job. This will only affect jobs in job queues with a fair share policy. Jobs
2964
- * with a higher scheduling priority will be scheduled before jobs with a lower scheduling priority. This will override
2965
- * any scheduling priority in the job definition.</p>
3660
+ * <p>The scheduling priority for the job. This only affects jobs in job queues with a fair share policy. Jobs with a
3661
+ * higher scheduling priority are scheduled before jobs with a lower scheduling priority. This overrides any scheduling
3662
+ * priority in the job definition.</p>
2966
3663
  * <p>The minimum supported value is 0 and the maximum supported value is 9999.</p>
2967
3664
  */
2968
3665
  schedulingPriorityOverride?: number;
@@ -2993,11 +3690,11 @@ export interface SubmitJobRequest {
2993
3690
  */
2994
3691
  parameters?: Record<string, string>;
2995
3692
  /**
2996
- * <p>A list of container overrides in the JSON format that specify the name of a container in the specified job
2997
- * definition and the overrides it receives. You can override the default command for a container, which is specified in
2998
- * the job definition or the Docker image, with a <code>command</code> override. You can also override
2999
- * existing environment variables on a container or add new environment variables to it with an <code>environment</code>
3000
- * override.</p>
3693
+ * <p>An object with various properties that override the defaults for the job definition that specify the name of a
3694
+ * container in the specified job definition and the overrides it should receive. You can override the default command
3695
+ * for a container, which is specified in the job definition or the Docker image, with a <code>command</code> override.
3696
+ * You can also override existing environment variables on a container or add new environment variables to it with an
3697
+ * <code>environment</code> override.</p>
3001
3698
  */
3002
3699
  containerOverrides?: ContainerOverrides;
3003
3700
  /**
@@ -3037,6 +3734,11 @@ export interface SubmitJobRequest {
3037
3734
  * Reference</i>.</p>
3038
3735
  */
3039
3736
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
3737
+ /**
3738
+ * <p>An object that can only be specified for jobs that are run on Amazon EKS resources with various properties that
3739
+ * override defaults for the job definition.</p>
3740
+ */
3741
+ eksPropertiesOverride?: EksPropertiesOverride;
3040
3742
  }
3041
3743
  export interface SubmitJobResponse {
3042
3744
  /**
@@ -3058,7 +3760,7 @@ export interface SubmitJobResponse {
3058
3760
  export interface TagResourceRequest {
3059
3761
  /**
3060
3762
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource that tags are added to. Batch resources that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues,
3061
- * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs are not supported.</p>
3763
+ * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs aren't supported.</p>
3062
3764
  */
3063
3765
  resourceArn: string | undefined;
3064
3766
  /**
@@ -3093,7 +3795,7 @@ export interface TerminateJobResponse {
3093
3795
  export interface UntagResourceRequest {
3094
3796
  /**
3095
3797
  * <p>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource from which to delete tags. Batch resources that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues,
3096
- * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs are not supported.</p>
3798
+ * and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs aren't supported.</p>
3097
3799
  */
3098
3800
  resourceArn: string | undefined;
3099
3801
  /**
@@ -3108,25 +3810,24 @@ export declare enum CRUpdateAllocationStrategy {
3108
3810
  SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED = "SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED"
3109
3811
  }
3110
3812
  /**
3111
- * <p>An object representing the attributes of a compute environment that can be updated. For more information, see
3112
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a>
3813
+ * <p>An object that represents the attributes of a compute environment that can be updated. For more information, see
3814
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a>
3113
3815
  * in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3114
3816
  */
3115
3817
  export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3116
3818
  /**
3117
3819
  * <p>The minimum number of Amazon EC2 vCPUs that an environment should maintain (even if the compute environment is
3118
- * <code>DISABLED</code>).</p>
3820
+ * <code>DISABLED</code>).</p>
3119
3821
  * <note>
3120
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3121
- * specified.</p>
3822
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3122
3823
  * </note>
3123
3824
  */
3124
3825
  minvCpus?: number;
3125
3826
  /**
3126
3827
  * <p>The maximum number of Amazon EC2 vCPUs that an environment can reach.</p>
3127
3828
  * <note>
3128
- * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> allocation strategies,
3129
- * Batch might need to exceed <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never
3829
+ * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> allocation strategies
3830
+ * using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <code>BEST_FIT</code> strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never
3130
3831
  * exceeds <code>maxvCpus</code> by more than a single instance. That is, no more than a single instance from among
3131
3832
  * those specified in your compute environment.</p>
3132
3833
  * </note>
@@ -3136,8 +3837,7 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3136
3837
  * <p>The desired number of Amazon EC2 vCPUS in the compute environment. Batch modifies this value between the minimum
3137
3838
  * and maximum values based on job queue demand.</p>
3138
3839
  * <note>
3139
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3140
- * specified.</p>
3840
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3141
3841
  * </note>
3142
3842
  */
3143
3843
  desiredvCpus?: number;
@@ -3151,45 +3851,46 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3151
3851
  */
3152
3852
  subnets?: string[];
3153
3853
  /**
3154
- * <p>The Amazon EC2 security groups associated with instances launched in the compute environment. This parameter is
3155
- * required for Fargate compute resources, where it can contain up to 5 security groups. For Fargate compute
3854
+ * <p>The Amazon EC2 security groups that are associated with instances launched in the compute environment. This parameter
3855
+ * is required for Fargate compute resources, where it can contain up to 5 security groups. For Fargate compute
3156
3856
  * resources, providing an empty list is handled as if this parameter wasn't specified and no change is made. For EC2
3157
3857
  * compute resources, providing an empty list removes the security groups from the compute resource.</p>
3158
3858
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the EC2 security groups requires an infrastructure update of the
3159
3859
  * compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3160
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3860
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3161
3861
  */
3162
3862
  securityGroupIds?: string[];
3163
3863
  /**
3164
- * <p>The allocation strategy to use for the compute resource if not enough instances of the best fitting instance
3165
- * type can be allocated. This might be because of availability of the instance type in the Region or <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon EC2 service limits</a>. For more
3166
- * information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/allocation-strategies.html">Allocation strategies</a>
3167
- * in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3864
+ * <p>The allocation strategy to use for the compute resource if there's not enough instances of the best fitting
3865
+ * instance type that can be allocated. This might be because of availability of the instance type in the Region or
3866
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon EC2 service limits</a>. For
3867
+ * more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/allocation-strategies.html">Allocation
3868
+ * strategies</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3168
3869
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the allocation strategy requires an infrastructure update of the
3169
3870
  * compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3170
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. <code>BEST_FIT</code> isn't supported when updating a compute
3871
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>. <code>BEST_FIT</code> isn't supported when updating a compute
3171
3872
  * environment.</p>
3172
3873
  * <note>
3173
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3174
- * specified.</p>
3874
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3175
3875
  * </note>
3176
3876
  * <dl>
3177
3877
  * <dt>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</dt>
3178
3878
  * <dd>
3179
- * <p>Batch will select additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in
3180
- * the queue, with a preference for instance types with a lower cost per unit vCPU. If additional instances of the
3181
- * previously selected instance types aren't available, Batch will select new instance types.</p>
3879
+ * <p>Batch selects additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in the
3880
+ * queue. Its preference is for instance types with lower cost vCPUs. If additional instances of the previously
3881
+ * selected instance types aren't available, Batch selects new instance types.</p>
3182
3882
  * </dd>
3183
3883
  * <dt>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt>
3184
3884
  * <dd>
3185
- * <p>Batch will select one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in
3186
- * the queue, with a preference for instance types that are less likely to be interrupted. This allocation strategy
3187
- * is only available for Spot Instance compute resources.</p>
3885
+ * <p>Batch selects one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements of the jobs in the
3886
+ * queue. Its preference is for instance types that are less likely to be interrupted. This allocation strategy is
3887
+ * only available for Spot Instance compute resources.</p>
3188
3888
  * </dd>
3189
3889
  * </dl>
3190
- * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> strategies, Batch might
3191
- * need to go above <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds
3192
- * <code>maxvCpus</code> by more than a single instance.</p>
3890
+ * <p>With both <code>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</code> and <code>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</code> strategies using On-Demand
3891
+ * or Spot Instances, and the <code>BEST_FIT</code> strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed
3892
+ * <code>maxvCpus</code> to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <code>maxvCpus</code>
3893
+ * by more than a single instance.</p>
3193
3894
  */
3194
3895
  allocationStrategy?: CRUpdateAllocationStrategy | string;
3195
3896
  /**
@@ -3200,8 +3901,7 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3200
3901
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3201
3902
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3202
3903
  * <note>
3203
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3204
- * specified.</p>
3904
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3205
3905
  * </note>
3206
3906
  * <note>
3207
3907
  * <p>When you create a compute environment, the instance types that you select for the compute environment must
@@ -3210,7 +3910,7 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3210
3910
  * </note>
3211
3911
  * <note>
3212
3912
  * <p>Currently, <code>optimal</code> uses instance types from the C4, M4, and R4 instance families. In Regions that
3213
- * don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types from the C5, M5. and R5 instance families are
3913
+ * don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types from the C5, M5, and R5 instance families are
3214
3914
  * used.</p>
3215
3915
  * </note>
3216
3916
  */
@@ -3221,40 +3921,36 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3221
3921
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the EC2 key pair requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3222
3922
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3223
3923
  * <note>
3224
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3225
- * specified.</p>
3924
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3226
3925
  * </note>
3227
3926
  */
3228
3927
  ec2KeyPair?: string;
3229
3928
  /**
3230
3929
  * <p>The Amazon ECS instance profile applied to Amazon EC2 instances in a compute environment. You can specify the short name
3231
- * or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example,
3232
- * <code>
3930
+ * or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example, <code>
3233
3931
  * <i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
3234
3932
  * </code> or
3235
- * <code>arn:aws:iam::<i><aws_account_id></i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
3933
+ * <code>arn:aws:iam::<i><aws_account_id></i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i>
3236
3934
  * </code>.
3237
3935
  * For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/instance_IAM_role.html">Amazon ECS instance
3238
- * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3936
+ * role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3239
3937
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3240
3938
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3241
3939
  * <note>
3242
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3243
- * specified.</p>
3940
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3244
3941
  * </note>
3245
3942
  */
3246
3943
  instanceRole?: string;
3247
3944
  /**
3248
3945
  * <p>Key-value pair tags to be applied to EC2 resources that are launched in the compute environment. For Batch,
3249
- * these take the form of "String1": "String2", where String1 is the tag key and String2 is the tag value−for
3250
- * example, <code>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</code>. This is helpful for recognizing your Batch
3251
- * instances in the Amazon EC2 console. These tags aren't seen when using the Batch <code>ListTagsForResource</code> API
3252
- * operation.</p>
3946
+ * these take the form of <code>"String1": "String2"</code>, where <code>String1</code> is the tag key and
3947
+ * <code>String2</code> is the tag value-for example, <code>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</code>. This is
3948
+ * helpful for recognizing your Batch instances in the Amazon EC2 console. These tags aren't seen when using the Batch
3949
+ * <code>ListTagsForResource</code> API operation.</p>
3253
3950
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3254
3951
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3255
3952
  * <note>
3256
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3257
- * specified.</p>
3953
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3258
3954
  * </note>
3259
3955
  */
3260
3956
  tags?: Record<string, string>;
@@ -3263,27 +3959,25 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3263
3959
  * jobs to your compute environment, you should consider creating a cluster placement group and associate it with your
3264
3960
  * compute resources. This keeps your multi-node parallel job on a logical grouping of instances within a single
3265
3961
  * Availability Zone with high network flow potential. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/placement-groups.html">Placement groups</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for
3266
- * Linux Instances</i>.</p>
3962
+ * Linux Instances</i>.</p>
3267
3963
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the placement group requires an infrastructure update of the
3268
3964
  * compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3269
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3965
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3270
3966
  * <note>
3271
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3272
- * specified.</p>
3967
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3273
3968
  * </note>
3274
3969
  */
3275
3970
  placementGroup?: string;
3276
3971
  /**
3277
3972
  * <p>The maximum percentage that a Spot Instance price can be when compared with the On-Demand price for that
3278
- * instance type before instances are launched. For example, if your maximum percentage is 20%, then the Spot price must
3279
- * be less than 20% of the current On-Demand price for that Amazon EC2 instance. You always pay the lowest (market) price and
3973
+ * instance type before instances are launched. For example, if your maximum percentage is 20%, the Spot price must be
3974
+ * less than 20% of the current On-Demand price for that Amazon EC2 instance. You always pay the lowest (market) price and
3280
3975
  * never more than your maximum percentage.</p>
3281
3976
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the bid percentage requires an infrastructure update of the
3282
3977
  * compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3283
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3978
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3284
3979
  * <note>
3285
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3286
- * specified.</p>
3980
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3287
3981
  * </note>
3288
3982
  */
3289
3983
  bidPercentage?: number;
@@ -3291,16 +3985,15 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3291
3985
  * <p>The updated launch template to use for your compute resources. You must specify either the launch template ID or
3292
3986
  * launch template name in the request, but not both. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/launch-templates.html">Launch template support</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.
3293
3987
  * To remove the custom launch template and use the default launch template, set <code>launchTemplateId</code> or
3294
- * <code>launchTemplateName</code> member of the launch template specification to an empty string. Removing the launch
3988
+ * <code>launchTemplateName</code> member of the launch template specification to an empty string. Removing the launch
3295
3989
  * template from a compute environment will not remove the AMI specified in the launch template. In order to update the
3296
3990
  * AMI specified in a launch template, the <code>updateToLatestImageVersion</code> parameter must be set to
3297
- * <code>true</code>.</p>
3991
+ * <code>true</code>.</p>
3298
3992
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the launch template requires an infrastructure update of the
3299
3993
  * compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3300
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3994
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3301
3995
  * <note>
3302
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3303
- * specified.</p>
3996
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3304
3997
  * </note>
3305
3998
  */
3306
3999
  launchTemplate?: LaunchTemplateSpecification;
@@ -3312,36 +4005,34 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3312
4005
  * and any custom AMI ID specified in <code>imageIdOverride</code>, set this value to an empty string.</p>
3313
4006
  * <p>One or two values can be provided.</p>
3314
4007
  * <note>
3315
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3316
- * specified.</p>
4008
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3317
4009
  * </note>
3318
4010
  */
3319
4011
  ec2Configuration?: Ec2Configuration[];
3320
4012
  /**
3321
4013
  * <p>Specifies whether the AMI ID is updated to the latest one that's supported by Batch when the compute
3322
4014
  * environment has an infrastructure update. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p>
3323
- *
3324
4015
  * <note>
3325
- * <p>If an AMI ID is specified in the <code>imageId</code> or <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameters or by the
3326
- * launch template specified in the <code>launchTemplate</code> parameter, this parameter is ignored. For more
3327
- * information on updating AMI IDs during an infrastructure update, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html#updating-compute-environments-ami">Updating the AMI ID</a> in
4016
+ * <p>An AMI ID can either be specified in the <code>imageId</code> or <code>imageIdOverride</code> parameters or be
4017
+ * determined by the launch template that's specified in the <code>launchTemplate</code> parameter. If an AMI ID is
4018
+ * specified any of these ways, this parameter is ignored. For more information about to update AMI IDs during an
4019
+ * infrastructure update, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html#updating-compute-environments-ami">Updating the AMI ID</a> in
3328
4020
  * the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3329
4021
  * </note>
3330
- *
3331
4022
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3332
4023
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3333
4024
  */
3334
4025
  updateToLatestImageVersion?: boolean;
3335
4026
  /**
3336
4027
  * <p>The type of compute environment: <code>EC2</code>, <code>SPOT</code>, <code>FARGATE</code>, or
3337
- * <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
4028
+ * <code>FARGATE_SPOT</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute environments</a> in the
3338
4029
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3339
4030
  * <p> If you choose <code>SPOT</code>, you must also specify an Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet role with the
3340
- * <code>spotIamFleetRole</code> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the
4031
+ * <code>spotIamFleetRole</code> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the
3341
4032
  * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3342
4033
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the type of a compute environment requires an infrastructure
3343
4034
  * update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the
3344
- * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
4035
+ * <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3345
4036
  */
3346
4037
  type?: CRType | string;
3347
4038
  /**
@@ -3351,8 +4042,7 @@ export interface ComputeResourceUpdate {
3351
4042
  * <p>When updating a compute environment, changing the AMI ID requires an infrastructure update of the compute
3352
4043
  * environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</p>
3353
4044
  * <note>
3354
- * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources, and shouldn't be
3355
- * specified.</p>
4045
+ * <p>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't specify it.</p>
3356
4046
  * </note>
3357
4047
  * <note>
3358
4048
  * <p>The AMI that you choose for a compute environment must match the architecture of the instance types that
@@ -3386,10 +4076,10 @@ export interface UpdateComputeEnvironmentRequest {
3386
4076
  */
3387
4077
  state?: CEState | string;
3388
4078
  /**
3389
- * <p>The maximum number of vCPUs expected to be used for an unmanaged compute environment. Do not specify this
4079
+ * <p>The maximum number of vCPUs expected to be used for an unmanaged compute environment. Don't specify this
3390
4080
  * parameter for a managed compute environment. This parameter is only used for fair share scheduling to reserve vCPU
3391
- * capacity for new share identifiers. If this parameter is not provided for a fair share job queue, no vCPU capacity
3392
- * will be reserved.</p>
4081
+ * capacity for new share identifiers. If this parameter isn't provided for a fair share job queue, no vCPU capacity
4082
+ * is reserved.</p>
3393
4083
  */
3394
4084
  unmanagedvCpus?: number;
3395
4085
  /**
@@ -3428,7 +4118,7 @@ export interface UpdateComputeEnvironmentRequest {
3428
4118
  }
3429
4119
  export interface UpdateComputeEnvironmentResponse {
3430
4120
  /**
3431
- * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain uppercase and
4121
+ * <p>The name of the compute environment. It can be up to 128 characters long. It can contain uppercase and
3432
4122
  * lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</p>
3433
4123
  */
3434
4124
  computeEnvironmentName?: string;
@@ -3457,7 +4147,7 @@ export interface UpdateJobQueueRequest {
3457
4147
  * <code>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i>
3458
4148
  * </code>.
3459
4149
  * For example,
3460
- * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:012345678910:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
4150
+ * <code>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</code>.</p>
3461
4151
  */
3462
4152
  schedulingPolicyArn?: string;
3463
4153
  /**
@@ -3551,6 +4241,10 @@ export declare const LaunchTemplateSpecificationFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: Launch
3551
4241
  * @internal
3552
4242
  */
3553
4243
  export declare const ComputeResourceFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: ComputeResource) => any;
4244
+ /**
4245
+ * @internal
4246
+ */
4247
+ export declare const EksConfigurationFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksConfiguration) => any;
3554
4248
  /**
3555
4249
  * @internal
3556
4250
  */
@@ -3703,6 +4397,50 @@ export declare const VolumeFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: Volume) => any;
3703
4397
  * @internal
3704
4398
  */
3705
4399
  export declare const ContainerPropertiesFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: ContainerProperties) => any;
4400
+ /**
4401
+ * @internal
4402
+ */
4403
+ export declare const EksContainerEnvironmentVariableFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerEnvironmentVariable) => any;
4404
+ /**
4405
+ * @internal
4406
+ */
4407
+ export declare const EksContainerResourceRequirementsFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerResourceRequirements) => any;
4408
+ /**
4409
+ * @internal
4410
+ */
4411
+ export declare const EksContainerSecurityContextFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerSecurityContext) => any;
4412
+ /**
4413
+ * @internal
4414
+ */
4415
+ export declare const EksContainerVolumeMountFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerVolumeMount) => any;
4416
+ /**
4417
+ * @internal
4418
+ */
4419
+ export declare const EksContainerFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainer) => any;
4420
+ /**
4421
+ * @internal
4422
+ */
4423
+ export declare const EksEmptyDirFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksEmptyDir) => any;
4424
+ /**
4425
+ * @internal
4426
+ */
4427
+ export declare const EksHostPathFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksHostPath) => any;
4428
+ /**
4429
+ * @internal
4430
+ */
4431
+ export declare const EksSecretFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksSecret) => any;
4432
+ /**
4433
+ * @internal
4434
+ */
4435
+ export declare const EksVolumeFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksVolume) => any;
4436
+ /**
4437
+ * @internal
4438
+ */
4439
+ export declare const EksPodPropertiesFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksPodProperties) => any;
4440
+ /**
4441
+ * @internal
4442
+ */
4443
+ export declare const EksPropertiesFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksProperties) => any;
3706
4444
  /**
3707
4445
  * @internal
3708
4446
  */
@@ -3755,6 +4493,26 @@ export declare const ContainerDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: ContainerDetail) =
3755
4493
  * @internal
3756
4494
  */
3757
4495
  export declare const JobDependencyFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: JobDependency) => any;
4496
+ /**
4497
+ * @internal
4498
+ */
4499
+ export declare const EksAttemptContainerDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksAttemptContainerDetail) => any;
4500
+ /**
4501
+ * @internal
4502
+ */
4503
+ export declare const EksAttemptDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksAttemptDetail) => any;
4504
+ /**
4505
+ * @internal
4506
+ */
4507
+ export declare const EksContainerDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerDetail) => any;
4508
+ /**
4509
+ * @internal
4510
+ */
4511
+ export declare const EksPodPropertiesDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksPodPropertiesDetail) => any;
4512
+ /**
4513
+ * @internal
4514
+ */
4515
+ export declare const EksPropertiesDetailFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksPropertiesDetail) => any;
3758
4516
  /**
3759
4517
  * @internal
3760
4518
  */
@@ -3835,6 +4593,18 @@ export declare const RegisterJobDefinitionResponseFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: Regi
3835
4593
  * @internal
3836
4594
  */
3837
4595
  export declare const ContainerOverridesFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: ContainerOverrides) => any;
4596
+ /**
4597
+ * @internal
4598
+ */
4599
+ export declare const EksContainerOverrideFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksContainerOverride) => any;
4600
+ /**
4601
+ * @internal
4602
+ */
4603
+ export declare const EksPodPropertiesOverrideFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksPodPropertiesOverride) => any;
4604
+ /**
4605
+ * @internal
4606
+ */
4607
+ export declare const EksPropertiesOverrideFilterSensitiveLog: (obj: EksPropertiesOverride) => any;
3838
4608
  /**
3839
4609
  * @internal
3840
4610
  */