aws-sdk 2.1347.0 → 2.1349.0

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
@@ -188,6 +188,9 @@
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  },
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  "TokenDomains": {
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  "shape": "S4k"
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+ },
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+ "AssociationConfig": {
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+ "shape": "S4m"
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -195,7 +198,7 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "Summary": {
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- "shape": "S4n"
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+ "shape": "S4s"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -370,10 +373,10 @@
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  },
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  "LabelNamespace": {},
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  "AvailableLabels": {
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- "shape": "S56"
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+ "shape": "S5b"
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  },
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  "ConsumedLabels": {
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- "shape": "S56"
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+ "shape": "S5b"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -467,7 +470,7 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "LoggingConfiguration": {
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- "shape": "S5j"
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+ "shape": "S5o"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -603,10 +606,10 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "ManagedKeysIPV4": {
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- "shape": "S6c"
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+ "shape": "S6h"
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  },
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  "ManagedKeysIPV6": {
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- "shape": "S6c"
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+ "shape": "S6h"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -685,10 +688,10 @@
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  "shape": "S4c"
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  },
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  "AvailableLabels": {
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- "shape": "S56"
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+ "shape": "S5b"
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  },
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  "ConsumedLabels": {
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- "shape": "S56"
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+ "shape": "S5b"
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -711,7 +714,7 @@
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  "RuleMetricName": {},
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  "Scope": {},
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  "TimeWindow": {
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- "shape": "S6k"
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+ "shape": "S6p"
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  },
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  "MaxItems": {
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  "type": "long"
@@ -739,7 +742,7 @@
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  "Method": {},
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  "HTTPVersion": {},
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  "Headers": {
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- "shape": "S6v"
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+ "shape": "S70"
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -752,7 +755,7 @@
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  "Action": {},
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  "RuleNameWithinRuleGroup": {},
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  "RequestHeadersInserted": {
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- "shape": "S6v"
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+ "shape": "S70"
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  },
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  "ResponseCodeSent": {
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  "type": "integer"
@@ -792,7 +795,7 @@
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  "type": "long"
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  },
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  "TimeWindow": {
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- "shape": "S6k"
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+ "shape": "S6p"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -815,7 +818,7 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "WebACL": {
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- "shape": "S79"
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+ "shape": "S7e"
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  },
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  "LockToken": {},
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  "ApplicationIntegrationURL": {}
@@ -836,7 +839,7 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "WebACL": {
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- "shape": "S79"
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+ "shape": "S7e"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -961,7 +964,7 @@
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  "LoggingConfigurations": {
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {
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- "shape": "S5j"
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+ "shape": "S5o"
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  }
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  },
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  "NextMarker": {}
@@ -1162,7 +1165,7 @@
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  "WebACLs": {
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {
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- "shape": "S4n"
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+ "shape": "S4s"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -1176,7 +1179,7 @@
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  ],
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  "members": {
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  "LoggingConfiguration": {
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- "shape": "S5j"
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+ "shape": "S5o"
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -1184,7 +1187,7 @@
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "LoggingConfiguration": {
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- "shape": "S5j"
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+ "shape": "S5o"
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  }
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  }
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  }
@@ -1442,6 +1445,9 @@
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  },
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  "TokenDomains": {
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  "shape": "S4k"
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+ },
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+ "AssociationConfig": {
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+ "shape": "S4m"
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -2344,7 +2350,25 @@
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {}
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  },
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- "S4n": {
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+ "S4m": {
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+ "type": "structure",
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+ "members": {
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+ "RequestBody": {
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+ "type": "map",
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+ "key": {},
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+ "value": {
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+ "type": "structure",
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+ "required": [
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+ "DefaultSizeInspectionLimit"
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+ ],
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+ "members": {
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+ "DefaultSizeInspectionLimit": {}
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+ }
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+ }
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+ }
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "S4s": {
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "Name": {},
@@ -2354,7 +2378,7 @@
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  "ARN": {}
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  }
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  },
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- "S56": {
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+ "S5b": {
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {
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  "type": "structure",
@@ -2363,7 +2387,7 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S5j": {
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+ "S5o": {
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  "type": "structure",
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  "required": [
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  "ResourceArn",
@@ -2437,7 +2461,7 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S6c": {
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+ "S6h": {
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  "type": "structure",
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  "members": {
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  "IPAddressVersion": {},
@@ -2446,7 +2470,7 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S6k": {
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+ "S6p": {
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  "type": "structure",
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  "required": [
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  "StartTime",
@@ -2461,7 +2485,7 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S6v": {
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+ "S70": {
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {
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  "type": "structure",
@@ -2471,7 +2495,7 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S79": {
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+ "S7e": {
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  "type": "structure",
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  "required": [
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  "Name",
@@ -2498,10 +2522,10 @@
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  "type": "long"
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  },
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  "PreProcessFirewallManagerRuleGroups": {
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- "shape": "S7a"
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+ "shape": "S7f"
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  },
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  "PostProcessFirewallManagerRuleGroups": {
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- "shape": "S7a"
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+ "shape": "S7f"
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  },
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  "ManagedByFirewallManager": {
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  "type": "boolean"
@@ -2518,10 +2542,13 @@
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  },
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  "TokenDomains": {
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  "shape": "S4k"
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+ },
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+ "AssociationConfig": {
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+ "shape": "S4m"
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  }
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  }
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  },
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- "S7a": {
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+ "S7f": {
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  "type": "list",
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  "member": {
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  "type": "structure",
package/clients/ec2.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -20550,7 +20550,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
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  }
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  export interface GetGroupsForCapacityReservationRequest {
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  /**
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- * The ID of the Capacity Reservation.
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+ * The ID of the Capacity Reservation. If you specify a Capacity Reservation that is shared with you, the operation returns only Capacity Reservation groups that you own.
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  */
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  CapacityReservationId: CapacityReservationId;
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  /**
@@ -22849,7 +22849,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
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  */
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  ElasticGpuAssociations?: ElasticGpuAssociationList;
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  /**
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- * The elastic inference accelerator associated with the instance.
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+ * The elastic inference accelerator associated with the instance.
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  */
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  ElasticInferenceAcceleratorAssociations?: ElasticInferenceAcceleratorAssociationList;
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  /**
@@ -32645,7 +32645,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
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  */
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  ElasticGpuSpecification?: ElasticGpuSpecifications;
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  /**
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- * An elastic inference accelerator to associate with the instance. Elastic inference accelerators are a resource you can attach to your Amazon EC2 instances to accelerate your Deep Learning (DL) inference workloads. You cannot specify accelerators from different generations in the same request.
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+ * An elastic inference accelerator to associate with the instance. Elastic inference accelerators are a resource you can attach to your Amazon EC2 instances to accelerate your Deep Learning (DL) inference workloads. You cannot specify accelerators from different generations in the same request. Starting April 15, 2023, Amazon Web Services will not onboard new customers to Amazon Elastic Inference (EI), and will help current customers migrate their workloads to options that offer better price and performance. After April 15, 2023, new customers will not be able to launch instances with Amazon EI accelerators in Amazon SageMaker, Amazon ECS, or Amazon EC2. However, customers who have used Amazon EI at least once during the past 30-day period are considered current customers and will be able to continue using the service.
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  */
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  ElasticInferenceAccelerators?: ElasticInferenceAccelerators;
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  /**
package/clients/glue.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -1737,7 +1737,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  export type AuditColumnNamesList = ColumnNameString[];
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  export interface AuditContext {
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  /**
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- * The context for the audit..
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+ * A string containing the additional audit context information.
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  */
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  AdditionalAuditContext?: AuditContextString;
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  /**
@@ -2982,7 +2982,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  */
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  DateColumnStatisticsData?: DateColumnStatisticsData;
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  /**
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- * Decimal column statistics data.
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+ * Decimal column statistics data. UnscaledValues within are Base64-encoded binary objects storing big-endian, two's complement representations of the decimal's unscaled value.
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  */
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  DecimalColumnStatisticsData?: DecimalColumnStatisticsData;
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  /**
@@ -4169,11 +4169,11 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  */
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  Command: SessionCommand;
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  /**
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- * The number of seconds before request times out.
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+ * The number of minutes before session times out. Default for Spark ETL jobs is 48 hours (2880 minutes), the maximum session lifetime for this job type. Consult the documentation for other job types.
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  */
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  Timeout?: Timeout;
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  /**
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- * The number of seconds when idle before request times out.
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+ * The number of minutes when idle before session times out. Default for Spark ETL jobs is value of Timeout. Consult the documentation for other job types.
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  */
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  IdleTimeout?: Timeout;
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  /**
@@ -4793,6 +4793,10 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  * The ID of the Data Catalog in which the database resides.
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  */
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  CatalogId?: CatalogIdString;
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+ /**
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+ * A FederatedDatabase structure that references an entity outside the Glue Data Catalog.
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+ */
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+ FederatedDatabase?: FederatedDatabase;
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  }
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  export interface DatabaseIdentifier {
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  /**
@@ -4829,6 +4833,10 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  * A DatabaseIdentifier structure that describes a target database for resource linking.
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  */
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  TargetDatabase?: DatabaseIdentifier;
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+ /**
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+ * A FederatedDatabase structure that references an entity outside the Glue Data Catalog.
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+ */
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+ FederatedDatabase?: FederatedDatabase;
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  }
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  export type DatabaseList = Database[];
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  export type DatabaseName = string;
@@ -5728,6 +5736,31 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  OutputS3Path?: UriString;
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  }
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  export type ExtendedString = string;
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+ export interface FederatedDatabase {
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+ /**
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+ * A unique identifier for the federated database.
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+ */
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+ Identifier?: FederationIdentifier;
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+ /**
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+ * The name of the connection to the external metastore.
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+ */
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+ ConnectionName?: NameString;
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+ }
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+ export interface FederatedTable {
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+ /**
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+ * A unique identifier for the federated table.
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+ */
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+ Identifier?: FederationIdentifier;
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+ /**
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+ * A unique identifier for the federated database.
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+ */
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+ DatabaseIdentifier?: FederationIdentifier;
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+ /**
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+ * The name of the connection to the external metastore.
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+ */
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+ ConnectionName?: NameString;
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+ }
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+ export type FederationIdentifier = string;
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  export type FieldName = "CRAWL_ID"|"STATE"|"START_TIME"|"END_TIME"|"DPU_HOUR"|string;
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  export type FieldType = string;
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  export interface FillMissingValues {
@@ -6018,7 +6051,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  }
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  export interface GetColumnStatisticsForTableResponse {
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  /**
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- * List of ColumnStatistics that failed to be retrieved.
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+ * List of ColumnStatistics.
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  */
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  ColumnStatisticsList?: ColumnStatisticsList;
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  /**
@@ -6418,7 +6451,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  */
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  MaxResults?: CatalogGetterPageSize;
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  /**
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- * Allows you to specify that you want to list the databases shared with your account. The allowable values are FOREIGN or ALL. If set to FOREIGN, will list the databases shared with your account. If set to ALL, will list the databases shared with your account, as well as the databases in yor local account.
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+ * Allows you to specify that you want to list the databases shared with your account. The allowable values are FEDERATED, FOREIGN or ALL. If set to FEDERATED, will list the federated databases (referencing an external entity) shared with your account. If set to FOREIGN, will list the databases shared with your account. If set to ALL, will list the databases shared with your account, as well as the databases in yor local account.
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  */
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  ResourceShareType?: ResourceShareType;
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  }
@@ -8018,7 +8051,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  */
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  Timeout?: Timeout;
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  /**
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- * For Glue version 1.0 or earlier jobs, using the standard worker type, the number of Glue data processing units (DPUs) that can be allocated when this job runs. A DPU is a relative measure of processing power that consists of 4 vCPUs of compute capacity and 16 GB of memory. For more information, see the Glue pricing page. Do not set Max Capacity if using WorkerType and NumberOfWorkers. The value that can be allocated for MaxCapacity depends on whether you are running a Python shell job, an Apache Spark ETL job, or an Apache Spark streaming ETL job: When you specify a Python shell job (JobCommand.Name="pythonshell"), you can allocate either 0.0625 or 1 DPU. The default is 0.0625 DPU. When you specify an Apache Spark ETL job (JobCommand.Name="glueetl") or Apache Spark streaming ETL job (JobCommand.Name="gluestreaming"), you can allocate a minimum of 2 DPUs. The default is 10 DPUs. This job type cannot have a fractional DPU allocation. For Glue version 2.0 jobs, you cannot instead specify a Maximum capacity. Instead, you should specify a Worker type and the Number of workers.
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+ * For Glue version 1.0 or earlier jobs, using the standard worker type, the number of Glue data processing units (DPUs) that can be allocated when this job runs. A DPU is a relative measure of processing power that consists of 4 vCPUs of compute capacity and 16 GB of memory. For more information, see the Glue pricing page. Do not set Max Capacity if using WorkerType and NumberOfWorkers. The value that can be allocated for MaxCapacity depends on whether you are running a Python shell job, an Apache Spark ETL job, or an Apache Spark streaming ETL job: When you specify a Python shell job (JobCommand.Name="pythonshell"), you can allocate either 0.0625 or 1 DPU. The default is 0.0625 DPU. When you specify an Apache Spark ETL job (JobCommand.Name="glueetl") or Apache Spark streaming ETL job (JobCommand.Name="gluestreaming"), you can allocate from 2 to 100 DPUs. The default is 10 DPUs. This job type cannot have a fractional DPU allocation. For Glue version 2.0 jobs, you cannot instead specify a Maximum capacity. Instead, you should specify a Worker type and the Number of workers.
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  */
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  MaxCapacity?: NullableDouble;
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  /**
@@ -10134,7 +10167,7 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  */
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  JobBookmarkEntry?: JobBookmarkEntry;
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  }
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- export type ResourceShareType = "FOREIGN"|"ALL"|string;
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+ export type ResourceShareType = "FOREIGN"|"ALL"|"FEDERATED"|string;
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  export type ResourceType = "JAR"|"FILE"|"ARCHIVE"|string;
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  export interface ResourceUri {
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  /**
@@ -11822,6 +11855,10 @@ declare namespace Glue {
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  * The ID of the table version.
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  */
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  VersionId?: VersionString;
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+ /**
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+ * A FederatedTable structure that references an entity outside the Glue Data Catalog.
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+ */
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+ FederatedTable?: FederatedTable;
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  }
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  export interface TableError {
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  /**
@@ -12,11 +12,11 @@ declare class InternetMonitor extends Service {
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  constructor(options?: InternetMonitor.Types.ClientConfiguration)
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  config: Config & InternetMonitor.Types.ClientConfiguration;
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  /**
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- * Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and WorkSpaces directories. After you create a monitor, you can view the internet performance for your application, scoped to a location, as well as any health events that are impairing traffic. Internet Monitor can also diagnose whether the impairment is on the Amazon Web Services network or is an issue with an internet service provider (ISP).
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+ * Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and WorkSpaces directories. Internet Monitor then publishes internet measurements from Amazon Web Services that are specific to the city-networks, that is, the locations and ASNs (typically internet service providers or ISPs), where clients access your application. For more information, see Using Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide. When you create a monitor, you set a maximum limit for the number of city-networks where client traffic is monitored. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. You can change the maximum at any time by updating your monitor. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
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  */
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  createMonitor(params: InternetMonitor.Types.CreateMonitorInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: InternetMonitor.Types.CreateMonitorOutput) => void): Request<InternetMonitor.Types.CreateMonitorOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and WorkSpaces directories. After you create a monitor, you can view the internet performance for your application, scoped to a location, as well as any health events that are impairing traffic. Internet Monitor can also diagnose whether the impairment is on the Amazon Web Services network or is an issue with an internet service provider (ISP).
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+ * Creates a monitor in Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor. A monitor is built based on information from the application resources that you add: Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs), Amazon CloudFront distributions, and WorkSpaces directories. Internet Monitor then publishes internet measurements from Amazon Web Services that are specific to the city-networks, that is, the locations and ASNs (typically internet service providers or ISPs), where clients access your application. For more information, see Using Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide. When you create a monitor, you set a maximum limit for the number of city-networks where client traffic is monitored. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. You can change the maximum at any time by updating your monitor. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
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  */
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  createMonitor(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: InternetMonitor.Types.CreateMonitorOutput) => void): Request<InternetMonitor.Types.CreateMonitorOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -84,11 +84,11 @@ declare class InternetMonitor extends Service {
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  */
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  untagResource(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: InternetMonitor.Types.UntagResourceOutput) => void): Request<InternetMonitor.Types.UntagResourceOutput, AWSError>;
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86
  /**
87
- * Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. You can't change the name of a monitor.
87
+ * Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to change the maximum number of city-networks (locations and ASNs or internet service providers), to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. Note that you can't change the name of a monitor. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
88
88
  */
89
89
  updateMonitor(params: InternetMonitor.Types.UpdateMonitorInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: InternetMonitor.Types.UpdateMonitorOutput) => void): Request<InternetMonitor.Types.UpdateMonitorOutput, AWSError>;
90
90
  /**
91
- * Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. You can't change the name of a monitor.
91
+ * Updates a monitor. You can update a monitor to change the maximum number of city-networks (locations and ASNs or internet service providers), to add or remove resources, or to change the status of the monitor. Note that you can't change the name of a monitor. The city-network maximum that you choose is the limit, but you only pay for the number of city-networks that are actually monitored. For more information, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
92
92
  */
93
93
  updateMonitor(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: InternetMonitor.Types.UpdateMonitorOutput) => void): Request<InternetMonitor.Types.UpdateMonitorOutput, AWSError>;
94
94
  }
@@ -96,15 +96,15 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
96
96
  export type Arn = string;
97
97
  export interface AvailabilityMeasurement {
98
98
  /**
99
- * Experience scores, or health scores are calculated for different geographic and network provider combinations (that is, different granularities) and also summed into global scores. If you view performance or availability scores without filtering for any specific geography or service provider, Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor provides global health scores. The Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor chapter in the CloudWatch User Guide includes detailed information about how Internet Monitor calculates health scores, including performance and availability scores, and when it creates and resolves health events. For more information, see How Amazon Web Services calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
99
+ * Experience scores, or health scores are calculated for different geographic and network provider combinations (that is, different granularities) and also summed into global scores. If you view performance or availability scores without filtering for any specific geography or service provider, Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor provides global health scores. The Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor chapter in the CloudWatch User Guide includes detailed information about how Internet Monitor calculates health scores, including performance and availability scores, and when it creates and resolves health events. For more information, see How Amazon Web Services calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
100
100
  */
101
101
  ExperienceScore?: Double;
102
102
  /**
103
- * The percentage of impact caused by a health event for total traffic globally. For information about how Internet Monitor calculates impact, see Inside Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
103
+ * The percentage of impact caused by a health event for total traffic globally. For information about how Internet Monitor calculates impact, see Inside Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
104
104
  */
105
105
  PercentOfTotalTrafficImpacted?: Double;
106
106
  /**
107
- * The percentage of impact caused by a health event for client location traffic globally. For information about how Internet Monitor calculates impact, see Inside Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
107
+ * The percentage of impact caused by a health event for client location traffic globally. For information about how Internet Monitor calculates impact, see Inside Internet Monitor in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
108
108
  */
109
109
  PercentOfClientLocationImpacted?: Double;
110
110
  }
@@ -126,9 +126,13 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
126
126
  */
127
127
  Tags?: TagMap;
128
128
  /**
129
- * The maximum number of city-network combinations (that is, combinations of a city location and network, such as an ISP) to be monitored for your resources.
129
+ * The maximum number of city-networks to monitor for your resources. A city-network is the location (city) where clients access your application resources from and the network or ASN, such as an internet service provider (ISP), that clients access the resources through. This limit helps control billing costs. To learn more, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
130
130
  */
131
131
  MaxCityNetworksToMonitor: MaxCityNetworksToMonitor;
132
+ /**
133
+ * Publish internet measurements for Internet Monitor to another location, such as an Amazon S3 bucket. The measurements are also published to Amazon CloudWatch Logs.
134
+ */
135
+ InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery?: InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery;
132
136
  }
133
137
  export interface CreateMonitorOutput {
134
138
  /**
@@ -245,9 +249,13 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
245
249
  */
246
250
  Tags?: TagMap;
247
251
  /**
248
- * The maximum number of city-network combinations (that is, combinations of a city location and network, such as an ISP) to be monitored for your resources.
252
+ * The maximum number of city-networks to monitor for your resources. A city-network is the location (city) where clients access your application resources from and the network or ASN, such as an internet service provider (ISP), that clients access the resources through. This limit helps control billing costs. To learn more, see Choosing a city-network maximum value in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
249
253
  */
250
254
  MaxCityNetworksToMonitor: MaxCityNetworksToMonitor;
255
+ /**
256
+ * Publish internet measurements for Internet Monitor to another location, such as an Amazon S3 bucket. The measurements are also published to Amazon CloudWatch Logs.
257
+ */
258
+ InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery?: InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery;
251
259
  }
252
260
  export interface HealthEvent {
253
261
  /**
@@ -356,14 +364,20 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
356
364
  export type ImpactedLocationsList = ImpactedLocation[];
357
365
  export interface InternetHealth {
358
366
  /**
359
- * Availability in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing an availability drop. For example, an availability score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing an availability drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
367
+ * Availability in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing an availability drop. For example, an availability score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing an availability drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
360
368
  */
361
369
  Availability?: AvailabilityMeasurement;
362
370
  /**
363
- * Performance in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing a performance drop. For example, a performance score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing a performance drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
371
+ * Performance in Internet Monitor represents the estimated percentage of traffic that is not seeing a performance drop. For example, a performance score of 99% for an end user and service location pair is equivalent to 1% of the traffic experiencing a performance drop for that pair. For more information, see How Internet Monitor calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
364
372
  */
365
373
  Performance?: PerformanceMeasurement;
366
374
  }
375
+ export interface InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery {
376
+ /**
377
+ * The configuration information for publishing Internet Monitor internet measurements to Amazon S3. The configuration includes the bucket name and (optionally) prefix for the S3 bucket to store the measurements, and the delivery status. The delivery status is ENABLED or DISABLED, depending on whether you choose to deliver internet measurements to S3 logs.
378
+ */
379
+ S3Config?: S3Config;
380
+ }
367
381
  export interface ListHealthEventsInput {
368
382
  /**
369
383
  * The name of the monitor.
@@ -436,6 +450,7 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
436
450
  */
437
451
  Tags?: TagMap;
438
452
  }
453
+ export type LogDeliveryStatus = "ENABLED"|"DISABLED"|string;
439
454
  export type Long = number;
440
455
  export type MaxCityNetworksToMonitor = number;
441
456
  export type MaxResults = number;
@@ -488,19 +503,19 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
488
503
  export type NetworkList = Network[];
489
504
  export interface PerformanceMeasurement {
490
505
  /**
491
- * Experience scores, or health scores, are calculated for different geographic and network provider combinations (that is, different granularities) and also totaled into global scores. If you view performance or availability scores without filtering for any specific geography or service provider, Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor provides global health scores. The Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor chapter in the CloudWatch User Guide includes detailed information about how Internet Monitor calculates health scores, including performance and availability scores, and when it creates and resolves health events. For more information, see How Amazon Web Services calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
506
+ * Experience scores, or health scores, are calculated for different geographic and network provider combinations (that is, different granularities) and also totaled into global scores. If you view performance or availability scores without filtering for any specific geography or service provider, Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor provides global health scores. The Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor chapter in the CloudWatch User Guide includes detailed information about how Internet Monitor calculates health scores, including performance and availability scores, and when it creates and resolves health events. For more information, see How Amazon Web Services calculates performance and availability scores in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
492
507
  */
493
508
  ExperienceScore?: Double;
494
509
  /**
495
- * How much performance impact was caused by a health event for total traffic globally. For performance, this is the percentage of how much latency increased during the event compared to typical performance for your application traffic globally. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
510
+ * How much performance impact was caused by a health event for total traffic globally. For performance, this is the percentage of how much latency increased during the event compared to typical performance for your application traffic globally. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
496
511
  */
497
512
  PercentOfTotalTrafficImpacted?: Double;
498
513
  /**
499
- * How much performance impact was caused by a health event at a client location. For performance, this is the percentage of how much latency increased during the event compared to typical performance for traffic, from this client location to an Amazon Web Services location, using a specific client network. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
514
+ * How much performance impact was caused by a health event at a client location. For performance, this is the percentage of how much latency increased during the event compared to typical performance for traffic, from this client location to an Amazon Web Services location, using a specific client network. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
500
515
  */
501
516
  PercentOfClientLocationImpacted?: Double;
502
517
  /**
503
- * This is the percentage of how much round-trip time increased during the event compared to typical round-trip time for your application for traffic. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
518
+ * This is the percentage of how much round-trip time increased during the event compared to typical round-trip time for your application for traffic. For more information, see When Amazon Web Services creates and resolves health events in the Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor section of the CloudWatch User Guide.
504
519
  */
505
520
  RoundTripTime?: RoundTripTime;
506
521
  }
@@ -519,6 +534,21 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
519
534
  */
520
535
  P95?: Double;
521
536
  }
537
+ export interface S3Config {
538
+ /**
539
+ * The Amazon S3 bucket name.
540
+ */
541
+ BucketName?: S3ConfigBucketNameString;
542
+ /**
543
+ * The Amazon S3 bucket prefix.
544
+ */
545
+ BucketPrefix?: String;
546
+ /**
547
+ * The status of publishing Internet Monitor internet measurements to an Amazon S3 bucket.
548
+ */
549
+ LogDeliveryStatus?: LogDeliveryStatus;
550
+ }
551
+ export type S3ConfigBucketNameString = string;
522
552
  export type SetOfARNs = Arn[];
523
553
  export type String = string;
524
554
  export type SyntheticTimestamp_date_time = Date;
@@ -573,9 +603,13 @@ declare namespace InternetMonitor {
573
603
  */
574
604
  ClientToken?: String;
575
605
  /**
576
- * The maximum number of city-network combinations (that is, combinations of a city location and network, such as an ISP) to be monitored for your resources.
606
+ * The maximum number of city-networks to monitor for your resources. A city-network is the location (city) where clients access your application resources from and the network or ASN, such as an internet service provider, that clients access the resources through.
577
607
  */
578
608
  MaxCityNetworksToMonitor?: MaxCityNetworksToMonitor;
609
+ /**
610
+ * Publish internet measurements for Internet Monitor to another location, such as an Amazon S3 bucket. The measurements are also published to Amazon CloudWatch Logs.
611
+ */
612
+ InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery?: InternetMeasurementsLogDelivery;
579
613
  }
580
614
  export interface UpdateMonitorOutput {
581
615
  /**
@@ -1636,6 +1636,10 @@ declare namespace LakeFormation {
1636
1636
  * The identifier for the role that registers the resource.
1637
1637
  */
1638
1638
  RoleArn?: IAMRoleArn;
1639
+ /**
1640
+ * Whether or not the resource is a federated resource.
1641
+ */
1642
+ WithFederation?: NullableBoolean;
1639
1643
  }
1640
1644
  export interface RegisterResourceResponse {
1641
1645
  }
@@ -1707,6 +1711,10 @@ declare namespace LakeFormation {
1707
1711
  * The date and time the resource was last modified.
1708
1712
  */
1709
1713
  LastModified?: LastModifiedTimestamp;
1714
+ /**
1715
+ * Whether or not the resource is a federated resource.
1716
+ */
1717
+ WithFederation?: NullableBoolean;
1710
1718
  }
1711
1719
  export type ResourceInfoList = ResourceInfo[];
1712
1720
  export type ResourceShareList = RAMResourceShareArn[];
@@ -2021,6 +2029,10 @@ declare namespace LakeFormation {
2021
2029
  * The resource ARN.
2022
2030
  */
2023
2031
  ResourceArn: ResourceArnString;
2032
+ /**
2033
+ * Whether or not the resource is a federated resource.
2034
+ */
2035
+ WithFederation?: NullableBoolean;
2024
2036
  }
2025
2037
  export interface UpdateResourceResponse {
2026
2038
  }