aws-sdk 2.1652.0 → 2.1654.0

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.
@@ -20,11 +20,11 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  acceptDirectConnectGatewayAssociationProposal(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.AcceptDirectConnectGatewayAssociationProposalResult) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.AcceptDirectConnectGatewayAssociationProposalResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use AllocateHostedConnection instead. Creates a hosted connection on an interconnect. Allocates a VLAN number and a specified amount of bandwidth for use by a hosted connection on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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+ * Deprecated. Use AllocateHostedConnection instead. Creates a hosted connection on an interconnect. Allocates a VLAN number and a specified amount of bandwidth for use by a hosted connection on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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  */
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  allocateConnectionOnInterconnect(params: DirectConnect.Types.AllocateConnectionOnInterconnectRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connection) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connection, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use AllocateHostedConnection instead. Creates a hosted connection on an interconnect. Allocates a VLAN number and a specified amount of bandwidth for use by a hosted connection on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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+ * Deprecated. Use AllocateHostedConnection instead. Creates a hosted connection on an interconnect. Allocates a VLAN number and a specified amount of bandwidth for use by a hosted connection on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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  */
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  allocateConnectionOnInterconnect(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connection) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connection, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -180,19 +180,19 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  createInterconnect(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Interconnect) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Interconnect, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a link aggregation group (LAG) with the specified number of bundled physical dedicated connections between the customer network and a specific Direct Connect location. A LAG is a logical interface that uses the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) to aggregate multiple interfaces, enabling you to treat them as a single interface. All connections in a LAG must use the same bandwidth (either 1Gbps or 10Gbps) and must terminate at the same Direct Connect endpoint. You can have up to 10 dedicated connections per LAG. Regardless of this limit, if you request more connections for the LAG than Direct Connect can allocate on a single endpoint, no LAG is created. You can specify an existing physical dedicated connection or interconnect to include in the LAG (which counts towards the total number of connections). Doing so interrupts the current physical dedicated connection, and re-establishes them as a member of the LAG. The LAG will be created on the same Direct Connect endpoint to which the dedicated connection terminates. Any virtual interfaces associated with the dedicated connection are automatically disassociated and re-associated with the LAG. The connection ID does not change. If the Amazon Web Services account used to create a LAG is a registered Direct Connect Partner, the LAG is automatically enabled to host sub-connections. For a LAG owned by a partner, any associated virtual interfaces cannot be directly configured.
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+ * Creates a link aggregation group (LAG) with the specified number of bundled physical dedicated connections between the customer network and a specific Direct Connect location. A LAG is a logical interface that uses the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) to aggregate multiple interfaces, enabling you to treat them as a single interface. All connections in a LAG must use the same bandwidth (either 1Gbps, 10Gbps, 100Gbps, or 400Gbps) and must terminate at the same Direct Connect endpoint. You can have up to 10 dedicated connections per location. Regardless of this limit, if you request more connections for the LAG than Direct Connect can allocate on a single endpoint, no LAG is created.. You can specify an existing physical dedicated connection or interconnect to include in the LAG (which counts towards the total number of connections). Doing so interrupts the current physical dedicated connection, and re-establishes them as a member of the LAG. The LAG will be created on the same Direct Connect endpoint to which the dedicated connection terminates. Any virtual interfaces associated with the dedicated connection are automatically disassociated and re-associated with the LAG. The connection ID does not change. If the Amazon Web Services account used to create a LAG is a registered Direct Connect Partner, the LAG is automatically enabled to host sub-connections. For a LAG owned by a partner, any associated virtual interfaces cannot be directly configured.
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  */
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  createLag(params: DirectConnect.Types.CreateLagRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Lag) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Lag, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a link aggregation group (LAG) with the specified number of bundled physical dedicated connections between the customer network and a specific Direct Connect location. A LAG is a logical interface that uses the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) to aggregate multiple interfaces, enabling you to treat them as a single interface. All connections in a LAG must use the same bandwidth (either 1Gbps or 10Gbps) and must terminate at the same Direct Connect endpoint. You can have up to 10 dedicated connections per LAG. Regardless of this limit, if you request more connections for the LAG than Direct Connect can allocate on a single endpoint, no LAG is created. You can specify an existing physical dedicated connection or interconnect to include in the LAG (which counts towards the total number of connections). Doing so interrupts the current physical dedicated connection, and re-establishes them as a member of the LAG. The LAG will be created on the same Direct Connect endpoint to which the dedicated connection terminates. Any virtual interfaces associated with the dedicated connection are automatically disassociated and re-associated with the LAG. The connection ID does not change. If the Amazon Web Services account used to create a LAG is a registered Direct Connect Partner, the LAG is automatically enabled to host sub-connections. For a LAG owned by a partner, any associated virtual interfaces cannot be directly configured.
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+ * Creates a link aggregation group (LAG) with the specified number of bundled physical dedicated connections between the customer network and a specific Direct Connect location. A LAG is a logical interface that uses the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) to aggregate multiple interfaces, enabling you to treat them as a single interface. All connections in a LAG must use the same bandwidth (either 1Gbps, 10Gbps, 100Gbps, or 400Gbps) and must terminate at the same Direct Connect endpoint. You can have up to 10 dedicated connections per location. Regardless of this limit, if you request more connections for the LAG than Direct Connect can allocate on a single endpoint, no LAG is created.. You can specify an existing physical dedicated connection or interconnect to include in the LAG (which counts towards the total number of connections). Doing so interrupts the current physical dedicated connection, and re-establishes them as a member of the LAG. The LAG will be created on the same Direct Connect endpoint to which the dedicated connection terminates. Any virtual interfaces associated with the dedicated connection are automatically disassociated and re-associated with the LAG. The connection ID does not change. If the Amazon Web Services account used to create a LAG is a registered Direct Connect Partner, the LAG is automatically enabled to host sub-connections. For a LAG owned by a partner, any associated virtual interfaces cannot be directly configured.
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  */
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  createLag(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Lag) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Lag, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a private virtual interface. A virtual interface is the VLAN that transports Direct Connect traffic. A private virtual interface can be connected to either a Direct Connect gateway or a Virtual Private Gateway (VGW). Connecting the private virtual interface to a Direct Connect gateway enables the possibility for connecting to multiple VPCs, including VPCs in different Amazon Web Services Regions. Connecting the private virtual interface to a VGW only provides access to a single VPC within the same Region. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 9001 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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+ * Creates a private virtual interface. A virtual interface is the VLAN that transports Direct Connect traffic. A private virtual interface can be connected to either a Direct Connect gateway or a Virtual Private Gateway (VGW). Connecting the private virtual interface to a Direct Connect gateway enables the possibility for connecting to multiple VPCs, including VPCs in different Amazon Web Services Regions. Connecting the private virtual interface to a VGW only provides access to a single VPC within the same Region. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 8500 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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  */
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  createPrivateVirtualInterface(params: DirectConnect.Types.CreatePrivateVirtualInterfaceRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a private virtual interface. A virtual interface is the VLAN that transports Direct Connect traffic. A private virtual interface can be connected to either a Direct Connect gateway or a Virtual Private Gateway (VGW). Connecting the private virtual interface to a Direct Connect gateway enables the possibility for connecting to multiple VPCs, including VPCs in different Amazon Web Services Regions. Connecting the private virtual interface to a VGW only provides access to a single VPC within the same Region. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 9001 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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+ * Creates a private virtual interface. A virtual interface is the VLAN that transports Direct Connect traffic. A private virtual interface can be connected to either a Direct Connect gateway or a Virtual Private Gateway (VGW). Connecting the private virtual interface to a Direct Connect gateway enables the possibility for connecting to multiple VPCs, including VPCs in different Amazon Web Services Regions. Connecting the private virtual interface to a VGW only provides access to a single VPC within the same Region. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 8500 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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  */
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  createPrivateVirtualInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -276,11 +276,11 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  deleteVirtualInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DeleteVirtualInterfaceResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DeleteVirtualInterfaceResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for a connection. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that your APN partner or service provider uses when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for a connection. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that your APN partner or service provider uses when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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  */
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  describeConnectionLoa(params: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionLoaRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionLoaResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionLoaResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for a connection. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that your APN partner or service provider uses when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for a connection. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that your APN partner or service provider uses when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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  */
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  describeConnectionLoa(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionLoaResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionLoaResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -292,11 +292,11 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  describeConnections(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connections) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connections, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeHostedConnections instead. Lists the connections that have been provisioned on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeHostedConnections instead. Lists the connections that have been provisioned on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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  */
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  describeConnectionsOnInterconnect(params: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeConnectionsOnInterconnectRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connections) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connections, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeHostedConnections instead. Lists the connections that have been provisioned on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeHostedConnections instead. Lists the connections that have been provisioned on the specified interconnect. Intended for use by Direct Connect Partners only.
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  */
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  describeConnectionsOnInterconnect(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connections) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connections, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -344,11 +344,11 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  describeHostedConnections(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Connections) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Connections, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for the specified interconnect. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that is used when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for the specified interconnect. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that is used when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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  */
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  describeInterconnectLoa(params: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeInterconnectLoaRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeInterconnectLoaResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DescribeInterconnectLoaResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for the specified interconnect. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that is used when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeLoa instead. Gets the LOA-CFA for the specified interconnect. The Letter of Authorization - Connecting Facility Assignment (LOA-CFA) is a document that is used when establishing your cross connect to Amazon Web Services at the colocation facility. For more information, see Requesting Cross Connects at Direct Connect Locations in the Direct Connect User Guide.
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  */
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  describeInterconnectLoa(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeInterconnectLoaResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DescribeInterconnectLoaResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  describeTags(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.DescribeTagsResponse) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.DescribeTagsResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Lists the virtual private gateways owned by the Amazon Web Services account. You can create one or more Direct Connect private virtual interfaces linked to a virtual private gateway.
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+ * Deprecated. Use DescribeVpnGateways instead. See DescribeVPNGateways in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud API Reference. Lists the virtual private gateways owned by the Amazon Web Services account. You can create one or more Direct Connect private virtual interfaces linked to a virtual private gateway.
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  */
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  describeVirtualGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.VirtualGateways) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.VirtualGateways, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -496,11 +496,11 @@ declare class DirectConnect extends Service {
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  */
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  updateLag(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.Lag) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.Lag, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Updates the specified attributes of the specified virtual private interface. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 9001 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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+ * Updates the specified attributes of the specified virtual private interface. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 8500 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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  */
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  updateVirtualInterfaceAttributes(params: DirectConnect.Types.UpdateVirtualInterfaceAttributesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Updates the specified attributes of the specified virtual private interface. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 9001 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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+ * Updates the specified attributes of the specified virtual private interface. Setting the MTU of a virtual interface to 8500 (jumbo frames) can cause an update to the underlying physical connection if it wasn't updated to support jumbo frames. Updating the connection disrupts network connectivity for all virtual interfaces associated with the connection for up to 30 seconds. To check whether your connection supports jumbo frames, call DescribeConnections. To check whether your virtual interface supports jumbo frames, call DescribeVirtualInterfaces.
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  */
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  updateVirtualInterfaceAttributes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface) => void): Request<DirectConnect.Types.VirtualInterface, AWSError>;
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  }
@@ -525,6 +525,9 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  overrideAllowedPrefixesToDirectConnectGateway?: RouteFilterPrefixList;
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  }
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  export interface AcceptDirectConnectGatewayAssociationProposalResult {
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+ /**
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+ * Information about an association between a Direct Connect gateway and a virtual gateway or transit gateway.
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+ */
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  directConnectGatewayAssociation?: DirectConnectGatewayAssociation;
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  }
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  export type AddressFamily = "ipv4"|"ipv6"|string;
@@ -562,7 +565,7 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  */
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  ownerAccount: OwnerAccount;
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  /**
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- * The bandwidth of the connection. The possible values are 50Mbps, 100Mbps, 200Mbps, 300Mbps, 400Mbps, 500Mbps, 1Gbps, 2Gbps, 5Gbps, and 10Gbps. Note that only those Direct Connect Partners who have met specific requirements are allowed to create a 1Gbps, 2Gbps, 5Gbps or 10Gbps hosted connection.
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+ * The bandwidth of the connection. The possible values are 50Mbps, 100Mbps, 200Mbps, 300Mbps, 400Mbps, 500Mbps, 1Gbps, 2Gbps, 5Gbps, 10Gbps, and 25Gbps. Note that only those Direct Connect Partners who have met specific requirements are allowed to create a 1Gbps, 2Gbps, 5Gbps, 10Gbps, or 25Gbps hosted connection.
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  */
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  bandwidth: Bandwidth;
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  /**
@@ -621,6 +624,9 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  newTransitVirtualInterfaceAllocation: NewTransitVirtualInterfaceAllocation;
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  }
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  export interface AllocateTransitVirtualInterfaceResult {
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+ /**
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+ * Information about the transit virtual interface.
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+ */
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  virtualInterface?: VirtualInterface;
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  }
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  export type AmazonAddress = string;
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  */
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  interconnectName: InterconnectName;
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  /**
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- * The port bandwidth, in Gbps. The possible values are 1 and 10.
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+ * The port bandwidth, in Gbps. The possible values are 1, 10, and 100.
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  */
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  bandwidth: Bandwidth;
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  /**
@@ -1074,7 +1080,7 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  }
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  export interface CreateLagRequest {
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  /**
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- * The number of physical dedicated connections initially provisioned and bundled by the LAG. You can have a maximum of four connections when the port speed is 1G or 10G, or two when the port speed is 100G.
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+ * The number of physical dedicated connections initially provisioned and bundled by the LAG. You can have a maximum of four connections when the port speed is 1Gbps or 10Gbps, or two when the port speed is 100Gbps or 400Gbps.
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  */
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  numberOfConnections: Count;
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  /**
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  */
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  location: LocationCode;
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  /**
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- * The bandwidth of the individual physical dedicated connections bundled by the LAG. The possible values are 1Gbps and 10Gbps.
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+ * The bandwidth of the individual physical dedicated connections bundled by the LAG. The possible values are 1Gbps,10Gbps, 100Gbps, and 400Gbps.
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  */
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  connectionsBandwidth: Bandwidth;
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  /**
@@ -1141,6 +1147,9 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  newTransitVirtualInterface: NewTransitVirtualInterface;
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  }
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  export interface CreateTransitVirtualInterfaceResult {
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+ /**
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+ * Information about a virtual interface.
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+ */
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  virtualInterface?: VirtualInterface;
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  }
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  export type CustomerAddress = string;
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  export type JumboFrameCapable = boolean;
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  export interface Lag {
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  /**
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- * The individual bandwidth of the physical connections bundled by the LAG. The possible values are 1Gbps and 10Gbps.
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+ * The individual bandwidth of the physical connections bundled by the LAG. The possible values are 1Gbps, 10Gbps, 100Gbps, or 400 Gbps..
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  */
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  connectionsBandwidth?: Bandwidth;
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  /**
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- * The number of physical dedicated connections bundled by the LAG, up to a maximum of 10.
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+ * The number of physical dedicated connections initially provisioned and bundled by the LAG. You can have a maximum of four connections when the port speed is 1 Gbps or 10 Gbps, or two when the port speed is 100 Gbps or 400 Gbps.
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  */
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  numberOfConnections?: Count;
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  /**
@@ -2013,7 +2022,7 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  */
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  asn: ASN;
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  /**
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- * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 9001. The default value is 1500.
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+ * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 8500. The default value is 1500.
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  */
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  mtu?: MTU;
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  /**
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  */
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  asn: ASN;
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  /**
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- * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 9001. The default value is 1500.
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+ * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 8500. The default value is 1500.
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  */
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  mtu?: MTU;
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  /**
@@ -2415,6 +2424,9 @@ declare namespace DirectConnect {
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  removeAllowedPrefixesToDirectConnectGateway?: RouteFilterPrefixList;
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  }
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  export interface UpdateDirectConnectGatewayAssociationResult {
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+ /**
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+ * Information about an association between a Direct Connect gateway and a virtual private gateway or transit gateway.
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+ */
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  directConnectGatewayAssociation?: DirectConnectGatewayAssociation;
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  }
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  export interface UpdateDirectConnectGatewayRequest {
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  newDirectConnectGatewayName: DirectConnectGatewayName;
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  }
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  export interface UpdateDirectConnectGatewayResponse {
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+ /**
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+ * Informaiton about a Direct Connect gateway, which enables you to connect virtual interfaces and virtual private gateways or transit gateways.
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+ */
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  directConnectGateway?: DirectConnectGateway;
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  }
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  export interface UpdateLagRequest {
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  */
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  virtualInterfaceId: VirtualInterfaceId;
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  /**
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- * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 9001. The default value is 1500.
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+ * The maximum transmission unit (MTU), in bytes. The supported values are 1500 and 8500. The default value is 1500.
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  */
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  mtu?: MTU;
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  /**
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  */
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  connectionId?: ConnectionId;
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  /**
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- * The type of virtual interface. The possible values are private and public.
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+ * The type of virtual interface. The possible values are private, public and transit.
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  */
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  virtualInterfaceType?: VirtualInterfaceType;
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  /**
package/clients/ec2.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -7377,7 +7377,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
7377
7377
  */
7378
7378
  StatusMessage?: String;
7379
7379
  /**
7380
- * The state of the address pool.
7380
+ * The state of the address range. advertised: The address range is being advertised to the internet by Amazon Web Services. deprovisioned: The address range is deprovisioned. failed-deprovision: The request to deprovision the address range was unsuccessful. Ensure that all EIPs from the range have been deallocated and try again. failed-provision: The request to provision the address range was unsuccessful. pending-deprovision: You’ve submitted a request to deprovision an address range and it's pending. pending-provision: You’ve submitted a request to provision an address range and it's pending. provisioned: The address range is provisioned and can be advertised. The range is not currently advertised. provisioned-not-publicly-advertisable: The address range is provisioned and cannot be advertised.
7381
7381
  */
7382
7382
  State?: ByoipCidrState;
7383
7383
  /**
@@ -9546,7 +9546,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9546
9546
  */
9547
9547
  SecurityGroupIds?: SecurityGroupIdStringListRequest;
9548
9548
  /**
9549
- * Indicates whether your client's IP address is preserved as the source. The value is true or false. If true, your client's IP address is used when you connect to a resource. If false, the elastic network interface IP address is used when you connect to a resource. Default: true
9549
+ * Indicates whether the client IP address is preserved as the source. The following are the possible values. true - Use the client IP address as the source. false - Use the network interface IP address as the source. Default: false
9550
9550
  */
9551
9551
  PreserveClientIp?: Boolean;
9552
9552
  /**
@@ -11656,7 +11656,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11656
11656
  */
11657
11657
  KmsKeyId?: KmsKeyId;
11658
11658
  /**
11659
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost.
11659
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost on which to create the volume. If you intend to use a volume with an instance running on an outpost, then you must create the volume on the same outpost as the instance. You can't use a volume created in an Amazon Web Services Region with an instance on an Amazon Web Services outpost, or the other way around.
11660
11660
  */
11661
11661
  OutpostArn?: String;
11662
11662
  /**
@@ -18019,7 +18019,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18019
18019
  */
18020
18020
  Filters?: FilterList;
18021
18021
  /**
18022
- * The volume IDs.
18022
+ * The volume IDs. If not specified, then all volumes are included in the response.
18023
18023
  */
18024
18024
  VolumeIds?: VolumeIdStringList;
18025
18025
  /**
@@ -23157,7 +23157,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
23157
23157
  export type HostReservationId = string;
23158
23158
  export type HostReservationIdSet = HostReservationId[];
23159
23159
  export type HostReservationSet = HostReservation[];
23160
- export type HostTenancy = "dedicated"|"host"|string;
23160
+ export type HostTenancy = "default"|"dedicated"|"host"|string;
23161
23161
  export type HostnameType = "ip-name"|"resource-name"|string;
23162
23162
  export type Hour = number;
23163
23163
  export type HttpTokensState = "optional"|"required"|string;
@@ -25096,7 +25096,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25096
25096
  */
25097
25097
  AllowedInstanceTypes?: AllowedInstanceTypeSet;
25098
25098
  /**
25099
- * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set DesiredCapacityType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25099
+ * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set TargetCapacityUnitType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25100
25100
  */
25101
25101
  MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice?: Integer;
25102
25102
  }
@@ -25194,7 +25194,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25194
25194
  */
25195
25195
  AllowedInstanceTypes?: AllowedInstanceTypeSet;
25196
25196
  /**
25197
- * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set DesiredCapacityType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25197
+ * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set TargetCapacityUnitType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25198
25198
  */
25199
25199
  MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice?: Integer;
25200
25200
  }
@@ -28622,7 +28622,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28622
28622
  */
28623
28623
  SriovNetSupport?: AttributeValue;
28624
28624
  /**
28625
- * Changes the instance's user data to the specified value. If you are using an Amazon Web Services SDK or command line tool, base64-encoding is performed for you, and you can load the text from a file. Otherwise, you must provide base64-encoded text.
28625
+ * Changes the instance's user data to the specified value. User data must be base64-encoded. Depending on the tool or SDK that you're using, the base64-encoding might be performed for you. For more information, see Work with instance user data.
28626
28626
  */
28627
28627
  UserData?: BlobAttributeValue;
28628
28628
  /**
@@ -34686,7 +34686,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34686
34686
  */
34687
34687
  SubnetId?: SubnetId;
34688
34688
  /**
34689
- * The user data script to make available to the instance. For more information, see Run commands on your Amazon EC2 instance at launch in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. If you are using a command line tool, base64-encoding is performed for you, and you can load the text from a file. Otherwise, you must provide base64-encoded text. User data is limited to 16 KB.
34689
+ * The user data to make available to the instance. User data must be base64-encoded. Depending on the tool or SDK that you're using, the base64-encoding might be performed for you. For more information, see Work with instance user data.
34690
34690
  */
34691
34691
  UserData?: RunInstancesUserData;
34692
34692
  /**
@@ -44,11 +44,11 @@ declare class Organizations extends Service {
44
44
  */
45
45
  closeAccount(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
46
46
  /**
47
- * Creates an Amazon Web Services account that is automatically a member of the organization whose credentials made the request. This is an asynchronous request that Amazon Web Services performs in the background. Because CreateAccount operates asynchronously, it can return a successful completion message even though account initialization might still be in progress. You might need to wait a few minutes before you can successfully access the account. To check the status of the request, do one of the following: Use the Id value of the CreateAccountStatus response element from this operation to provide as a parameter to the DescribeCreateAccountStatus operation. Check the CloudTrail log for the CreateAccountResult event. For information on using CloudTrail with Organizations, see Logging and monitoring in Organizations in the Organizations User Guide. The user who calls the API to create an account must have the organizations:CreateAccount permission. If you enabled all features in the organization, Organizations creates the required service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForOrganizations. For more information, see Organizations and service-linked roles in the Organizations User Guide. If the request includes tags, then the requester must have the organizations:TagResource permission. Organizations preconfigures the new member account with a role (named OrganizationAccountAccessRole by default) that grants users in the management account administrator permissions in the new member account. Principals in the management account can assume the role. Organizations clones the company name and address information for the new account from the organization's management account. This operation can be called only from the organization's management account. For more information about creating accounts, see Creating a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create an account in an organization using the Organizations console, API, or CLI commands, the information required for the account to operate as a standalone account, such as a payment method and signing the end user license agreement (EULA) is not automatically collected. If you must remove an account from your organization later, you can do so only after you provide the missing information. For more information, see Considerations before removing an account from an organization in the Organizations User Guide. If you get an exception that indicates that you exceeded your account limits for the organization, contact Amazon Web Services Support. If you get an exception that indicates that the operation failed because your organization is still initializing, wait one hour and then try again. If the error persists, contact Amazon Web Services Support. Using CreateAccount to create multiple temporary accounts isn't recommended. You can only close an account from the Billing and Cost Management console, and you must be signed in as the root user. For information on the requirements and process for closing an account, see Closing a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create a member account with this operation, you can choose whether to create the account with the IAM User and Role Access to Billing Information switch enabled. If you enable it, IAM users and roles that have appropriate permissions can view billing information for the account. If you disable it, only the account root user can access billing information. For information about how to disable this switch for an account, see Granting access to your billing information and tools.
47
+ * Creates an Amazon Web Services account that is automatically a member of the organization whose credentials made the request. This is an asynchronous request that Amazon Web Services performs in the background. Because CreateAccount operates asynchronously, it can return a successful completion message even though account initialization might still be in progress. You might need to wait a few minutes before you can successfully access the account. To check the status of the request, do one of the following: Use the Id value of the CreateAccountStatus response element from this operation to provide as a parameter to the DescribeCreateAccountStatus operation. Check the CloudTrail log for the CreateAccountResult event. For information on using CloudTrail with Organizations, see Logging and monitoring in Organizations in the Organizations User Guide. The user who calls the API to create an account must have the organizations:CreateAccount permission. If you enabled all features in the organization, Organizations creates the required service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForOrganizations. For more information, see Organizations and service-linked roles in the Organizations User Guide. If the request includes tags, then the requester must have the organizations:TagResource permission. Organizations preconfigures the new member account with a role (named OrganizationAccountAccessRole by default) that grants users in the management account administrator permissions in the new member account. Principals in the management account can assume the role. Organizations clones the company name and address information for the new account from the organization's management account. This operation can be called only from the organization's management account. For more information about creating accounts, see Creating a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create an account in an organization using the Organizations console, API, or CLI commands, the information required for the account to operate as a standalone account, such as a payment method is not automatically collected. If you must remove an account from your organization later, you can do so only after you provide the missing information. For more information, see Considerations before removing an account from an organization in the Organizations User Guide. If you get an exception that indicates that you exceeded your account limits for the organization, contact Amazon Web Services Support. If you get an exception that indicates that the operation failed because your organization is still initializing, wait one hour and then try again. If the error persists, contact Amazon Web Services Support. Using CreateAccount to create multiple temporary accounts isn't recommended. You can only close an account from the Billing and Cost Management console, and you must be signed in as the root user. For information on the requirements and process for closing an account, see Closing a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create a member account with this operation, you can choose whether to create the account with the IAM User and Role Access to Billing Information switch enabled. If you enable it, IAM users and roles that have appropriate permissions can view billing information for the account. If you disable it, only the account root user can access billing information. For information about how to disable this switch for an account, see Granting access to your billing information and tools.
48
48
  */
49
49
  createAccount(params: Organizations.Types.CreateAccountRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Organizations.Types.CreateAccountResponse) => void): Request<Organizations.Types.CreateAccountResponse, AWSError>;
50
50
  /**
51
- * Creates an Amazon Web Services account that is automatically a member of the organization whose credentials made the request. This is an asynchronous request that Amazon Web Services performs in the background. Because CreateAccount operates asynchronously, it can return a successful completion message even though account initialization might still be in progress. You might need to wait a few minutes before you can successfully access the account. To check the status of the request, do one of the following: Use the Id value of the CreateAccountStatus response element from this operation to provide as a parameter to the DescribeCreateAccountStatus operation. Check the CloudTrail log for the CreateAccountResult event. For information on using CloudTrail with Organizations, see Logging and monitoring in Organizations in the Organizations User Guide. The user who calls the API to create an account must have the organizations:CreateAccount permission. If you enabled all features in the organization, Organizations creates the required service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForOrganizations. For more information, see Organizations and service-linked roles in the Organizations User Guide. If the request includes tags, then the requester must have the organizations:TagResource permission. Organizations preconfigures the new member account with a role (named OrganizationAccountAccessRole by default) that grants users in the management account administrator permissions in the new member account. Principals in the management account can assume the role. Organizations clones the company name and address information for the new account from the organization's management account. This operation can be called only from the organization's management account. For more information about creating accounts, see Creating a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create an account in an organization using the Organizations console, API, or CLI commands, the information required for the account to operate as a standalone account, such as a payment method and signing the end user license agreement (EULA) is not automatically collected. If you must remove an account from your organization later, you can do so only after you provide the missing information. For more information, see Considerations before removing an account from an organization in the Organizations User Guide. If you get an exception that indicates that you exceeded your account limits for the organization, contact Amazon Web Services Support. If you get an exception that indicates that the operation failed because your organization is still initializing, wait one hour and then try again. If the error persists, contact Amazon Web Services Support. Using CreateAccount to create multiple temporary accounts isn't recommended. You can only close an account from the Billing and Cost Management console, and you must be signed in as the root user. For information on the requirements and process for closing an account, see Closing a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create a member account with this operation, you can choose whether to create the account with the IAM User and Role Access to Billing Information switch enabled. If you enable it, IAM users and roles that have appropriate permissions can view billing information for the account. If you disable it, only the account root user can access billing information. For information about how to disable this switch for an account, see Granting access to your billing information and tools.
51
+ * Creates an Amazon Web Services account that is automatically a member of the organization whose credentials made the request. This is an asynchronous request that Amazon Web Services performs in the background. Because CreateAccount operates asynchronously, it can return a successful completion message even though account initialization might still be in progress. You might need to wait a few minutes before you can successfully access the account. To check the status of the request, do one of the following: Use the Id value of the CreateAccountStatus response element from this operation to provide as a parameter to the DescribeCreateAccountStatus operation. Check the CloudTrail log for the CreateAccountResult event. For information on using CloudTrail with Organizations, see Logging and monitoring in Organizations in the Organizations User Guide. The user who calls the API to create an account must have the organizations:CreateAccount permission. If you enabled all features in the organization, Organizations creates the required service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForOrganizations. For more information, see Organizations and service-linked roles in the Organizations User Guide. If the request includes tags, then the requester must have the organizations:TagResource permission. Organizations preconfigures the new member account with a role (named OrganizationAccountAccessRole by default) that grants users in the management account administrator permissions in the new member account. Principals in the management account can assume the role. Organizations clones the company name and address information for the new account from the organization's management account. This operation can be called only from the organization's management account. For more information about creating accounts, see Creating a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create an account in an organization using the Organizations console, API, or CLI commands, the information required for the account to operate as a standalone account, such as a payment method is not automatically collected. If you must remove an account from your organization later, you can do so only after you provide the missing information. For more information, see Considerations before removing an account from an organization in the Organizations User Guide. If you get an exception that indicates that you exceeded your account limits for the organization, contact Amazon Web Services Support. If you get an exception that indicates that the operation failed because your organization is still initializing, wait one hour and then try again. If the error persists, contact Amazon Web Services Support. Using CreateAccount to create multiple temporary accounts isn't recommended. You can only close an account from the Billing and Cost Management console, and you must be signed in as the root user. For information on the requirements and process for closing an account, see Closing a member account in your organization in the Organizations User Guide. When you create a member account with this operation, you can choose whether to create the account with the IAM User and Role Access to Billing Information switch enabled. If you enable it, IAM users and roles that have appropriate permissions can view billing information for the account. If you disable it, only the account root user can access billing information. For information about how to disable this switch for an account, see Granting access to your billing information and tools.
52
52
  */
53
53
  createAccount(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Organizations.Types.CreateAccountResponse) => void): Request<Organizations.Types.CreateAccountResponse, AWSError>;
54
54
  /**
@@ -309,11 +309,11 @@ declare class Rekognition extends Service {
309
309
  */
310
310
  getFaceSearch(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Rekognition.Types.GetFaceSearchResponse) => void): Request<Rekognition.Types.GetFaceSearchResponse, AWSError>;
311
311
  /**
312
- * Gets the label detection results of a Amazon Rekognition Video analysis started by StartLabelDetection. The label detection operation is started by a call to StartLabelDetection which returns a job identifier (JobId). When the label detection operation finishes, Amazon Rekognition publishes a completion status to the Amazon Simple Notification Service topic registered in the initial call to StartlabelDetection. To get the results of the label detection operation, first check that the status value published to the Amazon SNS topic is SUCCEEDED. If so, call GetLabelDetection and pass the job identifier (JobId) from the initial call to StartLabelDetection. GetLabelDetection returns an array of detected labels (Labels) sorted by the time the labels were detected. You can also sort by the label name by specifying NAME for the SortBy input parameter. If there is no NAME specified, the default sort is by timestamp. You can select how results are aggregated by using the AggregateBy input parameter. The default aggregation method is TIMESTAMPS. You can also aggregate by SEGMENTS, which aggregates all instances of labels detected in a given segment. The returned Labels array may include the following attributes: Name - The name of the detected label. Confidence - The level of confidence in the label assigned to a detected object. Parents - The ancestor labels for a detected label. GetLabelDetection returns a hierarchical taxonomy of detected labels. For example, a detected car might be assigned the label car. The label car has two parent labels: Vehicle (its parent) and Transportation (its grandparent). The response includes the all ancestors for a label, where every ancestor is a unique label. In the previous example, Car, Vehicle, and Transportation are returned as unique labels in the response. Aliases - Possible Aliases for the label. Categories - The label categories that the detected label belongs to. BoundingBox — Bounding boxes are described for all instances of detected common object labels, returned in an array of Instance objects. An Instance object contains a BoundingBox object, describing the location of the label on the input image. It also includes the confidence for the accuracy of the detected bounding box. Timestamp - Time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, that the label was detected. For aggregation by SEGMENTS, the StartTimestampMillis, EndTimestampMillis, and DurationMillis structures are what define a segment. Although the “Timestamp” structure is still returned with each label, its value is set to be the same as StartTimestampMillis. Timestamp and Bounding box information are returned for detected Instances, only if aggregation is done by TIMESTAMPS. If aggregating by SEGMENTS, information about detected instances isn’t returned. The version of the label model used for the detection is also returned. Note DominantColors isn't returned for Instances, although it is shown as part of the response in the sample seen below. Use MaxResults parameter to limit the number of labels returned. If there are more results than specified in MaxResults, the value of NextToken in the operation response contains a pagination token for getting the next set of results. To get the next page of results, call GetlabelDetection and populate the NextToken request parameter with the token value returned from the previous call to GetLabelDetection.
312
+ * Gets the label detection results of a Amazon Rekognition Video analysis started by StartLabelDetection. The label detection operation is started by a call to StartLabelDetection which returns a job identifier (JobId). When the label detection operation finishes, Amazon Rekognition publishes a completion status to the Amazon Simple Notification Service topic registered in the initial call to StartlabelDetection. To get the results of the label detection operation, first check that the status value published to the Amazon SNS topic is SUCCEEDED. If so, call GetLabelDetection and pass the job identifier (JobId) from the initial call to StartLabelDetection. GetLabelDetection returns an array of detected labels (Labels) sorted by the time the labels were detected. You can also sort by the label name by specifying NAME for the SortBy input parameter. If there is no NAME specified, the default sort is by timestamp. You can select how results are aggregated by using the AggregateBy input parameter. The default aggregation method is TIMESTAMPS. You can also aggregate by SEGMENTS, which aggregates all instances of labels detected in a given segment. The returned Labels array may include the following attributes: Name - The name of the detected label. Confidence - The level of confidence in the label assigned to a detected object. Parents - The ancestor labels for a detected label. GetLabelDetection returns a hierarchical taxonomy of detected labels. For example, a detected car might be assigned the label car. The label car has two parent labels: Vehicle (its parent) and Transportation (its grandparent). The response includes the all ancestors for a label, where every ancestor is a unique label. In the previous example, Car, Vehicle, and Transportation are returned as unique labels in the response. Aliases - Possible Aliases for the label. Categories - The label categories that the detected label belongs to. BoundingBox — Bounding boxes are described for all instances of detected common object labels, returned in an array of Instance objects. An Instance object contains a BoundingBox object, describing the location of the label on the input image. It also includes the confidence for the accuracy of the detected bounding box. Timestamp - Time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, that the label was detected. For aggregation by SEGMENTS, the StartTimestampMillis, EndTimestampMillis, and DurationMillis structures are what define a segment. Although the “Timestamp” structure is still returned with each label, its value is set to be the same as StartTimestampMillis. Timestamp and Bounding box information are returned for detected Instances, only if aggregation is done by TIMESTAMPS. If aggregating by SEGMENTS, information about detected instances isn’t returned. The version of the label model used for the detection is also returned. Note DominantColors isn't returned for Instances, although it is shown as part of the response in the sample seen below. Use MaxResults parameter to limit the number of labels returned. If there are more results than specified in MaxResults, the value of NextToken in the operation response contains a pagination token for getting the next set of results. To get the next page of results, call GetlabelDetection and populate the NextToken request parameter with the token value returned from the previous call to GetLabelDetection. If you are retrieving results while using the Amazon Simple Notification Service, note that you will receive an "ERROR" notification if the job encounters an issue.
313
313
  */
314
314
  getLabelDetection(params: Rekognition.Types.GetLabelDetectionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Rekognition.Types.GetLabelDetectionResponse) => void): Request<Rekognition.Types.GetLabelDetectionResponse, AWSError>;
315
315
  /**
316
- * Gets the label detection results of a Amazon Rekognition Video analysis started by StartLabelDetection. The label detection operation is started by a call to StartLabelDetection which returns a job identifier (JobId). When the label detection operation finishes, Amazon Rekognition publishes a completion status to the Amazon Simple Notification Service topic registered in the initial call to StartlabelDetection. To get the results of the label detection operation, first check that the status value published to the Amazon SNS topic is SUCCEEDED. If so, call GetLabelDetection and pass the job identifier (JobId) from the initial call to StartLabelDetection. GetLabelDetection returns an array of detected labels (Labels) sorted by the time the labels were detected. You can also sort by the label name by specifying NAME for the SortBy input parameter. If there is no NAME specified, the default sort is by timestamp. You can select how results are aggregated by using the AggregateBy input parameter. The default aggregation method is TIMESTAMPS. You can also aggregate by SEGMENTS, which aggregates all instances of labels detected in a given segment. The returned Labels array may include the following attributes: Name - The name of the detected label. Confidence - The level of confidence in the label assigned to a detected object. Parents - The ancestor labels for a detected label. GetLabelDetection returns a hierarchical taxonomy of detected labels. For example, a detected car might be assigned the label car. The label car has two parent labels: Vehicle (its parent) and Transportation (its grandparent). The response includes the all ancestors for a label, where every ancestor is a unique label. In the previous example, Car, Vehicle, and Transportation are returned as unique labels in the response. Aliases - Possible Aliases for the label. Categories - The label categories that the detected label belongs to. BoundingBox — Bounding boxes are described for all instances of detected common object labels, returned in an array of Instance objects. An Instance object contains a BoundingBox object, describing the location of the label on the input image. It also includes the confidence for the accuracy of the detected bounding box. Timestamp - Time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, that the label was detected. For aggregation by SEGMENTS, the StartTimestampMillis, EndTimestampMillis, and DurationMillis structures are what define a segment. Although the “Timestamp” structure is still returned with each label, its value is set to be the same as StartTimestampMillis. Timestamp and Bounding box information are returned for detected Instances, only if aggregation is done by TIMESTAMPS. If aggregating by SEGMENTS, information about detected instances isn’t returned. The version of the label model used for the detection is also returned. Note DominantColors isn't returned for Instances, although it is shown as part of the response in the sample seen below. Use MaxResults parameter to limit the number of labels returned. If there are more results than specified in MaxResults, the value of NextToken in the operation response contains a pagination token for getting the next set of results. To get the next page of results, call GetlabelDetection and populate the NextToken request parameter with the token value returned from the previous call to GetLabelDetection.
316
+ * Gets the label detection results of a Amazon Rekognition Video analysis started by StartLabelDetection. The label detection operation is started by a call to StartLabelDetection which returns a job identifier (JobId). When the label detection operation finishes, Amazon Rekognition publishes a completion status to the Amazon Simple Notification Service topic registered in the initial call to StartlabelDetection. To get the results of the label detection operation, first check that the status value published to the Amazon SNS topic is SUCCEEDED. If so, call GetLabelDetection and pass the job identifier (JobId) from the initial call to StartLabelDetection. GetLabelDetection returns an array of detected labels (Labels) sorted by the time the labels were detected. You can also sort by the label name by specifying NAME for the SortBy input parameter. If there is no NAME specified, the default sort is by timestamp. You can select how results are aggregated by using the AggregateBy input parameter. The default aggregation method is TIMESTAMPS. You can also aggregate by SEGMENTS, which aggregates all instances of labels detected in a given segment. The returned Labels array may include the following attributes: Name - The name of the detected label. Confidence - The level of confidence in the label assigned to a detected object. Parents - The ancestor labels for a detected label. GetLabelDetection returns a hierarchical taxonomy of detected labels. For example, a detected car might be assigned the label car. The label car has two parent labels: Vehicle (its parent) and Transportation (its grandparent). The response includes the all ancestors for a label, where every ancestor is a unique label. In the previous example, Car, Vehicle, and Transportation are returned as unique labels in the response. Aliases - Possible Aliases for the label. Categories - The label categories that the detected label belongs to. BoundingBox — Bounding boxes are described for all instances of detected common object labels, returned in an array of Instance objects. An Instance object contains a BoundingBox object, describing the location of the label on the input image. It also includes the confidence for the accuracy of the detected bounding box. Timestamp - Time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, that the label was detected. For aggregation by SEGMENTS, the StartTimestampMillis, EndTimestampMillis, and DurationMillis structures are what define a segment. Although the “Timestamp” structure is still returned with each label, its value is set to be the same as StartTimestampMillis. Timestamp and Bounding box information are returned for detected Instances, only if aggregation is done by TIMESTAMPS. If aggregating by SEGMENTS, information about detected instances isn’t returned. The version of the label model used for the detection is also returned. Note DominantColors isn't returned for Instances, although it is shown as part of the response in the sample seen below. Use MaxResults parameter to limit the number of labels returned. If there are more results than specified in MaxResults, the value of NextToken in the operation response contains a pagination token for getting the next set of results. To get the next page of results, call GetlabelDetection and populate the NextToken request parameter with the token value returned from the previous call to GetLabelDetection. If you are retrieving results while using the Amazon Simple Notification Service, note that you will receive an "ERROR" notification if the job encounters an issue.
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  */
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  getLabelDetection(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Rekognition.Types.GetLabelDetectionResponse) => void): Request<Rekognition.Types.GetLabelDetectionResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -1070,6 +1070,10 @@ declare namespace Rekognition {
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  * The ARN of the Amazon Rekognition Custom Labels project to which you want to asssign the dataset.
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  */
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  ProjectArn: ProjectArn;
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+ /**
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+ * A set of tags (key-value pairs) that you want to attach to the dataset.
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+ */
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+ Tags?: TagMap;
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  }
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  export interface CreateDatasetResponse {
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  /**
@@ -1120,6 +1124,10 @@ declare namespace Rekognition {
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  * Specifies whether automatic retraining should be attempted for the versions of the project. Automatic retraining is done as a best effort. Required argument for Content Moderation. Applicable only to adapters.
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  */
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  AutoUpdate?: ProjectAutoUpdate;
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+ /**
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+ * A set of tags (key-value pairs) that you want to attach to the project.
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+ */
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+ Tags?: TagMap;
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  }
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  export interface CreateProjectResponse {
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  /**
@@ -1809,7 +1817,7 @@ declare namespace Rekognition {
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  }
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  export interface DetectModerationLabelsResponse {
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  /**
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- * Array of detected Moderation labels and the time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, they were detected.
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+ * Array of detected Moderation labels. For video operations, this includes the time, in milliseconds from the start of the video, they were detected.
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  */
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  ModerationLabels?: ModerationLabels;
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  /**