cdk-lambda-subminute 2.0.226 → 2.0.228

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Files changed (190) hide show
  1. package/.jsii +15 -15
  2. package/README.md +12 -0
  3. package/lib/cdk-lambda-subminute.js +3 -3
  4. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/CHANGELOG.md +174 -1
  5. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/README.md +1 -1
  6. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/amplifybackend-2020-08-11.min.json +4 -0
  7. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/amplifyuibuilder-2021-08-11.min.json +40 -9
  8. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/apigateway-2015-07-09.min.json +2 -1
  9. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appflow-2020-08-23.min.json +115 -87
  10. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/application-insights-2018-11-25.min.json +228 -43
  11. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/application-insights-2018-11-25.paginators.json +5 -0
  12. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/auditmanager-2017-07-25.min.json +238 -63
  13. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/autoscaling-2011-01-01.examples.json +74 -11
  14. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/autoscaling-2011-01-01.min.json +61 -52
  15. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/backup-2018-11-15.min.json +217 -104
  16. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/backup-2018-11-15.paginators.json +6 -0
  17. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ce-2017-10-25.min.json +3 -1
  18. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/chime-sdk-media-pipelines-2021-07-15.min.json +261 -21
  19. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/chime-sdk-voice-2022-08-03.min.json +198 -182
  20. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanrooms-2022-02-17.min.json +657 -102
  21. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanrooms-2022-02-17.paginators.json +12 -0
  22. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudformation-2010-05-15.min.json +95 -80
  23. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudfront-2020-05-31.min.json +4 -1
  24. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudhsm-2014-05-30.min.json +60 -20
  25. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codecommit-2015-04-13.min.json +44 -0
  26. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codecommit-2015-04-13.paginators.json +5 -0
  27. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cognito-idp-2016-04-18.examples.json +849 -0
  28. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cognito-idp-2016-04-18.min.json +110 -24
  29. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/compute-optimizer-2019-11-01.min.json +200 -57
  30. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connect-2017-08-08.min.json +903 -316
  31. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connect-2017-08-08.paginators.json +18 -0
  32. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connectcampaigns-2021-01-30.min.json +103 -90
  33. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connectparticipant-2018-09-07.min.json +62 -0
  34. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/customer-profiles-2020-08-15.min.json +269 -118
  35. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/datasync-2018-11-09.min.json +103 -14
  36. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/detective-2018-10-26.min.json +14 -3
  37. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/dms-2016-01-01.min.json +1123 -217
  38. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/dms-2016-01-01.paginators.json +50 -0
  39. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ec2-2016-11-15.min.json +1254 -1191
  40. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticache-2015-02-02.min.json +37 -10
  41. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticloadbalancingv2-2015-12-01.min.json +49 -46
  42. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/finspace-2021-03-12.min.json +74 -13
  43. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/fsx-2018-03-01.min.json +190 -143
  44. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/glue-2017-03-31.min.json +235 -216
  45. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/grafana-2020-08-18.min.json +2 -1
  46. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/health-2016-08-04.min.json +116 -34
  47. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/inspector2-2020-06-08.min.json +291 -192
  48. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/internetmonitor-2021-06-03.min.json +37 -19
  49. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kafka-2018-11-14.min.json +237 -52
  50. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kafka-2018-11-14.paginators.json +6 -0
  51. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kafkaconnect-2021-09-14.min.json +38 -36
  52. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesis-video-archived-media-2017-09-30.min.json +0 -1
  53. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/lookoutequipment-2020-12-15.min.json +337 -23
  54. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/lookoutequipment-2020-12-15.paginators.json +5 -0
  55. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediaconvert-2017-08-29.min.json +134 -96
  56. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/medialive-2017-10-14.min.json +249 -225
  57. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediapackage-2017-10-12.min.json +93 -87
  58. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/metadata.json +7 -0
  59. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/neptunedata-2023-08-01.examples.json +5 -0
  60. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/neptunedata-2023-08-01.min.json +1923 -0
  61. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/neptunedata-2023-08-01.paginators.json +4 -0
  62. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/omics-2022-11-28.min.json +756 -204
  63. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/omics-2022-11-28.paginators.json +12 -0
  64. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/omics-2022-11-28.waiters2.json +48 -0
  65. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/payment-cryptography-data-2022-02-03.min.json +29 -16
  66. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-ad-2018-05-10.examples.json +5 -0
  67. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-ad-2018-05-10.min.json +1465 -0
  68. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-ad-2018-05-10.paginators.json +34 -0
  69. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pi-2018-02-27.min.json +304 -11
  70. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pi-2018-02-27.paginators.json +5 -0
  71. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pinpoint-2016-12-01.examples.json +6 -12
  72. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pinpoint-2016-12-01.min.json +286 -243
  73. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/quicksight-2018-04-01.min.json +1194 -1134
  74. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/quicksight-2018-04-01.paginators.json +30 -0
  75. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2014-10-31.min.json +334 -180
  76. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2014-10-31.paginators.json +6 -0
  77. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rekognition-2016-06-27.examples.json +501 -1
  78. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/resiliencehub-2020-04-30.min.json +354 -125
  79. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/resiliencehub-2020-04-30.paginators.json +5 -0
  80. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/route53domains-2014-05-15.min.json +103 -44
  81. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/runtime.sagemaker-2017-05-13.min.json +104 -0
  82. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/s3-2006-03-01.examples.json +131 -131
  83. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sagemaker-2017-07-24.min.json +868 -726
  84. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/scheduler-2021-06-30.min.json +15 -12
  85. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/securityhub-2018-10-26.min.json +100 -61
  86. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/service-quotas-2019-06-24.min.json +45 -23
  87. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sesv2-2019-09-27.examples.json +244 -0
  88. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sesv2-2019-09-27.min.json +491 -153
  89. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sesv2-2019-09-27.paginators.json +5 -0
  90. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/swf-2012-01-25.min.json +12 -3
  91. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/verifiedpermissions-2021-12-01.min.json +127 -33
  92. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/workspaces-web-2020-07-08.min.json +136 -58
  93. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/acmpca.d.ts +1 -1
  94. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/all.d.ts +2 -0
  95. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/all.js +3 -1
  96. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/amplifyuibuilder.d.ts +48 -4
  97. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/apigateway.d.ts +34 -30
  98. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/appflow.d.ts +30 -0
  99. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/applicationinsights.d.ts +342 -2
  100. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/apprunner.d.ts +5 -5
  101. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/autoscaling.d.ts +13 -2
  102. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/backup.d.ts +131 -8
  103. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/batch.d.ts +9 -9
  104. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/budgets.d.ts +1 -1
  105. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/chimesdkmediapipelines.d.ts +228 -2
  106. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/chimesdkvoice.d.ts +17 -0
  107. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cleanrooms.d.ts +557 -14
  108. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloud9.d.ts +1 -1
  109. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudformation.d.ts +21 -0
  110. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudfront.d.ts +14 -10
  111. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudtrail.d.ts +4 -4
  112. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudwatch.d.ts +7 -7
  113. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudwatchevents.d.ts +2 -2
  114. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/codecommit.d.ts +87 -30
  115. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/codestarconnections.d.ts +10 -10
  116. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cognitoidentityserviceprovider.d.ts +292 -215
  117. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/computeoptimizer.d.ts +214 -2
  118. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/configservice.d.ts +1 -1
  119. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/connect.d.ts +609 -17
  120. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/connectcampaigns.d.ts +30 -23
  121. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/connectparticipant.d.ts +71 -2
  122. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/costexplorer.d.ts +10 -2
  123. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/customerprofiles.d.ts +56 -52
  124. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/datasync.d.ts +170 -39
  125. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/dms.d.ts +1289 -13
  126. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/drs.d.ts +1 -1
  127. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ec2.d.ts +87 -20
  128. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ecs.d.ts +32 -32
  129. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/elasticache.d.ts +22 -1
  130. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/elbv2.d.ts +23 -9
  131. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/finspace.d.ts +73 -5
  132. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/fsx.d.ts +108 -33
  133. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/gamelift.d.ts +91 -91
  134. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/globalaccelerator.d.ts +12 -12
  135. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/glue.d.ts +40 -2
  136. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/guardduty.d.ts +4 -4
  137. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/health.d.ts +86 -2
  138. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/identitystore.d.ts +26 -26
  139. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/inspector2.d.ts +101 -2
  140. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/internetmonitor.d.ts +49 -26
  141. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ivs.d.ts +4 -4
  142. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ivsrealtime.d.ts +2 -2
  143. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kafka.d.ts +204 -0
  144. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kafkaconnect.d.ts +6 -8
  145. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kinesisvideo.d.ts +2 -2
  146. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kinesisvideoarchivedmedia.d.ts +16 -16
  147. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/lookoutequipment.d.ts +522 -15
  148. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/mediaconvert.d.ts +52 -6
  149. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/medialive.d.ts +35 -0
  150. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/mediapackage.d.ts +3 -2
  151. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/mediatailor.d.ts +2 -2
  152. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/neptunedata.d.ts +1976 -0
  153. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/neptunedata.js +18 -0
  154. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/networkfirewall.d.ts +9 -9
  155. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/omics.d.ts +619 -21
  156. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/organizations.d.ts +55 -55
  157. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/paymentcryptographydata.d.ts +8 -6
  158. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/pcaconnectorad.d.ts +1606 -0
  159. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/pcaconnectorad.js +18 -0
  160. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/pi.d.ts +382 -5
  161. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/pinpoint.d.ts +69 -5
  162. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/polly.d.ts +2 -2
  163. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/quicksight.d.ts +148 -33
  164. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/rds.d.ts +255 -23
  165. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/rekognition.d.ts +19 -19
  166. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/resiliencehub.d.ts +588 -274
  167. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/route53.d.ts +9 -9
  168. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/route53domains.d.ts +9 -3
  169. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sagemaker.d.ts +227 -22
  170. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sagemakerruntime.d.ts +86 -8
  171. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/scheduler.d.ts +16 -3
  172. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/securityhub.d.ts +68 -4
  173. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/servicecatalog.d.ts +16 -16
  174. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/servicequotas.d.ts +138 -80
  175. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ses.d.ts +158 -158
  176. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sesv2.d.ts +374 -3
  177. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sqs.d.ts +9 -9
  178. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/swf.d.ts +18 -1
  179. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/transfer.d.ts +12 -12
  180. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/verifiedpermissions.d.ts +27 -27
  181. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/workspacesweb.d.ts +69 -16
  182. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-core-react-native.js +2 -2
  183. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-react-native.js +152 -78
  184. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.js +3098 -1970
  185. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.min.js +101 -101
  186. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/config_service_placeholders.d.ts +4 -0
  187. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/core.js +1 -1
  188. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/token/sso_token_provider.js +3 -3
  189. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/package.json +1 -1
  190. package/package.json +13 -13
@@ -29,11 +29,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
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  */
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  createConfigurationSet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a configuration set event destination. When you create or update an event destination, you must provide one, and only one, destination. The destination can be CloudWatch, Amazon Kinesis Firehose, or Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS). An event destination is the AWS service to which Amazon SES publishes the email sending events associated with a configuration set. For information about using configuration sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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+ * Creates a configuration set event destination. When you create or update an event destination, you must provide one, and only one, destination. The destination can be CloudWatch, Amazon Kinesis Firehose, or Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS). An event destination is the Amazon Web Services service to which Amazon SES publishes the email sending events associated with a configuration set. For information about using configuration sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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  */
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  createConfigurationSetEventDestination(params: SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetEventDestinationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a configuration set event destination. When you create or update an event destination, you must provide one, and only one, destination. The destination can be CloudWatch, Amazon Kinesis Firehose, or Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS). An event destination is the AWS service to which Amazon SES publishes the email sending events associated with a configuration set. For information about using configuration sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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+ * Creates a configuration set event destination. When you create or update an event destination, you must provide one, and only one, destination. The destination can be CloudWatch, Amazon Kinesis Firehose, or Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS). An event destination is the Amazon Web Services service to which Amazon SES publishes the email sending events associated with a configuration set. For information about using configuration sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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  */
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  createConfigurationSetEventDestination(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -77,11 +77,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
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  */
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  createReceiptRuleSet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single API operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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+ * Creates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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  */
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  createTemplate(params: SES.Types.CreateTemplateRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single API operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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+ * Creates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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  */
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  createTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.CreateTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.CreateTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -101,11 +101,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
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  */
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  deleteConfigurationSetEventDestination(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes an association between a configuration set and a custom domain for open and click event tracking. By default, images and links used for tracking open and click events are hosted on domains operated by Amazon SES. You can configure a subdomain of your own to handle these events. For information about using custom domains, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Deleting this kind of association will result in emails sent using the specified configuration set to capture open and click events using the standard, Amazon SES-operated domains.
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+ * Deletes an association between a configuration set and a custom domain for open and click event tracking. By default, images and links used for tracking open and click events are hosted on domains operated by Amazon SES. You can configure a subdomain of your own to handle these events. For information about using custom domains, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Deleting this kind of association results in emails sent using the specified configuration set to capture open and click events using the standard, Amazon SES-operated domains.
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  */
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  deleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptions(params: SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes an association between a configuration set and a custom domain for open and click event tracking. By default, images and links used for tracking open and click events are hosted on domains operated by Amazon SES. You can configure a subdomain of your own to handle these events. For information about using custom domains, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Deleting this kind of association will result in emails sent using the specified configuration set to capture open and click events using the standard, Amazon SES-operated domains.
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+ * Deletes an association between a configuration set and a custom domain for open and click event tracking. By default, images and links used for tracking open and click events are hosted on domains operated by Amazon SES. You can configure a subdomain of your own to handle these events. For information about using custom domains, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Deleting this kind of association results in emails sent using the specified configuration set to capture open and click events using the standard, Amazon SES-operated domains.
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  */
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  deleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -125,11 +125,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
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  */
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  deleteIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteIdentityResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteIdentityResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes the specified sending authorization policy for the given identity (an email address or a domain). This API returns successfully even if a policy with the specified name does not exist. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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+ * Deletes the specified sending authorization policy for the given identity (an email address or a domain). This operation returns successfully even if a policy with the specified name does not exist. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
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  */
130
130
  deleteIdentityPolicy(params: SES.Types.DeleteIdentityPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteIdentityPolicyResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteIdentityPolicyResponse, AWSError>;
131
131
  /**
132
- * Deletes the specified sending authorization policy for the given identity (an email address or a domain). This API returns successfully even if a policy with the specified name does not exist. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
132
+ * Deletes the specified sending authorization policy for the given identity (an email address or a domain). This operation returns successfully even if a policy with the specified name does not exist. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
133
133
  */
134
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  deleteIdentityPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DeleteIdentityPolicyResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DeleteIdentityPolicyResponse, AWSError>;
135
135
  /**
@@ -205,7 +205,7 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
205
205
  */
206
206
  describeReceiptRuleSet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.DescribeReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.DescribeReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
207
207
  /**
208
- * Returns the email sending status of the Amazon SES account for the current region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
208
+ * Returns the email sending status of the Amazon SES account for the current Region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
209
209
  */
210
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  getAccountSendingEnabled(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetAccountSendingEnabledResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetAccountSendingEnabledResponse, AWSError>;
211
211
  /**
@@ -241,19 +241,19 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
241
241
  */
242
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  getIdentityNotificationAttributes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetIdentityNotificationAttributesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetIdentityNotificationAttributesResponse, AWSError>;
243
243
  /**
244
- * Returns the requested sending authorization policies for the given identity (an email address or a domain). The policies are returned as a map of policy names to policy contents. You can retrieve a maximum of 20 policies at a time. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
244
+ * Returns the requested sending authorization policies for the given identity (an email address or a domain). The policies are returned as a map of policy names to policy contents. You can retrieve a maximum of 20 policies at a time. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
245
245
  */
246
246
  getIdentityPolicies(params: SES.Types.GetIdentityPoliciesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetIdentityPoliciesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetIdentityPoliciesResponse, AWSError>;
247
247
  /**
248
- * Returns the requested sending authorization policies for the given identity (an email address or a domain). The policies are returned as a map of policy names to policy contents. You can retrieve a maximum of 20 policies at a time. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
248
+ * Returns the requested sending authorization policies for the given identity (an email address or a domain). The policies are returned as a map of policy names to policy contents. You can retrieve a maximum of 20 policies at a time. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
249
249
  */
250
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  getIdentityPolicies(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetIdentityPoliciesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetIdentityPoliciesResponse, AWSError>;
251
251
  /**
252
- * Given a list of identities (email addresses and/or domains), returns the verification status and (for domain identities) the verification token for each identity. The verification status of an email address is "Pending" until the email address owner clicks the link within the verification email that Amazon SES sent to that address. If the email address owner clicks the link within 24 hours, the verification status of the email address changes to "Success". If the link is not clicked within 24 hours, the verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, if you still want to verify the email address, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. For domain identities, the domain's verification status is "Pending" as Amazon SES searches for the required TXT record in the DNS settings of the domain. When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, if you still want to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. This operation is throttled at one request per second and can only get verification attributes for up to 100 identities at a time.
252
+ * Given a list of identities (email addresses and/or domains), returns the verification status and (for domain identities) the verification token for each identity. The verification status of an email address is "Pending" until the email address owner clicks the link within the verification email that Amazon SES sent to that address. If the email address owner clicks the link within 24 hours, the verification status of the email address changes to "Success". If the link is not clicked within 24 hours, the verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, to verify the email address, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. For domain identities, the domain's verification status is "Pending" as Amazon SES searches for the required TXT record in the DNS settings of the domain. When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. This operation is throttled at one request per second and can only get verification attributes for up to 100 identities at a time.
253
253
  */
254
254
  getIdentityVerificationAttributes(params: SES.Types.GetIdentityVerificationAttributesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetIdentityVerificationAttributesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetIdentityVerificationAttributesResponse, AWSError>;
255
255
  /**
256
- * Given a list of identities (email addresses and/or domains), returns the verification status and (for domain identities) the verification token for each identity. The verification status of an email address is "Pending" until the email address owner clicks the link within the verification email that Amazon SES sent to that address. If the email address owner clicks the link within 24 hours, the verification status of the email address changes to "Success". If the link is not clicked within 24 hours, the verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, if you still want to verify the email address, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. For domain identities, the domain's verification status is "Pending" as Amazon SES searches for the required TXT record in the DNS settings of the domain. When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, if you still want to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. This operation is throttled at one request per second and can only get verification attributes for up to 100 identities at a time.
256
+ * Given a list of identities (email addresses and/or domains), returns the verification status and (for domain identities) the verification token for each identity. The verification status of an email address is "Pending" until the email address owner clicks the link within the verification email that Amazon SES sent to that address. If the email address owner clicks the link within 24 hours, the verification status of the email address changes to "Success". If the link is not clicked within 24 hours, the verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, to verify the email address, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. For domain identities, the domain's verification status is "Pending" as Amazon SES searches for the required TXT record in the DNS settings of the domain. When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. This operation is throttled at one request per second and can only get verification attributes for up to 100 identities at a time.
257
257
  */
258
258
  getIdentityVerificationAttributes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetIdentityVerificationAttributesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetIdentityVerificationAttributesResponse, AWSError>;
259
259
  /**
@@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
261
261
  */
262
262
  getSendQuota(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetSendQuotaResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetSendQuotaResponse, AWSError>;
263
263
  /**
264
- * Provides sending statistics for the current AWS Region. The result is a list of data points, representing the last two weeks of sending activity. Each data point in the list contains statistics for a 15-minute period of time. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
264
+ * Provides sending statistics for the current Amazon Web Services Region. The result is a list of data points, representing the last two weeks of sending activity. Each data point in the list contains statistics for a 15-minute period of time. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
265
265
  */
266
266
  getSendStatistics(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetSendStatisticsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetSendStatisticsResponse, AWSError>;
267
267
  /**
@@ -273,59 +273,59 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
273
273
  */
274
274
  getTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.GetTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.GetTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
275
275
  /**
276
- * Provides a list of the configuration sets associated with your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. For information about using configuration sets, see Monitoring Your Amazon SES Sending Activity in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. This operation will return up to 1,000 configuration sets each time it is run. If your Amazon SES account has more than 1,000 configuration sets, this operation will also return a NextToken element. You can then execute the ListConfigurationSets operation again, passing the NextToken parameter and the value of the NextToken element to retrieve additional results.
276
+ * Provides a list of the configuration sets associated with your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For information about using configuration sets, see Monitoring Your Amazon SES Sending Activity in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. This operation returns up to 1,000 configuration sets each time it is run. If your Amazon SES account has more than 1,000 configuration sets, this operation also returns NextToken. You can then execute the ListConfigurationSets operation again, passing the NextToken parameter and the value of the NextToken element to retrieve additional results.
277
277
  */
278
278
  listConfigurationSets(params: SES.Types.ListConfigurationSetsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListConfigurationSetsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListConfigurationSetsResponse, AWSError>;
279
279
  /**
280
- * Provides a list of the configuration sets associated with your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. For information about using configuration sets, see Monitoring Your Amazon SES Sending Activity in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. This operation will return up to 1,000 configuration sets each time it is run. If your Amazon SES account has more than 1,000 configuration sets, this operation will also return a NextToken element. You can then execute the ListConfigurationSets operation again, passing the NextToken parameter and the value of the NextToken element to retrieve additional results.
280
+ * Provides a list of the configuration sets associated with your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For information about using configuration sets, see Monitoring Your Amazon SES Sending Activity in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. This operation returns up to 1,000 configuration sets each time it is run. If your Amazon SES account has more than 1,000 configuration sets, this operation also returns NextToken. You can then execute the ListConfigurationSets operation again, passing the NextToken parameter and the value of the NextToken element to retrieve additional results.
281
281
  */
282
282
  listConfigurationSets(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListConfigurationSetsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListConfigurationSetsResponse, AWSError>;
283
283
  /**
284
- * Lists the existing custom verification email templates for your account in the current AWS Region. For more information about custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
284
+ * Lists the existing custom verification email templates for your account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For more information about custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
285
285
  */
286
286
  listCustomVerificationEmailTemplates(params: SES.Types.ListCustomVerificationEmailTemplatesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListCustomVerificationEmailTemplatesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListCustomVerificationEmailTemplatesResponse, AWSError>;
287
287
  /**
288
- * Lists the existing custom verification email templates for your account in the current AWS Region. For more information about custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
288
+ * Lists the existing custom verification email templates for your account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For more information about custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
289
289
  */
290
290
  listCustomVerificationEmailTemplates(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListCustomVerificationEmailTemplatesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListCustomVerificationEmailTemplatesResponse, AWSError>;
291
291
  /**
292
- * Returns a list containing all of the identities (email addresses and domains) for your AWS account in the current AWS Region, regardless of verification status. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
292
+ * Returns a list containing all of the identities (email addresses and domains) for your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region, regardless of verification status. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. It's recommended that for successive pagination calls of this API, you continue to the use the same parameter/value pairs as used in the original call, e.g., if you used IdentityType=Domain in the the original call and received a NextToken in the response, you should continue providing the IdentityType=Domain parameter for further NextToken calls; however, if you didn't provide the IdentityType parameter in the original call, then continue to not provide it for successive pagination calls. Using this protocol will ensure consistent results.
293
293
  */
294
294
  listIdentities(params: SES.Types.ListIdentitiesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListIdentitiesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListIdentitiesResponse, AWSError>;
295
295
  /**
296
- * Returns a list containing all of the identities (email addresses and domains) for your AWS account in the current AWS Region, regardless of verification status. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
296
+ * Returns a list containing all of the identities (email addresses and domains) for your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region, regardless of verification status. You can execute this operation no more than once per second. It's recommended that for successive pagination calls of this API, you continue to the use the same parameter/value pairs as used in the original call, e.g., if you used IdentityType=Domain in the the original call and received a NextToken in the response, you should continue providing the IdentityType=Domain parameter for further NextToken calls; however, if you didn't provide the IdentityType parameter in the original call, then continue to not provide it for successive pagination calls. Using this protocol will ensure consistent results.
297
297
  */
298
298
  listIdentities(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListIdentitiesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListIdentitiesResponse, AWSError>;
299
299
  /**
300
- * Returns a list of sending authorization policies that are attached to the given identity (an email address or a domain). This API returns only a list. If you want the actual policy content, you can use GetIdentityPolicies. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
300
+ * Returns a list of sending authorization policies that are attached to the given identity (an email address or a domain). This operation returns only a list. To get the actual policy content, use GetIdentityPolicies. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
301
301
  */
302
302
  listIdentityPolicies(params: SES.Types.ListIdentityPoliciesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListIdentityPoliciesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListIdentityPoliciesResponse, AWSError>;
303
303
  /**
304
- * Returns a list of sending authorization policies that are attached to the given identity (an email address or a domain). This API returns only a list. If you want the actual policy content, you can use GetIdentityPolicies. This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
304
+ * Returns a list of sending authorization policies that are attached to the given identity (an email address or a domain). This operation returns only a list. To get the actual policy content, use GetIdentityPolicies. This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
305
305
  */
306
306
  listIdentityPolicies(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListIdentityPoliciesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListIdentityPoliciesResponse, AWSError>;
307
307
  /**
308
- * Lists the IP address filters associated with your AWS account in the current AWS Region. For information about managing IP address filters, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
308
+ * Lists the IP address filters associated with your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For information about managing IP address filters, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
309
309
  */
310
310
  listReceiptFilters(params: SES.Types.ListReceiptFiltersRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListReceiptFiltersResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListReceiptFiltersResponse, AWSError>;
311
311
  /**
312
- * Lists the IP address filters associated with your AWS account in the current AWS Region. For information about managing IP address filters, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
312
+ * Lists the IP address filters associated with your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For information about managing IP address filters, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
313
313
  */
314
314
  listReceiptFilters(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListReceiptFiltersResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListReceiptFiltersResponse, AWSError>;
315
315
  /**
316
- * Lists the receipt rule sets that exist under your AWS account in the current AWS Region. If there are additional receipt rule sets to be retrieved, you will receive a NextToken that you can provide to the next call to ListReceiptRuleSets to retrieve the additional entries. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
316
+ * Lists the receipt rule sets that exist under your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. If there are additional receipt rule sets to be retrieved, you receive a NextToken that you can provide to the next call to ListReceiptRuleSets to retrieve the additional entries. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
317
317
  */
318
318
  listReceiptRuleSets(params: SES.Types.ListReceiptRuleSetsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListReceiptRuleSetsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListReceiptRuleSetsResponse, AWSError>;
319
319
  /**
320
- * Lists the receipt rule sets that exist under your AWS account in the current AWS Region. If there are additional receipt rule sets to be retrieved, you will receive a NextToken that you can provide to the next call to ListReceiptRuleSets to retrieve the additional entries. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
320
+ * Lists the receipt rule sets that exist under your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. If there are additional receipt rule sets to be retrieved, you receive a NextToken that you can provide to the next call to ListReceiptRuleSets to retrieve the additional entries. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
321
321
  */
322
322
  listReceiptRuleSets(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListReceiptRuleSetsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListReceiptRuleSetsResponse, AWSError>;
323
323
  /**
324
- * Lists the email templates present in your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
324
+ * Lists the email templates present in your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
325
325
  */
326
326
  listTemplates(params: SES.Types.ListTemplatesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListTemplatesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListTemplatesResponse, AWSError>;
327
327
  /**
328
- * Lists the email templates present in your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
328
+ * Lists the email templates present in your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
329
329
  */
330
330
  listTemplates(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ListTemplatesResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ListTemplatesResponse, AWSError>;
331
331
  /**
@@ -341,75 +341,75 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
341
341
  */
342
342
  putConfigurationSetDeliveryOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.PutConfigurationSetDeliveryOptionsResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.PutConfigurationSetDeliveryOptionsResponse, AWSError>;
343
343
  /**
344
- * Adds or updates a sending authorization policy for the specified identity (an email address or a domain). This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
344
+ * Adds or updates a sending authorization policy for the specified identity (an email address or a domain). This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
345
345
  */
346
346
  putIdentityPolicy(params: SES.Types.PutIdentityPolicyRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.PutIdentityPolicyResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.PutIdentityPolicyResponse, AWSError>;
347
347
  /**
348
- * Adds or updates a sending authorization policy for the specified identity (an email address or a domain). This API is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, this API will return an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
348
+ * Adds or updates a sending authorization policy for the specified identity (an email address or a domain). This operation is for the identity owner only. If you have not verified the identity, it returns an error. Sending authorization is a feature that enables an identity owner to authorize other senders to use its identities. For information about using sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
349
349
  */
350
350
  putIdentityPolicy(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.PutIdentityPolicyResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.PutIdentityPolicyResponse, AWSError>;
351
351
  /**
352
- * Reorders the receipt rules within a receipt rule set. All of the rules in the rule set must be represented in this request. That is, this API will return an error if the reorder request doesn't explicitly position all of the rules. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
352
+ * Reorders the receipt rules within a receipt rule set. All of the rules in the rule set must be represented in this request. That is, it is error if the reorder request doesn't explicitly position all of the rules. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
353
353
  */
354
354
  reorderReceiptRuleSet(params: SES.Types.ReorderReceiptRuleSetRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ReorderReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ReorderReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
355
355
  /**
356
- * Reorders the receipt rules within a receipt rule set. All of the rules in the rule set must be represented in this request. That is, this API will return an error if the reorder request doesn't explicitly position all of the rules. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
356
+ * Reorders the receipt rules within a receipt rule set. All of the rules in the rule set must be represented in this request. That is, it is error if the reorder request doesn't explicitly position all of the rules. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
357
357
  */
358
358
  reorderReceiptRuleSet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.ReorderReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.ReorderReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
359
359
  /**
360
- * Generates and sends a bounce message to the sender of an email you received through Amazon SES. You can only use this API on an email up to 24 hours after you receive it. You cannot use this API to send generic bounces for mail that was not received by Amazon SES. For information about receiving email through Amazon SES, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
360
+ * Generates and sends a bounce message to the sender of an email you received through Amazon SES. You can only use this operation on an email up to 24 hours after you receive it. You cannot use this operation to send generic bounces for mail that was not received by Amazon SES. For information about receiving email through Amazon SES, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
361
361
  */
362
362
  sendBounce(params: SES.Types.SendBounceRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendBounceResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendBounceResponse, AWSError>;
363
363
  /**
364
- * Generates and sends a bounce message to the sender of an email you received through Amazon SES. You can only use this API on an email up to 24 hours after you receive it. You cannot use this API to send generic bounces for mail that was not received by Amazon SES. For information about receiving email through Amazon SES, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
364
+ * Generates and sends a bounce message to the sender of an email you received through Amazon SES. You can only use this operation on an email up to 24 hours after you receive it. You cannot use this operation to send generic bounces for mail that was not received by Amazon SES. For information about receiving email through Amazon SES, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
365
365
  */
366
366
  sendBounce(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendBounceResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendBounceResponse, AWSError>;
367
367
  /**
368
- * Composes an email message to multiple destinations. The message body is created using an email template. In order to send email using the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation, your call to the API must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Each Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. The number of destinations you can contact in a single call to the API may be limited by your account's maximum sending rate.
368
+ * Composes an email message to multiple destinations. The message body is created using an email template. To send email using this operation, your call must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using CreateTemplate. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may send only to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Each Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. The number of destinations you can contact in a single call can be limited by your account's maximum sending rate.
369
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  */
370
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  sendBulkTemplatedEmail(params: SES.Types.SendBulkTemplatedEmailRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendBulkTemplatedEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendBulkTemplatedEmailResponse, AWSError>;
371
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  /**
372
- * Composes an email message to multiple destinations. The message body is created using an email template. In order to send email using the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation, your call to the API must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Each Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. The number of destinations you can contact in a single call to the API may be limited by your account's maximum sending rate.
372
+ * Composes an email message to multiple destinations. The message body is created using an email template. To send email using this operation, your call must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using CreateTemplate. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may send only to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Each Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. The number of destinations you can contact in a single call can be limited by your account's maximum sending rate.
373
373
  */
374
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  sendBulkTemplatedEmail(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendBulkTemplatedEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendBulkTemplatedEmailResponse, AWSError>;
375
375
  /**
376
- * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a customized verification email is sent to the specified address. To use this operation, you must first create a custom verification email template. For more information about creating and using custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
376
+ * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a customized verification email is sent to the specified address. To use this operation, you must first create a custom verification email template. For more information about creating and using custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
377
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  */
378
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  sendCustomVerificationEmail(params: SES.Types.SendCustomVerificationEmailRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendCustomVerificationEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendCustomVerificationEmailResponse, AWSError>;
379
379
  /**
380
- * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a customized verification email is sent to the specified address. To use this operation, you must first create a custom verification email template. For more information about creating and using custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
380
+ * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a customized verification email is sent to the specified address. To use this operation, you must first create a custom verification email template. For more information about creating and using custom verification email templates, see Using Custom Verification Email Templates in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
381
381
  */
382
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  sendCustomVerificationEmail(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendCustomVerificationEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendCustomVerificationEmailResponse, AWSError>;
383
383
  /**
384
- * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. In order to send email using the SendEmail operation, your message must meet the following requirements: The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If you attempt to send email using a non-verified address or domain, the operation will result in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. The message must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
384
+ * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. To send email using this operation, your message must meet the following requirements: The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If you attempt to send email using a non-verified address or domain, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. The message must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
385
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  */
386
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  sendEmail(params: SES.Types.SendEmailRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendEmailResponse, AWSError>;
387
387
  /**
388
- * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. In order to send email using the SendEmail operation, your message must meet the following requirements: The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If you attempt to send email using a non-verified address or domain, the operation will result in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. The message must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
388
+ * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. To send email using this operation, your message must meet the following requirements: The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If you attempt to send email using a non-verified address or domain, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. The message must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. The message may not include more than 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. If you need to send an email message to a larger audience, you can divide your recipient list into groups of 50 or fewer, and then call the SendEmail operation several times to send the message to each group. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
389
389
  */
390
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  sendEmail(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendEmailResponse, AWSError>;
391
391
  /**
392
- * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. This operation is more flexible than the SendEmail API operation. When you use the SendRawEmail operation, you can specify the headers of the message as well as its content. This flexibility is useful, for example, when you want to send a multipart MIME email (such a message that contains both a text and an HTML version). You can also use this operation to send messages that include attachments. The SendRawEmail operation has the following requirements: You can only send email from verified email addresses or domains. If you try to send email from an address that isn't verified, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you can only send email to other verified addresses in your account, or to addresses that are associated with the Amazon SES mailbox simulator. The maximum message size, including attachments, is 10 MB. Each message has to include at least one recipient address. A recipient address includes any address on the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you send a single message to more than one recipient address, and one of the recipient addresses isn't in a valid format (that is, it's not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), Amazon SES rejects the entire message, even if the other addresses are valid. Each message can include up to 50 recipient addresses across the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you need to send a single message to more than 50 recipients, you have to split the list of recipient addresses into groups of less than 50 recipients, and send separate messages to each group. Amazon SES allows you to specify 8-bit Content-Transfer-Encoding for MIME message parts. However, if Amazon SES has to modify the contents of your message (for example, if you use open and click tracking), 8-bit content isn't preserved. For this reason, we highly recommend that you encode all content that isn't 7-bit ASCII. For more information, see MIME Encoding in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Additionally, keep the following considerations in mind when using the SendRawEmail operation: Although you can customize the message headers when using the SendRawEmail operation, Amazon SES will automatically apply its own Message-ID and Date headers; if you passed these headers when creating the message, they will be overwritten by the values that Amazon SES provides. If you are using sending authorization to send on behalf of another user, SendRawEmail enables you to specify the cross-account identity for the email's Source, From, and Return-Path parameters in one of two ways: you can pass optional parameters SourceArn, FromArn, and/or ReturnPathArn to the API, or you can include the following X-headers in the header of your raw email: X-SES-SOURCE-ARN X-SES-FROM-ARN X-SES-RETURN-PATH-ARN Don't include these X-headers in the DKIM signature. Amazon SES removes these before it sends the email. If you only specify the SourceIdentityArn parameter, Amazon SES sets the From and Return-Path addresses to the same identity that you specified. For more information about sending authorization, see the Using Sending Authorization with Amazon SES in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
392
+ * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. This operation is more flexible than the SendEmail operation. When you use the SendRawEmail operation, you can specify the headers of the message as well as its content. This flexibility is useful, for example, when you need to send a multipart MIME email (such a message that contains both a text and an HTML version). You can also use this operation to send messages that include attachments. The SendRawEmail operation has the following requirements: You can only send email from verified email addresses or domains. If you try to send email from an address that isn't verified, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you can only send email to other verified addresses in your account, or to addresses that are associated with the Amazon SES mailbox simulator. The maximum message size, including attachments, is 10 MB. Each message has to include at least one recipient address. A recipient address includes any address on the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you send a single message to more than one recipient address, and one of the recipient addresses isn't in a valid format (that is, it's not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), Amazon SES rejects the entire message, even if the other addresses are valid. Each message can include up to 50 recipient addresses across the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you need to send a single message to more than 50 recipients, you have to split the list of recipient addresses into groups of less than 50 recipients, and send separate messages to each group. Amazon SES allows you to specify 8-bit Content-Transfer-Encoding for MIME message parts. However, if Amazon SES has to modify the contents of your message (for example, if you use open and click tracking), 8-bit content isn't preserved. For this reason, we highly recommend that you encode all content that isn't 7-bit ASCII. For more information, see MIME Encoding in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Additionally, keep the following considerations in mind when using the SendRawEmail operation: Although you can customize the message headers when using the SendRawEmail operation, Amazon SES automatically applies its own Message-ID and Date headers; if you passed these headers when creating the message, they are overwritten by the values that Amazon SES provides. If you are using sending authorization to send on behalf of another user, SendRawEmail enables you to specify the cross-account identity for the email's Source, From, and Return-Path parameters in one of two ways: you can pass optional parameters SourceArn, FromArn, and/or ReturnPathArn, or you can include the following X-headers in the header of your raw email: X-SES-SOURCE-ARN X-SES-FROM-ARN X-SES-RETURN-PATH-ARN Don't include these X-headers in the DKIM signature. Amazon SES removes these before it sends the email. If you only specify the SourceIdentityArn parameter, Amazon SES sets the From and Return-Path addresses to the same identity that you specified. For more information about sending authorization, see the Using Sending Authorization with Amazon SES in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
393
393
  */
394
394
  sendRawEmail(params: SES.Types.SendRawEmailRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendRawEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendRawEmailResponse, AWSError>;
395
395
  /**
396
- * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. This operation is more flexible than the SendEmail API operation. When you use the SendRawEmail operation, you can specify the headers of the message as well as its content. This flexibility is useful, for example, when you want to send a multipart MIME email (such a message that contains both a text and an HTML version). You can also use this operation to send messages that include attachments. The SendRawEmail operation has the following requirements: You can only send email from verified email addresses or domains. If you try to send email from an address that isn't verified, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you can only send email to other verified addresses in your account, or to addresses that are associated with the Amazon SES mailbox simulator. The maximum message size, including attachments, is 10 MB. Each message has to include at least one recipient address. A recipient address includes any address on the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you send a single message to more than one recipient address, and one of the recipient addresses isn't in a valid format (that is, it's not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), Amazon SES rejects the entire message, even if the other addresses are valid. Each message can include up to 50 recipient addresses across the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you need to send a single message to more than 50 recipients, you have to split the list of recipient addresses into groups of less than 50 recipients, and send separate messages to each group. Amazon SES allows you to specify 8-bit Content-Transfer-Encoding for MIME message parts. However, if Amazon SES has to modify the contents of your message (for example, if you use open and click tracking), 8-bit content isn't preserved. For this reason, we highly recommend that you encode all content that isn't 7-bit ASCII. For more information, see MIME Encoding in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Additionally, keep the following considerations in mind when using the SendRawEmail operation: Although you can customize the message headers when using the SendRawEmail operation, Amazon SES will automatically apply its own Message-ID and Date headers; if you passed these headers when creating the message, they will be overwritten by the values that Amazon SES provides. If you are using sending authorization to send on behalf of another user, SendRawEmail enables you to specify the cross-account identity for the email's Source, From, and Return-Path parameters in one of two ways: you can pass optional parameters SourceArn, FromArn, and/or ReturnPathArn to the API, or you can include the following X-headers in the header of your raw email: X-SES-SOURCE-ARN X-SES-FROM-ARN X-SES-RETURN-PATH-ARN Don't include these X-headers in the DKIM signature. Amazon SES removes these before it sends the email. If you only specify the SourceIdentityArn parameter, Amazon SES sets the From and Return-Path addresses to the same identity that you specified. For more information about sending authorization, see the Using Sending Authorization with Amazon SES in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
396
+ * Composes an email message and immediately queues it for sending. This operation is more flexible than the SendEmail operation. When you use the SendRawEmail operation, you can specify the headers of the message as well as its content. This flexibility is useful, for example, when you need to send a multipart MIME email (such a message that contains both a text and an HTML version). You can also use this operation to send messages that include attachments. The SendRawEmail operation has the following requirements: You can only send email from verified email addresses or domains. If you try to send email from an address that isn't verified, the operation results in an "Email address not verified" error. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you can only send email to other verified addresses in your account, or to addresses that are associated with the Amazon SES mailbox simulator. The maximum message size, including attachments, is 10 MB. Each message has to include at least one recipient address. A recipient address includes any address on the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you send a single message to more than one recipient address, and one of the recipient addresses isn't in a valid format (that is, it's not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), Amazon SES rejects the entire message, even if the other addresses are valid. Each message can include up to 50 recipient addresses across the To:, CC:, or BCC: lines. If you need to send a single message to more than 50 recipients, you have to split the list of recipient addresses into groups of less than 50 recipients, and send separate messages to each group. Amazon SES allows you to specify 8-bit Content-Transfer-Encoding for MIME message parts. However, if Amazon SES has to modify the contents of your message (for example, if you use open and click tracking), 8-bit content isn't preserved. For this reason, we highly recommend that you encode all content that isn't 7-bit ASCII. For more information, see MIME Encoding in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Additionally, keep the following considerations in mind when using the SendRawEmail operation: Although you can customize the message headers when using the SendRawEmail operation, Amazon SES automatically applies its own Message-ID and Date headers; if you passed these headers when creating the message, they are overwritten by the values that Amazon SES provides. If you are using sending authorization to send on behalf of another user, SendRawEmail enables you to specify the cross-account identity for the email's Source, From, and Return-Path parameters in one of two ways: you can pass optional parameters SourceArn, FromArn, and/or ReturnPathArn, or you can include the following X-headers in the header of your raw email: X-SES-SOURCE-ARN X-SES-FROM-ARN X-SES-RETURN-PATH-ARN Don't include these X-headers in the DKIM signature. Amazon SES removes these before it sends the email. If you only specify the SourceIdentityArn parameter, Amazon SES sets the From and Return-Path addresses to the same identity that you specified. For more information about sending authorization, see the Using Sending Authorization with Amazon SES in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For every message that you send, the total number of recipients (including each recipient in the To:, CC: and BCC: fields) is counted against the maximum number of emails you can send in a 24-hour period (your sending quota). For more information about sending quotas in Amazon SES, see Managing Your Amazon SES Sending Limits in the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
397
397
  */
398
398
  sendRawEmail(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendRawEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendRawEmailResponse, AWSError>;
399
399
  /**
400
- * Composes an email message using an email template and immediately queues it for sending. In order to send email using the SendTemplatedEmail operation, your call to the API must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Calls to the SendTemplatedEmail operation may only include one Destination parameter. A destination is a set of recipients who will receive the same version of the email. The Destination parameter can include up to 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. The Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. If your call to the SendTemplatedEmail operation includes all of the required parameters, Amazon SES accepts it and returns a Message ID. However, if Amazon SES can't render the email because the template contains errors, it doesn't send the email. Additionally, because it already accepted the message, Amazon SES doesn't return a message stating that it was unable to send the email. For these reasons, we highly recommend that you set up Amazon SES to send you notifications when Rendering Failure events occur. For more information, see Sending Personalized Email Using the Amazon SES API in the Amazon Simple Email Service Developer Guide.
400
+ * Composes an email message using an email template and immediately queues it for sending. To send email using this operation, your call must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Calls to the SendTemplatedEmail operation may only include one Destination parameter. A destination is a set of recipients that receives the same version of the email. The Destination parameter can include up to 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. The Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. If your call to the SendTemplatedEmail operation includes all of the required parameters, Amazon SES accepts it and returns a Message ID. However, if Amazon SES can't render the email because the template contains errors, it doesn't send the email. Additionally, because it already accepted the message, Amazon SES doesn't return a message stating that it was unable to send the email. For these reasons, we highly recommend that you set up Amazon SES to send you notifications when Rendering Failure events occur. For more information, see Sending Personalized Email Using the Amazon SES API in the Amazon Simple Email Service Developer Guide.
401
401
  */
402
402
  sendTemplatedEmail(params: SES.Types.SendTemplatedEmailRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendTemplatedEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendTemplatedEmailResponse, AWSError>;
403
403
  /**
404
- * Composes an email message using an email template and immediately queues it for sending. In order to send email using the SendTemplatedEmail operation, your call to the API must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Calls to the SendTemplatedEmail operation may only include one Destination parameter. A destination is a set of recipients who will receive the same version of the email. The Destination parameter can include up to 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. The Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message will be rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. If your call to the SendTemplatedEmail operation includes all of the required parameters, Amazon SES accepts it and returns a Message ID. However, if Amazon SES can't render the email because the template contains errors, it doesn't send the email. Additionally, because it already accepted the message, Amazon SES doesn't return a message stating that it was unable to send the email. For these reasons, we highly recommend that you set up Amazon SES to send you notifications when Rendering Failure events occur. For more information, see Sending Personalized Email Using the Amazon SES API in the Amazon Simple Email Service Developer Guide.
404
+ * Composes an email message using an email template and immediately queues it for sending. To send email using this operation, your call must meet the following requirements: The call must refer to an existing email template. You can create email templates using the CreateTemplate operation. The message must be sent from a verified email address or domain. If your account is still in the Amazon SES sandbox, you may only send to verified addresses or domains, or to email addresses associated with the Amazon SES Mailbox Simulator. For more information, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. The maximum message size is 10 MB. Calls to the SendTemplatedEmail operation may only include one Destination parameter. A destination is a set of recipients that receives the same version of the email. The Destination parameter can include up to 50 recipients, across the To:, CC: and BCC: fields. The Destination parameter must include at least one recipient email address. The recipient address can be a To: address, a CC: address, or a BCC: address. If a recipient email address is invalid (that is, it is not in the format UserName@[SubDomain.]Domain.TopLevelDomain), the entire message is rejected, even if the message contains other recipients that are valid. If your call to the SendTemplatedEmail operation includes all of the required parameters, Amazon SES accepts it and returns a Message ID. However, if Amazon SES can't render the email because the template contains errors, it doesn't send the email. Additionally, because it already accepted the message, Amazon SES doesn't return a message stating that it was unable to send the email. For these reasons, we highly recommend that you set up Amazon SES to send you notifications when Rendering Failure events occur. For more information, see Sending Personalized Email Using the Amazon SES API in the Amazon Simple Email Service Developer Guide.
405
405
  */
406
406
  sendTemplatedEmail(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SendTemplatedEmailResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SendTemplatedEmailResponse, AWSError>;
407
407
  /**
408
- * Sets the specified receipt rule set as the active receipt rule set. To disable your email-receiving through Amazon SES completely, you can call this API with RuleSetName set to null. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
408
+ * Sets the specified receipt rule set as the active receipt rule set. To disable your email-receiving through Amazon SES completely, you can call this operation with RuleSetName set to null. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
409
409
  */
410
410
  setActiveReceiptRuleSet(params: SES.Types.SetActiveReceiptRuleSetRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SetActiveReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SetActiveReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
411
411
  /**
412
- * Sets the specified receipt rule set as the active receipt rule set. To disable your email-receiving through Amazon SES completely, you can call this API with RuleSetName set to null. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
412
+ * Sets the specified receipt rule set as the active receipt rule set. To disable your email-receiving through Amazon SES completely, you can call this operation with RuleSetName set to null. For information about managing receipt rule sets, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
413
413
  */
414
414
  setActiveReceiptRuleSet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SetActiveReceiptRuleSetResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SetActiveReceiptRuleSetResponse, AWSError>;
415
415
  /**
@@ -437,11 +437,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
437
437
  */
438
438
  setIdentityHeadersInNotificationsEnabled(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SetIdentityHeadersInNotificationsEnabledResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SetIdentityHeadersInNotificationsEnabledResponse, AWSError>;
439
439
  /**
440
- * Enables or disables the custom MAIL FROM domain setup for a verified identity (an email address or a domain). To send emails using the specified MAIL FROM domain, you must add an MX record to your MAIL FROM domain's DNS settings. If you want your emails to pass Sender Policy Framework (SPF) checks, you must also add or update an SPF record. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
440
+ * Enables or disables the custom MAIL FROM domain setup for a verified identity (an email address or a domain). To send emails using the specified MAIL FROM domain, you must add an MX record to your MAIL FROM domain's DNS settings. To ensure that your emails pass Sender Policy Framework (SPF) checks, you must also add or update an SPF record. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
441
441
  */
442
442
  setIdentityMailFromDomain(params: SES.Types.SetIdentityMailFromDomainRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SetIdentityMailFromDomainResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SetIdentityMailFromDomainResponse, AWSError>;
443
443
  /**
444
- * Enables or disables the custom MAIL FROM domain setup for a verified identity (an email address or a domain). To send emails using the specified MAIL FROM domain, you must add an MX record to your MAIL FROM domain's DNS settings. If you want your emails to pass Sender Policy Framework (SPF) checks, you must also add or update an SPF record. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
444
+ * Enables or disables the custom MAIL FROM domain setup for a verified identity (an email address or a domain). To send emails using the specified MAIL FROM domain, you must add an MX record to your MAIL FROM domain's DNS settings. To ensure that your emails pass Sender Policy Framework (SPF) checks, you must also add or update an SPF record. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
445
445
  */
446
446
  setIdentityMailFromDomain(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.SetIdentityMailFromDomainResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.SetIdentityMailFromDomainResponse, AWSError>;
447
447
  /**
@@ -469,11 +469,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
469
469
  */
470
470
  testRenderTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.TestRenderTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.TestRenderTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
471
471
  /**
472
- * Enables or disables email sending across your entire Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending across your Amazon SES account in a given AWS Region when reputation metrics (such as your bounce or complaint rates) reach certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
472
+ * Enables or disables email sending across your entire Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending across your Amazon SES account in a given Amazon Web Services Region when reputation metrics (such as your bounce or complaint rates) reach certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
473
473
  */
474
474
  updateAccountSendingEnabled(params: SES.Types.UpdateAccountSendingEnabledRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
475
475
  /**
476
- * Enables or disables email sending across your entire Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending across your Amazon SES account in a given AWS Region when reputation metrics (such as your bounce or complaint rates) reach certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
476
+ * Enables or disables email sending across your entire Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending across your Amazon SES account in a given Amazon Web Services Region when reputation metrics (such as your bounce or complaint rates) reach certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
477
477
  */
478
478
  updateAccountSendingEnabled(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
479
479
  /**
@@ -485,19 +485,19 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
485
485
  */
486
486
  updateConfigurationSetEventDestination(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.UpdateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.UpdateConfigurationSetEventDestinationResponse, AWSError>;
487
487
  /**
488
- * Enables or disables the publishing of reputation metrics for emails sent using a specific configuration set in a given AWS Region. Reputation metrics include bounce and complaint rates. These metrics are published to Amazon CloudWatch. By using CloudWatch, you can create alarms when bounce or complaint rates exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
488
+ * Enables or disables the publishing of reputation metrics for emails sent using a specific configuration set in a given Amazon Web Services Region. Reputation metrics include bounce and complaint rates. These metrics are published to Amazon CloudWatch. By using CloudWatch, you can create alarms when bounce or complaint rates exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
489
489
  */
490
490
  updateConfigurationSetReputationMetricsEnabled(params: SES.Types.UpdateConfigurationSetReputationMetricsEnabledRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
491
491
  /**
492
- * Enables or disables the publishing of reputation metrics for emails sent using a specific configuration set in a given AWS Region. Reputation metrics include bounce and complaint rates. These metrics are published to Amazon CloudWatch. By using CloudWatch, you can create alarms when bounce or complaint rates exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
492
+ * Enables or disables the publishing of reputation metrics for emails sent using a specific configuration set in a given Amazon Web Services Region. Reputation metrics include bounce and complaint rates. These metrics are published to Amazon CloudWatch. By using CloudWatch, you can create alarms when bounce or complaint rates exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
493
493
  */
494
494
  updateConfigurationSetReputationMetricsEnabled(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
495
495
  /**
496
- * Enables or disables email sending for messages sent using a specific configuration set in a given AWS Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending for a configuration set when the reputation metrics for that configuration set (such as your bounce on complaint rate) exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
496
+ * Enables or disables email sending for messages sent using a specific configuration set in a given Amazon Web Services Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending for a configuration set when the reputation metrics for that configuration set (such as your bounce on complaint rate) exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
497
497
  */
498
498
  updateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled(params: SES.Types.UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabledRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
499
499
  /**
500
- * Enables or disables email sending for messages sent using a specific configuration set in a given AWS Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending for a configuration set when the reputation metrics for that configuration set (such as your bounce on complaint rate) exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
500
+ * Enables or disables email sending for messages sent using a specific configuration set in a given Amazon Web Services Region. You can use this operation in conjunction with Amazon CloudWatch alarms to temporarily pause email sending for a configuration set when the reputation metrics for that configuration set (such as your bounce on complaint rate) exceed certain thresholds. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
501
501
  */
502
502
  updateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
503
503
  /**
@@ -525,11 +525,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
525
525
  */
526
526
  updateReceiptRule(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.UpdateReceiptRuleResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.UpdateReceiptRuleResponse, AWSError>;
527
527
  /**
528
- * Updates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single API operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
528
+ * Updates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
529
529
  */
530
530
  updateTemplate(params: SES.Types.UpdateTemplateRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.UpdateTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.UpdateTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
531
531
  /**
532
- * Updates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single API operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
532
+ * Updates an email template. Email templates enable you to send personalized email to one or more destinations in a single operation. For more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
533
533
  */
534
534
  updateTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.UpdateTemplateResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.UpdateTemplateResponse, AWSError>;
535
535
  /**
@@ -541,11 +541,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
541
541
  */
542
542
  verifyDomainDkim(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.VerifyDomainDkimResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.VerifyDomainDkimResponse, AWSError>;
543
543
  /**
544
- * Adds a domain to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region and attempts to verify it. For more information about verifying domains, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
544
+ * Adds a domain to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. For more information about verifying domains, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
545
545
  */
546
546
  verifyDomainIdentity(params: SES.Types.VerifyDomainIdentityRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.VerifyDomainIdentityResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.VerifyDomainIdentityResponse, AWSError>;
547
547
  /**
548
- * Adds a domain to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region and attempts to verify it. For more information about verifying domains, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
548
+ * Adds a domain to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. For more information about verifying domains, see Verifying Email Addresses and Domains in the Amazon SES Developer Guide. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
549
549
  */
550
550
  verifyDomainIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.VerifyDomainIdentityResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.VerifyDomainIdentityResponse, AWSError>;
551
551
  /**
@@ -557,11 +557,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
557
557
  */
558
558
  verifyEmailAddress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
559
559
  /**
560
- * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a verification email is sent to the specified address. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
560
+ * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a verification email is sent to the specified address. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
561
561
  */
562
562
  verifyEmailIdentity(params: SES.Types.VerifyEmailIdentityRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.VerifyEmailIdentityResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.VerifyEmailIdentityResponse, AWSError>;
563
563
  /**
564
- * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a verification email is sent to the specified address. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
564
+ * Adds an email address to the list of identities for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region and attempts to verify it. As a result of executing this operation, a verification email is sent to the specified address. You can execute this operation no more than once per second.
565
565
  */
566
566
  verifyEmailIdentity(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: SES.Types.VerifyEmailIdentityResponse) => void): Request<SES.Types.VerifyEmailIdentityResponse, AWSError>;
567
567
  /**
@@ -576,11 +576,11 @@ declare class SES extends Service {
576
576
  declare namespace SES {
577
577
  export interface AddHeaderAction {
578
578
  /**
579
- * The name of the header to add. Must be between 1 and 50 characters, inclusive, and consist of alphanumeric (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) characters and dashes only.
579
+ * The name of the header to add to the incoming message. The name must contain at least one character, and can contain up to 50 characters. It consists of alphanumeric (az, AZ, 09) characters and dashes.
580
580
  */
581
581
  HeaderName: HeaderName;
582
582
  /**
583
- * Must be less than 2048 characters, and must not contain newline characters ("\r" or "\n").
583
+ * The content to include in the header. This value can contain up to 2048 characters. It can't contain newline (\n) or carriage return (\r) characters.
584
584
  */
585
585
  HeaderValue: HeaderValue;
586
586
  }
@@ -601,7 +601,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
601
601
  }
602
602
  export interface BounceAction {
603
603
  /**
604
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the bounce action is taken. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
604
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the bounce action is taken. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics operation in Amazon SNS. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
605
605
  */
606
606
  TopicArn?: AmazonResourceName;
607
607
  /**
@@ -617,7 +617,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
617
617
  */
618
618
  Message: BounceMessage;
619
619
  /**
620
- * The email address of the sender of the bounced email. This is the address from which the bounce message will be sent.
620
+ * The email address of the sender of the bounced email. This is the address from which the bounce message is sent.
621
621
  */
622
622
  Sender: Address;
623
623
  }
@@ -658,7 +658,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
658
658
  export type BulkEmailDestinationList = BulkEmailDestination[];
659
659
  export interface BulkEmailDestinationStatus {
660
660
  /**
661
- * The status of a message sent using the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation. Possible values for this parameter include: Success: Amazon SES accepted the message, and will attempt to deliver it to the recipients. MessageRejected: The message was rejected because it contained a virus. MailFromDomainNotVerified: The sender's email address or domain was not verified. ConfigurationSetDoesNotExist: The configuration set you specified does not exist. TemplateDoesNotExist: The template you specified does not exist. AccountSuspended: Your account has been shut down because of issues related to your email sending practices. AccountThrottled: The number of emails you can send has been reduced because your account has exceeded its allocated sending limit. AccountDailyQuotaExceeded: You have reached or exceeded the maximum number of emails you can send from your account in a 24-hour period. InvalidSendingPoolName: The configuration set you specified refers to an IP pool that does not exist. AccountSendingPaused: Email sending for the Amazon SES account was disabled using the UpdateAccountSendingEnabled operation. ConfigurationSetSendingPaused: Email sending for this configuration set was disabled using the UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled operation. InvalidParameterValue: One or more of the parameters you specified when calling this operation was invalid. See the error message for additional information. TransientFailure: Amazon SES was unable to process your request because of a temporary issue. Failed: Amazon SES was unable to process your request. See the error message for additional information.
661
+ * The status of a message sent using the SendBulkTemplatedEmail operation. Possible values for this parameter include: Success: Amazon SES accepted the message, and attempts to deliver it to the recipients. MessageRejected: The message was rejected because it contained a virus. MailFromDomainNotVerified: The sender's email address or domain was not verified. ConfigurationSetDoesNotExist: The configuration set you specified does not exist. TemplateDoesNotExist: The template you specified does not exist. AccountSuspended: Your account has been shut down because of issues related to your email sending practices. AccountThrottled: The number of emails you can send has been reduced because your account has exceeded its allocated sending limit. AccountDailyQuotaExceeded: You have reached or exceeded the maximum number of emails you can send from your account in a 24-hour period. InvalidSendingPoolName: The configuration set you specified refers to an IP pool that does not exist. AccountSendingPaused: Email sending for the Amazon SES account was disabled using the UpdateAccountSendingEnabled operation. ConfigurationSetSendingPaused: Email sending for this configuration set was disabled using the UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled operation. InvalidParameterValue: One or more of the parameters you specified when calling this operation was invalid. See the error message for additional information. TransientFailure: Amazon SES was unable to process your request because of a temporary issue. Failed: Amazon SES was unable to process your request. See the error message for additional information.
662
662
  */
663
663
  Status?: BulkEmailStatus;
664
664
  /**
@@ -676,7 +676,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
676
676
  export type Cidr = string;
677
677
  export interface CloneReceiptRuleSetRequest {
678
678
  /**
679
- * The name of the rule set to create. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain less than 64 characters.
679
+ * The name of the rule set to create. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain 64 characters or fewer.
680
680
  */
681
681
  RuleSetName: ReceiptRuleSetName;
682
682
  /**
@@ -694,15 +694,15 @@ declare namespace SES {
694
694
  }
695
695
  export interface CloudWatchDimensionConfiguration {
696
696
  /**
697
- * The name of an Amazon CloudWatch dimension associated with an email sending metric. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain less than 256 characters.
697
+ * The name of an Amazon CloudWatch dimension associated with an email sending metric. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), dashes (-), or colons (:). Contain 256 characters or fewer.
698
698
  */
699
699
  DimensionName: DimensionName;
700
700
  /**
701
- * The place where Amazon SES finds the value of a dimension to publish to Amazon CloudWatch. If you want Amazon SES to use the message tags that you specify using an X-SES-MESSAGE-TAGS header or a parameter to the SendEmail/SendRawEmail API, choose messageTag. If you want Amazon SES to use your own email headers, choose emailHeader.
701
+ * The place where Amazon SES finds the value of a dimension to publish to Amazon CloudWatch. To use the message tags that you specify using an X-SES-MESSAGE-TAGS header or a parameter to the SendEmail/SendRawEmail API, specify messageTag. To use your own email headers, specify emailHeader. To put a custom tag on any link included in your email, specify linkTag.
702
702
  */
703
703
  DimensionValueSource: DimensionValueSource;
704
704
  /**
705
- * The default value of the dimension that is published to Amazon CloudWatch if you do not provide the value of the dimension when you send an email. The default value must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain less than 256 characters.
705
+ * The default value of the dimension that is published to Amazon CloudWatch if you do not provide the value of the dimension when you send an email. The default value must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), dashes (-), at signs (@), or periods (.). Contain 256 characters or fewer.
706
706
  */
707
707
  DefaultDimensionValue: DefaultDimensionValue;
708
708
  }
@@ -734,7 +734,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
734
734
  */
735
735
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
736
736
  /**
737
- * An object that describes the AWS service that email sending event information will be published to.
737
+ * An object that describes the Amazon Web Services service that email sending event where information is published.
738
738
  */
739
739
  EventDestination: EventDestination;
740
740
  }
@@ -793,11 +793,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
793
793
  }
794
794
  export interface CreateReceiptRuleRequest {
795
795
  /**
796
- * The name of the rule set that the receipt rule will be added to.
796
+ * The name of the rule set where the receipt rule is added.
797
797
  */
798
798
  RuleSetName: ReceiptRuleSetName;
799
799
  /**
800
- * The name of an existing rule after which the new rule will be placed. If this parameter is null, the new rule will be inserted at the beginning of the rule list.
800
+ * The name of an existing rule after which the new rule is placed. If this parameter is null, the new rule is inserted at the beginning of the rule list.
801
801
  */
802
802
  After?: ReceiptRuleName;
803
803
  /**
@@ -809,7 +809,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
809
809
  }
810
810
  export interface CreateReceiptRuleSetRequest {
811
811
  /**
812
- * The name of the rule set to create. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain less than 64 characters.
812
+ * The name of the rule set to create. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain 64 characters or fewer.
813
813
  */
814
814
  RuleSetName: ReceiptRuleSetName;
815
815
  }
@@ -817,7 +817,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
817
817
  }
818
818
  export interface CreateTemplateRequest {
819
819
  /**
820
- * The content of the email, composed of a subject line, an HTML part, and a text-only part.
820
+ * The content of the email, composed of a subject line and either an HTML part or a text-only part.
821
821
  */
822
822
  Template: Template;
823
823
  }
@@ -871,7 +871,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
871
871
  }
872
872
  export interface DeleteConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsRequest {
873
873
  /**
874
- * The name of the configuration set from which you want to delete the tracking options.
874
+ * The name of the configuration set.
875
875
  */
876
876
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
877
877
  }
@@ -879,13 +879,13 @@ declare namespace SES {
879
879
  }
880
880
  export interface DeleteCustomVerificationEmailTemplateRequest {
881
881
  /**
882
- * The name of the custom verification email template that you want to delete.
882
+ * The name of the custom verification email template to delete.
883
883
  */
884
884
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
885
885
  }
886
886
  export interface DeleteIdentityPolicyRequest {
887
887
  /**
888
- * The identity that is associated with the policy that you want to delete. You can specify the identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this API, you must own the identity.
888
+ * The identity that is associated with the policy to delete. You can specify the identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this operation, you must own the identity.
889
889
  */
890
890
  Identity: Identity;
891
891
  /**
@@ -897,7 +897,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
897
897
  }
898
898
  export interface DeleteIdentityRequest {
899
899
  /**
900
- * The identity to be removed from the list of identities for the AWS Account.
900
+ * The identity to be removed from the list of identities for the Amazon Web Services account.
901
901
  */
902
902
  Identity: Identity;
903
903
  }
@@ -1049,7 +1049,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1049
1049
  export type Error = string;
1050
1050
  export interface EventDestination {
1051
1051
  /**
1052
- * The name of the event destination. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain less than 64 characters.
1052
+ * The name of the event destination. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain 64 characters or fewer.
1053
1053
  */
1054
1054
  Name: EventDestinationName;
1055
1055
  /**
@@ -1057,7 +1057,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1057
1057
  */
1058
1058
  Enabled?: Enabled;
1059
1059
  /**
1060
- * The type of email sending events to publish to the event destination.
1060
+ * The type of email sending events to publish to the event destination. send - The call was successful and Amazon SES is attempting to deliver the email. reject - Amazon SES determined that the email contained a virus and rejected it. bounce - The recipient's mail server permanently rejected the email. This corresponds to a hard bounce. complaint - The recipient marked the email as spam. delivery - Amazon SES successfully delivered the email to the recipient's mail server. open - The recipient received the email and opened it in their email client. click - The recipient clicked one or more links in the email. renderingFailure - Amazon SES did not send the email because of a template rendering issue.
1061
1061
  */
1062
1062
  MatchingEventTypes: EventTypes;
1063
1063
  /**
@@ -1084,7 +1084,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1084
1084
  */
1085
1085
  Name: ExtensionFieldName;
1086
1086
  /**
1087
- * The value of the header to add. Must be less than 2048 characters, and must not contain newline characters ("\r" or "\n").
1087
+ * The value of the header to add. Must contain 2048 characters or fewer, and must not contain newline characters ("\r" or "\n").
1088
1088
  */
1089
1089
  Value: ExtensionFieldValue;
1090
1090
  }
@@ -1095,13 +1095,13 @@ declare namespace SES {
1095
1095
  export type FromAddress = string;
1096
1096
  export interface GetAccountSendingEnabledResponse {
1097
1097
  /**
1098
- * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region.
1098
+ * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region.
1099
1099
  */
1100
1100
  Enabled?: Enabled;
1101
1101
  }
1102
1102
  export interface GetCustomVerificationEmailTemplateRequest {
1103
1103
  /**
1104
- * The name of the custom verification email template that you want to retrieve.
1104
+ * The name of the custom verification email template to retrieve.
1105
1105
  */
1106
1106
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
1107
1107
  }
@@ -1169,7 +1169,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1169
1169
  }
1170
1170
  export interface GetIdentityPoliciesRequest {
1171
1171
  /**
1172
- * The identity for which the policies will be retrieved. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this API, you must own the identity.
1172
+ * The identity for which the policies are retrieved. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this operation, you must own the identity.
1173
1173
  */
1174
1174
  Identity: Identity;
1175
1175
  /**
@@ -1217,7 +1217,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1217
1217
  }
1218
1218
  export interface GetTemplateRequest {
1219
1219
  /**
1220
- * The name of the template you want to retrieve.
1220
+ * The name of the template to retrieve.
1221
1221
  */
1222
1222
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
1223
1223
  }
@@ -1259,31 +1259,31 @@ declare namespace SES {
1259
1259
  }
1260
1260
  export interface IdentityNotificationAttributes {
1261
1261
  /**
1262
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES will publish bounce notifications.
1262
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES publishes bounce notifications.
1263
1263
  */
1264
1264
  BounceTopic: NotificationTopic;
1265
1265
  /**
1266
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES will publish complaint notifications.
1266
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES publishes complaint notifications.
1267
1267
  */
1268
1268
  ComplaintTopic: NotificationTopic;
1269
1269
  /**
1270
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES will publish delivery notifications.
1270
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic where Amazon SES publishes delivery notifications.
1271
1271
  */
1272
1272
  DeliveryTopic: NotificationTopic;
1273
1273
  /**
1274
- * Describes whether Amazon SES will forward bounce and complaint notifications as email. true indicates that Amazon SES will forward bounce and complaint notifications as email, while false indicates that bounce and complaint notifications will be published only to the specified bounce and complaint Amazon SNS topics.
1274
+ * Describes whether Amazon SES forwards bounce and complaint notifications as email. true indicates that Amazon SES forwards bounce and complaint notifications as email, while false indicates that bounce and complaint notifications are published only to the specified bounce and complaint Amazon SNS topics.
1275
1275
  */
1276
1276
  ForwardingEnabled: Enabled;
1277
1277
  /**
1278
- * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Bounce. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES will include headers in bounce notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES will not include headers in bounce notifications.
1278
+ * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Bounce. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES includes headers in bounce notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES does not include headers in bounce notifications.
1279
1279
  */
1280
1280
  HeadersInBounceNotificationsEnabled?: Enabled;
1281
1281
  /**
1282
- * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Complaint. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES will include headers in complaint notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES will not include headers in complaint notifications.
1282
+ * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Complaint. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES includes headers in complaint notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES does not include headers in complaint notifications.
1283
1283
  */
1284
1284
  HeadersInComplaintNotificationsEnabled?: Enabled;
1285
1285
  /**
1286
- * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Delivery. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES will include headers in delivery notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES will not include headers in delivery notifications.
1286
+ * Describes whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of type Delivery. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES includes headers in delivery notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES does not include headers in delivery notifications.
1287
1287
  */
1288
1288
  HeadersInDeliveryNotificationsEnabled?: Enabled;
1289
1289
  }
@@ -1311,15 +1311,15 @@ declare namespace SES {
1311
1311
  }
1312
1312
  export interface LambdaAction {
1313
1313
  /**
1314
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the Lambda action is taken. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1314
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the Lambda action is executed. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics operation in Amazon SNS. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1315
1315
  */
1316
1316
  TopicArn?: AmazonResourceName;
1317
1317
  /**
1318
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the AWS Lambda function. An example of an AWS Lambda function ARN is arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:MyFunction. For more information about AWS Lambda, see the AWS Lambda Developer Guide.
1318
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon Web Services Lambda function. An example of an Amazon Web Services Lambda function ARN is arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:MyFunction. For more information about Amazon Web Services Lambda, see the Amazon Web Services Lambda Developer Guide.
1319
1319
  */
1320
1320
  FunctionArn: AmazonResourceName;
1321
1321
  /**
1322
- * The invocation type of the AWS Lambda function. An invocation type of RequestResponse means that the execution of the function will immediately result in a response, and a value of Event means that the function will be invoked asynchronously. The default value is Event. For information about AWS Lambda invocation types, see the AWS Lambda Developer Guide. There is a 30-second timeout on RequestResponse invocations. You should use Event invocation in most cases. Use RequestResponse only when you want to make a mail flow decision, such as whether to stop the receipt rule or the receipt rule set.
1322
+ * The invocation type of the Amazon Web Services Lambda function. An invocation type of RequestResponse means that the execution of the function immediately results in a response, and a value of Event means that the function is invoked asynchronously. The default value is Event. For information about Amazon Web Services Lambda invocation types, see the Amazon Web Services Lambda Developer Guide. There is a 30-second timeout on RequestResponse invocations. You should use Event invocation in most cases. Use RequestResponse only to make a mail flow decision, such as whether to stop the receipt rule or the receipt rule set.
1323
1323
  */
1324
1324
  InvocationType?: InvocationType;
1325
1325
  }
@@ -1351,7 +1351,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1351
1351
  */
1352
1352
  NextToken?: NextToken;
1353
1353
  /**
1354
- * The maximum number of custom verification email templates to return. This value must be at least 1 and less than or equal to 50. If you do not specify a value, or if you specify a value less than 1 or greater than 50, the operation will return up to 50 results.
1354
+ * The maximum number of custom verification email templates to return. This value must be at least 1 and less than or equal to 50. If you do not specify a value, or if you specify a value less than 1 or greater than 50, the operation returns up to 50 results.
1355
1355
  */
1356
1356
  MaxResults?: MaxResults;
1357
1357
  }
@@ -1367,7 +1367,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1367
1367
  }
1368
1368
  export interface ListIdentitiesRequest {
1369
1369
  /**
1370
- * The type of the identities to list. Possible values are "EmailAddress" and "Domain". If this parameter is omitted, then all identities will be listed.
1370
+ * The type of the identities to list. Possible values are "EmailAddress" and "Domain". If this parameter is omitted, then all identities are listed.
1371
1371
  */
1372
1372
  IdentityType?: IdentityType;
1373
1373
  /**
@@ -1391,7 +1391,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1391
1391
  }
1392
1392
  export interface ListIdentityPoliciesRequest {
1393
1393
  /**
1394
- * The identity that is associated with the policy for which the policies will be listed. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this API, you must own the identity.
1394
+ * The identity that is associated with the policy for which the policies are listed. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this operation, you must own the identity.
1395
1395
  */
1396
1396
  Identity: Identity;
1397
1397
  }
@@ -1431,7 +1431,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1431
1431
  */
1432
1432
  NextToken?: NextToken;
1433
1433
  /**
1434
- * The maximum number of templates to return. This value must be at least 1 and less than or equal to 10. If you do not specify a value, or if you specify a value less than 1 or greater than 10, the operation will return up to 10 results.
1434
+ * The maximum number of templates to return. This value must be at least 1 and less than or equal to 100. If more than 100 items are requested, the page size will automatically set to 100. If you do not specify a value, 10 is the default page size.
1435
1435
  */
1436
1436
  MaxItems?: MaxItems;
1437
1437
  }
@@ -1441,7 +1441,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1441
1441
  */
1442
1442
  TemplatesMetadata?: TemplateMetadataList;
1443
1443
  /**
1444
- * A token indicating that there are additional email templates available to be listed. Pass this token to a subsequent call to ListTemplates to retrieve the next 50 email templates.
1444
+ * A token indicating that there are additional email templates available to be listed. Pass this token to a subsequent call to ListTemplates to retrieve the next set of email templates within your page size.
1445
1445
  */
1446
1446
  NextToken?: NextToken;
1447
1447
  }
@@ -1459,7 +1459,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1459
1459
  export type MaxSendRate = number;
1460
1460
  export interface Message {
1461
1461
  /**
1462
- * The subject of the message: A short summary of the content, which will appear in the recipient's inbox.
1462
+ * The subject of the message: A short summary of the content, which appears in the recipient's inbox.
1463
1463
  */
1464
1464
  Subject: Content;
1465
1465
  /**
@@ -1485,11 +1485,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1485
1485
  export type MessageId = string;
1486
1486
  export interface MessageTag {
1487
1487
  /**
1488
- * The name of the tag. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain less than 256 characters.
1488
+ * The name of the tag. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain 256 characters or fewer.
1489
1489
  */
1490
1490
  Name: MessageTagName;
1491
1491
  /**
1492
- * The value of the tag. The value must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain less than 256 characters.
1492
+ * The value of the tag. The value must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Contain 256 characters or fewer.
1493
1493
  */
1494
1494
  Value: MessageTagValue;
1495
1495
  }
@@ -1506,7 +1506,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1506
1506
  export type PolicyNameList = PolicyName[];
1507
1507
  export interface PutConfigurationSetDeliveryOptionsRequest {
1508
1508
  /**
1509
- * The name of the configuration set that you want to specify the delivery options for.
1509
+ * The name of the configuration set.
1510
1510
  */
1511
1511
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
1512
1512
  /**
@@ -1518,7 +1518,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1518
1518
  }
1519
1519
  export interface PutIdentityPolicyRequest {
1520
1520
  /**
1521
- * The identity that the policy will apply to. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this API, you must own the identity.
1521
+ * The identity to which that the policy applies. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). Examples: user@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com. To successfully call this operation, you must own the identity.
1522
1522
  */
1523
1523
  Identity: Identity;
1524
1524
  /**
@@ -1534,7 +1534,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1534
1534
  }
1535
1535
  export interface RawMessage {
1536
1536
  /**
1537
- * The raw data of the message. This data needs to base64-encoded if you are accessing Amazon SES directly through the HTTPS interface. If you are accessing Amazon SES using an AWS SDK, the SDK takes care of the base 64-encoding for you. In all cases, the client must ensure that the message format complies with Internet email standards regarding email header fields, MIME types, and MIME encoding. The To:, CC:, and BCC: headers in the raw message can contain a group list. If you are using SendRawEmail with sending authorization, you can include X-headers in the raw message to specify the "Source," "From," and "Return-Path" addresses. For more information, see the documentation for SendRawEmail. Do not include these X-headers in the DKIM signature, because they are removed by Amazon SES before sending the email. For more information, go to the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
1537
+ * The raw data of the message. This data needs to base64-encoded if you are accessing Amazon SES directly through the HTTPS interface. If you are accessing Amazon SES using an Amazon Web Services SDK, the SDK takes care of the base 64-encoding for you. In all cases, the client must ensure that the message format complies with Internet email standards regarding email header fields, MIME types, and MIME encoding. The To:, CC:, and BCC: headers in the raw message can contain a group list. If you are using SendRawEmail with sending authorization, you can include X-headers in the raw message to specify the "Source," "From," and "Return-Path" addresses. For more information, see the documentation for SendRawEmail. Do not include these X-headers in the DKIM signature, because they are removed by Amazon SES before sending the email. For more information, go to the Amazon SES Developer Guide.
1538
1538
  */
1539
1539
  Data: RawMessageData;
1540
1540
  }
@@ -1553,7 +1553,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1553
1553
  */
1554
1554
  WorkmailAction?: WorkmailAction;
1555
1555
  /**
1556
- * Calls an AWS Lambda function, and optionally, publishes a notification to Amazon SNS.
1556
+ * Calls an Amazon Web Services Lambda function, and optionally, publishes a notification to Amazon SNS.
1557
1557
  */
1558
1558
  LambdaAction?: LambdaAction;
1559
1559
  /**
@@ -1572,7 +1572,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1572
1572
  export type ReceiptActionsList = ReceiptAction[];
1573
1573
  export interface ReceiptFilter {
1574
1574
  /**
1575
- * The name of the IP address filter. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain less than 64 characters.
1575
+ * The name of the IP address filter. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain 64 characters or fewer.
1576
1576
  */
1577
1577
  Name: ReceiptFilterName;
1578
1578
  /**
@@ -1589,13 +1589,13 @@ declare namespace SES {
1589
1589
  */
1590
1590
  Policy: ReceiptFilterPolicy;
1591
1591
  /**
1592
- * A single IP address or a range of IP addresses that you want to block or allow, specified in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. An example of a single email address is 10.0.0.1. An example of a range of IP addresses is 10.0.0.1/24. For more information about CIDR notation, see RFC 2317.
1592
+ * A single IP address or a range of IP addresses to block or allow, specified in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation. An example of a single email address is 10.0.0.1. An example of a range of IP addresses is 10.0.0.1/24. For more information about CIDR notation, see RFC 2317.
1593
1593
  */
1594
1594
  Cidr: Cidr;
1595
1595
  }
1596
1596
  export interface ReceiptRule {
1597
1597
  /**
1598
- * The name of the receipt rule. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain less than 64 characters.
1598
+ * The name of the receipt rule. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), dashes (-), or periods (.). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain 64 characters or fewer.
1599
1599
  */
1600
1600
  Name: ReceiptRuleName;
1601
1601
  /**
@@ -1603,11 +1603,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1603
1603
  */
1604
1604
  Enabled?: Enabled;
1605
1605
  /**
1606
- * Specifies whether Amazon SES should require that incoming email is delivered over a connection encrypted with Transport Layer Security (TLS). If this parameter is set to Require, Amazon SES will bounce emails that are not received over TLS. The default is Optional.
1606
+ * Specifies whether Amazon SES should require that incoming email is delivered over a connection encrypted with Transport Layer Security (TLS). If this parameter is set to Require, Amazon SES bounces emails that are not received over TLS. The default is Optional.
1607
1607
  */
1608
1608
  TlsPolicy?: TlsPolicy;
1609
1609
  /**
1610
- * The recipient domains and email addresses that the receipt rule applies to. If this field is not specified, this rule will match all recipients under all verified domains.
1610
+ * The recipient domains and email addresses that the receipt rule applies to. If this field is not specified, this rule matches all recipients on all verified domains.
1611
1611
  */
1612
1612
  Recipients?: RecipientsList;
1613
1613
  /**
@@ -1623,7 +1623,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1623
1623
  export type ReceiptRuleNamesList = ReceiptRuleName[];
1624
1624
  export interface ReceiptRuleSetMetadata {
1625
1625
  /**
1626
- * The name of the receipt rule set. The name must: This value can only contain ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain less than 64 characters.
1626
+ * The name of the receipt rule set. The name must meet the following requirements: Contain only ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), numbers (0-9), underscores (_), or dashes (-). Start and end with a letter or number. Contain 64 characters or fewer.
1627
1627
  */
1628
1628
  Name?: ReceiptRuleSetName;
1629
1629
  /**
@@ -1637,7 +1637,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1637
1637
  export type Recipient = string;
1638
1638
  export interface RecipientDsnFields {
1639
1639
  /**
1640
- * The email address that the message was ultimately delivered to. This corresponds to the Final-Recipient in the DSN. If not specified, FinalRecipient will be set to the Recipient specified in the BouncedRecipientInfo structure. Either FinalRecipient or the recipient in BouncedRecipientInfo must be a recipient of the original bounced message. Do not prepend the FinalRecipient email address with rfc 822;, as described in RFC 3798.
1640
+ * The email address that the message was ultimately delivered to. This corresponds to the Final-Recipient in the DSN. If not specified, FinalRecipient is set to the Recipient specified in the BouncedRecipientInfo structure. Either FinalRecipient or the recipient in BouncedRecipientInfo must be a recipient of the original bounced message. Do not prepend the FinalRecipient email address with rfc 822;, as described in RFC 3798.
1641
1641
  */
1642
1642
  FinalRecipient?: Address;
1643
1643
  /**
@@ -1674,7 +1674,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1674
1674
  */
1675
1675
  RuleSetName: ReceiptRuleSetName;
1676
1676
  /**
1677
- * A list of the specified receipt rule set's receipt rules in the order that you want to put them.
1677
+ * The specified receipt rule set's receipt rules, in order.
1678
1678
  */
1679
1679
  RuleNames: ReceiptRuleNamesList;
1680
1680
  }
@@ -1683,7 +1683,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1683
1683
  export type ReportingMta = string;
1684
1684
  export interface ReputationOptions {
1685
1685
  /**
1686
- * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for the configuration set. If the value is true, then Amazon SES will send emails that use the configuration set. If the value is false, Amazon SES will not send emails that use the configuration set. The default value is true. You can change this setting using UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled.
1686
+ * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for the configuration set. If the value is true, then Amazon SES sends emails that use the configuration set. If the value is false, Amazon SES does not send emails that use the configuration set. The default value is true. You can change this setting using UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabled.
1687
1687
  */
1688
1688
  SendingEnabled?: Enabled;
1689
1689
  /**
@@ -1697,11 +1697,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1697
1697
  }
1698
1698
  export interface S3Action {
1699
1699
  /**
1700
- * The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to the Amazon S3 bucket. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1700
+ * The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the message is saved to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics operation in Amazon SNS. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1701
1701
  */
1702
1702
  TopicArn?: AmazonResourceName;
1703
1703
  /**
1704
- * The name of the Amazon S3 bucket that incoming email will be saved to.
1704
+ * The name of the Amazon S3 bucket for incoming email.
1705
1705
  */
1706
1706
  BucketName: S3BucketName;
1707
1707
  /**
@@ -1709,7 +1709,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1709
1709
  */
1710
1710
  ObjectKeyPrefix?: S3KeyPrefix;
1711
1711
  /**
1712
- * The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key you created in AWS KMS as follows: To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses. For example, if your AWS account ID is 123456789012 and you want to use the default master key in the US West (Oregon) region, the ARN of the default master key would be arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses. If you use the default master key, you don't need to perform any extra steps to give Amazon SES permission to use the key. To use a custom master key you created in AWS KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For more information about key policies, see the AWS KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES will not encrypt your emails. Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your AWS KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the AWS SDK for Java and AWS SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using AWS KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
1712
+ * The customer master key that Amazon SES should use to encrypt your emails before saving them to the Amazon S3 bucket. You can use the default master key or a custom master key that you created in Amazon Web Services KMS as follows: To use the default master key, provide an ARN in the form of arn:aws:kms:REGION:ACCOUNT-ID-WITHOUT-HYPHENS:alias/aws/ses. For example, if your Amazon Web Services account ID is 123456789012 and you want to use the default master key in the US West (Oregon) Region, the ARN of the default master key would be arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:123456789012:alias/aws/ses. If you use the default master key, you don't need to perform any extra steps to give Amazon SES permission to use the key. To use a custom master key that you created in Amazon Web Services KMS, provide the ARN of the master key and ensure that you add a statement to your key's policy to give Amazon SES permission to use it. For more information about giving permissions, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. For more information about key policies, see the Amazon Web Services KMS Developer Guide. If you do not specify a master key, Amazon SES does not encrypt your emails. Your mail is encrypted by Amazon SES using the Amazon S3 encryption client before the mail is submitted to Amazon S3 for storage. It is not encrypted using Amazon S3 server-side encryption. This means that you must use the Amazon S3 encryption client to decrypt the email after retrieving it from Amazon S3, as the service has no access to use your Amazon Web Services KMS keys for decryption. This encryption client is currently available with the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java and Amazon Web Services SDK for Ruby only. For more information about client-side encryption using Amazon Web Services KMS master keys, see the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.
1713
1713
  */
1714
1714
  KmsKeyArn?: AmazonResourceName;
1715
1715
  }
@@ -1717,7 +1717,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1717
1717
  export type S3KeyPrefix = string;
1718
1718
  export interface SNSAction {
1719
1719
  /**
1720
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1720
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics operation in Amazon SNS. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1721
1721
  */
1722
1722
  TopicArn: AmazonResourceName;
1723
1723
  /**
@@ -1728,7 +1728,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1728
1728
  export type SNSActionEncoding = "UTF-8"|"Base64"|string;
1729
1729
  export interface SNSDestination {
1730
1730
  /**
1731
- * The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic that email sending events will be published to. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1731
+ * The ARN of the Amazon SNS topic for email sending events. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics Amazon SNS operation. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
1732
1732
  */
1733
1733
  TopicARN: AmazonResourceName;
1734
1734
  }
@@ -1742,11 +1742,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1742
1742
  */
1743
1743
  BounceSender: Address;
1744
1744
  /**
1745
- * Human-readable text for the bounce message to explain the failure. If not specified, the text will be auto-generated based on the bounced recipient information.
1745
+ * Human-readable text for the bounce message to explain the failure. If not specified, the text is auto-generated based on the bounced recipient information.
1746
1746
  */
1747
1747
  Explanation?: Explanation;
1748
1748
  /**
1749
- * Message-related DSN fields. If not specified, Amazon SES will choose the values.
1749
+ * Message-related DSN fields. If not specified, Amazon SES chooses the values.
1750
1750
  */
1751
1751
  MessageDsn?: MessageDsn;
1752
1752
  /**
@@ -1766,7 +1766,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1766
1766
  }
1767
1767
  export interface SendBulkTemplatedEmailRequest {
1768
1768
  /**
1769
- * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. For this reason, the local part of a source email address (the part of the email address that precedes the @ sign) may only contain 7-bit ASCII characters. If the domain part of an address (the part after the @ sign) contains non-ASCII characters, they must be encoded using Punycode, as described in RFC3492. The sender name (also known as the friendly name) may contain non-ASCII characters. These characters must be encoded using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in RFC 2047. MIME encoded-word syntax uses the following form: =?charset?encoding?encoded-text?=.
1769
+ * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. For this reason, the email address string must be 7-bit ASCII. If you want to send to or from email addresses that contain Unicode characters in the domain part of an address, you must encode the domain using Punycode. Punycode is not permitted in the local part of the email address (the part before the @ sign) nor in the "friendly from" name. If you want to use Unicode characters in the "friendly from" name, you must encode the "friendly from" name using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in Sending raw email using the Amazon SES API. For more information about Punycode, see RFC 3492.
1770
1770
  */
1771
1771
  Source: Address;
1772
1772
  /**
@@ -1774,11 +1774,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1774
1774
  */
1775
1775
  SourceArn?: AmazonResourceName;
1776
1776
  /**
1777
- * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address will receive the reply.
1777
+ * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address receives the reply.
1778
1778
  */
1779
1779
  ReplyToAddresses?: AddressList;
1780
1780
  /**
1781
- * The email address that bounces and complaints will be forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message will be returned from the recipient's ISP; this message will then be forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1781
+ * The email address that bounces and complaints are forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message is returned from the recipient's ISP; this message is forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1782
1782
  */
1783
1783
  ReturnPath?: Address;
1784
1784
  /**
@@ -1806,13 +1806,13 @@ declare namespace SES {
1806
1806
  */
1807
1807
  DefaultTemplateData?: TemplateData;
1808
1808
  /**
1809
- * One or more Destination objects. All of the recipients in a Destination will receive the same version of the email. You can specify up to 50 Destination objects within a Destinations array.
1809
+ * One or more Destination objects. All of the recipients in a Destination receive the same version of the email. You can specify up to 50 Destination objects within a Destinations array.
1810
1810
  */
1811
1811
  Destinations: BulkEmailDestinationList;
1812
1812
  }
1813
1813
  export interface SendBulkTemplatedEmailResponse {
1814
1814
  /**
1815
- * The unique message identifier returned from the SendBulkTemplatedEmail action.
1815
+ * One object per intended recipient. Check each response object and retry any messages with a failure status. (Note that order of responses will be respective to order of destinations in the request.)Receipt rules enable you to specify which actions
1816
1816
  */
1817
1817
  Status: BulkEmailDestinationStatusList;
1818
1818
  }
@@ -1861,7 +1861,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1861
1861
  export type SendDataPointList = SendDataPoint[];
1862
1862
  export interface SendEmailRequest {
1863
1863
  /**
1864
- * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. For this reason, the local part of a source email address (the part of the email address that precedes the @ sign) may only contain 7-bit ASCII characters. If the domain part of an address (the part after the @ sign) contains non-ASCII characters, they must be encoded using Punycode, as described in RFC3492. The sender name (also known as the friendly name) may contain non-ASCII characters. These characters must be encoded using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in RFC 2047. MIME encoded-word syntax uses the following form: =?charset?encoding?encoded-text?=.
1864
+ * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. For this reason, the email address string must be 7-bit ASCII. If you want to send to or from email addresses that contain Unicode characters in the domain part of an address, you must encode the domain using Punycode. Punycode is not permitted in the local part of the email address (the part before the @ sign) nor in the "friendly from" name. If you want to use Unicode characters in the "friendly from" name, you must encode the "friendly from" name using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in Sending raw email using the Amazon SES API. For more information about Punycode, see RFC 3492.
1865
1865
  */
1866
1866
  Source: Address;
1867
1867
  /**
@@ -1873,11 +1873,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1873
1873
  */
1874
1874
  Message: Message;
1875
1875
  /**
1876
- * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address will receive the reply.
1876
+ * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address receives the reply.
1877
1877
  */
1878
1878
  ReplyToAddresses?: AddressList;
1879
1879
  /**
1880
- * The email address that bounces and complaints will be forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message will be returned from the recipient's ISP; this message will then be forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1880
+ * The email address that bounces and complaints are forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message is returned from the recipient's ISP; this message is forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1881
1881
  */
1882
1882
  ReturnPath?: Address;
1883
1883
  /**
@@ -1905,7 +1905,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1905
1905
  }
1906
1906
  export interface SendRawEmailRequest {
1907
1907
  /**
1908
- * The identity's email address. If you do not provide a value for this parameter, you must specify a "From" address in the raw text of the message. (You can also specify both.) Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described inRFC6531. For this reason, the local part of a source email address (the part of the email address that precedes the @ sign) may only contain 7-bit ASCII characters. If the domain part of an address (the part after the @ sign) contains non-ASCII characters, they must be encoded using Punycode, as described in RFC3492. The sender name (also known as the friendly name) may contain non-ASCII characters. These characters must be encoded using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in RFC 2047. MIME encoded-word syntax uses the following form: =?charset?encoding?encoded-text?=. If you specify the Source parameter and have feedback forwarding enabled, then bounces and complaints will be sent to this email address. This takes precedence over any Return-Path header that you might include in the raw text of the message.
1908
+ * The identity's email address. If you do not provide a value for this parameter, you must specify a "From" address in the raw text of the message. (You can also specify both.) Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described inRFC6531. For this reason, the email address string must be 7-bit ASCII. If you want to send to or from email addresses that contain Unicode characters in the domain part of an address, you must encode the domain using Punycode. Punycode is not permitted in the local part of the email address (the part before the @ sign) nor in the "friendly from" name. If you want to use Unicode characters in the "friendly from" name, you must encode the "friendly from" name using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in Sending raw email using the Amazon SES API. For more information about Punycode, see RFC 3492. If you specify the Source parameter and have feedback forwarding enabled, then bounces and complaints are sent to this email address. This takes precedence over any Return-Path header that you might include in the raw text of the message.
1909
1909
  */
1910
1910
  Source?: Address;
1911
1911
  /**
@@ -1945,7 +1945,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
1945
1945
  }
1946
1946
  export interface SendTemplatedEmailRequest {
1947
1947
  /**
1948
- * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. For this reason, the local part of a source email address (the part of the email address that precedes the @ sign) may only contain 7-bit ASCII characters. If the domain part of an address (the part after the @ sign) contains non-ASCII characters, they must be encoded using Punycode, as described in RFC3492. The sender name (also known as the friendly name) may contain non-ASCII characters. These characters must be encoded using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described inRFC 2047. MIME encoded-word syntax uses the following form: =?charset?encoding?encoded-text?=.
1948
+ * The email address that is sending the email. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES. For information about verifying identities, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. If you are sending on behalf of another user and have been permitted to do so by a sending authorization policy, then you must also specify the SourceArn parameter. For more information about sending authorization, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide. Amazon SES does not support the SMTPUTF8 extension, as described in RFC6531. for this reason, The email address string must be 7-bit ASCII. If you want to send to or from email addresses that contain Unicode characters in the domain part of an address, you must encode the domain using Punycode. Punycode is not permitted in the local part of the email address (the part before the @ sign) nor in the "friendly from" name. If you want to use Unicode characters in the "friendly from" name, you must encode the "friendly from" name using MIME encoded-word syntax, as described in Sending raw email using the Amazon SES API. For more information about Punycode, see RFC 3492.
1949
1949
  */
1950
1950
  Source: Address;
1951
1951
  /**
@@ -1953,11 +1953,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
1953
1953
  */
1954
1954
  Destination: Destination;
1955
1955
  /**
1956
- * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address will receive the reply.
1956
+ * The reply-to email address(es) for the message. If the recipient replies to the message, each reply-to address receives the reply.
1957
1957
  */
1958
1958
  ReplyToAddresses?: AddressList;
1959
1959
  /**
1960
- * The email address that bounces and complaints will be forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message will be returned from the recipient's ISP; this message will then be forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1960
+ * The email address that bounces and complaints are forwarded to when feedback forwarding is enabled. If the message cannot be delivered to the recipient, then an error message is returned from the recipient's ISP; this message is forwarded to the email address specified by the ReturnPath parameter. The ReturnPath parameter is never overwritten. This email address must be either individually verified with Amazon SES, or from a domain that has been verified with Amazon SES.
1961
1961
  */
1962
1962
  ReturnPath?: Address;
1963
1963
  /**
@@ -2022,7 +2022,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2022
2022
  */
2023
2023
  Identity: Identity;
2024
2024
  /**
2025
- * Sets whether Amazon SES will forward bounce and complaint notifications as email. true specifies that Amazon SES will forward bounce and complaint notifications as email, in addition to any Amazon SNS topic publishing otherwise specified. false specifies that Amazon SES will publish bounce and complaint notifications only through Amazon SNS. This value can only be set to false when Amazon SNS topics are set for both Bounce and Complaint notification types.
2025
+ * Sets whether Amazon SES forwards bounce and complaint notifications as email. true specifies that Amazon SES forwards bounce and complaint notifications as email, in addition to any Amazon SNS topic publishing otherwise specified. false specifies that Amazon SES publishes bounce and complaint notifications only through Amazon SNS. This value can only be set to false when Amazon SNS topics are set for both Bounce and Complaint notification types.
2026
2026
  */
2027
2027
  ForwardingEnabled: Enabled;
2028
2028
  }
@@ -2038,7 +2038,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2038
2038
  */
2039
2039
  NotificationType: NotificationType;
2040
2040
  /**
2041
- * Sets whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of the specified notification type. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES will include headers in notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES will not include headers in notifications. This value can only be set when NotificationType is already set to use a particular Amazon SNS topic.
2041
+ * Sets whether Amazon SES includes the original email headers in Amazon SNS notifications of the specified notification type. A value of true specifies that Amazon SES includes headers in notifications, and a value of false specifies that Amazon SES does not include headers in notifications. This value can only be set when NotificationType is already set to use a particular Amazon SNS topic.
2042
2042
  */
2043
2043
  Enabled: Enabled;
2044
2044
  }
@@ -2046,15 +2046,15 @@ declare namespace SES {
2046
2046
  }
2047
2047
  export interface SetIdentityMailFromDomainRequest {
2048
2048
  /**
2049
- * The verified identity for which you want to enable or disable the specified custom MAIL FROM domain.
2049
+ * The verified identity.
2050
2050
  */
2051
2051
  Identity: Identity;
2052
2052
  /**
2053
- * The custom MAIL FROM domain that you want the verified identity to use. The MAIL FROM domain must 1) be a subdomain of the verified identity, 2) not be used in a "From" address if the MAIL FROM domain is the destination of email feedback forwarding (for more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide), and 3) not be used to receive emails. A value of null disables the custom MAIL FROM setting for the identity.
2053
+ * The custom MAIL FROM domain for the verified identity to use. The MAIL FROM domain must 1) be a subdomain of the verified identity, 2) not be used in a "From" address if the MAIL FROM domain is the destination of email feedback forwarding (for more information, see the Amazon SES Developer Guide), and 3) not be used to receive emails. A value of null disables the custom MAIL FROM setting for the identity.
2054
2054
  */
2055
2055
  MailFromDomain?: MailFromDomainName;
2056
2056
  /**
2057
- * The action that you want Amazon SES to take if it cannot successfully read the required MX record when you send an email. If you choose UseDefaultValue, Amazon SES will use amazonses.com (or a subdomain of that) as the MAIL FROM domain. If you choose RejectMessage, Amazon SES will return a MailFromDomainNotVerified error and not send the email. The action specified in BehaviorOnMXFailure is taken when the custom MAIL FROM domain setup is in the Pending, Failed, and TemporaryFailure states.
2057
+ * The action for Amazon SES to take if it cannot successfully read the required MX record when you send an email. If you choose UseDefaultValue, Amazon SES uses amazonses.com (or a subdomain of that) as the MAIL FROM domain. If you choose RejectMessage, Amazon SES returns a MailFromDomainNotVerified error and not send the email. The action specified in BehaviorOnMXFailure is taken when the custom MAIL FROM domain setup is in the Pending, Failed, and TemporaryFailure states.
2058
2058
  */
2059
2059
  BehaviorOnMXFailure?: BehaviorOnMXFailure;
2060
2060
  }
@@ -2062,11 +2062,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
2062
2062
  }
2063
2063
  export interface SetIdentityNotificationTopicRequest {
2064
2064
  /**
2065
- * The identity (email address or domain) that you want to set the Amazon SNS topic for. You can only specify a verified identity for this parameter. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). The following examples are all valid identities: sender@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com.
2065
+ * The identity (email address or domain) for the Amazon SNS topic. You can only specify a verified identity for this parameter. You can specify an identity by using its name or by using its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). The following examples are all valid identities: sender@example.com, example.com, arn:aws:ses:us-east-1:123456789012:identity/example.com.
2066
2066
  */
2067
2067
  Identity: Identity;
2068
2068
  /**
2069
- * The type of notifications that will be published to the specified Amazon SNS topic.
2069
+ * The type of notifications that are published to the specified Amazon SNS topic.
2070
2070
  */
2071
2071
  NotificationType: NotificationType;
2072
2072
  /**
@@ -2098,7 +2098,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2098
2098
  */
2099
2099
  Scope: StopScope;
2100
2100
  /**
2101
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the stop action is taken. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
2101
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the stop action is taken. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics Amazon SNS operation. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
2102
2102
  */
2103
2103
  TopicArn?: AmazonResourceName;
2104
2104
  }
@@ -2108,7 +2108,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2108
2108
  export type SuccessRedirectionURL = string;
2109
2109
  export interface Template {
2110
2110
  /**
2111
- * The name of the template. You will refer to this name when you send email using the SendTemplatedEmail or SendBulkTemplatedEmail operations.
2111
+ * The name of the template. You use this name when you send email using the SendTemplatedEmail or SendBulkTemplatedEmail operations.
2112
2112
  */
2113
2113
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
2114
2114
  /**
@@ -2116,7 +2116,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2116
2116
  */
2117
2117
  SubjectPart?: SubjectPart;
2118
2118
  /**
2119
- * The email body that will be visible to recipients whose email clients do not display HTML.
2119
+ * The email body that is visible to recipients whose email clients do not display HTML content.
2120
2120
  */
2121
2121
  TextPart?: TextPart;
2122
2122
  /**
@@ -2140,7 +2140,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2140
2140
  export type TemplateName = string;
2141
2141
  export interface TestRenderTemplateRequest {
2142
2142
  /**
2143
- * The name of the template that you want to render.
2143
+ * The name of the template to render.
2144
2144
  */
2145
2145
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
2146
2146
  /**
@@ -2159,23 +2159,23 @@ declare namespace SES {
2159
2159
  export type TlsPolicy = "Require"|"Optional"|string;
2160
2160
  export interface TrackingOptions {
2161
2161
  /**
2162
- * The custom subdomain that will be used to redirect email recipients to the Amazon SES event tracking domain.
2162
+ * The custom subdomain that is used to redirect email recipients to the Amazon SES event tracking domain.
2163
2163
  */
2164
2164
  CustomRedirectDomain?: CustomRedirectDomain;
2165
2165
  }
2166
2166
  export interface UpdateAccountSendingEnabledRequest {
2167
2167
  /**
2168
- * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for your Amazon SES account in the current AWS Region.
2168
+ * Describes whether email sending is enabled or disabled for your Amazon SES account in the current Amazon Web Services Region.
2169
2169
  */
2170
2170
  Enabled?: Enabled;
2171
2171
  }
2172
2172
  export interface UpdateConfigurationSetEventDestinationRequest {
2173
2173
  /**
2174
- * The name of the configuration set that contains the event destination that you want to update.
2174
+ * The name of the configuration set that contains the event destination.
2175
2175
  */
2176
2176
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
2177
2177
  /**
2178
- * The event destination object that you want to apply to the specified configuration set.
2178
+ * The event destination object.
2179
2179
  */
2180
2180
  EventDestination: EventDestination;
2181
2181
  }
@@ -2183,17 +2183,17 @@ declare namespace SES {
2183
2183
  }
2184
2184
  export interface UpdateConfigurationSetReputationMetricsEnabledRequest {
2185
2185
  /**
2186
- * The name of the configuration set that you want to update.
2186
+ * The name of the configuration set to update.
2187
2187
  */
2188
2188
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
2189
2189
  /**
2190
- * Describes whether or not Amazon SES will publish reputation metrics for the configuration set, such as bounce and complaint rates, to Amazon CloudWatch.
2190
+ * Describes whether or not Amazon SES publishes reputation metrics for the configuration set, such as bounce and complaint rates, to Amazon CloudWatch.
2191
2191
  */
2192
2192
  Enabled: Enabled;
2193
2193
  }
2194
2194
  export interface UpdateConfigurationSetSendingEnabledRequest {
2195
2195
  /**
2196
- * The name of the configuration set that you want to update.
2196
+ * The name of the configuration set to update.
2197
2197
  */
2198
2198
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
2199
2199
  /**
@@ -2203,7 +2203,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2203
2203
  }
2204
2204
  export interface UpdateConfigurationSetTrackingOptionsRequest {
2205
2205
  /**
2206
- * The name of the configuration set for which you want to update the custom tracking domain.
2206
+ * The name of the configuration set.
2207
2207
  */
2208
2208
  ConfigurationSetName: ConfigurationSetName;
2209
2209
  TrackingOptions: TrackingOptions;
@@ -2212,7 +2212,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2212
2212
  }
2213
2213
  export interface UpdateCustomVerificationEmailTemplateRequest {
2214
2214
  /**
2215
- * The name of the custom verification email template that you want to update.
2215
+ * The name of the custom verification email template to update.
2216
2216
  */
2217
2217
  TemplateName: TemplateName;
2218
2218
  /**
@@ -2277,7 +2277,7 @@ declare namespace SES {
2277
2277
  }
2278
2278
  export interface VerifyDomainIdentityResponse {
2279
2279
  /**
2280
- * A TXT record that you must place in the DNS settings of the domain to complete domain verification with Amazon SES. As Amazon SES searches for the TXT record, the domain's verification status is "Pending". When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, if you still want to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning.
2280
+ * A TXT record that you must place in the DNS settings of the domain to complete domain verification with Amazon SES. As Amazon SES searches for the TXT record, the domain's verification status is "Pending". When Amazon SES detects the record, the domain's verification status changes to "Success". If Amazon SES is unable to detect the record within 72 hours, the domain's verification status changes to "Failed." In that case, to verify the domain, you must restart the verification process from the beginning. The domain's verification status also changes to "Success" when it is DKIM verified.
2281
2281
  */
2282
2282
  VerificationToken: VerificationToken;
2283
2283
  }
@@ -2297,11 +2297,11 @@ declare namespace SES {
2297
2297
  }
2298
2298
  export interface WorkmailAction {
2299
2299
  /**
2300
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the WorkMail action is called. An example of an Amazon SNS topic ARN is arn:aws:sns:us-west-2:123456789012:MyTopic. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
2300
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon SNS topic to notify when the WorkMail action is called. You can find the ARN of a topic by using the ListTopics operation in Amazon SNS. For more information about Amazon SNS topics, see the Amazon SNS Developer Guide.
2301
2301
  */
2302
2302
  TopicArn?: AmazonResourceName;
2303
2303
  /**
2304
- * The ARN of the Amazon WorkMail organization. An example of an Amazon WorkMail organization ARN is arn:aws:workmail:us-west-2:123456789012:organization/m-68755160c4cb4e29a2b2f8fb58f359d7. For information about Amazon WorkMail organizations, see the Amazon WorkMail Administrator Guide.
2304
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon WorkMail organization. Amazon WorkMail ARNs use the following format: arn:aws:workmail:&lt;region&gt;:&lt;awsAccountId&gt;:organization/&lt;workmailOrganizationId&gt; You can find the ID of your organization by using the ListOrganizations operation in Amazon WorkMail. Amazon WorkMail organization IDs begin with "m-", followed by a string of alphanumeric characters. For information about Amazon WorkMail organizations, see the Amazon WorkMail Administrator Guide.
2305
2305
  */
2306
2306
  OrganizationArn: AmazonResourceName;
2307
2307
  }