cdk-lambda-subminute 2.0.301 → 2.0.302

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Files changed (74) hide show
  1. package/.jsii +3 -3
  2. package/lib/cdk-lambda-subminute.js +3 -3
  3. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/CHANGELOG.md +30 -1
  4. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/README.md +1 -1
  5. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/athena-2017-05-18.min.json +6 -0
  6. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloud9-2017-09-23.examples.json +1 -0
  7. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudformation-2010-05-15.min.json +90 -81
  8. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codepipeline-2015-07-09.min.json +16 -0
  9. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codestar-connections-2019-12-01.min.json +590 -3
  10. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codestar-connections-2019-12-01.paginators.json +10 -0
  11. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ec2-2016-11-15.min.json +1853 -1396
  12. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecr-2015-09-21.min.json +100 -40
  13. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticmapreduce-2009-03-31.min.json +91 -78
  14. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/internetmonitor-2021-06-03.min.json +172 -0
  15. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/internetmonitor-2021-06-03.paginators.json +5 -0
  16. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivschat-2020-07-14.min.json +16 -4
  17. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/medialive-2017-10-14.min.json +379 -301
  18. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/metadata.json +3 -3
  19. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/osis-2022-01-01.min.json +66 -12
  20. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2014-10-31.min.json +233 -217
  21. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/redshift-2012-12-01.min.json +250 -91
  22. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/redshift-2012-12-01.paginators.json +6 -0
  23. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/redshift-serverless-2021-04-21.min.json +39 -38
  24. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/s3-2006-03-01.examples.json +126 -126
  25. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sso-admin-2020-07-20.min.json +21 -13
  26. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sso-oidc-2019-06-10.examples.json +228 -0
  27. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sso-oidc-2019-06-10.min.json +94 -8
  28. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/trustedadvisor-2022-09-15.min.json +794 -0
  29. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/trustedadvisor-2022-09-15.paginators.json +40 -0
  30. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/verifiedpermissions-2021-12-01.min.json +269 -199
  31. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/wisdom-2020-10-19.min.json +790 -27
  32. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/wisdom-2020-10-19.paginators.json +18 -0
  33. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/all.d.ts +1 -1
  34. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/all.js +2 -2
  35. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/appmesh.d.ts +2 -2
  36. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/athena.d.ts +27 -19
  37. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloud9.d.ts +1 -1
  38. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/cloudformation.d.ts +14 -1
  39. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/codepipeline.d.ts +22 -2
  40. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/codestarconnections.d.ts +727 -0
  41. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/connect.d.ts +2 -2
  42. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/dlm.d.ts +2 -2
  43. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ec2.d.ts +563 -22
  44. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ecr.d.ts +128 -7
  45. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/emr.d.ts +80 -43
  46. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/eventbridge.d.ts +40 -37
  47. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/internetmonitor.d.ts +157 -4
  48. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/kinesisvideo.d.ts +8 -8
  49. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/medialive.d.ts +121 -47
  50. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/osis.d.ts +55 -0
  51. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/rds.d.ts +31 -4
  52. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/redshift.d.ts +207 -0
  53. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/redshiftserverless.d.ts +5 -0
  54. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/s3.d.ts +2 -2
  55. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ssoadmin.d.ts +18 -6
  56. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/ssooidc.d.ts +99 -16
  57. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/sts.d.ts +3 -3
  58. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/trustedadvisor.d.ts +918 -0
  59. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/trustedadvisor.js +18 -0
  60. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/verifiedpermissions.d.ts +67 -1
  61. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/wisdom.d.ts +849 -25
  62. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-core-react-native.js +2 -2
  63. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk-react-native.js +1420 -1420
  64. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.js +2651 -1909
  65. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/dist/aws-sdk.min.js +101 -101
  66. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/config_service_placeholders.d.ts +2 -2
  67. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/lib/core.js +1 -1
  68. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/package.json +1 -1
  69. package/package.json +3 -3
  70. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/macie-2017-12-19.min.json +0 -222
  71. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/macie-2017-12-19.paginators.json +0 -14
  72. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/macie.d.ts +0 -284
  73. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/macie.js +0 -18
  74. /package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{macie-2017-12-19.examples.json → trustedadvisor-2022-09-15.examples.json} +0 -0
@@ -18,12 +18,24 @@
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  "limit_key": "maxResults",
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  "result_key": "contentSummaries"
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  },
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+ "ListImportJobs": {
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+ "input_token": "nextToken",
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+ "output_token": "nextToken",
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+ "limit_key": "maxResults",
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+ "result_key": "importJobSummaries"
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+ },
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  "ListKnowledgeBases": {
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  "input_token": "nextToken",
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  "output_token": "nextToken",
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  "limit_key": "maxResults",
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  "result_key": "knowledgeBaseSummaries"
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  },
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+ "ListQuickResponses": {
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+ "input_token": "nextToken",
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+ "output_token": "nextToken",
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+ "limit_key": "maxResults",
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+ "result_key": "quickResponseSummaries"
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+ },
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  "QueryAssistant": {
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  "input_token": "nextToken",
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  "output_token": "nextToken",
@@ -36,6 +48,12 @@
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  "limit_key": "maxResults",
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  "result_key": "contentSummaries"
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  },
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+ "SearchQuickResponses": {
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+ "input_token": "nextToken",
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+ "output_token": "nextToken",
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+ "limit_key": "maxResults",
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+ "result_key": "results"
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+ },
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  "SearchSessions": {
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  "input_token": "nextToken",
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  "output_token": "nextToken",
@@ -142,7 +142,6 @@ export import PI = require('./pi');
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  export import Neptune = require('./neptune');
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  export import MediaTailor = require('./mediatailor');
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  export import EKS = require('./eks');
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- export import Macie = require('./macie');
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  export import DLM = require('./dlm');
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  export import Signer = require('./signer');
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  export import Chime = require('./chime');
@@ -357,3 +356,4 @@ export import Bedrock = require('./bedrock');
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  export import BedrockRuntime = require('./bedrockruntime');
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  export import DataZone = require('./datazone');
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  export import LaunchWizard = require('./launchwizard');
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+ export import TrustedAdvisor = require('./trustedadvisor');
@@ -144,7 +144,6 @@ module.exports = {
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  Neptune: require('./neptune'),
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  MediaTailor: require('./mediatailor'),
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  EKS: require('./eks'),
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- Macie: require('./macie'),
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  DLM: require('./dlm'),
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  Signer: require('./signer'),
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  Chime: require('./chime'),
@@ -358,5 +357,6 @@ module.exports = {
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  Bedrock: require('./bedrock'),
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  BedrockRuntime: require('./bedrockruntime'),
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  DataZone: require('./datazone'),
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- LaunchWizard: require('./launchwizard')
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+ LaunchWizard: require('./launchwizard'),
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+ TrustedAdvisor: require('./trustedadvisor')
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  };
@@ -956,7 +956,7 @@ declare namespace AppMesh {
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  */
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  format?: LoggingFormat;
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  /**
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- * The file path to write access logs to. You can use /dev/stdout to send access logs to standard out and configure your Envoy container to use a log driver, such as awslogs, to export the access logs to a log storage service such as Amazon CloudWatch Logs. You can also specify a path in the Envoy container's file system to write the files to disk. <note> <p>The Envoy process must have write permissions to the path that you specify here. Otherwise, Envoy fails to bootstrap properly.</p> </note>
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+ * The file path to write access logs to. You can use /dev/stdout to send access logs to standard out and configure your Envoy container to use a log driver, such as awslogs, to export the access logs to a log storage service such as Amazon CloudWatch Logs. You can also specify a path in the Envoy container's file system to write the files to disk. The Envoy process must have write permissions to the path that you specify here. Otherwise, Envoy fails to bootstrap properly.
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  */
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  path: FilePath;
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  }
@@ -1111,7 +1111,7 @@ declare namespace AppMesh {
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  */
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  metadata?: GrpcGatewayRouteMetadataList;
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  /**
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- * The port number to match from the request.
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+ * The gateway route port to be matched on.
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  */
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  port?: ListenerPort;
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  /**
@@ -60,11 +60,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  createDataCatalog(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.CreateDataCatalogOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.CreateDataCatalogOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a named query in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the workgroup. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Creates a named query in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the workgroup.
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  */
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  createNamedQuery(params: Athena.Types.CreateNamedQueryInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.CreateNamedQueryOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.CreateNamedQueryOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a named query in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the workgroup. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Creates a named query in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the workgroup.
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  */
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  createNamedQuery(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.CreateNamedQueryOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.CreateNamedQueryOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -116,11 +116,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  deleteDataCatalog(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.DeleteDataCatalogOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.DeleteDataCatalogOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes the named query if you have access to the workgroup in which the query was saved. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Deletes the named query if you have access to the workgroup in which the query was saved.
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  */
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  deleteNamedQuery(params: Athena.Types.DeleteNamedQueryInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.DeleteNamedQueryOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.DeleteNamedQueryOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Deletes the named query if you have access to the workgroup in which the query was saved. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Deletes the named query if you have access to the workgroup in which the query was saved.
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  */
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  deleteNamedQuery(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.DeleteNamedQueryOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.DeleteNamedQueryOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -356,11 +356,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  listExecutors(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListExecutorsResponse) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListExecutorsResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Provides a list of available query IDs only for queries saved in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, lists the saved queries for the primary workgroup. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Provides a list of available query IDs only for queries saved in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, lists the saved queries for the primary workgroup.
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  */
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  listNamedQueries(params: Athena.Types.ListNamedQueriesInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListNamedQueriesOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListNamedQueriesOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Provides a list of available query IDs only for queries saved in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, lists the saved queries for the primary workgroup. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Provides a list of available query IDs only for queries saved in the specified workgroup. Requires that you have access to the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, lists the saved queries for the primary workgroup.
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  */
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  listNamedQueries(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListNamedQueriesOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListNamedQueriesOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -388,11 +388,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  listPreparedStatements(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListPreparedStatementsOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListPreparedStatementsOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Provides a list of available query execution IDs for the queries in the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, returns a list of query execution IDs for the primary workgroup. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the queries ran. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Provides a list of available query execution IDs for the queries in the specified workgroup. Athena keeps a query history for 45 days. If a workgroup is not specified, returns a list of query execution IDs for the primary workgroup. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the queries ran.
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  */
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  listQueryExecutions(params: Athena.Types.ListQueryExecutionsInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListQueryExecutionsOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListQueryExecutionsOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Provides a list of available query execution IDs for the queries in the specified workgroup. If a workgroup is not specified, returns a list of query execution IDs for the primary workgroup. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the queries ran. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Provides a list of available query execution IDs for the queries in the specified workgroup. Athena keeps a query history for 45 days. If a workgroup is not specified, returns a list of query execution IDs for the primary workgroup. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the queries ran.
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  */
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  listQueryExecutions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.ListQueryExecutionsOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.ListQueryExecutionsOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -436,11 +436,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  putCapacityAssignmentConfiguration(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.PutCapacityAssignmentConfigurationOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.PutCapacityAssignmentConfigurationOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Submits calculations for execution within a session. You can supply the code to run as an inline code block within the request.
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+ * Submits calculations for execution within a session. You can supply the code to run as an inline code block within the request. The request syntax requires the StartCalculationExecutionRequest$CodeBlock parameter or the CalculationConfiguration$CodeBlock parameter, but not both. Because CalculationConfiguration$CodeBlock is deprecated, use the StartCalculationExecutionRequest$CodeBlock parameter instead.
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  */
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  startCalculationExecution(params: Athena.Types.StartCalculationExecutionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.StartCalculationExecutionResponse) => void): Request<Athena.Types.StartCalculationExecutionResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Submits calculations for execution within a session. You can supply the code to run as an inline code block within the request.
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+ * Submits calculations for execution within a session. You can supply the code to run as an inline code block within the request. The request syntax requires the StartCalculationExecutionRequest$CodeBlock parameter or the CalculationConfiguration$CodeBlock parameter, but not both. Because CalculationConfiguration$CodeBlock is deprecated, use the StartCalculationExecutionRequest$CodeBlock parameter instead.
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  */
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  startCalculationExecution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.StartCalculationExecutionResponse) => void): Request<Athena.Types.StartCalculationExecutionResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -468,11 +468,11 @@ declare class Athena extends Service {
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  */
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  stopCalculationExecution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.StopCalculationExecutionResponse) => void): Request<Athena.Types.StopCalculationExecutionResponse, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Stops a query execution. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the query ran. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Stops a query execution. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the query ran.
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  */
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  stopQueryExecution(params: Athena.Types.StopQueryExecutionInput, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.StopQueryExecutionOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.StopQueryExecutionOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Stops a query execution. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the query ran. For code samples using the Amazon Web Services SDK for Java, see Examples and Code Samples in the Amazon Athena User Guide.
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+ * Stops a query execution. Requires you to have access to the workgroup in which the query ran.
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  */
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  stopQueryExecution(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: Athena.Types.StopQueryExecutionOutput) => void): Request<Athena.Types.StopQueryExecutionOutput, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -890,7 +890,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
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  Description?: DescriptionString;
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  /**
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- * Specifies the Lambda function or functions to use for creating the data catalog. This is a mapping whose values depend on the catalog type. For the HIVE data catalog type, use the following syntax. The metadata-function parameter is required. The sdk-version parameter is optional and defaults to the currently supported version. metadata-function=lambda_arn, sdk-version=version_number For the LAMBDA data catalog type, use one of the following sets of required parameters, but not both. If you have one Lambda function that processes metadata and another for reading the actual data, use the following syntax. Both parameters are required. metadata-function=lambda_arn, record-function=lambda_arn If you have a composite Lambda function that processes both metadata and data, use the following syntax to specify your Lambda function. function=lambda_arn The GLUE type takes a catalog ID parameter and is required. The catalog_id is the account ID of the Amazon Web Services account to which the Glue Data Catalog belongs. catalog-id=catalog_id The GLUE data catalog type also applies to the default AwsDataCatalog that already exists in your account, of which you can have only one and cannot modify. Queries that specify a Glue Data Catalog other than the default AwsDataCatalog must be run on Athena engine version 2. In Regions where Athena engine version 2 is not available, creating new Glue data catalogs results in an INVALID_INPUT error.
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+ * Specifies the Lambda function or functions to use for creating the data catalog. This is a mapping whose values depend on the catalog type. For the HIVE data catalog type, use the following syntax. The metadata-function parameter is required. The sdk-version parameter is optional and defaults to the currently supported version. metadata-function=lambda_arn, sdk-version=version_number For the LAMBDA data catalog type, use one of the following sets of required parameters, but not both. If you have one Lambda function that processes metadata and another for reading the actual data, use the following syntax. Both parameters are required. metadata-function=lambda_arn, record-function=lambda_arn If you have a composite Lambda function that processes both metadata and data, use the following syntax to specify your Lambda function. function=lambda_arn The GLUE type takes a catalog ID parameter and is required. The catalog_id is the account ID of the Amazon Web Services account to which the Glue Data Catalog belongs. catalog-id=catalog_id The GLUE data catalog type also applies to the default AwsDataCatalog that already exists in your account, of which you can have only one and cannot modify.
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  */
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  Parameters?: ParametersMap;
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  /**
@@ -1014,7 +1014,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
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  }
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  export interface CustomerContentEncryptionConfiguration {
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  /**
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- * The KMS key that is used to encrypt the user's data stores in Athena.
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+ * The customer managed KMS key that is used to encrypt the user's data stores in Athena.
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  */
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  KmsKey: KmsKey;
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  }
@@ -1032,7 +1032,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
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  */
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  Type: DataCatalogType;
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  /**
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- * Specifies the Lambda function or functions to use for the data catalog. This is a mapping whose values depend on the catalog type. For the HIVE data catalog type, use the following syntax. The metadata-function parameter is required. The sdk-version parameter is optional and defaults to the currently supported version. metadata-function=lambda_arn, sdk-version=version_number For the LAMBDA data catalog type, use one of the following sets of required parameters, but not both. If you have one Lambda function that processes metadata and another for reading the actual data, use the following syntax. Both parameters are required. metadata-function=lambda_arn, record-function=lambda_arn If you have a composite Lambda function that processes both metadata and data, use the following syntax to specify your Lambda function. function=lambda_arn The GLUE type takes a catalog ID parameter and is required. The catalog_id is the account ID of the Amazon Web Services account to which the Glue catalog belongs. catalog-id=catalog_id The GLUE data catalog type also applies to the default AwsDataCatalog that already exists in your account, of which you can have only one and cannot modify. Queries that specify a Glue Data Catalog other than the default AwsDataCatalog must be run on Athena engine version 2.
1035
+ * Specifies the Lambda function or functions to use for the data catalog. This is a mapping whose values depend on the catalog type. For the HIVE data catalog type, use the following syntax. The metadata-function parameter is required. The sdk-version parameter is optional and defaults to the currently supported version. metadata-function=lambda_arn, sdk-version=version_number For the LAMBDA data catalog type, use one of the following sets of required parameters, but not both. If you have one Lambda function that processes metadata and another for reading the actual data, use the following syntax. Both parameters are required. metadata-function=lambda_arn, record-function=lambda_arn If you have a composite Lambda function that processes both metadata and data, use the following syntax to specify your Lambda function. function=lambda_arn The GLUE type takes a catalog ID parameter and is required. The catalog_id is the account ID of the Amazon Web Services account to which the Glue catalog belongs. catalog-id=catalog_id The GLUE data catalog type also applies to the default AwsDataCatalog that already exists in your account, of which you can have only one and cannot modify.
1036
1036
  */
1037
1037
  Parameters?: ParametersMap;
1038
1038
  }
@@ -2181,6 +2181,10 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2181
2181
  * The number of milliseconds that the query was in your query queue waiting for resources. Note that if transient errors occur, Athena might automatically add the query back to the queue.
2182
2182
  */
2183
2183
  QueryQueueTimeInMillis?: Long;
2184
+ /**
2185
+ * The number of milliseconds that Athena took to preprocess the query before submitting the query to the query engine.
2186
+ */
2187
+ ServicePreProcessingTimeInMillis?: Long;
2184
2188
  /**
2185
2189
  * The number of milliseconds that Athena took to plan the query processing flow. This includes the time spent retrieving table partitions from the data source. Note that because the query engine performs the query planning, query planning time is a subset of engine processing time.
2186
2190
  */
@@ -2247,6 +2251,10 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2247
2251
  * The number of milliseconds that the query was in your query queue waiting for resources. Note that if transient errors occur, Athena might automatically add the query back to the queue.
2248
2252
  */
2249
2253
  QueryQueueTimeInMillis?: Long;
2254
+ /**
2255
+ * The number of milliseconds that Athena spends on preprocessing before it submits the query to the engine.
2256
+ */
2257
+ ServicePreProcessingTimeInMillis?: Long;
2250
2258
  /**
2251
2259
  * The number of milliseconds that Athena took to plan the query processing flow. This includes the time spent retrieving table partitions from the data source. Note that because the query engine performs the query planning, query planning time is a subset of engine processing time.
2252
2260
  */
@@ -2426,7 +2434,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2426
2434
  export type S3Uri = string;
2427
2435
  export interface SessionConfiguration {
2428
2436
  /**
2429
- * The ARN of the execution role used for the session.
2437
+ * The ARN of the execution role used in a Spark session to access user resources. This property applies only to Spark-enabled workgroups.
2430
2438
  */
2431
2439
  ExecutionRole?: RoleArn;
2432
2440
  /**
@@ -2512,7 +2520,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2512
2520
  */
2513
2521
  CalculationConfiguration?: CalculationConfiguration;
2514
2522
  /**
2515
- * A string that contains the code of the calculation.
2523
+ * A string that contains the code of the calculation. Use this parameter instead of CalculationConfiguration$CodeBlock, which is deprecated.
2516
2524
  */
2517
2525
  CodeBlock?: CodeBlock;
2518
2526
  /**
@@ -2942,7 +2950,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2942
2950
  */
2943
2951
  AdditionalConfiguration?: NameString;
2944
2952
  /**
2945
- * Role used in a session for accessing the user's resources.
2953
+ * Role used in a Spark session for accessing the user's resources. This property applies only to Spark-enabled workgroups.
2946
2954
  */
2947
2955
  ExecutionRole?: RoleArn;
2948
2956
  /**
@@ -2992,7 +3000,7 @@ declare namespace Athena {
2992
3000
  */
2993
3001
  AdditionalConfiguration?: NameString;
2994
3002
  /**
2995
- * Contains the ARN of the execution role for the workgroup
3003
+ * The ARN of the execution role used to access user resources. This property applies only to Spark-enabled workgroups.
2996
3004
  */
2997
3005
  ExecutionRole?: RoleArn;
2998
3006
  CustomerContentEncryptionConfiguration?: CustomerContentEncryptionConfiguration;
@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ declare namespace Cloud9 {
143
143
  */
144
144
  subnetId?: SubnetId;
145
145
  /**
146
- * The identifier for the Amazon Machine Image (AMI) that's used to create the EC2 instance. To choose an AMI for the instance, you must specify a valid AMI alias or a valid Amazon EC2 Systems Manager (SSM) path. From November 20, 2023, you will be required to include the imageId parameter for the CreateEnvironmentEC2 action. This change will be reflected across all direct methods of communicating with the API, such as Amazon Web Services SDK, Amazon Web Services CLI and Amazon Web Services CloudFormation. This change will only affect direct API consumers, and not Cloud9 console users. From January 22, 2024, Amazon Linux (AL1) will be removed from the list of available image IDs for Cloud9. This is necessary as AL1 will reach the end of maintenance support in December 2023, and as a result will no longer receive security updates. We recommend using Amazon Linux 2 as the AMI to create your environment as it is fully supported. This change will only affect direct API consumers, and not Cloud9 console users. Since Ubuntu 18.04 has ended standard support as of May 31, 2023, we recommend you choose Ubuntu 22.04. AMI aliases Amazon Linux (default): amazonlinux-1-x86_64 Amazon Linux 2: amazonlinux-2-x86_64 Ubuntu 18.04: ubuntu-18.04-x86_64 Ubuntu 22.04: ubuntu-22.04-x86_64 SSM paths Amazon Linux (default): resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/amazonlinux-1-x86_64 Amazon Linux 2: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/amazonlinux-2-x86_64 Ubuntu 18.04: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/ubuntu-18.04-x86_64 Ubuntu 22.04: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/ubuntu-22.04-x86_64
146
+ * The identifier for the Amazon Machine Image (AMI) that's used to create the EC2 instance. To choose an AMI for the instance, you must specify a valid AMI alias or a valid Amazon EC2 Systems Manager (SSM) path. From December 04, 2023, you will be required to include the imageId parameter for the CreateEnvironmentEC2 action. This change will be reflected across all direct methods of communicating with the API, such as Amazon Web Services SDK, Amazon Web Services CLI and Amazon Web Services CloudFormation. This change will only affect direct API consumers, and not Cloud9 console users. From January 22, 2024, Amazon Linux (AL1) will be removed from the list of available image IDs for Cloud9. This is necessary as AL1 will reach the end of maintenance support in December 2023, and as a result will no longer receive security updates. We recommend using Amazon Linux 2 as the AMI to create your environment as it is fully supported. This change will only affect direct API consumers, and not Cloud9 console users. Since Ubuntu 18.04 has ended standard support as of May 31, 2023, we recommend you choose Ubuntu 22.04. AMI aliases Amazon Linux (default): amazonlinux-1-x86_64 Amazon Linux 2: amazonlinux-2-x86_64 Ubuntu 18.04: ubuntu-18.04-x86_64 Ubuntu 22.04: ubuntu-22.04-x86_64 SSM paths Amazon Linux (default): resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/amazonlinux-1-x86_64 Amazon Linux 2: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/amazonlinux-2-x86_64 Ubuntu 18.04: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/ubuntu-18.04-x86_64 Ubuntu 22.04: resolve:ssm:/aws/service/cloud9/amis/ubuntu-22.04-x86_64
147
147
  */
148
148
  imageId?: ImageId;
149
149
  /**
@@ -908,6 +908,10 @@ declare namespace CloudFormation {
908
908
  * The root change set ID.
909
909
  */
910
910
  RootChangeSetId?: ChangeSetId;
911
+ /**
912
+ * Indicates if the stack set imports resources that already exist.
913
+ */
914
+ ImportExistingResources?: ImportExistingResources;
911
915
  }
912
916
  export type ChangeSetType = "CREATE"|"UPDATE"|"IMPORT"|string;
913
917
  export type ChangeSource = "ResourceReference"|"ParameterReference"|"ResourceAttribute"|"DirectModification"|"Automatic"|string;
@@ -1011,6 +1015,10 @@ declare namespace CloudFormation {
1011
1015
  * Determines what action will be taken if stack creation fails. If this parameter is specified, the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation must not be specified. This must be one of these values: DELETE - Deletes the change set if the stack creation fails. This is only valid when the ChangeSetType parameter is set to CREATE. If the deletion of the stack fails, the status of the stack is DELETE_FAILED. DO_NOTHING - if the stack creation fails, do nothing. This is equivalent to specifying true for the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation. ROLLBACK - if the stack creation fails, roll back the stack. This is equivalent to specifying false for the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation. For nested stacks, when the OnStackFailure parameter is set to DELETE for the change set for the parent stack, any failure in a child stack will cause the parent stack creation to fail and all stacks to be deleted.
1012
1016
  */
1013
1017
  OnStackFailure?: OnStackFailure;
1018
+ /**
1019
+ * Indicates if the stack set imports resources that already exist. This parameter can only import resources that have custom names in templates. For more information, see name type in the CloudFormation User Guide. To import resources that do not accept custom names, such as EC2 instances, use the resource import feature instead. For more information, see Bringing existing resources into CloudFormation management in the CloudFormation User Guide.
1020
+ */
1021
+ ImportExistingResources?: ImportExistingResources;
1014
1022
  }
1015
1023
  export interface CreateChangeSetOutput {
1016
1024
  /**
@@ -1512,6 +1520,10 @@ declare namespace CloudFormation {
1512
1520
  * Determines what action will be taken if stack creation fails. When this parameter is specified, the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation must not be specified. This must be one of these values: DELETE - Deletes the change set if the stack creation fails. This is only valid when the ChangeSetType parameter is set to CREATE. If the deletion of the stack fails, the status of the stack is DELETE_FAILED. DO_NOTHING - if the stack creation fails, do nothing. This is equivalent to specifying true for the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation. ROLLBACK - if the stack creation fails, roll back the stack. This is equivalent to specifying false for the DisableRollback parameter to the ExecuteChangeSet API operation.
1513
1521
  */
1514
1522
  OnStackFailure?: OnStackFailure;
1523
+ /**
1524
+ * Indicates if the stack set imports resources that already exist. This parameter can only import resources that have custom names in templates. To import resources that do not accept custom names, such as EC2 instances, use the resource import feature instead.
1525
+ */
1526
+ ImportExistingResources?: ImportExistingResources;
1515
1527
  }
1516
1528
  export interface DescribeOrganizationsAccessInput {
1517
1529
  /**
@@ -2157,6 +2169,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFormation {
2157
2169
  export type HookTypeName = string;
2158
2170
  export type HookTypeVersionId = string;
2159
2171
  export type IdentityProvider = "AWS_Marketplace"|"GitHub"|"Bitbucket"|string;
2172
+ export type ImportExistingResources = boolean;
2160
2173
  export interface ImportStacksToStackSetInput {
2161
2174
  /**
2162
2175
  * The name of the stack set. The name must be unique in the Region where you create your stack set.
@@ -3900,7 +3913,7 @@ declare namespace CloudFormation {
3900
3913
  */
3901
3914
  MaxConcurrentPercentage?: MaxConcurrentPercentage;
3902
3915
  /**
3903
- * Specifies how the concurrency level behaves during the operation execution. STRICT_FAILURE_TOLERANCE: Dynamically lowers the concurrency level to ensure the number of failed accounts never exceeds the FailureToleranceCount +1. StackSets will set the actual concurrency of your deployment as the minimum value between the MaxConcurrentCount and the FailureToleranceCount +1. This is the default behavior. If failure tolerance or Maximum concurrent accounts are set to percentages, the behavior is similar. SOFT_FAILURE_TOLERANCE: Always run at the concurrency level set by the user in the MaxConcurrentCount or MaxConcurrentPercentage, regardless of the number of failures.
3916
+ * Specifies how the concurrency level behaves during the operation execution. STRICT_FAILURE_TOLERANCE: This option dynamically lowers the concurrency level to ensure the number of failed accounts never exceeds the value of FailureToleranceCount +1. The initial actual concurrency is set to the lower of either the value of the MaxConcurrentCount, or the value of MaxConcurrentCount +1. The actual concurrency is then reduced proportionally by the number of failures. This is the default behavior. If failure tolerance or Maximum concurrent accounts are set to percentages, the behavior is similar. SOFT_FAILURE_TOLERANCE: This option decouples FailureToleranceCount from the actual concurrency. This allows stack set operations to run at the concurrency level set by the MaxConcurrentCount value, or MaxConcurrentPercentage, regardless of the number of failures.
3904
3917
  */
3905
3918
  ConcurrencyMode?: ConcurrencyMode;
3906
3919
  }
@@ -1690,7 +1690,7 @@ declare namespace CodePipeline {
1690
1690
  */
1691
1691
  version?: PipelineVersion;
1692
1692
  /**
1693
- * CodePipeline provides the following pipeline types, which differ in characteristics and price, so that you can tailor your pipeline features and cost to the needs of your applications. V1 type pipelines have a JSON structure that contains standard pipeline, stage, and action-level parameters. V2 type pipelines have the same structure as a V1 type, along with additional parameters for release safety and trigger configuration. Including V2 parameters, such as triggers on Git tags, in the pipeline JSON when creating or updating a pipeline will result in the pipeline having the V2 type of pipeline and the associated costs. For information about pricing for CodePipeline, see Pricing. For information about which type of pipeline to choose, see What type of pipeline is right for me?.
1693
+ * CodePipeline provides the following pipeline types, which differ in characteristics and price, so that you can tailor your pipeline features and cost to the needs of your applications. V1 type pipelines have a JSON structure that contains standard pipeline, stage, and action-level parameters. V2 type pipelines have the same structure as a V1 type, along with additional parameters for release safety and trigger configuration. Including V2 parameters, such as triggers on Git tags, in the pipeline JSON when creating or updating a pipeline will result in the pipeline having the V2 type of pipeline and the associated costs. For information about pricing for CodePipeline, see Pricing. For information about which type of pipeline to choose, see What type of pipeline is right for me?. V2 type pipelines, along with triggers on Git tags and pipeline-level variables, are not currently supported for CloudFormation and CDK resources in CodePipeline. For more information about V2 type pipelines, see Pipeline types in the CodePipeline User Guide.
1694
1694
  */
1695
1695
  pipelineType?: PipelineType;
1696
1696
  /**
@@ -1798,7 +1798,7 @@ declare namespace CodePipeline {
1798
1798
  */
1799
1799
  version?: PipelineVersion;
1800
1800
  /**
1801
- * CodePipeline provides the following pipeline types, which differ in characteristics and price, so that you can tailor your pipeline features and cost to the needs of your applications. V1 type pipelines have a JSON structure that contains standard pipeline, stage, and action-level parameters. V2 type pipelines have the same structure as a V1 type, along with additional parameters for release safety and trigger configuration. Including V2 parameters, such as triggers on Git tags, in the pipeline JSON when creating or updating a pipeline will result in the pipeline having the V2 type of pipeline and the associated costs. For information about pricing for CodePipeline, see Pricing. For information about which type of pipeline to choose, see What type of pipeline is right for me?.
1801
+ * CodePipeline provides the following pipeline types, which differ in characteristics and price, so that you can tailor your pipeline features and cost to the needs of your applications. V1 type pipelines have a JSON structure that contains standard pipeline, stage, and action-level parameters. V2 type pipelines have the same structure as a V1 type, along with additional parameters for release safety and trigger configuration. Including V2 parameters, such as triggers on Git tags, in the pipeline JSON when creating or updating a pipeline will result in the pipeline having the V2 type of pipeline and the associated costs. For information about pricing for CodePipeline, see Pricing. For information about which type of pipeline to choose, see What type of pipeline is right for me?. V2 type pipelines, along with triggers on Git tags and pipeline-level variables, are not currently supported for CloudFormation and CDK resources in CodePipeline. For more information about V2 type pipelines, see Pipeline types in the CodePipeline User Guide.
1802
1802
  */
1803
1803
  pipelineType?: PipelineType;
1804
1804
  /**
@@ -2129,6 +2129,22 @@ declare namespace CodePipeline {
2129
2129
  revisionUrl?: Url;
2130
2130
  }
2131
2131
  export type SourceRevisionList = SourceRevision[];
2132
+ export interface SourceRevisionOverride {
2133
+ /**
2134
+ * The name of the action where the override will be applied.
2135
+ */
2136
+ actionName: ActionName;
2137
+ /**
2138
+ * The type of source revision, based on the source provider. For example, the revision type for the CodeCommit action provider is the commit ID.
2139
+ */
2140
+ revisionType: SourceRevisionType;
2141
+ /**
2142
+ * The source revision, or version of your source artifact, with the changes that you want to run in the pipeline execution.
2143
+ */
2144
+ revisionValue: Revision;
2145
+ }
2146
+ export type SourceRevisionOverrideList = SourceRevisionOverride[];
2147
+ export type SourceRevisionType = "COMMIT_ID"|"IMAGE_DIGEST"|"S3_OBJECT_VERSION_ID"|string;
2132
2148
  export type StageActionDeclarationList = ActionDeclaration[];
2133
2149
  export type StageBlockerDeclarationList = BlockerDeclaration[];
2134
2150
  export interface StageContext {
@@ -2198,6 +2214,10 @@ declare namespace CodePipeline {
2198
2214
  * The system-generated unique ID used to identify a unique execution request.
2199
2215
  */
2200
2216
  clientRequestToken?: ClientRequestToken;
2217
+ /**
2218
+ * A list that allows you to specify, or override, the source revision for a pipeline execution that's being started. A source revision is the version with all the changes to your application code, or source artifact, for the pipeline execution.
2219
+ */
2220
+ sourceRevisions?: SourceRevisionOverrideList;
2201
2221
  }
2202
2222
  export interface StartPipelineExecutionOutput {
2203
2223
  /**