Class CfnWebACL.ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty
Configures inspection of the response body.
Inheritance
Namespace: Amazon.CDK.AWS.WAFv2
Assembly: Amazon.CDK.Lib.dll
Syntax (csharp)
public class ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty : Object, CfnWebACL.IResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty
Syntax (vb)
Public Class ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty
Inherits Object
Implements CfnWebACL.IResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty
Remarks
AWS WAF can inspect the first 65,536 bytes (64 KB) of the response body. This is part of the ResponseInspection
configuration for AWSManagedRulesATPRuleSet
and AWSManagedRulesACFPRuleSet
.
Response inspection is available only in web ACLs that protect Amazon CloudFront distributions.
ExampleMetadata: fixture=_generated
Examples
// The code below shows an example of how to instantiate this type.
// The values are placeholders you should change.
using Amazon.CDK.AWS.WAFv2;
var responseInspectionBodyContainsProperty = new ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty {
FailureStrings = new [] { "failureStrings" },
SuccessStrings = new [] { "successStrings" }
};
Synopsis
Constructors
ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty() |
Properties
FailureStrings | Strings in the body of the response that indicate a failed login or account creation attempt. |
SuccessStrings | Strings in the body of the response that indicate a successful login or account creation attempt. |
Constructors
ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty()
public ResponseInspectionBodyContainsProperty()
Properties
FailureStrings
Strings in the body of the response that indicate a failed login or account creation attempt.
public string[] FailureStrings { get; set; }
Property Value
System.String[]
Remarks
To be counted as a failure, the string can be anywhere in the body and must be an exact match, including case. Each string must be unique among the success and failure strings.
JSON example: "FailureStrings": [ "Request failed" ]
SuccessStrings
Strings in the body of the response that indicate a successful login or account creation attempt.
public string[] SuccessStrings { get; set; }
Property Value
System.String[]
Remarks
To be counted as a success, the string can be anywhere in the body and must be an exact match, including case. Each string must be unique among the success and failure strings.
JSON examples: "SuccessStrings": [ "Login successful" ]
and "SuccessStrings": [ "Account creation successful", "Welcome to our site!" ]