Version 5 (V5) of the Amazon Tools for PowerShell has been released!
To start using the new version of the tools, see the Amazon Tools for PowerShell User Guide (V5), especially the topic for Migrating to V5.
Migrating from Amazon Tools for PowerShell Version 3.3 to Version 4
Amazon Tools for PowerShell version 4 is a backward-compatible update to Amazon Tools for PowerShell version 3.3. It adds significant improvements while maintaining existing cmdlet behavior.
Your existing scripts should continue to work after upgrading to the new version, but we do recommend that you test them thoroughly before upgrading your production environments.
This section describes the changes and explains how they might impact your scripts.
New Fully Modularized AWS.Tools Version
    The AWSPowerShell.NetCore and AWSPowerShell packages were "monolithic". This meant that all of the Amazon services
      were supported in the same module, making it very large, and growing larger as each new Amazon service
      and feature was added. The new AWS.Tools package is broken up into smaller modules that give you the
      flexibility to download and install only those that you require for the Amazon services that you use. The
      package includes a shared AWS.Tools.Common module that is required by all of the other
      modules, and an AWS.Tools.Installer module that simplifies installing, updating, and
      removing modules as needed.
This also enables auto-importing of cmdlets on first call, without having to first call
        Import-module. However, to interact with the associated .NET objects before calling a
      cmdlet, you must still call Import-Module to let PowerShell know about the relevant .NET
      types. 
For example, the following command has a reference to Amazon.EC2.Model.Filter. This
      type of reference can't trigger auto-importing, so you must call Import-Module first or the
      command fails.
PS >$filter = [Amazon.EC2.Model.Filter]@{Name="vpc-id";Values="vpc-1234abcd"}InvalidOperation: Unable to find type [Amazon.EC2.Model.Filter].
PS >Import-Module AWS.Tools.EC2PS >$filter = [Amazon.EC2.Model.Filter]@{Name="vpc-id";Values="vpc-1234abcd"}PS >Get-EC2Instance -Filter $filter -Select Reservations.Instances.InstanceIdi-0123456789abcdefg i-0123456789hijklmn
New Get-AWSService cmdlet
    To help you discover the names of the modules for each Amazon service in the AWS.Tools collection of
      modules, you can use the Get-AWSService cmdlet.
PS >Get-AWSServiceService : ACMPCA CmdletNounPrefix : PCA ModuleName : AWS.Tools.ACMPCA SDKAssemblyVersion : 3.3.101.56 ServiceName : Certificate Manager Private Certificate Authority Service : AlexaForBusiness CmdletNounPrefix : ALXB ModuleName : AWS.Tools.AlexaForBusiness SDKAssemblyVersion : 3.3.106.26 ServiceName : Alexa For Business ...
New -Select Parameter to Control the Object Returned by a
        Cmdlet
    Most cmdlets in version 4 support a new -Select parameter. Each cmdlet calls the Amazon
      service APIs for you using the Amazon SDK for .NET. Then the Amazon Tools for PowerShell client converts the response into an
      object that you can use in your PowerShell scripts and pipe to other commands. Sometimes the final
      PowerShell object has more fields or properties in the original response than you need, and other times
      you might want the object to include fields or properties of the response that are not there by default.
      The -Select parameter enables you to specify what is included in the .NET object returned
      by the cmdlet.
For example, the Get-S3Object cmdlet
      invokes the Amazon S3 SDK operation ListObjects.
      That operation returns a ListObjectsResponse object. However, by default, the Get-S3Object cmdlet returns
      only the S3Objects element of the SDK response to the PowerShell user. In the following
      example, that object is an array with two elements.
PS >Get-S3Object -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucketETag : "01234567890123456789012345678901111" BucketName :amzn-s3-demo-bucketKey : file1.txt LastModified : 9/30/2019 1:31:40 PM Owner : Amazon.S3.Model.Owner Size : 568 StorageClass : STANDARD ETag : "01234567890123456789012345678902222" BucketName :amzn-s3-demo-bucketKey : file2.txt LastModified : 7/15/2019 9:36:54 AM Owner : Amazon.S3.Model.Owner Size : 392 StorageClass : STANDARD
In Amazon Tools for PowerShell version 4, you can specify -Select * to return the complete .NET
      response object returned by the SDK API call.
PS >Get-S3Object -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucket-Select *IsTruncated : False NextMarker : S3Objects : {file1.txt, file2.txt} Name :amzn-s3-demo-bucketPrefix : MaxKeys : 1000 CommonPrefixes : {} Delimiter :
You can also specify the path to the specific nested property you want. The following example
      returns only the Key property of each element in the S3Objects array.
PS >Get-S3Object -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucket-Select S3Objects.Keyfile1.txt file2.txt
In certain situations it can be useful to return a cmdlet parameter. You can do this with
        -Select ^ParameterName. This feature supplants the -PassThru parameter,
      which is still available but deprecated. 
PS >Get-S3Object -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucket-Select S3Objects.Key |>>Write-S3ObjectTagSet -Select ^Key -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucket-Tagging_TagSet @{ Key='key'; Value='value'}file1.txt file2.txt
The reference topic for each cmdlet identifies whether it
      supports the -Select parameter.
More Consistent Limiting of the Number of Items in the Output
Earlier versions of Amazon Tools for PowerShell enabled you to use the -MaxItems parameter to specify
      the maximum number of objects returned in the final output.
This behavior is removed from AWS.Tools.
This behavior is deprecated in AWSPowerShell.NetCore and AWSPowerShell, and will be removed from those versions in a future release.
If the underlying service API supports a MaxItems parameter, it's still available and
      functions as the API specifies. But it no longer has the added behavior of limiting the number of items
      returned in the output of the cmdlet.
To limit the number of items returned in the final output, pipe the output to the
        Select-Object cmdlet and specify the -First 
      parameter, where nn is the maximum number of items to include in the final
      output.
PS >Get-S3ObjectV2 -BucketNameamzn-s3-demo-bucket-Select S3Objects.Key | select -first 2file1.txt file2.txt
Not all Amazon services supported -MaxItems in the same way, so this removes that
      inconsistency and the unexpected results that sometimes occurred. Also, -MaxItems combined
      with the new -Select parameter could sometimes result
      in confusing results.
Easier to Use Stream Parameters
Parameters of type Stream or byte[] can now accept string,
        string[], or FileInfo values.
For example, you can use any of the following examples.
PS >Invoke-LMFunction -FunctionName MyTestFunction -PayloadStream '{>>"some": "json">>}'
PS >Invoke-LMFunction -FunctionName MyTestFunction -PayloadStream (ls .\some.json)
PS >Invoke-LMFunction -FunctionName MyTestFunction -PayloadStream @('{', '"some": "json"', '}')
 Amazon Tools for PowerShell converts all strings to byte[] using UTF-8 encoding.
Extending the Pipe by Property Name
To make the user experience more consistent, you can now pass pipeline input by specifying the property name for any parameter.
In the following example, we create a custom object with properties that have names that match the parameter names of the target cmdlet. When the cmdlet runs, it automatically consumes those properties as its parameters.
PS >[pscustomobject] @{ BucketName='amzn-s3-demo-bucket'; Key='file1.txt'; PartNumber=1 } | Get-S3ObjectMetadata
Note
Some properties supported this in earlier versions of Amazon Tools for PowerShell. Version 4 makes this more consistent by enabling it for all parameters.
Static Common Parameters
To improve consistency in version 4.0 of Amazon Tools for PowerShell, all parameters are static.
In earlier versions of Amazon Tools for PowerShell, some common parameters such as
        AccessKey,SecretKey, ProfileName, or Region, were
        dynamic
PS >Get-EC2Region -Region us-west-2
Earlier versions of PowerShell bound the value us-west-2 to the
        -RegionName static parameter instead of the -Region dynamic parameter.
      Likely, this could confuse users.
AWS.Tools Declares and Enforces Manadatory Parameters
    The AWS.Tools.* modules now declare and enforce mandatory cmdlet parameters. When an
      Amazon Service declares that a parameter of an API is required, PowerShell prompts you for the
      corresponding cmdlet parameter if you didn't specify it. This applies only to AWS.Tools. To ensure
      backward compatibility, this does not apply to AWSPowerShell.NetCore or AWSPowerShell.
All Parameters Are Nullable
You can now assign $null to value type parameters (numbers and dates). This change
      should not affect existing scripts. This enables you to bypass the prompt for a mandatory parameter.
      Mandatory parameters are enforced in AWS.Tools only.
If you run the following example using version 4, it effectively bypasses client-side validation because you provide a "value" for each mandatory parameter. However, the Amazon EC2 API service call fails because the Amazon service still requires that information.
PS >Get-EC2InstanceAttribute -InstanceId $null -Attribute $nullWARNING: You are passing $null as a value for parameter Attribute which is marked as required. In case you believe this parameter was incorrectly marked as required, report this by opening an issue at https://github.com/aws/aws-tools-for-powershell/issues. WARNING: You are passing $null as a value for parameter InstanceId which is marked as required. In case you believe this parameter was incorrectly marked as required, report this by opening an issue at https://github.com/aws/aws-tools-for-powershell/issues. Get-EC2InstanceAttribute : The request must contain the parameter instanceId
Removing Previously Deprecated Features
The following features were deprecated in previous releases of Amazon Tools for PowerShell and are removed in version 4:
- 
        Removed the -Terminateparameter from theStop-EC2Instancecmdlet. UseRemove-EC2Instanceinstead.
- 
        Removed the -ProfileNameparameter from the Clear-AWSCredential cmdlet. UseRemove-AWSCredentialProfileinstead.
- 
        Removed cmdlets Import-EC2InstanceandImport-EC2Volume.