Interface DataPipelineAsyncClient

All Superinterfaces:
AutoCloseable, AwsClient, SdkAutoCloseable, SdkClient

@Generated("software.amazon.awssdk:codegen") @ThreadSafe public interface DataPipelineAsyncClient extends AwsClient
Service client for accessing AWS Data Pipeline asynchronously. This can be created using the static builder() method.The asynchronous client performs non-blocking I/O when configured with any SdkAsyncHttpClient supported in the SDK. However, full non-blocking is not guaranteed as the async client may perform blocking calls in some cases such as credentials retrieval and endpoint discovery as part of the async API call.

AWS Data Pipeline configures and manages a data-driven workflow called a pipeline. AWS Data Pipeline handles the details of scheduling and ensuring that data dependencies are met so that your application can focus on processing the data.

AWS Data Pipeline provides a JAR implementation of a task runner called AWS Data Pipeline Task Runner. AWS Data Pipeline Task Runner provides logic for common data management scenarios, such as performing database queries and running data analysis using Amazon Elastic MapReduce (Amazon EMR). You can use AWS Data Pipeline Task Runner as your task runner, or you can write your own task runner to provide custom data management.

AWS Data Pipeline implements two main sets of functionality. Use the first set to create a pipeline and define data sources, schedules, dependencies, and the transforms to be performed on the data. Use the second set in your task runner application to receive the next task ready for processing. The logic for performing the task, such as querying the data, running data analysis, or converting the data from one format to another, is contained within the task runner. The task runner performs the task assigned to it by the web service, reporting progress to the web service as it does so. When the task is done, the task runner reports the final success or failure of the task to the web service.

  • Field Details

  • Method Details

    • activatePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<ActivatePipelineResponse> activatePipeline(ActivatePipelineRequest activatePipelineRequest)

      Validates the specified pipeline and starts processing pipeline tasks. If the pipeline does not pass validation, activation fails.

      If you need to pause the pipeline to investigate an issue with a component, such as a data source or script, call DeactivatePipeline.

      To activate a finished pipeline, modify the end date for the pipeline and then activate it.

      Parameters:
      activatePipelineRequest - Contains the parameters for ActivatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ActivatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • activatePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<ActivatePipelineResponse> activatePipeline(Consumer<ActivatePipelineRequest.Builder> activatePipelineRequest)

      Validates the specified pipeline and starts processing pipeline tasks. If the pipeline does not pass validation, activation fails.

      If you need to pause the pipeline to investigate an issue with a component, such as a data source or script, call DeactivatePipeline.

      To activate a finished pipeline, modify the end date for the pipeline and then activate it.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ActivatePipelineRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ActivatePipelineRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      activatePipelineRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ActivatePipelineRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ActivatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ActivatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • addTags

      default CompletableFuture<AddTagsResponse> addTags(AddTagsRequest addTagsRequest)

      Adds or modifies tags for the specified pipeline.

      Parameters:
      addTagsRequest - Contains the parameters for AddTags.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the AddTags operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • addTags

      Adds or modifies tags for the specified pipeline.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the AddTagsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via AddTagsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      addTagsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on AddTagsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for AddTags.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the AddTags operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • createPipeline

      default CompletableFuture<CreatePipelineResponse> createPipeline(CreatePipelineRequest createPipelineRequest)

      Creates a new, empty pipeline. Use PutPipelineDefinition to populate the pipeline.

      Parameters:
      createPipelineRequest - Contains the parameters for CreatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the CreatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • createPipeline

      default CompletableFuture<CreatePipelineResponse> createPipeline(Consumer<CreatePipelineRequest.Builder> createPipelineRequest)

      Creates a new, empty pipeline. Use PutPipelineDefinition to populate the pipeline.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the CreatePipelineRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via CreatePipelineRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      createPipelineRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on CreatePipelineRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for CreatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the CreatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • deactivatePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<DeactivatePipelineResponse> deactivatePipeline(DeactivatePipelineRequest deactivatePipelineRequest)

      Deactivates the specified running pipeline. The pipeline is set to the DEACTIVATING state until the deactivation process completes.

      To resume a deactivated pipeline, use ActivatePipeline. By default, the pipeline resumes from the last completed execution. Optionally, you can specify the date and time to resume the pipeline.

      Parameters:
      deactivatePipelineRequest - Contains the parameters for DeactivatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DeactivatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • deactivatePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<DeactivatePipelineResponse> deactivatePipeline(Consumer<DeactivatePipelineRequest.Builder> deactivatePipelineRequest)

      Deactivates the specified running pipeline. The pipeline is set to the DEACTIVATING state until the deactivation process completes.

      To resume a deactivated pipeline, use ActivatePipeline. By default, the pipeline resumes from the last completed execution. Optionally, you can specify the date and time to resume the pipeline.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DeactivatePipelineRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via DeactivatePipelineRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      deactivatePipelineRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DeactivatePipelineRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for DeactivatePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DeactivatePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • deletePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<DeletePipelineResponse> deletePipeline(DeletePipelineRequest deletePipelineRequest)

      Deletes a pipeline, its pipeline definition, and its run history. AWS Data Pipeline attempts to cancel instances associated with the pipeline that are currently being processed by task runners.

      Deleting a pipeline cannot be undone. You cannot query or restore a deleted pipeline. To temporarily pause a pipeline instead of deleting it, call SetStatus with the status set to PAUSE on individual components. Components that are paused by SetStatus can be resumed.

      Parameters:
      deletePipelineRequest - Contains the parameters for DeletePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DeletePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • deletePipeline

      default CompletableFuture<DeletePipelineResponse> deletePipeline(Consumer<DeletePipelineRequest.Builder> deletePipelineRequest)

      Deletes a pipeline, its pipeline definition, and its run history. AWS Data Pipeline attempts to cancel instances associated with the pipeline that are currently being processed by task runners.

      Deleting a pipeline cannot be undone. You cannot query or restore a deleted pipeline. To temporarily pause a pipeline instead of deleting it, call SetStatus with the status set to PAUSE on individual components. Components that are paused by SetStatus can be resumed.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DeletePipelineRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via DeletePipelineRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      deletePipelineRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DeletePipelineRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for DeletePipeline.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DeletePipeline operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describeObjects

      default CompletableFuture<DescribeObjectsResponse> describeObjects(DescribeObjectsRequest describeObjectsRequest)

      Gets the object definitions for a set of objects associated with the pipeline. Object definitions are composed of a set of fields that define the properties of the object.

      Parameters:
      describeObjectsRequest - Contains the parameters for DescribeObjects.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeObjects operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describeObjects

      default CompletableFuture<DescribeObjectsResponse> describeObjects(Consumer<DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder> describeObjectsRequest)

      Gets the object definitions for a set of objects associated with the pipeline. Object definitions are composed of a set of fields that define the properties of the object.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via DescribeObjectsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      describeObjectsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for DescribeObjects.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeObjects operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describeObjectsPaginator

      default DescribeObjectsPublisher describeObjectsPaginator(DescribeObjectsRequest describeObjectsRequest)

      This is a variant of describeObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.DescribeObjectsPublisher publisher = client.describeObjectsPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.DescribeObjectsPublisher publisher = client.describeObjectsPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of null won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the describeObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsRequest) operation.

      Parameters:
      describeObjectsRequest - Contains the parameters for DescribeObjects.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describeObjectsPaginator

      default DescribeObjectsPublisher describeObjectsPaginator(Consumer<DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder> describeObjectsRequest)

      This is a variant of describeObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.DescribeObjectsPublisher publisher = client.describeObjectsPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.DescribeObjectsPublisher publisher = client.describeObjectsPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of null won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the describeObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.DescribeObjectsRequest) operation.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via DescribeObjectsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      describeObjectsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DescribeObjectsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for DescribeObjects.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describePipelines

      default CompletableFuture<DescribePipelinesResponse> describePipelines(DescribePipelinesRequest describePipelinesRequest)

      Retrieves metadata about one or more pipelines. The information retrieved includes the name of the pipeline, the pipeline identifier, its current state, and the user account that owns the pipeline. Using account credentials, you can retrieve metadata about pipelines that you or your IAM users have created. If you are using an IAM user account, you can retrieve metadata about only those pipelines for which you have read permissions.

      To retrieve the full pipeline definition instead of metadata about the pipeline, call GetPipelineDefinition.

      Parameters:
      describePipelinesRequest - Contains the parameters for DescribePipelines.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DescribePipelines operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • describePipelines

      default CompletableFuture<DescribePipelinesResponse> describePipelines(Consumer<DescribePipelinesRequest.Builder> describePipelinesRequest)

      Retrieves metadata about one or more pipelines. The information retrieved includes the name of the pipeline, the pipeline identifier, its current state, and the user account that owns the pipeline. Using account credentials, you can retrieve metadata about pipelines that you or your IAM users have created. If you are using an IAM user account, you can retrieve metadata about only those pipelines for which you have read permissions.

      To retrieve the full pipeline definition instead of metadata about the pipeline, call GetPipelineDefinition.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DescribePipelinesRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via DescribePipelinesRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      describePipelinesRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DescribePipelinesRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for DescribePipelines.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the DescribePipelines operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • evaluateExpression

      default CompletableFuture<EvaluateExpressionResponse> evaluateExpression(EvaluateExpressionRequest evaluateExpressionRequest)

      Task runners call EvaluateExpression to evaluate a string in the context of the specified object. For example, a task runner can evaluate SQL queries stored in Amazon S3.

      Parameters:
      evaluateExpressionRequest - Contains the parameters for EvaluateExpression.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the EvaluateExpression operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • evaluateExpression

      default CompletableFuture<EvaluateExpressionResponse> evaluateExpression(Consumer<EvaluateExpressionRequest.Builder> evaluateExpressionRequest)

      Task runners call EvaluateExpression to evaluate a string in the context of the specified object. For example, a task runner can evaluate SQL queries stored in Amazon S3.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the EvaluateExpressionRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via EvaluateExpressionRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      evaluateExpressionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on EvaluateExpressionRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for EvaluateExpression.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the EvaluateExpression operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • getPipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<GetPipelineDefinitionResponse> getPipelineDefinition(GetPipelineDefinitionRequest getPipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Gets the definition of the specified pipeline. You can call GetPipelineDefinition to retrieve the pipeline definition that you provided using PutPipelineDefinition.

      Parameters:
      getPipelineDefinitionRequest - Contains the parameters for GetPipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the GetPipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • getPipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<GetPipelineDefinitionResponse> getPipelineDefinition(Consumer<GetPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder> getPipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Gets the definition of the specified pipeline. You can call GetPipelineDefinition to retrieve the pipeline definition that you provided using PutPipelineDefinition.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the GetPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via GetPipelineDefinitionRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      getPipelineDefinitionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on GetPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for GetPipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the GetPipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelines

      default CompletableFuture<ListPipelinesResponse> listPipelines(ListPipelinesRequest listPipelinesRequest)

      Lists the pipeline identifiers for all active pipelines that you have permission to access.

      Parameters:
      listPipelinesRequest - Contains the parameters for ListPipelines.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ListPipelines operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelines

      default CompletableFuture<ListPipelinesResponse> listPipelines(Consumer<ListPipelinesRequest.Builder> listPipelinesRequest)

      Lists the pipeline identifiers for all active pipelines that you have permission to access.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListPipelinesRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ListPipelinesRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      listPipelinesRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListPipelinesRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ListPipelines.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ListPipelines operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelines

      default CompletableFuture<ListPipelinesResponse> listPipelines()

      Lists the pipeline identifiers for all active pipelines that you have permission to access.

      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ListPipelines operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelinesPaginator

      default ListPipelinesPublisher listPipelinesPaginator()

      This is a variant of listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of null won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation.

      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelinesPaginator

      default ListPipelinesPublisher listPipelinesPaginator(ListPipelinesRequest listPipelinesRequest)

      This is a variant of listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of null won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation.

      Parameters:
      listPipelinesRequest - Contains the parameters for ListPipelines.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • listPipelinesPaginator

      default ListPipelinesPublisher listPipelinesPaginator(Consumer<ListPipelinesRequest.Builder> listPipelinesRequest)

      This is a variant of listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.ListPipelinesPublisher publisher = client.listPipelinesPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of null won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the listPipelines(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.ListPipelinesRequest) operation.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListPipelinesRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ListPipelinesRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      listPipelinesRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListPipelinesRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ListPipelines.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • pollForTask

      default CompletableFuture<PollForTaskResponse> pollForTask(PollForTaskRequest pollForTaskRequest)

      Task runners call PollForTask to receive a task to perform from AWS Data Pipeline. The task runner specifies which tasks it can perform by setting a value for the workerGroup parameter. The task returned can come from any of the pipelines that match the workerGroup value passed in by the task runner and that was launched using the IAM user credentials specified by the task runner.

      If tasks are ready in the work queue, PollForTask returns a response immediately. If no tasks are available in the queue, PollForTask uses long-polling and holds on to a poll connection for up to a 90 seconds, during which time the first newly scheduled task is handed to the task runner. To accomodate this, set the socket timeout in your task runner to 90 seconds. The task runner should not call PollForTask again on the same workerGroup until it receives a response, and this can take up to 90 seconds.

      Parameters:
      pollForTaskRequest - Contains the parameters for PollForTask.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the PollForTask operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • pollForTask

      default CompletableFuture<PollForTaskResponse> pollForTask(Consumer<PollForTaskRequest.Builder> pollForTaskRequest)

      Task runners call PollForTask to receive a task to perform from AWS Data Pipeline. The task runner specifies which tasks it can perform by setting a value for the workerGroup parameter. The task returned can come from any of the pipelines that match the workerGroup value passed in by the task runner and that was launched using the IAM user credentials specified by the task runner.

      If tasks are ready in the work queue, PollForTask returns a response immediately. If no tasks are available in the queue, PollForTask uses long-polling and holds on to a poll connection for up to a 90 seconds, during which time the first newly scheduled task is handed to the task runner. To accomodate this, set the socket timeout in your task runner to 90 seconds. The task runner should not call PollForTask again on the same workerGroup until it receives a response, and this can take up to 90 seconds.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the PollForTaskRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via PollForTaskRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      pollForTaskRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on PollForTaskRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for PollForTask.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the PollForTask operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • putPipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<PutPipelineDefinitionResponse> putPipelineDefinition(PutPipelineDefinitionRequest putPipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Adds tasks, schedules, and preconditions to the specified pipeline. You can use PutPipelineDefinition to populate a new pipeline.

      PutPipelineDefinition also validates the configuration as it adds it to the pipeline. Changes to the pipeline are saved unless one of the following three validation errors exists in the pipeline.

      1. An object is missing a name or identifier field.
      2. A string or reference field is empty.
      3. The number of objects in the pipeline exceeds the maximum allowed objects.
      4. The pipeline is in a FINISHED state.

      Pipeline object definitions are passed to the PutPipelineDefinition action and returned by the GetPipelineDefinition action.

      Parameters:
      putPipelineDefinitionRequest - Contains the parameters for PutPipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the PutPipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • putPipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<PutPipelineDefinitionResponse> putPipelineDefinition(Consumer<PutPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder> putPipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Adds tasks, schedules, and preconditions to the specified pipeline. You can use PutPipelineDefinition to populate a new pipeline.

      PutPipelineDefinition also validates the configuration as it adds it to the pipeline. Changes to the pipeline are saved unless one of the following three validation errors exists in the pipeline.

      1. An object is missing a name or identifier field.
      2. A string or reference field is empty.
      3. The number of objects in the pipeline exceeds the maximum allowed objects.
      4. The pipeline is in a FINISHED state.

      Pipeline object definitions are passed to the PutPipelineDefinition action and returned by the GetPipelineDefinition action.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the PutPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via PutPipelineDefinitionRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      putPipelineDefinitionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on PutPipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for PutPipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the PutPipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • queryObjects

      default CompletableFuture<QueryObjectsResponse> queryObjects(QueryObjectsRequest queryObjectsRequest)

      Queries the specified pipeline for the names of objects that match the specified set of conditions.

      Parameters:
      queryObjectsRequest - Contains the parameters for QueryObjects.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the QueryObjects operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • queryObjects

      default CompletableFuture<QueryObjectsResponse> queryObjects(Consumer<QueryObjectsRequest.Builder> queryObjectsRequest)

      Queries the specified pipeline for the names of objects that match the specified set of conditions.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the QueryObjectsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via QueryObjectsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      queryObjectsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on QueryObjectsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for QueryObjects.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the QueryObjects operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • queryObjectsPaginator

      default QueryObjectsPublisher queryObjectsPaginator(QueryObjectsRequest queryObjectsRequest)

      This is a variant of queryObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.QueryObjectsPublisher publisher = client.queryObjectsPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.QueryObjectsPublisher publisher = client.queryObjectsPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of limit won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the queryObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsRequest) operation.

      Parameters:
      queryObjectsRequest - Contains the parameters for QueryObjects.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • queryObjectsPaginator

      default QueryObjectsPublisher queryObjectsPaginator(Consumer<QueryObjectsRequest.Builder> queryObjectsRequest)

      This is a variant of queryObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsRequest) operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.

      When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start streaming data. For more info, see Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the starting request.

      The following are few ways to use the response class:

      1) Using the subscribe helper method
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.QueryObjectsPublisher publisher = client.queryObjectsPaginator(request);
       CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
       future.get();
       
       
      2) Using a custom subscriber
       
       software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.paginators.QueryObjectsPublisher publisher = client.queryObjectsPaginator(request);
       publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsResponse>() {
       
       public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
       
       
       public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsResponse response) { //... };
       });
       
      As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.

      Please notice that the configuration of limit won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.

      Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the queryObjects(software.amazon.awssdk.services.datapipeline.model.QueryObjectsRequest) operation.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the QueryObjectsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via QueryObjectsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      queryObjectsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on QueryObjectsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for QueryObjects.
      Returns:
      A custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • removeTags

      default CompletableFuture<RemoveTagsResponse> removeTags(RemoveTagsRequest removeTagsRequest)

      Removes existing tags from the specified pipeline.

      Parameters:
      removeTagsRequest - Contains the parameters for RemoveTags.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the RemoveTags operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • removeTags

      default CompletableFuture<RemoveTagsResponse> removeTags(Consumer<RemoveTagsRequest.Builder> removeTagsRequest)

      Removes existing tags from the specified pipeline.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the RemoveTagsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via RemoveTagsRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      removeTagsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on RemoveTagsRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for RemoveTags.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the RemoveTags operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • reportTaskProgress

      default CompletableFuture<ReportTaskProgressResponse> reportTaskProgress(ReportTaskProgressRequest reportTaskProgressRequest)

      Task runners call ReportTaskProgress when assigned a task to acknowledge that it has the task. If the web service does not receive this acknowledgement within 2 minutes, it assigns the task in a subsequent PollForTask call. After this initial acknowledgement, the task runner only needs to report progress every 15 minutes to maintain its ownership of the task. You can change this reporting time from 15 minutes by specifying a reportProgressTimeout field in your pipeline.

      If a task runner does not report its status after 5 minutes, AWS Data Pipeline assumes that the task runner is unable to process the task and reassigns the task in a subsequent response to PollForTask. Task runners should call ReportTaskProgress every 60 seconds.

      Parameters:
      reportTaskProgressRequest - Contains the parameters for ReportTaskProgress.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ReportTaskProgress operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • reportTaskProgress

      default CompletableFuture<ReportTaskProgressResponse> reportTaskProgress(Consumer<ReportTaskProgressRequest.Builder> reportTaskProgressRequest)

      Task runners call ReportTaskProgress when assigned a task to acknowledge that it has the task. If the web service does not receive this acknowledgement within 2 minutes, it assigns the task in a subsequent PollForTask call. After this initial acknowledgement, the task runner only needs to report progress every 15 minutes to maintain its ownership of the task. You can change this reporting time from 15 minutes by specifying a reportProgressTimeout field in your pipeline.

      If a task runner does not report its status after 5 minutes, AWS Data Pipeline assumes that the task runner is unable to process the task and reassigns the task in a subsequent response to PollForTask. Task runners should call ReportTaskProgress every 60 seconds.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ReportTaskProgressRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ReportTaskProgressRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      reportTaskProgressRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ReportTaskProgressRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ReportTaskProgress.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ReportTaskProgress operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • reportTaskRunnerHeartbeat

      default CompletableFuture<ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatResponse> reportTaskRunnerHeartbeat(ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest reportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest)

      Task runners call ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat every 15 minutes to indicate that they are operational. If the AWS Data Pipeline Task Runner is launched on a resource managed by AWS Data Pipeline, the web service can use this call to detect when the task runner application has failed and restart a new instance.

      Parameters:
      reportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest - Contains the parameters for ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • reportTaskRunnerHeartbeat

      default CompletableFuture<ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatResponse> reportTaskRunnerHeartbeat(Consumer<ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest.Builder> reportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest)

      Task runners call ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat every 15 minutes to indicate that they are operational. If the AWS Data Pipeline Task Runner is launched on a resource managed by AWS Data Pipeline, the web service can use this call to detect when the task runner application has failed and restart a new instance.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      reportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeatRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ReportTaskRunnerHeartbeat operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • setStatus

      default CompletableFuture<SetStatusResponse> setStatus(SetStatusRequest setStatusRequest)

      Requests that the status of the specified physical or logical pipeline objects be updated in the specified pipeline. This update might not occur immediately, but is eventually consistent. The status that can be set depends on the type of object (for example, DataNode or Activity). You cannot perform this operation on FINISHED pipelines and attempting to do so returns InvalidRequestException.

      Parameters:
      setStatusRequest - Contains the parameters for SetStatus.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the SetStatus operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • setStatus

      default CompletableFuture<SetStatusResponse> setStatus(Consumer<SetStatusRequest.Builder> setStatusRequest)

      Requests that the status of the specified physical or logical pipeline objects be updated in the specified pipeline. This update might not occur immediately, but is eventually consistent. The status that can be set depends on the type of object (for example, DataNode or Activity). You cannot perform this operation on FINISHED pipelines and attempting to do so returns InvalidRequestException.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the SetStatusRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via SetStatusRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      setStatusRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on SetStatusRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for SetStatus.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the SetStatus operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • setTaskStatus

      default CompletableFuture<SetTaskStatusResponse> setTaskStatus(SetTaskStatusRequest setTaskStatusRequest)

      Task runners call SetTaskStatus to notify AWS Data Pipeline that a task is completed and provide information about the final status. A task runner makes this call regardless of whether the task was sucessful. A task runner does not need to call SetTaskStatus for tasks that are canceled by the web service during a call to ReportTaskProgress.

      Parameters:
      setTaskStatusRequest - Contains the parameters for SetTaskStatus.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the SetTaskStatus operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • setTaskStatus

      default CompletableFuture<SetTaskStatusResponse> setTaskStatus(Consumer<SetTaskStatusRequest.Builder> setTaskStatusRequest)

      Task runners call SetTaskStatus to notify AWS Data Pipeline that a task is completed and provide information about the final status. A task runner makes this call regardless of whether the task was sucessful. A task runner does not need to call SetTaskStatus for tasks that are canceled by the web service during a call to ReportTaskProgress.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the SetTaskStatusRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via SetTaskStatusRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      setTaskStatusRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on SetTaskStatusRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for SetTaskStatus.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the SetTaskStatus operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • TaskNotFoundException The specified task was not found.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • validatePipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<ValidatePipelineDefinitionResponse> validatePipelineDefinition(ValidatePipelineDefinitionRequest validatePipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Validates the specified pipeline definition to ensure that it is well formed and can be run without error.

      Parameters:
      validatePipelineDefinitionRequest - Contains the parameters for ValidatePipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ValidatePipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • validatePipelineDefinition

      default CompletableFuture<ValidatePipelineDefinitionResponse> validatePipelineDefinition(Consumer<ValidatePipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder> validatePipelineDefinitionRequest)

      Validates the specified pipeline definition to ensure that it is well formed and can be run without error.


      This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ValidatePipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via ValidatePipelineDefinitionRequest.builder()

      Parameters:
      validatePipelineDefinitionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ValidatePipelineDefinitionRequest.Builder to create a request. Contains the parameters for ValidatePipelineDefinition.
      Returns:
      A Java Future containing the result of the ValidatePipelineDefinition operation returned by the service.
      The CompletableFuture returned by this method can be completed exceptionally with the following exceptions. The exception returned is wrapped with CompletionException, so you need to invoke Throwable.getCause() to retrieve the underlying exception.
      • InternalServiceErrorException An internal service error occurred.
      • InvalidRequestException The request was not valid. Verify that your request was properly formatted, that the signature was generated with the correct credentials, and that you haven't exceeded any of the service limits for your account.
      • PipelineNotFoundException The specified pipeline was not found. Verify that you used the correct user and account identifiers.
      • PipelineDeletedException The specified pipeline has been deleted.
      • SdkException Base class for all exceptions that can be thrown by the SDK (both service and client). Can be used for catch all scenarios.
      • SdkClientException If any client side error occurs such as an IO related failure, failure to get credentials, etc.
      • DataPipelineException Base class for all service exceptions. Unknown exceptions will be thrown as an instance of this type.
      See Also:
    • serviceClientConfiguration

      default DataPipelineServiceClientConfiguration serviceClientConfiguration()
      Description copied from interface: SdkClient
      The SDK service client configuration exposes client settings to the user, e.g., ClientOverrideConfiguration
      Specified by:
      serviceClientConfiguration in interface AwsClient
      Specified by:
      serviceClientConfiguration in interface SdkClient
      Returns:
      SdkServiceClientConfiguration
    • create

      static DataPipelineAsyncClient create()
      Create a DataPipelineAsyncClient with the region loaded from the DefaultAwsRegionProviderChain and credentials loaded from the DefaultCredentialsProvider.
    • builder

      Create a builder that can be used to configure and create a DataPipelineAsyncClient.