@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class AbstractAmazonEKS extends Object implements AmazonEKS
AmazonEKS
. Convenient method forms pass through to the corresponding overload that
takes a request object, which throws an UnsupportedOperationException
.ENDPOINT_PREFIX
public AssociateAccessPolicyResult associateAccessPolicy(AssociateAccessPolicyRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Associates an access policy and its scope to an access entry. For more information about associating access policies, see Associating and disassociating access policies to and from access entries in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
associateAccessPolicy
in interface AmazonEKS
public AssociateEncryptionConfigResult associateEncryptionConfig(AssociateEncryptionConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Associates an encryption configuration to an existing cluster.
Use this API to enable encryption on existing clusters that don't already have encryption enabled. This allows you to implement a defense-in-depth security strategy without migrating applications to new Amazon EKS clusters.
associateEncryptionConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public AssociateIdentityProviderConfigResult associateIdentityProviderConfig(AssociateIdentityProviderConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Associates an identity provider configuration to a cluster.
If you want to authenticate identities using an identity provider, you can create an identity provider
configuration and associate it to your cluster. After configuring authentication to your cluster you can create
Kubernetes Role
and ClusterRole
objects, assign permissions to them, and then bind them
to the identities using Kubernetes RoleBinding
and ClusterRoleBinding
objects. For more
information see Using RBAC
Authorization in the Kubernetes documentation.
associateIdentityProviderConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateAccessEntryResult createAccessEntry(CreateAccessEntryRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an access entry.
An access entry allows an IAM principal to access your cluster. Access entries can replace the need to maintain
entries in the aws-auth
ConfigMap
for authentication. You have the following options
for authorizing an IAM principal to access Kubernetes objects on your cluster: Kubernetes role-based access
control (RBAC), Amazon EKS, or both. Kubernetes RBAC authorization requires you to create and manage Kubernetes
Role
, ClusterRole
, RoleBinding
, and ClusterRoleBinding
objects, in addition to managing access entries. If you use Amazon EKS authorization exclusively, you don't need
to create and manage Kubernetes Role
, ClusterRole
, RoleBinding
, and
ClusterRoleBinding
objects.
For more information about access entries, see Access entries in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createAccessEntry
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateAddonResult createAddon(CreateAddonRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an Amazon EKS add-on.
Amazon EKS add-ons help to automate the provisioning and lifecycle management of common operational software for Amazon EKS clusters. For more information, see Amazon EKS add-ons in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createAddon
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateClusterResult createCluster(CreateClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an Amazon EKS control plane.
The Amazon EKS control plane consists of control plane instances that run the Kubernetes software, such as
etcd
and the API server. The control plane runs in an account managed by Amazon Web Services, and
the Kubernetes API is exposed by the Amazon EKS API server endpoint. Each Amazon EKS cluster control plane is
single tenant and unique. It runs on its own set of Amazon EC2 instances.
The cluster control plane is provisioned across multiple Availability Zones and fronted by an Elastic Load
Balancing Network Load Balancer. Amazon EKS also provisions elastic network interfaces in your VPC subnets to
provide connectivity from the control plane instances to the nodes (for example, to support
kubectl exec
, logs
, and proxy
data flows).
Amazon EKS nodes run in your Amazon Web Services account and connect to your cluster's control plane over the Kubernetes API server endpoint and a certificate file that is created for your cluster.
You can use the endpointPublicAccess
and endpointPrivateAccess
parameters to enable or
disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is
enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Endpoint Access
Control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
You can use the logging
parameter to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs
for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs.
For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane
Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see CloudWatch Pricing.
In most cases, it takes several minutes to create a cluster. After you create an Amazon EKS cluster, you must configure your Kubernetes tooling to communicate with the API server and launch nodes into your cluster. For more information, see Allowing users to access your cluster and Launching Amazon EKS nodes in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createCluster
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateEksAnywhereSubscriptionResult createEksAnywhereSubscription(CreateEksAnywhereSubscriptionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an EKS Anywhere subscription. When a subscription is created, it is a contract agreement for the length of the term specified in the request. Licenses that are used to validate support are provisioned in Amazon Web Services License Manager and the caller account is granted access to EKS Anywhere Curated Packages.
createEksAnywhereSubscription
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateFargateProfileResult createFargateProfile(CreateFargateProfileRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an Fargate profile for your Amazon EKS cluster. You must have at least one Fargate profile in a cluster to be able to run pods on Fargate.
The Fargate profile allows an administrator to declare which pods run on Fargate and specify which pods run on which Fargate profile. This declaration is done through the profile’s selectors. Each profile can have up to five selectors that contain a namespace and labels. A namespace is required for every selector. The label field consists of multiple optional key-value pairs. Pods that match the selectors are scheduled on Fargate. If a to-be-scheduled pod matches any of the selectors in the Fargate profile, then that pod is run on Fargate.
When you create a Fargate profile, you must specify a pod execution role to use with the pods that are scheduled
with the profile. This role is added to the cluster's Kubernetes Role Based Access Control (RBAC) for
authorization so that the kubelet
that is running on the Fargate infrastructure can register with
your Amazon EKS cluster so that it can appear in your cluster as a node. The pod execution role also provides IAM
permissions to the Fargate infrastructure to allow read access to Amazon ECR image repositories. For more
information, see Pod Execution
Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
Fargate profiles are immutable. However, you can create a new updated profile to replace an existing profile and then delete the original after the updated profile has finished creating.
If any Fargate profiles in a cluster are in the DELETING
status, you must wait for that Fargate
profile to finish deleting before you can create any other profiles in that cluster.
For more information, see Fargate profile in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createFargateProfile
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreateNodegroupResult createNodegroup(CreateNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster.
You can only create a node group for your cluster that is equal to the current Kubernetes version for the cluster. All node groups are created with the latest AMI release version for the respective minor Kubernetes version of the cluster, unless you deploy a custom AMI using a launch template. For more information about using launch templates, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates.
An Amazon EKS managed node group is an Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling group and associated Amazon EC2 instances that are managed by Amazon Web Services for an Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Managed node groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
Windows AMI types are only supported for commercial Amazon Web Services Regions that support Windows on Amazon EKS.
createNodegroup
in interface AmazonEKS
public CreatePodIdentityAssociationResult createPodIdentityAssociation(CreatePodIdentityAssociationRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Creates an EKS Pod Identity association between a service account in an Amazon EKS cluster and an IAM role with EKS Pod Identity. Use EKS Pod Identity to give temporary IAM credentials to pods and the credentials are rotated automatically.
Amazon EKS Pod Identity associations provide the ability to manage credentials for your applications, similar to the way that Amazon EC2 instance profiles provide credentials to Amazon EC2 instances.
If a pod uses a service account that has an association, Amazon EKS sets environment variables in the containers of the pod. The environment variables configure the Amazon Web Services SDKs, including the Command Line Interface, to use the EKS Pod Identity credentials.
Pod Identity is a simpler method than IAM roles for service accounts, as this method doesn't use OIDC identity providers. Additionally, you can configure a role for Pod Identity once, and reuse it across clusters.
createPodIdentityAssociation
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteAccessEntryResult deleteAccessEntry(DeleteAccessEntryRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes an access entry.
Deleting an access entry of a type other than Standard
can cause your cluster to function
improperly. If you delete an access entry in error, you can recreate it.
deleteAccessEntry
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteAddonResult deleteAddon(DeleteAddonRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes an Amazon EKS add-on.
When you remove an add-on, it's deleted from the cluster. You can always manually start an add-on on the cluster using the Kubernetes API.
deleteAddon
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteClusterResult deleteCluster(DeleteClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes an Amazon EKS cluster control plane.
If you have active services in your cluster that are associated with a load balancer, you must delete those services before deleting the cluster so that the load balancers are deleted properly. Otherwise, you can have orphaned resources in your VPC that prevent you from being able to delete the VPC. For more information, see Deleting a cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
If you have managed node groups or Fargate profiles attached to the cluster, you must delete them first. For more
information, see DeleteNodgroup
and DeleteFargateProfile
.
deleteCluster
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteEksAnywhereSubscriptionResult deleteEksAnywhereSubscription(DeleteEksAnywhereSubscriptionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes an expired or inactive subscription. Deleting inactive subscriptions removes them from the Amazon Web Services Management Console view and from list/describe API responses. Subscriptions can only be cancelled within 7 days of creation and are cancelled by creating a ticket in the Amazon Web Services Support Center.
deleteEksAnywhereSubscription
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteFargateProfileResult deleteFargateProfile(DeleteFargateProfileRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes an Fargate profile.
When you delete a Fargate profile, any Pod
running on Fargate that was created with the profile is
deleted. If the Pod
matches another Fargate profile, then it is scheduled on Fargate with that
profile. If it no longer matches any Fargate profiles, then it's not scheduled on Fargate and may remain in a
pending state.
Only one Fargate profile in a cluster can be in the DELETING
status at a time. You must wait for a
Fargate profile to finish deleting before you can delete any other profiles in that cluster.
deleteFargateProfile
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeleteNodegroupResult deleteNodegroup(DeleteNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes a managed node group.
deleteNodegroup
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeletePodIdentityAssociationResult deletePodIdentityAssociation(DeletePodIdentityAssociationRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes a EKS Pod Identity association.
The temporary Amazon Web Services credentials from the previous IAM role session might still be valid until the session expiry. If you need to immediately revoke the temporary session credentials, then go to the role in the IAM console.
deletePodIdentityAssociation
in interface AmazonEKS
public DeregisterClusterResult deregisterCluster(DeregisterClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deregisters a connected cluster to remove it from the Amazon EKS control plane.
A connected cluster is a Kubernetes cluster that you've connected to your control plane using the Amazon EKS Connector.
deregisterCluster
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeAccessEntryResult describeAccessEntry(DescribeAccessEntryRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an access entry.
describeAccessEntry
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeAddonResult describeAddon(DescribeAddonRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an Amazon EKS add-on.
describeAddon
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeAddonConfigurationResult describeAddonConfiguration(DescribeAddonConfigurationRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Returns configuration options.
describeAddonConfiguration
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeAddonVersionsResult describeAddonVersions(DescribeAddonVersionsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes the versions for an add-on.
Information such as the Kubernetes versions that you can use the add-on with, the owner
,
publisher
, and the type
of the add-on are returned.
describeAddonVersions
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeClusterResult describeCluster(DescribeClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an Amazon EKS cluster.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data returned by this operation are required for
kubelet
and kubectl
to communicate with your Kubernetes API server. For more
information, see Creating or
updating a kubeconfig
file for an Amazon EKS cluster.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data aren't available until the cluster reaches the
ACTIVE
state.
describeCluster
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeEksAnywhereSubscriptionResult describeEksAnywhereSubscription(DescribeEksAnywhereSubscriptionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Returns descriptive information about a subscription.
describeEksAnywhereSubscription
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeFargateProfileResult describeFargateProfile(DescribeFargateProfileRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an Fargate profile.
describeFargateProfile
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeIdentityProviderConfigResult describeIdentityProviderConfig(DescribeIdentityProviderConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an identity provider configuration.
describeIdentityProviderConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeInsightResult describeInsight(DescribeInsightRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Returns details about an insight that you specify using its ID.
describeInsight
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeNodegroupResult describeNodegroup(DescribeNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes a managed node group.
describeNodegroup
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribePodIdentityAssociationResult describePodIdentityAssociation(DescribePodIdentityAssociationRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Returns descriptive information about an EKS Pod Identity association.
This action requires the ID of the association. You can get the ID from the response to the
CreatePodIdentityAssocation
for newly created associations. Or, you can list the IDs for
associations with ListPodIdentityAssociations
and filter the list by namespace or service account.
describePodIdentityAssociation
in interface AmazonEKS
public DescribeUpdateResult describeUpdate(DescribeUpdateRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Describes an update to an Amazon EKS resource.
When the status of the update is Succeeded
, the update is complete. If an update fails, the status
is Failed
, and an error detail explains the reason for the failure.
describeUpdate
in interface AmazonEKS
request
- Describes an update request.public DisassociateAccessPolicyResult disassociateAccessPolicy(DisassociateAccessPolicyRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Disassociates an access policy from an access entry.
disassociateAccessPolicy
in interface AmazonEKS
public DisassociateIdentityProviderConfigResult disassociateIdentityProviderConfig(DisassociateIdentityProviderConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Disassociates an identity provider configuration from a cluster.
If you disassociate an identity provider from your cluster, users included in the provider can no longer access the cluster. However, you can still access the cluster with IAM principals.
disassociateIdentityProviderConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListAccessEntriesResult listAccessEntries(ListAccessEntriesRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the access entries for your cluster.
listAccessEntries
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListAccessPoliciesResult listAccessPolicies(ListAccessPoliciesRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the available access policies.
listAccessPolicies
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListAddonsResult listAddons(ListAddonsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the installed add-ons.
listAddons
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListAssociatedAccessPoliciesResult listAssociatedAccessPolicies(ListAssociatedAccessPoliciesRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the access policies associated with an access entry.
listAssociatedAccessPolicies
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListClustersResult listClusters(ListClustersRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the Amazon EKS clusters in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.
listClusters
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListEksAnywhereSubscriptionsResult listEksAnywhereSubscriptions(ListEksAnywhereSubscriptionsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Displays the full description of the subscription.
listEksAnywhereSubscriptions
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListFargateProfilesResult listFargateProfiles(ListFargateProfilesRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the Fargate profiles associated with the specified cluster in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.
listFargateProfiles
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListIdentityProviderConfigsResult listIdentityProviderConfigs(ListIdentityProviderConfigsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the identity provider configurations for your cluster.
listIdentityProviderConfigs
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListInsightsResult listInsights(ListInsightsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Returns a list of all insights checked for against the specified cluster. You can filter which insights are returned by category, associated Kubernetes version, and status.
listInsights
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListNodegroupsResult listNodegroups(ListNodegroupsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the managed node groups associated with the specified cluster in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region. Self-managed node groups aren't listed.
listNodegroups
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListPodIdentityAssociationsResult listPodIdentityAssociations(ListPodIdentityAssociationsRequest request)
AmazonEKS
List the EKS Pod Identity associations in a cluster. You can filter the list by the namespace that the association is in or the service account that the association uses.
listPodIdentityAssociations
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListTagsForResourceResult listTagsForResource(ListTagsForResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKS
List the tags for an Amazon EKS resource.
listTagsForResource
in interface AmazonEKS
public ListUpdatesResult listUpdates(ListUpdatesRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Lists the updates associated with an Amazon EKS resource in your Amazon Web Services account, in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.
listUpdates
in interface AmazonEKS
public RegisterClusterResult registerCluster(RegisterClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Connects a Kubernetes cluster to the Amazon EKS control plane.
Any Kubernetes cluster can be connected to the Amazon EKS control plane to view current information about the cluster and its nodes.
Cluster connection requires two steps. First, send a RegisterClusterRequest
to add it to
the Amazon EKS control plane.
Second, a Manifest containing the activationID
and activationCode
must be applied to the
Kubernetes cluster through it's native provider to provide visibility.
After the manifest is updated and applied, the connected cluster is visible to the Amazon EKS control plane. If
the manifest isn't applied within three days, the connected cluster will no longer be visible and must be
deregistered using DeregisterCluster
.
registerCluster
in interface AmazonEKS
public TagResourceResult tagResource(TagResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Associates the specified tags to an Amazon EKS resource with the specified resourceArn
. If existing
tags on a resource are not specified in the request parameters, they aren't changed. When a resource is deleted,
the tags associated with that resource are also deleted. Tags that you create for Amazon EKS resources don't
propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster. For example, if you tag a cluster with this
operation, that tag doesn't automatically propagate to the subnets and nodes associated with the cluster.
tagResource
in interface AmazonEKS
public UntagResourceResult untagResource(UntagResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Deletes specified tags from an Amazon EKS resource.
untagResource
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateAccessEntryResult updateAccessEntry(UpdateAccessEntryRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates an access entry.
updateAccessEntry
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateAddonResult updateAddon(UpdateAddonRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates an Amazon EKS add-on.
updateAddon
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateClusterConfigResult updateClusterConfig(UpdateClusterConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster configuration. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response
output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with
DescribeUpdate
"/>.
You can use this API operation to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster control plane logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see CloudWatch Pricing.
You can also use this API operation to enable or disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
You can also use this API operation to choose different subnets and security groups for the cluster. You must specify at least two subnets that are in different Availability Zones. You can't change which VPC the subnets are from, the subnets must be in the same VPC as the subnets that the cluster was created with. For more information about the VPC requirements, see https ://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/network_reqs.html in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
updateClusterConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateClusterVersionResult updateClusterVersion(UpdateClusterVersionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster to the specified Kubernetes version. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
If your cluster has managed node groups attached to it, all of your node groups’ Kubernetes versions must match the cluster’s Kubernetes version in order to update the cluster to a new Kubernetes version.
updateClusterVersion
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateEksAnywhereSubscriptionResult updateEksAnywhereSubscription(UpdateEksAnywhereSubscriptionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Update an EKS Anywhere Subscription. Only auto renewal and tags can be updated after subscription creation.
updateEksAnywhereSubscription
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateNodegroupConfigResult updateNodegroupConfig(UpdateNodegroupConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates an Amazon EKS managed node group configuration. Your node group continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your node group update with the DescribeUpdate API operation. Currently you can update the Kubernetes labels for a node group or the scaling configuration.
updateNodegroupConfig
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdateNodegroupVersionResult updateNodegroupVersion(UpdateNodegroupVersionRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates the Kubernetes version or AMI version of an Amazon EKS managed node group.
You can update a node group using a launch template only if the node group was originally deployed with a launch template. If you need to update a custom AMI in a node group that was deployed with a launch template, then update your custom AMI, specify the new ID in a new version of the launch template, and then update the node group to the new version of the launch template.
If you update without a launch template, then you can update to the latest available AMI version of a node group's current Kubernetes version by not specifying a Kubernetes version in the request. You can update to the latest AMI version of your cluster's current Kubernetes version by specifying your cluster's Kubernetes version in the request. For information about Linux versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Amazon Linux AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide. For information about Windows versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Windows AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
You cannot roll back a node group to an earlier Kubernetes version or AMI version.
When a node in a managed node group is terminated due to a scaling action or update, every Pod
on
that node is drained first. Amazon EKS attempts to drain the nodes gracefully and will fail if it is unable to do
so. You can force
the update if Amazon EKS is unable to drain the nodes as a result of a
Pod
disruption budget issue.
updateNodegroupVersion
in interface AmazonEKS
public UpdatePodIdentityAssociationResult updatePodIdentityAssociation(UpdatePodIdentityAssociationRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Updates a EKS Pod Identity association. Only the IAM role can be changed; an association can't be moved between clusters, namespaces, or service accounts. If you need to edit the namespace or service account, you need to delete the association and then create a new association with your desired settings.
updatePodIdentityAssociation
in interface AmazonEKS
public void shutdown()
AmazonEKS
public ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
AmazonEKS
Response metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you need to access this extra diagnostic information for an executed request, you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after executing a request.
getCachedResponseMetadata
in interface AmazonEKS
request
- The originally executed request.public AmazonEKSWaiters waiters()