Class: Aws::States::Client
- Inherits:
-
Seahorse::Client::Base
- Object
- Seahorse::Client::Base
- Aws::States::Client
- Includes:
- ClientStubs
- Defined in:
- gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb
Overview
An API client for States. To construct a client, you need to configure a :region
and :credentials
.
client = Aws::States::Client.new(
region: region_name,
credentials: credentials,
# ...
)
For details on configuring region and credentials see the developer guide.
See #initialize for a full list of supported configuration options.
Instance Attribute Summary
Attributes inherited from Seahorse::Client::Base
API Operations collapse
-
#create_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateActivityOutput
Creates an activity.
-
#create_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateStateMachineOutput
Creates a state machine.
-
#create_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateStateMachineAliasOutput
Creates an [alias][1] for a state machine that points to one or two [versions][2] of the same state machine.
-
#delete_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes an activity.
-
#delete_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine.
-
#delete_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine [alias][1].
-
#delete_state_machine_version(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine [version][1].
-
#describe_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeActivityOutput
Describes an activity.
-
#describe_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeExecutionOutput
Provides information about a state machine execution, such as the state machine associated with the execution, the execution input and output, and relevant execution metadata.
-
#describe_map_run(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeMapRunOutput
Provides information about a Map Run's configuration, progress, and results.
-
#describe_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineOutput
Provides information about a state machine's definition, its IAM role Amazon Resource Name (ARN), and configuration.
-
#describe_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineAliasOutput
Returns details about a state machine [alias][1].
-
#describe_state_machine_for_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineForExecutionOutput
Provides information about a state machine's definition, its execution role ARN, and configuration.
-
#get_activity_task(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetActivityTaskOutput
Used by workers to retrieve a task (with the specified activity ARN) which has been scheduled for execution by a running state machine.
-
#get_execution_history(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetExecutionHistoryOutput
Returns the history of the specified execution as a list of events.
-
#list_activities(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListActivitiesOutput
Lists the existing activities.
-
#list_executions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListExecutionsOutput
Lists all executions of a state machine or a Map Run.
-
#list_map_runs(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListMapRunsOutput
Lists all Map Runs that were started by a given state machine execution.
-
#list_state_machine_aliases(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachineAliasesOutput
Lists [aliases][1] for a specified state machine ARN.
-
#list_state_machine_versions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachineVersionsOutput
Lists [versions][1] for the specified state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN).
-
#list_state_machines(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachinesOutput
Lists the existing state machines.
-
#list_tags_for_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListTagsForResourceOutput
List tags for a given resource.
-
#publish_state_machine_version(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PublishStateMachineVersionOutput
Creates a [version][1] from the current revision of a state machine.
-
#redrive_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::RedriveExecutionOutput
Restarts unsuccessful executions of Standard workflows that didn't complete successfully in the last 14 days.
-
#send_task_failure(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Used by activity workers, Task states using the [callback][1] pattern, and optionally Task states using the [job run][2] pattern to report that the task identified by the
taskToken
failed. -
#send_task_heartbeat(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Used by activity workers and Task states using the [callback][1] pattern, and optionally Task states using the [job run][2] pattern to report to Step Functions that the task represented by the specified
taskToken
is still making progress. -
#send_task_success(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Used by activity workers, Task states using the [callback][1] pattern, and optionally Task states using the [job run][2] pattern to report that the task identified by the
taskToken
completed successfully. -
#start_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StartExecutionOutput
Starts a state machine execution.
-
#start_sync_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StartSyncExecutionOutput
Starts a Synchronous Express state machine execution.
-
#stop_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StopExecutionOutput
Stops an execution.
-
#tag_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Add a tag to a Step Functions resource.
-
#test_state(params = {}) ⇒ Types::TestStateOutput
Accepts the definition of a single state and executes it.
-
#untag_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Remove a tag from a Step Functions resource.
-
#update_map_run(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Updates an in-progress Map Run's configuration to include changes to the settings that control maximum concurrency and Map Run failure.
-
#update_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UpdateStateMachineOutput
Updates an existing state machine by modifying its
definition
,roleArn
,loggingConfiguration
, orEncryptionConfiguration
. -
#update_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UpdateStateMachineAliasOutput
Updates the configuration of an existing state machine [alias][1] by modifying its
description
orroutingConfiguration
. -
#validate_state_machine_definition(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ValidateStateMachineDefinitionOutput
Validates the syntax of a state machine definition.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#initialize(options) ⇒ Client
constructor
A new instance of Client.
Methods included from ClientStubs
#api_requests, #stub_data, #stub_responses
Methods inherited from Seahorse::Client::Base
add_plugin, api, clear_plugins, define, new, #operation_names, plugins, remove_plugin, set_api, set_plugins
Methods included from Seahorse::Client::HandlerBuilder
#handle, #handle_request, #handle_response
Constructor Details
#initialize(options) ⇒ Client
Returns a new instance of Client.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 451 def initialize(*args) super end |
Instance Method Details
#create_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateActivityOutput
Creates an activity. An activity is a task that you write in any
programming language and host on any machine that has access to Step
Functions. Activities must poll Step Functions using the
GetActivityTask
API action and respond using SendTask*
API
actions. This function lets Step Functions know the existence of your
activity and returns an identifier for use in a state machine and when
polling from the activity.
CreateActivity
is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t
create a duplicate resource if it was already created.
CreateActivity
's idempotency check is based on the activity name
.
If a following request has different tags
values, Step Functions
will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of
the previous. In this case, tags
will not be updated, even if they
are different.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 554 def create_activity(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_activity, params) req.send_request() end |
#create_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateStateMachineOutput
Creates a state machine. A state machine consists of a collection of
states that can do work (Task
states), determine to which states to
transition next (Choice
states), stop an execution with an error
(Fail
states), and so on. State machines are specified using a
JSON-based, structured language. For more information, see Amazon
States Language in the Step Functions User Guide.
If you set the publish
parameter of this API action to true
, it
publishes version 1
as the first revision of the state machine.
For additional control over security, you can encrypt your data using a customer-managed key for Step Functions state machines. You can configure a symmetric KMS key and data key reuse period when creating or updating a State Machine. The execution history and state machine definition will be encrypted with the key applied to the State Machine.
CreateStateMachine
is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t
create a duplicate resource if it was already created.
CreateStateMachine
's idempotency check is based on the state
machine name
, definition
, type
, LoggingConfiguration
,
TracingConfiguration
, and EncryptionConfiguration
The check is
also based on the publish
and versionDescription
parameters. If a
following request has a different roleArn
or tags
, Step Functions
will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of
the previous. In this case, roleArn
and tags
will not be updated,
even if they are different.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 729 def create_state_machine(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_state_machine, params) req.send_request() end |
#create_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateStateMachineAliasOutput
Creates an alias for a state machine that points to one or two versions of the same state machine. You can set your application to call StartExecution with an alias and update the version the alias uses without changing the client's code.
You can also map an alias to split StartExecution requests between two
versions of a state machine. To do this, add a second RoutingConfig
object in the routingConfiguration
parameter. You must also specify
the percentage of execution run requests each version should receive
in both RoutingConfig
objects. Step Functions randomly chooses which
version runs a given execution based on the percentage you specify.
To create an alias that points to a single version, specify a single
RoutingConfig
object with a weight
set to 100.
You can create up to 100 aliases for each state machine. You must delete unused aliases using the DeleteStateMachineAlias API action.
CreateStateMachineAlias
is an idempotent API. Step Functions bases
the idempotency check on the stateMachineArn
, description
, name
,
and routingConfiguration
parameters. Requests that contain the same
values for these parameters return a successful idempotent response
without creating a duplicate resource.
Related operations:
DescribeStateMachineAlias
ListStateMachineAliases
UpdateStateMachineAlias
DeleteStateMachineAlias
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 817 def create_state_machine_alias(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_state_machine_alias, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes an activity.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 839 def delete_activity(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_activity, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine. This is an asynchronous operation. It sets
the state machine's status to DELETING
and begins the deletion
process. A state machine is deleted only when all its executions are
completed. On the next state transition, the state machine's
executions are terminated.
A qualified state machine ARN can either refer to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine, a version ARN, or an alias ARN.
The following are some examples of qualified and unqualified state machine ARNs:
The following qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state with a label
mapStateLabel
in a state machine namedmyStateMachine
.arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:myStateMachine/mapStateLabel
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a Distributed Map state, the request fails with ValidationException
.The following unqualified state machine ARN refers to a state machine named
myStateMachine
.arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:myStateMachine
This API action also deletes all versions and aliases associated with a state machine.
EXPRESS
state machines, the deletion happens eventually (usually
in less than a minute). Running executions may emit logs after
DeleteStateMachine
API is called.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 902 def delete_state_machine(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_state_machine, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine alias.
After you delete a state machine alias, you can't use it to start executions. When you delete a state machine alias, Step Functions doesn't delete the state machine versions that alias references.
Related operations:
CreateStateMachineAlias
DescribeStateMachineAlias
ListStateMachineAliases
UpdateStateMachineAlias
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 942 def delete_state_machine_alias(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_state_machine_alias, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_state_machine_version(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a state machine version. After you delete a version, you can't call StartExecution using that version's ARN or use the version with a state machine alias.
Related operations:
PublishStateMachineVersion
ListStateMachineVersions
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 988 def delete_state_machine_version(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_state_machine_version, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_activity(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeActivityOutput
Describes an activity.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1029 def describe_activity(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_activity, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeExecutionOutput
Provides information about a state machine execution, such as the state machine associated with the execution, the execution input and output, and relevant execution metadata. If you've redriven an execution, you can use this API action to return information about the redrives of that execution. In addition, you can use this API action to return the Map Run Amazon Resource Name (ARN) if the execution was dispatched by a Map Run.
If you specify a version or alias ARN when you call the StartExecution
API action, DescribeExecution
returns that ARN.
Executions of an EXPRESS
state machine aren't supported by
DescribeExecution
unless a Map Run dispatched them.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1124 def describe_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_map_run(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeMapRunOutput
Provides information about a Map Run's configuration, progress, and results. If you've redriven a Map Run, this API action also returns information about the redrives of that Map Run. For more information, see Examining Map Run in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1201 def describe_map_run(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_map_run, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineOutput
Provides information about a state machine's definition, its IAM role Amazon Resource Name (ARN), and configuration.
A qualified state machine ARN can either refer to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine, a version ARN, or an alias ARN.
The following are some examples of qualified and unqualified state machine ARNs:
The following qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state with a label
mapStateLabel
in a state machine namedmyStateMachine
.arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:myStateMachine/mapStateLabel
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a Distributed Map state, the request fails with ValidationException
.The following qualified state machine ARN refers to an alias named
PROD
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine:PROD>
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a version ARN or an alias ARN, the request starts execution for that version or alias. The following unqualified state machine ARN refers to a state machine named
myStateMachine
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine>
This API action returns the details for a state machine version if the
stateMachineArn
you specify is a state machine version ARN.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1323 def describe_state_machine(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_state_machine, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineAliasOutput
Returns details about a state machine alias.
Related operations:
CreateStateMachineAlias
ListStateMachineAliases
UpdateStateMachineAlias
DeleteStateMachineAlias
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1377 def describe_state_machine_alias(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_state_machine_alias, params) req.send_request() end |
#describe_state_machine_for_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DescribeStateMachineForExecutionOutput
Provides information about a state machine's definition, its execution role ARN, and configuration. If a Map Run dispatched the execution, this action returns the Map Run Amazon Resource Name (ARN) in the response. The state machine returned is the state machine associated with the Map Run.
This API action is not supported by EXPRESS
state machines.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1450 def describe_state_machine_for_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:describe_state_machine_for_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_activity_task(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetActivityTaskOutput
Used by workers to retrieve a task (with the specified activity ARN)
which has been scheduled for execution by a running state machine.
This initiates a long poll, where the service holds the HTTP
connection open and responds as soon as a task becomes available (i.e.
an execution of a task of this type is needed.) The maximum time the
service holds on to the request before responding is 60 seconds. If no
task is available within 60 seconds, the poll returns a taskToken
with a null string.
Workers should set their client side socket timeout to at least 65 seconds (5 seconds higher than the maximum time the service may hold the poll request).
Polling with GetActivityTask
can cause latency in some
implementations. See Avoid Latency When Polling for Activity
Tasks in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1510 def get_activity_task(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_activity_task, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_execution_history(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetExecutionHistoryOutput
Returns the history of the specified execution as a list of events. By
default, the results are returned in ascending order of the
timeStamp
of the events. Use the reverseOrder
parameter to get the
latest events first.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
This API action is not supported by EXPRESS
state machines.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1681 def get_execution_history(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_execution_history, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_activities(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListActivitiesOutput
Lists the existing activities.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1742 def list_activities(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_activities, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_executions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListExecutionsOutput
Lists all executions of a state machine or a Map Run. You can list all executions related to a state machine by specifying a state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN), or those related to a Map Run by specifying a Map Run ARN. Using this API action, you can also list all redriven executions.
You can also provide a state machine alias ARN or version ARN to list the executions associated with a specific alias or version.
Results are sorted by time, with the most recent execution first.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
This API action is not supported by EXPRESS
state machines.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1881 def list_executions(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_executions, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_map_runs(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListMapRunsOutput
Lists all Map Runs that were started by a given state machine
execution. Use this API action to obtain Map Run ARNs, and then call
DescribeMapRun
to obtain more information, if needed.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 1939 def list_map_runs(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_map_runs, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_state_machine_aliases(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachineAliasesOutput
Lists aliases for a specified state machine ARN. Results are sorted by time, with the most recently created aliases listed first.
To list aliases that reference a state machine version, you can
specify the version ARN in the stateMachineArn
parameter.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
Related operations:
CreateStateMachineAlias
DescribeStateMachineAlias
UpdateStateMachineAlias
DeleteStateMachineAlias
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2019 def list_state_machine_aliases(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_state_machine_aliases, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_state_machine_versions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachineVersionsOutput
Lists versions for the specified state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN).
The results are sorted in descending order of the version creation time.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
Related operations:
PublishStateMachineVersion
DeleteStateMachineVersion
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2090 def list_state_machine_versions(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_state_machine_versions, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_state_machines(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListStateMachinesOutput
Lists the existing state machines.
If nextToken
is returned, there are more results available. The
value of nextToken
is a unique pagination token for each page. Make
the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires
after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination token will return an HTTP
400 InvalidToken error.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2152 def list_state_machines(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_state_machines, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_tags_for_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListTagsForResourceOutput
List tags for a given resource.
Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these
symbols: _ . : / = + - @
.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2186 def (params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_tags_for_resource, params) req.send_request() end |
#publish_state_machine_version(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PublishStateMachineVersionOutput
Creates a version from the current revision of a state machine. Use versions to create immutable snapshots of your state machine. You can start executions from versions either directly or with an alias. To create an alias, use CreateStateMachineAlias.
You can publish up to 1000 versions for each state machine. You must manually delete unused versions using the DeleteStateMachineVersion API action.
PublishStateMachineVersion
is an idempotent API. It doesn't create
a duplicate state machine version if it already exists for the current
revision. Step Functions bases PublishStateMachineVersion
's
idempotency check on the stateMachineArn
, name
, and revisionId
parameters. Requests with the same parameters return a successful
idempotent response. If you don't specify a revisionId
, Step
Functions checks for a previously published version of the state
machine's current revision.
Related operations:
DeleteStateMachineVersion
ListStateMachineVersions
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2264 def publish_state_machine_version(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:publish_state_machine_version, params) req.send_request() end |
#redrive_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::RedriveExecutionOutput
Restarts unsuccessful executions of Standard workflows that didn't complete successfully in the last 14 days. These include failed, aborted, or timed out executions. When you redrive an execution, it continues the failed execution from the unsuccessful step and uses the same input. Step Functions preserves the results and execution history of the successful steps, and doesn't rerun these steps when you redrive an execution. Redriven executions use the same state machine definition and execution ARN as the original execution attempt.
For workflows that include an Inline Map or Parallel state,
RedriveExecution
API action reschedules and redrives only the
iterations and branches that failed or aborted.
To redrive a workflow that includes a Distributed Map state whose Map Run failed, you must redrive the parent workflow. The parent workflow redrives all the unsuccessful states, including a failed Map Run. If a Map Run was not started in the original execution attempt, the redriven parent workflow starts the Map Run.
EXPRESS
state machines.
However, you can restart the unsuccessful executions of Express child workflows in a Distributed Map by redriving its Map Run. When you redrive a Map Run, the Express child workflows are rerun using the StartExecution API action. For more information, see Redriving Map Runs.
You can redrive executions if your original execution meets the following conditions:
The execution status isn't
SUCCEEDED
.Your workflow execution has not exceeded the redrivable period of 14 days. Redrivable period refers to the time during which you can redrive a given execution. This period starts from the day a state machine completes its execution.
The workflow execution has not exceeded the maximum open time of one year. For more information about state machine quotas, see Quotas related to state machine executions.
The execution event history count is less than 24,999. Redriven executions append their event history to the existing event history. Make sure your workflow execution contains less than 24,999 events to accommodate the
ExecutionRedriven
history event and at least one other history event.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2362 def redrive_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:redrive_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#send_task_failure(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Used by activity workers, Task states using the callback pattern,
and optionally Task states using the job run pattern to report
that the task identified by the taskToken
failed.
For an execution with encryption enabled, Step Functions will encrypt the error and cause fields using the KMS key for the execution role.
A caller can mark a task as fail without using any KMS permissions in
the execution role if the caller provides a null value for both
error
and cause
fields because no data needs to be encrypted.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2413 def send_task_failure(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:send_task_failure, params) req.send_request() end |
#send_task_heartbeat(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Used by activity workers and Task states using the callback
pattern, and optionally Task states using the job run pattern to
report to Step Functions that the task represented by the specified
taskToken
is still making progress. This action resets the
Heartbeat
clock. The Heartbeat
threshold is specified in the state
machine's Amazon States Language definition (HeartbeatSeconds
).
This action does not in itself create an event in the execution
history. However, if the task times out, the execution history
contains an ActivityTimedOut
entry for activities, or a
TaskTimedOut
entry for tasks using the job run or callback
pattern.
Timeout
of a task, defined in the state machine's Amazon States
Language definition, is its maximum allowed duration, regardless of
the number of SendTaskHeartbeat requests received. Use
HeartbeatSeconds
to configure the timeout interval for heartbeats.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2464 def send_task_heartbeat(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:send_task_heartbeat, params) req.send_request() end |
#send_task_success(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2505 def send_task_success(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:send_task_success, params) req.send_request() end |
#start_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StartExecutionOutput
Starts a state machine execution.
A qualified state machine ARN can either refer to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine, a version ARN, or an alias ARN.
The following are some examples of qualified and unqualified state machine ARNs:
The following qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state with a label
mapStateLabel
in a state machine namedmyStateMachine
.arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:myStateMachine/mapStateLabel
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a Distributed Map state, the request fails with ValidationException
.The following qualified state machine ARN refers to an alias named
PROD
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine:PROD>
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a version ARN or an alias ARN, the request starts execution for that version or alias. The following unqualified state machine ARN refers to a state machine named
myStateMachine
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine>
If you start an execution with an unqualified state machine ARN, Step Functions uses the latest revision of the state machine for the execution.
To start executions of a state machine version, call
StartExecution
and provide the version ARN or the ARN of an
alias that points to the version.
StartExecution
is idempotent for STANDARD
workflows. For a
STANDARD
workflow, if you call StartExecution
with the same name
and input as a running execution, the call succeeds and return the
same response as the original request. If the execution is closed or
if the input is different, it returns a 400 ExecutionAlreadyExists
error. You can reuse names after 90 days.
StartExecution
isn't idempotent for EXPRESS
workflows.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2676 def start_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:start_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#start_sync_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StartSyncExecutionOutput
Starts a Synchronous Express state machine execution.
StartSyncExecution
is not available for STANDARD
workflows.
StartSyncExecution
will return a 200 OK
response, even if your
execution fails, because the status code in the API response doesn't
reflect function errors. Error codes are reserved for errors that
prevent your execution from running, such as permissions errors, limit
errors, or issues with your state machine code and configuration.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2776 def start_sync_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:start_sync_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#stop_execution(params = {}) ⇒ Types::StopExecutionOutput
Stops an execution.
This API action is not supported by EXPRESS
state machines.
For an execution with encryption enabled, Step Functions will encrypt the error and cause fields using the KMS key for the execution role.
A caller can stop an execution without using any KMS permissions in
the execution role if the caller provides a null value for both
error
and cause
fields because no data needs to be encrypted.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2821 def stop_execution(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:stop_execution, params) req.send_request() end |
#tag_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Add a tag to a Step Functions resource.
An array of key-value pairs. For more information, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Amazon Web Services Billing and Cost Management User Guide, and Controlling Access Using IAM Tags.
Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these
symbols: _ . : / = + - @
.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 2868 def tag_resource(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:tag_resource, params) req.send_request() end |
#test_state(params = {}) ⇒ Types::TestStateOutput
Accepts the definition of a single state and executes it. You can test a state without creating a state machine or updating an existing state machine. Using this API, you can test the following:
A state's input and output processing data flow
An Amazon Web Services service integration request and response
An HTTP Task request and response
You can call this API on only one state at a time. The states that you can test include the following:
The TestState
API assumes an IAM role which must contain the
required IAM permissions for the resources your state is accessing.
For information about the permissions a state might need, see IAM
permissions to test a state.
The TestState
API can run for up to five minutes. If the execution
of a state exceeds this duration, it fails with the States.Timeout
error.
TestState
doesn't support Activity tasks, .sync
or
.waitForTaskToken
service integration patterns,
Parallel, or Map states.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3026 def test_state(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:test_state, params) req.send_request() end |
#untag_resource(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Remove a tag from a Step Functions resource
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3053 def untag_resource(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:untag_resource, params) req.send_request() end |
#update_map_run(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Updates an in-progress Map Run's configuration to include changes to the settings that control maximum concurrency and Map Run failure.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3089 def update_map_run(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:update_map_run, params) req.send_request() end |
#update_state_machine(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UpdateStateMachineOutput
Updates an existing state machine by modifying its definition
,
roleArn
, loggingConfiguration
, or EncryptionConfiguration
.
Running executions will continue to use the previous definition
and
roleArn
. You must include at least one of definition
or roleArn
or you will receive a MissingRequiredParameter
error.
A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state
defined within a state machine. For example, the qualified state
machine ARN
arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel
refers to a Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel
in
the state machine named stateMachineName
.
A qualified state machine ARN can either refer to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine, a version ARN, or an alias ARN.
The following are some examples of qualified and unqualified state machine ARNs:
The following qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state with a label
mapStateLabel
in a state machine namedmyStateMachine
.arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:myStateMachine/mapStateLabel
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a Distributed Map state, the request fails with ValidationException
.The following qualified state machine ARN refers to an alias named
PROD
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine:PROD>
If you provide a qualified state machine ARN that refers to a version ARN or an alias ARN, the request starts execution for that version or alias. The following unqualified state machine ARN refers to a state machine named
myStateMachine
.arn:<partition>:states:<region>:<account-id>:stateMachine:<myStateMachine>
After you update your state machine, you can set the publish
parameter to true
in the same action to publish a new version.
This way, you can opt-in to strict versioning of your state machine.
StartExecution
calls within a few seconds use the updated
definition
and roleArn
. Executions started immediately after you
call UpdateStateMachine
may use the previous state machine
definition
and roleArn
.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3241 def update_state_machine(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:update_state_machine, params) req.send_request() end |
#update_state_machine_alias(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UpdateStateMachineAliasOutput
Updates the configuration of an existing state machine alias by
modifying its description
or routingConfiguration
.
You must specify at least one of the description
or
routingConfiguration
parameters to update a state machine alias.
UpdateStateMachineAlias
is an idempotent API. Step Functions bases
the idempotency check on the stateMachineAliasArn
, description
,
and routingConfiguration
parameters. Requests with the same
parameters return an idempotent response.
UpdateStateMachineAlias
may use the previous routing configuration.
Related operations:
CreateStateMachineAlias
DescribeStateMachineAlias
ListStateMachineAliases
DeleteStateMachineAlias
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3317 def update_state_machine_alias(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:update_state_machine_alias, params) req.send_request() end |
#validate_state_machine_definition(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ValidateStateMachineDefinitionOutput
Validates the syntax of a state machine definition.
You can validate that a state machine definition is correct without
creating a state machine resource. Step Functions will implicitly
perform the same syntax check when you invoke CreateStateMachine
and
UpdateStateMachine
. State machine definitions are specified using a
JSON-based, structured language. For more information on Amazon States
Language see Amazon States Language (ASL).
Suggested uses for ValidateStateMachineDefinition
:
Integrate automated checks into your code review or Continuous Integration (CI) process to validate state machine definitions before starting deployments.
Run the validation from a Git pre-commit hook to check your state machine definitions before committing them to your source repository.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-states/lib/aws-sdk-states/client.rb', line 3406 def validate_state_machine_definition(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:validate_state_machine_definition, params) req.send_request() end |