DeleteComputeEnvironment - AWS Batch

DeleteComputeEnvironment

Deletes an AWS Batch compute environment.

Before you can delete a compute environment, you must set its state to DISABLED with the UpdateComputeEnvironment API operation and disassociate it from any job queues with the UpdateJobQueue API operation. Compute environments that use AWS Fargate resources must terminate all active jobs on that compute environment before deleting the compute environment. If this isn't done, the compute environment enters an invalid state.

Request Syntax

POST /v1/deletecomputeenvironment HTTP/1.1 Content-type: application/json { "computeEnvironment": "string" }

URI Request Parameters

The request does not use any URI parameters.

Request Body

The request accepts the following data in JSON format.

computeEnvironment

The name or Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the compute environment to delete.

Type: String

Required: Yes

Response Syntax

HTTP/1.1 200

Response Elements

If the action is successful, the service sends back an HTTP 200 response with an empty HTTP body.

Errors

ClientException

These errors are usually caused by a client action. One example cause is using an action or resource on behalf of a user that doesn't have permissions to use the action or resource. Another cause is specifying an identifier that's not valid.

HTTP Status Code: 400

ServerException

These errors are usually caused by a server issue.

HTTP Status Code: 500

Examples

In the following example or examples, the Authorization header contents ( [authorization-params] ) must be replaced with an AWS Signature Version 4 signature. For more information about creating these signatures, see Signature Version 4 Signing Process in the AWS General Reference.

You only need to learn how to sign HTTP requests if you intend to manually create them. When you use the AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI) or one of the AWS SDKs to make requests to AWS, these tools automatically sign the requests for you with the access key that you specify when you configure the tools. When you use these tools, you don't need to learn how to sign requests yourself.

Example

This example deletes the P3OnDemand compute environment.

Sample Request

POST /v1/deletecomputeenvironment HTTP/1.1 Host: batch.us-east-1.amazonaws.com Accept-Encoding: identity Content-Length: [content-length] Authorization: [authorization-params] X-Amz-Date: 20161128T202219Z User-Agent: aws-cli/1.11.21 Python/2.7.12 Darwin/16.1.0 botocore/1.4.78 { "computeEnvironment": "P3OnDemand" }

Sample Response

HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json Content-Length: 2 Connection: keep-alive Date: Mon, 28 Nov 2016 20:22:20 GMT x-amzn-RequestId: [request-id] X-Amzn-Trace-Id: [trace-id] X-Cache: Miss from cloudfront Via: 1.1 b63769e2d89c89274acd908e4bfcb9f4.cloudfront.net (CloudFront) X-Amz-Cf-Id: mqHP9krdcbSbT0pivub4bJEM0_XCTTfENz0xPwwye-USu1CVGlj-nw== {}

See Also

For more information about using this API in one of the language-specific AWS SDKs, see the following: