API for Amazon AppConfig¶
ABAP Package | /AWS1/API_APC_IMPL |
---|---|
ABAP SDK "TLA" | APC |
ABAP Interface | /AWS1/IF_APC |
The "TLA" is a Three Letter Abbreviation that appears in ABAP class names, data dictionary
objects and other ABAP objects throughout the AWS SDK for SAP ABAP. The TLA for Amazon AppConfig is APC
.
This TLA helps squeeze ABAP objects into the 30-character length limit of the ABAP data dictionary.
Installation¶
To install the AWS SDK for SAP ABAP, import the Core transport, along with the transport for the AppConfig module and other API modules you are interested in. A few modules are included in the Core transport itself. For more information, see the Developer Guide guide.
About The Service¶
AppConfig feature flags and dynamic configurations help software builders quickly and securely adjust application behavior in production environments without full code deployments. AppConfig speeds up software release frequency, improves application resiliency, and helps you address emergent issues more quickly. With feature flags, you can gradually release new capabilities to users and measure the impact of those changes before fully deploying the new capabilities to all users. With operational flags and dynamic configurations, you can update block lists, allow lists, throttling limits, logging verbosity, and perform other operational tuning to quickly respond to issues in production environments.
AppConfig is a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager.
Despite the fact that application configuration content can vary greatly from application to application, AppConfig supports the following use cases, which cover a broad spectrum of customer needs:
-
Feature flags and toggles - Safely release new capabilities to your customers in a controlled environment. Instantly roll back changes if you experience a problem.
-
Application tuning - Carefully introduce application changes while testing the impact of those changes with users in production environments.
-
Allow list or block list - Control access to premium features or instantly block specific users without deploying new code.
-
Centralized configuration storage - Keep your configuration data organized and consistent across all of your workloads. You can use AppConfig to deploy configuration data stored in the AppConfig hosted configuration store, Secrets Manager, Systems Manager, Parameter Store, or Amazon S3.
How AppConfig works
This section provides a high-level description of how AppConfig works and how you get started.
- 1. Identify configuration values in code you want to manage in the cloud
-
Before you start creating AppConfig artifacts, we recommend you identify configuration data in your code that you want to dynamically manage using AppConfig. Good examples include feature flags or toggles, allow and block lists, logging verbosity, service limits, and throttling rules, to name a few.
If your configuration data already exists in the cloud, you can take advantage of AppConfig validation, deployment, and extension features to further streamline configuration data management.
- 2. Create an application namespace
-
To create a namespace, you create an AppConfig artifact called an application. An application is simply an organizational construct like a folder.
- 3. Create environments
-
For each AppConfig application, you define one or more environments. An environment is a logical grouping of targets, such as applications in a
Beta
orProduction
environment, Lambda functions, or containers. You can also define environments for application subcomponents, such as theWeb
,Mobile
, andBack-end
.You can configure Amazon CloudWatch alarms for each environment. The system monitors alarms during a configuration deployment. If an alarm is triggered, the system rolls back the configuration.
- 4. Create a configuration profile
-
A configuration profile includes, among other things, a URI that enables AppConfig to locate your configuration data in its stored location and a profile type. AppConfig supports two configuration profile types: feature flags and freeform configurations. Feature flag configuration profiles store their data in the AppConfig hosted configuration store and the URI is simply
hosted
. For freeform configuration profiles, you can store your data in the AppConfig hosted configuration store or any Amazon Web Services service that integrates with AppConfig, as described in Creating a free form configuration profile in the the AppConfig User Guide.A configuration profile can also include optional validators to ensure your configuration data is syntactically and semantically correct. AppConfig performs a check using the validators when you start a deployment. If any errors are detected, the deployment rolls back to the previous configuration data.
- 5. Deploy configuration data
-
When you create a new deployment, you specify the following:
-
An application ID
-
A configuration profile ID
-
A configuration version
-
An environment ID where you want to deploy the configuration data
-
A deployment strategy ID that defines how fast you want the changes to take effect
When you call the StartDeployment API action, AppConfig performs the following tasks:
-
Retrieves the configuration data from the underlying data store by using the location URI in the configuration profile.
-
Verifies the configuration data is syntactically and semantically correct by using the validators you specified when you created your configuration profile.
-
Caches a copy of the data so it is ready to be retrieved by your application. This cached copy is called the deployed data.
-
- 6. Retrieve the configuration
-
You can configure AppConfig Agent as a local host and have the agent poll AppConfig for configuration updates. The agent calls the StartConfigurationSession and GetLatestConfiguration API actions and caches your configuration data locally. To retrieve the data, your application makes an HTTP call to the localhost server. AppConfig Agent supports several use cases, as described in Simplified retrieval methods in the the AppConfig User Guide.
If AppConfig Agent isn't supported for your use case, you can configure your application to poll AppConfig for configuration updates by directly calling the StartConfigurationSession and GetLatestConfiguration API actions.
This reference is intended to be used with the AppConfig User Guide.
Using the SDK¶
In your code, create a client using the SDK module for Amazon AppConfig, which is created with
factory method /AWS1/CL_APC_FACTORY
=>create()
.
In this example we will assume you have configured
an SDK profile in transaction /AWS1/IMG
called ZFINANCE
.
DATA(go_session) = /aws1/cl_rt_session_aws=>create( 'ZFINANCE' ).
DATA(go_apc) = /aws1/cl_apc_factory=>create( go_session ).
Your variable go_apc
is an instance of /AWS1/IF_APC
,
and all of the operations
in the Amazon AppConfig service are accessed by calling methods in /AWS1/IF_APC
.
API Operations¶
For an overview of ABAP method calls corresponding to API operations in Amazon AppConfig, see the Operation List.
Factory Method¶
/AWS1/CL_APC_FACTORY=>create( )
¶
Creates an object of type /AWS1/IF_APC
.
IMPORTING¶
Optional arguments:¶
IV_PROTOCOL
TYPE /AWS1/RT_PROTOCOL
/AWS1/RT_PROTOCOL
¶
Domain /AWS1/RT_ACCOUNT_ID Primitive Type NUMC
IO_SESSION
TYPE REF TO /AWS1/CL_RT_SESSION_BASE
/AWS1/CL_RT_SESSION_BASE
¶
Domain /AWS1/RT_ACCOUNT_ID Primitive Type NUMC
IV_REGION
TYPE /AWS1/RT_REGION_ID
/AWS1/RT_REGION_ID
¶
Domain /AWS1/RT_ACCOUNT_ID Primitive Type NUMC
IV_CUSTOM_ENDPOINT
TYPE /AWS1/RT_ENDPOINT
/AWS1/RT_ENDPOINT
¶
Domain /AWS1/RT_ACCOUNT_ID Primitive Type NUMC
RETURNING¶
OO_CLIENT
TYPE REF TO /AWS1/IF_APC
/AWS1/IF_APC
¶
/AWS1/IF_APC
represents the ABAP client for the AppConfig service, representing each operation as a method call. For more information see the API Page page.
Configuring Programmatically¶
DATA(lo_config) = DATA(go_apc)->get_config( ).
lo_config
is a variable of type /AWS1/CL_APC_CONFIG
. See the documentation for /AWS1/CL_APC_CONFIG
for
details on the settings that can be configured.
Paginators¶
Paginators for Amazon AppConfig can be created via `get_paginator()` which returns a paginator object of type [`/AWS1/IF_APC_PAGINATOR`](./_AWS1_IF_APC_PAGINATOR.md). The operation method that is being paginated is called using the paginator object, which accepts any necessary parameters to provide to the underlying API operation. This returns an iterator object which can be used to iterate over paginated results using `has_next()` and `get_next()` methods.
Details about the paginator methods available for service Amazon AppConfig can be found in interface [`/AWS1/IF_APC_PAGINATOR`](./_AWS1_IF_APC_PAGINATOR.md).