CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

Struct CreateAutoScalingGroupInput 

Source
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct CreateAutoScalingGroupInput {
Show 33 fields pub auto_scaling_group_name: Option<String>, pub launch_configuration_name: Option<String>, pub launch_template: Option<LaunchTemplateSpecification>, pub mixed_instances_policy: Option<MixedInstancesPolicy>, pub instance_id: Option<String>, pub min_size: Option<i32>, pub max_size: Option<i32>, pub desired_capacity: Option<i32>, pub default_cooldown: Option<i32>, pub availability_zones: Option<Vec<String>>, pub load_balancer_names: Option<Vec<String>>, pub target_group_arns: Option<Vec<String>>, pub health_check_type: Option<String>, pub health_check_grace_period: Option<i32>, pub placement_group: Option<String>, pub vpc_zone_identifier: Option<String>, pub termination_policies: Option<Vec<String>>, pub new_instances_protected_from_scale_in: Option<bool>, pub capacity_rebalance: Option<bool>, pub lifecycle_hook_specification_list: Option<Vec<LifecycleHookSpecification>>, pub tags: Option<Vec<Tag>>, pub service_linked_role_arn: Option<String>, pub max_instance_lifetime: Option<i32>, pub context: Option<String>, pub desired_capacity_type: Option<String>, pub default_instance_warmup: Option<i32>, pub traffic_sources: Option<Vec<TrafficSourceIdentifier>>, pub instance_maintenance_policy: Option<InstanceMaintenancePolicy>, pub availability_zone_distribution: Option<AvailabilityZoneDistribution>, pub availability_zone_impairment_policy: Option<AvailabilityZoneImpairmentPolicy>, pub skip_zonal_shift_validation: Option<bool>, pub capacity_reservation_specification: Option<CapacityReservationSpecification>, pub instance_lifecycle_policy: Option<InstanceLifecyclePolicy>,
}

Fields (Non-exhaustive)§

This struct is marked as non-exhaustive
Non-exhaustive structs could have additional fields added in future. Therefore, non-exhaustive structs cannot be constructed in external crates using the traditional Struct { .. } syntax; cannot be matched against without a wildcard ..; and struct update syntax will not work.
§auto_scaling_group_name: Option<String>

The name of the Auto Scaling group. This name must be unique per Region per account.

The name can contain any ASCII character 33 to 126 including most punctuation characters, digits, and upper and lowercased letters.

You cannot use a colon (:) in the name.

§launch_configuration_name: Option<String>

The name of the launch configuration to use to launch instances.

Conditional: You must specify either a launch template (LaunchTemplate or MixedInstancesPolicy) or a launch configuration (LaunchConfigurationName or InstanceId).

§launch_template: Option<LaunchTemplateSpecification>

Information used to specify the launch template and version to use to launch instances.

Conditional: You must specify either a launch template (LaunchTemplate or MixedInstancesPolicy) or a launch configuration (LaunchConfigurationName or InstanceId).

The launch template that is specified must be configured for use with an Auto Scaling group. For more information, see Create a launch template for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§mixed_instances_policy: Option<MixedInstancesPolicy>

The mixed instances policy. For more information, see Auto Scaling groups with multiple instance types and purchase options in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§instance_id: Option<String>

The ID of the instance used to base the launch configuration on. If specified, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the configuration values from the specified instance to create a new launch configuration. To get the instance ID, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeInstances API operation. For more information, see Create an Auto Scaling group using parameters from an existing instance in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§min_size: Option<i32>

The minimum size of the group.

§max_size: Option<i32>

The maximum size of the group.

With a mixed instances policy that uses instance weighting, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling may need to go above MaxSize to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling will never go above MaxSize by more than your largest instance weight (weights that define how many units each instance contributes to the desired capacity of the group).

§desired_capacity: Option<i32>

The desired capacity is the initial capacity of the Auto Scaling group at the time of its creation and the capacity it attempts to maintain. It can scale beyond this capacity if you configure auto scaling. This number must be greater than or equal to the minimum size of the group and less than or equal to the maximum size of the group. If you do not specify a desired capacity, the default is the minimum size of the group.

§default_cooldown: Option<i32>

Only needed if you use simple scaling policies.

The amount of time, in seconds, between one scaling activity ending and another one starting due to simple scaling policies. For more information, see Scaling cooldowns for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Default: 300 seconds

§availability_zones: Option<Vec<String>>

A list of Availability Zones where instances in the Auto Scaling group can be created. Used for launching into the default VPC subnet in each Availability Zone when not using the VPCZoneIdentifier property, or for attaching a network interface when an existing network interface ID is specified in a launch template.

§load_balancer_names: Option<Vec<String>>

A list of Classic Load Balancers associated with this Auto Scaling group. For Application Load Balancers, Network Load Balancers, and Gateway Load Balancers, specify the TargetGroupARNs property instead.

§target_group_arns: Option<Vec<String>>

The Amazon Resource Names (ARN) of the Elastic Load Balancing target groups to associate with the Auto Scaling group. Instances are registered as targets with the target groups. The target groups receive incoming traffic and route requests to one or more registered targets. For more information, see Use Elastic Load Balancing to distribute traffic across the instances in your Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§health_check_type: Option<String>

A comma-separated value string of one or more health check types.

The valid values are EC2, EBS, ELB, and VPC_LATTICE. EC2 is the default health check and cannot be disabled. For more information, see Health checks for instances in an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Only specify EC2 if you must clear a value that was previously set.

§health_check_grace_period: Option<i32>

The amount of time, in seconds, that Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling waits before checking the health status of an EC2 instance that has come into service and marking it unhealthy due to a failed health check. This is useful if your instances do not immediately pass their health checks after they enter the InService state. For more information, see Set the health check grace period for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Default: 0 seconds

§placement_group: Option<String>

The name of the placement group into which to launch your instances. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.

A cluster placement group is a logical grouping of instances within a single Availability Zone. You cannot specify multiple Availability Zones and a cluster placement group.

§vpc_zone_identifier: Option<String>

A comma-separated list of subnet IDs for a virtual private cloud (VPC) where instances in the Auto Scaling group can be created. If you specify VPCZoneIdentifier with AvailabilityZones, the subnets that you specify must reside in those Availability Zones.

§termination_policies: Option<Vec<String>>

A policy or a list of policies that are used to select the instance to terminate. These policies are executed in the order that you list them. For more information, see Configure termination policies for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Valid values: Default | AllocationStrategy | ClosestToNextInstanceHour | NewestInstance | OldestInstance | OldestLaunchConfiguration | OldestLaunchTemplate | arn:aws:lambda:region:account-id:function:my-function:my-alias

§new_instances_protected_from_scale_in: Option<bool>

Indicates whether newly launched instances are protected from termination by Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling when scaling in. For more information about preventing instances from terminating on scale in, see Use instance scale-in protection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§capacity_rebalance: Option<bool>

Indicates whether Capacity Rebalancing is enabled. Otherwise, Capacity Rebalancing is disabled. When you turn on Capacity Rebalancing, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling attempts to launch a Spot Instance whenever Amazon EC2 notifies that a Spot Instance is at an elevated risk of interruption. After launching a new instance, it then terminates an old instance. For more information, see Use Capacity Rebalancing to handle Amazon EC2 Spot Interruptions in the in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§lifecycle_hook_specification_list: Option<Vec<LifecycleHookSpecification>>

One or more lifecycle hooks to add to the Auto Scaling group before instances are launched.

§tags: Option<Vec<Tag>>

One or more tags. You can tag your Auto Scaling group and propagate the tags to the Amazon EC2 instances it launches. Tags are not propagated to Amazon EBS volumes. To add tags to Amazon EBS volumes, specify the tags in a launch template but use caution. If the launch template specifies an instance tag with a key that is also specified for the Auto Scaling group, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling overrides the value of that instance tag with the value specified by the Auto Scaling group. For more information, see Tag Auto Scaling groups and instances in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§service_linked_role_arn: Option<String>

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the service-linked role that the Auto Scaling group uses to call other Amazon Web Services service on your behalf. By default, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses a service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForAutoScaling, which it creates if it does not exist. For more information, see Service-linked roles in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§max_instance_lifetime: Option<i32>

The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that an instance can be in service. The default is null. If specified, the value must be either 0 or a number equal to or greater than 86,400 seconds (1 day). For more information, see Replace Auto Scaling instances based on maximum instance lifetime in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§context: Option<String>

Reserved.

§desired_capacity_type: Option<String>

The unit of measurement for the value specified for desired capacity. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling supports DesiredCapacityType for attribute-based instance type selection only. For more information, see Create a mixed instances group using attribute-based instance type selection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

By default, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling specifies units, which translates into number of instances.

Valid values: units | vcpu | memory-mib

§default_instance_warmup: Option<i32>

The amount of time, in seconds, until a new instance is considered to have finished initializing and resource consumption to become stable after it enters the InService state.

During an instance refresh, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling waits for the warm-up period after it replaces an instance before it moves on to replacing the next instance. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling also waits for the warm-up period before aggregating the metrics for new instances with existing instances in the Amazon CloudWatch metrics that are used for scaling, resulting in more reliable usage data. For more information, see Set the default instance warmup for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

To manage various warm-up settings at the group level, we recommend that you set the default instance warmup, even if it is set to 0 seconds. To remove a value that you previously set, include the property but specify -1 for the value. However, we strongly recommend keeping the default instance warmup enabled by specifying a value of 0 or other nominal value.

Default: None

§traffic_sources: Option<Vec<TrafficSourceIdentifier>>

The list of traffic sources to attach to this Auto Scaling group. You can use any of the following as traffic sources for an Auto Scaling group: Classic Load Balancer, Application Load Balancer, Gateway Load Balancer, Network Load Balancer, and VPC Lattice.

§instance_maintenance_policy: Option<InstanceMaintenancePolicy>

An instance maintenance policy. For more information, see Set instance maintenance policy in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§availability_zone_distribution: Option<AvailabilityZoneDistribution>

The instance capacity distribution across Availability Zones.

§availability_zone_impairment_policy: Option<AvailabilityZoneImpairmentPolicy>

The policy for Availability Zone impairment.

§skip_zonal_shift_validation: Option<bool>

If you enable zonal shift with cross-zone disabled load balancers, capacity could become imbalanced across Availability Zones. To skip the validation, specify true. For more information, see Auto Scaling group zonal shift in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

§capacity_reservation_specification: Option<CapacityReservationSpecification>

The capacity reservation specification for the Auto Scaling group.

§instance_lifecycle_policy: Option<InstanceLifecyclePolicy>

The instance lifecycle policy for the Auto Scaling group. This policy controls instance behavior when an instance transitions through its lifecycle states. Configure retention triggers to specify when instances should move to a Retained state for manual intervention instead of automatic termination.

Instances in a Retained state will continue to incur standard EC2 charges until terminated.

Implementations§

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impl CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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pub fn auto_scaling_group_name(&self) -> Option<&str>

The name of the Auto Scaling group. This name must be unique per Region per account.

The name can contain any ASCII character 33 to 126 including most punctuation characters, digits, and upper and lowercased letters.

You cannot use a colon (:) in the name.

Source

pub fn launch_configuration_name(&self) -> Option<&str>

The name of the launch configuration to use to launch instances.

Conditional: You must specify either a launch template (LaunchTemplate or MixedInstancesPolicy) or a launch configuration (LaunchConfigurationName or InstanceId).

Source

pub fn launch_template(&self) -> Option<&LaunchTemplateSpecification>

Information used to specify the launch template and version to use to launch instances.

Conditional: You must specify either a launch template (LaunchTemplate or MixedInstancesPolicy) or a launch configuration (LaunchConfigurationName or InstanceId).

The launch template that is specified must be configured for use with an Auto Scaling group. For more information, see Create a launch template for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn mixed_instances_policy(&self) -> Option<&MixedInstancesPolicy>

The mixed instances policy. For more information, see Auto Scaling groups with multiple instance types and purchase options in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn instance_id(&self) -> Option<&str>

The ID of the instance used to base the launch configuration on. If specified, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses the configuration values from the specified instance to create a new launch configuration. To get the instance ID, use the Amazon EC2 DescribeInstances API operation. For more information, see Create an Auto Scaling group using parameters from an existing instance in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn min_size(&self) -> Option<i32>

The minimum size of the group.

Source

pub fn max_size(&self) -> Option<i32>

The maximum size of the group.

With a mixed instances policy that uses instance weighting, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling may need to go above MaxSize to meet your capacity requirements. In this event, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling will never go above MaxSize by more than your largest instance weight (weights that define how many units each instance contributes to the desired capacity of the group).

Source

pub fn desired_capacity(&self) -> Option<i32>

The desired capacity is the initial capacity of the Auto Scaling group at the time of its creation and the capacity it attempts to maintain. It can scale beyond this capacity if you configure auto scaling. This number must be greater than or equal to the minimum size of the group and less than or equal to the maximum size of the group. If you do not specify a desired capacity, the default is the minimum size of the group.

Source

pub fn default_cooldown(&self) -> Option<i32>

Only needed if you use simple scaling policies.

The amount of time, in seconds, between one scaling activity ending and another one starting due to simple scaling policies. For more information, see Scaling cooldowns for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Default: 300 seconds

Source

pub fn availability_zones(&self) -> &[String]

A list of Availability Zones where instances in the Auto Scaling group can be created. Used for launching into the default VPC subnet in each Availability Zone when not using the VPCZoneIdentifier property, or for attaching a network interface when an existing network interface ID is specified in a launch template.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .availability_zones.is_none().

Source

pub fn load_balancer_names(&self) -> &[String]

A list of Classic Load Balancers associated with this Auto Scaling group. For Application Load Balancers, Network Load Balancers, and Gateway Load Balancers, specify the TargetGroupARNs property instead.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .load_balancer_names.is_none().

Source

pub fn target_group_arns(&self) -> &[String]

The Amazon Resource Names (ARN) of the Elastic Load Balancing target groups to associate with the Auto Scaling group. Instances are registered as targets with the target groups. The target groups receive incoming traffic and route requests to one or more registered targets. For more information, see Use Elastic Load Balancing to distribute traffic across the instances in your Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .target_group_arns.is_none().

Source

pub fn health_check_type(&self) -> Option<&str>

A comma-separated value string of one or more health check types.

The valid values are EC2, EBS, ELB, and VPC_LATTICE. EC2 is the default health check and cannot be disabled. For more information, see Health checks for instances in an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Only specify EC2 if you must clear a value that was previously set.

Source

pub fn health_check_grace_period(&self) -> Option<i32>

The amount of time, in seconds, that Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling waits before checking the health status of an EC2 instance that has come into service and marking it unhealthy due to a failed health check. This is useful if your instances do not immediately pass their health checks after they enter the InService state. For more information, see Set the health check grace period for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Default: 0 seconds

Source

pub fn placement_group(&self) -> Option<&str>

The name of the placement group into which to launch your instances. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.

A cluster placement group is a logical grouping of instances within a single Availability Zone. You cannot specify multiple Availability Zones and a cluster placement group.

Source

pub fn vpc_zone_identifier(&self) -> Option<&str>

A comma-separated list of subnet IDs for a virtual private cloud (VPC) where instances in the Auto Scaling group can be created. If you specify VPCZoneIdentifier with AvailabilityZones, the subnets that you specify must reside in those Availability Zones.

Source

pub fn termination_policies(&self) -> &[String]

A policy or a list of policies that are used to select the instance to terminate. These policies are executed in the order that you list them. For more information, see Configure termination policies for Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Valid values: Default | AllocationStrategy | ClosestToNextInstanceHour | NewestInstance | OldestInstance | OldestLaunchConfiguration | OldestLaunchTemplate | arn:aws:lambda:region:account-id:function:my-function:my-alias

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .termination_policies.is_none().

Source

pub fn new_instances_protected_from_scale_in(&self) -> Option<bool>

Indicates whether newly launched instances are protected from termination by Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling when scaling in. For more information about preventing instances from terminating on scale in, see Use instance scale-in protection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn capacity_rebalance(&self) -> Option<bool>

Indicates whether Capacity Rebalancing is enabled. Otherwise, Capacity Rebalancing is disabled. When you turn on Capacity Rebalancing, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling attempts to launch a Spot Instance whenever Amazon EC2 notifies that a Spot Instance is at an elevated risk of interruption. After launching a new instance, it then terminates an old instance. For more information, see Use Capacity Rebalancing to handle Amazon EC2 Spot Interruptions in the in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn lifecycle_hook_specification_list(&self) -> &[LifecycleHookSpecification]

One or more lifecycle hooks to add to the Auto Scaling group before instances are launched.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .lifecycle_hook_specification_list.is_none().

Source

pub fn tags(&self) -> &[Tag]

One or more tags. You can tag your Auto Scaling group and propagate the tags to the Amazon EC2 instances it launches. Tags are not propagated to Amazon EBS volumes. To add tags to Amazon EBS volumes, specify the tags in a launch template but use caution. If the launch template specifies an instance tag with a key that is also specified for the Auto Scaling group, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling overrides the value of that instance tag with the value specified by the Auto Scaling group. For more information, see Tag Auto Scaling groups and instances in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .tags.is_none().

Source

pub fn service_linked_role_arn(&self) -> Option<&str>

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the service-linked role that the Auto Scaling group uses to call other Amazon Web Services service on your behalf. By default, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling uses a service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForAutoScaling, which it creates if it does not exist. For more information, see Service-linked roles in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn max_instance_lifetime(&self) -> Option<i32>

The maximum amount of time, in seconds, that an instance can be in service. The default is null. If specified, the value must be either 0 or a number equal to or greater than 86,400 seconds (1 day). For more information, see Replace Auto Scaling instances based on maximum instance lifetime in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn context(&self) -> Option<&str>

Reserved.

Source

pub fn desired_capacity_type(&self) -> Option<&str>

The unit of measurement for the value specified for desired capacity. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling supports DesiredCapacityType for attribute-based instance type selection only. For more information, see Create a mixed instances group using attribute-based instance type selection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

By default, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling specifies units, which translates into number of instances.

Valid values: units | vcpu | memory-mib

Source

pub fn default_instance_warmup(&self) -> Option<i32>

The amount of time, in seconds, until a new instance is considered to have finished initializing and resource consumption to become stable after it enters the InService state.

During an instance refresh, Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling waits for the warm-up period after it replaces an instance before it moves on to replacing the next instance. Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling also waits for the warm-up period before aggregating the metrics for new instances with existing instances in the Amazon CloudWatch metrics that are used for scaling, resulting in more reliable usage data. For more information, see Set the default instance warmup for an Auto Scaling group in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

To manage various warm-up settings at the group level, we recommend that you set the default instance warmup, even if it is set to 0 seconds. To remove a value that you previously set, include the property but specify -1 for the value. However, we strongly recommend keeping the default instance warmup enabled by specifying a value of 0 or other nominal value.

Default: None

Source

pub fn traffic_sources(&self) -> &[TrafficSourceIdentifier]

The list of traffic sources to attach to this Auto Scaling group. You can use any of the following as traffic sources for an Auto Scaling group: Classic Load Balancer, Application Load Balancer, Gateway Load Balancer, Network Load Balancer, and VPC Lattice.

If no value was sent for this field, a default will be set. If you want to determine if no value was sent, use .traffic_sources.is_none().

Source

pub fn instance_maintenance_policy(&self) -> Option<&InstanceMaintenancePolicy>

An instance maintenance policy. For more information, see Set instance maintenance policy in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn availability_zone_distribution( &self, ) -> Option<&AvailabilityZoneDistribution>

The instance capacity distribution across Availability Zones.

Source

pub fn availability_zone_impairment_policy( &self, ) -> Option<&AvailabilityZoneImpairmentPolicy>

The policy for Availability Zone impairment.

Source

pub fn skip_zonal_shift_validation(&self) -> Option<bool>

If you enable zonal shift with cross-zone disabled load balancers, capacity could become imbalanced across Availability Zones. To skip the validation, specify true. For more information, see Auto Scaling group zonal shift in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.

Source

pub fn capacity_reservation_specification( &self, ) -> Option<&CapacityReservationSpecification>

The capacity reservation specification for the Auto Scaling group.

Source

pub fn instance_lifecycle_policy(&self) -> Option<&InstanceLifecyclePolicy>

The instance lifecycle policy for the Auto Scaling group. This policy controls instance behavior when an instance transitions through its lifecycle states. Configure retention triggers to specify when instances should move to a Retained state for manual intervention instead of automatic termination.

Instances in a Retained state will continue to incur standard EC2 charges until terminated.

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impl CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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pub fn builder() -> CreateAutoScalingGroupInputBuilder

Creates a new builder-style object to manufacture CreateAutoScalingGroupInput.

Trait Implementations§

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impl Clone for CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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fn clone(&self) -> CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

Returns a duplicate of the value. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more
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impl Debug for CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more
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impl PartialEq for CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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fn eq(&self, other: &CreateAutoScalingGroupInput) -> bool

Tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==.
1.0.0 · Source§

fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool

Tests for !=. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
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impl StructuralPartialEq for CreateAutoScalingGroupInput

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Returns self with the fg() set to [Color :: Magenta].

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Returns a styled value derived from self with the background set to value.

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: Green].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: Yellow].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: Blue].

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fn on_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: Magenta].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: Cyan].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: White].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: BrightBlue].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: BrightMagenta].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: BrightCyan].

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Returns self with the bg() set to [Color :: BrightWhite].

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fn attr(&self, value: Attribute) -> Painted<&T>

Enables the styling Attribute value.

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Enables the yansi Quirk value.

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👎Deprecated since 1.0.1: renamed to resetting() due to conflicts with Vec::clear(). The clear() method will be removed in a future release.

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fn whenever(&self, value: Condition) -> Painted<&T>

Conditionally enable styling based on whether the Condition value applies. Replaces any previous condition.

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