#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct StartChatContactInput { /* private fields */ }

Implementations§

Consumes the builder and constructs an Operation<StartChatContact>

Creates a new builder-style object to manufacture StartChatContactInput.

The identifier of the Amazon Connect instance. You can find the instanceId in the ARN of the instance.

The identifier of the flow for initiating the chat. To see the ContactFlowId in the Amazon Connect console user interface, on the navigation menu go to Routing, Contact Flows. Choose the flow. On the flow page, under the name of the flow, choose Show additional flow information. The ContactFlowId is the last part of the ARN, shown here in bold:

arn:aws:connect:us-west-2:xxxxxxxxxxxx:instance/xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx/contact-flow/846ec553-a005-41c0-8341-xxxxxxxxxxxx

A custom key-value pair using an attribute map. The attributes are standard Amazon Connect attributes. They can be accessed in flows just like any other contact attributes.

There can be up to 32,768 UTF-8 bytes across all key-value pairs per contact. Attribute keys can include only alphanumeric, dash, and underscore characters.

Information identifying the participant.

The initial message to be sent to the newly created chat.

A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. If not provided, the Amazon Web Services SDK populates this field. For more information about idempotency, see Making retries safe with idempotent APIs.

The total duration of the newly started chat session. If not specified, the chat session duration defaults to 25 hour. The minumum configurable time is 60 minutes. The maximum configurable time is 10,080 minutes (7 days).

The supported chat message content types. Content types must always contain text/plain. You can then put any other supported type in the list. For example, all the following lists are valid because they contain text/plain: [text/plain, text/markdown, application/json], [text/markdown, text/plain], [text/plain, application/json].

Enable persistent chats. For more information about enabling persistent chat, and for example use cases and how to configure for them, see Enable persistent chat.

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This method tests for !=. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.

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