Module aws_sdk_dax::types 
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Data structures used by operation inputs/outputs.
Modules§
- Builders
- Error types that Amazon DynamoDB Accelerator (DAX) can respond with.
Structs§
- Contains all of the attributes of a specific DAX cluster. 
- Represents the information required for client programs to connect to the endpoint for a DAX cluster. 
- Represents a single occurrence of something interesting within the system. Some examples of events are creating a DAX cluster, adding or removing a node, or rebooting a node. 
- Represents an individual node within a DAX cluster. 
- Represents a parameter value that is applicable to a particular node type. 
- Describes a notification topic and its status. Notification topics are used for publishing DAX events to subscribers using Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS). 
- Describes an individual setting that controls some aspect of DAX behavior. 
- A named set of parameters that are applied to all of the nodes in a DAX cluster. 
- The status of a parameter group. 
- An individual DAX parameter. 
- An individual VPC security group and its status. 
- The description of the server-side encryption status on the specified DAX cluster. 
- Represents the settings used to enable server-side encryption. 
- Represents the subnet associated with a DAX cluster. This parameter refers to subnets defined in Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) and used with DAX. 
- Represents the output of one of the following actions: 
- A description of a tag. Every tag is a key-value pair. You can add up to 50 tags to a single DAX cluster. 
Enums§
- When writing a match expression againstChangeType, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.
- When writing a match expression againstClusterEndpointEncryptionType, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.
- When writing a match expression againstIsModifiable, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.
- When writing a match expression againstParameterType, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.
- When writing a match expression againstSourceType, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.
- When writing a match expression againstSseStatus, it is important to ensure your code is forward-compatible. That is, if a match arm handles a case for a feature that is supported by the service but has not been represented as an enum variant in a current version of SDK, your code should continue to work when you upgrade SDK to a future version in which the enum does include a variant for that feature.