Struct CreatePipelineInput

Source
#[non_exhaustive]
pub struct CreatePipelineInput { pub name: Option<String>, pub input_bucket: Option<String>, pub output_bucket: Option<String>, pub role: Option<String>, pub aws_kms_key_arn: Option<String>, pub notifications: Option<Notifications>, pub content_config: Option<PipelineOutputConfig>, pub thumbnail_config: Option<PipelineOutputConfig>, }
Expand description

The CreatePipelineRequest structure.

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.
§name: Option<String>

The name of the pipeline. We recommend that the name be unique within the AWS account, but uniqueness is not enforced.

Constraints: Maximum 40 characters.

§input_bucket: Option<String>

The Amazon S3 bucket in which you saved the media files that you want to transcode.

§output_bucket: Option<String>

The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save the transcoded files. (Use this, or use ContentConfig:Bucket plus ThumbnailConfig:Bucket.)

Specify this value when all of the following are true:

  • You want to save transcoded files, thumbnails (if any), and playlists (if any) together in one bucket.

  • You do not want to specify the users or groups who have access to the transcoded files, thumbnails, and playlists.

  • You do not want to specify the permissions that Elastic Transcoder grants to the files.

    When Elastic Transcoder saves files in OutputBucket, it grants full control over the files only to the AWS account that owns the role that is specified by Role.

  • You want to associate the transcoded files and thumbnails with the Amazon S3 Standard storage class.

If you want to save transcoded files and playlists in one bucket and thumbnails in another bucket, specify which users can access the transcoded files or the permissions the users have, or change the Amazon S3 storage class, omit OutputBucket and specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig instead.

§role: Option<String>

The IAM Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the role that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to create the pipeline.

§aws_kms_key_arn: Option<String>

The AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) key that you want to use with this pipeline.

If you use either s3 or s3-aws-kms as your Encryption:Mode, you don't need to provide a key with your job because a default key, known as an AWS-KMS key, is created for you automatically. You need to provide an AWS-KMS key only if you want to use a non-default AWS-KMS key, or if you are using an Encryption:Mode of aes-cbc-pkcs7, aes-ctr, or aes-gcm.

§notifications: Option<Notifications>

The Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic that you want to notify to report job status.

To receive notifications, you must also subscribe to the new topic in the Amazon SNS console.

  • Progressing: The topic ARN for the Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder has started to process a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic. For more information, see Create a Topic in the Amazon Simple Notification Service Developer Guide.

  • Complete: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder has finished processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

  • Warning: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder encounters a warning condition while processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

  • Error: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder encounters an error condition while processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

§content_config: Option<PipelineOutputConfig>

The optional ContentConfig object specifies information about the Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save transcoded files and playlists: which bucket to use, which users you want to have access to the files, the type of access you want users to have, and the storage class that you want to assign to the files.

If you specify values for ContentConfig, you must also specify values for ThumbnailConfig.

If you specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig, omit the OutputBucket object.

  • Bucket: The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save transcoded files and playlists.

  • Permissions (Optional): The Permissions object specifies which users you want to have access to transcoded files and the type of access you want them to have. You can grant permissions to a maximum of 30 users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups.

  • Grantee Type: Specify the type of value that appears in the Grantee object:

    • Canonical: The value in the Grantee object is either the canonical user ID for an AWS account or an origin access identity for an Amazon CloudFront distribution. For more information about canonical user IDs, see Access Control List (ACL) Overview in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide. For more information about using CloudFront origin access identities to require that users use CloudFront URLs instead of Amazon S3 URLs, see Using an Origin Access Identity to Restrict Access to Your Amazon S3 Content.

      A canonical user ID is not the same as an AWS account number.

    • Email: The value in the Grantee object is the registered email address of an AWS account.

    • Group: The value in the Grantee object is one of the following predefined Amazon S3 groups: AllUsers, AuthenticatedUsers, or LogDelivery.

  • Grantee: The AWS user or group that you want to have access to transcoded files and playlists. To identify the user or group, you can specify the canonical user ID for an AWS account, an origin access identity for a CloudFront distribution, the registered email address of an AWS account, or a predefined Amazon S3 group

  • Access: The permission that you want to give to the AWS user that you specified in Grantee. Permissions are granted on the files that Elastic Transcoder adds to the bucket, including playlists and video files. Valid values include:

    • READ: The grantee can read the objects and metadata for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • READ_ACP: The grantee can read the object ACL for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • WRITE_ACP: The grantee can write the ACL for the objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • FULL_CONTROL: The grantee has READ, READ_ACP, and WRITE_ACP permissions for the objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

  • StorageClass: The Amazon S3 storage class, Standard or ReducedRedundancy, that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the video files and playlists that it stores in your Amazon S3 bucket.

§thumbnail_config: Option<PipelineOutputConfig>

The ThumbnailConfig object specifies several values, including the Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save thumbnail files, which users you want to have access to the files, the type of access you want users to have, and the storage class that you want to assign to the files.

If you specify values for ContentConfig, you must also specify values for ThumbnailConfig even if you don't want to create thumbnails.

If you specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig, omit the OutputBucket object.

  • Bucket: The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save thumbnail files.

  • Permissions (Optional): The Permissions object specifies which users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups you want to have access to thumbnail files, and the type of access you want them to have. You can grant permissions to a maximum of 30 users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups.

  • GranteeType: Specify the type of value that appears in the Grantee object:

    • Canonical: The value in the Grantee object is either the canonical user ID for an AWS account or an origin access identity for an Amazon CloudFront distribution.

      A canonical user ID is not the same as an AWS account number.

    • Email: The value in the Grantee object is the registered email address of an AWS account.

    • Group: The value in the Grantee object is one of the following predefined Amazon S3 groups: AllUsers, AuthenticatedUsers, or LogDelivery.

  • Grantee: The AWS user or group that you want to have access to thumbnail files. To identify the user or group, you can specify the canonical user ID for an AWS account, an origin access identity for a CloudFront distribution, the registered email address of an AWS account, or a predefined Amazon S3 group.

  • Access: The permission that you want to give to the AWS user that you specified in Grantee. Permissions are granted on the thumbnail files that Elastic Transcoder adds to the bucket. Valid values include:

    • READ: The grantee can read the thumbnails and metadata for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • READ_ACP: The grantee can read the object ACL for thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • WRITE_ACP: The grantee can write the ACL for the thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • FULL_CONTROL: The grantee has READ, READ_ACP, and WRITE_ACP permissions for the thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

  • StorageClass: The Amazon S3 storage class, Standard or ReducedRedundancy, that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the thumbnails that it stores in your Amazon S3 bucket.

Implementations§

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impl CreatePipelineInput

Source

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

The name of the pipeline. We recommend that the name be unique within the AWS account, but uniqueness is not enforced.

Constraints: Maximum 40 characters.

Source

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

The Amazon S3 bucket in which you saved the media files that you want to transcode.

Source

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

The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save the transcoded files. (Use this, or use ContentConfig:Bucket plus ThumbnailConfig:Bucket.)

Specify this value when all of the following are true:

  • You want to save transcoded files, thumbnails (if any), and playlists (if any) together in one bucket.

  • You do not want to specify the users or groups who have access to the transcoded files, thumbnails, and playlists.

  • You do not want to specify the permissions that Elastic Transcoder grants to the files.

    When Elastic Transcoder saves files in OutputBucket, it grants full control over the files only to the AWS account that owns the role that is specified by Role.

  • You want to associate the transcoded files and thumbnails with the Amazon S3 Standard storage class.

If you want to save transcoded files and playlists in one bucket and thumbnails in another bucket, specify which users can access the transcoded files or the permissions the users have, or change the Amazon S3 storage class, omit OutputBucket and specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig instead.

Source

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

The IAM Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the role that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to create the pipeline.

Source

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

The AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) key that you want to use with this pipeline.

If you use either s3 or s3-aws-kms as your Encryption:Mode, you don't need to provide a key with your job because a default key, known as an AWS-KMS key, is created for you automatically. You need to provide an AWS-KMS key only if you want to use a non-default AWS-KMS key, or if you are using an Encryption:Mode of aes-cbc-pkcs7, aes-ctr, or aes-gcm.

Source

pub fn notifications(&self) -> Option<&Notifications>

The Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic that you want to notify to report job status.

To receive notifications, you must also subscribe to the new topic in the Amazon SNS console.

  • Progressing: The topic ARN for the Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder has started to process a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic. For more information, see Create a Topic in the Amazon Simple Notification Service Developer Guide.

  • Complete: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder has finished processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

  • Warning: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder encounters a warning condition while processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

  • Error: The topic ARN for the Amazon SNS topic that you want to notify when Elastic Transcoder encounters an error condition while processing a job in this pipeline. This is the ARN that Amazon SNS returned when you created the topic.

Source

pub fn content_config(&self) -> Option<&PipelineOutputConfig>

The optional ContentConfig object specifies information about the Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save transcoded files and playlists: which bucket to use, which users you want to have access to the files, the type of access you want users to have, and the storage class that you want to assign to the files.

If you specify values for ContentConfig, you must also specify values for ThumbnailConfig.

If you specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig, omit the OutputBucket object.

  • Bucket: The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save transcoded files and playlists.

  • Permissions (Optional): The Permissions object specifies which users you want to have access to transcoded files and the type of access you want them to have. You can grant permissions to a maximum of 30 users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups.

  • Grantee Type: Specify the type of value that appears in the Grantee object:

    • Canonical: The value in the Grantee object is either the canonical user ID for an AWS account or an origin access identity for an Amazon CloudFront distribution. For more information about canonical user IDs, see Access Control List (ACL) Overview in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide. For more information about using CloudFront origin access identities to require that users use CloudFront URLs instead of Amazon S3 URLs, see Using an Origin Access Identity to Restrict Access to Your Amazon S3 Content.

      A canonical user ID is not the same as an AWS account number.

    • Email: The value in the Grantee object is the registered email address of an AWS account.

    • Group: The value in the Grantee object is one of the following predefined Amazon S3 groups: AllUsers, AuthenticatedUsers, or LogDelivery.

  • Grantee: The AWS user or group that you want to have access to transcoded files and playlists. To identify the user or group, you can specify the canonical user ID for an AWS account, an origin access identity for a CloudFront distribution, the registered email address of an AWS account, or a predefined Amazon S3 group

  • Access: The permission that you want to give to the AWS user that you specified in Grantee. Permissions are granted on the files that Elastic Transcoder adds to the bucket, including playlists and video files. Valid values include:

    • READ: The grantee can read the objects and metadata for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • READ_ACP: The grantee can read the object ACL for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • WRITE_ACP: The grantee can write the ACL for the objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • FULL_CONTROL: The grantee has READ, READ_ACP, and WRITE_ACP permissions for the objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

  • StorageClass: The Amazon S3 storage class, Standard or ReducedRedundancy, that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the video files and playlists that it stores in your Amazon S3 bucket.

Source

pub fn thumbnail_config(&self) -> Option<&PipelineOutputConfig>

The ThumbnailConfig object specifies several values, including the Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save thumbnail files, which users you want to have access to the files, the type of access you want users to have, and the storage class that you want to assign to the files.

If you specify values for ContentConfig, you must also specify values for ThumbnailConfig even if you don't want to create thumbnails.

If you specify values for ContentConfig and ThumbnailConfig, omit the OutputBucket object.

  • Bucket: The Amazon S3 bucket in which you want Elastic Transcoder to save thumbnail files.

  • Permissions (Optional): The Permissions object specifies which users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups you want to have access to thumbnail files, and the type of access you want them to have. You can grant permissions to a maximum of 30 users and/or predefined Amazon S3 groups.

  • GranteeType: Specify the type of value that appears in the Grantee object:

    • Canonical: The value in the Grantee object is either the canonical user ID for an AWS account or an origin access identity for an Amazon CloudFront distribution.

      A canonical user ID is not the same as an AWS account number.

    • Email: The value in the Grantee object is the registered email address of an AWS account.

    • Group: The value in the Grantee object is one of the following predefined Amazon S3 groups: AllUsers, AuthenticatedUsers, or LogDelivery.

  • Grantee: The AWS user or group that you want to have access to thumbnail files. To identify the user or group, you can specify the canonical user ID for an AWS account, an origin access identity for a CloudFront distribution, the registered email address of an AWS account, or a predefined Amazon S3 group.

  • Access: The permission that you want to give to the AWS user that you specified in Grantee. Permissions are granted on the thumbnail files that Elastic Transcoder adds to the bucket. Valid values include:

    • READ: The grantee can read the thumbnails and metadata for objects that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • READ_ACP: The grantee can read the object ACL for thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • WRITE_ACP: The grantee can write the ACL for the thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

    • FULL_CONTROL: The grantee has READ, READ_ACP, and WRITE_ACP permissions for the thumbnails that Elastic Transcoder adds to the Amazon S3 bucket.

  • StorageClass: The Amazon S3 storage class, Standard or ReducedRedundancy, that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the thumbnails that it stores in your Amazon S3 bucket.

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impl CreatePipelineInput

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pub fn builder() -> CreatePipelineInputBuilder

Creates a new builder-style object to manufacture CreatePipelineInput.

Trait Implementations§

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impl Clone for CreatePipelineInput

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fn clone(&self) -> CreatePipelineInput

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 CreatePipelineInput

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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 CreatePipelineInput

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fn eq(&self, other: &CreatePipelineInput) -> 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 CreatePipelineInput

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

Enables the styling Attribute value.

This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use attribute-specific builder methods like bold() and underline(), which have the same functionality but are pithier.

§Example

Make text bold using attr():

use yansi::{Paint, Attribute};

painted.attr(Attribute::Bold);

Make text bold using using bold().

use yansi::Paint;

painted.bold();
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fn bold(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Bold].

§Example
println!("{}", value.bold());
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fn dim(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Dim].

§Example
println!("{}", value.dim());
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fn italic(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Italic].

§Example
println!("{}", value.italic());
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fn underline(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Underline].

§Example
println!("{}", value.underline());

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Blink].

§Example
println!("{}", value.blink());

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: RapidBlink].

§Example
println!("{}", value.rapid_blink());
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fn invert(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Invert].

§Example
println!("{}", value.invert());
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fn conceal(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Conceal].

§Example
println!("{}", value.conceal());
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fn strike(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the attr() set to [Attribute :: Strike].

§Example
println!("{}", value.strike());
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fn quirk(&self, value: Quirk) -> Painted<&T>

Enables the yansi Quirk value.

This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use quirk-specific builder methods like mask() and wrap(), which have the same functionality but are pithier.

§Example

Enable wrapping using .quirk():

use yansi::{Paint, Quirk};

painted.quirk(Quirk::Wrap);

Enable wrapping using wrap().

use yansi::Paint;

painted.wrap();
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fn mask(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Mask].

§Example
println!("{}", value.mask());
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fn wrap(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Wrap].

§Example
println!("{}", value.wrap());
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fn linger(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Linger].

§Example
println!("{}", value.linger());
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fn clear(&self) -> Painted<&T>

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

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Clear].

§Example
println!("{}", value.clear());
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fn resetting(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Resetting].

§Example
println!("{}", value.resetting());
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fn bright(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: Bright].

§Example
println!("{}", value.bright());
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fn on_bright(&self) -> Painted<&T>

Returns self with the quirk() set to [Quirk :: OnBright].

§Example
println!("{}", value.on_bright());
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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.

See the crate level docs for more details.

§Example

Enable styling painted only when both stdout and stderr are TTYs:

use yansi::{Paint, Condition};

painted.red().on_yellow().whenever(Condition::STDOUTERR_ARE_TTY);
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fn new(self) -> Painted<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Create a new Painted with a default Style. Read more
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fn paint<S>(&self, style: S) -> Painted<&Self>
where S: Into<Style>,

Apply a style wholesale to self. Any previous style is replaced. Read more
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impl<T> Same for T

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type Output = T

Should always be Self
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impl<T> ToOwned for T
where T: Clone,

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type Owned = T

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
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fn to_owned(&self) -> T

Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more
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fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)

Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more
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impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T
where U: Into<T>,

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type Error = Infallible

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
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fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>

Performs the conversion.
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T
where U: TryFrom<T>,

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type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
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fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>

Performs the conversion.
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impl<T> WithSubscriber for T

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fn with_subscriber<S>(self, subscriber: S) -> WithDispatch<Self>
where S: Into<Dispatch>,

Attaches the provided Subscriber to this type, returning a WithDispatch wrapper. Read more
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fn with_current_subscriber(self) -> WithDispatch<Self>

Attaches the current default Subscriber to this type, returning a WithDispatch wrapper. Read more
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impl<T> ErasedDestructor for T
where T: 'static,