pub struct CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
Fluent builder constructing a request to CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
.
Creates a new DB instance that acts as a read replica for an existing source DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster. You can create a read replica for a DB instance running Db2, MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, or SQL Server. You can create a read replica for a Multi-AZ DB cluster running MySQL or PostgreSQL. For more information, see Working with read replicas and Migrating from a Multi-AZ DB cluster to a DB instance using a read replica in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Amazon Aurora doesn't support this operation. To create a DB instance for an Aurora DB cluster, use the CreateDBInstance
operation.
RDS creates read replicas with backups disabled. All other attributes (including DB security groups and DB parameter groups) are inherited from the source DB instance or cluster, except as specified.
Your source DB instance or cluster must have backup retention enabled.
Implementations§
Source§impl CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
Sourcepub fn as_input(&self) -> &CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaInputBuilder
pub fn as_input(&self) -> &CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaInputBuilder
Access the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica as a reference.
Sourcepub async fn send(
self,
) -> Result<CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaOutput, SdkError<CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaError, HttpResponse>>
pub async fn send( self, ) -> Result<CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaOutput, SdkError<CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaError, HttpResponse>>
Sends the request and returns the response.
If an error occurs, an SdkError
will be returned with additional details that
can be matched against.
By default, any retryable failures will be retried twice. Retry behavior is configurable with the RetryConfig, which can be set when configuring the client.
Sourcepub fn customize(
self,
) -> CustomizableOperation<CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaOutput, CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaError, Self>
pub fn customize( self, ) -> CustomizableOperation<CreateDbInstanceReadReplicaOutput, CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaError, Self>
Consumes this builder, creating a customizable operation that can be modified before being sent.
Sourcepub fn db_instance_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn db_instance_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The DB instance identifier of the read replica. This identifier is the unique key that identifies a DB instance. This parameter is stored as a lowercase string.
Sourcepub fn set_db_instance_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_db_instance_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The DB instance identifier of the read replica. This identifier is the unique key that identifies a DB instance. This parameter is stored as a lowercase string.
Sourcepub fn get_db_instance_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_db_instance_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
The DB instance identifier of the read replica. This identifier is the unique key that identifies a DB instance. This parameter is stored as a lowercase string.
Sourcepub fn source_db_instance_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn source_db_instance_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the DB instance that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB instance can have up to 15 read replicas, except for the following engines:
-
Db2 - Can have up to three replicas.
-
Oracle - Can have up to five read replicas.
-
SQL Server - Can have up to five read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Db2, MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, or SQL Server DB instance.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBClusterIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
For the limitations of Oracle read replicas, see Version and licensing considerations for RDS for Oracle replicas in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
For the limitations of SQL Server read replicas, see Read replica limitations with SQL Server in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
The specified DB instance must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
If the source DB instance is in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica, specify a valid DB instance identifier.
-
If the source DB instance is in a different Amazon Web Services Region from the read replica, specify a valid DB instance ARN. For more information, see Constructing an ARN for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide. This doesn't apply to SQL Server or RDS Custom, which don't support cross-Region replicas.
Sourcepub fn set_source_db_instance_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_source_db_instance_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the DB instance that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB instance can have up to 15 read replicas, except for the following engines:
-
Db2 - Can have up to three replicas.
-
Oracle - Can have up to five read replicas.
-
SQL Server - Can have up to five read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Db2, MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, or SQL Server DB instance.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBClusterIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
For the limitations of Oracle read replicas, see Version and licensing considerations for RDS for Oracle replicas in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
For the limitations of SQL Server read replicas, see Read replica limitations with SQL Server in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
The specified DB instance must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
If the source DB instance is in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica, specify a valid DB instance identifier.
-
If the source DB instance is in a different Amazon Web Services Region from the read replica, specify a valid DB instance ARN. For more information, see Constructing an ARN for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide. This doesn't apply to SQL Server or RDS Custom, which don't support cross-Region replicas.
Sourcepub fn get_source_db_instance_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_source_db_instance_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
The identifier of the DB instance that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB instance can have up to 15 read replicas, except for the following engines:
-
Db2 - Can have up to three replicas.
-
Oracle - Can have up to five read replicas.
-
SQL Server - Can have up to five read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Db2, MariaDB, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, or SQL Server DB instance.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBClusterIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
For the limitations of Oracle read replicas, see Version and licensing considerations for RDS for Oracle replicas in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
For the limitations of SQL Server read replicas, see Read replica limitations with SQL Server in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
-
The specified DB instance must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
If the source DB instance is in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica, specify a valid DB instance identifier.
-
If the source DB instance is in a different Amazon Web Services Region from the read replica, specify a valid DB instance ARN. For more information, see Constructing an ARN for Amazon RDS in the Amazon RDS User Guide. This doesn't apply to SQL Server or RDS Custom, which don't support cross-Region replicas.
Sourcepub fn db_instance_class(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn db_instance_class(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The compute and memory capacity of the read replica, for example db.m4.large. Not all DB instance classes are available in all Amazon Web Services Regions, or for all database engines. For the full list of DB instance classes, and availability for your engine, see DB Instance Class in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn set_db_instance_class(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_db_instance_class(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The compute and memory capacity of the read replica, for example db.m4.large. Not all DB instance classes are available in all Amazon Web Services Regions, or for all database engines. For the full list of DB instance classes, and availability for your engine, see DB Instance Class in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn get_db_instance_class(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_db_instance_class(&self) -> &Option<String>
The compute and memory capacity of the read replica, for example db.m4.large. Not all DB instance classes are available in all Amazon Web Services Regions, or for all database engines. For the full list of DB instance classes, and availability for your engine, see DB Instance Class in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn availability_zone(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn availability_zone(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The Availability Zone (AZ) where the read replica will be created.
Default: A random, system-chosen Availability Zone in the endpoint's Amazon Web Services Region.
Example: us-east-1d
Sourcepub fn set_availability_zone(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_availability_zone(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The Availability Zone (AZ) where the read replica will be created.
Default: A random, system-chosen Availability Zone in the endpoint's Amazon Web Services Region.
Example: us-east-1d
Sourcepub fn get_availability_zone(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_availability_zone(&self) -> &Option<String>
The Availability Zone (AZ) where the read replica will be created.
Default: A random, system-chosen Availability Zone in the endpoint's Amazon Web Services Region.
Example: us-east-1d
Sourcepub fn port(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn port(self, input: i32) -> Self
The port number that the DB instance uses for connections.
Valid Values: 1150-65535
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn set_port(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_port(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
The port number that the DB instance uses for connections.
Valid Values: 1150-65535
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn get_port(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_port(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The port number that the DB instance uses for connections.
Valid Values: 1150-65535
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
Sourcepub fn multi_az(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn multi_az(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether the read replica is in a Multi-AZ deployment.
You can create a read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance. RDS creates a standby of your replica in another Availability Zone for failover support for the replica. Creating your read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance is independent of whether the source is a Multi-AZ DB instance or a Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_multi_az(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_multi_az(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether the read replica is in a Multi-AZ deployment.
You can create a read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance. RDS creates a standby of your replica in another Availability Zone for failover support for the replica. Creating your read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance is independent of whether the source is a Multi-AZ DB instance or a Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_multi_az(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_multi_az(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether the read replica is in a Multi-AZ deployment.
You can create a read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance. RDS creates a standby of your replica in another Availability Zone for failover support for the replica. Creating your read replica as a Multi-AZ DB instance is independent of whether the source is a Multi-AZ DB instance or a Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn auto_minor_version_upgrade(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn auto_minor_version_upgrade(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether to automatically apply minor engine upgrades to the read replica during the maintenance window.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
For more information about automatic minor version upgrades, see Automatically upgrading the minor engine version.
Sourcepub fn set_auto_minor_version_upgrade(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_auto_minor_version_upgrade(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether to automatically apply minor engine upgrades to the read replica during the maintenance window.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
For more information about automatic minor version upgrades, see Automatically upgrading the minor engine version.
Sourcepub fn get_auto_minor_version_upgrade(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_auto_minor_version_upgrade(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether to automatically apply minor engine upgrades to the read replica during the maintenance window.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: Inherits the value from the source DB instance.
For more information about automatic minor version upgrades, see Automatically upgrading the minor engine version.
Sourcepub fn iops(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn iops(self, input: i32) -> Self
The amount of Provisioned IOPS (input/output operations per second) to initially allocate for the DB instance.
Sourcepub fn set_iops(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_iops(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
The amount of Provisioned IOPS (input/output operations per second) to initially allocate for the DB instance.
Sourcepub fn get_iops(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_iops(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The amount of Provisioned IOPS (input/output operations per second) to initially allocate for the DB instance.
Sourcepub fn option_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn option_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The option group to associate the DB instance with. If not specified, RDS uses the option group associated with the source DB instance or cluster.
For SQL Server, you must use the option group associated with the source.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_option_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_option_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The option group to associate the DB instance with. If not specified, RDS uses the option group associated with the source DB instance or cluster.
For SQL Server, you must use the option group associated with the source.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_option_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_option_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
The option group to associate the DB instance with. If not specified, RDS uses the option group associated with the source DB instance or cluster.
For SQL Server, you must use the option group associated with the source.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn db_parameter_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn db_parameter_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The name of the DB parameter group to associate with this read replica DB instance.
For the Db2 DB engine, if your source DB instance uses the bring your own license (BYOL) model, then a custom parameter group must be associated with the replica. For a same Amazon Web Services Region replica, if you don't specify a custom parameter group, Amazon RDS associates the custom parameter group associated with the source DB instance. For a cross-Region replica, you must specify a custom parameter group. This custom parameter group must include your IBM Site ID and IBM Customer ID. For more information, see IBM IDs for bring your own license (BYOL) for Db2.
For Single-AZ or Multi-AZ DB instance read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the DBParameterGroup
of the source DB instance for a same Region read replica, or the default DBParameterGroup
for the specified DB engine for a cross-Region read replica.
For Multi-AZ DB cluster same Region read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the default DBParameterGroup
.
Specifying a parameter group for this operation is only supported for MySQL DB instances for cross-Region read replicas, for Multi-AZ DB cluster read replica instances, for Db2 DB instances, and for Oracle DB instances. It isn't supported for MySQL DB instances for same Region read replicas or for RDS Custom.
Constraints:
-
Must be 1 to 255 letters, numbers, or hyphens.
-
First character must be a letter.
-
Can't end with a hyphen or contain two consecutive hyphens.
Sourcepub fn set_db_parameter_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_db_parameter_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The name of the DB parameter group to associate with this read replica DB instance.
For the Db2 DB engine, if your source DB instance uses the bring your own license (BYOL) model, then a custom parameter group must be associated with the replica. For a same Amazon Web Services Region replica, if you don't specify a custom parameter group, Amazon RDS associates the custom parameter group associated with the source DB instance. For a cross-Region replica, you must specify a custom parameter group. This custom parameter group must include your IBM Site ID and IBM Customer ID. For more information, see IBM IDs for bring your own license (BYOL) for Db2.
For Single-AZ or Multi-AZ DB instance read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the DBParameterGroup
of the source DB instance for a same Region read replica, or the default DBParameterGroup
for the specified DB engine for a cross-Region read replica.
For Multi-AZ DB cluster same Region read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the default DBParameterGroup
.
Specifying a parameter group for this operation is only supported for MySQL DB instances for cross-Region read replicas, for Multi-AZ DB cluster read replica instances, for Db2 DB instances, and for Oracle DB instances. It isn't supported for MySQL DB instances for same Region read replicas or for RDS Custom.
Constraints:
-
Must be 1 to 255 letters, numbers, or hyphens.
-
First character must be a letter.
-
Can't end with a hyphen or contain two consecutive hyphens.
Sourcepub fn get_db_parameter_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_db_parameter_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
The name of the DB parameter group to associate with this read replica DB instance.
For the Db2 DB engine, if your source DB instance uses the bring your own license (BYOL) model, then a custom parameter group must be associated with the replica. For a same Amazon Web Services Region replica, if you don't specify a custom parameter group, Amazon RDS associates the custom parameter group associated with the source DB instance. For a cross-Region replica, you must specify a custom parameter group. This custom parameter group must include your IBM Site ID and IBM Customer ID. For more information, see IBM IDs for bring your own license (BYOL) for Db2.
For Single-AZ or Multi-AZ DB instance read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the DBParameterGroup
of the source DB instance for a same Region read replica, or the default DBParameterGroup
for the specified DB engine for a cross-Region read replica.
For Multi-AZ DB cluster same Region read replica instances, if you don't specify a value for DBParameterGroupName
, then Amazon RDS uses the default DBParameterGroup
.
Specifying a parameter group for this operation is only supported for MySQL DB instances for cross-Region read replicas, for Multi-AZ DB cluster read replica instances, for Db2 DB instances, and for Oracle DB instances. It isn't supported for MySQL DB instances for same Region read replicas or for RDS Custom.
Constraints:
-
Must be 1 to 255 letters, numbers, or hyphens.
-
First character must be a letter.
-
Can't end with a hyphen or contain two consecutive hyphens.
Sourcepub fn publicly_accessible(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn publicly_accessible(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether the DB instance is publicly accessible.
When the DB cluster is publicly accessible, its Domain Name System (DNS) endpoint resolves to the private IP address from within the DB cluster's virtual private cloud (VPC). It resolves to the public IP address from outside of the DB cluster's VPC. Access to the DB cluster is ultimately controlled by the security group it uses. That public access isn't permitted if the security group assigned to the DB cluster doesn't permit it.
When the DB instance isn't publicly accessible, it is an internal DB instance with a DNS name that resolves to a private IP address.
For more information, see CreateDBInstance
.
Sourcepub fn set_publicly_accessible(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_publicly_accessible(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether the DB instance is publicly accessible.
When the DB cluster is publicly accessible, its Domain Name System (DNS) endpoint resolves to the private IP address from within the DB cluster's virtual private cloud (VPC). It resolves to the public IP address from outside of the DB cluster's VPC. Access to the DB cluster is ultimately controlled by the security group it uses. That public access isn't permitted if the security group assigned to the DB cluster doesn't permit it.
When the DB instance isn't publicly accessible, it is an internal DB instance with a DNS name that resolves to a private IP address.
For more information, see CreateDBInstance
.
Sourcepub fn get_publicly_accessible(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_publicly_accessible(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether the DB instance is publicly accessible.
When the DB cluster is publicly accessible, its Domain Name System (DNS) endpoint resolves to the private IP address from within the DB cluster's virtual private cloud (VPC). It resolves to the public IP address from outside of the DB cluster's VPC. Access to the DB cluster is ultimately controlled by the security group it uses. That public access isn't permitted if the security group assigned to the DB cluster doesn't permit it.
When the DB instance isn't publicly accessible, it is an internal DB instance with a DNS name that resolves to a private IP address.
For more information, see CreateDBInstance
.
Appends an item to Tags
.
To override the contents of this collection use set_tags
.
A list of tags.
For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide or Tagging Amazon Aurora and Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
A list of tags.
For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide or Tagging Amazon Aurora and Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
A list of tags.
For more information, see Tagging Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon RDS User Guide or Tagging Amazon Aurora and Amazon RDS resources in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
Sourcepub fn db_subnet_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn db_subnet_group_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
A DB subnet group for the DB instance. The new DB instance is created in the VPC associated with the DB subnet group. If no DB subnet group is specified, then the new DB instance isn't created in a VPC.
Constraints:
-
If supplied, must match the name of an existing DB subnet group.
-
The specified DB subnet group must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region in which the operation is running.
-
All read replicas in one Amazon Web Services Region that are created from the same source DB instance must either:
-
Specify DB subnet groups from the same VPC. All these read replicas are created in the same VPC.
-
Not specify a DB subnet group. All these read replicas are created outside of any VPC.
-
Example: mydbsubnetgroup
Sourcepub fn set_db_subnet_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_db_subnet_group_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
A DB subnet group for the DB instance. The new DB instance is created in the VPC associated with the DB subnet group. If no DB subnet group is specified, then the new DB instance isn't created in a VPC.
Constraints:
-
If supplied, must match the name of an existing DB subnet group.
-
The specified DB subnet group must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region in which the operation is running.
-
All read replicas in one Amazon Web Services Region that are created from the same source DB instance must either:
-
Specify DB subnet groups from the same VPC. All these read replicas are created in the same VPC.
-
Not specify a DB subnet group. All these read replicas are created outside of any VPC.
-
Example: mydbsubnetgroup
Sourcepub fn get_db_subnet_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_db_subnet_group_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
A DB subnet group for the DB instance. The new DB instance is created in the VPC associated with the DB subnet group. If no DB subnet group is specified, then the new DB instance isn't created in a VPC.
Constraints:
-
If supplied, must match the name of an existing DB subnet group.
-
The specified DB subnet group must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region in which the operation is running.
-
All read replicas in one Amazon Web Services Region that are created from the same source DB instance must either:
-
Specify DB subnet groups from the same VPC. All these read replicas are created in the same VPC.
-
Not specify a DB subnet group. All these read replicas are created outside of any VPC.
-
Example: mydbsubnetgroup
Sourcepub fn vpc_security_group_ids(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn vpc_security_group_ids(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
Appends an item to VpcSecurityGroupIds
.
To override the contents of this collection use set_vpc_security_group_ids
.
A list of Amazon EC2 VPC security groups to associate with the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: The default EC2 VPC security group for the DB subnet group's VPC.
Sourcepub fn set_vpc_security_group_ids(self, input: Option<Vec<String>>) -> Self
pub fn set_vpc_security_group_ids(self, input: Option<Vec<String>>) -> Self
A list of Amazon EC2 VPC security groups to associate with the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: The default EC2 VPC security group for the DB subnet group's VPC.
Sourcepub fn get_vpc_security_group_ids(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
pub fn get_vpc_security_group_ids(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
A list of Amazon EC2 VPC security groups to associate with the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Default: The default EC2 VPC security group for the DB subnet group's VPC.
Sourcepub fn storage_type(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn storage_type(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The storage type to associate with the read replica.
If you specify io1
, io2
, or gp3
, you must also include a value for the Iops
parameter.
Valid Values: gp2 | gp3 | io1 | io2 | standard
Default: io1
if the Iops
parameter is specified. Otherwise, gp3
.
Sourcepub fn set_storage_type(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_storage_type(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The storage type to associate with the read replica.
If you specify io1
, io2
, or gp3
, you must also include a value for the Iops
parameter.
Valid Values: gp2 | gp3 | io1 | io2 | standard
Default: io1
if the Iops
parameter is specified. Otherwise, gp3
.
Sourcepub fn get_storage_type(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_storage_type(&self) -> &Option<String>
The storage type to associate with the read replica.
If you specify io1
, io2
, or gp3
, you must also include a value for the Iops
parameter.
Valid Values: gp2 | gp3 | io1 | io2 | standard
Default: io1
if the Iops
parameter is specified. Otherwise, gp3
.
Specifies whether to copy all tags from the read replica to snapshots of the read replica. By default, tags aren't copied.
Specifies whether to copy all tags from the read replica to snapshots of the read replica. By default, tags aren't copied.
Specifies whether to copy all tags from the read replica to snapshots of the read replica. By default, tags aren't copied.
Sourcepub fn monitoring_interval(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn monitoring_interval(self, input: i32) -> Self
The interval, in seconds, between points when Enhanced Monitoring metrics are collected for the read replica. To disable collection of Enhanced Monitoring metrics, specify 0
. The default is 0
.
If MonitoringRoleArn
is specified, then you must set MonitoringInterval
to a value other than 0
.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values: 0, 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, 60
Default: 0
Sourcepub fn set_monitoring_interval(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_monitoring_interval(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
The interval, in seconds, between points when Enhanced Monitoring metrics are collected for the read replica. To disable collection of Enhanced Monitoring metrics, specify 0
. The default is 0
.
If MonitoringRoleArn
is specified, then you must set MonitoringInterval
to a value other than 0
.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values: 0, 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, 60
Default: 0
Sourcepub fn get_monitoring_interval(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_monitoring_interval(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The interval, in seconds, between points when Enhanced Monitoring metrics are collected for the read replica. To disable collection of Enhanced Monitoring metrics, specify 0
. The default is 0
.
If MonitoringRoleArn
is specified, then you must set MonitoringInterval
to a value other than 0
.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values: 0, 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, 60
Default: 0
Sourcepub fn monitoring_role_arn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn monitoring_role_arn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The ARN for the IAM role that permits RDS to send enhanced monitoring metrics to Amazon CloudWatch Logs. For example, arn:aws:iam:123456789012:role/emaccess
. For information on creating a monitoring role, go to To create an IAM role for Amazon RDS Enhanced Monitoring in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
If MonitoringInterval
is set to a value other than 0, then you must supply a MonitoringRoleArn
value.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_monitoring_role_arn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_monitoring_role_arn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The ARN for the IAM role that permits RDS to send enhanced monitoring metrics to Amazon CloudWatch Logs. For example, arn:aws:iam:123456789012:role/emaccess
. For information on creating a monitoring role, go to To create an IAM role for Amazon RDS Enhanced Monitoring in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
If MonitoringInterval
is set to a value other than 0, then you must supply a MonitoringRoleArn
value.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_monitoring_role_arn(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_monitoring_role_arn(&self) -> &Option<String>
The ARN for the IAM role that permits RDS to send enhanced monitoring metrics to Amazon CloudWatch Logs. For example, arn:aws:iam:123456789012:role/emaccess
. For information on creating a monitoring role, go to To create an IAM role for Amazon RDS Enhanced Monitoring in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
If MonitoringInterval
is set to a value other than 0, then you must supply a MonitoringRoleArn
value.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn kms_key_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn kms_key_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for an encrypted read replica.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you create an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the source DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster, don't specify a value for this parameter. A read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region is always encrypted with the same KMS key as the source DB instance or cluster.
If you create an encrypted read replica in a different Amazon Web Services Region, then you must specify a KMS key identifier for the destination Amazon Web Services Region. KMS keys are specific to the Amazon Web Services Region that they are created in, and you can't use KMS keys from one Amazon Web Services Region in another Amazon Web Services Region.
You can't create an encrypted read replica from an unencrypted DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom, which uses the same KMS key as the primary replica.
Sourcepub fn set_kms_key_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_kms_key_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for an encrypted read replica.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you create an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the source DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster, don't specify a value for this parameter. A read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region is always encrypted with the same KMS key as the source DB instance or cluster.
If you create an encrypted read replica in a different Amazon Web Services Region, then you must specify a KMS key identifier for the destination Amazon Web Services Region. KMS keys are specific to the Amazon Web Services Region that they are created in, and you can't use KMS keys from one Amazon Web Services Region in another Amazon Web Services Region.
You can't create an encrypted read replica from an unencrypted DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom, which uses the same KMS key as the primary replica.
Sourcepub fn get_kms_key_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_kms_key_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for an encrypted read replica.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you create an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the source DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster, don't specify a value for this parameter. A read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region is always encrypted with the same KMS key as the source DB instance or cluster.
If you create an encrypted read replica in a different Amazon Web Services Region, then you must specify a KMS key identifier for the destination Amazon Web Services Region. KMS keys are specific to the Amazon Web Services Region that they are created in, and you can't use KMS keys from one Amazon Web Services Region in another Amazon Web Services Region.
You can't create an encrypted read replica from an unencrypted DB instance or Multi-AZ DB cluster.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom, which uses the same KMS key as the primary replica.
Sourcepub fn pre_signed_url(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn pre_signed_url(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
When you are creating a read replica from one Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region to another or from one China Amazon Web Services Region to another, the URL that contains a Signature Version 4 signed request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the source DB instance.
This setting applies only to Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions. It's ignored in other Amazon Web Services Regions.
This setting applies only when replicating from a source DB instance. Source DB clusters aren't supported in Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions.
You must specify this parameter when you create an encrypted read replica from another Amazon Web Services Region by using the Amazon RDS API. Don't specify PreSignedUrl
when you are creating an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region.
The presigned URL must be a valid request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the encrypted source DB instance. The presigned URL request must contain the following parameter values:
-
DestinationRegion
- The Amazon Web Services Region that the encrypted read replica is created in. This Amazon Web Services Region is the same one where theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation is called that contains this presigned URL.For example, if you create an encrypted DB instance in the us-west-1 Amazon Web Services Region, from a source DB instance in the us-east-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then you call the
CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region and provide a presigned URL that contains a call to theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region. For this example, theDestinationRegion
in the presigned URL must be set to the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region. -
KmsKeyId
- The KMS key identifier for the key to use to encrypt the read replica in the destination Amazon Web Services Region. This is the same identifier for both theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation that is called in the destination Amazon Web Services Region, and the operation contained in the presigned URL. -
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
- The DB instance identifier for the encrypted DB instance to be replicated. This identifier must be in the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) format for the source Amazon Web Services Region. For example, if you are creating an encrypted read replica from a DB instance in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then yourSourceDBInstanceIdentifier
looks like the following example:arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:instance:mysql-instance1-20161115
.
To learn how to generate a Signature Version 4 signed request, see Authenticating Requests: Using Query Parameters (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) and Signature Version 4 Signing Process.
If you are using an Amazon Web Services SDK tool or the CLI, you can specify SourceRegion
(or --source-region
for the CLI) instead of specifying PreSignedUrl
manually. Specifying SourceRegion
autogenerates a presigned URL that is a valid request for the operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_pre_signed_url(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_pre_signed_url(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
When you are creating a read replica from one Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region to another or from one China Amazon Web Services Region to another, the URL that contains a Signature Version 4 signed request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the source DB instance.
This setting applies only to Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions. It's ignored in other Amazon Web Services Regions.
This setting applies only when replicating from a source DB instance. Source DB clusters aren't supported in Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions.
You must specify this parameter when you create an encrypted read replica from another Amazon Web Services Region by using the Amazon RDS API. Don't specify PreSignedUrl
when you are creating an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region.
The presigned URL must be a valid request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the encrypted source DB instance. The presigned URL request must contain the following parameter values:
-
DestinationRegion
- The Amazon Web Services Region that the encrypted read replica is created in. This Amazon Web Services Region is the same one where theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation is called that contains this presigned URL.For example, if you create an encrypted DB instance in the us-west-1 Amazon Web Services Region, from a source DB instance in the us-east-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then you call the
CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region and provide a presigned URL that contains a call to theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region. For this example, theDestinationRegion
in the presigned URL must be set to the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region. -
KmsKeyId
- The KMS key identifier for the key to use to encrypt the read replica in the destination Amazon Web Services Region. This is the same identifier for both theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation that is called in the destination Amazon Web Services Region, and the operation contained in the presigned URL. -
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
- The DB instance identifier for the encrypted DB instance to be replicated. This identifier must be in the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) format for the source Amazon Web Services Region. For example, if you are creating an encrypted read replica from a DB instance in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then yourSourceDBInstanceIdentifier
looks like the following example:arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:instance:mysql-instance1-20161115
.
To learn how to generate a Signature Version 4 signed request, see Authenticating Requests: Using Query Parameters (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) and Signature Version 4 Signing Process.
If you are using an Amazon Web Services SDK tool or the CLI, you can specify SourceRegion
(or --source-region
for the CLI) instead of specifying PreSignedUrl
manually. Specifying SourceRegion
autogenerates a presigned URL that is a valid request for the operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_pre_signed_url(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_pre_signed_url(&self) -> &Option<String>
When you are creating a read replica from one Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region to another or from one China Amazon Web Services Region to another, the URL that contains a Signature Version 4 signed request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the source DB instance.
This setting applies only to Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions. It's ignored in other Amazon Web Services Regions.
This setting applies only when replicating from a source DB instance. Source DB clusters aren't supported in Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Regions and China Amazon Web Services Regions.
You must specify this parameter when you create an encrypted read replica from another Amazon Web Services Region by using the Amazon RDS API. Don't specify PreSignedUrl
when you are creating an encrypted read replica in the same Amazon Web Services Region.
The presigned URL must be a valid request for the CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
API operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region that contains the encrypted source DB instance. The presigned URL request must contain the following parameter values:
-
DestinationRegion
- The Amazon Web Services Region that the encrypted read replica is created in. This Amazon Web Services Region is the same one where theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation is called that contains this presigned URL.For example, if you create an encrypted DB instance in the us-west-1 Amazon Web Services Region, from a source DB instance in the us-east-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then you call the
CreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region and provide a presigned URL that contains a call to theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region. For this example, theDestinationRegion
in the presigned URL must be set to the us-east-1 Amazon Web Services Region. -
KmsKeyId
- The KMS key identifier for the key to use to encrypt the read replica in the destination Amazon Web Services Region. This is the same identifier for both theCreateDBInstanceReadReplica
operation that is called in the destination Amazon Web Services Region, and the operation contained in the presigned URL. -
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
- The DB instance identifier for the encrypted DB instance to be replicated. This identifier must be in the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) format for the source Amazon Web Services Region. For example, if you are creating an encrypted read replica from a DB instance in the us-west-2 Amazon Web Services Region, then yourSourceDBInstanceIdentifier
looks like the following example:arn:aws:rds:us-west-2:123456789012:instance:mysql-instance1-20161115
.
To learn how to generate a Signature Version 4 signed request, see Authenticating Requests: Using Query Parameters (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) and Signature Version 4 Signing Process.
If you are using an Amazon Web Services SDK tool or the CLI, you can specify SourceRegion
(or --source-region
for the CLI) instead of specifying PreSignedUrl
manually. Specifying SourceRegion
autogenerates a presigned URL that is a valid request for the operation that can run in the source Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn enable_iam_database_authentication(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn enable_iam_database_authentication(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable mapping of Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) accounts to database accounts. By default, mapping isn't enabled.
For more information about IAM database authentication, see IAM Database Authentication for MySQL and PostgreSQL in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_enable_iam_database_authentication(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_enable_iam_database_authentication(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable mapping of Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) accounts to database accounts. By default, mapping isn't enabled.
For more information about IAM database authentication, see IAM Database Authentication for MySQL and PostgreSQL in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_enable_iam_database_authentication(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_enable_iam_database_authentication(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether to enable mapping of Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) accounts to database accounts. By default, mapping isn't enabled.
For more information about IAM database authentication, see IAM Database Authentication for MySQL and PostgreSQL in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn database_insights_mode(self, input: DatabaseInsightsMode) -> Self
pub fn database_insights_mode(self, input: DatabaseInsightsMode) -> Self
The mode of Database Insights to enable for the read replica.
This setting isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn set_database_insights_mode(
self,
input: Option<DatabaseInsightsMode>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_database_insights_mode( self, input: Option<DatabaseInsightsMode>, ) -> Self
The mode of Database Insights to enable for the read replica.
This setting isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn get_database_insights_mode(&self) -> &Option<DatabaseInsightsMode>
pub fn get_database_insights_mode(&self) -> &Option<DatabaseInsightsMode>
The mode of Database Insights to enable for the read replica.
This setting isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn enable_performance_insights(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn enable_performance_insights(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable Performance Insights for the read replica.
For more information, see Using Amazon Performance Insights in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_enable_performance_insights(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_enable_performance_insights(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable Performance Insights for the read replica.
For more information, see Using Amazon Performance Insights in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_enable_performance_insights(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_enable_performance_insights(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether to enable Performance Insights for the read replica.
For more information, see Using Amazon Performance Insights in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn performance_insights_kms_key_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn performance_insights_kms_key_id(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for encryption of Performance Insights data.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you do not specify a value for PerformanceInsightsKMSKeyId
, then Amazon RDS uses your default KMS key. There is a default KMS key for your Amazon Web Services account. Your Amazon Web Services account has a different default KMS key for each Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_performance_insights_kms_key_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_performance_insights_kms_key_id(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for encryption of Performance Insights data.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you do not specify a value for PerformanceInsightsKMSKeyId
, then Amazon RDS uses your default KMS key. There is a default KMS key for your Amazon Web Services account. Your Amazon Web Services account has a different default KMS key for each Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_performance_insights_kms_key_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_performance_insights_kms_key_id(&self) -> &Option<String>
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier for encryption of Performance Insights data.
The Amazon Web Services KMS key identifier is the key ARN, key ID, alias ARN, or alias name for the KMS key.
If you do not specify a value for PerformanceInsightsKMSKeyId
, then Amazon RDS uses your default KMS key. There is a default KMS key for your Amazon Web Services account. Your Amazon Web Services account has a different default KMS key for each Amazon Web Services Region.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn performance_insights_retention_period(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn performance_insights_retention_period(self, input: i32) -> Self
The number of days to retain Performance Insights data.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values:
-
7
-
month * 31, where month is a number of months from 1-23. Examples:
93
(3 months * 31),341
(11 months * 31),589
(19 months * 31) -
731
Default: 7
days
If you specify a retention period that isn't valid, such as 94
, Amazon RDS returns an error.
Sourcepub fn set_performance_insights_retention_period(
self,
input: Option<i32>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_performance_insights_retention_period( self, input: Option<i32>, ) -> Self
The number of days to retain Performance Insights data.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values:
-
7
-
month * 31, where month is a number of months from 1-23. Examples:
93
(3 months * 31),341
(11 months * 31),589
(19 months * 31) -
731
Default: 7
days
If you specify a retention period that isn't valid, such as 94
, Amazon RDS returns an error.
Sourcepub fn get_performance_insights_retention_period(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_performance_insights_retention_period(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The number of days to retain Performance Insights data.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Valid Values:
-
7
-
month * 31, where month is a number of months from 1-23. Examples:
93
(3 months * 31),341
(11 months * 31),589
(19 months * 31) -
731
Default: 7
days
If you specify a retention period that isn't valid, such as 94
, Amazon RDS returns an error.
Sourcepub fn enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
Appends an item to EnableCloudwatchLogsExports
.
To override the contents of this collection use set_enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports
.
The list of logs that the new DB instance is to export to CloudWatch Logs. The values in the list depend on the DB engine being used. For more information, see Publishing Database Logs to Amazon CloudWatch Logs in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports(
self,
input: Option<Vec<String>>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports( self, input: Option<Vec<String>>, ) -> Self
The list of logs that the new DB instance is to export to CloudWatch Logs. The values in the list depend on the DB engine being used. For more information, see Publishing Database Logs to Amazon CloudWatch Logs in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
pub fn get_enable_cloudwatch_logs_exports(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
The list of logs that the new DB instance is to export to CloudWatch Logs. The values in the list depend on the DB engine being used. For more information, see Publishing Database Logs to Amazon CloudWatch Logs in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn processor_features(self, input: ProcessorFeature) -> Self
pub fn processor_features(self, input: ProcessorFeature) -> Self
Appends an item to ProcessorFeatures
.
To override the contents of this collection use set_processor_features
.
The number of CPU cores and the number of threads per core for the DB instance class of the DB instance.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_processor_features(
self,
input: Option<Vec<ProcessorFeature>>,
) -> Self
pub fn set_processor_features( self, input: Option<Vec<ProcessorFeature>>, ) -> Self
The number of CPU cores and the number of threads per core for the DB instance class of the DB instance.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_processor_features(&self) -> &Option<Vec<ProcessorFeature>>
pub fn get_processor_features(&self) -> &Option<Vec<ProcessorFeature>>
The number of CPU cores and the number of threads per core for the DB instance class of the DB instance.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn use_default_processor_features(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn use_default_processor_features(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether the DB instance class of the DB instance uses its default processor features.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_use_default_processor_features(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_use_default_processor_features(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether the DB instance class of the DB instance uses its default processor features.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_use_default_processor_features(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_use_default_processor_features(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether the DB instance class of the DB instance uses its default processor features.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn deletion_protection(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn deletion_protection(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable deletion protection for the DB instance. The database can't be deleted when deletion protection is enabled. By default, deletion protection isn't enabled. For more information, see Deleting a DB Instance.
Sourcepub fn set_deletion_protection(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_deletion_protection(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable deletion protection for the DB instance. The database can't be deleted when deletion protection is enabled. By default, deletion protection isn't enabled. For more information, see Deleting a DB Instance.
Sourcepub fn get_deletion_protection(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_deletion_protection(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether to enable deletion protection for the DB instance. The database can't be deleted when deletion protection is enabled. By default, deletion protection isn't enabled. For more information, see Deleting a DB Instance.
Sourcepub fn domain(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The Active Directory directory ID to create the DB instance in. Currently, only MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, and PostgreSQL DB instances can be created in an Active Directory Domain.
For more information, see Kerberos Authentication in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_domain(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The Active Directory directory ID to create the DB instance in. Currently, only MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, and PostgreSQL DB instances can be created in an Active Directory Domain.
For more information, see Kerberos Authentication in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_domain(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_domain(&self) -> &Option<String>
The Active Directory directory ID to create the DB instance in. Currently, only MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, and PostgreSQL DB instances can be created in an Active Directory Domain.
For more information, see Kerberos Authentication in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn domain_iam_role_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain_iam_role_name(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The name of the IAM role to use when making API calls to the Directory Service.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_domain_iam_role_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain_iam_role_name(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The name of the IAM role to use when making API calls to the Directory Service.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_domain_iam_role_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_domain_iam_role_name(&self) -> &Option<String>
The name of the IAM role to use when making API calls to the Directory Service.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn domain_fqdn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain_fqdn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of an Active Directory domain.
Constraints:
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: mymanagedADtest.mymanagedAD.mydomain
Sourcepub fn set_domain_fqdn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain_fqdn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of an Active Directory domain.
Constraints:
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: mymanagedADtest.mymanagedAD.mydomain
Sourcepub fn get_domain_fqdn(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_domain_fqdn(&self) -> &Option<String>
The fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of an Active Directory domain.
Constraints:
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: mymanagedADtest.mymanagedAD.mydomain
Sourcepub fn domain_ou(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain_ou(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The Active Directory organizational unit for your DB instance to join.
Constraints:
-
Must be in the distinguished name format.
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: OU=mymanagedADtestOU,DC=mymanagedADtest,DC=mymanagedAD,DC=mydomain
Sourcepub fn set_domain_ou(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain_ou(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The Active Directory organizational unit for your DB instance to join.
Constraints:
-
Must be in the distinguished name format.
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: OU=mymanagedADtestOU,DC=mymanagedADtest,DC=mymanagedAD,DC=mydomain
Sourcepub fn get_domain_ou(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_domain_ou(&self) -> &Option<String>
The Active Directory organizational unit for your DB instance to join.
Constraints:
-
Must be in the distinguished name format.
-
Can't be longer than 64 characters.
Example: OU=mymanagedADtestOU,DC=mymanagedADtest,DC=mymanagedAD,DC=mydomain
Sourcepub fn domain_auth_secret_arn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain_auth_secret_arn(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The ARN for the Secrets Manager secret with the credentials for the user joining the domain.
Example: arn:aws:secretsmanager:region:account-number:secret:myselfmanagedADtestsecret-123456
Sourcepub fn set_domain_auth_secret_arn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain_auth_secret_arn(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The ARN for the Secrets Manager secret with the credentials for the user joining the domain.
Example: arn:aws:secretsmanager:region:account-number:secret:myselfmanagedADtestsecret-123456
Sourcepub fn get_domain_auth_secret_arn(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_domain_auth_secret_arn(&self) -> &Option<String>
The ARN for the Secrets Manager secret with the credentials for the user joining the domain.
Example: arn:aws:secretsmanager:region:account-number:secret:myselfmanagedADtestsecret-123456
Sourcepub fn domain_dns_ips(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn domain_dns_ips(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
Appends an item to DomainDnsIps
.
To override the contents of this collection use set_domain_dns_ips
.
The IPv4 DNS IP addresses of your primary and secondary Active Directory domain controllers.
Constraints:
-
Two IP addresses must be provided. If there isn't a secondary domain controller, use the IP address of the primary domain controller for both entries in the list.
Example: 123.124.125.126,234.235.236.237
Sourcepub fn set_domain_dns_ips(self, input: Option<Vec<String>>) -> Self
pub fn set_domain_dns_ips(self, input: Option<Vec<String>>) -> Self
The IPv4 DNS IP addresses of your primary and secondary Active Directory domain controllers.
Constraints:
-
Two IP addresses must be provided. If there isn't a secondary domain controller, use the IP address of the primary domain controller for both entries in the list.
Example: 123.124.125.126,234.235.236.237
Sourcepub fn get_domain_dns_ips(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
pub fn get_domain_dns_ips(&self) -> &Option<Vec<String>>
The IPv4 DNS IP addresses of your primary and secondary Active Directory domain controllers.
Constraints:
-
Two IP addresses must be provided. If there isn't a secondary domain controller, use the IP address of the primary domain controller for both entries in the list.
Example: 123.124.125.126,234.235.236.237
Sourcepub fn replica_mode(self, input: ReplicaMode) -> Self
pub fn replica_mode(self, input: ReplicaMode) -> Self
The open mode of the replica database.
This parameter is only supported for Db2 DB instances and Oracle DB instances.
- Db2
-
Standby DB replicas are included in Db2 Advanced Edition (AE) and Db2 Standard Edition (SE). The main use case for standby replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a standby replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of standby and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with replicas for Amazon RDS for Db2 in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
To create standby DB replicas for RDS for Db2, set this parameter to
mounted
. - Oracle
-
Mounted DB replicas are included in Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. The main use case for mounted replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. The primary database doesn't use Active Data Guard to transmit information to the mounted replica. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a mounted replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of mounted and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with read replicas for Amazon RDS for Oracle in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For RDS Custom, you must specify this parameter and set it to
mounted
. The value won't be set by default. After replica creation, you can manage the open mode manually.
Sourcepub fn set_replica_mode(self, input: Option<ReplicaMode>) -> Self
pub fn set_replica_mode(self, input: Option<ReplicaMode>) -> Self
The open mode of the replica database.
This parameter is only supported for Db2 DB instances and Oracle DB instances.
- Db2
-
Standby DB replicas are included in Db2 Advanced Edition (AE) and Db2 Standard Edition (SE). The main use case for standby replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a standby replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of standby and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with replicas for Amazon RDS for Db2 in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
To create standby DB replicas for RDS for Db2, set this parameter to
mounted
. - Oracle
-
Mounted DB replicas are included in Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. The main use case for mounted replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. The primary database doesn't use Active Data Guard to transmit information to the mounted replica. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a mounted replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of mounted and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with read replicas for Amazon RDS for Oracle in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For RDS Custom, you must specify this parameter and set it to
mounted
. The value won't be set by default. After replica creation, you can manage the open mode manually.
Sourcepub fn get_replica_mode(&self) -> &Option<ReplicaMode>
pub fn get_replica_mode(&self) -> &Option<ReplicaMode>
The open mode of the replica database.
This parameter is only supported for Db2 DB instances and Oracle DB instances.
- Db2
-
Standby DB replicas are included in Db2 Advanced Edition (AE) and Db2 Standard Edition (SE). The main use case for standby replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a standby replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of standby and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with replicas for Amazon RDS for Db2 in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
To create standby DB replicas for RDS for Db2, set this parameter to
mounted
. - Oracle
-
Mounted DB replicas are included in Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. The main use case for mounted replicas is cross-Region disaster recovery. The primary database doesn't use Active Data Guard to transmit information to the mounted replica. Because it doesn't accept user connections, a mounted replica can't serve a read-only workload.
You can create a combination of mounted and read-only DB replicas for the same primary DB instance. For more information, see Working with read replicas for Amazon RDS for Oracle in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For RDS Custom, you must specify this parameter and set it to
mounted
. The value won't be set by default. After replica creation, you can manage the open mode manually.
Sourcepub fn max_allocated_storage(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn max_allocated_storage(self, input: i32) -> Self
The upper limit in gibibytes (GiB) to which Amazon RDS can automatically scale the storage of the DB instance.
For more information about this setting, including limitations that apply to it, see Managing capacity automatically with Amazon RDS storage autoscaling in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn set_max_allocated_storage(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_max_allocated_storage(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
The upper limit in gibibytes (GiB) to which Amazon RDS can automatically scale the storage of the DB instance.
For more information about this setting, including limitations that apply to it, see Managing capacity automatically with Amazon RDS storage autoscaling in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn get_max_allocated_storage(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_max_allocated_storage(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The upper limit in gibibytes (GiB) to which Amazon RDS can automatically scale the storage of the DB instance.
For more information about this setting, including limitations that apply to it, see Managing capacity automatically with Amazon RDS storage autoscaling in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn custom_iam_instance_profile(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn custom_iam_instance_profile(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The instance profile associated with the underlying Amazon EC2 instance of an RDS Custom DB instance. The instance profile must meet the following requirements:
-
The profile must exist in your account.
-
The profile must have an IAM role that Amazon EC2 has permissions to assume.
-
The instance profile name and the associated IAM role name must start with the prefix
AWSRDSCustom
.
For the list of permissions required for the IAM role, see Configure IAM and your VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting is required for RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_custom_iam_instance_profile(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_custom_iam_instance_profile(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The instance profile associated with the underlying Amazon EC2 instance of an RDS Custom DB instance. The instance profile must meet the following requirements:
-
The profile must exist in your account.
-
The profile must have an IAM role that Amazon EC2 has permissions to assume.
-
The instance profile name and the associated IAM role name must start with the prefix
AWSRDSCustom
.
For the list of permissions required for the IAM role, see Configure IAM and your VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting is required for RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_custom_iam_instance_profile(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_custom_iam_instance_profile(&self) -> &Option<String>
The instance profile associated with the underlying Amazon EC2 instance of an RDS Custom DB instance. The instance profile must meet the following requirements:
-
The profile must exist in your account.
-
The profile must have an IAM role that Amazon EC2 has permissions to assume.
-
The instance profile name and the associated IAM role name must start with the prefix
AWSRDSCustom
.
For the list of permissions required for the IAM role, see Configure IAM and your VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
This setting is required for RDS Custom DB instances.
Sourcepub fn network_type(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn network_type(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The network type of the DB instance.
Valid Values:
-
IPV4
-
DUAL
The network type is determined by the DBSubnetGroup
specified for read replica. A DBSubnetGroup
can support only the IPv4 protocol or the IPv4 and the IPv6 protocols (DUAL
).
For more information, see Working with a DB instance in a VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn set_network_type(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_network_type(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The network type of the DB instance.
Valid Values:
-
IPV4
-
DUAL
The network type is determined by the DBSubnetGroup
specified for read replica. A DBSubnetGroup
can support only the IPv4 protocol or the IPv4 and the IPv6 protocols (DUAL
).
For more information, see Working with a DB instance in a VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn get_network_type(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_network_type(&self) -> &Option<String>
The network type of the DB instance.
Valid Values:
-
IPV4
-
DUAL
The network type is determined by the DBSubnetGroup
specified for read replica. A DBSubnetGroup
can support only the IPv4 protocol or the IPv4 and the IPv6 protocols (DUAL
).
For more information, see Working with a DB instance in a VPC in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
Sourcepub fn storage_throughput(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn storage_throughput(self, input: i32) -> Self
Specifies the storage throughput value for the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom or Amazon Aurora DB instances.
Sourcepub fn set_storage_throughput(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_storage_throughput(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
Specifies the storage throughput value for the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom or Amazon Aurora DB instances.
Sourcepub fn get_storage_throughput(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_storage_throughput(&self) -> &Option<i32>
Specifies the storage throughput value for the read replica.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom or Amazon Aurora DB instances.
Sourcepub fn enable_customer_owned_ip(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn enable_customer_owned_ip(self, input: bool) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable a customer-owned IP address (CoIP) for an RDS on Outposts read replica.
A CoIP provides local or external connectivity to resources in your Outpost subnets through your on-premises network. For some use cases, a CoIP can provide lower latency for connections to the read replica from outside of its virtual private cloud (VPC) on your local network.
For more information about RDS on Outposts, see Working with Amazon RDS on Amazon Web Services Outposts in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For more information about CoIPs, see Customer-owned IP addresses in the Amazon Web Services Outposts User Guide.
Sourcepub fn set_enable_customer_owned_ip(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_enable_customer_owned_ip(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Specifies whether to enable a customer-owned IP address (CoIP) for an RDS on Outposts read replica.
A CoIP provides local or external connectivity to resources in your Outpost subnets through your on-premises network. For some use cases, a CoIP can provide lower latency for connections to the read replica from outside of its virtual private cloud (VPC) on your local network.
For more information about RDS on Outposts, see Working with Amazon RDS on Amazon Web Services Outposts in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For more information about CoIPs, see Customer-owned IP addresses in the Amazon Web Services Outposts User Guide.
Sourcepub fn get_enable_customer_owned_ip(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_enable_customer_owned_ip(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Specifies whether to enable a customer-owned IP address (CoIP) for an RDS on Outposts read replica.
A CoIP provides local or external connectivity to resources in your Outpost subnets through your on-premises network. For some use cases, a CoIP can provide lower latency for connections to the read replica from outside of its virtual private cloud (VPC) on your local network.
For more information about RDS on Outposts, see Working with Amazon RDS on Amazon Web Services Outposts in the Amazon RDS User Guide.
For more information about CoIPs, see Customer-owned IP addresses in the Amazon Web Services Outposts User Guide.
Sourcepub fn backup_target(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn backup_target(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The location where RDS stores automated backups and manual snapshots.
Valid Values:
-
local
for Dedicated Local Zones -
region
for Amazon Web Services Region
Sourcepub fn set_backup_target(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_backup_target(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The location where RDS stores automated backups and manual snapshots.
Valid Values:
-
local
for Dedicated Local Zones -
region
for Amazon Web Services Region
Sourcepub fn get_backup_target(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_backup_target(&self) -> &Option<String>
The location where RDS stores automated backups and manual snapshots.
Valid Values:
-
local
for Dedicated Local Zones -
region
for Amazon Web Services Region
Sourcepub fn allocated_storage(self, input: i32) -> Self
pub fn allocated_storage(self, input: i32) -> Self
The amount of storage (in gibibytes) to allocate initially for the read replica. Follow the allocation rules specified in CreateDBInstance
.
This setting isn't valid for RDS for SQL Server.
Be sure to allocate enough storage for your read replica so that the create operation can succeed. You can also allocate additional storage for future growth.
Sourcepub fn set_allocated_storage(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
pub fn set_allocated_storage(self, input: Option<i32>) -> Self
The amount of storage (in gibibytes) to allocate initially for the read replica. Follow the allocation rules specified in CreateDBInstance
.
This setting isn't valid for RDS for SQL Server.
Be sure to allocate enough storage for your read replica so that the create operation can succeed. You can also allocate additional storage for future growth.
Sourcepub fn get_allocated_storage(&self) -> &Option<i32>
pub fn get_allocated_storage(&self) -> &Option<i32>
The amount of storage (in gibibytes) to allocate initially for the read replica. Follow the allocation rules specified in CreateDBInstance
.
This setting isn't valid for RDS for SQL Server.
Be sure to allocate enough storage for your read replica so that the create operation can succeed. You can also allocate additional storage for future growth.
Sourcepub fn source_db_cluster_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn source_db_cluster_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the Multi-AZ DB cluster that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB cluster can have up to 15 read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Multi-AZ DB cluster.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
The specified DB cluster must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
The source DB cluster must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica. Cross-Region replication isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn set_source_db_cluster_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_source_db_cluster_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The identifier of the Multi-AZ DB cluster that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB cluster can have up to 15 read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Multi-AZ DB cluster.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
The specified DB cluster must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
The source DB cluster must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica. Cross-Region replication isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn get_source_db_cluster_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_source_db_cluster_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
The identifier of the Multi-AZ DB cluster that will act as the source for the read replica. Each DB cluster can have up to 15 read replicas.
Constraints:
-
Must be the identifier of an existing Multi-AZ DB cluster.
-
Can't be specified if the
SourceDBInstanceIdentifier
parameter is also specified. -
The specified DB cluster must have automatic backups enabled, that is, its backup retention period must be greater than 0.
-
The source DB cluster must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the read replica. Cross-Region replication isn't supported.
Sourcepub fn dedicated_log_volume(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn dedicated_log_volume(self, input: bool) -> Self
Indicates whether the DB instance has a dedicated log volume (DLV) enabled.
Sourcepub fn set_dedicated_log_volume(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_dedicated_log_volume(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Indicates whether the DB instance has a dedicated log volume (DLV) enabled.
Sourcepub fn get_dedicated_log_volume(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_dedicated_log_volume(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Indicates whether the DB instance has a dedicated log volume (DLV) enabled.
Sourcepub fn upgrade_storage_config(self, input: bool) -> Self
pub fn upgrade_storage_config(self, input: bool) -> Self
Whether to upgrade the storage file system configuration on the read replica. This option migrates the read replica from the old storage file system layout to the preferred layout.
Sourcepub fn set_upgrade_storage_config(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
pub fn set_upgrade_storage_config(self, input: Option<bool>) -> Self
Whether to upgrade the storage file system configuration on the read replica. This option migrates the read replica from the old storage file system layout to the preferred layout.
Sourcepub fn get_upgrade_storage_config(&self) -> &Option<bool>
pub fn get_upgrade_storage_config(&self) -> &Option<bool>
Whether to upgrade the storage file system configuration on the read replica. This option migrates the read replica from the old storage file system layout to the preferred layout.
Sourcepub fn ca_certificate_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
pub fn ca_certificate_identifier(self, input: impl Into<String>) -> Self
The CA certificate identifier to use for the read replica's server certificate.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
For more information, see Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
Sourcepub fn set_ca_certificate_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
pub fn set_ca_certificate_identifier(self, input: Option<String>) -> Self
The CA certificate identifier to use for the read replica's server certificate.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
For more information, see Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
Sourcepub fn get_ca_certificate_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
pub fn get_ca_certificate_identifier(&self) -> &Option<String>
The CA certificate identifier to use for the read replica's server certificate.
This setting doesn't apply to RDS Custom DB instances.
For more information, see Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB instance in the Amazon RDS User Guide and Using SSL/TLS to encrypt a connection to a DB cluster in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl Clone for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
Source§fn clone(&self) -> CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
fn clone(&self) -> CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
1.0.0 · Source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source
. Read moreAuto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl !RefUnwindSafe for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl Send for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl Sync for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl Unpin for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
impl !UnwindSafe for CreateDBInstanceReadReplicaFluentBuilder
Blanket Implementations§
Source§impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Source§fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Source§impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
Source§impl<T> Instrument for T
impl<T> Instrument for T
Source§fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§impl<T> IntoEither for T
impl<T> IntoEither for T
Source§fn into_either(self, into_left: bool) -> Either<Self, Self>
fn into_either(self, into_left: bool) -> Either<Self, Self>
self
into a Left
variant of Either<Self, Self>
if into_left
is true
.
Converts self
into a Right
variant of Either<Self, Self>
otherwise. Read moreSource§fn into_either_with<F>(self, into_left: F) -> Either<Self, Self>
fn into_either_with<F>(self, into_left: F) -> Either<Self, Self>
self
into a Left
variant of Either<Self, Self>
if into_left(&self)
returns true
.
Converts self
into a Right
variant of Either<Self, Self>
otherwise. Read moreSource§impl<T> Paint for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Paint for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Source§fn fg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
fn fg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
Returns a styled value derived from self
with the foreground set to
value
.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use color-specific
builder methods like red()
and
green()
, which have the same functionality but are
pithier.
§Example
Set foreground color to white using fg()
:
use yansi::{Paint, Color};
painted.fg(Color::White);
Set foreground color to white using white()
.
use yansi::Paint;
painted.white();
Source§fn bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn bg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
fn bg(&self, value: Color) -> Painted<&T>
Returns a styled value derived from self
with the background set to
value
.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use color-specific
builder methods like on_red()
and
on_green()
, which have the same functionality but
are pithier.
§Example
Set background color to red using fg()
:
use yansi::{Paint, Color};
painted.bg(Color::Red);
Set background color to red using on_red()
.
use yansi::Paint;
painted.on_red();
Source§fn on_primary(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_primary(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_black(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_red(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_blue(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_magenta(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_cyan(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn on_bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn on_bright_white(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn attr(&self, value: Attribute) -> Painted<&T>
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();
Source§fn rapid_blink(&self) -> Painted<&T>
fn rapid_blink(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Source§fn quirk(&self, value: Quirk) -> Painted<&T>
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();
Source§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.
fn clear(&self) -> Painted<&T>
resetting()
due to conflicts with Vec::clear()
.
The clear()
method will be removed in a future release.Source§fn whenever(&self, value: Condition) -> Painted<&T>
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);