aws_sdk_resourcegroups/lib.rs
1#![allow(deprecated)]
2#![allow(unknown_lints)]
3#![allow(clippy::module_inception)]
4#![allow(clippy::upper_case_acronyms)]
5#![allow(clippy::large_enum_variant)]
6#![allow(clippy::wrong_self_convention)]
7#![allow(clippy::should_implement_trait)]
8#![allow(clippy::disallowed_names)]
9#![allow(clippy::vec_init_then_push)]
10#![allow(clippy::type_complexity)]
11#![allow(clippy::needless_return)]
12#![allow(clippy::derive_partial_eq_without_eq)]
13#![allow(clippy::result_large_err)]
14#![allow(clippy::unnecessary_map_on_constructor)]
15#![allow(clippy::useless_conversion)]
16#![allow(clippy::deprecated_semver)]
17#![allow(rustdoc::bare_urls)]
18#![allow(rustdoc::redundant_explicit_links)]
19#![allow(rustdoc::broken_intra_doc_links)]
20#![allow(rustdoc::invalid_html_tags)]
21#![forbid(unsafe_code)]
22#![warn(missing_docs)]
23#![cfg_attr(docsrs, feature(doc_cfg))]
24//! Resource Groups lets you organize Amazon Web Services resources such as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instances, Amazon Relational Database Service databases, and Amazon Simple Storage Service buckets into groups using criteria that you define as tags. A resource group is a collection of resources that match the resource types specified in a query, and share one or more tags or portions of tags. You can create a group of resources based on their roles in your cloud infrastructure, lifecycle stages, regions, application layers, or virtually any criteria. Resource Groups enable you to automate management tasks, such as those in Amazon Web Services Systems Manager Automation documents, on tag-related resources in Amazon Web Services Systems Manager. Groups of tagged resources also let you quickly view a custom console in Amazon Web Services Systems Manager that shows Config compliance and other monitoring data about member resources.
25//!
26//! To create a resource group, build a resource query, and specify tags that identify the criteria that members of the group have in common. Tags are key-value pairs.
27//!
28//! For more information about Resource Groups, see the [Resource Groups User Guide](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ARG/latest/userguide/welcome.html).
29//!
30//! Resource Groups uses a REST-compliant API that you can use to perform the following types of operations.
31//! - Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) operations on resource groups and resource query entities
32//! - Applying, editing, and removing tags from resource groups
33//! - Resolving resource group member Amazon resource names (ARN)s so they can be returned as search results
34//! - Getting data about resources that are members of a group
35//! - Searching Amazon Web Services resources based on a resource query
36//!
37//! ## Getting Started
38//!
39//! > Examples are available for many services and operations, check out the
40//! > [usage examples](https://github.com/awsdocs/aws-doc-sdk-examples/tree/main/rustv1).
41//!
42//! The SDK provides one crate per AWS service. You must add [Tokio](https://crates.io/crates/tokio)
43//! as a dependency within your Rust project to execute asynchronous code. To add `aws-sdk-resourcegroups` to
44//! your project, add the following to your **Cargo.toml** file:
45//!
46//! ```toml
47//! [dependencies]
48//! aws-config = { version = "1.1.7", features = ["behavior-version-latest"] }
49//! aws-sdk-resourcegroups = "1.98.0"
50//! tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }
51//! ```
52//!
53//! Then in code, a client can be created with the following:
54//!
55//! ```rust,no_run
56//! use aws_sdk_resourcegroups as resourcegroups;
57//!
58//! #[::tokio::main]
59//! async fn main() -> Result<(), resourcegroups::Error> {
60//! let config = aws_config::load_from_env().await;
61//! let client = aws_sdk_resourcegroups::Client::new(&config);
62//!
63//! // ... make some calls with the client
64//!
65//! Ok(())
66//! }
67//! ```
68//!
69//! See the [client documentation](https://docs.rs/aws-sdk-resourcegroups/latest/aws_sdk_resourcegroups/client/struct.Client.html)
70//! for information on what calls can be made, and the inputs and outputs for each of those calls.
71//!
72//! ## Using the SDK
73//!
74//! Until the SDK is released, we will be adding information about using the SDK to the
75//! [Developer Guide](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-rust/latest/dg/welcome.html). Feel free to suggest
76//! additional sections for the guide by opening an issue and describing what you are trying to do.
77//!
78//! ## Getting Help
79//!
80//! * [GitHub discussions](https://github.com/awslabs/aws-sdk-rust/discussions) - For ideas, RFCs & general questions
81//! * [GitHub issues](https://github.com/awslabs/aws-sdk-rust/issues/new/choose) - For bug reports & feature requests
82//! * [Generated Docs (latest version)](https://awslabs.github.io/aws-sdk-rust/)
83//! * [Usage examples](https://github.com/awsdocs/aws-doc-sdk-examples/tree/main/rustv1)
84//!
85//!
86//! # Crate Organization
87//!
88//! The entry point for most customers will be [`Client`], which exposes one method for each API
89//! offered by AWS Resource Groups. The return value of each of these methods is a "fluent builder",
90//! where the different inputs for that API are added by builder-style function call chaining,
91//! followed by calling `send()` to get a [`Future`](std::future::Future) that will result in
92//! either a successful output or a [`SdkError`](crate::error::SdkError).
93//!
94//! Some of these API inputs may be structs or enums to provide more complex structured information.
95//! These structs and enums live in [`types`](crate::types). There are some simpler types for
96//! representing data such as date times or binary blobs that live in [`primitives`](crate::primitives).
97//!
98//! All types required to configure a client via the [`Config`](crate::Config) struct live
99//! in [`config`](crate::config).
100//!
101//! The [`operation`](crate::operation) module has a submodule for every API, and in each submodule
102//! is the input, output, and error type for that API, as well as builders to construct each of those.
103//!
104//! There is a top-level [`Error`](crate::Error) type that encompasses all the errors that the
105//! client can return. Any other error type can be converted to this `Error` type via the
106//! [`From`](std::convert::From) trait.
107//!
108//! The other modules within this crate are not required for normal usage.
109
110// Code generated by software.amazon.smithy.rust.codegen.smithy-rs. DO NOT EDIT.
111pub use error_meta::Error;
112
113#[doc(inline)]
114pub use config::Config;
115
116/// Client for calling AWS Resource Groups.
117/// ## Constructing a `Client`
118///
119/// A [`Config`] is required to construct a client. For most use cases, the [`aws-config`]
120/// crate should be used to automatically resolve this config using
121/// [`aws_config::load_from_env()`], since this will resolve an [`SdkConfig`] which can be shared
122/// across multiple different AWS SDK clients. This config resolution process can be customized
123/// by calling [`aws_config::from_env()`] instead, which returns a [`ConfigLoader`] that uses
124/// the [builder pattern] to customize the default config.
125///
126/// In the simplest case, creating a client looks as follows:
127/// ```rust,no_run
128/// # async fn wrapper() {
129/// let config = aws_config::load_from_env().await;
130/// let client = aws_sdk_resourcegroups::Client::new(&config);
131/// # }
132/// ```
133///
134/// Occasionally, SDKs may have additional service-specific values that can be set on the [`Config`] that
135/// is absent from [`SdkConfig`], or slightly different settings for a specific client may be desired.
136/// The [`Builder`](crate::config::Builder) struct implements `From<&SdkConfig>`, so setting these specific settings can be
137/// done as follows:
138///
139/// ```rust,no_run
140/// # async fn wrapper() {
141/// let sdk_config = ::aws_config::load_from_env().await;
142/// let config = aws_sdk_resourcegroups::config::Builder::from(&sdk_config)
143/// # /*
144/// .some_service_specific_setting("value")
145/// # */
146/// .build();
147/// # }
148/// ```
149///
150/// See the [`aws-config` docs] and [`Config`] for more information on customizing configuration.
151///
152/// _Note:_ Client construction is expensive due to connection thread pool initialization, and should
153/// be done once at application start-up.
154///
155/// [`Config`]: crate::Config
156/// [`ConfigLoader`]: https://docs.rs/aws-config/*/aws_config/struct.ConfigLoader.html
157/// [`SdkConfig`]: https://docs.rs/aws-config/*/aws_config/struct.SdkConfig.html
158/// [`aws-config` docs]: https://docs.rs/aws-config/*
159/// [`aws-config`]: https://crates.io/crates/aws-config
160/// [`aws_config::from_env()`]: https://docs.rs/aws-config/*/aws_config/fn.from_env.html
161/// [`aws_config::load_from_env()`]: https://docs.rs/aws-config/*/aws_config/fn.load_from_env.html
162/// [builder pattern]: https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines/type-safety.html#builders-enable-construction-of-complex-values-c-builder
163/// # Using the `Client`
164///
165/// A client has a function for every operation that can be performed by the service.
166/// For example, the [`CancelTagSyncTask`](crate::operation::cancel_tag_sync_task) operation has
167/// a [`Client::cancel_tag_sync_task`], function which returns a builder for that operation.
168/// The fluent builder ultimately has a `send()` function that returns an async future that
169/// returns a result, as illustrated below:
170///
171/// ```rust,ignore
172/// let result = client.cancel_tag_sync_task()
173/// .task_arn("example")
174/// .send()
175/// .await;
176/// ```
177///
178/// The underlying HTTP requests that get made by this can be modified with the `customize_operation`
179/// function on the fluent builder. See the [`customize`](crate::client::customize) module for more
180/// information.
181pub mod client;
182
183/// Configuration for AWS Resource Groups.
184pub mod config;
185
186/// Common errors and error handling utilities.
187pub mod error;
188
189mod error_meta;
190
191/// Information about this crate.
192pub mod meta;
193
194/// All operations that this crate can perform.
195pub mod operation;
196
197/// Primitives such as `Blob` or `DateTime` used by other types.
198pub mod primitives;
199
200/// Data structures used by operation inputs/outputs.
201pub mod types;
202
203mod observability_feature;
204
205pub(crate) mod protocol_serde;
206
207mod sdk_feature_tracker;
208
209mod serialization_settings;
210
211mod endpoint_lib;
212
213mod lens;
214
215mod json_errors;
216
217mod serde_util;
218
219#[doc(inline)]
220pub use client::Client;