Expand description

With Amazon CloudWatch RUM, you can perform real-user monitoring to collect client-side data about your web application performance from actual user sessions in real time. The data collected includes page load times, client-side errors, and user behavior. When you view this data, you can see it all aggregated together and also see breakdowns by the browsers and devices that your customers use.

You can use the collected data to quickly identify and debug client-side performance issues. CloudWatch RUM helps you visualize anomalies in your application performance and find relevant debugging data such as error messages, stack traces, and user sessions. You can also use RUM to understand the range of end-user impact including the number of users, geolocations, and browsers used.

Crate Organization

The entry point for most customers will be Client. Client exposes one method for each API offered by the service.

Some APIs require complex or nested arguments. These exist in model.

Lastly, errors that can be returned by the service are contained within error. Error defines a meta error encompassing all possible errors that can be returned by the service.

The other modules within this crate are not required for normal usage.

Re-exports

pub use config::Config;
pub use client::Client;

Modules

Client and fluent builders for calling the service.

Configuration for the service.

Errors that can occur when calling the service.

Input structures for operations.

Base Middleware Stack

Data structures used by operation inputs/outputs.

All operations that this crate can perform.

Output structures for operations.

Paginators for the service

Structs

App name that can be configured with an AWS SDK client to become part of the user agent string.

Binary Blob Type

Stream of binary data

AWS SDK Credentials

DateTime in time.

API Endpoint

The region to send requests to.

Retry configuration for requests.

Enums

All possible error types for this service.

Failed SDK Result

Statics

Crate version number.