Struct aws_sdk_swf::client::fluent_builders::RequestCancelWorkflowExecution [−][src]
pub struct RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C = DynConnector, M = AwsMiddleware, R = Standard> { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
Fluent builder constructing a request to RequestCancelWorkflowExecution
.
Records a WorkflowExecutionCancelRequested
event in the currently running
workflow execution identified by the given domain, workflowId, and runId. This logically
requests the cancellation of the workflow execution as a whole. It is up to the decider to
take appropriate actions when it receives an execution history with this event.
If the runId isn't specified, the WorkflowExecutionCancelRequested
event
is recorded in the history of the current open workflow execution with the specified
workflowId in the domain.
Because this action allows the workflow to properly clean up and gracefully close, it should be used instead of TerminateWorkflowExecution when possible.
Access Control
You can use IAM policies to control this action's access to Amazon SWF resources as follows:
-
Use a
Resource
element with the domain name to limit the action to only specified domains. -
Use an
Action
element to allow or deny permission to call this action. -
You cannot use an IAM policy to constrain this action's parameters.
If the caller doesn't have sufficient permissions to invoke the action, or the
parameter values fall outside the specified constraints, the action fails. The associated
event attribute's cause
parameter is set to OPERATION_NOT_PERMITTED
.
For details and example IAM policies, see Using IAM to Manage Access to Amazon SWF
Workflows in the Amazon SWF Developer Guide.
Implementations
impl<C, M, R> RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R> where
C: SmithyConnector,
M: SmithyMiddleware<C>,
R: NewRequestPolicy,
impl<C, M, R> RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R> where
C: SmithyConnector,
M: SmithyMiddleware<C>,
R: NewRequestPolicy,
pub async fn send(
self
) -> Result<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionOutput, SdkError<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionError>> where
R::Policy: SmithyRetryPolicy<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionInputOperationOutputAlias, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionOutput, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionError, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionInputOperationRetryAlias>,
pub async fn send(
self
) -> Result<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionOutput, SdkError<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionError>> where
R::Policy: SmithyRetryPolicy<RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionInputOperationOutputAlias, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionOutput, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionError, RequestCancelWorkflowExecutionInputOperationRetryAlias>,
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.
The name of the domain containing the workflow execution to cancel.
The name of the domain containing the workflow execution to cancel.
The workflowId of the workflow execution to cancel.
The workflowId of the workflow execution to cancel.
The runId of the workflow execution to cancel.
The runId of the workflow execution to cancel.
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<C = DynConnector, M = AwsMiddleware, R = Standard> !RefUnwindSafe for RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R>
impl<C, M, R> Send for RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R> where
C: Send + Sync,
M: Send + Sync,
R: Send + Sync,
impl<C, M, R> Sync for RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R> where
C: Send + Sync,
M: Send + Sync,
R: Send + Sync,
impl<C, M, R> Unpin for RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R>
impl<C = DynConnector, M = AwsMiddleware, R = Standard> !UnwindSafe for RequestCancelWorkflowExecution<C, M, R>
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Attaches the provided Subscriber
to this type, returning a
WithDispatch
wrapper. Read more
Attaches the current default Subscriber
to this type, returning a
WithDispatch
wrapper. Read more