aws-sdk-codedeploy 0.0.26-alpha

AWS SDK for AWS CodeDeploy
Documentation
#![allow(clippy::module_inception)]
#![allow(clippy::upper_case_acronyms)]
#![allow(clippy::large_enum_variant)]
#![allow(clippy::wrong_self_convention)]
#![allow(clippy::should_implement_trait)]
#![allow(clippy::blacklisted_name)]
#![allow(clippy::vec_init_then_push)]
#![allow(rustdoc::bare_urls)]
#![warn(missing_docs)]
//! <fullname>AWS CodeDeploy</fullname>
//! <p>AWS CodeDeploy is a deployment service that automates application deployments to
//! Amazon EC2 instances, on-premises instances running in your own facility, serverless AWS
//! Lambda functions, or applications in an Amazon ECS service.</p>
//! <p>You can deploy a nearly unlimited variety of application content, such as an updated
//! Lambda function, updated applications in an Amazon ECS service, code, web and
//! configuration files, executables, packages, scripts, multimedia files, and so on. AWS
//! CodeDeploy can deploy application content stored in Amazon S3 buckets, GitHub
//! repositories, or Bitbucket repositories. You do not need to make changes to your
//! existing code before you can use AWS CodeDeploy.</p>
//! <p>AWS CodeDeploy makes it easier for you to rapidly release new features, helps you
//! avoid downtime during application deployment, and handles the complexity of updating
//! your applications, without many of the risks associated with error-prone manual
//! deployments.</p>
//! <p>
//! <b>AWS CodeDeploy Components</b>
//! </p>
//! <p>Use the information in this guide to help you work with the following AWS CodeDeploy
//! components:</p>
//! <ul>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <b>Application</b>: A name that uniquely identifies
//! the application you want to deploy. AWS CodeDeploy uses this name, which
//! functions as a container, to ensure the correct combination of revision,
//! deployment configuration, and deployment group are referenced during a
//! deployment.</p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <b>Deployment group</b>: A set of individual
//! instances, CodeDeploy Lambda deployment configuration settings, or an Amazon ECS
//! service and network details. A Lambda deployment group specifies how to route
//! traffic to a new version of a Lambda function. An Amazon ECS deployment group
//! specifies the service created in Amazon ECS to deploy, a load balancer, and a
//! listener to reroute production traffic to an updated containerized application.
//! An EC2/On-premises deployment group contains individually tagged instances,
//! Amazon EC2 instances in Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling groups, or both. All deployment
//! groups can specify optional trigger, alarm, and rollback settings.</p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <b>Deployment configuration</b>: A set of deployment
//! rules and deployment success and failure conditions used by AWS CodeDeploy
//! during a deployment.</p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <b>Deployment</b>: The process and the components used
//! when updating a Lambda function, a containerized application in an Amazon ECS
//! service, or of installing content on one or more instances. </p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <b>Application revisions</b>: For an AWS Lambda
//! deployment, this is an AppSpec file that specifies the Lambda function to be
//! updated and one or more functions to validate deployment lifecycle events. For
//! an Amazon ECS deployment, this is an AppSpec file that specifies the Amazon ECS
//! task definition, container, and port where production traffic is rerouted. For
//! an EC2/On-premises deployment, this is an archive file that contains source
//! content—source code, webpages, executable files, and deployment scripts—along
//! with an AppSpec file. Revisions are stored in Amazon S3 buckets or GitHub
//! repositories. For Amazon S3, a revision is uniquely identified by its Amazon S3
//! object key and its ETag, version, or both. For GitHub, a revision is uniquely
//! identified by its commit ID.</p>
//! </li>
//! </ul>
//! <p>This guide also contains information to help you get details about the instances in
//! your deployments, to make on-premises instances available for AWS CodeDeploy
//! deployments, to get details about a Lambda function deployment, and to get details about
//! Amazon ECS service deployments.</p>
//! <p>
//! <b>AWS CodeDeploy Information Resources</b>
//! </p>
//! <ul>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/codedeploy/latest/userguide">AWS CodeDeploy
//! User Guide</a>
//! </p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/codedeploy/latest/APIReference/">AWS
//! CodeDeploy API Reference Guide</a>
//! </p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/deploy/index.html">AWS
//! CLI Reference for AWS CodeDeploy</a>
//! </p>
//! </li>
//! <li>
//! <p>
//! <a href="https://forums.aws.amazon.com/forum.jspa?forumID=179">AWS CodeDeploy
//! Developer Forum</a>
//! </p>
//! </li>
//! </ul>

// Code generated by software.amazon.smithy.rust.codegen.smithy-rs. DO NOT EDIT.
pub use error_meta::Error;

pub use config::Config;

mod aws_endpoint;
/// Client and fluent builders for calling the service.
#[cfg(feature = "client")]
pub mod client;
/// Configuration for the service.
pub mod config;
/// Errors that can occur when calling the service.
pub mod error;
mod error_meta;
/// Input structures for operations.
pub mod input;
mod json_deser;
mod json_errors;
mod json_ser;
/// Data structures used by operation inputs/outputs.
pub mod model;
mod no_credentials;
/// All operations that this crate can perform.
pub mod operation;
mod operation_deser;
mod operation_ser;
/// Output structures for operations.
pub mod output;
/// Crate version number.
pub static PKG_VERSION: &str = env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION");
pub use aws_smithy_http::byte_stream::ByteStream;
pub use aws_smithy_http::result::SdkError;
pub use aws_smithy_types::Blob;
pub use aws_smithy_types::DateTime;
static API_METADATA: aws_http::user_agent::ApiMetadata =
    aws_http::user_agent::ApiMetadata::new("codedeploy", PKG_VERSION);
pub use aws_smithy_http::endpoint::Endpoint;
pub use aws_smithy_types::retry::RetryConfig;
pub use aws_types::app_name::AppName;
pub use aws_types::region::Region;
pub use aws_types::Credentials;
#[cfg(feature = "client")]
pub use client::Client;