diff --git a/CHANGELOG.md b/CHANGELOG.md
index 0e4026db756..55dfd079581 100644
--- a/CHANGELOG.md
+++ b/CHANGELOG.md
@@ -1,3 +1,14 @@
+Release v1.44.182 (2023-01-18)
+===
+
+### Service Client Updates
+* `service/elasticfilesystem`: Updates service documentation
+ * Documentation updates for EFS access points limit increase
+* `service/ivschat`: Updates service API
+* `service/monitoring`: Updates service API and documentation
+ * Enable cross-account streams in CloudWatch Metric Streams via Observability Access Manager.
+* `service/wafv2`: Updates service documentation
+
Release v1.44.181 (2023-01-17)
===
diff --git a/aws/endpoints/defaults.go b/aws/endpoints/defaults.go
index 0d8ae0a7247..ab3cf01b09e 100644
--- a/aws/endpoints/defaults.go
+++ b/aws/endpoints/defaults.go
@@ -23205,6 +23205,9 @@ var awsPartition = partition{
},
Deprecated: boxedTrue,
},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "me-central-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
endpointKey{
Region: "me-south-1",
}: endpoint{},
@@ -24834,12 +24837,72 @@ var awsPartition = partition{
},
"ssm-sap": service{
Endpoints: serviceEndpoints{
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "af-south-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-east-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-northeast-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-northeast-2",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-northeast-3",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-south-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-southeast-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
endpointKey{
Region: "ap-southeast-2",
}: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ap-southeast-3",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "ca-central-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-central-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-north-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-south-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-west-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-west-2",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "eu-west-3",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "me-south-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "sa-east-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
endpointKey{
Region: "us-east-1",
}: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "us-east-2",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "us-west-1",
+ }: endpoint{},
+ endpointKey{
+ Region: "us-west-2",
+ }: endpoint{},
},
},
"sso": service{
diff --git a/aws/version.go b/aws/version.go
index 8266fc4edd6..a41cd23a3d6 100644
--- a/aws/version.go
+++ b/aws/version.go
@@ -5,4 +5,4 @@ package aws
const SDKName = "aws-sdk-go"
// SDKVersion is the version of this SDK
-const SDKVersion = "1.44.181"
+const SDKVersion = "1.44.182"
diff --git a/models/apis/elasticfilesystem/2015-02-01/docs-2.json b/models/apis/elasticfilesystem/2015-02-01/docs-2.json
index aa531969903..bd81a37f110 100644
--- a/models/apis/elasticfilesystem/2015-02-01/docs-2.json
+++ b/models/apis/elasticfilesystem/2015-02-01/docs-2.json
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
"version": "2.0",
"service": "
Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) provides simple, scalable file storage for use with Amazon EC2 Linux and Mac instances in the Amazon Web Services Cloud. With Amazon EFS, storage capacity is elastic, growing and shrinking automatically as you add and remove files, so that your applications have the storage they need, when they need it. For more information, see the Amazon Elastic File System API Reference and the Amazon Elastic File System User Guide.
", "operations": { - "CreateAccessPoint": "Creates an EFS access point. An access point is an application-specific view into an EFS file system that applies an operating system user and group, and a file system path, to any file system request made through the access point. The operating system user and group override any identity information provided by the NFS client. The file system path is exposed as the access point's root directory. Applications using the access point can only access data in the application's own directory and any subdirectories. To learn more, see Mounting a file system using EFS access points.
If multiple requests to create access points on the same file system are sent in quick succession, and the file system is near the limit of 120 access points, you may experience a throttling response for these requests. This is to ensure that the file system does not exceed the stated access point limit.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:CreateAccessPoint
action.
Creates an EFS access point. An access point is an application-specific view into an EFS file system that applies an operating system user and group, and a file system path, to any file system request made through the access point. The operating system user and group override any identity information provided by the NFS client. The file system path is exposed as the access point's root directory. Applications using the access point can only access data in the application's own directory and any subdirectories. To learn more, see Mounting a file system using EFS access points.
If multiple requests to create access points on the same file system are sent in quick succession, and the file system is near the limit of 1000 access points, you may experience a throttling response for these requests. This is to ensure that the file system does not exceed the stated access point limit.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:CreateAccessPoint
action.
Creates a new, empty file system. The operation requires a creation token in the request that Amazon EFS uses to ensure idempotent creation (calling the operation with same creation token has no effect). If a file system does not currently exist that is owned by the caller's Amazon Web Services account with the specified creation token, this operation does the following:
Creates a new, empty file system. The file system will have an Amazon EFS assigned ID, and an initial lifecycle state creating
.
Returns with the description of the created file system.
Otherwise, this operation returns a FileSystemAlreadyExists
error with the ID of the existing file system.
For basic use cases, you can use a randomly generated UUID for the creation token.
The idempotent operation allows you to retry a CreateFileSystem
call without risk of creating an extra file system. This can happen when an initial call fails in a way that leaves it uncertain whether or not a file system was actually created. An example might be that a transport level timeout occurred or your connection was reset. As long as you use the same creation token, if the initial call had succeeded in creating a file system, the client can learn of its existence from the FileSystemAlreadyExists
error.
For more information, see Creating a file system in the Amazon EFS User Guide.
The CreateFileSystem
call returns while the file system's lifecycle state is still creating
. You can check the file system creation status by calling the DescribeFileSystems operation, which among other things returns the file system state.
This operation accepts an optional PerformanceMode
parameter that you choose for your file system. We recommend generalPurpose
performance mode for most file systems. File systems using the maxIO
performance mode can scale to higher levels of aggregate throughput and operations per second with a tradeoff of slightly higher latencies for most file operations. The performance mode can't be changed after the file system has been created. For more information, see Amazon EFS performance modes.
You can set the throughput mode for the file system using the ThroughputMode
parameter.
After the file system is fully created, Amazon EFS sets its lifecycle state to available
, at which point you can create one or more mount targets for the file system in your VPC. For more information, see CreateMountTarget. You mount your Amazon EFS file system on an EC2 instances in your VPC by using the mount target. For more information, see Amazon EFS: How it Works.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:CreateFileSystem
action.
Creates a mount target for a file system. You can then mount the file system on EC2 instances by using the mount target.
You can create one mount target in each Availability Zone in your VPC. All EC2 instances in a VPC within a given Availability Zone share a single mount target for a given file system. If you have multiple subnets in an Availability Zone, you create a mount target in one of the subnets. EC2 instances do not need to be in the same subnet as the mount target in order to access their file system.
You can create only one mount target for an EFS file system using One Zone storage classes. You must create that mount target in the same Availability Zone in which the file system is located. Use the AvailabilityZoneName
and AvailabiltyZoneId
properties in the DescribeFileSystems response object to get this information. Use the subnetId
associated with the file system's Availability Zone when creating the mount target.
For more information, see Amazon EFS: How it Works.
To create a mount target for a file system, the file system's lifecycle state must be available
. For more information, see DescribeFileSystems.
In the request, provide the following:
The file system ID for which you are creating the mount target.
A subnet ID, which determines the following:
The VPC in which Amazon EFS creates the mount target
The Availability Zone in which Amazon EFS creates the mount target
The IP address range from which Amazon EFS selects the IP address of the mount target (if you don't specify an IP address in the request)
After creating the mount target, Amazon EFS returns a response that includes, a MountTargetId
and an IpAddress
. You use this IP address when mounting the file system in an EC2 instance. You can also use the mount target's DNS name when mounting the file system. The EC2 instance on which you mount the file system by using the mount target can resolve the mount target's DNS name to its IP address. For more information, see How it Works: Implementation Overview.
Note that you can create mount targets for a file system in only one VPC, and there can be only one mount target per Availability Zone. That is, if the file system already has one or more mount targets created for it, the subnet specified in the request to add another mount target must meet the following requirements:
Must belong to the same VPC as the subnets of the existing mount targets
Must not be in the same Availability Zone as any of the subnets of the existing mount targets
If the request satisfies the requirements, Amazon EFS does the following:
Creates a new mount target in the specified subnet.
Also creates a new network interface in the subnet as follows:
If the request provides an IpAddress
, Amazon EFS assigns that IP address to the network interface. Otherwise, Amazon EFS assigns a free address in the subnet (in the same way that the Amazon EC2 CreateNetworkInterface
call does when a request does not specify a primary private IP address).
If the request provides SecurityGroups
, this network interface is associated with those security groups. Otherwise, it belongs to the default security group for the subnet's VPC.
Assigns the description Mount target fsmt-id for file system fs-id
where fsmt-id
is the mount target ID, and fs-id
is the FileSystemId
.
Sets the requesterManaged
property of the network interface to true
, and the requesterId
value to EFS
.
Each Amazon EFS mount target has one corresponding requester-managed EC2 network interface. After the network interface is created, Amazon EFS sets the NetworkInterfaceId
field in the mount target's description to the network interface ID, and the IpAddress
field to its address. If network interface creation fails, the entire CreateMountTarget
operation fails.
The CreateMountTarget
call returns only after creating the network interface, but while the mount target state is still creating
, you can check the mount target creation status by calling the DescribeMountTargets operation, which among other things returns the mount target state.
We recommend that you create a mount target in each of the Availability Zones. There are cost considerations for using a file system in an Availability Zone through a mount target created in another Availability Zone. For more information, see Amazon EFS. In addition, by always using a mount target local to the instance's Availability Zone, you eliminate a partial failure scenario. If the Availability Zone in which your mount target is created goes down, then you can't access your file system through that mount target.
This operation requires permissions for the following action on the file system:
elasticfilesystem:CreateMountTarget
This operation also requires permissions for the following Amazon EC2 actions:
ec2:DescribeSubnets
ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces
ec2:CreateNetworkInterface
Creates a replication configuration that replicates an existing EFS file system to a new, read-only file system. For more information, see Amazon EFS replication in the Amazon EFS User Guide. The replication configuration specifies the following:
Source file system - An existing EFS file system that you want replicated. The source file system cannot be a destination file system in an existing replication configuration.
Destination file system configuration - The configuration of the destination file system to which the source file system will be replicated. There can only be one destination file system in a replication configuration. The destination file system configuration consists of the following properties:
Amazon Web Services Region - The Amazon Web Services Region in which the destination file system is created. Amazon EFS replication is available in all Amazon Web Services Regions that Amazon EFS is available in, except Africa (Cape Town), Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Jakarta), Europe (Milan), and Middle East (Bahrain).
Availability Zone - If you want the destination file system to use EFS One Zone availability and durability, you must specify the Availability Zone to create the file system in. For more information about EFS storage classes, see Amazon EFS storage classes in the Amazon EFS User Guide.
Encryption - All destination file systems are created with encryption at rest enabled. You can specify the Key Management Service (KMS) key that is used to encrypt the destination file system. If you don't specify a KMS key, your service-managed KMS key for Amazon EFS is used.
After the file system is created, you cannot change the KMS key.
The following properties are set by default:
Performance mode - The destination file system's performance mode matches that of the source file system, unless the destination file system uses EFS One Zone storage. In that case, the General Purpose performance mode is used. The performance mode cannot be changed.
Throughput mode - The destination file system uses the Bursting Throughput mode by default. After the file system is created, you can modify the throughput mode.
The following properties are turned off by default:
Lifecycle management - EFS lifecycle management and EFS Intelligent-Tiering are not enabled on the destination file system. After the destination file system is created, you can enable EFS lifecycle management and EFS Intelligent-Tiering.
Automatic backups - Automatic daily backups not enabled on the destination file system. After the file system is created, you can change this setting.
For more information, see Amazon EFS replication in the Amazon EFS User Guide.
", @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ "DescribeAccountPreferences": "Returns the account preferences settings for the Amazon Web Services account associated with the user making the request, in the current Amazon Web Services Region. For more information, see Managing Amazon EFS resource IDs.
", "DescribeBackupPolicy": "Returns the backup policy for the specified EFS file system.
", "DescribeFileSystemPolicy": "Returns the FileSystemPolicy
for the specified EFS file system.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:DescribeFileSystemPolicy
action.
Returns the description of a specific Amazon EFS file system if either the file system CreationToken
or the FileSystemId
is provided. Otherwise, it returns descriptions of all file systems owned by the caller's Amazon Web Services account in the Amazon Web Services Region of the endpoint that you're calling.
When retrieving all file system descriptions, you can optionally specify the MaxItems
parameter to limit the number of descriptions in a response. Currently, this number is automatically set to 10. If more file system descriptions remain, Amazon EFS returns a NextMarker
, an opaque token, in the response. In this case, you should send a subsequent request with the Marker
request parameter set to the value of NextMarker
.
To retrieve a list of your file system descriptions, this operation is used in an iterative process, where DescribeFileSystems
is called first without the Marker
and then the operation continues to call it with the Marker
parameter set to the value of the NextMarker
from the previous response until the response has no NextMarker
.
The order of file systems returned in the response of one DescribeFileSystems
call and the order of file systems returned across the responses of a multi-call iteration is unspecified.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:DescribeFileSystems
action.
Returns the description of a specific Amazon EFS file system if either the file system CreationToken
or the FileSystemId
is provided. Otherwise, it returns descriptions of all file systems owned by the caller's Amazon Web Services account in the Amazon Web Services Region of the endpoint that you're calling.
When retrieving all file system descriptions, you can optionally specify the MaxItems
parameter to limit the number of descriptions in a response. This number is automatically set to 100. If more file system descriptions remain, Amazon EFS returns a NextMarker
, an opaque token, in the response. In this case, you should send a subsequent request with the Marker
request parameter set to the value of NextMarker
.
To retrieve a list of your file system descriptions, this operation is used in an iterative process, where DescribeFileSystems
is called first without the Marker
and then the operation continues to call it with the Marker
parameter set to the value of the NextMarker
from the previous response until the response has no NextMarker
.
The order of file systems returned in the response of one DescribeFileSystems
call and the order of file systems returned across the responses of a multi-call iteration is unspecified.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:DescribeFileSystems
action.
Returns the current LifecycleConfiguration
object for the specified Amazon EFS file system. EFS lifecycle management uses the LifecycleConfiguration
object to identify which files to move to the EFS Infrequent Access (IA) storage class. For a file system without a LifecycleConfiguration
object, the call returns an empty array in the response.
When EFS Intelligent-Tiering is enabled, TransitionToPrimaryStorageClass
has a value of AFTER_1_ACCESS
.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:DescribeLifecycleConfiguration
operation.
Returns the security groups currently in effect for a mount target. This operation requires that the network interface of the mount target has been created and the lifecycle state of the mount target is not deleted
.
This operation requires permissions for the following actions:
elasticfilesystem:DescribeMountTargetSecurityGroups
action on the mount target's file system.
ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute
action on the mount target's network interface.
Returns the descriptions of all the current mount targets, or a specific mount target, for a file system. When requesting all of the current mount targets, the order of mount targets returned in the response is unspecified.
This operation requires permissions for the elasticfilesystem:DescribeMountTargets
action, on either the file system ID that you specify in FileSystemId
, or on the file system of the mount target that you specify in MountTargetId
.
Creates a managed Contributor Insights rule for a specified Amazon Web Services resource. When you enable a managed rule, you create a Contributor Insights rule that collects data from Amazon Web Services services. You cannot edit these rules with PutInsightRule
. The rules can be enabled, disabled, and deleted using EnableInsightRules
, DisableInsightRules
, and DeleteInsightRules
. If a previously created managed rule is currently disabled, a subsequent call to this API will re-enable it. Use ListManagedInsightRules
to describe all available rules.
Creates or updates an alarm and associates it with the specified metric, metric math expression, anomaly detection model, or Metrics Insights query. For more information about using a Metrics Insights query for an alarm, see Create alarms on Metrics Insights queries.
Alarms based on anomaly detection models cannot have Auto Scaling actions.
When this operation creates an alarm, the alarm state is immediately set to INSUFFICIENT_DATA
. The alarm is then evaluated and its state is set appropriately. Any actions associated with the new state are then executed.
When you update an existing alarm, its state is left unchanged, but the update completely overwrites the previous configuration of the alarm.
If you are an IAM user, you must have Amazon EC2 permissions for some alarm operations:
The iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole
for all alarms with EC2 actions
The iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole
to create an alarm with Systems Manager OpsItem actions.
The first time you create an alarm in the Amazon Web Services Management Console, the CLI, or by using the PutMetricAlarm API, CloudWatch creates the necessary service-linked role for you. The service-linked roles are called AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchEvents
and AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchAlarms_ActionSSM
. For more information, see Amazon Web Services service-linked role.
Cross-account alarms
You can set an alarm on metrics in the current account, or in another account. To create a cross-account alarm that watches a metric in a different account, you must have completed the following pre-requisites:
The account where the metrics are located (the sharing account) must already have a sharing role named CloudWatch-CrossAccountSharingRole. If it does not already have this role, you must create it using the instructions in Set up a sharing account in Cross-account cross-Region CloudWatch console. The policy for that role must grant access to the ID of the account where you are creating the alarm.
The account where you are creating the alarm (the monitoring account) must already have a service-linked role named AWSServiceRoleForCloudWatchCrossAccount to allow CloudWatch to assume the sharing role in the sharing account. If it does not, you must create it following the directions in Set up a monitoring account in Cross-account cross-Region CloudWatch console.
Publishes metric data points to Amazon CloudWatch. CloudWatch associates the data points with the specified metric. If the specified metric does not exist, CloudWatch creates the metric. When CloudWatch creates a metric, it can take up to fifteen minutes for the metric to appear in calls to ListMetrics.
You can publish either individual data points in the Value
field, or arrays of values and the number of times each value occurred during the period by using the Values
and Counts
fields in the MetricDatum
structure. Using the Values
and Counts
method enables you to publish up to 150 values per metric with one PutMetricData
request, and supports retrieving percentile statistics on this data.
Each PutMetricData
request is limited to 1 MB in size for HTTP POST requests. You can send a payload compressed by gzip. Each request is also limited to no more than 1000 different metrics.
Although the Value
parameter accepts numbers of type Double
, CloudWatch rejects values that are either too small or too large. Values must be in the range of -2^360 to 2^360. In addition, special values (for example, NaN, +Infinity, -Infinity) are not supported.
You can use up to 30 dimensions per metric to further clarify what data the metric collects. Each dimension consists of a Name and Value pair. For more information about specifying dimensions, see Publishing Metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
You specify the time stamp to be associated with each data point. You can specify time stamps that are as much as two weeks before the current date, and as much as 2 hours after the current day and time.
Data points with time stamps from 24 hours ago or longer can take at least 48 hours to become available for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics from the time they are submitted. Data points with time stamps between 3 and 24 hours ago can take as much as 2 hours to become available for for GetMetricData or GetMetricStatistics.
CloudWatch needs raw data points to calculate percentile statistics. If you publish data using a statistic set instead, you can only retrieve percentile statistics for this data if one of the following conditions is true:
The SampleCount
value of the statistic set is 1 and Min
, Max
, and Sum
are all equal.
The Min
and Max
are equal, and Sum
is equal to Min
multiplied by SampleCount
.
Creates or updates a metric stream. Metric streams can automatically stream CloudWatch metrics to Amazon Web Services destinations, including Amazon S3, and to many third-party solutions.
For more information, see Using Metric Streams.
To create a metric stream, you must be signed in to an account that has the iam:PassRole
permission and either the CloudWatchFullAccess
policy or the cloudwatch:PutMetricStream
permission.
When you create or update a metric stream, you choose one of the following:
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account.
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account, except for the namespaces that you list in ExcludeFilters
.
Stream metrics from only the metric namespaces that you list in IncludeFilters
.
By default, a metric stream always sends the MAX
, MIN
, SUM
, and SAMPLECOUNT
statistics for each metric that is streamed. You can use the StatisticsConfigurations
parameter to have the metric stream send additional statistics in the stream. Streaming additional statistics incurs additional costs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
When you use PutMetricStream
to create a new metric stream, the stream is created in the running
state. If you use it to update an existing stream, the state of the stream is not changed.
Creates or updates a metric stream. Metric streams can automatically stream CloudWatch metrics to Amazon Web Services destinations, including Amazon S3, and to many third-party solutions.
For more information, see Using Metric Streams.
To create a metric stream, you must be signed in to an account that has the iam:PassRole
permission and either the CloudWatchFullAccess
policy or the cloudwatch:PutMetricStream
permission.
When you create or update a metric stream, you choose one of the following:
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account.
Stream metrics from all metric namespaces in the account, except for the namespaces that you list in ExcludeFilters
.
Stream metrics from only the metric namespaces that you list in IncludeFilters
.
By default, a metric stream always sends the MAX
, MIN
, SUM
, and SAMPLECOUNT
statistics for each metric that is streamed. You can use the StatisticsConfigurations
parameter to have the metric stream send additional statistics in the stream. Streaming additional statistics incurs additional costs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
When you use PutMetricStream
to create a new metric stream, the stream is created in the running
state. If you use it to update an existing stream, the state of the stream is not changed.
If you are using CloudWatch cross-account observability and you create a metric stream in a monitoring account, you can choose whether to include metrics from source accounts in the stream. For more information, see CloudWatch cross-account observability.
", "SetAlarmState": "Temporarily sets the state of an alarm for testing purposes. When the updated state differs from the previous value, the action configured for the appropriate state is invoked. For example, if your alarm is configured to send an Amazon SNS message when an alarm is triggered, temporarily changing the alarm state to ALARM
sends an SNS message.
Metric alarms returns to their actual state quickly, often within seconds. Because the metric alarm state change happens quickly, it is typically only visible in the alarm's History tab in the Amazon CloudWatch console or through DescribeAlarmHistory.
If you use SetAlarmState
on a composite alarm, the composite alarm is not guaranteed to return to its actual state. It returns to its actual state only once any of its children alarms change state. It is also reevaluated if you update its configuration.
If an alarm triggers EC2 Auto Scaling policies or application Auto Scaling policies, you must include information in the StateReasonData
parameter to enable the policy to take the correct action.
Starts the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
", "StopMetricStreams": "Stops the streaming of metrics for one or more of your metric streams.
", @@ -761,6 +761,13 @@ "ListMetricsInput$IncludeLinkedAccounts": "If you are using this operation in a monitoring account, specify true
to include metrics from source accounts in the returned data.
The default is false
.
If this is true
and this metric stream is in a monitoring account, then the stream includes metrics from source accounts that the monitoring account is linked to.
If you are creating a metric stream in a monitoring account, specify true
to include metrics from source accounts in the metric stream.
This structure contains the definition for a Contributor Insights rule. For more information about this rule, see Using Constributor Insights to analyze high-cardinality data in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
", "refs": { diff --git a/models/apis/monitoring/2010-08-01/endpoint-tests-1.json b/models/apis/monitoring/2010-08-01/endpoint-tests-1.json index 83b5b18520b..b32656fbc08 100644 --- a/models/apis/monitoring/2010-08-01/endpoint-tests-1.json +++ b/models/apis/monitoring/2010-08-01/endpoint-tests-1.json @@ -8,9 +8,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-south-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-south-2" } }, { @@ -21,9 +21,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-south-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-south-2" } }, { @@ -34,9 +34,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-south-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-south-2" } }, { @@ -47,9 +47,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-south-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-south-2" } }, { @@ -60,9 +60,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-south-1" } }, { @@ -73,9 +73,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-south-1" } }, { @@ -86,9 +86,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-south-1" } }, { @@ -99,9 +99,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-south-1" } }, { @@ -112,9 +112,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-south-1" } }, { @@ -125,9 +125,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-south-1" } }, { @@ -138,9 +138,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-south-1" } }, { @@ -151,9 +151,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-south-1" } }, { @@ -164,9 +164,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-south-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-south-2" } }, { @@ -177,9 +177,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-south-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-south-2" } }, { @@ -190,9 +190,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-south-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-south-2" } }, { @@ -203,9 +203,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-south-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-south-2" } }, { @@ -216,9 +216,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-gov-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-gov-east-1" } }, { @@ -229,9 +229,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-gov-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-gov-east-1" } }, { @@ -242,9 +242,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-gov-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-gov-east-1" } }, { @@ -255,9 +255,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-gov-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-gov-east-1" } }, { @@ -268,9 +268,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "me-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "me-central-1" } }, { @@ -281,9 +281,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "me-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "me-central-1" } }, { @@ -294,9 +294,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "me-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "me-central-1" } }, { @@ -307,9 +307,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "me-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "me-central-1" } }, { @@ -320,9 +320,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ca-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ca-central-1" } }, { @@ -333,9 +333,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ca-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ca-central-1" } }, { @@ -346,9 +346,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ca-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ca-central-1" } }, { @@ -359,9 +359,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ca-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ca-central-1" } }, { @@ -372,9 +372,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-central-1" } }, { @@ -385,9 +385,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-central-1" } }, { @@ -398,9 +398,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-central-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-central-1" } }, { @@ -411,9 +411,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-central-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-central-1" } }, { @@ -422,9 +422,9 @@ "error": "FIPS and DualStack are enabled, but this partition does not support one or both" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-iso-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-iso-west-1" } }, { @@ -435,9 +435,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-iso-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-iso-west-1" } }, { @@ -446,9 +446,9 @@ "error": "DualStack is enabled but this partition does not support DualStack" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-iso-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-iso-west-1" } }, { @@ -459,9 +459,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-iso-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-iso-west-1" } }, { @@ -472,9 +472,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-central-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-central-2" } }, { @@ -485,9 +485,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-central-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-central-2" } }, { @@ -498,9 +498,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-central-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-central-2" } }, { @@ -511,9 +511,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-central-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-central-2" } }, { @@ -524,9 +524,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-west-1" } }, { @@ -537,9 +537,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-west-1" } }, { @@ -550,9 +550,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-west-1" } }, { @@ -563,9 +563,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-west-1" } }, { @@ -576,9 +576,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-west-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-west-2" } }, { @@ -589,9 +589,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-west-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-west-2" } }, { @@ -602,9 +602,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-west-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-west-2" } }, { @@ -615,9 +615,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-west-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-west-2" } }, { @@ -628,9 +628,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "af-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "af-south-1" } }, { @@ -641,9 +641,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "af-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "af-south-1" } }, { @@ -654,9 +654,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "af-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "af-south-1" } }, { @@ -667,9 +667,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "af-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "af-south-1" } }, { @@ -680,9 +680,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-north-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-north-1" } }, { @@ -693,9 +693,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-north-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-north-1" } }, { @@ -706,9 +706,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-north-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-north-1" } }, { @@ -719,9 +719,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-north-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-north-1" } }, { @@ -732,9 +732,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-3" } }, { @@ -745,9 +745,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-3" } }, { @@ -758,9 +758,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-3" } }, { @@ -771,9 +771,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-3" } }, { @@ -784,9 +784,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-2" } }, { @@ -797,9 +797,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-2" } }, { @@ -810,9 +810,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-2" } }, { @@ -823,9 +823,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-2" } }, { @@ -836,9 +836,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-1" } }, { @@ -849,9 +849,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "eu-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-1" } }, { @@ -862,9 +862,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "eu-west-1" } }, { @@ -875,9 +875,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "eu-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "eu-west-1" } }, { @@ -888,9 +888,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-3" } }, { @@ -901,9 +901,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-3" } }, { @@ -914,9 +914,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-3" } }, { @@ -927,9 +927,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-3" } }, { @@ -940,9 +940,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-2" } }, { @@ -953,9 +953,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-2" } }, { @@ -966,9 +966,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-2" } }, { @@ -979,9 +979,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-2" } }, { @@ -992,9 +992,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-1" } }, { @@ -1005,9 +1005,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-northeast-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-1" } }, { @@ -1018,9 +1018,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-northeast-1" } }, { @@ -1031,9 +1031,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-northeast-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-northeast-1" } }, { @@ -1044,9 +1044,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "me-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "me-south-1" } }, { @@ -1057,9 +1057,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "me-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "me-south-1" } }, { @@ -1070,9 +1070,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "me-south-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "me-south-1" } }, { @@ -1083,9 +1083,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "me-south-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "me-south-1" } }, { @@ -1096,9 +1096,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "sa-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "sa-east-1" } }, { @@ -1109,9 +1109,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "sa-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "sa-east-1" } }, { @@ -1122,9 +1122,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "sa-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "sa-east-1" } }, { @@ -1135,9 +1135,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "sa-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "sa-east-1" } }, { @@ -1148,9 +1148,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-east-1" } }, { @@ -1161,9 +1161,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-east-1" } }, { @@ -1174,9 +1174,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-east-1" } }, { @@ -1187,9 +1187,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-east-1" } }, { @@ -1200,9 +1200,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "cn-north-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "cn-north-1" } }, { @@ -1213,9 +1213,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "cn-north-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "cn-north-1" } }, { @@ -1226,9 +1226,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "cn-north-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "cn-north-1" } }, { @@ -1239,9 +1239,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "cn-north-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "cn-north-1" } }, { @@ -1252,9 +1252,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ca-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ca-west-1" } }, { @@ -1265,9 +1265,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ca-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ca-west-1" } }, { @@ -1278,9 +1278,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ca-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ca-west-1" } }, { @@ -1291,9 +1291,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ca-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ca-west-1" } }, { @@ -1304,9 +1304,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-gov-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-gov-west-1" } }, { @@ -1317,9 +1317,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-gov-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-gov-west-1" } }, { @@ -1330,9 +1330,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-gov-west-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-gov-west-1" } }, { @@ -1343,9 +1343,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-gov-west-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-gov-west-1" } }, { @@ -1356,9 +1356,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-1" } }, { @@ -1369,9 +1369,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-1" } }, { @@ -1382,9 +1382,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-1" } }, { @@ -1395,9 +1395,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-1" } }, { @@ -1408,9 +1408,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-2" } }, { @@ -1421,9 +1421,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-2" } }, { @@ -1434,9 +1434,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-2" } }, { @@ -1447,9 +1447,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-2" } }, { @@ -1458,9 +1458,9 @@ "error": "FIPS and DualStack are enabled, but this partition does not support one or both" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-iso-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-iso-east-1" } }, { @@ -1471,9 +1471,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-iso-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-iso-east-1" } }, { @@ -1482,9 +1482,9 @@ "error": "DualStack is enabled but this partition does not support DualStack" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-iso-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-iso-east-1" } }, { @@ -1495,9 +1495,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-iso-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-iso-east-1" } }, { @@ -1508,9 +1508,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-3" } }, { @@ -1521,9 +1521,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-3" } }, { @@ -1534,9 +1534,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-3", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-3" } }, { @@ -1547,9 +1547,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-3", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-3" } }, { @@ -1560,9 +1560,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-4", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-4" } }, { @@ -1573,9 +1573,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "ap-southeast-4", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-4" } }, { @@ -1586,9 +1586,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-4", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "ap-southeast-4" } }, { @@ -1599,9 +1599,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "ap-southeast-4", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "ap-southeast-4" } }, { @@ -1612,9 +1612,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-east-1" } }, { @@ -1625,9 +1625,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-east-1" } }, { @@ -1638,9 +1638,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-east-1" } }, { @@ -1651,9 +1651,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-east-1" } }, { @@ -1664,9 +1664,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-east-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-east-2" } }, { @@ -1677,9 +1677,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-east-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-east-2" } }, { @@ -1690,9 +1690,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-east-2", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-east-2" } }, { @@ -1703,9 +1703,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-east-2", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-east-2" } }, { @@ -1716,9 +1716,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "cn-northwest-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "cn-northwest-1" } }, { @@ -1729,9 +1729,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "cn-northwest-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "cn-northwest-1" } }, { @@ -1742,9 +1742,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "cn-northwest-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "cn-northwest-1" } }, { @@ -1755,9 +1755,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "cn-northwest-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "cn-northwest-1" } }, { @@ -1766,9 +1766,9 @@ "error": "FIPS and DualStack are enabled, but this partition does not support one or both" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-isob-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-isob-east-1" } }, { @@ -1779,9 +1779,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, - "Region": "us-isob-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-isob-east-1" } }, { @@ -1790,9 +1790,9 @@ "error": "DualStack is enabled but this partition does not support DualStack" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-isob-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true + "Region": "us-isob-east-1" } }, { @@ -1803,9 +1803,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, - "Region": "us-isob-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false + "Region": "us-isob-east-1" } }, { @@ -1816,9 +1816,9 @@ } }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": false, "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false, "Endpoint": "https://example.com" } }, @@ -1828,9 +1828,9 @@ "error": "Invalid Configuration: FIPS and custom endpoint are not supported" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": false, "UseFIPS": true, "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": false, "Endpoint": "https://example.com" } }, @@ -1840,9 +1840,9 @@ "error": "Invalid Configuration: Dualstack and custom endpoint are not supported" }, "params": { + "UseDualStack": true, "UseFIPS": false, "Region": "us-east-1", - "UseDualStack": true, "Endpoint": "https://example.com" } } diff --git a/models/apis/wafv2/2019-07-29/docs-2.json b/models/apis/wafv2/2019-07-29/docs-2.json index 36b2c43b444..d5b996c9e34 100755 --- a/models/apis/wafv2/2019-07-29/docs-2.json +++ b/models/apis/wafv2/2019-07-29/docs-2.json @@ -40,16 +40,16 @@ "ListRuleGroups": "Retrieves an array of RuleGroupSummary objects for the rule groups that you manage.
", "ListTagsForResource": "Retrieves the TagInfoForResource for the specified resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can use to categorize and manage your resources, for purposes like billing. For example, you might set the tag key to \"customer\" and the value to the customer name or ID. You can specify one or more tags to add to each Amazon Web Services resource, up to 50 tags for a resource.
You can tag the Amazon Web Services resources that you manage through WAF: web ACLs, rule groups, IP sets, and regex pattern sets. You can't manage or view tags through the WAF console.
", "ListWebACLs": "Retrieves an array of WebACLSummary objects for the web ACLs that you manage.
", - "PutLoggingConfiguration": "Enables the specified LoggingConfiguration, to start logging from a web ACL, according to the configuration provided.
You can define one logging destination per web ACL.
You can access information about the traffic that WAF inspects using the following steps:
Create your logging destination. You can use an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group, an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) bucket, or an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose.
The name that you give the destination must start with aws-waf-logs-
. Depending on the type of destination, you might need to configure additional settings or permissions.
For configuration requirements and pricing information for each destination type, see Logging web ACL traffic in the WAF Developer Guide.
Associate your logging destination to your web ACL using a PutLoggingConfiguration
request.
When you successfully enable logging using a PutLoggingConfiguration
request, WAF creates an additional role or policy that is required to write logs to the logging destination. For an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group, WAF creates a resource policy on the log group. For an Amazon S3 bucket, WAF creates a bucket policy. For an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose, WAF creates a service-linked role.
For additional information about web ACL logging, see Logging web ACL traffic information in the WAF Developer Guide.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the logging configuration with the ones that you provide to this call. To modify the logging configuration, retrieve it by calling GetLoggingConfiguration, update the settings as needed, and then provide the complete logging configuration specification to this call.
Enables the specified LoggingConfiguration, to start logging from a web ACL, according to the configuration provided.
This operation completely replaces any mutable specifications that you already have for a logging configuration with the ones that you provide to this call.
To modify an existing logging configuration, do the following:
Retrieve it by calling GetLoggingConfiguration
Update its settings as needed
Provide the complete logging configuration specification to this call
You can define one logging destination per web ACL.
You can access information about the traffic that WAF inspects using the following steps:
Create your logging destination. You can use an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group, an Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) bucket, or an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose.
The name that you give the destination must start with aws-waf-logs-
. Depending on the type of destination, you might need to configure additional settings or permissions.
For configuration requirements and pricing information for each destination type, see Logging web ACL traffic in the WAF Developer Guide.
Associate your logging destination to your web ACL using a PutLoggingConfiguration
request.
When you successfully enable logging using a PutLoggingConfiguration
request, WAF creates an additional role or policy that is required to write logs to the logging destination. For an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group, WAF creates a resource policy on the log group. For an Amazon S3 bucket, WAF creates a bucket policy. For an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose, WAF creates a service-linked role.
For additional information about web ACL logging, see Logging web ACL traffic information in the WAF Developer Guide.
", "PutManagedRuleSetVersions": "Defines the versions of your managed rule set that you are offering to the customers. Customers see your offerings as managed rule groups with versioning.
This is intended for use only by vendors of managed rule sets. Vendors are Amazon Web Services and Amazon Web Services Marketplace sellers.
Vendors, you can use the managed rule set APIs to provide controlled rollout of your versioned managed rule group offerings for your customers. The APIs are ListManagedRuleSets
, GetManagedRuleSet
, PutManagedRuleSetVersions
, and UpdateManagedRuleSetVersionExpiryDate
.
Customers retrieve their managed rule group list by calling ListAvailableManagedRuleGroups. The name that you provide here for your managed rule set is the name the customer sees for the corresponding managed rule group. Customers can retrieve the available versions for a managed rule group by calling ListAvailableManagedRuleGroupVersions. You provide a rule group specification for each version. For each managed rule set, you must specify a version that you recommend using.
To initiate the expiration of a managed rule group version, use UpdateManagedRuleSetVersionExpiryDate.
", "PutPermissionPolicy": "Attaches an IAM policy to the specified resource. Use this to share a rule group across accounts.
You must be the owner of the rule group to perform this operation.
This action is subject to the following restrictions:
You can attach only one policy with each PutPermissionPolicy
request.
The ARN in the request must be a valid WAF RuleGroup ARN and the rule group must exist in the same Region.
The user making the request must be the owner of the rule group.
Associates tags with the specified Amazon Web Services resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can use to categorize and manage your resources, for purposes like billing. For example, you might set the tag key to \"customer\" and the value to the customer name or ID. You can specify one or more tags to add to each Amazon Web Services resource, up to 50 tags for a resource.
You can tag the Amazon Web Services resources that you manage through WAF: web ACLs, rule groups, IP sets, and regex pattern sets. You can't manage or view tags through the WAF console.
", "UntagResource": "Disassociates tags from an Amazon Web Services resource. Tags are key:value pairs that you can associate with Amazon Web Services resources. For example, the tag key might be \"customer\" and the tag value might be \"companyA.\" You can specify one or more tags to add to each container. You can add up to 50 tags to each Amazon Web Services resource.
", - "UpdateIPSet": "Updates the specified IPSet.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the IP set with the ones that you provide to this call. To modify the IP set, retrieve it by calling GetIPSet, update the settings as needed, and then provide the complete IP set specification to this call.
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
", + "UpdateIPSet": "Updates the specified IPSet.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the IP set with the ones that you provide to this call.
To modify an IP set, do the following:
Retrieve it by calling GetIPSet
Update its settings as needed
Provide the complete IP set specification to this call
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
", "UpdateManagedRuleSetVersionExpiryDate": "Updates the expiration information for your managed rule set. Use this to initiate the expiration of a managed rule group version. After you initiate expiration for a version, WAF excludes it from the response to ListAvailableManagedRuleGroupVersions for the managed rule group.
This is intended for use only by vendors of managed rule sets. Vendors are Amazon Web Services and Amazon Web Services Marketplace sellers.
Vendors, you can use the managed rule set APIs to provide controlled rollout of your versioned managed rule group offerings for your customers. The APIs are ListManagedRuleSets
, GetManagedRuleSet
, PutManagedRuleSetVersions
, and UpdateManagedRuleSetVersionExpiryDate
.
Updates the specified RegexPatternSet.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the regex pattern set with the ones that you provide to this call. To modify the regex pattern set, retrieve it by calling GetRegexPatternSet, update the settings as needed, and then provide the complete regex pattern set specification to this call.
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
", - "UpdateRuleGroup": "Updates the specified RuleGroup.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the rule group with the ones that you provide to this call. To modify the rule group, retrieve it by calling GetRuleGroup, update the settings as needed, and then provide the complete rule group specification to this call.
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
A rule group defines a collection of rules to inspect and control web requests that you can use in a WebACL. When you create a rule group, you define an immutable capacity limit. If you update a rule group, you must stay within the capacity. This allows others to reuse the rule group with confidence in its capacity requirements.
", - "UpdateWebACL": "Updates the specified WebACL. While updating a web ACL, WAF provides continuous coverage to the resources that you have associated with the web ACL.
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the web ACL with the ones that you provide to this call. To modify the web ACL, retrieve it by calling GetWebACL, update the settings as needed, and then provide the complete web ACL specification to this call.
A web ACL defines a collection of rules to use to inspect and control web requests. Each rule has an action defined (allow, block, or count) for requests that match the statement of the rule. In the web ACL, you assign a default action to take (allow, block) for any request that does not match any of the rules. The rules in a web ACL can be a combination of the types Rule, RuleGroup, and managed rule group. You can associate a web ACL with one or more Amazon Web Services resources to protect. The resources can be an Amazon CloudFront distribution, an Amazon API Gateway REST API, an Application Load Balancer, an AppSync GraphQL API, or an Amazon Cognito user pool.
" + "UpdateRegexPatternSet": "Updates the specified RegexPatternSet.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the regex pattern set with the ones that you provide to this call.
To modify a regex pattern set, do the following:
Retrieve it by calling GetRegexPatternSet
Update its settings as needed
Provide the complete regex pattern set specification to this call
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
", + "UpdateRuleGroup": "Updates the specified RuleGroup.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the rule group with the ones that you provide to this call.
To modify a rule group, do the following:
Retrieve it by calling GetRuleGroup
Update its settings as needed
Provide the complete rule group specification to this call
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
A rule group defines a collection of rules to inspect and control web requests that you can use in a WebACL. When you create a rule group, you define an immutable capacity limit. If you update a rule group, you must stay within the capacity. This allows others to reuse the rule group with confidence in its capacity requirements.
", + "UpdateWebACL": "Updates the specified WebACL. While updating a web ACL, WAF provides continuous coverage to the resources that you have associated with the web ACL.
This operation completely replaces the mutable specifications that you already have for the web ACL with the ones that you provide to this call.
To modify a web ACL, do the following:
Retrieve it by calling GetWebACL
Update its settings as needed
Provide the complete web ACL specification to this call
When you make changes to web ACLs or web ACL components, like rules and rule groups, WAF propagates the changes everywhere that the web ACL and its components are stored and used. Your changes are applied within seconds, but there might be a brief period of inconsistency when the changes have arrived in some places and not in others. So, for example, if you change a rule action setting, the action might be the old action in one area and the new action in another area. Or if you add an IP address to an IP set used in a blocking rule, the new address might briefly be blocked in one area while still allowed in another. This temporary inconsistency can occur when you first associate a web ACL with an Amazon Web Services resource and when you change a web ACL that is already associated with a resource. Generally, any inconsistencies of this type last only a few seconds.
A web ACL defines a collection of rules to use to inspect and control web requests. Each rule has an action defined (allow, block, or count) for requests that match the statement of the rule. In the web ACL, you assign a default action to take (allow, block) for any request that does not match any of the rules. The rules in a web ACL can be a combination of the types Rule, RuleGroup, and managed rule group. You can associate a web ACL with one or more Amazon Web Services resources to protect. The resources can be an Amazon CloudFront distribution, an Amazon API Gateway REST API, an Application Load Balancer, an AppSync GraphQL API, or an Amazon Cognito user pool.
" }, "shapes": { "AWSManagedRulesBotControlRuleSet": { @@ -1352,8 +1352,8 @@ "MetricName": { "base": null, "refs": { - "GetSampledRequestsRequest$RuleMetricName": "The metric name assigned to the Rule
or RuleGroup
for which you want a sample of requests.
A name of the Amazon CloudWatch metric. The name can contain only the characters: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, - (hyphen), and _ (underscore). The name can be from one to 128 characters long. It can't contain whitespace or metric names reserved for WAF, for example All
and Default_Action
.
The metric name assigned to the Rule
or RuleGroup
dimension for which you want a sample of requests.
A name of the Amazon CloudWatch metric dimension. The name can contain only the characters: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, - (hyphen), and _ (underscore). The name can be from one to 128 characters long. It can't contain whitespace or metric names that are reserved for WAF, for example All
and Default_Action
.