Copyright | (c) 2013-2021 Brendan Hay |
---|---|
License | Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
Maintainer | Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay+amazonka@gmail.com> |
Stability | auto-generated |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Add a parameter to the system.
Synopsis
- data PutParameter = PutParameter' {}
- newPutParameter :: Text -> Text -> PutParameter
- putParameter_keyId :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text)
- putParameter_tier :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe ParameterTier)
- putParameter_allowedPattern :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text)
- putParameter_type :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe ParameterType)
- putParameter_dataType :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text)
- putParameter_overwrite :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Bool)
- putParameter_description :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text)
- putParameter_policies :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text)
- putParameter_tags :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe [Tag])
- putParameter_name :: Lens' PutParameter Text
- putParameter_value :: Lens' PutParameter Text
- data PutParameterResponse = PutParameterResponse' {
- tier :: Maybe ParameterTier
- version :: Maybe Integer
- httpStatus :: Int
- newPutParameterResponse :: Int -> PutParameterResponse
- putParameterResponse_tier :: Lens' PutParameterResponse (Maybe ParameterTier)
- putParameterResponse_version :: Lens' PutParameterResponse (Maybe Integer)
- putParameterResponse_httpStatus :: Lens' PutParameterResponse Int
Creating a Request
data PutParameter Source #
See: newPutParameter
smart constructor.
PutParameter' | |
|
Instances
Create a value of PutParameter
with all optional fields omitted.
Use generic-lens or optics to modify other optional fields.
The following record fields are available, with the corresponding lenses provided for backwards compatibility:
$sel:keyId:PutParameter'
, putParameter_keyId
- The Key Management Service (KMS) ID that you want to use to encrypt a
parameter. Either the default KMS key automatically assigned to your
Amazon Web Services account or a custom key. Required for parameters
that use the SecureString
data type.
If you don't specify a key ID, the system uses the default key associated with your Amazon Web Services account.
- To use your default KMS key, choose the
SecureString
data type, and do not specify theKey ID
when you create the parameter. The system automatically populatesKey ID
with your default KMS key. - To use a custom KMS key, choose the
SecureString
data type with theKey ID
parameter.
$sel:tier:PutParameter'
, putParameter_tier
- The parameter tier to assign to a parameter.
Parameter Store offers a standard tier and an advanced tier for parameters. Standard parameters have a content size limit of 4 KB and can't be configured to use parameter policies. You can create a maximum of 10,000 standard parameters for each Region in an Amazon Web Services account. Standard parameters are offered at no additional cost.
Advanced parameters have a content size limit of 8 KB and can be configured to use parameter policies. You can create a maximum of 100,000 advanced parameters for each Region in an Amazon Web Services account. Advanced parameters incur a charge. For more information, see Standard and advanced parameter tiers in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
You can change a standard parameter to an advanced parameter any time. But you can't revert an advanced parameter to a standard parameter. Reverting an advanced parameter to a standard parameter would result in data loss because the system would truncate the size of the parameter from 8 KB to 4 KB. Reverting would also remove any policies attached to the parameter. Lastly, advanced parameters use a different form of encryption than standard parameters.
If you no longer need an advanced parameter, or if you no longer want to incur charges for an advanced parameter, you must delete it and recreate it as a new standard parameter.
Using the Default Tier Configuration
In PutParameter
requests, you can specify the tier to create the
parameter in. Whenever you specify a tier in the request, Parameter
Store creates or updates the parameter according to that request.
However, if you don't specify a tier in a request, Parameter Store
assigns the tier based on the current Parameter Store default tier
configuration.
The default tier when you begin using Parameter Store is the standard-parameter tier. If you use the advanced-parameter tier, you can specify one of the following as the default:
- Advanced: With this option, Parameter Store evaluates all requests as advanced parameters.
Intelligent-Tiering: With this option, Parameter Store evaluates each request to determine if the parameter is standard or advanced.
If the request doesn't include any options that require an advanced parameter, the parameter is created in the standard-parameter tier. If one or more options requiring an advanced parameter are included in the request, Parameter Store create a parameter in the advanced-parameter tier.
This approach helps control your parameter-related costs by always creating standard parameters unless an advanced parameter is necessary.
Options that require an advanced parameter include the following:
- The content size of the parameter is more than 4 KB.
- The parameter uses a parameter policy.
- More than 10,000 parameters already exist in your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region.
For more information about configuring the default tier option, see Specifying a default parameter tier in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
$sel:allowedPattern:PutParameter'
, putParameter_allowedPattern
- A regular expression used to validate the parameter value. For example,
for String types with values restricted to numbers, you can specify the
following: AllowedPattern=^\d+$
$sel:type':PutParameter'
, putParameter_type
- The type of parameter that you want to add to the system.
SecureString
isn't currently supported for CloudFormation templates.
Items in a StringList
must be separated by a comma (,). You can't use
other punctuation or special character to escape items in the list. If
you have a parameter value that requires a comma, then use the String
data type.
Specifying a parameter type isn't required when updating a parameter. You must specify a parameter type when creating a parameter.
$sel:dataType:PutParameter'
, putParameter_dataType
- The data type for a String
parameter. Supported data types include
plain text and Amazon Machine Image (AMI) IDs.
The following data type values are supported.
text
aws:ec2:image
When you create a String
parameter and specify aws:ec2:image
, Amazon
Web Services Systems Manager validates the parameter value is in the
required format, such as ami-12345abcdeEXAMPLE
, and that the specified
AMI is available in your Amazon Web Services account. For more
information, see
Native parameter support for Amazon Machine Image (AMI) IDs
in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
$sel:overwrite:PutParameter'
, putParameter_overwrite
- Overwrite an existing parameter. The default value is false
.
$sel:description:PutParameter'
, putParameter_description
- Information about the parameter that you want to add to the system.
Optional but recommended.
Don't enter personally identifiable information in this field.
$sel:policies:PutParameter'
, putParameter_policies
- One or more policies to apply to a parameter. This operation takes a
JSON array. Parameter Store, a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems
Manager supports the following policy types:
Expiration: This policy deletes the parameter after it expires. When you create the policy, you specify the expiration date. You can update the expiration date and time by updating the policy. Updating the parameter doesn't affect the expiration date and time. When the expiration time is reached, Parameter Store deletes the parameter.
ExpirationNotification: This policy triggers an event in Amazon CloudWatch Events that notifies you about the expiration. By using this policy, you can receive notification before or after the expiration time is reached, in units of days or hours.
NoChangeNotification: This policy triggers a CloudWatch Events event if a parameter hasn't been modified for a specified period of time. This policy type is useful when, for example, a secret needs to be changed within a period of time, but it hasn't been changed.
All existing policies are preserved until you send new policies or an empty policy. For more information about parameter policies, see Assigning parameter policies.
$sel:tags:PutParameter'
, putParameter_tags
- Optional metadata that you assign to a resource. Tags enable you to
categorize a resource in different ways, such as by purpose, owner, or
environment. For example, you might want to tag a Systems Manager
parameter to identify the type of resource to which it applies, the
environment, or the type of configuration data referenced by the
parameter. In this case, you could specify the following key-value
pairs:
Key=Resource,Value=S3bucket
Key=OS,Value=Windows
Key=ParameterType,Value=LicenseKey
To add tags to an existing Systems Manager parameter, use the AddTagsToResource operation.
$sel:name:PutParameter'
, putParameter_name
- The fully qualified name of the parameter that you want to add to the
system. The fully qualified name includes the complete hierarchy of the
parameter path and name. For parameters in a hierarchy, you must include
a leading forward slash character (/) when you create or reference a
parameter. For example: /Dev/DBServer/MySQL/db-string13
Naming Constraints:
- Parameter names are case sensitive.
- A parameter name must be unique within an Amazon Web Services Region
- A parameter name can't be prefixed with "
aws
" or "ssm
" (case-insensitive). Parameter names can include only the following symbols and letters:
a-zA-Z0-9_.-
In addition, the slash character ( / ) is used to delineate hierarchies in parameter names. For example:
/Dev/Production/East/Project-ABC/MyParameter
- A parameter name can't include spaces.
- Parameter hierarchies are limited to a maximum depth of fifteen levels.
For additional information about valid values for parameter names, see Creating Systems Manager parameters in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
The maximum length constraint listed below includes capacity for additional system attributes that aren't part of the name. The maximum length for a parameter name, including the full length of the parameter ARN, is 1011 characters. For example, the length of the following parameter name is 65 characters, not 20 characters:
arn:aws:ssm:us-east-2:111122223333:parameter/ExampleParameterName
$sel:value:PutParameter'
, putParameter_value
- The parameter value that you want to add to the system. Standard
parameters have a value limit of 4 KB. Advanced parameters have a value
limit of 8 KB.
Parameters can't be referenced or nested in the values of other
parameters. You can't include {{}}
or {{ssm:parameter-name}}
in a
parameter value.
Request Lenses
putParameter_keyId :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text) Source #
The Key Management Service (KMS) ID that you want to use to encrypt a
parameter. Either the default KMS key automatically assigned to your
Amazon Web Services account or a custom key. Required for parameters
that use the SecureString
data type.
If you don't specify a key ID, the system uses the default key associated with your Amazon Web Services account.
- To use your default KMS key, choose the
SecureString
data type, and do not specify theKey ID
when you create the parameter. The system automatically populatesKey ID
with your default KMS key. - To use a custom KMS key, choose the
SecureString
data type with theKey ID
parameter.
putParameter_tier :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe ParameterTier) Source #
The parameter tier to assign to a parameter.
Parameter Store offers a standard tier and an advanced tier for parameters. Standard parameters have a content size limit of 4 KB and can't be configured to use parameter policies. You can create a maximum of 10,000 standard parameters for each Region in an Amazon Web Services account. Standard parameters are offered at no additional cost.
Advanced parameters have a content size limit of 8 KB and can be configured to use parameter policies. You can create a maximum of 100,000 advanced parameters for each Region in an Amazon Web Services account. Advanced parameters incur a charge. For more information, see Standard and advanced parameter tiers in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
You can change a standard parameter to an advanced parameter any time. But you can't revert an advanced parameter to a standard parameter. Reverting an advanced parameter to a standard parameter would result in data loss because the system would truncate the size of the parameter from 8 KB to 4 KB. Reverting would also remove any policies attached to the parameter. Lastly, advanced parameters use a different form of encryption than standard parameters.
If you no longer need an advanced parameter, or if you no longer want to incur charges for an advanced parameter, you must delete it and recreate it as a new standard parameter.
Using the Default Tier Configuration
In PutParameter
requests, you can specify the tier to create the
parameter in. Whenever you specify a tier in the request, Parameter
Store creates or updates the parameter according to that request.
However, if you don't specify a tier in a request, Parameter Store
assigns the tier based on the current Parameter Store default tier
configuration.
The default tier when you begin using Parameter Store is the standard-parameter tier. If you use the advanced-parameter tier, you can specify one of the following as the default:
- Advanced: With this option, Parameter Store evaluates all requests as advanced parameters.
Intelligent-Tiering: With this option, Parameter Store evaluates each request to determine if the parameter is standard or advanced.
If the request doesn't include any options that require an advanced parameter, the parameter is created in the standard-parameter tier. If one or more options requiring an advanced parameter are included in the request, Parameter Store create a parameter in the advanced-parameter tier.
This approach helps control your parameter-related costs by always creating standard parameters unless an advanced parameter is necessary.
Options that require an advanced parameter include the following:
- The content size of the parameter is more than 4 KB.
- The parameter uses a parameter policy.
- More than 10,000 parameters already exist in your Amazon Web Services account in the current Amazon Web Services Region.
For more information about configuring the default tier option, see Specifying a default parameter tier in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
putParameter_allowedPattern :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text) Source #
A regular expression used to validate the parameter value. For example, for String types with values restricted to numbers, you can specify the following: AllowedPattern=^\d+$
putParameter_type :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe ParameterType) Source #
The type of parameter that you want to add to the system.
SecureString
isn't currently supported for CloudFormation templates.
Items in a StringList
must be separated by a comma (,). You can't use
other punctuation or special character to escape items in the list. If
you have a parameter value that requires a comma, then use the String
data type.
Specifying a parameter type isn't required when updating a parameter. You must specify a parameter type when creating a parameter.
putParameter_dataType :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text) Source #
The data type for a String
parameter. Supported data types include
plain text and Amazon Machine Image (AMI) IDs.
The following data type values are supported.
text
aws:ec2:image
When you create a String
parameter and specify aws:ec2:image
, Amazon
Web Services Systems Manager validates the parameter value is in the
required format, such as ami-12345abcdeEXAMPLE
, and that the specified
AMI is available in your Amazon Web Services account. For more
information, see
Native parameter support for Amazon Machine Image (AMI) IDs
in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
putParameter_overwrite :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Bool) Source #
Overwrite an existing parameter. The default value is false
.
putParameter_description :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text) Source #
Information about the parameter that you want to add to the system. Optional but recommended.
Don't enter personally identifiable information in this field.
putParameter_policies :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe Text) Source #
One or more policies to apply to a parameter. This operation takes a JSON array. Parameter Store, a capability of Amazon Web Services Systems Manager supports the following policy types:
Expiration: This policy deletes the parameter after it expires. When you create the policy, you specify the expiration date. You can update the expiration date and time by updating the policy. Updating the parameter doesn't affect the expiration date and time. When the expiration time is reached, Parameter Store deletes the parameter.
ExpirationNotification: This policy triggers an event in Amazon CloudWatch Events that notifies you about the expiration. By using this policy, you can receive notification before or after the expiration time is reached, in units of days or hours.
NoChangeNotification: This policy triggers a CloudWatch Events event if a parameter hasn't been modified for a specified period of time. This policy type is useful when, for example, a secret needs to be changed within a period of time, but it hasn't been changed.
All existing policies are preserved until you send new policies or an empty policy. For more information about parameter policies, see Assigning parameter policies.
putParameter_tags :: Lens' PutParameter (Maybe [Tag]) Source #
Optional metadata that you assign to a resource. Tags enable you to categorize a resource in different ways, such as by purpose, owner, or environment. For example, you might want to tag a Systems Manager parameter to identify the type of resource to which it applies, the environment, or the type of configuration data referenced by the parameter. In this case, you could specify the following key-value pairs:
Key=Resource,Value=S3bucket
Key=OS,Value=Windows
Key=ParameterType,Value=LicenseKey
To add tags to an existing Systems Manager parameter, use the AddTagsToResource operation.
putParameter_name :: Lens' PutParameter Text Source #
The fully qualified name of the parameter that you want to add to the
system. The fully qualified name includes the complete hierarchy of the
parameter path and name. For parameters in a hierarchy, you must include
a leading forward slash character (/) when you create or reference a
parameter. For example: /Dev/DBServer/MySQL/db-string13
Naming Constraints:
- Parameter names are case sensitive.
- A parameter name must be unique within an Amazon Web Services Region
- A parameter name can't be prefixed with "
aws
" or "ssm
" (case-insensitive). Parameter names can include only the following symbols and letters:
a-zA-Z0-9_.-
In addition, the slash character ( / ) is used to delineate hierarchies in parameter names. For example:
/Dev/Production/East/Project-ABC/MyParameter
- A parameter name can't include spaces.
- Parameter hierarchies are limited to a maximum depth of fifteen levels.
For additional information about valid values for parameter names, see Creating Systems Manager parameters in the Amazon Web Services Systems Manager User Guide.
The maximum length constraint listed below includes capacity for additional system attributes that aren't part of the name. The maximum length for a parameter name, including the full length of the parameter ARN, is 1011 characters. For example, the length of the following parameter name is 65 characters, not 20 characters:
arn:aws:ssm:us-east-2:111122223333:parameter/ExampleParameterName
putParameter_value :: Lens' PutParameter Text Source #
The parameter value that you want to add to the system. Standard parameters have a value limit of 4 KB. Advanced parameters have a value limit of 8 KB.
Parameters can't be referenced or nested in the values of other
parameters. You can't include {{}}
or {{ssm:parameter-name}}
in a
parameter value.
Destructuring the Response
data PutParameterResponse Source #
See: newPutParameterResponse
smart constructor.
PutParameterResponse' | |
|
Instances
newPutParameterResponse Source #
Create a value of PutParameterResponse
with all optional fields omitted.
Use generic-lens or optics to modify other optional fields.
The following record fields are available, with the corresponding lenses provided for backwards compatibility:
$sel:tier:PutParameter'
, putParameterResponse_tier
- The tier assigned to the parameter.
$sel:version:PutParameterResponse'
, putParameterResponse_version
- The new version number of a parameter. If you edit a parameter value,
Parameter Store automatically creates a new version and assigns this new
version a unique ID. You can reference a parameter version ID in API
operations or in Systems Manager documents (SSM documents). By default,
if you don't specify a specific version, the system returns the latest
parameter value when a parameter is called.
$sel:httpStatus:PutParameterResponse'
, putParameterResponse_httpStatus
- The response's http status code.
Response Lenses
putParameterResponse_tier :: Lens' PutParameterResponse (Maybe ParameterTier) Source #
The tier assigned to the parameter.
putParameterResponse_version :: Lens' PutParameterResponse (Maybe Integer) Source #
The new version number of a parameter. If you edit a parameter value, Parameter Store automatically creates a new version and assigns this new version a unique ID. You can reference a parameter version ID in API operations or in Systems Manager documents (SSM documents). By default, if you don't specify a specific version, the system returns the latest parameter value when a parameter is called.
putParameterResponse_httpStatus :: Lens' PutParameterResponse Int Source #
The response's http status code.