@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public interface AmazonECSAsync extends AmazonECS
AsyncHandler can be used to receive
 notification when an asynchronous operation completes.
 
 Note: Do not directly implement this interface, new methods are added to it regularly. Extend from
 AbstractAmazonECSAsync instead.
 
 
Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) is a highly scalable, fast, container management service that makes it easy to run, stop, and manage Docker containers on a cluster. You can host your cluster on a serverless infrastructure that is managed by Amazon ECS by launching your services or tasks on AWS Fargate. For more control, you can host your tasks on a cluster of Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances that you manage.
Amazon ECS makes it easy to launch and stop container-based applications with simple API calls, allows you to get the state of your cluster from a centralized service, and gives you access to many familiar Amazon EC2 features.
You can use Amazon ECS to schedule the placement of containers across your cluster based on your resource needs, isolation policies, and availability requirements. Amazon ECS eliminates the need for you to operate your own cluster management and configuration management systems or worry about scaling your management infrastructure.
ENDPOINT_PREFIXcreateCapacityProvider, createCluster, createCluster, createService, createTaskSet, deleteAccountSetting, deleteAttributes, deleteCapacityProvider, deleteCluster, deleteService, deleteTaskSet, deregisterContainerInstance, deregisterTaskDefinition, describeCapacityProviders, describeClusters, describeClusters, describeContainerInstances, describeServices, describeTaskDefinition, describeTasks, describeTaskSets, discoverPollEndpoint, discoverPollEndpoint, executeCommand, getCachedResponseMetadata, listAccountSettings, listAttributes, listClusters, listClusters, listContainerInstances, listContainerInstances, listServices, listServices, listTagsForResource, listTaskDefinitionFamilies, listTaskDefinitionFamilies, listTaskDefinitions, listTaskDefinitions, listTasks, listTasks, putAccountSetting, putAccountSettingDefault, putAttributes, putClusterCapacityProviders, registerContainerInstance, registerTaskDefinition, runTask, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, startTask, stopTask, submitAttachmentStateChanges, submitContainerStateChange, submitContainerStateChange, submitTaskStateChange, tagResource, untagResource, updateCapacityProvider, updateCluster, updateClusterSettings, updateContainerAgent, updateContainerInstancesState, updateService, updateServicePrimaryTaskSet, updateTaskSet, waitersFuture<CreateCapacityProviderResult> createCapacityProviderAsync(CreateCapacityProviderRequest createCapacityProviderRequest)
Creates a new capacity provider. Capacity providers are associated with an Amazon ECS cluster and are used in capacity provider strategies to facilitate cluster auto scaling.
 Only capacity providers using an Auto Scaling group can be created. Amazon ECS tasks on AWS Fargate use the
 FARGATE and FARGATE_SPOT capacity providers which are already created and available to
 all accounts in Regions supported by AWS Fargate.
 
createCapacityProviderRequest - Future<CreateCapacityProviderResult> createCapacityProviderAsync(CreateCapacityProviderRequest createCapacityProviderRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateCapacityProviderRequest,CreateCapacityProviderResult> asyncHandler)
Creates a new capacity provider. Capacity providers are associated with an Amazon ECS cluster and are used in capacity provider strategies to facilitate cluster auto scaling.
 Only capacity providers using an Auto Scaling group can be created. Amazon ECS tasks on AWS Fargate use the
 FARGATE and FARGATE_SPOT capacity providers which are already created and available to
 all accounts in Regions supported by AWS Fargate.
 
createCapacityProviderRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync(CreateClusterRequest createClusterRequest)
 Creates a new Amazon ECS cluster. By default, your account receives a default cluster when you
 launch your first container instance. However, you can create your own cluster with a unique name with the
 CreateCluster action.
 
When you call the CreateCluster API operation, Amazon ECS attempts to create the Amazon ECS service-linked role for your account so that required resources in other AWS services can be managed on your behalf. However, if the IAM user that makes the call does not have permissions to create the service-linked role, it is not created. For more information, see Using Service-Linked Roles for Amazon ECS in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
createClusterRequest - Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync(CreateClusterRequest createClusterRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateClusterRequest,CreateClusterResult> asyncHandler)
 Creates a new Amazon ECS cluster. By default, your account receives a default cluster when you
 launch your first container instance. However, you can create your own cluster with a unique name with the
 CreateCluster action.
 
When you call the CreateCluster API operation, Amazon ECS attempts to create the Amazon ECS service-linked role for your account so that required resources in other AWS services can be managed on your behalf. However, if the IAM user that makes the call does not have permissions to create the service-linked role, it is not created. For more information, see Using Service-Linked Roles for Amazon ECS in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
createClusterRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync()
createClusterAsync(CreateClusterRequest)Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync(AsyncHandler<CreateClusterRequest,CreateClusterResult> asyncHandler)
Future<CreateServiceResult> createServiceAsync(CreateServiceRequest createServiceRequest)
 Runs and maintains a desired number of tasks from a specified task definition. If the number of tasks running in
 a service drops below the desiredCount, Amazon ECS runs another copy of the task in the specified
 cluster. To update an existing service, see the UpdateService action.
 
In addition to maintaining the desired count of tasks in your service, you can optionally run your service behind one or more load balancers. The load balancers distribute traffic across the tasks that are associated with the service. For more information, see Service Load Balancing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 Tasks for services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if they're in the
 RUNNING state. Tasks for services that do use a load balancer are considered healthy if
 they're in the RUNNING state and the container instance that they're hosted on is reported as
 healthy by the load balancer.
 
There are two service scheduler strategies available:
 REPLICA - The replica scheduling strategy places and maintains the desired number of tasks across
 your cluster. By default, the service scheduler spreads tasks across Availability Zones. You can use task
 placement strategies and constraints to customize task placement decisions. For more information, see Service Scheduler
 Concepts in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 DAEMON - The daemon scheduling strategy deploys exactly one task on each active container instance
 that meets all of the task placement constraints that you specify in your cluster. The service scheduler also
 evaluates the task placement constraints for running tasks and will stop tasks that do not meet the placement
 constraints. When using this strategy, you don't need to specify a desired number of tasks, a task placement
 strategy, or use Service Auto Scaling policies. For more information, see Service Scheduler
 Concepts in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can optionally specify a deployment configuration for your service. The deployment is triggered by changing
 properties, such as the task definition or the desired count of a service, with an UpdateService
 operation. The default value for a replica service for minimumHealthyPercent is 100%. The default
 value for a daemon service for minimumHealthyPercent is 0%.
 
 If a service is using the ECS deployment controller, the minimum healthy percent represents a lower
 limit on the number of tasks in a service that must remain in the RUNNING state during a deployment,
 as a percentage of the desired number of tasks (rounded up to the nearest integer), and while any container
 instances are in the DRAINING state if the service contains tasks using the EC2 launch type. This
 parameter enables you to deploy without using additional cluster capacity. For example, if your service has a
 desired number of four tasks and a minimum healthy percent of 50%, the scheduler might stop two existing tasks to
 free up cluster capacity before starting two new tasks. Tasks for services that do not use a load balancer
 are considered healthy if they're in the RUNNING state. Tasks for services that do use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they're in the RUNNING state and they're reported as healthy by
 the load balancer. The default value for minimum healthy percent is 100%.
 
 If a service is using the ECS deployment controller, the maximum percent parameter represents
 an upper limit on the number of tasks in a service that are allowed in the RUNNING or
 PENDING state during a deployment, as a percentage of the desired number of tasks (rounded down to
 the nearest integer), and while any container instances are in the DRAINING state if the service
 contains tasks using the EC2 launch type. This parameter enables you to define the deployment batch size. For
 example, if your service has a desired number of four tasks and a maximum percent value of 200%, the scheduler
 may start four new tasks before stopping the four older tasks (provided that the cluster resources required to do
 this are available). The default value for maximum percent is 200%.
 
 If a service is using either the CODE_DEPLOY or EXTERNAL deployment controller types
 and tasks that use the EC2 launch type, the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent values are
 used only to define the lower and upper limit on the number of the tasks in the service that remain in the
 RUNNING state while the container instances are in the DRAINING state. If the tasks in
 the service use the Fargate launch type, the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent values aren't used,
 although they're currently visible when describing your service.
 
 When creating a service that uses the EXTERNAL deployment controller, you can specify only
 parameters that aren't controlled at the task set level. The only required parameter is the service name. You
 control your services using the CreateTaskSet operation. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task placement in your cluster using the following logic:
Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can support your service's task definition (for example, they have the required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
 By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across Availability Zones in this manner (although
 you can choose a different placement strategy) with the placementStrategy parameter):
 
Sort the valid container instances, giving priority to instances that have the fewest number of running tasks for this service in their respective Availability Zone. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for this service.
createServiceRequest - Future<CreateServiceResult> createServiceAsync(CreateServiceRequest createServiceRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateServiceRequest,CreateServiceResult> asyncHandler)
 Runs and maintains a desired number of tasks from a specified task definition. If the number of tasks running in
 a service drops below the desiredCount, Amazon ECS runs another copy of the task in the specified
 cluster. To update an existing service, see the UpdateService action.
 
In addition to maintaining the desired count of tasks in your service, you can optionally run your service behind one or more load balancers. The load balancers distribute traffic across the tasks that are associated with the service. For more information, see Service Load Balancing in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 Tasks for services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if they're in the
 RUNNING state. Tasks for services that do use a load balancer are considered healthy if
 they're in the RUNNING state and the container instance that they're hosted on is reported as
 healthy by the load balancer.
 
There are two service scheduler strategies available:
 REPLICA - The replica scheduling strategy places and maintains the desired number of tasks across
 your cluster. By default, the service scheduler spreads tasks across Availability Zones. You can use task
 placement strategies and constraints to customize task placement decisions. For more information, see Service Scheduler
 Concepts in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 DAEMON - The daemon scheduling strategy deploys exactly one task on each active container instance
 that meets all of the task placement constraints that you specify in your cluster. The service scheduler also
 evaluates the task placement constraints for running tasks and will stop tasks that do not meet the placement
 constraints. When using this strategy, you don't need to specify a desired number of tasks, a task placement
 strategy, or use Service Auto Scaling policies. For more information, see Service Scheduler
 Concepts in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can optionally specify a deployment configuration for your service. The deployment is triggered by changing
 properties, such as the task definition or the desired count of a service, with an UpdateService
 operation. The default value for a replica service for minimumHealthyPercent is 100%. The default
 value for a daemon service for minimumHealthyPercent is 0%.
 
 If a service is using the ECS deployment controller, the minimum healthy percent represents a lower
 limit on the number of tasks in a service that must remain in the RUNNING state during a deployment,
 as a percentage of the desired number of tasks (rounded up to the nearest integer), and while any container
 instances are in the DRAINING state if the service contains tasks using the EC2 launch type. This
 parameter enables you to deploy without using additional cluster capacity. For example, if your service has a
 desired number of four tasks and a minimum healthy percent of 50%, the scheduler might stop two existing tasks to
 free up cluster capacity before starting two new tasks. Tasks for services that do not use a load balancer
 are considered healthy if they're in the RUNNING state. Tasks for services that do use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they're in the RUNNING state and they're reported as healthy by
 the load balancer. The default value for minimum healthy percent is 100%.
 
 If a service is using the ECS deployment controller, the maximum percent parameter represents
 an upper limit on the number of tasks in a service that are allowed in the RUNNING or
 PENDING state during a deployment, as a percentage of the desired number of tasks (rounded down to
 the nearest integer), and while any container instances are in the DRAINING state if the service
 contains tasks using the EC2 launch type. This parameter enables you to define the deployment batch size. For
 example, if your service has a desired number of four tasks and a maximum percent value of 200%, the scheduler
 may start four new tasks before stopping the four older tasks (provided that the cluster resources required to do
 this are available). The default value for maximum percent is 200%.
 
 If a service is using either the CODE_DEPLOY or EXTERNAL deployment controller types
 and tasks that use the EC2 launch type, the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent values are
 used only to define the lower and upper limit on the number of the tasks in the service that remain in the
 RUNNING state while the container instances are in the DRAINING state. If the tasks in
 the service use the Fargate launch type, the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent values aren't used,
 although they're currently visible when describing your service.
 
 When creating a service that uses the EXTERNAL deployment controller, you can specify only
 parameters that aren't controlled at the task set level. The only required parameter is the service name. You
 control your services using the CreateTaskSet operation. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task placement in your cluster using the following logic:
Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can support your service's task definition (for example, they have the required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
 By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across Availability Zones in this manner (although
 you can choose a different placement strategy) with the placementStrategy parameter):
 
Sort the valid container instances, giving priority to instances that have the fewest number of running tasks for this service in their respective Availability Zone. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for this service.
createServiceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<CreateTaskSetResult> createTaskSetAsync(CreateTaskSetRequest createTaskSetRequest)
 Create a task set in the specified cluster and service. This is used when a service uses the
 EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
createTaskSetRequest - Future<CreateTaskSetResult> createTaskSetAsync(CreateTaskSetRequest createTaskSetRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateTaskSetRequest,CreateTaskSetResult> asyncHandler)
 Create a task set in the specified cluster and service. This is used when a service uses the
 EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
createTaskSetRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteAccountSettingResult> deleteAccountSettingAsync(DeleteAccountSettingRequest deleteAccountSettingRequest)
Disables an account setting for a specified IAM user, IAM role, or the root user for an account.
deleteAccountSettingRequest - Future<DeleteAccountSettingResult> deleteAccountSettingAsync(DeleteAccountSettingRequest deleteAccountSettingRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteAccountSettingRequest,DeleteAccountSettingResult> asyncHandler)
Disables an account setting for a specified IAM user, IAM role, or the root user for an account.
deleteAccountSettingRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteAttributesResult> deleteAttributesAsync(DeleteAttributesRequest deleteAttributesRequest)
Deletes one or more custom attributes from an Amazon ECS resource.
deleteAttributesRequest - Future<DeleteAttributesResult> deleteAttributesAsync(DeleteAttributesRequest deleteAttributesRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteAttributesRequest,DeleteAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes one or more custom attributes from an Amazon ECS resource.
deleteAttributesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteCapacityProviderResult> deleteCapacityProviderAsync(DeleteCapacityProviderRequest deleteCapacityProviderRequest)
Deletes the specified capacity provider.
 The FARGATE and FARGATE_SPOT capacity providers are reserved and cannot be deleted. You
 can disassociate them from a cluster using either the PutClusterCapacityProviders API or by deleting the
 cluster.
 
 Prior to a capacity provider being deleted, the capacity provider must be removed from the capacity provider
 strategy from all services. The UpdateService API can be used to remove a capacity provider from a
 service's capacity provider strategy. When updating a service, the forceNewDeployment option can be
 used to ensure that any tasks using the Amazon EC2 instance capacity provided by the capacity provider are
 transitioned to use the capacity from the remaining capacity providers. Only capacity providers that are not
 associated with a cluster can be deleted. To remove a capacity provider from a cluster, you can either use
 PutClusterCapacityProviders or delete the cluster.
 
deleteCapacityProviderRequest - Future<DeleteCapacityProviderResult> deleteCapacityProviderAsync(DeleteCapacityProviderRequest deleteCapacityProviderRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteCapacityProviderRequest,DeleteCapacityProviderResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes the specified capacity provider.
 The FARGATE and FARGATE_SPOT capacity providers are reserved and cannot be deleted. You
 can disassociate them from a cluster using either the PutClusterCapacityProviders API or by deleting the
 cluster.
 
 Prior to a capacity provider being deleted, the capacity provider must be removed from the capacity provider
 strategy from all services. The UpdateService API can be used to remove a capacity provider from a
 service's capacity provider strategy. When updating a service, the forceNewDeployment option can be
 used to ensure that any tasks using the Amazon EC2 instance capacity provided by the capacity provider are
 transitioned to use the capacity from the remaining capacity providers. Only capacity providers that are not
 associated with a cluster can be deleted. To remove a capacity provider from a cluster, you can either use
 PutClusterCapacityProviders or delete the cluster.
 
deleteCapacityProviderRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteClusterResult> deleteClusterAsync(DeleteClusterRequest deleteClusterRequest)
 Deletes the specified cluster. The cluster will transition to the INACTIVE state. Clusters with an
 INACTIVE status may remain discoverable in your account for a period of time. However, this behavior
 is subject to change in the future, so you should not rely on INACTIVE clusters persisting.
 
You must deregister all container instances from this cluster before you may delete it. You can list the container instances in a cluster with ListContainerInstances and deregister them with DeregisterContainerInstance.
deleteClusterRequest - Future<DeleteClusterResult> deleteClusterAsync(DeleteClusterRequest deleteClusterRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteClusterRequest,DeleteClusterResult> asyncHandler)
 Deletes the specified cluster. The cluster will transition to the INACTIVE state. Clusters with an
 INACTIVE status may remain discoverable in your account for a period of time. However, this behavior
 is subject to change in the future, so you should not rely on INACTIVE clusters persisting.
 
You must deregister all container instances from this cluster before you may delete it. You can list the container instances in a cluster with ListContainerInstances and deregister them with DeregisterContainerInstance.
deleteClusterRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteServiceResult> deleteServiceAsync(DeleteServiceRequest deleteServiceRequest)
Deletes a specified service within a cluster. You can delete a service if you have no running tasks in it and the desired task count is zero. If the service is actively maintaining tasks, you cannot delete it, and you must update the service to a desired task count of zero. For more information, see UpdateService.
 When you delete a service, if there are still running tasks that require cleanup, the service status moves from
 ACTIVE to DRAINING, and the service is no longer visible in the console or in the
 ListServices API operation. After all tasks have transitioned to either STOPPING or
 STOPPED status, the service status moves from DRAINING to INACTIVE.
 Services in the DRAINING or INACTIVE status can still be viewed with the
 DescribeServices API operation. However, in the future, INACTIVE services may be cleaned up
 and purged from Amazon ECS record keeping, and DescribeServices calls on those services return a
 ServiceNotFoundException error.
 
 If you attempt to create a new service with the same name as an existing service in either ACTIVE or
 DRAINING status, you receive an error.
 
deleteServiceRequest - Future<DeleteServiceResult> deleteServiceAsync(DeleteServiceRequest deleteServiceRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteServiceRequest,DeleteServiceResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes a specified service within a cluster. You can delete a service if you have no running tasks in it and the desired task count is zero. If the service is actively maintaining tasks, you cannot delete it, and you must update the service to a desired task count of zero. For more information, see UpdateService.
 When you delete a service, if there are still running tasks that require cleanup, the service status moves from
 ACTIVE to DRAINING, and the service is no longer visible in the console or in the
 ListServices API operation. After all tasks have transitioned to either STOPPING or
 STOPPED status, the service status moves from DRAINING to INACTIVE.
 Services in the DRAINING or INACTIVE status can still be viewed with the
 DescribeServices API operation. However, in the future, INACTIVE services may be cleaned up
 and purged from Amazon ECS record keeping, and DescribeServices calls on those services return a
 ServiceNotFoundException error.
 
 If you attempt to create a new service with the same name as an existing service in either ACTIVE or
 DRAINING status, you receive an error.
 
deleteServiceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeleteTaskSetResult> deleteTaskSetAsync(DeleteTaskSetRequest deleteTaskSetRequest)
 Deletes a specified task set within a service. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL
 deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
deleteTaskSetRequest - Future<DeleteTaskSetResult> deleteTaskSetAsync(DeleteTaskSetRequest deleteTaskSetRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteTaskSetRequest,DeleteTaskSetResult> asyncHandler)
 Deletes a specified task set within a service. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL
 deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
deleteTaskSetRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeregisterContainerInstanceResult> deregisterContainerInstanceAsync(DeregisterContainerInstanceRequest deregisterContainerInstanceRequest)
Deregisters an Amazon ECS container instance from the specified cluster. This instance is no longer available to run tasks.
If you intend to use the container instance for some other purpose after deregistration, you should stop all of the tasks running on the container instance before deregistration. That prevents any orphaned tasks from consuming resources.
Deregistering a container instance removes the instance from a cluster, but it does not terminate the EC2 instance. If you are finished using the instance, be sure to terminate it in the Amazon EC2 console to stop billing.
If you terminate a running container instance, Amazon ECS automatically deregisters the instance from your cluster (stopped container instances or instances with disconnected agents are not automatically deregistered when terminated).
deregisterContainerInstanceRequest - Future<DeregisterContainerInstanceResult> deregisterContainerInstanceAsync(DeregisterContainerInstanceRequest deregisterContainerInstanceRequest, AsyncHandler<DeregisterContainerInstanceRequest,DeregisterContainerInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
Deregisters an Amazon ECS container instance from the specified cluster. This instance is no longer available to run tasks.
If you intend to use the container instance for some other purpose after deregistration, you should stop all of the tasks running on the container instance before deregistration. That prevents any orphaned tasks from consuming resources.
Deregistering a container instance removes the instance from a cluster, but it does not terminate the EC2 instance. If you are finished using the instance, be sure to terminate it in the Amazon EC2 console to stop billing.
If you terminate a running container instance, Amazon ECS automatically deregisters the instance from your cluster (stopped container instances or instances with disconnected agents are not automatically deregistered when terminated).
deregisterContainerInstanceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DeregisterTaskDefinitionResult> deregisterTaskDefinitionAsync(DeregisterTaskDefinitionRequest deregisterTaskDefinitionRequest)
 Deregisters the specified task definition by family and revision. Upon deregistration, the task definition is
 marked as INACTIVE. Existing tasks and services that reference an INACTIVE task
 definition continue to run without disruption. Existing services that reference an INACTIVE task
 definition can still scale up or down by modifying the service's desired count.
 
 You cannot use an INACTIVE task definition to run new tasks or create new services, and you cannot
 update an existing service to reference an INACTIVE task definition. However, there may be up to a
 10-minute window following deregistration where these restrictions have not yet taken effect.
 
 At this time, INACTIVE task definitions remain discoverable in your account indefinitely. However,
 this behavior is subject to change in the future, so you should not rely on INACTIVE task
 definitions persisting beyond the lifecycle of any associated tasks and services.
 
deregisterTaskDefinitionRequest - Future<DeregisterTaskDefinitionResult> deregisterTaskDefinitionAsync(DeregisterTaskDefinitionRequest deregisterTaskDefinitionRequest, AsyncHandler<DeregisterTaskDefinitionRequest,DeregisterTaskDefinitionResult> asyncHandler)
 Deregisters the specified task definition by family and revision. Upon deregistration, the task definition is
 marked as INACTIVE. Existing tasks and services that reference an INACTIVE task
 definition continue to run without disruption. Existing services that reference an INACTIVE task
 definition can still scale up or down by modifying the service's desired count.
 
 You cannot use an INACTIVE task definition to run new tasks or create new services, and you cannot
 update an existing service to reference an INACTIVE task definition. However, there may be up to a
 10-minute window following deregistration where these restrictions have not yet taken effect.
 
 At this time, INACTIVE task definitions remain discoverable in your account indefinitely. However,
 this behavior is subject to change in the future, so you should not rely on INACTIVE task
 definitions persisting beyond the lifecycle of any associated tasks and services.
 
deregisterTaskDefinitionRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeCapacityProvidersResult> describeCapacityProvidersAsync(DescribeCapacityProvidersRequest describeCapacityProvidersRequest)
Describes one or more of your capacity providers.
describeCapacityProvidersRequest - Future<DescribeCapacityProvidersResult> describeCapacityProvidersAsync(DescribeCapacityProvidersRequest describeCapacityProvidersRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeCapacityProvidersRequest,DescribeCapacityProvidersResult> asyncHandler)
Describes one or more of your capacity providers.
describeCapacityProvidersRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeClustersResult> describeClustersAsync(DescribeClustersRequest describeClustersRequest)
Describes one or more of your clusters.
describeClustersRequest - Future<DescribeClustersResult> describeClustersAsync(DescribeClustersRequest describeClustersRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeClustersRequest,DescribeClustersResult> asyncHandler)
Describes one or more of your clusters.
describeClustersRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeClustersResult> describeClustersAsync()
Future<DescribeClustersResult> describeClustersAsync(AsyncHandler<DescribeClustersRequest,DescribeClustersResult> asyncHandler)
Future<DescribeContainerInstancesResult> describeContainerInstancesAsync(DescribeContainerInstancesRequest describeContainerInstancesRequest)
Describes Amazon Elastic Container Service container instances. Returns metadata about registered and remaining resources on each container instance requested.
describeContainerInstancesRequest - Future<DescribeContainerInstancesResult> describeContainerInstancesAsync(DescribeContainerInstancesRequest describeContainerInstancesRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeContainerInstancesRequest,DescribeContainerInstancesResult> asyncHandler)
Describes Amazon Elastic Container Service container instances. Returns metadata about registered and remaining resources on each container instance requested.
describeContainerInstancesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeServicesResult> describeServicesAsync(DescribeServicesRequest describeServicesRequest)
Describes the specified services running in your cluster.
describeServicesRequest - Future<DescribeServicesResult> describeServicesAsync(DescribeServicesRequest describeServicesRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeServicesRequest,DescribeServicesResult> asyncHandler)
Describes the specified services running in your cluster.
describeServicesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeTaskDefinitionResult> describeTaskDefinitionAsync(DescribeTaskDefinitionRequest describeTaskDefinitionRequest)
 Describes a task definition. You can specify a family and revision to find information
 about a specific task definition, or you can simply specify the family to find the latest ACTIVE
 revision in that family.
 
 You can only describe INACTIVE task definitions while an active task or service references them.
 
describeTaskDefinitionRequest - Future<DescribeTaskDefinitionResult> describeTaskDefinitionAsync(DescribeTaskDefinitionRequest describeTaskDefinitionRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeTaskDefinitionRequest,DescribeTaskDefinitionResult> asyncHandler)
 Describes a task definition. You can specify a family and revision to find information
 about a specific task definition, or you can simply specify the family to find the latest ACTIVE
 revision in that family.
 
 You can only describe INACTIVE task definitions while an active task or service references them.
 
describeTaskDefinitionRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeTaskSetsResult> describeTaskSetsAsync(DescribeTaskSetsRequest describeTaskSetsRequest)
 Describes the task sets in the specified cluster and service. This is used when a service uses the
 EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
describeTaskSetsRequest - Future<DescribeTaskSetsResult> describeTaskSetsAsync(DescribeTaskSetsRequest describeTaskSetsRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeTaskSetsRequest,DescribeTaskSetsResult> asyncHandler)
 Describes the task sets in the specified cluster and service. This is used when a service uses the
 EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
describeTaskSetsRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DescribeTasksResult> describeTasksAsync(DescribeTasksRequest describeTasksRequest)
Describes a specified task or tasks.
describeTasksRequest - Future<DescribeTasksResult> describeTasksAsync(DescribeTasksRequest describeTasksRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeTasksRequest,DescribeTasksResult> asyncHandler)
Describes a specified task or tasks.
describeTasksRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DiscoverPollEndpointResult> discoverPollEndpointAsync(DiscoverPollEndpointRequest discoverPollEndpointRequest)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Returns an endpoint for the Amazon ECS agent to poll for updates.
discoverPollEndpointRequest - Future<DiscoverPollEndpointResult> discoverPollEndpointAsync(DiscoverPollEndpointRequest discoverPollEndpointRequest, AsyncHandler<DiscoverPollEndpointRequest,DiscoverPollEndpointResult> asyncHandler)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Returns an endpoint for the Amazon ECS agent to poll for updates.
discoverPollEndpointRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<DiscoverPollEndpointResult> discoverPollEndpointAsync()
Future<DiscoverPollEndpointResult> discoverPollEndpointAsync(AsyncHandler<DiscoverPollEndpointRequest,DiscoverPollEndpointResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ExecuteCommandResult> executeCommandAsync(ExecuteCommandRequest executeCommandRequest)
Runs a command remotely on a container within a task.
executeCommandRequest - Future<ExecuteCommandResult> executeCommandAsync(ExecuteCommandRequest executeCommandRequest, AsyncHandler<ExecuteCommandRequest,ExecuteCommandResult> asyncHandler)
Runs a command remotely on a container within a task.
executeCommandRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListAccountSettingsResult> listAccountSettingsAsync(ListAccountSettingsRequest listAccountSettingsRequest)
Lists the account settings for a specified principal.
listAccountSettingsRequest - Future<ListAccountSettingsResult> listAccountSettingsAsync(ListAccountSettingsRequest listAccountSettingsRequest, AsyncHandler<ListAccountSettingsRequest,ListAccountSettingsResult> asyncHandler)
Lists the account settings for a specified principal.
listAccountSettingsRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListAttributesResult> listAttributesAsync(ListAttributesRequest listAttributesRequest)
 Lists the attributes for Amazon ECS resources within a specified target type and cluster. When you specify a
 target type and cluster, ListAttributes returns a list of attribute objects, one for each attribute
 on each resource. You can filter the list of results to a single attribute name to only return results that have
 that name. You can also filter the results by attribute name and value, for example, to see which container
 instances in a cluster are running a Linux AMI (ecs.os-type=linux).
 
listAttributesRequest - Future<ListAttributesResult> listAttributesAsync(ListAttributesRequest listAttributesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListAttributesRequest,ListAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
 Lists the attributes for Amazon ECS resources within a specified target type and cluster. When you specify a
 target type and cluster, ListAttributes returns a list of attribute objects, one for each attribute
 on each resource. You can filter the list of results to a single attribute name to only return results that have
 that name. You can also filter the results by attribute name and value, for example, to see which container
 instances in a cluster are running a Linux AMI (ecs.os-type=linux).
 
listAttributesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest listClustersRequest)
Returns a list of existing clusters.
listClustersRequest - Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest listClustersRequest, AsyncHandler<ListClustersRequest,ListClustersResult> asyncHandler)
Returns a list of existing clusters.
listClustersRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync()
listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest)Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync(AsyncHandler<ListClustersRequest,ListClustersResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ListContainerInstancesResult> listContainerInstancesAsync(ListContainerInstancesRequest listContainerInstancesRequest)
 Returns a list of container instances in a specified cluster. You can filter the results of a
 ListContainerInstances operation with cluster query language statements inside the
 filter parameter. For more information, see Cluster Query
 Language in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
listContainerInstancesRequest - Future<ListContainerInstancesResult> listContainerInstancesAsync(ListContainerInstancesRequest listContainerInstancesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListContainerInstancesRequest,ListContainerInstancesResult> asyncHandler)
 Returns a list of container instances in a specified cluster. You can filter the results of a
 ListContainerInstances operation with cluster query language statements inside the
 filter parameter. For more information, see Cluster Query
 Language in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
listContainerInstancesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListContainerInstancesResult> listContainerInstancesAsync()
Future<ListContainerInstancesResult> listContainerInstancesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListContainerInstancesRequest,ListContainerInstancesResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ListServicesResult> listServicesAsync(ListServicesRequest listServicesRequest)
Lists the services that are running in a specified cluster.
listServicesRequest - Future<ListServicesResult> listServicesAsync(ListServicesRequest listServicesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListServicesRequest,ListServicesResult> asyncHandler)
Lists the services that are running in a specified cluster.
listServicesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListServicesResult> listServicesAsync()
listServicesAsync(ListServicesRequest)Future<ListServicesResult> listServicesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListServicesRequest,ListServicesResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest listTagsForResourceRequest)
List the tags for an Amazon ECS resource.
listTagsForResourceRequest - Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest listTagsForResourceRequest, AsyncHandler<ListTagsForResourceRequest,ListTagsForResourceResult> asyncHandler)
List the tags for an Amazon ECS resource.
listTagsForResourceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> listTaskDefinitionFamiliesAsync(ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest listTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest)
 Returns a list of task definition families that are registered to your account (which may include task definition
 families that no longer have any ACTIVE task definition revisions).
 
 You can filter out task definition families that do not contain any ACTIVE task definition revisions
 by setting the status parameter to ACTIVE. You can also filter the results with the
 familyPrefix parameter.
 
listTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest - Future<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> listTaskDefinitionFamiliesAsync(ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest listTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest,ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> asyncHandler)
 Returns a list of task definition families that are registered to your account (which may include task definition
 families that no longer have any ACTIVE task definition revisions).
 
 You can filter out task definition families that do not contain any ACTIVE task definition revisions
 by setting the status parameter to ACTIVE. You can also filter the results with the
 familyPrefix parameter.
 
listTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> listTaskDefinitionFamiliesAsync()
Future<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> listTaskDefinitionFamiliesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesRequest,ListTaskDefinitionFamiliesResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ListTaskDefinitionsResult> listTaskDefinitionsAsync(ListTaskDefinitionsRequest listTaskDefinitionsRequest)
 Returns a list of task definitions that are registered to your account. You can filter the results by family name
 with the familyPrefix parameter or by status with the status parameter.
 
listTaskDefinitionsRequest - Future<ListTaskDefinitionsResult> listTaskDefinitionsAsync(ListTaskDefinitionsRequest listTaskDefinitionsRequest, AsyncHandler<ListTaskDefinitionsRequest,ListTaskDefinitionsResult> asyncHandler)
 Returns a list of task definitions that are registered to your account. You can filter the results by family name
 with the familyPrefix parameter or by status with the status parameter.
 
listTaskDefinitionsRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListTaskDefinitionsResult> listTaskDefinitionsAsync()
Future<ListTaskDefinitionsResult> listTaskDefinitionsAsync(AsyncHandler<ListTaskDefinitionsRequest,ListTaskDefinitionsResult> asyncHandler)
Future<ListTasksResult> listTasksAsync(ListTasksRequest listTasksRequest)
 Returns a list of tasks for a specified cluster. You can filter the results by family name, by a particular
 container instance, or by the desired status of the task with the family,
 containerInstance, and desiredStatus parameters.
 
Recently stopped tasks might appear in the returned results. Currently, stopped tasks appear in the returned results for at least one hour.
listTasksRequest - Future<ListTasksResult> listTasksAsync(ListTasksRequest listTasksRequest, AsyncHandler<ListTasksRequest,ListTasksResult> asyncHandler)
 Returns a list of tasks for a specified cluster. You can filter the results by family name, by a particular
 container instance, or by the desired status of the task with the family,
 containerInstance, and desiredStatus parameters.
 
Recently stopped tasks might appear in the returned results. Currently, stopped tasks appear in the returned results for at least one hour.
listTasksRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<ListTasksResult> listTasksAsync()
listTasksAsync(ListTasksRequest)Future<ListTasksResult> listTasksAsync(AsyncHandler<ListTasksRequest,ListTasksResult> asyncHandler)
Future<PutAccountSettingResult> putAccountSettingAsync(PutAccountSettingRequest putAccountSettingRequest)
Modifies an account setting. Account settings are set on a per-Region basis.
If you change the account setting for the root user, the default settings for all of the IAM users and roles for which no individual account setting has been specified are reset. For more information, see Account Settings in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 When serviceLongArnFormat, taskLongArnFormat, or
 containerInstanceLongArnFormat are specified, the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) and resource ID format
 of the resource type for a specified IAM user, IAM role, or the root user for an account is affected. The opt-in
 and opt-out account setting must be set for each Amazon ECS resource separately. The ARN and resource ID format
 of a resource will be defined by the opt-in status of the IAM user or role that created the resource. You must
 enable this setting to use Amazon ECS features such as resource tagging.
 
 When awsvpcTrunking is specified, the elastic network interface (ENI) limit for any new container
 instances that support the feature is changed. If awsvpcTrunking is enabled, any new container
 instances that support the feature are launched have the increased ENI limits available to them. For more
 information, see Elastic Network
 Interface Trunking in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 When containerInsights is specified, the default setting indicating whether CloudWatch Container
 Insights is enabled for your clusters is changed. If containerInsights is enabled, any new clusters
 that are created will have Container Insights enabled unless you disable it during cluster creation. For more
 information, see CloudWatch
 Container Insights in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
putAccountSettingRequest - Future<PutAccountSettingResult> putAccountSettingAsync(PutAccountSettingRequest putAccountSettingRequest, AsyncHandler<PutAccountSettingRequest,PutAccountSettingResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies an account setting. Account settings are set on a per-Region basis.
If you change the account setting for the root user, the default settings for all of the IAM users and roles for which no individual account setting has been specified are reset. For more information, see Account Settings in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 When serviceLongArnFormat, taskLongArnFormat, or
 containerInstanceLongArnFormat are specified, the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) and resource ID format
 of the resource type for a specified IAM user, IAM role, or the root user for an account is affected. The opt-in
 and opt-out account setting must be set for each Amazon ECS resource separately. The ARN and resource ID format
 of a resource will be defined by the opt-in status of the IAM user or role that created the resource. You must
 enable this setting to use Amazon ECS features such as resource tagging.
 
 When awsvpcTrunking is specified, the elastic network interface (ENI) limit for any new container
 instances that support the feature is changed. If awsvpcTrunking is enabled, any new container
 instances that support the feature are launched have the increased ENI limits available to them. For more
 information, see Elastic Network
 Interface Trunking in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 When containerInsights is specified, the default setting indicating whether CloudWatch Container
 Insights is enabled for your clusters is changed. If containerInsights is enabled, any new clusters
 that are created will have Container Insights enabled unless you disable it during cluster creation. For more
 information, see CloudWatch
 Container Insights in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
putAccountSettingRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<PutAccountSettingDefaultResult> putAccountSettingDefaultAsync(PutAccountSettingDefaultRequest putAccountSettingDefaultRequest)
Modifies an account setting for all IAM users on an account for whom no individual account setting has been specified. Account settings are set on a per-Region basis.
putAccountSettingDefaultRequest - Future<PutAccountSettingDefaultResult> putAccountSettingDefaultAsync(PutAccountSettingDefaultRequest putAccountSettingDefaultRequest, AsyncHandler<PutAccountSettingDefaultRequest,PutAccountSettingDefaultResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies an account setting for all IAM users on an account for whom no individual account setting has been specified. Account settings are set on a per-Region basis.
putAccountSettingDefaultRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<PutAttributesResult> putAttributesAsync(PutAttributesRequest putAttributesRequest)
Create or update an attribute on an Amazon ECS resource. If the attribute does not exist, it is created. If the attribute exists, its value is replaced with the specified value. To delete an attribute, use DeleteAttributes. For more information, see Attributes in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
putAttributesRequest - Future<PutAttributesResult> putAttributesAsync(PutAttributesRequest putAttributesRequest, AsyncHandler<PutAttributesRequest,PutAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Create or update an attribute on an Amazon ECS resource. If the attribute does not exist, it is created. If the attribute exists, its value is replaced with the specified value. To delete an attribute, use DeleteAttributes. For more information, see Attributes in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
putAttributesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<PutClusterCapacityProvidersResult> putClusterCapacityProvidersAsync(PutClusterCapacityProvidersRequest putClusterCapacityProvidersRequest)
Modifies the available capacity providers and the default capacity provider strategy for a cluster.
You must specify both the available capacity providers and a default capacity provider strategy for the cluster. If the specified cluster has existing capacity providers associated with it, you must specify all existing capacity providers in addition to any new ones you want to add. Any existing capacity providers associated with a cluster that are omitted from a PutClusterCapacityProviders API call will be disassociated with the cluster. You can only disassociate an existing capacity provider from a cluster if it's not being used by any existing tasks.
 When creating a service or running a task on a cluster, if no capacity provider or launch type is specified, then
 the cluster's default capacity provider strategy is used. It is recommended to define a default capacity provider
 strategy for your cluster, however you may specify an empty array ([]) to bypass defining a default
 strategy.
 
putClusterCapacityProvidersRequest - Future<PutClusterCapacityProvidersResult> putClusterCapacityProvidersAsync(PutClusterCapacityProvidersRequest putClusterCapacityProvidersRequest, AsyncHandler<PutClusterCapacityProvidersRequest,PutClusterCapacityProvidersResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies the available capacity providers and the default capacity provider strategy for a cluster.
You must specify both the available capacity providers and a default capacity provider strategy for the cluster. If the specified cluster has existing capacity providers associated with it, you must specify all existing capacity providers in addition to any new ones you want to add. Any existing capacity providers associated with a cluster that are omitted from a PutClusterCapacityProviders API call will be disassociated with the cluster. You can only disassociate an existing capacity provider from a cluster if it's not being used by any existing tasks.
 When creating a service or running a task on a cluster, if no capacity provider or launch type is specified, then
 the cluster's default capacity provider strategy is used. It is recommended to define a default capacity provider
 strategy for your cluster, however you may specify an empty array ([]) to bypass defining a default
 strategy.
 
putClusterCapacityProvidersRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<RegisterContainerInstanceResult> registerContainerInstanceAsync(RegisterContainerInstanceRequest registerContainerInstanceRequest)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Registers an EC2 instance into the specified cluster. This instance becomes available to place containers on.
registerContainerInstanceRequest - Future<RegisterContainerInstanceResult> registerContainerInstanceAsync(RegisterContainerInstanceRequest registerContainerInstanceRequest, AsyncHandler<RegisterContainerInstanceRequest,RegisterContainerInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Registers an EC2 instance into the specified cluster. This instance becomes available to place containers on.
registerContainerInstanceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<RegisterTaskDefinitionResult> registerTaskDefinitionAsync(RegisterTaskDefinitionRequest registerTaskDefinitionRequest)
 Registers a new task definition from the supplied family and containerDefinitions.
 Optionally, you can add data volumes to your containers with the volumes parameter. For more
 information about task definition parameters and defaults, see Amazon ECS Task
 Definitions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can specify an IAM role for your task with the taskRoleArn parameter. When you specify an IAM
 role for a task, its containers can then use the latest versions of the AWS CLI or SDKs to make API requests to
 the AWS services that are specified in the IAM policy associated with the role. For more information, see IAM Roles for Tasks in
 the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can specify a Docker networking mode for the containers in your task definition with the
 networkMode parameter. The available network modes correspond to those described in Network settings in the Docker run
 reference. If you specify the awsvpc network mode, the task is allocated an elastic network
 interface, and you must specify a NetworkConfiguration when you create a service or run a task with the
 task definition. For more information, see Task Networking in
 the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
registerTaskDefinitionRequest - Future<RegisterTaskDefinitionResult> registerTaskDefinitionAsync(RegisterTaskDefinitionRequest registerTaskDefinitionRequest, AsyncHandler<RegisterTaskDefinitionRequest,RegisterTaskDefinitionResult> asyncHandler)
 Registers a new task definition from the supplied family and containerDefinitions.
 Optionally, you can add data volumes to your containers with the volumes parameter. For more
 information about task definition parameters and defaults, see Amazon ECS Task
 Definitions in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can specify an IAM role for your task with the taskRoleArn parameter. When you specify an IAM
 role for a task, its containers can then use the latest versions of the AWS CLI or SDKs to make API requests to
 the AWS services that are specified in the IAM policy associated with the role. For more information, see IAM Roles for Tasks in
 the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 You can specify a Docker networking mode for the containers in your task definition with the
 networkMode parameter. The available network modes correspond to those described in Network settings in the Docker run
 reference. If you specify the awsvpc network mode, the task is allocated an elastic network
 interface, and you must specify a NetworkConfiguration when you create a service or run a task with the
 task definition. For more information, see Task Networking in
 the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
registerTaskDefinitionRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<RunTaskResult> runTaskAsync(RunTaskRequest runTaskRequest)
Starts a new task using the specified task definition.
You can allow Amazon ECS to place tasks for you, or you can customize how Amazon ECS places tasks using placement constraints and placement strategies. For more information, see Scheduling Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
Alternatively, you can use StartTask to use your own scheduler or place tasks manually on specific container instances.
The Amazon ECS API follows an eventual consistency model, due to the distributed nature of the system supporting the API. This means that the result of an API command you run that affects your Amazon ECS resources might not be immediately visible to all subsequent commands you run. Keep this in mind when you carry out an API command that immediately follows a previous API command.
To manage eventual consistency, you can do the following:
Confirm the state of the resource before you run a command to modify it. Run the DescribeTasks command using an exponential backoff algorithm to ensure that you allow enough time for the previous command to propagate through the system. To do this, run the DescribeTasks command repeatedly, starting with a couple of seconds of wait time and increasing gradually up to five minutes of wait time.
Add wait time between subsequent commands, even if the DescribeTasks command returns an accurate response. Apply an exponential backoff algorithm starting with a couple of seconds of wait time, and increase gradually up to about five minutes of wait time.
runTaskRequest - Future<RunTaskResult> runTaskAsync(RunTaskRequest runTaskRequest, AsyncHandler<RunTaskRequest,RunTaskResult> asyncHandler)
Starts a new task using the specified task definition.
You can allow Amazon ECS to place tasks for you, or you can customize how Amazon ECS places tasks using placement constraints and placement strategies. For more information, see Scheduling Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
Alternatively, you can use StartTask to use your own scheduler or place tasks manually on specific container instances.
The Amazon ECS API follows an eventual consistency model, due to the distributed nature of the system supporting the API. This means that the result of an API command you run that affects your Amazon ECS resources might not be immediately visible to all subsequent commands you run. Keep this in mind when you carry out an API command that immediately follows a previous API command.
To manage eventual consistency, you can do the following:
Confirm the state of the resource before you run a command to modify it. Run the DescribeTasks command using an exponential backoff algorithm to ensure that you allow enough time for the previous command to propagate through the system. To do this, run the DescribeTasks command repeatedly, starting with a couple of seconds of wait time and increasing gradually up to five minutes of wait time.
Add wait time between subsequent commands, even if the DescribeTasks command returns an accurate response. Apply an exponential backoff algorithm starting with a couple of seconds of wait time, and increase gradually up to about five minutes of wait time.
runTaskRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<StartTaskResult> startTaskAsync(StartTaskRequest startTaskRequest)
Starts a new task from the specified task definition on the specified container instance or instances.
Alternatively, you can use RunTask to place tasks for you. For more information, see Scheduling Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
startTaskRequest - Future<StartTaskResult> startTaskAsync(StartTaskRequest startTaskRequest, AsyncHandler<StartTaskRequest,StartTaskResult> asyncHandler)
Starts a new task from the specified task definition on the specified container instance or instances.
Alternatively, you can use RunTask to place tasks for you. For more information, see Scheduling Tasks in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
startTaskRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<StopTaskResult> stopTaskAsync(StopTaskRequest stopTaskRequest)
Stops a running task. Any tags associated with the task will be deleted.
 When StopTask is called on a task, the equivalent of docker stop is issued to the containers
 running in the task. This results in a SIGTERM value and a default 30-second timeout, after which
 the SIGKILL value is sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container handles the
 SIGTERM value gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from receiving it, no SIGKILL
 value is sent.
 
 The default 30-second timeout can be configured on the Amazon ECS container agent with the
 ECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT variable. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container
 Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
stopTaskRequest - Future<StopTaskResult> stopTaskAsync(StopTaskRequest stopTaskRequest, AsyncHandler<StopTaskRequest,StopTaskResult> asyncHandler)
Stops a running task. Any tags associated with the task will be deleted.
 When StopTask is called on a task, the equivalent of docker stop is issued to the containers
 running in the task. This results in a SIGTERM value and a default 30-second timeout, after which
 the SIGKILL value is sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container handles the
 SIGTERM value gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from receiving it, no SIGKILL
 value is sent.
 
 The default 30-second timeout can be configured on the Amazon ECS container agent with the
 ECS_CONTAINER_STOP_TIMEOUT variable. For more information, see Amazon ECS Container
 Agent Configuration in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
stopTaskRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<SubmitAttachmentStateChangesResult> submitAttachmentStateChangesAsync(SubmitAttachmentStateChangesRequest submitAttachmentStateChangesRequest)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that an attachment changed states.
submitAttachmentStateChangesRequest - Future<SubmitAttachmentStateChangesResult> submitAttachmentStateChangesAsync(SubmitAttachmentStateChangesRequest submitAttachmentStateChangesRequest, AsyncHandler<SubmitAttachmentStateChangesRequest,SubmitAttachmentStateChangesResult> asyncHandler)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that an attachment changed states.
submitAttachmentStateChangesRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> submitContainerStateChangeAsync(SubmitContainerStateChangeRequest submitContainerStateChangeRequest)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that a container changed states.
submitContainerStateChangeRequest - Future<SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> submitContainerStateChangeAsync(SubmitContainerStateChangeRequest submitContainerStateChangeRequest, AsyncHandler<SubmitContainerStateChangeRequest,SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> asyncHandler)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that a container changed states.
submitContainerStateChangeRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> submitContainerStateChangeAsync()
Future<SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> submitContainerStateChangeAsync(AsyncHandler<SubmitContainerStateChangeRequest,SubmitContainerStateChangeResult> asyncHandler)
Future<SubmitTaskStateChangeResult> submitTaskStateChangeAsync(SubmitTaskStateChangeRequest submitTaskStateChangeRequest)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that a task changed states.
submitTaskStateChangeRequest - Future<SubmitTaskStateChangeResult> submitTaskStateChangeAsync(SubmitTaskStateChangeRequest submitTaskStateChangeRequest, AsyncHandler<SubmitTaskStateChangeRequest,SubmitTaskStateChangeResult> asyncHandler)
This action is only used by the Amazon ECS agent, and it is not intended for use outside of the agent.
Sent to acknowledge that a task changed states.
submitTaskStateChangeRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<TagResourceResult> tagResourceAsync(TagResourceRequest tagResourceRequest)
 Associates the specified tags to a resource with the specified resourceArn. If existing tags on a
 resource are not specified in the request parameters, they are not changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags
 associated with that resource are deleted as well.
 
tagResourceRequest - Future<TagResourceResult> tagResourceAsync(TagResourceRequest tagResourceRequest, AsyncHandler<TagResourceRequest,TagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
 Associates the specified tags to a resource with the specified resourceArn. If existing tags on a
 resource are not specified in the request parameters, they are not changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags
 associated with that resource are deleted as well.
 
tagResourceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UntagResourceResult> untagResourceAsync(UntagResourceRequest untagResourceRequest)
Deletes specified tags from a resource.
untagResourceRequest - Future<UntagResourceResult> untagResourceAsync(UntagResourceRequest untagResourceRequest, AsyncHandler<UntagResourceRequest,UntagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes specified tags from a resource.
untagResourceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateCapacityProviderResult> updateCapacityProviderAsync(UpdateCapacityProviderRequest updateCapacityProviderRequest)
Modifies the parameters for a capacity provider.
updateCapacityProviderRequest - Future<UpdateCapacityProviderResult> updateCapacityProviderAsync(UpdateCapacityProviderRequest updateCapacityProviderRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateCapacityProviderRequest,UpdateCapacityProviderResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies the parameters for a capacity provider.
updateCapacityProviderRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateClusterResult> updateClusterAsync(UpdateClusterRequest updateClusterRequest)
Updates the cluster.
updateClusterRequest - Future<UpdateClusterResult> updateClusterAsync(UpdateClusterRequest updateClusterRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateClusterRequest,UpdateClusterResult> asyncHandler)
Updates the cluster.
updateClusterRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateClusterSettingsResult> updateClusterSettingsAsync(UpdateClusterSettingsRequest updateClusterSettingsRequest)
Modifies the settings to use for a cluster.
updateClusterSettingsRequest - Future<UpdateClusterSettingsResult> updateClusterSettingsAsync(UpdateClusterSettingsRequest updateClusterSettingsRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateClusterSettingsRequest,UpdateClusterSettingsResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies the settings to use for a cluster.
updateClusterSettingsRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateContainerAgentResult> updateContainerAgentAsync(UpdateContainerAgentRequest updateContainerAgentRequest)
Updates the Amazon ECS container agent on a specified container instance. Updating the Amazon ECS container agent does not interrupt running tasks or services on the container instance. The process for updating the agent differs depending on whether your container instance was launched with the Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or another operating system.
 The UpdateContainerAgent API isn't supported for container instances using the Amazon ECS-optimized
 Amazon Linux 2 (arm64) AMI. To update the container agent, you can update the ecs-init package which
 will update the agent. For more information, see Updating the Amazon
 ECS container agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 The UpdateContainerAgent API requires an Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or Amazon Linux AMI with the
 ecs-init service installed and running. For help updating the Amazon ECS container agent on other
 operating systems, see Manually updating the Amazon ECS container agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
 Guide.
 
updateContainerAgentRequest - Future<UpdateContainerAgentResult> updateContainerAgentAsync(UpdateContainerAgentRequest updateContainerAgentRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateContainerAgentRequest,UpdateContainerAgentResult> asyncHandler)
Updates the Amazon ECS container agent on a specified container instance. Updating the Amazon ECS container agent does not interrupt running tasks or services on the container instance. The process for updating the agent differs depending on whether your container instance was launched with the Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or another operating system.
 The UpdateContainerAgent API isn't supported for container instances using the Amazon ECS-optimized
 Amazon Linux 2 (arm64) AMI. To update the container agent, you can update the ecs-init package which
 will update the agent. For more information, see Updating the Amazon
 ECS container agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
 The UpdateContainerAgent API requires an Amazon ECS-optimized AMI or Amazon Linux AMI with the
 ecs-init service installed and running. For help updating the Amazon ECS container agent on other
 operating systems, see Manually updating the Amazon ECS container agent in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
 Guide.
 
updateContainerAgentRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateContainerInstancesStateResult> updateContainerInstancesStateAsync(UpdateContainerInstancesStateRequest updateContainerInstancesStateRequest)
Modifies the status of an Amazon ECS container instance.
 Once a container instance has reached an ACTIVE state, you can change the status of a container
 instance to DRAINING to manually remove an instance from a cluster, for example to perform system
 updates, update the Docker daemon, or scale down the cluster size.
 
 A container instance cannot be changed to DRAINING until it has reached an ACTIVE
 status. If the instance is in any other status, an error will be received.
 
 When you set a container instance to DRAINING, Amazon ECS prevents new tasks from being scheduled
 for placement on the container instance and replacement service tasks are started on other container instances in
 the cluster if the resources are available. Service tasks on the container instance that are in the
 PENDING state are stopped immediately.
 
 Service tasks on the container instance that are in the RUNNING state are stopped and replaced
 according to the service's deployment configuration parameters, minimumHealthyPercent and
 maximumPercent. You can change the deployment configuration of your service using
 UpdateService.
 
 If minimumHealthyPercent is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore desiredCount
 temporarily during task replacement. For example, desiredCount is four tasks, a minimum of 50%
 allows the scheduler to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. If the minimum is 100%, the
 service scheduler can't remove existing tasks until the replacement tasks are considered healthy. Tasks for
 services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state.
 Tasks for services that use a load balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state
 and the container instance they are hosted on is reported as healthy by the load balancer.
 
 The maximumPercent parameter represents an upper limit on the number of running tasks during task
 replacement, which enables you to define the replacement batch size. For example, if desiredCount is
 four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before stopping the four tasks to be drained, provided that
 the cluster resources required to do this are available. If the maximum is 100%, then replacement tasks can't
 start until the draining tasks have stopped.
 
 Any PENDING or RUNNING tasks that do not belong to a service are not affected. You must
 wait for them to finish or stop them manually.
 
 A container instance has completed draining when it has no more RUNNING tasks. You can verify this
 using ListTasks.
 
 When a container instance has been drained, you can set a container instance to ACTIVE status and
 once it has reached that status the Amazon ECS scheduler can begin scheduling tasks on the instance again.
 
updateContainerInstancesStateRequest - Future<UpdateContainerInstancesStateResult> updateContainerInstancesStateAsync(UpdateContainerInstancesStateRequest updateContainerInstancesStateRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateContainerInstancesStateRequest,UpdateContainerInstancesStateResult> asyncHandler)
Modifies the status of an Amazon ECS container instance.
 Once a container instance has reached an ACTIVE state, you can change the status of a container
 instance to DRAINING to manually remove an instance from a cluster, for example to perform system
 updates, update the Docker daemon, or scale down the cluster size.
 
 A container instance cannot be changed to DRAINING until it has reached an ACTIVE
 status. If the instance is in any other status, an error will be received.
 
 When you set a container instance to DRAINING, Amazon ECS prevents new tasks from being scheduled
 for placement on the container instance and replacement service tasks are started on other container instances in
 the cluster if the resources are available. Service tasks on the container instance that are in the
 PENDING state are stopped immediately.
 
 Service tasks on the container instance that are in the RUNNING state are stopped and replaced
 according to the service's deployment configuration parameters, minimumHealthyPercent and
 maximumPercent. You can change the deployment configuration of your service using
 UpdateService.
 
 If minimumHealthyPercent is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore desiredCount
 temporarily during task replacement. For example, desiredCount is four tasks, a minimum of 50%
 allows the scheduler to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. If the minimum is 100%, the
 service scheduler can't remove existing tasks until the replacement tasks are considered healthy. Tasks for
 services that do not use a load balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state.
 Tasks for services that use a load balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state
 and the container instance they are hosted on is reported as healthy by the load balancer.
 
 The maximumPercent parameter represents an upper limit on the number of running tasks during task
 replacement, which enables you to define the replacement batch size. For example, if desiredCount is
 four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before stopping the four tasks to be drained, provided that
 the cluster resources required to do this are available. If the maximum is 100%, then replacement tasks can't
 start until the draining tasks have stopped.
 
 Any PENDING or RUNNING tasks that do not belong to a service are not affected. You must
 wait for them to finish or stop them manually.
 
 A container instance has completed draining when it has no more RUNNING tasks. You can verify this
 using ListTasks.
 
 When a container instance has been drained, you can set a container instance to ACTIVE status and
 once it has reached that status the Amazon ECS scheduler can begin scheduling tasks on the instance again.
 
updateContainerInstancesStateRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateServiceResult> updateServiceAsync(UpdateServiceRequest updateServiceRequest)
Updating the task placement strategies and constraints on an Amazon ECS service remains in preview and is a Beta Service as defined by and subject to the Beta Service Participation Service Terms located at https://aws.amazon.com/service-terms ("Beta Terms"). These Beta Terms apply to your participation in this preview.
Modifies the parameters of a service.
 For services using the rolling update (ECS) deployment controller, the desired count, deployment
 configuration, network configuration, task placement constraints and strategies, or task definition used can be
 updated.
 
 For services using the blue/green (CODE_DEPLOY) deployment controller, only the desired count,
 deployment configuration, task placement constraints and strategies, and health check grace period can be updated
 using this API. If the network configuration, platform version, or task definition need to be updated, a new AWS
 CodeDeploy deployment should be created. For more information, see CreateDeployment
 in the AWS CodeDeploy API Reference.
 
For services using an external deployment controller, you can update only the desired count, task placement constraints and strategies, and health check grace period using this API. If the launch type, load balancer, network configuration, platform version, or task definition need to be updated, you should create a new task set. For more information, see CreateTaskSet.
 You can add to or subtract from the number of instantiations of a task definition in a service by specifying the
 cluster that the service is running in and a new desiredCount parameter.
 
If you have updated the Docker image of your application, you can create a new task definition with that image and deploy it to your service. The service scheduler uses the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent parameters (in the service's deployment configuration) to determine the deployment strategy.
 If your updated Docker image uses the same tag as what is in the existing task definition for your service (for
 example, my_image:latest), you do not need to create a new revision of your task definition. You can
 update the service using the forceNewDeployment option. The new tasks launched by the deployment
 pull the current image/tag combination from your repository when they start.
 
 You can also update the deployment configuration of a service. When a deployment is triggered by updating the
 task definition of a service, the service scheduler uses the deployment configuration parameters,
 minimumHealthyPercent and maximumPercent, to determine the deployment strategy.
 
 If minimumHealthyPercent is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore desiredCount
 temporarily during a deployment. For example, if desiredCount is four tasks, a minimum of 50% allows
 the scheduler to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. Tasks for services that do not use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state. Tasks for services that use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state and the container instance they are
 hosted on is reported as healthy by the load balancer.
 
 The maximumPercent parameter represents an upper limit on the number of running tasks during a
 deployment, which enables you to define the deployment batch size. For example, if desiredCount is
 four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before stopping the four older tasks (provided that the
 cluster resources required to do this are available).
 
 When UpdateService stops a task during a deployment, the equivalent of docker stop is issued
 to the containers running in the task. This results in a SIGTERM and a 30-second timeout, after
 which SIGKILL is sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container handles the
 SIGTERM gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from receiving it, no SIGKILL is sent.
 
When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task placement in your cluster with the following logic:
Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can support your service's task definition (for example, they have the required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across Availability Zones in this manner (although you can choose a different placement strategy):
Sort the valid container instances by the fewest number of running tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for this service.
When the service scheduler stops running tasks, it attempts to maintain balance across the Availability Zones in your cluster using the following logic:
Sort the container instances by the largest number of running tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have two, container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for termination.
Stop the task on a container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the largest number of running tasks for this service.
updateServiceRequest - Future<UpdateServiceResult> updateServiceAsync(UpdateServiceRequest updateServiceRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateServiceRequest,UpdateServiceResult> asyncHandler)
Updating the task placement strategies and constraints on an Amazon ECS service remains in preview and is a Beta Service as defined by and subject to the Beta Service Participation Service Terms located at https://aws.amazon.com/service-terms ("Beta Terms"). These Beta Terms apply to your participation in this preview.
Modifies the parameters of a service.
 For services using the rolling update (ECS) deployment controller, the desired count, deployment
 configuration, network configuration, task placement constraints and strategies, or task definition used can be
 updated.
 
 For services using the blue/green (CODE_DEPLOY) deployment controller, only the desired count,
 deployment configuration, task placement constraints and strategies, and health check grace period can be updated
 using this API. If the network configuration, platform version, or task definition need to be updated, a new AWS
 CodeDeploy deployment should be created. For more information, see CreateDeployment
 in the AWS CodeDeploy API Reference.
 
For services using an external deployment controller, you can update only the desired count, task placement constraints and strategies, and health check grace period using this API. If the launch type, load balancer, network configuration, platform version, or task definition need to be updated, you should create a new task set. For more information, see CreateTaskSet.
 You can add to or subtract from the number of instantiations of a task definition in a service by specifying the
 cluster that the service is running in and a new desiredCount parameter.
 
If you have updated the Docker image of your application, you can create a new task definition with that image and deploy it to your service. The service scheduler uses the minimum healthy percent and maximum percent parameters (in the service's deployment configuration) to determine the deployment strategy.
 If your updated Docker image uses the same tag as what is in the existing task definition for your service (for
 example, my_image:latest), you do not need to create a new revision of your task definition. You can
 update the service using the forceNewDeployment option. The new tasks launched by the deployment
 pull the current image/tag combination from your repository when they start.
 
 You can also update the deployment configuration of a service. When a deployment is triggered by updating the
 task definition of a service, the service scheduler uses the deployment configuration parameters,
 minimumHealthyPercent and maximumPercent, to determine the deployment strategy.
 
 If minimumHealthyPercent is below 100%, the scheduler can ignore desiredCount
 temporarily during a deployment. For example, if desiredCount is four tasks, a minimum of 50% allows
 the scheduler to stop two existing tasks before starting two new tasks. Tasks for services that do not use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state. Tasks for services that use a load
 balancer are considered healthy if they are in the RUNNING state and the container instance they are
 hosted on is reported as healthy by the load balancer.
 
 The maximumPercent parameter represents an upper limit on the number of running tasks during a
 deployment, which enables you to define the deployment batch size. For example, if desiredCount is
 four tasks, a maximum of 200% starts four new tasks before stopping the four older tasks (provided that the
 cluster resources required to do this are available).
 
 When UpdateService stops a task during a deployment, the equivalent of docker stop is issued
 to the containers running in the task. This results in a SIGTERM and a 30-second timeout, after
 which SIGKILL is sent and the containers are forcibly stopped. If the container handles the
 SIGTERM gracefully and exits within 30 seconds from receiving it, no SIGKILL is sent.
 
When the service scheduler launches new tasks, it determines task placement in your cluster with the following logic:
Determine which of the container instances in your cluster can support your service's task definition (for example, they have the required CPU, memory, ports, and container instance attributes).
By default, the service scheduler attempts to balance tasks across Availability Zones in this manner (although you can choose a different placement strategy):
Sort the valid container instances by the fewest number of running tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have zero, valid container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for placement.
Place the new service task on a valid container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the fewest number of running tasks for this service.
When the service scheduler stops running tasks, it attempts to maintain balance across the Availability Zones in your cluster using the following logic:
Sort the container instances by the largest number of running tasks for this service in the same Availability Zone as the instance. For example, if zone A has one running service task and zones B and C each have two, container instances in either zone B or C are considered optimal for termination.
Stop the task on a container instance in an optimal Availability Zone (based on the previous steps), favoring container instances with the largest number of running tasks for this service.
updateServiceRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetResult> updateServicePrimaryTaskSetAsync(UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest updateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest)
 Modifies which task set in a service is the primary task set. Any parameters that are updated on the primary task
 set in a service will transition to the service. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL
 deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
updateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest - Future<UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetResult> updateServicePrimaryTaskSetAsync(UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest updateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest,UpdateServicePrimaryTaskSetResult> asyncHandler)
 Modifies which task set in a service is the primary task set. Any parameters that are updated on the primary task
 set in a service will transition to the service. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL
 deployment controller type. For more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
updateServicePrimaryTaskSetRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Future<UpdateTaskSetResult> updateTaskSetAsync(UpdateTaskSetRequest updateTaskSetRequest)
 Modifies a task set. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For
 more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
updateTaskSetRequest - Future<UpdateTaskSetResult> updateTaskSetAsync(UpdateTaskSetRequest updateTaskSetRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateTaskSetRequest,UpdateTaskSetResult> asyncHandler)
 Modifies a task set. This is used when a service uses the EXTERNAL deployment controller type. For
 more information, see Amazon ECS Deployment
 Types in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide.
 
updateTaskSetRequest - asyncHandler - Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
        implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
        unsuccessful completion of the operation.Copyright © 2021. All rights reserved.