public class InvokeRequest extends AmazonWebServiceRequest implements Serializable, Cloneable
NOOP
Constructor and Description |
---|
InvokeRequest() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
InvokeRequest |
clone() |
boolean |
equals(Object obj) |
String |
getClientContext()
Using the
ClientContext you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. |
String |
getFunctionName()
The Lambda function name.
|
String |
getInvocationType()
By default, the
Invoke API assumes
RequestResponse invocation type. |
String |
getLogType()
You can set this optional parameter to
Tail in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType parameter with value
RequestResponse . |
ByteBuffer |
getPayload()
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
|
String |
getQualifier()
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version
or alias name.
|
int |
hashCode() |
void |
setClientContext(String clientContext)
Using the
ClientContext you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. |
void |
setFunctionName(String functionName)
The Lambda function name.
|
void |
setInvocationType(InvocationType invocationType)
By default, the
Invoke API assumes
RequestResponse invocation type. |
void |
setInvocationType(String invocationType)
By default, the
Invoke API assumes
RequestResponse invocation type. |
void |
setLogType(LogType logType)
You can set this optional parameter to
Tail in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType parameter with value
RequestResponse . |
void |
setLogType(String logType)
You can set this optional parameter to
Tail in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType parameter with value
RequestResponse . |
void |
setPayload(ByteBuffer payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
|
void |
setPayload(String payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
|
void |
setQualifier(String qualifier)
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version
or alias name.
|
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of this object; useful for testing and
debugging.
|
InvokeRequest |
withClientContext(String clientContext)
Using the
ClientContext you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. |
InvokeRequest |
withFunctionName(String functionName)
The Lambda function name.
|
InvokeRequest |
withInvocationType(InvocationType invocationType)
By default, the
Invoke API assumes
RequestResponse invocation type. |
InvokeRequest |
withInvocationType(String invocationType)
By default, the
Invoke API assumes
RequestResponse invocation type. |
InvokeRequest |
withLogType(LogType logType)
You can set this optional parameter to
Tail in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType parameter with value
RequestResponse . |
InvokeRequest |
withLogType(String logType)
You can set this optional parameter to
Tail in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType parameter with value
RequestResponse . |
InvokeRequest |
withPayload(ByteBuffer payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
|
InvokeRequest |
withPayload(String payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
|
InvokeRequest |
withQualifier(String qualifier)
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version
or alias name.
|
copyBaseTo, getCloneRoot, getCloneSource, getCustomQueryParameters, getCustomRequestHeaders, getGeneralProgressListener, getReadLimit, getRequestClientOptions, getRequestCredentials, getRequestCredentialsProvider, getRequestMetricCollector, getSdkClientExecutionTimeout, getSdkRequestTimeout, putCustomQueryParameter, putCustomRequestHeader, setGeneralProgressListener, setRequestCredentials, setRequestCredentialsProvider, setRequestMetricCollector, setSdkClientExecutionTimeout, setSdkRequestTimeout, withGeneralProgressListener, withRequestMetricCollector, withSdkClientExecutionTimeout, withSdkRequestTimeout
public void setFunctionName(String functionName)
The Lambda function name.
You can specify a function name (for example, Thumbnail
) or
you can specify Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS
Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for example,
account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length constraint
applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the function name, it is
limited to 64 character in length.
functionName
- The Lambda function name.
You can specify a function name (for example,
Thumbnail
) or you can specify Amazon Resource Name
(ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for
example, account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length
constraint applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the
function name, it is limited to 64 character in length.
public String getFunctionName()
The Lambda function name.
You can specify a function name (for example, Thumbnail
) or
you can specify Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS
Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for example,
account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length constraint
applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the function name, it is
limited to 64 character in length.
You can specify a function name (for example,
Thumbnail
) or you can specify Amazon Resource Name
(ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for
example, account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length
constraint applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the
function name, it is limited to 64 character in length.
public InvokeRequest withFunctionName(String functionName)
The Lambda function name.
You can specify a function name (for example, Thumbnail
) or
you can specify Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS
Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for example,
account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length constraint
applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the function name, it is
limited to 64 character in length.
functionName
- The Lambda function name.
You can specify a function name (for example,
Thumbnail
) or you can specify Amazon Resource Name
(ARN) of the function (for example,
arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:account-id:function:ThumbNail
). AWS Lambda also allows you to specify a partial ARN (for
example, account-id:Thumbnail
). Note that the length
constraint applies only to the ARN. If you specify only the
function name, it is limited to 64 character in length.
public void setInvocationType(String invocationType)
By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally request
asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the
InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter to request
AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some verification, such as
if the caller is authorized to invoke the function and if the inputs are
valid. You request this by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account scenario
when you want to verify access to a function without running it.
invocationType
- By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally
request asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as
the InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter
to request AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some
verification, such as if the caller is authorized to invoke the
function and if the inputs are valid. You request this by
specifying DryRun
as the InvocationType
.
This is useful in a cross-account scenario when you want to verify
access to a function without running it.InvocationType
public String getInvocationType()
By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally request
asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the
InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter to request
AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some verification, such as
if the caller is authorized to invoke the function and if the inputs are
valid. You request this by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account scenario
when you want to verify access to a function without running it.
Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally
request asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the InvocationType
. You can also use this
parameter to request AWS Lambda to not execute the function but
do some verification, such as if the caller is authorized to
invoke the function and if the inputs are valid. You request this
by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account
scenario when you want to verify access to a function without
running it.InvocationType
public InvokeRequest withInvocationType(String invocationType)
By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally request
asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the
InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter to request
AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some verification, such as
if the caller is authorized to invoke the function and if the inputs are
valid. You request this by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account scenario
when you want to verify access to a function without running it.
invocationType
- By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally
request asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as
the InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter
to request AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some
verification, such as if the caller is authorized to invoke the
function and if the inputs are valid. You request this by
specifying DryRun
as the InvocationType
.
This is useful in a cross-account scenario when you want to verify
access to a function without running it.InvocationType
public void setInvocationType(InvocationType invocationType)
By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally request
asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the
InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter to request
AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some verification, such as
if the caller is authorized to invoke the function and if the inputs are
valid. You request this by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account scenario
when you want to verify access to a function without running it.
invocationType
- By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally
request asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as
the InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter
to request AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some
verification, such as if the caller is authorized to invoke the
function and if the inputs are valid. You request this by
specifying DryRun
as the InvocationType
.
This is useful in a cross-account scenario when you want to verify
access to a function without running it.InvocationType
public InvokeRequest withInvocationType(InvocationType invocationType)
By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally request
asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as the
InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter to request
AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some verification, such as
if the caller is authorized to invoke the function and if the inputs are
valid. You request this by specifying DryRun
as the
InvocationType
. This is useful in a cross-account scenario
when you want to verify access to a function without running it.
invocationType
- By default, the Invoke
API assumes
RequestResponse
invocation type. You can optionally
request asynchronous execution by specifying Event
as
the InvocationType
. You can also use this parameter
to request AWS Lambda to not execute the function but do some
verification, such as if the caller is authorized to invoke the
function and if the inputs are valid. You request this by
specifying DryRun
as the InvocationType
.
This is useful in a cross-account scenario when you want to verify
access to a function without running it.InvocationType
public void setLogType(String logType)
You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value
RequestResponse
. In this case, AWS Lambda returns the
base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data produced by your Lambda function in
the x-amz-log-results
header.
logType
- You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the
request only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value RequestResponse
. In this case,
AWS Lambda returns the base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data
produced by your Lambda function in the
x-amz-log-results
header.LogType
public String getLogType()
You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value
RequestResponse
. In this case, AWS Lambda returns the
base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data produced by your Lambda function in
the x-amz-log-results
header.
Tail
in the
request only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value RequestResponse
. In this case,
AWS Lambda returns the base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data
produced by your Lambda function in the
x-amz-log-results
header.LogType
public InvokeRequest withLogType(String logType)
You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value
RequestResponse
. In this case, AWS Lambda returns the
base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data produced by your Lambda function in
the x-amz-log-results
header.
logType
- You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the
request only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value RequestResponse
. In this case,
AWS Lambda returns the base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data
produced by your Lambda function in the
x-amz-log-results
header.LogType
public void setLogType(LogType logType)
You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value
RequestResponse
. In this case, AWS Lambda returns the
base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data produced by your Lambda function in
the x-amz-log-results
header.
logType
- You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the
request only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value RequestResponse
. In this case,
AWS Lambda returns the base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data
produced by your Lambda function in the
x-amz-log-results
header.LogType
public InvokeRequest withLogType(LogType logType)
You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the request
only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value
RequestResponse
. In this case, AWS Lambda returns the
base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data produced by your Lambda function in
the x-amz-log-results
header.
logType
- You can set this optional parameter to Tail
in the
request only if you specify the InvocationType
parameter with value RequestResponse
. In this case,
AWS Lambda returns the base64-encoded last 4 KB of log data
produced by your Lambda function in the
x-amz-log-results
header.LogType
public void setClientContext(String clientContext)
Using the ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then process
the client information in your Lambda function as you choose through the
context variable. For an example of a ClientContext
JSON,
see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference and User
Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
clientContext
- Using the ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then
process the client information in your Lambda function as you
choose through the context variable. For an example of a
ClientContext
JSON, see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference and
User Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
public String getClientContext()
Using the ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then process
the client information in your Lambda function as you choose through the
context variable. For an example of a ClientContext
JSON,
see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference and User
Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then
process the client information in your Lambda function as you
choose through the context variable. For an example of a
ClientContext
JSON, see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference
and User Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
public InvokeRequest withClientContext(String clientContext)
Using the ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then process
the client information in your Lambda function as you choose through the
context variable. For an example of a ClientContext
JSON,
see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference and User
Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
clientContext
- Using the ClientContext
you can pass client-specific
information to the Lambda function you are invoking. You can then
process the client information in your Lambda function as you
choose through the context variable. For an example of a
ClientContext
JSON, see PutEvents in the Amazon Mobile Analytics API Reference and
User Guide.
The ClientContext JSON must be base64-encoded.
public void setPayload(ByteBuffer payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
AWS SDK for Java performs a Base64 encoding on this field before sending this request to AWS service by default. Users of the SDK should not perform Base64 encoding on this field.
Warning: ByteBuffers returned by the SDK are mutable. Changes to the content or position of the byte buffer will be seen by all objects that have a reference to this object. It is recommended to call ByteBuffer.duplicate() or ByteBuffer.asReadOnlyBuffer() before using or reading from the buffer. This behavior will be changed in a future major version of the SDK.
payload
- JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.public ByteBuffer getPayload()
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
ByteBuffer
s are stateful. Calling their get
methods
changes their position
. We recommend using
ByteBuffer.asReadOnlyBuffer()
to create a read-only view
of the buffer with an independent position
, and calling
get
methods on this rather than directly on the returned
ByteBuffer
. Doing so will ensure that anyone else using the
ByteBuffer
will not be affected by changes to the position
.
public InvokeRequest withPayload(ByteBuffer payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
payload
- JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.public void setPayload(String payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
AWS SDK for Java performs a Base64 encoding on this field before sending this request to AWS service by default. Users of the SDK should not perform Base64 encoding on this field.
Warning: ByteBuffers returned by the SDK are mutable. Changes to the content or position of the byte buffer will be seen by all objects that have a reference to this object. It is recommended to call ByteBuffer.duplicate() or ByteBuffer.asReadOnlyBuffer() before using or reading from the buffer. This behavior will be changed in a future major version of the SDK.
payload
- JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.public InvokeRequest withPayload(String payload)
JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.
payload
- JSON that you want to provide to your Lambda function as input.public void setQualifier(String qualifier)
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version or alias name. If you specify a function version, the API uses the qualified function ARN to invoke a specific Lambda function. If you specify an alias name, the API uses the alias ARN to invoke the Lambda function version to which the alias points.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses unqualified
function ARN which results in invocation of the $LATEST
version.
qualifier
- You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function
version or alias name. If you specify a function version, the API
uses the qualified function ARN to invoke a specific Lambda
function. If you specify an alias name, the API uses the alias ARN
to invoke the Lambda function version to which the alias
points.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses unqualified
function ARN which results in invocation of the
$LATEST
version.
public String getQualifier()
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version or alias name. If you specify a function version, the API uses the qualified function ARN to invoke a specific Lambda function. If you specify an alias name, the API uses the alias ARN to invoke the Lambda function version to which the alias points.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses unqualified
function ARN which results in invocation of the $LATEST
version.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses
unqualified function ARN which results in invocation of the
$LATEST
version.
public InvokeRequest withQualifier(String qualifier)
You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function version or alias name. If you specify a function version, the API uses the qualified function ARN to invoke a specific Lambda function. If you specify an alias name, the API uses the alias ARN to invoke the Lambda function version to which the alias points.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses unqualified
function ARN which results in invocation of the $LATEST
version.
qualifier
- You can use this optional parameter to specify a Lambda function
version or alias name. If you specify a function version, the API
uses the qualified function ARN to invoke a specific Lambda
function. If you specify an alias name, the API uses the alias ARN
to invoke the Lambda function version to which the alias
points.
If you don't provide this parameter, then the API uses unqualified
function ARN which results in invocation of the
$LATEST
version.
public String toString()
toString
in class Object
Object.toString()
public InvokeRequest clone()
clone
in class AmazonWebServiceRequest
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