@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class AbstractAmazonEKSAsync extends AbstractAmazonEKS implements AmazonEKSAsync
AmazonEKSAsync
. Convenient method forms pass through to the corresponding overload
that takes a request object and an AsyncHandler
, which throws an UnsupportedOperationException
.ENDPOINT_PREFIX
createCluster, createNodegroup, deleteCluster, deleteNodegroup, describeCluster, describeNodegroup, describeUpdate, getCachedResponseMetadata, listClusters, listNodegroups, listTagsForResource, listUpdates, shutdown, tagResource, untagResource, updateClusterConfig, updateClusterVersion, updateNodegroupConfig, updateNodegroupVersion, waiters
equals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
createCluster, createNodegroup, deleteCluster, deleteNodegroup, describeCluster, describeNodegroup, describeUpdate, getCachedResponseMetadata, listClusters, listNodegroups, listTagsForResource, listUpdates, shutdown, tagResource, untagResource, updateClusterConfig, updateClusterVersion, updateNodegroupConfig, updateNodegroupVersion, waiters
public Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync(CreateClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Creates an Amazon EKS control plane.
The Amazon EKS control plane consists of control plane instances that run the Kubernetes software, such as
etcd
and the API server. The control plane runs in an account managed by AWS, and the Kubernetes API
is exposed via the Amazon EKS API server endpoint. Each Amazon EKS cluster control plane is single-tenant and
unique and runs on its own set of Amazon EC2 instances.
The cluster control plane is provisioned across multiple Availability Zones and fronted by an Elastic Load
Balancing Network Load Balancer. Amazon EKS also provisions elastic network interfaces in your VPC subnets to
provide connectivity from the control plane instances to the worker nodes (for example, to support
kubectl exec
, logs
, and proxy
data flows).
Amazon EKS worker nodes run in your AWS account and connect to your cluster's control plane via the Kubernetes API server endpoint and a certificate file that is created for your cluster.
You can use the endpointPublicAccess
and endpointPrivateAccess
parameters to enable or
disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is
enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Endpoint Access
Control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
You can use the logging
parameter to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs
for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs.
For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane
Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
Cluster creation typically takes between 10 and 15 minutes. After you create an Amazon EKS cluster, you must configure your Kubernetes tooling to communicate with the API server and launch worker nodes into your cluster. For more information, see Managing Cluster Authentication and Launching Amazon EKS Worker Nodes in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<CreateClusterResult> createClusterAsync(CreateClusterRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateClusterRequest,CreateClusterResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Creates an Amazon EKS control plane.
The Amazon EKS control plane consists of control plane instances that run the Kubernetes software, such as
etcd
and the API server. The control plane runs in an account managed by AWS, and the Kubernetes API
is exposed via the Amazon EKS API server endpoint. Each Amazon EKS cluster control plane is single-tenant and
unique and runs on its own set of Amazon EC2 instances.
The cluster control plane is provisioned across multiple Availability Zones and fronted by an Elastic Load
Balancing Network Load Balancer. Amazon EKS also provisions elastic network interfaces in your VPC subnets to
provide connectivity from the control plane instances to the worker nodes (for example, to support
kubectl exec
, logs
, and proxy
data flows).
Amazon EKS worker nodes run in your AWS account and connect to your cluster's control plane via the Kubernetes API server endpoint and a certificate file that is created for your cluster.
You can use the endpointPublicAccess
and endpointPrivateAccess
parameters to enable or
disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is
enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Endpoint Access
Control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
You can use the logging
parameter to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs
for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs.
For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane
Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
Cluster creation typically takes between 10 and 15 minutes. After you create an Amazon EKS cluster, you must configure your Kubernetes tooling to communicate with the API server and launch worker nodes into your cluster. For more information, see Managing Cluster Authentication and Launching Amazon EKS Worker Nodes in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<CreateNodegroupResult> createNodegroupAsync(CreateNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Creates a managed worker node group for an Amazon EKS cluster. You can only create a node group for your cluster that is equal to the current Kubernetes version for the cluster. All node groups are created with the latest AMI release version for the respective minor Kubernetes version of the cluster.
An Amazon EKS managed node group is an Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling group and associated Amazon EC2 instances that are managed by AWS for an Amazon EKS cluster. Each node group uses a version of the Amazon EKS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI. For more information, see Managed Node Groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<CreateNodegroupResult> createNodegroupAsync(CreateNodegroupRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateNodegroupRequest,CreateNodegroupResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Creates a managed worker node group for an Amazon EKS cluster. You can only create a node group for your cluster that is equal to the current Kubernetes version for the cluster. All node groups are created with the latest AMI release version for the respective minor Kubernetes version of the cluster.
An Amazon EKS managed node group is an Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling group and associated Amazon EC2 instances that are managed by AWS for an Amazon EKS cluster. Each node group uses a version of the Amazon EKS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI. For more information, see Managed Node Groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
createNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<DeleteClusterResult> deleteClusterAsync(DeleteClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes the Amazon EKS cluster control plane.
If you have active services in your cluster that are associated with a load balancer, you must delete those services before deleting the cluster so that the load balancers are deleted properly. Otherwise, you can have orphaned resources in your VPC that prevent you from being able to delete the VPC. For more information, see Deleting a Cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
If you have managed node groups attached to the cluster, you must delete them first. For more information, see DeleteNodegroup.
deleteClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<DeleteClusterResult> deleteClusterAsync(DeleteClusterRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteClusterRequest,DeleteClusterResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes the Amazon EKS cluster control plane.
If you have active services in your cluster that are associated with a load balancer, you must delete those services before deleting the cluster so that the load balancers are deleted properly. Otherwise, you can have orphaned resources in your VPC that prevent you from being able to delete the VPC. For more information, see Deleting a Cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
If you have managed node groups attached to the cluster, you must delete them first. For more information, see DeleteNodegroup.
deleteClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<DeleteNodegroupResult> deleteNodegroupAsync(DeleteNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes an Amazon EKS node group for a cluster.
deleteNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<DeleteNodegroupResult> deleteNodegroupAsync(DeleteNodegroupRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteNodegroupRequest,DeleteNodegroupResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes an Amazon EKS node group for a cluster.
deleteNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<DescribeClusterResult> describeClusterAsync(DescribeClusterRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS cluster.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data returned by this operation are required for
kubelet
and kubectl
to communicate with your Kubernetes API server. For more
information, see Create a
kubeconfig for Amazon EKS.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data aren't available until the cluster reaches the
ACTIVE
state.
describeClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<DescribeClusterResult> describeClusterAsync(DescribeClusterRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeClusterRequest,DescribeClusterResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS cluster.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data returned by this operation are required for
kubelet
and kubectl
to communicate with your Kubernetes API server. For more
information, see Create a
kubeconfig for Amazon EKS.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data aren't available until the cluster reaches the
ACTIVE
state.
describeClusterAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<DescribeNodegroupResult> describeNodegroupAsync(DescribeNodegroupRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS node group.
describeNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<DescribeNodegroupResult> describeNodegroupAsync(DescribeNodegroupRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeNodegroupRequest,DescribeNodegroupResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS node group.
describeNodegroupAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<DescribeUpdateResult> describeUpdateAsync(DescribeUpdateRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an update against your Amazon EKS cluster or associated managed node group.
When the status of the update is Succeeded
, the update is complete. If an update fails, the status
is Failed
, and an error detail explains the reason for the failure.
describeUpdateAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<DescribeUpdateResult> describeUpdateAsync(DescribeUpdateRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeUpdateRequest,DescribeUpdateResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Returns descriptive information about an update against your Amazon EKS cluster or associated managed node group.
When the status of the update is Succeeded
, the update is complete. If an update fails, the status
is Failed
, and an error detail explains the reason for the failure.
describeUpdateAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the Amazon EKS clusters in your AWS account in the specified Region.
listClustersAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<ListClustersResult> listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListClustersRequest,ListClustersResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the Amazon EKS clusters in your AWS account in the specified Region.
listClustersAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<ListNodegroupsResult> listNodegroupsAsync(ListNodegroupsRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the Amazon EKS node groups associated with the specified cluster in your AWS account in the specified Region.
listNodegroupsAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<ListNodegroupsResult> listNodegroupsAsync(ListNodegroupsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListNodegroupsRequest,ListNodegroupsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the Amazon EKS node groups associated with the specified cluster in your AWS account in the specified Region.
listNodegroupsAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
List the tags for an Amazon EKS resource.
listTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTagsForResourceRequest,ListTagsForResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
List the tags for an Amazon EKS resource.
listTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<ListUpdatesResult> listUpdatesAsync(ListUpdatesRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the updates associated with an Amazon EKS cluster or managed node group in your AWS account, in the specified Region.
listUpdatesAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<ListUpdatesResult> listUpdatesAsync(ListUpdatesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListUpdatesRequest,ListUpdatesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Lists the updates associated with an Amazon EKS cluster or managed node group in your AWS account, in the specified Region.
listUpdatesAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<TagResourceResult> tagResourceAsync(TagResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
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. Tags that you create for Amazon EKS resources do not propagate
to any other resources associated with the cluster. For example, if you tag a cluster with this operation, that
tag does not automatically propagate to the subnets and worker nodes associated with the cluster.
tagResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<TagResourceResult> tagResourceAsync(TagResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<TagResourceRequest,TagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
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. Tags that you create for Amazon EKS resources do not propagate
to any other resources associated with the cluster. For example, if you tag a cluster with this operation, that
tag does not automatically propagate to the subnets and worker nodes associated with the cluster.
tagResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<UntagResourceResult> untagResourceAsync(UntagResourceRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes specified tags from a resource.
untagResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<UntagResourceResult> untagResourceAsync(UntagResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<UntagResourceRequest,UntagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Deletes specified tags from a resource.
untagResourceAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<UpdateClusterConfigResult> updateClusterConfigAsync(UpdateClusterConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster configuration. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
You can use this API operation to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
You can also use this API operation to enable or disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Endpoint Access Control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
At this time, you can not update the subnets or security group IDs for an existing cluster.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
updateClusterConfigAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<UpdateClusterConfigResult> updateClusterConfigAsync(UpdateClusterConfigRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateClusterConfigRequest,UpdateClusterConfigResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster configuration. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
You can use this API operation to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
You can also use this API operation to enable or disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Endpoint Access Control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
At this time, you can not update the subnets or security group IDs for an existing cluster.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
updateClusterConfigAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<UpdateClusterVersionResult> updateClusterVersionAsync(UpdateClusterVersionRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster to the specified Kubernetes version. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
If your cluster has managed node groups attached to it, all of your node groups’ Kubernetes versions must match the cluster’s Kubernetes version in order to update the cluster to a new Kubernetes version.
updateClusterVersionAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<UpdateClusterVersionResult> updateClusterVersionAsync(UpdateClusterVersionRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateClusterVersionRequest,UpdateClusterVersionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS cluster to the specified Kubernetes version. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster
status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is
complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
If your cluster has managed node groups attached to it, all of your node groups’ Kubernetes versions must match the cluster’s Kubernetes version in order to update the cluster to a new Kubernetes version.
updateClusterVersionAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<UpdateNodegroupConfigResult> updateNodegroupConfigAsync(UpdateNodegroupConfigRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS managed node group configuration. Your node group continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your node group update with the DescribeUpdate API operation. Currently you can update the Kubernetes labels for a node group or the scaling configuration.
updateNodegroupConfigAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<UpdateNodegroupConfigResult> updateNodegroupConfigAsync(UpdateNodegroupConfigRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateNodegroupConfigRequest,UpdateNodegroupConfigResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates an Amazon EKS managed node group configuration. Your node group continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your node group update with the DescribeUpdate API operation. Currently you can update the Kubernetes labels for a node group or the scaling configuration.
updateNodegroupConfigAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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.public Future<UpdateNodegroupVersionResult> updateNodegroupVersionAsync(UpdateNodegroupVersionRequest request)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates the Kubernetes version or AMI version of an Amazon EKS managed node group.
You can update to the latest available AMI version of a node group's current Kubernetes version by not specifying a Kubernetes version in the request. You can update to the latest AMI version of your cluster's current Kubernetes version by specifying your cluster's Kubernetes version in the request. For more information, see Amazon EKS-Optimized Linux AMI Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
You cannot roll back a node group to an earlier Kubernetes version or AMI version.
When a node in a managed node group is terminated due to a scaling action or update, the pods in that node are
drained first. Amazon EKS attempts to drain the nodes gracefully and will fail if it is unable to do so. You can
force
the update if Amazon EKS is unable to drain the nodes as a result of a pod disruption budget
issue.
updateNodegroupVersionAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
public Future<UpdateNodegroupVersionResult> updateNodegroupVersionAsync(UpdateNodegroupVersionRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateNodegroupVersionRequest,UpdateNodegroupVersionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonEKSAsync
Updates the Kubernetes version or AMI version of an Amazon EKS managed node group.
You can update to the latest available AMI version of a node group's current Kubernetes version by not specifying a Kubernetes version in the request. You can update to the latest AMI version of your cluster's current Kubernetes version by specifying your cluster's Kubernetes version in the request. For more information, see Amazon EKS-Optimized Linux AMI Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
You cannot roll back a node group to an earlier Kubernetes version or AMI version.
When a node in a managed node group is terminated due to a scaling action or update, the pods in that node are
drained first. Amazon EKS attempts to drain the nodes gracefully and will fail if it is unable to do so. You can
force
the update if Amazon EKS is unable to drain the nodes as a result of a pod disruption budget
issue.
updateNodegroupVersionAsync
in interface AmazonEKSAsync
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 © 2013 Amazon Web Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.