@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class AbstractAWSStepFunctionsAsync extends AbstractAWSStepFunctions implements AWSStepFunctionsAsync
AWSStepFunctionsAsync. Convenient method forms pass through to the corresponding
 overload that takes a request object and an AsyncHandler, which throws an
 UnsupportedOperationException.ENDPOINT_PREFIXcreateActivity, createStateMachine, deleteActivity, deleteStateMachine, describeActivity, describeExecution, describeMapRun, describeStateMachine, describeStateMachineForExecution, getActivityTask, getCachedResponseMetadata, getExecutionHistory, listActivities, listExecutions, listMapRuns, listStateMachines, listTagsForResource, sendTaskFailure, sendTaskHeartbeat, sendTaskSuccess, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, startExecution, startSyncExecution, stopExecution, tagResource, untagResource, updateMapRun, updateStateMachineequals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, waitcreateActivity, createStateMachine, deleteActivity, deleteStateMachine, describeActivity, describeExecution, describeMapRun, describeStateMachine, describeStateMachineForExecution, getActivityTask, getCachedResponseMetadata, getExecutionHistory, listActivities, listExecutions, listMapRuns, listStateMachines, listTagsForResource, sendTaskFailure, sendTaskHeartbeat, sendTaskSuccess, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, startExecution, startSyncExecution, stopExecution, tagResource, untagResource, updateMapRun, updateStateMachinepublic Future<CreateActivityResult> createActivityAsync(CreateActivityRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Creates an activity. An activity is a task that you write in any programming language and host on any machine
 that has access to Step Functions. Activities must poll Step Functions using the GetActivityTask API
 action and respond using SendTask* API actions. This function lets Step Functions know the existence
 of your activity and returns an identifier for use in a state machine and when polling from the activity.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 CreateActivity is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if it was
 already created. CreateActivity's idempotency check is based on the activity name. If a
 following request has different tags values, Step Functions will ignore these differences and treat
 it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they
 are different.
 
createActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<CreateActivityResult> createActivityAsync(CreateActivityRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateActivityRequest,CreateActivityResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Creates an activity. An activity is a task that you write in any programming language and host on any machine
 that has access to Step Functions. Activities must poll Step Functions using the GetActivityTask API
 action and respond using SendTask* API actions. This function lets Step Functions know the existence
 of your activity and returns an identifier for use in a state machine and when polling from the activity.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 CreateActivity is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if it was
 already created. CreateActivity's idempotency check is based on the activity name. If a
 following request has different tags values, Step Functions will ignore these differences and treat
 it as an idempotent request of the previous. In this case, tags will not be updated, even if they
 are different.
 
createActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<CreateStateMachineResult> createStateMachineAsync(CreateStateMachineRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Creates a state machine. A state machine consists of a collection of states that can do work (Task
 states), determine to which states to transition next (Choice states), stop an execution with an
 error (Fail states), and so on. State machines are specified using a JSON-based, structured
 language. For more information, see Amazon States
 Language in the Step Functions User Guide.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 CreateStateMachine is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if it
 was already created. CreateStateMachine's idempotency check is based on the state machine
 name, definition, type, LoggingConfiguration and
 TracingConfiguration. If a following request has a different roleArn or
 tags, Step Functions will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the
 previous. In this case, roleArn and tags will not be updated, even if they are
 different.
 
createStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<CreateStateMachineResult> createStateMachineAsync(CreateStateMachineRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateStateMachineRequest,CreateStateMachineResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Creates a state machine. A state machine consists of a collection of states that can do work (Task
 states), determine to which states to transition next (Choice states), stop an execution with an
 error (Fail states), and so on. State machines are specified using a JSON-based, structured
 language. For more information, see Amazon States
 Language in the Step Functions User Guide.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 CreateStateMachine is an idempotent API. Subsequent requests won’t create a duplicate resource if it
 was already created. CreateStateMachine's idempotency check is based on the state machine
 name, definition, type, LoggingConfiguration and
 TracingConfiguration. If a following request has a different roleArn or
 tags, Step Functions will ignore these differences and treat it as an idempotent request of the
 previous. In this case, roleArn and tags will not be updated, even if they are
 different.
 
createStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DeleteActivityResult> deleteActivityAsync(DeleteActivityRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncDeletes an activity.
deleteActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DeleteActivityResult> deleteActivityAsync(DeleteActivityRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteActivityRequest,DeleteActivityResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncDeletes an activity.
deleteActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DeleteStateMachineResult> deleteStateMachineAsync(DeleteStateMachineRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Deletes a state machine. This is an asynchronous operation: It sets the state machine's status to
 DELETING and begins the deletion process.
 
If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 For EXPRESS state machines, the deletion will happen eventually (usually less than a minute).
 Running executions may emit logs after DeleteStateMachine API is called.
 
deleteStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DeleteStateMachineResult> deleteStateMachineAsync(DeleteStateMachineRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteStateMachineRequest,DeleteStateMachineResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Deletes a state machine. This is an asynchronous operation: It sets the state machine's status to
 DELETING and begins the deletion process.
 
If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 For EXPRESS state machines, the deletion will happen eventually (usually less than a minute).
 Running executions may emit logs after DeleteStateMachine API is called.
 
deleteStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DescribeActivityResult> describeActivityAsync(DescribeActivityRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncDescribes an activity.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
describeActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DescribeActivityResult> describeActivityAsync(DescribeActivityRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeActivityRequest,DescribeActivityResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncDescribes an activity.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
describeActivityAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DescribeExecutionResult> describeExecutionAsync(DescribeExecutionRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides all information about a state machine execution, such as the state machine associated with the execution, the execution input and output, and relevant execution metadata. Use this API action to return the Map Run ARN if the execution was dispatched by a Map Run.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machine executions unless they were dispatched by
 a Map Run.
 
describeExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DescribeExecutionResult> describeExecutionAsync(DescribeExecutionRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeExecutionRequest,DescribeExecutionResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides all information about a state machine execution, such as the state machine associated with the execution, the execution input and output, and relevant execution metadata. Use this API action to return the Map Run ARN if the execution was dispatched by a Map Run.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machine executions unless they were dispatched by
 a Map Run.
 
describeExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DescribeMapRunResult> describeMapRunAsync(DescribeMapRunRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides information about a Map Run's configuration, progress, and results. For more information, see Examining Map Run in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
describeMapRunAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DescribeMapRunResult> describeMapRunAsync(DescribeMapRunRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeMapRunRequest,DescribeMapRunResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides information about a Map Run's configuration, progress, and results. For more information, see Examining Map Run in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
describeMapRunAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DescribeStateMachineResult> describeStateMachineAsync(DescribeStateMachineRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Provides information about a state machine's definition, its IAM role Amazon Resource Name (ARN), and
 configuration. If the state machine ARN is a qualified state machine ARN, the response returned includes the
 Map state's label.
 
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
describeStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DescribeStateMachineResult> describeStateMachineAsync(DescribeStateMachineRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeStateMachineRequest,DescribeStateMachineResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Provides information about a state machine's definition, its IAM role Amazon Resource Name (ARN), and
 configuration. If the state machine ARN is a qualified state machine ARN, the response returned includes the
 Map state's label.
 
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
describeStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<DescribeStateMachineForExecutionResult> describeStateMachineForExecutionAsync(DescribeStateMachineForExecutionRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides information about a state machine's definition, its execution role ARN, and configuration. If an execution was dispatched by a Map Run, the Map Run is returned in the response. Additionally, the state machine returned will be the state machine associated with the Map Run.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
describeStateMachineForExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<DescribeStateMachineForExecutionResult> describeStateMachineForExecutionAsync(DescribeStateMachineForExecutionRequest request, AsyncHandler<DescribeStateMachineForExecutionRequest,DescribeStateMachineForExecutionResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncProvides information about a state machine's definition, its execution role ARN, and configuration. If an execution was dispatched by a Map Run, the Map Run is returned in the response. Additionally, the state machine returned will be the state machine associated with the Map Run.
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
describeStateMachineForExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<GetActivityTaskResult> getActivityTaskAsync(GetActivityTaskRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by workers to retrieve a task (with the specified activity ARN) which has been scheduled for execution by a
 running state machine. This initiates a long poll, where the service holds the HTTP connection open and responds
 as soon as a task becomes available (i.e. an execution of a task of this type is needed.) The maximum time the
 service holds on to the request before responding is 60 seconds. If no task is available within 60 seconds, the
 poll returns a taskToken with a null string.
 
This API action isn't logged in CloudTrail.
Workers should set their client side socket timeout to at least 65 seconds (5 seconds higher than the maximum time the service may hold the poll request).
 Polling with GetActivityTask can cause latency in some implementations. See Avoid Latency When Polling
 for Activity Tasks in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
 
getActivityTaskAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<GetActivityTaskResult> getActivityTaskAsync(GetActivityTaskRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetActivityTaskRequest,GetActivityTaskResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by workers to retrieve a task (with the specified activity ARN) which has been scheduled for execution by a
 running state machine. This initiates a long poll, where the service holds the HTTP connection open and responds
 as soon as a task becomes available (i.e. an execution of a task of this type is needed.) The maximum time the
 service holds on to the request before responding is 60 seconds. If no task is available within 60 seconds, the
 poll returns a taskToken with a null string.
 
This API action isn't logged in CloudTrail.
Workers should set their client side socket timeout to at least 65 seconds (5 seconds higher than the maximum time the service may hold the poll request).
 Polling with GetActivityTask can cause latency in some implementations. See Avoid Latency When Polling
 for Activity Tasks in the Step Functions Developer Guide.
 
getActivityTaskAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<GetExecutionHistoryResult> getExecutionHistoryAsync(GetExecutionHistoryRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Returns the history of the specified execution as a list of events. By default, the results are returned in
 ascending order of the timeStamp of the events. Use the reverseOrder parameter to get
 the latest events first.
 
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
getExecutionHistoryAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<GetExecutionHistoryResult> getExecutionHistoryAsync(GetExecutionHistoryRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetExecutionHistoryRequest,GetExecutionHistoryResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Returns the history of the specified execution as a list of events. By default, the results are returned in
 ascending order of the timeStamp of the events. Use the reverseOrder parameter to get
 the latest events first.
 
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
getExecutionHistoryAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<ListActivitiesResult> listActivitiesAsync(ListActivitiesRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists the existing activities.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
listActivitiesAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<ListActivitiesResult> listActivitiesAsync(ListActivitiesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListActivitiesRequest,ListActivitiesResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists the existing activities.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
listActivitiesAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<ListExecutionsResult> listExecutionsAsync(ListExecutionsRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists all executions of a state machine or a Map Run. You can list all executions related to a state machine by specifying a state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN), or those related to a Map Run by specifying a Map Run ARN.
Results are sorted by time, with the most recent execution first.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
listExecutionsAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<ListExecutionsResult> listExecutionsAsync(ListExecutionsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListExecutionsRequest,ListExecutionsResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists all executions of a state machine or a Map Run. You can list all executions related to a state machine by specifying a state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN), or those related to a Map Run by specifying a Map Run ARN.
Results are sorted by time, with the most recent execution first.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
listExecutionsAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<ListMapRunsResult> listMapRunsAsync(ListMapRunsRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Lists all Map Runs that were started by a given state machine execution. Use this API action to obtain Map Run
 ARNs, and then call DescribeMapRun to obtain more information, if needed.
 
listMapRunsAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<ListMapRunsResult> listMapRunsAsync(ListMapRunsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListMapRunsRequest,ListMapRunsResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Lists all Map Runs that were started by a given state machine execution. Use this API action to obtain Map Run
 ARNs, and then call DescribeMapRun to obtain more information, if needed.
 
listMapRunsAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<ListStateMachinesResult> listStateMachinesAsync(ListStateMachinesRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists the existing state machines.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
listStateMachinesAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<ListStateMachinesResult> listStateMachinesAsync(ListStateMachinesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListStateMachinesRequest,ListStateMachinesResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncLists the existing state machines.
 If nextToken is returned, there are more results available. The value of nextToken is a
 unique pagination token for each page. Make the call again using the returned token to retrieve the next page.
 Keep all other arguments unchanged. Each pagination token expires after 24 hours. Using an expired pagination
 token will return an HTTP 400 InvalidToken error.
 
This operation is eventually consistent. The results are best effort and may not reflect very recent updates and changes.
listStateMachinesAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncList tags for a given resource.
 Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these symbols: _ . : / = + - @.
 
listTagsForResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTagsForResourceRequest,ListTagsForResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncList tags for a given resource.
 Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these symbols: _ . : / = + - @.
 
listTagsForResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<SendTaskFailureResult> sendTaskFailureAsync(SendTaskFailureRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report that the task identified by the taskToken failed.
 
sendTaskFailureAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<SendTaskFailureResult> sendTaskFailureAsync(SendTaskFailureRequest request, AsyncHandler<SendTaskFailureRequest,SendTaskFailureResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report that the task identified by the taskToken failed.
 
sendTaskFailureAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<SendTaskHeartbeatResult> sendTaskHeartbeatAsync(SendTaskHeartbeatRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report to Step Functions that the task represented by the specified
 taskToken is still making progress. This action resets the Heartbeat clock. The
 Heartbeat threshold is specified in the state machine's Amazon States Language definition (
 HeartbeatSeconds). This action does not in itself create an event in the execution history. However,
 if the task times out, the execution history contains an ActivityTimedOut entry for activities, or a
 TaskTimedOut entry for for tasks using the job run or
 
 callback pattern.
 
 The Timeout of a task, defined in the state machine's Amazon States Language definition, is its
 maximum allowed duration, regardless of the number of SendTaskHeartbeat requests received. Use
 HeartbeatSeconds to configure the timeout interval for heartbeats.
 
sendTaskHeartbeatAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<SendTaskHeartbeatResult> sendTaskHeartbeatAsync(SendTaskHeartbeatRequest request, AsyncHandler<SendTaskHeartbeatRequest,SendTaskHeartbeatResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report to Step Functions that the task represented by the specified
 taskToken is still making progress. This action resets the Heartbeat clock. The
 Heartbeat threshold is specified in the state machine's Amazon States Language definition (
 HeartbeatSeconds). This action does not in itself create an event in the execution history. However,
 if the task times out, the execution history contains an ActivityTimedOut entry for activities, or a
 TaskTimedOut entry for for tasks using the job run or
 
 callback pattern.
 
 The Timeout of a task, defined in the state machine's Amazon States Language definition, is its
 maximum allowed duration, regardless of the number of SendTaskHeartbeat requests received. Use
 HeartbeatSeconds to configure the timeout interval for heartbeats.
 
sendTaskHeartbeatAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<SendTaskSuccessResult> sendTaskSuccessAsync(SendTaskSuccessRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report that the task identified by the taskToken completed successfully.
 
sendTaskSuccessAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<SendTaskSuccessResult> sendTaskSuccessAsync(SendTaskSuccessRequest request, AsyncHandler<SendTaskSuccessRequest,SendTaskSuccessResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Used by activity workers and task states using the callback pattern to report that the task identified by the taskToken completed successfully.
 
sendTaskSuccessAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<StartExecutionResult> startExecutionAsync(StartExecutionRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncStarts a state machine execution. If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 StartExecution is idempotent for STANDARD workflows. For a STANDARD
 workflow, if StartExecution is called with the same name and input as a running execution, the call
 will succeed and return the same response as the original request. If the execution is closed or if the input is
 different, it will return a 400 ExecutionAlreadyExists error. Names can be reused after 90 days.
 
 StartExecution is not idempotent for EXPRESS workflows.
 
startExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<StartExecutionResult> startExecutionAsync(StartExecutionRequest request, AsyncHandler<StartExecutionRequest,StartExecutionResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncStarts a state machine execution. If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 StartExecution is idempotent for STANDARD workflows. For a STANDARD
 workflow, if StartExecution is called with the same name and input as a running execution, the call
 will succeed and return the same response as the original request. If the execution is closed or if the input is
 different, it will return a 400 ExecutionAlreadyExists error. Names can be reused after 90 days.
 
 StartExecution is not idempotent for EXPRESS workflows.
 
startExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<StartSyncExecutionResult> startSyncExecutionAsync(StartSyncExecutionRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Starts a Synchronous Express state machine execution. StartSyncExecution is not available for
 STANDARD workflows.
 
 StartSyncExecution will return a 200 OK response, even if your execution fails, because
 the status code in the API response doesn't reflect function errors. Error codes are reserved for errors that
 prevent your execution from running, such as permissions errors, limit errors, or issues with your state machine
 code and configuration.
 
This API action isn't logged in CloudTrail.
startSyncExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<StartSyncExecutionResult> startSyncExecutionAsync(StartSyncExecutionRequest request, AsyncHandler<StartSyncExecutionRequest,StartSyncExecutionResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Starts a Synchronous Express state machine execution. StartSyncExecution is not available for
 STANDARD workflows.
 
 StartSyncExecution will return a 200 OK response, even if your execution fails, because
 the status code in the API response doesn't reflect function errors. Error codes are reserved for errors that
 prevent your execution from running, such as permissions errors, limit errors, or issues with your state machine
 code and configuration.
 
This API action isn't logged in CloudTrail.
startSyncExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<StopExecutionResult> stopExecutionAsync(StopExecutionRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncStops an execution.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
stopExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<StopExecutionResult> stopExecutionAsync(StopExecutionRequest request, AsyncHandler<StopExecutionRequest,StopExecutionResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncStops an execution.
 This API action is not supported by EXPRESS state machines.
 
stopExecutionAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncAdd a tag to a Step Functions resource.
An array of key-value pairs. For more information, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Amazon Web Services Billing and Cost Management User Guide, and Controlling Access Using IAM Tags.
 Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these symbols: _ . : / = + - @.
 
tagResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<TagResourceResult> tagResourceAsync(TagResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<TagResourceRequest,TagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncAdd a tag to a Step Functions resource.
An array of key-value pairs. For more information, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Amazon Web Services Billing and Cost Management User Guide, and Controlling Access Using IAM Tags.
 Tags may only contain Unicode letters, digits, white space, or these symbols: _ . : / = + - @.
 
tagResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncRemove a tag from a Step Functions resource
untagResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<UntagResourceResult> untagResourceAsync(UntagResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<UntagResourceRequest,UntagResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncRemove a tag from a Step Functions resource
untagResourceAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<UpdateMapRunResult> updateMapRunAsync(UpdateMapRunRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncUpdates an in-progress Map Run's configuration to include changes to the settings that control maximum concurrency and Map Run failure.
updateMapRunAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<UpdateMapRunResult> updateMapRunAsync(UpdateMapRunRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateMapRunRequest,UpdateMapRunResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsyncUpdates an in-progress Map Run's configuration to include changes to the settings that control maximum concurrency and Map Run failure.
updateMapRunAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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<UpdateStateMachineResult> updateStateMachineAsync(UpdateStateMachineRequest request)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Updates an existing state machine by modifying its definition, roleArn, or
 loggingConfiguration. Running executions will continue to use the previous definition
 and roleArn. You must include at least one of definition or roleArn or you
 will receive a MissingRequiredParameter error.
 
If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 All StartExecution calls within a few seconds will use the updated definition and
 roleArn. Executions started immediately after calling UpdateStateMachine may use the
 previous state machine definition and roleArn.
 
updateStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncpublic Future<UpdateStateMachineResult> updateStateMachineAsync(UpdateStateMachineRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateStateMachineRequest,UpdateStateMachineResult> asyncHandler)
AWSStepFunctionsAsync
 Updates an existing state machine by modifying its definition, roleArn, or
 loggingConfiguration. Running executions will continue to use the previous definition
 and roleArn. You must include at least one of definition or roleArn or you
 will receive a MissingRequiredParameter error.
 
If the given state machine Amazon Resource Name (ARN) is a qualified state machine ARN, it will fail with ValidationException.
 A qualified state machine ARN refers to a Distributed Map state defined within a state machine. For
 example, the qualified state machine ARN
 arn:partition:states:region:account-id:stateMachine:stateMachineName/mapStateLabel refers to a
 Distributed Map state with a label mapStateLabel in the state machine named
 stateMachineName.
 
 All StartExecution calls within a few seconds will use the updated definition and
 roleArn. Executions started immediately after calling UpdateStateMachine may use the
 previous state machine definition and roleArn.
 
updateStateMachineAsync in interface AWSStepFunctionsAsyncasyncHandler - 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.