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/*
 * Copyright 2010-2014 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.
 * 
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License").
 * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * A copy of the License is located at
 * 
 *  http://aws.amazon.com/apache2.0
 * 
 * or in the "license" file accompanying this file. This file is distributed
 * on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either
 * express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing
 * permissions and limitations under the License.
 */
package com.amazonaws.services.kinesis;

import java.util.concurrent.Callable;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutorService;
import java.util.concurrent.Executors;
import java.util.concurrent.Future;

import com.amazonaws.AmazonClientException;
import com.amazonaws.AmazonServiceException;
import com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler;
import com.amazonaws.ClientConfiguration;
import com.amazonaws.auth.AWSCredentials;
import com.amazonaws.auth.AWSCredentialsProvider;
import com.amazonaws.auth.DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain;

import com.amazonaws.services.kinesis.model.*;

/**
 * Asynchronous client for accessing AmazonKinesis.
 * All asynchronous calls made using this client are non-blocking. Callers could either
 * process the result and handle the exceptions in the worker thread by providing a callback handler
 * when making the call, or use the returned Future object to check the result of the call in the calling thread.
 * Amazon Kinesis Service API Reference 

* Amazon Kinesis is a managed service that scales elastically for real * time processing of streaming big data. *

*/ public class AmazonKinesisAsyncClient extends AmazonKinesisClient implements AmazonKinesisAsync { /** * Executor service for executing asynchronous requests. */ private ExecutorService executorService; private static final int DEFAULT_THREAD_POOL_SIZE = 50; /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis. A credentials provider chain will be used * that searches for credentials in this order: *
    *
  • Environment Variables - AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_KEY
  • *
  • Java System Properties - aws.accessKeyId and aws.secretKey
  • *
  • Instance profile credentials delivered through the Amazon EC2 metadata service
  • *
* *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and will not * return until the service call completes. * * @see DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient() { this(new DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain()); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis. A credentials provider chain will be used * that searches for credentials in this order: *

    *
  • Environment Variables - AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_KEY
  • *
  • Java System Properties - aws.accessKeyId and aws.secretKey
  • *
  • Instance profile credentials delivered through the Amazon EC2 metadata service
  • *
* *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and will not * return until the service call completes. * * @param clientConfiguration The client configuration options controlling how this * client connects to AmazonKinesis * (ex: proxy settings, retry counts, etc.). * * @see DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration) { this(new DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain(), clientConfiguration, Executors.newFixedThreadPool(clientConfiguration.getMaxConnections())); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials. * Default client settings will be used, and a fixed size thread pool will be * created for executing the asynchronous tasks. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentials The AWS credentials (access key ID and secret key) to use * when authenticating with AWS services. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentials awsCredentials) { this(awsCredentials, Executors.newFixedThreadPool(DEFAULT_THREAD_POOL_SIZE)); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials * and executor service. Default client settings will be used. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentials * The AWS credentials (access key ID and secret key) to use * when authenticating with AWS services. * @param executorService * The executor service by which all asynchronous requests will * be executed. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentials awsCredentials, ExecutorService executorService) { super(awsCredentials); this.executorService = executorService; } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials, * executor service, and client configuration options. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentials * The AWS credentials (access key ID and secret key) to use * when authenticating with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * Client configuration options (ex: max retry limit, proxy * settings, etc). * @param executorService * The executor service by which all asynchronous requests will * be executed. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentials awsCredentials, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration, ExecutorService executorService) { super(awsCredentials, clientConfiguration); this.executorService = executorService; } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials provider. * Default client settings will be used, and a fixed size thread pool will be * created for executing the asynchronous tasks. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials * to authenticate requests with AWS services. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider) { this(awsCredentialsProvider, Executors.newFixedThreadPool(DEFAULT_THREAD_POOL_SIZE)); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials provider * and executor service. Default client settings will be used. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials * to authenticate requests with AWS services. * @param executorService * The executor service by which all asynchronous requests will * be executed. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider, ExecutorService executorService) { this(awsCredentialsProvider, new ClientConfiguration(), executorService); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials * provider and client configuration options. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials * to authenticate requests with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * Client configuration options (ex: max retry limit, proxy * settings, etc). */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration) { this(awsCredentialsProvider, clientConfiguration, Executors.newFixedThreadPool(clientConfiguration.getMaxConnections())); } /** * Constructs a new asynchronous client to invoke service methods on * AmazonKinesis using the specified AWS account credentials * provider, executor service, and client configuration options. * *

* All calls made using this new client object are non-blocking, and will immediately * return a Java Future object that the caller can later check to see if the service * call has actually completed. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials * to authenticate requests with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * Client configuration options (ex: max retry limit, proxy * settings, etc). * @param executorService * The executor service by which all asynchronous requests will * be executed. */ public AmazonKinesisAsyncClient(AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration, ExecutorService executorService) { super(awsCredentialsProvider, clientConfiguration); this.executorService = executorService; } /** * Returns the executor service used by this async client to execute * requests. * * @return The executor service used by this async client to execute * requests. */ public ExecutorService getExecutorService() { return executorService; } /** * Shuts down the client, releasing all managed resources. This includes * forcibly terminating all pending asynchronous service calls. Clients who * wish to give pending asynchronous service calls time to complete should * call getExecutorService().shutdown() followed by * getExecutorService().awaitTermination() prior to calling this method. */ @Override public void shutdown() { super.shutdown(); executorService.shutdownNow(); } /** *

* This operation returns the following information about the stream: * the current status of the stream, the stream Amazon Resource Name * (ARN), and an array of shard objects that comprise the stream. For * each shard object there is information about the hash key and sequence * number ranges that the shard spans, and the IDs of any earlier shards * that played in a role in a MergeShards or SplitShard operation that * created the shard. A sequence number is the identifier associated with * every record ingested in the Amazon Kinesis stream. The sequence * number is assigned by the Amazon Kinesis service when a record is put * into the stream. *

*

* You can limit the number of returned shards using the * Limit parameter. The number of shards in a stream may be * too large to return from a single call to DescribeStream * . You can detect this by using the HasMoreShards flag in * the returned output. HasMoreShards is set to * true when there is more data available. *

*

* If there are more shards available, you can request more shards by * using the shard ID of the last shard returned by the * DescribeStream request, in the * ExclusiveStartShardId parameter in a subsequent request * to DescribeStream . DescribeStream is a * paginated operation. *

*

* DescribeStream has a limit of 10 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param describeStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the DescribeStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * DescribeStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future describeStreamAsync(final DescribeStreamRequest describeStreamRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public DescribeStreamResult call() throws Exception { return describeStream(describeStreamRequest); } }); } /** *

* This operation returns the following information about the stream: * the current status of the stream, the stream Amazon Resource Name * (ARN), and an array of shard objects that comprise the stream. For * each shard object there is information about the hash key and sequence * number ranges that the shard spans, and the IDs of any earlier shards * that played in a role in a MergeShards or SplitShard operation that * created the shard. A sequence number is the identifier associated with * every record ingested in the Amazon Kinesis stream. The sequence * number is assigned by the Amazon Kinesis service when a record is put * into the stream. *

*

* You can limit the number of returned shards using the * Limit parameter. The number of shards in a stream may be * too large to return from a single call to DescribeStream * . You can detect this by using the HasMoreShards flag in * the returned output. HasMoreShards is set to * true when there is more data available. *

*

* If there are more shards available, you can request more shards by * using the shard ID of the last shard returned by the * DescribeStream request, in the * ExclusiveStartShardId parameter in a subsequent request * to DescribeStream . DescribeStream is a * paginated operation. *

*

* DescribeStream has a limit of 10 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param describeStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the DescribeStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * DescribeStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future describeStreamAsync( final DescribeStreamRequest describeStreamRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public DescribeStreamResult call() throws Exception { DescribeStreamResult result; try { result = describeStream(describeStreamRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(describeStreamRequest, result); return result; } }); } /** *

* This operation returns a shard iterator in ShardIterator * . The shard iterator specifies the position in the shard from which * you want to start reading data records sequentially. A shard iterator * specifies this position using the sequence number of a data record in * a shard. A sequence number is the identifier associated with every * record ingested in the Amazon Kinesis stream. The sequence number is * assigned by the Amazon Kinesis service when a record is put into the * stream. *

*

* You must specify the shard iterator type in the * GetShardIterator request. For example, you can set the * ShardIteratorType parameter to read exactly from the * position denoted by a specific sequence number by using the * AT_SEQUENCE_NUMBER shard iterator type, or right after the sequence * number by using the AFTER_SEQUENCE_NUMBER shard iterator type, using * sequence numbers returned by earlier PutRecord, GetRecords or * DescribeStream requests. You can specify the shard iterator type * TRIM_HORIZON in the request to cause ShardIterator to * point to the last untrimmed record in the shard in the system, which * is the oldest data record in the shard. Or you can point to just after * the most recent record in the shard, by using the shard iterator type * LATEST, so that you always read the most recent data in the shard. *

*

* Note: Each shard iterator expires five minutes after it is * returned to the requester. *

*

* When you repeatedly read from an Amazon Kinesis stream use a * GetShardIterator request to get the first shard iterator to to use in * your first GetRecords request and then use the shard * iterator returned by the GetRecords request in * NextShardIterator for subsequent reads. A new shard * iterator is returned by every GetRecords request in * NextShardIterator , which you use in the * ShardIterator parameter of the next * GetRecords request. *

*

* If a GetShardIterator request is made too often, you * will receive a ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . * For more information about throughput limits, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* GetShardIterator can return null for its * ShardIterator to indicate that the shard has been closed * and that the requested iterator will return no more data. A shard can * be closed by a SplitShard or MergeShards operation. *

*

* GetShardIterator has a limit of 5 transactions per * second per account per open shard. *

* * @param getShardIteratorRequest Container for the necessary parameters * to execute the GetShardIterator operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * GetShardIterator service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future getShardIteratorAsync(final GetShardIteratorRequest getShardIteratorRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public GetShardIteratorResult call() throws Exception { return getShardIterator(getShardIteratorRequest); } }); } /** *

* This operation returns a shard iterator in ShardIterator * . The shard iterator specifies the position in the shard from which * you want to start reading data records sequentially. A shard iterator * specifies this position using the sequence number of a data record in * a shard. A sequence number is the identifier associated with every * record ingested in the Amazon Kinesis stream. The sequence number is * assigned by the Amazon Kinesis service when a record is put into the * stream. *

*

* You must specify the shard iterator type in the * GetShardIterator request. For example, you can set the * ShardIteratorType parameter to read exactly from the * position denoted by a specific sequence number by using the * AT_SEQUENCE_NUMBER shard iterator type, or right after the sequence * number by using the AFTER_SEQUENCE_NUMBER shard iterator type, using * sequence numbers returned by earlier PutRecord, GetRecords or * DescribeStream requests. You can specify the shard iterator type * TRIM_HORIZON in the request to cause ShardIterator to * point to the last untrimmed record in the shard in the system, which * is the oldest data record in the shard. Or you can point to just after * the most recent record in the shard, by using the shard iterator type * LATEST, so that you always read the most recent data in the shard. *

*

* Note: Each shard iterator expires five minutes after it is * returned to the requester. *

*

* When you repeatedly read from an Amazon Kinesis stream use a * GetShardIterator request to get the first shard iterator to to use in * your first GetRecords request and then use the shard * iterator returned by the GetRecords request in * NextShardIterator for subsequent reads. A new shard * iterator is returned by every GetRecords request in * NextShardIterator , which you use in the * ShardIterator parameter of the next * GetRecords request. *

*

* If a GetShardIterator request is made too often, you * will receive a ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . * For more information about throughput limits, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* GetShardIterator can return null for its * ShardIterator to indicate that the shard has been closed * and that the requested iterator will return no more data. A shard can * be closed by a SplitShard or MergeShards operation. *

*

* GetShardIterator has a limit of 5 transactions per * second per account per open shard. *

* * @param getShardIteratorRequest Container for the necessary parameters * to execute the GetShardIterator operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * GetShardIterator service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future getShardIteratorAsync( final GetShardIteratorRequest getShardIteratorRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public GetShardIteratorResult call() throws Exception { GetShardIteratorResult result; try { result = getShardIterator(getShardIteratorRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(getShardIteratorRequest, result); return result; } }); } /** *

* This operation puts a data record into an Amazon Kinesis stream from * a producer. This operation must be called to send data from the * producer into the Amazon Kinesis stream for real-time ingestion and * subsequent processing. The PutRecord operation requires * the name of the stream that captures, stores, and transports the data; * a partition key; and the data blob itself. The data blob could be a * segment from a log file, geographic/location data, website clickstream * data, or any other data type. *

*

* The partition key is used to distribute data across shards. Amazon * Kinesis segregates the data records that belong to a data stream into * multiple shards, using the partition key associated with each data * record to determine which shard a given data record belongs to. *

*

* Partition keys are Unicode strings, with a maximum length limit of * 256 bytes. An MD5 hash function is used to map partition keys to * 128-bit integer values and to map associated data records to shards * using the hash key ranges of the shards. You can override hashing the * partition key to determine the shard by explicitly specifying a hash * value using the ExplicitHashKey parameter. For more * information, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* PutRecord returns the shard ID of where the data record * was placed and the sequence number that was assigned to the data * record. *

*

* Sequence numbers generally increase over time. To guarantee strictly * increasing ordering, use the SequenceNumberForOrdering * parameter. For more information, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* If a PutRecord request cannot be processed because of * insufficient provisioned throughput on the shard involved in the * request, PutRecord throws * ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . *

*

* Data records are accessible for only 24 hours from the time that they * are added to an Amazon Kinesis stream. *

* * @param putRecordRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the PutRecord operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * PutRecord service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future putRecordAsync(final PutRecordRequest putRecordRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public PutRecordResult call() throws Exception { return putRecord(putRecordRequest); } }); } /** *

* This operation puts a data record into an Amazon Kinesis stream from * a producer. This operation must be called to send data from the * producer into the Amazon Kinesis stream for real-time ingestion and * subsequent processing. The PutRecord operation requires * the name of the stream that captures, stores, and transports the data; * a partition key; and the data blob itself. The data blob could be a * segment from a log file, geographic/location data, website clickstream * data, or any other data type. *

*

* The partition key is used to distribute data across shards. Amazon * Kinesis segregates the data records that belong to a data stream into * multiple shards, using the partition key associated with each data * record to determine which shard a given data record belongs to. *

*

* Partition keys are Unicode strings, with a maximum length limit of * 256 bytes. An MD5 hash function is used to map partition keys to * 128-bit integer values and to map associated data records to shards * using the hash key ranges of the shards. You can override hashing the * partition key to determine the shard by explicitly specifying a hash * value using the ExplicitHashKey parameter. For more * information, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* PutRecord returns the shard ID of where the data record * was placed and the sequence number that was assigned to the data * record. *

*

* Sequence numbers generally increase over time. To guarantee strictly * increasing ordering, use the SequenceNumberForOrdering * parameter. For more information, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* If a PutRecord request cannot be processed because of * insufficient provisioned throughput on the shard involved in the * request, PutRecord throws * ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . *

*

* Data records are accessible for only 24 hours from the time that they * are added to an Amazon Kinesis stream. *

* * @param putRecordRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the PutRecord operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * PutRecord service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future putRecordAsync( final PutRecordRequest putRecordRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public PutRecordResult call() throws Exception { PutRecordResult result; try { result = putRecord(putRecordRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(putRecordRequest, result); return result; } }); } /** *

* This operation returns one or more data records from a shard. A * GetRecords operation request can retrieve up to 10 MB of * data. *

*

* You specify a shard iterator for the shard that you want to read data * from in the ShardIterator parameter. The shard iterator * specifies the position in the shard from which you want to start * reading data records sequentially. A shard iterator specifies this * position using the sequence number of a data record in the shard. For * more information about the shard iterator, see GetShardIterator. *

*

* GetRecords may return a partial result if the response * size limit is exceeded. You will get an error, but not a partial * result if the shard's provisioned throughput is exceeded, the shard * iterator has expired, or an internal processing failure has occurred. * Clients can request a smaller amount of data by specifying a maximum * number of returned records using the Limit parameter. The * Limit parameter can be set to an integer value of up to * 10,000. If you set the value to an integer greater than 10,000, you * will receive InvalidArgumentException . *

*

* A new shard iterator is returned by every GetRecords * request in NextShardIterator , which you use in the * ShardIterator parameter of the next * GetRecords request. When you repeatedly read from an * Amazon Kinesis stream use a GetShardIterator request to get the first * shard iterator to use in your first GetRecords request * and then use the shard iterator returned in * NextShardIterator for subsequent reads. *

*

* GetRecords can return null for the * NextShardIterator to reflect that the shard has been * closed and that the requested shard iterator would never have returned * more data. *

*

* If no items can be processed because of insufficient provisioned * throughput on the shard involved in the request, * GetRecords throws * ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . *

* * @param getRecordsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the GetRecords operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * GetRecords service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future getRecordsAsync(final GetRecordsRequest getRecordsRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public GetRecordsResult call() throws Exception { return getRecords(getRecordsRequest); } }); } /** *

* This operation returns one or more data records from a shard. A * GetRecords operation request can retrieve up to 10 MB of * data. *

*

* You specify a shard iterator for the shard that you want to read data * from in the ShardIterator parameter. The shard iterator * specifies the position in the shard from which you want to start * reading data records sequentially. A shard iterator specifies this * position using the sequence number of a data record in the shard. For * more information about the shard iterator, see GetShardIterator. *

*

* GetRecords may return a partial result if the response * size limit is exceeded. You will get an error, but not a partial * result if the shard's provisioned throughput is exceeded, the shard * iterator has expired, or an internal processing failure has occurred. * Clients can request a smaller amount of data by specifying a maximum * number of returned records using the Limit parameter. The * Limit parameter can be set to an integer value of up to * 10,000. If you set the value to an integer greater than 10,000, you * will receive InvalidArgumentException . *

*

* A new shard iterator is returned by every GetRecords * request in NextShardIterator , which you use in the * ShardIterator parameter of the next * GetRecords request. When you repeatedly read from an * Amazon Kinesis stream use a GetShardIterator request to get the first * shard iterator to use in your first GetRecords request * and then use the shard iterator returned in * NextShardIterator for subsequent reads. *

*

* GetRecords can return null for the * NextShardIterator to reflect that the shard has been * closed and that the requested shard iterator would never have returned * more data. *

*

* If no items can be processed because of insufficient provisioned * throughput on the shard involved in the request, * GetRecords throws * ProvisionedThroughputExceededException . *

* * @param getRecordsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the GetRecords operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * GetRecords service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future getRecordsAsync( final GetRecordsRequest getRecordsRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public GetRecordsResult call() throws Exception { GetRecordsResult result; try { result = getRecords(getRecordsRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(getRecordsRequest, result); return result; } }); } /** *

* This operation splits a shard into two new shards in the stream, to * increase the stream's capacity to ingest and transport data. * SplitShard is called when there is a need to increase the * overall capacity of stream because of an expected increase in the * volume of data records being ingested. *

*

* SplitShard can also be used when a given shard appears * to be approaching its maximum utilization, for example, when the set * of producers sending data into the specific shard are suddenly sending * more than previously anticipated. You can also call the * SplitShard operation to increase stream capacity, so that * more Amazon Kinesis applications can simultaneously read data from the * stream for real-time processing. *

*

* The SplitShard operation requires that you specify the * shard to be split and the new hash key, which is the position in the * shard where the shard gets split in two. In many cases, the new hash * key might simply be the average of the beginning and ending hash key, * but it can be any hash key value in the range being mapped into the * shard. For more information about splitting shards, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to determine the shard ID * and hash key values for the ShardToSplit and * NewStartingHashKey parameters that are specified in the * SplitShard request. *

*

* SplitShard is an asynchronous operation. Upon receiving * a SplitShard request, Amazon Kinesis immediately returns * a response and sets the stream status to UPDATING. After the operation * is completed, Amazon Kinesis sets the stream status to ACTIVE. Read * and write operations continue to work while the stream is in the * UPDATING state. *

*

* You can use DescribeStream to check the status of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . If the stream * is in the ACTIVE state, you can call SplitShard . If a * stream is in CREATING or UPDATING or DELETING states, then Amazon * Kinesis returns a ResourceInUseException . *

*

* If the specified stream does not exist, Amazon Kinesis returns a * ResourceNotFoundException . If you try to create more * shards than are authorized for your account, you receive a * LimitExceededException . *

*

* Note: The default limit for an AWS account is 10 shards per * stream. If you need to create a stream with more than 10 shards, * contact AWS Support * to increase the limit on your account. *

*

* If you try to operate on too many streams in parallel using * CreateStream, DeleteStream, MergeShards or SplitShard, you will * receive a LimitExceededException . *

*

* SplitShard has limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param splitShardRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the SplitShard operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * SplitShard service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future splitShardAsync(final SplitShardRequest splitShardRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { splitShard(splitShardRequest); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation splits a shard into two new shards in the stream, to * increase the stream's capacity to ingest and transport data. * SplitShard is called when there is a need to increase the * overall capacity of stream because of an expected increase in the * volume of data records being ingested. *

*

* SplitShard can also be used when a given shard appears * to be approaching its maximum utilization, for example, when the set * of producers sending data into the specific shard are suddenly sending * more than previously anticipated. You can also call the * SplitShard operation to increase stream capacity, so that * more Amazon Kinesis applications can simultaneously read data from the * stream for real-time processing. *

*

* The SplitShard operation requires that you specify the * shard to be split and the new hash key, which is the position in the * shard where the shard gets split in two. In many cases, the new hash * key might simply be the average of the beginning and ending hash key, * but it can be any hash key value in the range being mapped into the * shard. For more information about splitting shards, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to determine the shard ID * and hash key values for the ShardToSplit and * NewStartingHashKey parameters that are specified in the * SplitShard request. *

*

* SplitShard is an asynchronous operation. Upon receiving * a SplitShard request, Amazon Kinesis immediately returns * a response and sets the stream status to UPDATING. After the operation * is completed, Amazon Kinesis sets the stream status to ACTIVE. Read * and write operations continue to work while the stream is in the * UPDATING state. *

*

* You can use DescribeStream to check the status of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . If the stream * is in the ACTIVE state, you can call SplitShard . If a * stream is in CREATING or UPDATING or DELETING states, then Amazon * Kinesis returns a ResourceInUseException . *

*

* If the specified stream does not exist, Amazon Kinesis returns a * ResourceNotFoundException . If you try to create more * shards than are authorized for your account, you receive a * LimitExceededException . *

*

* Note: The default limit for an AWS account is 10 shards per * stream. If you need to create a stream with more than 10 shards, * contact AWS Support * to increase the limit on your account. *

*

* If you try to operate on too many streams in parallel using * CreateStream, DeleteStream, MergeShards or SplitShard, you will * receive a LimitExceededException . *

*

* SplitShard has limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param splitShardRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the SplitShard operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * SplitShard service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future splitShardAsync( final SplitShardRequest splitShardRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { try { splitShard(splitShardRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(splitShardRequest, null); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation adds a new Amazon Kinesis stream to your AWS account. * A stream captures and transports data records that are continuously * emitted from different data sources or producers . Scale-out * within an Amazon Kinesis stream is explicitly supported by means of * shards, which are uniquely identified groups of data records in an * Amazon Kinesis stream. *

*

* You specify and control the number of shards that a stream is * composed of. Each open shard can support up to 5 read transactions per * second, up to a maximum total of 2 MB of data read per second. Each * shard can support up to 1000 write transactions per second, up to a * maximum total of 1 MB data written per second. You can add shards to a * stream if the amount of data input increases and you can remove shards * if the amount of data input decreases. *

*

* The stream name identifies the stream. The name is scoped to the AWS * account used by the application. It is also scoped by region. That is, * two streams in two different accounts can have the same name, and two * streams in the same account, but in two different regions, can have * the same name. *

*

* CreateStream is an asynchronous operation. Upon * receiving a CreateStream request, Amazon Kinesis * immediately returns and sets the stream status to CREATING. After the * stream is created, Amazon Kinesis sets the stream status to ACTIVE. * You should perform read and write operations only on an ACTIVE stream. *

*

* You receive a LimitExceededException when making a * CreateStream request if you try to do one of the * following: *

* *
    *
  • Have more than five streams in the CREATING state at any point in * time.
  • *
  • Create more shards than are authorized for your account.
  • * *
*

* Note: The default limit for an AWS account is 10 shards per * stream. If you need to create a stream with more than 10 shards, * contact AWS Support * to increase the limit on your account. *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the * stream status, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* CreateStream has a limit of 5 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param createStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the CreateStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * CreateStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future createStreamAsync(final CreateStreamRequest createStreamRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { createStream(createStreamRequest); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation adds a new Amazon Kinesis stream to your AWS account. * A stream captures and transports data records that are continuously * emitted from different data sources or producers . Scale-out * within an Amazon Kinesis stream is explicitly supported by means of * shards, which are uniquely identified groups of data records in an * Amazon Kinesis stream. *

*

* You specify and control the number of shards that a stream is * composed of. Each open shard can support up to 5 read transactions per * second, up to a maximum total of 2 MB of data read per second. Each * shard can support up to 1000 write transactions per second, up to a * maximum total of 1 MB data written per second. You can add shards to a * stream if the amount of data input increases and you can remove shards * if the amount of data input decreases. *

*

* The stream name identifies the stream. The name is scoped to the AWS * account used by the application. It is also scoped by region. That is, * two streams in two different accounts can have the same name, and two * streams in the same account, but in two different regions, can have * the same name. *

*

* CreateStream is an asynchronous operation. Upon * receiving a CreateStream request, Amazon Kinesis * immediately returns and sets the stream status to CREATING. After the * stream is created, Amazon Kinesis sets the stream status to ACTIVE. * You should perform read and write operations only on an ACTIVE stream. *

*

* You receive a LimitExceededException when making a * CreateStream request if you try to do one of the * following: *

* *
    *
  • Have more than five streams in the CREATING state at any point in * time.
  • *
  • Create more shards than are authorized for your account.
  • * *
*

* Note: The default limit for an AWS account is 10 shards per * stream. If you need to create a stream with more than 10 shards, * contact AWS Support * to increase the limit on your account. *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the * stream status, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* CreateStream has a limit of 5 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param createStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the CreateStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * CreateStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future createStreamAsync( final CreateStreamRequest createStreamRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { try { createStream(createStreamRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(createStreamRequest, null); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation deletes a stream and all of its shards and data. You * must shut down any applications that are operating on the stream * before you delete the stream. If an application attempts to operate on * a deleted stream, it will receive the exception * ResourceNotFoundException . *

*

* If the stream is in the ACTIVE state, you can delete it. After a * DeleteStream request, the specified stream is in the * DELETING state until Amazon Kinesis completes the deletion. *

*

* Note: Amazon Kinesis might continue to accept data read and * write operations, such as PutRecord and GetRecords, on a stream in the * DELETING state until the stream deletion is complete. *

*

* When you delete a stream, any shards in that stream are also deleted. *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the state of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* DeleteStream has a limit of 5 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param deleteStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the DeleteStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * DeleteStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future deleteStreamAsync(final DeleteStreamRequest deleteStreamRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { deleteStream(deleteStreamRequest); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation deletes a stream and all of its shards and data. You * must shut down any applications that are operating on the stream * before you delete the stream. If an application attempts to operate on * a deleted stream, it will receive the exception * ResourceNotFoundException . *

*

* If the stream is in the ACTIVE state, you can delete it. After a * DeleteStream request, the specified stream is in the * DELETING state until Amazon Kinesis completes the deletion. *

*

* Note: Amazon Kinesis might continue to accept data read and * write operations, such as PutRecord and GetRecords, on a stream in the * DELETING state until the stream deletion is complete. *

*

* When you delete a stream, any shards in that stream are also deleted. *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the state of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* DeleteStream has a limit of 5 transactions per second * per account. *

* * @param deleteStreamRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the DeleteStream operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * DeleteStream service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future deleteStreamAsync( final DeleteStreamRequest deleteStreamRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { try { deleteStream(deleteStreamRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(deleteStreamRequest, null); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation returns an array of the names of all the streams that * are associated with the AWS account making the * ListStreams request. A given AWS account can have many * streams active at one time. *

*

* The number of streams may be too large to return from a single call * to ListStreams . You can limit the number of returned * streams using the Limit parameter. If you do not specify * a value for the Limit parameter, Amazon Kinesis uses the * default limit, which is currently 10. *

*

* You can detect if there are more streams available to list by using * the HasMoreStreams flag from the returned output. If * there are more streams available, you can request more streams by * using the name of the last stream returned by the * ListStreams request in the * ExclusiveStartStreamName parameter in a subsequent * request to ListStreams . The group of stream names * returned by the subsequent request is then added to the list. You can * continue this process until all the stream names have been collected * in the list. *

*

* ListStreams has a limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param listStreamsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the ListStreams operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * ListStreams service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future listStreamsAsync(final ListStreamsRequest listStreamsRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public ListStreamsResult call() throws Exception { return listStreams(listStreamsRequest); } }); } /** *

* This operation returns an array of the names of all the streams that * are associated with the AWS account making the * ListStreams request. A given AWS account can have many * streams active at one time. *

*

* The number of streams may be too large to return from a single call * to ListStreams . You can limit the number of returned * streams using the Limit parameter. If you do not specify * a value for the Limit parameter, Amazon Kinesis uses the * default limit, which is currently 10. *

*

* You can detect if there are more streams available to list by using * the HasMoreStreams flag from the returned output. If * there are more streams available, you can request more streams by * using the name of the last stream returned by the * ListStreams request in the * ExclusiveStartStreamName parameter in a subsequent * request to ListStreams . The group of stream names * returned by the subsequent request is then added to the list. You can * continue this process until all the stream names have been collected * in the list. *

*

* ListStreams has a limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param listStreamsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the ListStreams operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * ListStreams service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future listStreamsAsync( final ListStreamsRequest listStreamsRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public ListStreamsResult call() throws Exception { ListStreamsResult result; try { result = listStreams(listStreamsRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(listStreamsRequest, result); return result; } }); } /** *

* This operation merges two adjacent shards in a stream and combines * them into a single shard to reduce the stream's capacity to ingest and * transport data. Two shards are considered adjacent if the union of the * hash key ranges for the two shards form a contiguous set with no gaps. * For example, if you have two shards, one with a hash key range of * 276...381 and the other with a hash key range of 382...454, then you * could merge these two shards into a single shard that would have a * hash key range of 276...454. After the merge, the single child shard * receives data for all hash key values covered by the two parent * shards. *

*

* MergeShards is called when there is a need to reduce the * overall capacity of a stream because of excess capacity that is not * being used. The operation requires that you specify the shard to be * merged and the adjacent shard for a given stream. For more information * about merging shards, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* If the stream is in the ACTIVE state, you can call * MergeShards . If a stream is in CREATING or UPDATING or * DELETING states, then Amazon Kinesis returns a * ResourceInUseException . If the specified stream does not * exist, Amazon Kinesis returns a ResourceNotFoundException * . *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the state of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* MergeShards is an asynchronous operation. Upon receiving * a MergeShards request, Amazon Kinesis immediately returns * a response and sets the StreamStatus to UPDATING. After * the operation is completed, Amazon Kinesis sets the * StreamStatus to ACTIVE. Read and write operations * continue to work while the stream is in the UPDATING state. *

*

* You use the DescribeStream operation to determine the shard IDs that * are specified in the MergeShards request. *

*

* If you try to operate on too many streams in parallel using * CreateStream, DeleteStream, MergeShards or SplitShard, * you will receive a LimitExceededException . *

*

* MergeShards has limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param mergeShardsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the MergeShards operation on AmazonKinesis. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * MergeShards service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future mergeShardsAsync(final MergeShardsRequest mergeShardsRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { mergeShards(mergeShardsRequest); return null; } }); } /** *

* This operation merges two adjacent shards in a stream and combines * them into a single shard to reduce the stream's capacity to ingest and * transport data. Two shards are considered adjacent if the union of the * hash key ranges for the two shards form a contiguous set with no gaps. * For example, if you have two shards, one with a hash key range of * 276...381 and the other with a hash key range of 382...454, then you * could merge these two shards into a single shard that would have a * hash key range of 276...454. After the merge, the single child shard * receives data for all hash key values covered by the two parent * shards. *

*

* MergeShards is called when there is a need to reduce the * overall capacity of a stream because of excess capacity that is not * being used. The operation requires that you specify the shard to be * merged and the adjacent shard for a given stream. For more information * about merging shards, see the * Amazon Kinesis Developer Guide * . *

*

* If the stream is in the ACTIVE state, you can call * MergeShards . If a stream is in CREATING or UPDATING or * DELETING states, then Amazon Kinesis returns a * ResourceInUseException . If the specified stream does not * exist, Amazon Kinesis returns a ResourceNotFoundException * . *

*

* You can use the DescribeStream operation to check the state of the * stream, which is returned in StreamStatus . *

*

* MergeShards is an asynchronous operation. Upon receiving * a MergeShards request, Amazon Kinesis immediately returns * a response and sets the StreamStatus to UPDATING. After * the operation is completed, Amazon Kinesis sets the * StreamStatus to ACTIVE. Read and write operations * continue to work while the stream is in the UPDATING state. *

*

* You use the DescribeStream operation to determine the shard IDs that * are specified in the MergeShards request. *

*

* If you try to operate on too many streams in parallel using * CreateStream, DeleteStream, MergeShards or SplitShard, * you will receive a LimitExceededException . *

*

* MergeShards has limit of 5 transactions per second per * account. *

* * @param mergeShardsRequest Container for the necessary parameters to * execute the MergeShards operation on AmazonKinesis. * @param asyncHandler Asynchronous callback handler for events in the * life-cycle of the request. Users could provide the implementation of * the four callback methods in this interface to process the operation * result or handle the exception. * * @return A Java Future object containing the response from the * MergeShards service method, as returned by AmazonKinesis. * * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while * attempting to make the request or handle the response. For example * if a network connection is not available. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by AmazonKinesis indicating * either a problem with the data in the request, or a server side issue. */ public Future mergeShardsAsync( final MergeShardsRequest mergeShardsRequest, final AsyncHandler asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException { return executorService.submit(new Callable() { public Void call() throws Exception { try { mergeShards(mergeShardsRequest); } catch (Exception ex) { asyncHandler.onError(ex); throw ex; } asyncHandler.onSuccess(mergeShardsRequest, null); return null; } }); } }




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