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The AWS Java SDK for AWS Lambda module holds the client classes that are used for communicating with AWS Lambda Service

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/*
 * Copyright 2019-2024 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.lambda.model;

import java.io.Serializable;
import javax.annotation.Generated;
import com.amazonaws.protocol.StructuredPojo;
import com.amazonaws.protocol.ProtocolMarshaller;

/**
 * 

* A destination for events that failed processing. *

* * @see AWS API * Documentation */ @Generated("com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class OnFailure implements Serializable, Cloneable, StructuredPojo { /** *

* The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource. *

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, or * Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon * MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the destination. *

*/ private String destination; /** *

* The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource. *

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, or * Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon * MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the destination. *

* * @param destination * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource.

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, * or Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the * destination. */ public void setDestination(String destination) { this.destination = destination; } /** *

* The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource. *

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, or * Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon * MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the destination. *

* * @return The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource.

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, * or Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the * destination. */ public String getDestination() { return this.destination; } /** *

* The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource. *

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, or * Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon * MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the destination. *

* * @param destination * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the destination resource.

*

* To retain records of asynchronous invocations, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, Lambda function, * or Amazon EventBridge event bus as the destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from Kinesis and DynamoDB event sources, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic or Amazon SQS queue as the * destination. *

*

* To retain records of failed invocations from self-managed Kafka or Amazon MSK, you can configure an Amazon SNS topic, Amazon SQS queue, or Amazon S3 bucket as the * destination. * @return Returns a reference to this object so that method calls can be chained together. */ public OnFailure withDestination(String destination) { setDestination(destination); return this; } /** * Returns a string representation of this object. This is useful for testing and debugging. Sensitive data will be * redacted from this string using a placeholder value. * * @return A string representation of this object. * * @see java.lang.Object#toString() */ @Override public String toString() { StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); sb.append("{"); if (getDestination() != null) sb.append("Destination: ").append(getDestination()); sb.append("}"); return sb.toString(); } @Override public boolean equals(Object obj) { if (this == obj) return true; if (obj == null) return false; if (obj instanceof OnFailure == false) return false; OnFailure other = (OnFailure) obj; if (other.getDestination() == null ^ this.getDestination() == null) return false; if (other.getDestination() != null && other.getDestination().equals(this.getDestination()) == false) return false; return true; } @Override public int hashCode() { final int prime = 31; int hashCode = 1; hashCode = prime * hashCode + ((getDestination() == null) ? 0 : getDestination().hashCode()); return hashCode; } @Override public OnFailure clone() { try { return (OnFailure) super.clone(); } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) { throw new IllegalStateException("Got a CloneNotSupportedException from Object.clone() " + "even though we're Cloneable!", e); } } @com.amazonaws.annotation.SdkInternalApi @Override public void marshall(ProtocolMarshaller protocolMarshaller) { com.amazonaws.services.lambda.model.transform.OnFailureMarshaller.getInstance().marshall(this, protocolMarshaller); } }





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