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The AWS SDK for Java with support for OSGi. The AWS SDK for Java provides Java APIs for building software on AWS' cost-effective, scalable, and reliable infrastructure products. The AWS Java SDK allows developers to code against APIs for all of Amazon's infrastructure web services (Amazon S3, Amazon EC2, Amazon SQS, Amazon Relational Database Service, Amazon AutoScaling, etc).

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/*
 * Copyright 2011-2016 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.cloudwatch;

import org.w3c.dom.*;

import java.net.*;
import java.util.*;
import java.util.Map.Entry;

import org.apache.commons.logging.*;

import com.amazonaws.*;
import com.amazonaws.auth.*;
import com.amazonaws.handlers.*;
import com.amazonaws.http.*;
import com.amazonaws.internal.*;
import com.amazonaws.internal.auth.*;
import com.amazonaws.metrics.*;
import com.amazonaws.regions.*;
import com.amazonaws.transform.*;
import com.amazonaws.util.*;
import com.amazonaws.protocol.json.*;
import com.amazonaws.util.AWSRequestMetrics.Field;
import com.amazonaws.annotation.ThreadSafe;
import com.amazonaws.client.AwsSyncClientParams;
import com.amazonaws.AmazonServiceException;

import com.amazonaws.services.cloudwatch.model.*;
import com.amazonaws.services.cloudwatch.model.transform.*;

/**
 * Client for accessing CloudWatch. All service calls made using this client are
 * blocking, and will not return until the service call completes.
 * 

*

* Amazon CloudWatch monitors your Amazon Web Services (AWS) resources and the * applications you run on AWS in real-time. You can use CloudWatch to collect * and track metrics, which are the variables you want to measure for your * resources and applications. *

*

* CloudWatch alarms send notifications or automatically make changes to the * resources you are monitoring based on rules that you define. For example, you * can monitor the CPU usage and disk reads and writes of your Amazon Elastic * Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances and then use this data to determine * whether you should launch additional instances to handle increased load. You * can also use this data to stop under-used instances to save money. *

*

* In addition to monitoring the built-in metrics that come with AWS, you can * monitor your own custom metrics. With CloudWatch, you gain system-wide * visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and * operational health. *

*/ @ThreadSafe public class AmazonCloudWatchClient extends AmazonWebServiceClient implements AmazonCloudWatch { /** Provider for AWS credentials. */ private final AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider; private static final Log log = LogFactory.getLog(AmazonCloudWatch.class); /** Default signing name for the service. */ private static final String DEFAULT_SIGNING_NAME = "monitoring"; /** * Client configuration factory providing ClientConfigurations tailored to * this client */ protected static final ClientConfigurationFactory configFactory = new ClientConfigurationFactory(); /** * List of exception unmarshallers for all modeled exceptions */ protected final List> exceptionUnmarshallers = new ArrayList>(); /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch. 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 AmazonCloudWatchClient() { this(new DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain(), configFactory .getConfig()); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch. 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 CloudWatch (ex: proxy settings, retry counts, etc.). * * @see DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient(ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration) { this(new DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain(), clientConfiguration); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified AWS account credentials. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param awsCredentials * The AWS credentials (access key ID and secret key) to use when * authenticating with AWS services. */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient(AWSCredentials awsCredentials) { this(awsCredentials, configFactory.getConfig()); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified AWS account credentials and client configuration options. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param awsCredentials * The AWS credentials (access key ID and secret key) to use when * authenticating with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * The client configuration options controlling how this client * connects to CloudWatch (ex: proxy settings, retry counts, etc.). */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient(AWSCredentials awsCredentials, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration) { super(clientConfiguration); this.awsCredentialsProvider = new StaticCredentialsProvider( awsCredentials); init(); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified AWS account credentials provider. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials to * authenticate requests with AWS services. */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient(AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider) { this(awsCredentialsProvider, configFactory.getConfig()); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified AWS account credentials provider and client configuration * options. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials to * authenticate requests with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * The client configuration options controlling how this client * connects to CloudWatch (ex: proxy settings, retry counts, etc.). */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient( AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration) { this(awsCredentialsProvider, clientConfiguration, null); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified AWS account credentials provider, client configuration options, * and request metric collector. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param awsCredentialsProvider * The AWS credentials provider which will provide credentials to * authenticate requests with AWS services. * @param clientConfiguration * The client configuration options controlling how this client * connects to CloudWatch (ex: proxy settings, retry counts, etc.). * @param requestMetricCollector * optional request metric collector */ public AmazonCloudWatchClient( AWSCredentialsProvider awsCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration clientConfiguration, RequestMetricCollector requestMetricCollector) { super(clientConfiguration, requestMetricCollector); this.awsCredentialsProvider = awsCredentialsProvider; init(); } /** * Constructs a new client to invoke service methods on CloudWatch using the * specified parameters. * *

* All service calls made using this new client object are blocking, and * will not return until the service call completes. * * @param clientParams * Object providing client parameters. */ AmazonCloudWatchClient(AwsSyncClientParams clientParams) { super(clientParams); this.awsCredentialsProvider = clientParams.getCredentialsProvider(); init(); } private void init() { exceptionUnmarshallers .add(new InvalidParameterCombinationExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers.add(new InvalidFormatExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers .add(new MissingRequiredParameterExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers .add(new InvalidParameterValueExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers.add(new ResourceNotFoundExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers.add(new InternalServiceExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers.add(new InvalidNextTokenExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers.add(new LimitExceededExceptionUnmarshaller()); exceptionUnmarshallers .add(new StandardErrorUnmarshaller( com.amazonaws.services.cloudwatch.model.AmazonCloudWatchException.class)); setServiceNameIntern(DEFAULT_SIGNING_NAME); setEndpointPrefix(ENDPOINT_PREFIX); // calling this.setEndPoint(...) will also modify the signer accordingly this.setEndpoint("https://monitoring.us-east-1.amazonaws.com"); HandlerChainFactory chainFactory = new HandlerChainFactory(); requestHandler2s .addAll(chainFactory .newRequestHandlerChain("/com/amazonaws/services/cloudwatch/request.handlers")); requestHandler2s .addAll(chainFactory .newRequestHandler2Chain("/com/amazonaws/services/cloudwatch/request.handler2s")); } /** *

* Deletes all specified alarms. In the event of an error, no alarms are * deleted. *

* * @param deleteAlarmsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteAlarms operation returned by the service. * @throws ResourceNotFoundException * The named resource does not exist. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.DeleteAlarms */ @Override public DeleteAlarmsResult deleteAlarms( DeleteAlarmsRequest deleteAlarmsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(deleteAlarmsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new DeleteAlarmsRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(deleteAlarmsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new DeleteAlarmsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Retrieves history for the specified alarm. Filter alarms by date range or * item type. If an alarm name is not specified, Amazon CloudWatch returns * histories for all of the owner's alarms. *

* Amazon CloudWatch retains the history of an alarm for two weeks, * whether or not you delete the alarm. * * @param describeAlarmHistoryRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAlarmHistory operation returned by the * service. * @throws InvalidNextTokenException * The next token specified is invalid. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.DescribeAlarmHistory */ @Override public DescribeAlarmHistoryResult describeAlarmHistory( DescribeAlarmHistoryRequest describeAlarmHistoryRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(describeAlarmHistoryRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new DescribeAlarmHistoryRequestMarshaller() .marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(describeAlarmHistoryRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new DescribeAlarmHistoryResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } @Override public DescribeAlarmHistoryResult describeAlarmHistory() { return describeAlarmHistory(new DescribeAlarmHistoryRequest()); } /** *

* Retrieves alarms with the specified names. If no name is specified, all * alarms for the user are returned. Alarms can be retrieved by using only a * prefix for the alarm name, the alarm state, or a prefix for any action. *

* * @param describeAlarmsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAlarms operation returned by the service. * @throws InvalidNextTokenException * The next token specified is invalid. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.DescribeAlarms */ @Override public DescribeAlarmsResult describeAlarms( DescribeAlarmsRequest describeAlarmsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(describeAlarmsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new DescribeAlarmsRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(describeAlarmsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new DescribeAlarmsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } @Override public DescribeAlarmsResult describeAlarms() { return describeAlarms(new DescribeAlarmsRequest()); } /** *

* Retrieves all alarms for a single metric. Specify a statistic, period, or * unit to filter the set of alarms further. *

* * @param describeAlarmsForMetricRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAlarmsForMetric operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.DescribeAlarmsForMetric */ @Override public DescribeAlarmsForMetricResult describeAlarmsForMetric( DescribeAlarmsForMetricRequest describeAlarmsForMetricRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(describeAlarmsForMetricRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new DescribeAlarmsForMetricRequestMarshaller() .marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(describeAlarmsForMetricRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new DescribeAlarmsForMetricResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Disables actions for the specified alarms. When an alarm's actions are * disabled the alarm's state may change, but none of the alarm's actions * will execute. *

* * @param disableAlarmActionsRequest * @return Result of the DisableAlarmActions operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.DisableAlarmActions */ @Override public DisableAlarmActionsResult disableAlarmActions( DisableAlarmActionsRequest disableAlarmActionsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(disableAlarmActionsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new DisableAlarmActionsRequestMarshaller() .marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(disableAlarmActionsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new DisableAlarmActionsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Enables actions for the specified alarms. *

* * @param enableAlarmActionsRequest * @return Result of the EnableAlarmActions operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.EnableAlarmActions */ @Override public EnableAlarmActionsResult enableAlarmActions( EnableAlarmActionsRequest enableAlarmActionsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(enableAlarmActionsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new EnableAlarmActionsRequestMarshaller() .marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(enableAlarmActionsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new EnableAlarmActionsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Gets statistics for the specified metric. *

*

* The maximum number of data points that can be queried is 50,850, whereas * the maximum number of data points returned from a single * GetMetricStatistics request is 1,440. If you make a request * that generates more than 1,440 data points, Amazon CloudWatch returns an * error. In such a case, you can alter the request by narrowing the * specified time range or increasing the specified period. Alternatively, * you can make multiple requests across adjacent time ranges. * GetMetricStatistics does not return the data in * chronological order. *

*

* Amazon CloudWatch aggregates data points based on the length of the * period that you specify. For example, if you request * statistics with a one-minute granularity, Amazon CloudWatch aggregates * data points with time stamps that fall within the same one-minute period. * In such a case, the data points queried can greatly outnumber the data * points returned. *

*

* The following examples show various statistics allowed by the data point * query maximum of 50,850 when you call GetMetricStatistics on * Amazon EC2 instances with detailed (one-minute) monitoring enabled: *

*
    *
  • Statistics for up to 400 instances for a span of one hour
  • *
  • Statistics for up to 35 instances over a span of 24 hours
  • *
  • Statistics for up to 2 instances over a span of 2 weeks
  • *
*

* For information about the namespace, metric names, and dimensions that * other Amazon Web Services products use to send metrics to CloudWatch, go * to Amazon CloudWatch Metrics, Namespaces, and Dimensions Reference in * the Amazon CloudWatch Developer Guide. *

* * @param getMetricStatisticsRequest * @return Result of the GetMetricStatistics operation returned by the * service. * @throws InvalidParameterValueException * Bad or out-of-range value was supplied for the input parameter. * @throws MissingRequiredParameterException * An input parameter that is mandatory for processing the request * is not supplied. * @throws InvalidParameterCombinationException * Parameters that must not be used together were used together. * @throws InternalServiceException * Indicates that the request processing has failed due to some * unknown error, exception, or failure. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.GetMetricStatistics */ @Override public GetMetricStatisticsResult getMetricStatistics( GetMetricStatisticsRequest getMetricStatisticsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(getMetricStatisticsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new GetMetricStatisticsRequestMarshaller() .marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(getMetricStatisticsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new GetMetricStatisticsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Returns a list of valid metrics stored for the AWS account owner. * Returned metrics can be used with GetMetricStatistics to obtain * statistical data for a given metric. *

* Up to 500 results are returned for any one call. To retrieve * further results, use returned NextToken values with * subsequent ListMetrics operations. If you * create a metric with the PutMetricData action, allow up to fifteen * minutes for the metric to appear in calls to the ListMetrics * action. Statistics about the metric, however, are available sooner using * GetMetricStatistics. * * @param listMetricsRequest * @return Result of the ListMetrics operation returned by the service. * @throws InternalServiceException * Indicates that the request processing has failed due to some * unknown error, exception, or failure. * @throws InvalidParameterValueException * Bad or out-of-range value was supplied for the input parameter. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.ListMetrics */ @Override public ListMetricsResult listMetrics(ListMetricsRequest listMetricsRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(listMetricsRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new ListMetricsRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(listMetricsRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new ListMetricsResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } @Override public ListMetricsResult listMetrics() { return listMetrics(new ListMetricsRequest()); } /** *

* Creates or updates an alarm and associates it with the specified Amazon * CloudWatch metric. Optionally, this operation can associate one or more * Amazon Simple Notification Service resources with the alarm. *

*

* When this operation creates an alarm, the alarm state is immediately set * to INSUFFICIENT_DATA. The alarm is evaluated and its * StateValue is set appropriately. Any actions associated with * the StateValue is then executed. *

* When updating an existing alarm, its StateValue is * left unchanged. If you are using an AWS Identity and * Access Management (IAM) account to create or modify an alarm, you must * have the following Amazon EC2 permissions: *
    *
  • ec2:DescribeInstanceStatus and * ec2:DescribeInstances for all alarms on Amazon EC2 instance * status metrics.
  • *
  • ec2:StopInstances for alarms with stop actions.
  • *
  • ec2:TerminateInstances for alarms with terminate * actions.
  • *
  • ec2:DescribeInstanceRecoveryAttribute, and * ec2:RecoverInstances for alarms with recover actions.
  • *
*

* If you have read/write permissions for Amazon CloudWatch but not for * Amazon EC2, you can still create an alarm but the stop or terminate * actions won't be performed on the Amazon EC2 instance. However, if you * are later granted permission to use the associated Amazon EC2 APIs, the * alarm actions you created earlier will be performed. For more information * about IAM permissions, see Permissions and Policies in Using IAM. *

*

* If you are using an IAM role (e.g., an Amazon EC2 instance profile), you * cannot stop or terminate the instance using alarm actions. However, you * can still see the alarm state and perform any other actions such as * Amazon SNS notifications or Auto Scaling policies. *

*

* If you are using temporary security credentials granted using the AWS * Security Token Service (AWS STS), you cannot stop or terminate an Amazon * EC2 instance using alarm actions. *

*
* * @param putMetricAlarmRequest * @return Result of the PutMetricAlarm operation returned by the service. * @throws LimitExceededException * The quota for alarms for this customer has already been reached. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.PutMetricAlarm */ @Override public PutMetricAlarmResult putMetricAlarm( PutMetricAlarmRequest putMetricAlarmRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(putMetricAlarmRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new PutMetricAlarmRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(putMetricAlarmRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new PutMetricAlarmResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Publishes metric data points to Amazon CloudWatch. Amazon CloudWatch * associates the data points with the specified metric. If the specified * metric does not exist, Amazon CloudWatch creates the metric. When Amazon * CloudWatch creates a metric, it can take up to fifteen minutes for the * metric to appear in calls to the ListMetrics action. *

*

* Each PutMetricData request is limited to 8 KB in size for * HTTP GET requests and is limited to 40 KB in size for HTTP POST requests. *

* Although the Value parameter accepts numbers of * type Double, Amazon CloudWatch rejects values that are * either too small or too large. Values must be in the range of * 8.515920e-109 to 1.174271e+108 (Base 10) or 2e-360 to 2e360 (Base 2). In * addition, special values (e.g., NaN, +Infinity, -Infinity) are not * supported. *

* Data that is timestamped 24 hours or more in the past may take in excess * of 48 hours to become available from submission time using * GetMetricStatistics. *

* * @param putMetricDataRequest * @return Result of the PutMetricData operation returned by the service. * @throws InvalidParameterValueException * Bad or out-of-range value was supplied for the input parameter. * @throws MissingRequiredParameterException * An input parameter that is mandatory for processing the request * is not supplied. * @throws InvalidParameterCombinationException * Parameters that must not be used together were used together. * @throws InternalServiceException * Indicates that the request processing has failed due to some * unknown error, exception, or failure. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.PutMetricData */ @Override public PutMetricDataResult putMetricData( PutMetricDataRequest putMetricDataRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(putMetricDataRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new PutMetricDataRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(putMetricDataRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new PutMetricDataResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** *

* Temporarily sets the state of an alarm. When the updated * StateValue differs from the previous value, the action * configured for the appropriate state is invoked. For example, if your * alarm is configured to send an Amazon SNS message when an alarm is * triggered, temporarily changing the alarm's state to ALARM will * send an Amazon SNS message. This is not a permanent change. The next * periodic alarm check (in about a minute) will set the alarm to its actual * state. Because the alarm state change happens very quickly, it is * typically only visibile in the alarm's History tab in the Amazon * CloudWatch console or through DescribeAlarmHistory. *

* * @param setAlarmStateRequest * @return Result of the SetAlarmState operation returned by the service. * @throws ResourceNotFoundException * The named resource does not exist. * @throws InvalidFormatException * Data was not syntactically valid JSON. * @sample AmazonCloudWatch.SetAlarmState */ @Override public SetAlarmStateResult setAlarmState( SetAlarmStateRequest setAlarmStateRequest) { ExecutionContext executionContext = createExecutionContext(setAlarmStateRequest); AWSRequestMetrics awsRequestMetrics = executionContext .getAwsRequestMetrics(); awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.ClientExecuteTime); Request request = null; Response response = null; try { awsRequestMetrics.startEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); try { request = new SetAlarmStateRequestMarshaller().marshall(super .beforeMarshalling(setAlarmStateRequest)); // Binds the request metrics to the current request. request.setAWSRequestMetrics(awsRequestMetrics); } finally { awsRequestMetrics.endEvent(Field.RequestMarshallTime); } StaxResponseHandler responseHandler = new StaxResponseHandler( new SetAlarmStateResultStaxUnmarshaller()); response = invoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); return response.getAwsResponse(); } finally { endClientExecution(awsRequestMetrics, request, response); } } /** * Returns additional metadata for a previously executed successful, * request, typically used for debugging issues where a service isn't acting * as expected. This data isn't considered part of the result data returned * by an operation, so it's available through this separate, diagnostic * interface. *

* Response metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you * need to access this extra diagnostic information for an executed request, * you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after * executing the request. * * @param request * The originally executed request * * @return The response metadata for the specified request, or null if none * is available. */ public ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata( AmazonWebServiceRequest request) { return client.getResponseMetadataForRequest(request); } /** * Normal invoke with authentication. Credentials are required and may be * overriden at the request level. **/ private Response invoke( Request request, HttpResponseHandler> responseHandler, ExecutionContext executionContext) { executionContext.setCredentialsProvider(CredentialUtils .getCredentialsProvider(request.getOriginalRequest(), awsCredentialsProvider)); return doInvoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); } /** * Invoke with no authentication. Credentials are not required and any * credentials set on the client or request will be ignored for this * operation. **/ private Response anonymousInvoke( Request request, HttpResponseHandler> responseHandler, ExecutionContext executionContext) { return doInvoke(request, responseHandler, executionContext); } /** * Invoke the request using the http client. Assumes credentials (or lack * thereof) have been configured in the ExecutionContext beforehand. **/ private Response doInvoke( Request request, HttpResponseHandler> responseHandler, ExecutionContext executionContext) { request.setEndpoint(endpoint); request.setTimeOffset(timeOffset); DefaultErrorResponseHandler errorResponseHandler = new DefaultErrorResponseHandler( exceptionUnmarshallers); return client.execute(request, responseHandler, errorResponseHandler, executionContext); } }





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