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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.
 */

/**
 * AWS CodeDeploy Overview
 * 

* This reference guide provides descriptions of the AWS CodeDeploy APIs. For * more information about AWS CodeDeploy, see the AWS CodeDeploy User * Guide. *

* Using the APIs *

* You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to work with the following: *

*
    *
  • *

    * Applications are unique identifiers used by AWS CodeDeploy to ensure the * correct combinations of revisions, deployment configurations, and deployment * groups are being referenced during deployments. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, list, and update * applications. *

    *
  • *
  • *

    * Deployment configurations are sets of deployment rules and success and * failure conditions used by AWS CodeDeploy during deployments. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, and list * deployment configurations. *

    *
  • *
  • *

    * Deployment groups are groups of instances to which application revisions can * be deployed. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, list, and update * deployment groups. *

    *
  • *
  • *

    * Instances represent Amazon EC2 instances to which application revisions are * deployed. Instances are identified by their Amazon EC2 tags or Auto Scaling * group names. Instances belong to deployment groups. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to get and list instance. *

    *
  • *
  • *

    * Deployments represent the process of deploying revisions to instances. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, get, list, and stop * deployments. *

    *
  • *
  • *

    * Application revisions are archive files stored in Amazon S3 buckets or GitHub * repositories. These revisions contain source content (such as source code, * web pages, executable files, and deployment scripts) along with an * application specification (AppSpec) file. (The AppSpec file is unique to AWS * CodeDeploy; it defines the deployment actions you want AWS CodeDeploy to * execute.) Ffor application revisions stored in Amazon S3 buckets, an * application revision is uniquely identified by its Amazon S3 object key and * its ETag, version, or both. For application revisions stored in GitHub * repositories, an application revision is uniquely identified by its * repository name and commit ID. Application revisions are deployed through * deployment groups. *

    *

    * You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to get, list, and register application * revisions. *

    *
  • *
*/ package com.amazonaws.services.codedeploy;




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