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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.elasticmapreduce;

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

/**
 * Interface for accessing Amazon EMR asynchronously. Each asynchronous method
 * will return a Java Future object representing the asynchronous operation;
 * overloads which accept an {@code AsyncHandler} can be used to receive
 * notification when an asynchronous operation completes.
 * 

*

* Amazon Elastic MapReduce (Amazon EMR) is a web service that makes it easy to * process large amounts of data efficiently. Amazon EMR uses Hadoop processing * combined with several AWS products to do tasks such as web indexing, data * mining, log file analysis, machine learning, scientific simulation, and data * warehousing. *

*/ public interface AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync extends AmazonElasticMapReduce { /** *

* AddInstanceGroups adds an instance group to a running cluster. *

* * @param addInstanceGroupsRequest * Input to an AddInstanceGroups call. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.AddInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future addInstanceGroupsAsync( AddInstanceGroupsRequest addInstanceGroupsRequest); /** *

* AddInstanceGroups adds an instance group to a running cluster. *

* * @param addInstanceGroupsRequest * Input to an AddInstanceGroups call. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.AddInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future addInstanceGroupsAsync( AddInstanceGroupsRequest addInstanceGroupsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* AddJobFlowSteps adds new steps to a running job flow. A maximum of 256 * steps are allowed in each job flow. *

*

* If your job flow is long-running (such as a Hive data warehouse) or * complex, you may require more than 256 steps to process your data. You * can bypass the 256-step limitation in various ways, including using the * SSH shell to connect to the master node and submitting queries directly * to the software running on the master node, such as Hive and Hadoop. For * more information on how to do this, go to Add More than 256 Steps to a Job Flow in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

*

* A step specifies the location of a JAR file stored either on the master * node of the job flow or in Amazon S3. Each step is performed by the main * function of the main class of the JAR file. The main class can be * specified either in the manifest of the JAR or by using the MainFunction * parameter of the step. *

*

* Elastic MapReduce executes each step in the order listed. For a step to * be considered complete, the main function must exit with a zero exit code * and all Hadoop jobs started while the step was running must have * completed and run successfully. *

*

* You can only add steps to a job flow that is in one of the following * states: STARTING, BOOTSTRAPPING, RUNNING, or WAITING. *

* * @param addJobFlowStepsRequest * The input argument to the AddJobFlowSteps operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddJobFlowSteps * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.AddJobFlowSteps */ java.util.concurrent.Future addJobFlowStepsAsync( AddJobFlowStepsRequest addJobFlowStepsRequest); /** *

* AddJobFlowSteps adds new steps to a running job flow. A maximum of 256 * steps are allowed in each job flow. *

*

* If your job flow is long-running (such as a Hive data warehouse) or * complex, you may require more than 256 steps to process your data. You * can bypass the 256-step limitation in various ways, including using the * SSH shell to connect to the master node and submitting queries directly * to the software running on the master node, such as Hive and Hadoop. For * more information on how to do this, go to Add More than 256 Steps to a Job Flow in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

*

* A step specifies the location of a JAR file stored either on the master * node of the job flow or in Amazon S3. Each step is performed by the main * function of the main class of the JAR file. The main class can be * specified either in the manifest of the JAR or by using the MainFunction * parameter of the step. *

*

* Elastic MapReduce executes each step in the order listed. For a step to * be considered complete, the main function must exit with a zero exit code * and all Hadoop jobs started while the step was running must have * completed and run successfully. *

*

* You can only add steps to a job flow that is in one of the following * states: STARTING, BOOTSTRAPPING, RUNNING, or WAITING. *

* * @param addJobFlowStepsRequest * The input argument to the AddJobFlowSteps operation. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddJobFlowSteps * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.AddJobFlowSteps */ java.util.concurrent.Future addJobFlowStepsAsync( AddJobFlowStepsRequest addJobFlowStepsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Adds tags to an Amazon EMR resource. Tags make it easier to associate * clusters in various ways, such as grouping clusters to track your Amazon * EMR resource allocation costs. For more information, see Tagging Amazon EMR Resources. *

* * @param addTagsRequest * This input identifies a cluster and a list of tags to attach. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddTags operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.AddTags */ java.util.concurrent.Future addTagsAsync( AddTagsRequest addTagsRequest); /** *

* Adds tags to an Amazon EMR resource. Tags make it easier to associate * clusters in various ways, such as grouping clusters to track your Amazon * EMR resource allocation costs. For more information, see Tagging Amazon EMR Resources. *

* * @param addTagsRequest * This input identifies a cluster and a list of tags to attach. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the AddTags operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.AddTags */ java.util.concurrent.Future addTagsAsync( AddTagsRequest addTagsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides cluster-level details including status, hardware and software * configuration, VPC settings, and so on. For information about the cluster * steps, see ListSteps. *

* * @param describeClusterRequest * This input determines which cluster to describe. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeCluster * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.DescribeCluster */ java.util.concurrent.Future describeClusterAsync( DescribeClusterRequest describeClusterRequest); /** *

* Provides cluster-level details including status, hardware and software * configuration, VPC settings, and so on. For information about the cluster * steps, see ListSteps. *

* * @param describeClusterRequest * This input determines which cluster to describe. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeCluster * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.DescribeCluster */ java.util.concurrent.Future describeClusterAsync( DescribeClusterRequest describeClusterRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* This API is deprecated and will eventually be removed. We recommend you * use ListClusters, DescribeCluster, ListSteps, * ListInstanceGroups and ListBootstrapActions instead. *

*

* DescribeJobFlows returns a list of job flows that match all of the * supplied parameters. The parameters can include a list of job flow IDs, * job flow states, and restrictions on job flow creation date and time. *

*

* Regardless of supplied parameters, only job flows created within the last * two months are returned. *

*

* If no parameters are supplied, then job flows matching either of the * following criteria are returned: *

*
    *
  • Job flows created and completed in the last two weeks
  • *
  • Job flows created within the last two months that are in one of the * following states: RUNNING, WAITING, * SHUTTING_DOWN, STARTING
  • *
*

* Amazon Elastic MapReduce can return a maximum of 512 job flow * descriptions. *

* * @param describeJobFlowsRequest * The input for the DescribeJobFlows operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeJobFlows * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.DescribeJobFlows */ @Deprecated java.util.concurrent.Future describeJobFlowsAsync( DescribeJobFlowsRequest describeJobFlowsRequest); /** *

* This API is deprecated and will eventually be removed. We recommend you * use ListClusters, DescribeCluster, ListSteps, * ListInstanceGroups and ListBootstrapActions instead. *

*

* DescribeJobFlows returns a list of job flows that match all of the * supplied parameters. The parameters can include a list of job flow IDs, * job flow states, and restrictions on job flow creation date and time. *

*

* Regardless of supplied parameters, only job flows created within the last * two months are returned. *

*

* If no parameters are supplied, then job flows matching either of the * following criteria are returned: *

*
    *
  • Job flows created and completed in the last two weeks
  • *
  • Job flows created within the last two months that are in one of the * following states: RUNNING, WAITING, * SHUTTING_DOWN, STARTING
  • *
*

* Amazon Elastic MapReduce can return a maximum of 512 job flow * descriptions. *

* * @param describeJobFlowsRequest * The input for the DescribeJobFlows operation. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeJobFlows * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.DescribeJobFlows */ @Deprecated java.util.concurrent.Future describeJobFlowsAsync( DescribeJobFlowsRequest describeJobFlowsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeJobFlows operation. * * @see #describeJobFlowsAsync(DescribeJobFlowsRequest) */ @Deprecated java.util.concurrent.Future describeJobFlowsAsync(); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeJobFlows operation with * an AsyncHandler. * * @see #describeJobFlowsAsync(DescribeJobFlowsRequest, * com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler) */ java.util.concurrent.Future describeJobFlowsAsync( com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides more detail about the cluster step. *

* * @param describeStepRequest * This input determines which step to describe. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeStep operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.DescribeStep */ java.util.concurrent.Future describeStepAsync( DescribeStepRequest describeStepRequest); /** *

* Provides more detail about the cluster step. *

* * @param describeStepRequest * This input determines which step to describe. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the DescribeStep operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.DescribeStep */ java.util.concurrent.Future describeStepAsync( DescribeStepRequest describeStepRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides information about the bootstrap actions associated with a * cluster. *

* * @param listBootstrapActionsRequest * This input determines which bootstrap actions to retrieve. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListBootstrapActions * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ListBootstrapActions */ java.util.concurrent.Future listBootstrapActionsAsync( ListBootstrapActionsRequest listBootstrapActionsRequest); /** *

* Provides information about the bootstrap actions associated with a * cluster. *

* * @param listBootstrapActionsRequest * This input determines which bootstrap actions to retrieve. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListBootstrapActions * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ListBootstrapActions */ java.util.concurrent.Future listBootstrapActionsAsync( ListBootstrapActionsRequest listBootstrapActionsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides the status of all clusters visible to this AWS account. Allows * you to filter the list of clusters based on certain criteria; for * example, filtering by cluster creation date and time or by status. This * call returns a maximum of 50 clusters per call, but returns a marker to * track the paging of the cluster list across multiple ListClusters calls. *

* * @param listClustersRequest * This input determines how the ListClusters action filters the list * of clusters that it returns. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListClusters operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ListClusters */ java.util.concurrent.Future listClustersAsync( ListClustersRequest listClustersRequest); /** *

* Provides the status of all clusters visible to this AWS account. Allows * you to filter the list of clusters based on certain criteria; for * example, filtering by cluster creation date and time or by status. This * call returns a maximum of 50 clusters per call, but returns a marker to * track the paging of the cluster list across multiple ListClusters calls. *

* * @param listClustersRequest * This input determines how the ListClusters action filters the list * of clusters that it returns. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListClusters operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ListClusters */ java.util.concurrent.Future listClustersAsync( ListClustersRequest listClustersRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ListClusters operation. * * @see #listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest) */ java.util.concurrent.Future listClustersAsync(); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ListClusters operation with an * AsyncHandler. * * @see #listClustersAsync(ListClustersRequest, * com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler) */ java.util.concurrent.Future listClustersAsync( com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides all available details about the instance groups in a cluster. *

* * @param listInstanceGroupsRequest * This input determines which instance groups to retrieve. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ListInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future listInstanceGroupsAsync( ListInstanceGroupsRequest listInstanceGroupsRequest); /** *

* Provides all available details about the instance groups in a cluster. *

* * @param listInstanceGroupsRequest * This input determines which instance groups to retrieve. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ListInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future listInstanceGroupsAsync( ListInstanceGroupsRequest listInstanceGroupsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides information about the cluster instances that Amazon EMR * provisions on behalf of a user when it creates the cluster. For example, * this operation indicates when the EC2 instances reach the Ready state, * when instances become available to Amazon EMR to use for jobs, and the IP * addresses for cluster instances, etc. *

* * @param listInstancesRequest * This input determines which instances to list. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListInstances * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ListInstances */ java.util.concurrent.Future listInstancesAsync( ListInstancesRequest listInstancesRequest); /** *

* Provides information about the cluster instances that Amazon EMR * provisions on behalf of a user when it creates the cluster. For example, * this operation indicates when the EC2 instances reach the Ready state, * when instances become available to Amazon EMR to use for jobs, and the IP * addresses for cluster instances, etc. *

* * @param listInstancesRequest * This input determines which instances to list. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListInstances * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ListInstances */ java.util.concurrent.Future listInstancesAsync( ListInstancesRequest listInstancesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Provides a list of steps for the cluster. *

* * @param listStepsRequest * This input determines which steps to list. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListSteps operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ListSteps */ java.util.concurrent.Future listStepsAsync( ListStepsRequest listStepsRequest); /** *

* Provides a list of steps for the cluster. *

* * @param listStepsRequest * This input determines which steps to list. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ListSteps operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ListSteps */ java.util.concurrent.Future listStepsAsync( ListStepsRequest listStepsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* ModifyInstanceGroups modifies the number of nodes and configuration * settings of an instance group. The input parameters include the new * target instance count for the group and the instance group ID. The call * will either succeed or fail atomically. *

* * @param modifyInstanceGroupsRequest * Change the size of some instance groups. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ModifyInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.ModifyInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future modifyInstanceGroupsAsync( ModifyInstanceGroupsRequest modifyInstanceGroupsRequest); /** *

* ModifyInstanceGroups modifies the number of nodes and configuration * settings of an instance group. The input parameters include the new * target instance count for the group and the instance group ID. The call * will either succeed or fail atomically. *

* * @param modifyInstanceGroupsRequest * Change the size of some instance groups. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the ModifyInstanceGroups * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.ModifyInstanceGroups */ java.util.concurrent.Future modifyInstanceGroupsAsync( ModifyInstanceGroupsRequest modifyInstanceGroupsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ModifyInstanceGroups operation. * * @see #modifyInstanceGroupsAsync(ModifyInstanceGroupsRequest) */ java.util.concurrent.Future modifyInstanceGroupsAsync(); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ModifyInstanceGroups operation * with an AsyncHandler. * * @see #modifyInstanceGroupsAsync(ModifyInstanceGroupsRequest, * com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler) */ java.util.concurrent.Future modifyInstanceGroupsAsync( com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Removes tags from an Amazon EMR resource. Tags make it easier to * associate clusters in various ways, such as grouping clusters to track * your Amazon EMR resource allocation costs. For more information, see Tagging Amazon EMR Resources. *

*

* The following example removes the stack tag with value Prod from a * cluster: *

* * @param removeTagsRequest * This input identifies a cluster and a list of tags to remove. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the RemoveTags operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.RemoveTags */ java.util.concurrent.Future removeTagsAsync( RemoveTagsRequest removeTagsRequest); /** *

* Removes tags from an Amazon EMR resource. Tags make it easier to * associate clusters in various ways, such as grouping clusters to track * your Amazon EMR resource allocation costs. For more information, see Tagging Amazon EMR Resources. *

*

* The following example removes the stack tag with value Prod from a * cluster: *

* * @param removeTagsRequest * This input identifies a cluster and a list of tags to remove. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the RemoveTags operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.RemoveTags */ java.util.concurrent.Future removeTagsAsync( RemoveTagsRequest removeTagsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* RunJobFlow creates and starts running a new job flow. The job flow will * run the steps specified. Once the job flow completes, the cluster is * stopped and the HDFS partition is lost. To prevent loss of data, * configure the last step of the job flow to store results in Amazon S3. If * the JobFlowInstancesConfig * KeepJobFlowAliveWhenNoSteps parameter is set to * TRUE, the job flow will transition to the WAITING state * rather than shutting down once the steps have completed. *

*

* For additional protection, you can set the JobFlowInstancesConfig * TerminationProtected parameter to TRUE to lock * the job flow and prevent it from being terminated by API call, user * intervention, or in the event of a job flow error. *

*

* A maximum of 256 steps are allowed in each job flow. *

*

* If your job flow is long-running (such as a Hive data warehouse) or * complex, you may require more than 256 steps to process your data. You * can bypass the 256-step limitation in various ways, including using the * SSH shell to connect to the master node and submitting queries directly * to the software running on the master node, such as Hive and Hadoop. For * more information on how to do this, go to Add More than 256 Steps to a Job Flow in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

*

* For long running job flows, we recommend that you periodically store your * results. *

* * @param runJobFlowRequest * Input to the RunJobFlow operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the RunJobFlow operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.RunJobFlow */ java.util.concurrent.Future runJobFlowAsync( RunJobFlowRequest runJobFlowRequest); /** *

* RunJobFlow creates and starts running a new job flow. The job flow will * run the steps specified. Once the job flow completes, the cluster is * stopped and the HDFS partition is lost. To prevent loss of data, * configure the last step of the job flow to store results in Amazon S3. If * the JobFlowInstancesConfig * KeepJobFlowAliveWhenNoSteps parameter is set to * TRUE, the job flow will transition to the WAITING state * rather than shutting down once the steps have completed. *

*

* For additional protection, you can set the JobFlowInstancesConfig * TerminationProtected parameter to TRUE to lock * the job flow and prevent it from being terminated by API call, user * intervention, or in the event of a job flow error. *

*

* A maximum of 256 steps are allowed in each job flow. *

*

* If your job flow is long-running (such as a Hive data warehouse) or * complex, you may require more than 256 steps to process your data. You * can bypass the 256-step limitation in various ways, including using the * SSH shell to connect to the master node and submitting queries directly * to the software running on the master node, such as Hive and Hadoop. For * more information on how to do this, go to Add More than 256 Steps to a Job Flow in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

*

* For long running job flows, we recommend that you periodically store your * results. *

* * @param runJobFlowRequest * Input to the RunJobFlow operation. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the RunJobFlow operation * returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.RunJobFlow */ java.util.concurrent.Future runJobFlowAsync( RunJobFlowRequest runJobFlowRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* SetTerminationProtection locks a job flow so the Amazon EC2 instances in * the cluster cannot be terminated by user intervention, an API call, or in * the event of a job-flow error. The cluster still terminates upon * successful completion of the job flow. Calling SetTerminationProtection * on a job flow is analogous to calling the Amazon EC2 * DisableAPITermination API on all of the EC2 instances in a cluster. *

*

* SetTerminationProtection is used to prevent accidental termination of a * job flow and to ensure that in the event of an error, the instances will * persist so you can recover any data stored in their ephemeral instance * storage. *

*

* To terminate a job flow that has been locked by setting * SetTerminationProtection to true, you must first unlock the * job flow by a subsequent call to SetTerminationProtection in which you * set the value to false. *

*

* For more information, go to Protecting a Job Flow from Termination in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

* * @param setTerminationProtectionRequest * The input argument to the TerminationProtection operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the * SetTerminationProtection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.SetTerminationProtection */ java.util.concurrent.Future setTerminationProtectionAsync( SetTerminationProtectionRequest setTerminationProtectionRequest); /** *

* SetTerminationProtection locks a job flow so the Amazon EC2 instances in * the cluster cannot be terminated by user intervention, an API call, or in * the event of a job-flow error. The cluster still terminates upon * successful completion of the job flow. Calling SetTerminationProtection * on a job flow is analogous to calling the Amazon EC2 * DisableAPITermination API on all of the EC2 instances in a cluster. *

*

* SetTerminationProtection is used to prevent accidental termination of a * job flow and to ensure that in the event of an error, the instances will * persist so you can recover any data stored in their ephemeral instance * storage. *

*

* To terminate a job flow that has been locked by setting * SetTerminationProtection to true, you must first unlock the * job flow by a subsequent call to SetTerminationProtection in which you * set the value to false. *

*

* For more information, go to Protecting a Job Flow from Termination in the Amazon Elastic * MapReduce Developer's Guide. *

* * @param setTerminationProtectionRequest * The input argument to the TerminationProtection operation. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the * SetTerminationProtection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.SetTerminationProtection */ java.util.concurrent.Future setTerminationProtectionAsync( SetTerminationProtectionRequest setTerminationProtectionRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* Sets whether all AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) users under * your account can access the specified job flows. This action works on * running job flows. You can also set the visibility of a job flow when you * launch it using the VisibleToAllUsers parameter of * RunJobFlow. The SetVisibleToAllUsers action can be called only by * an IAM user who created the job flow or the AWS account that owns the job * flow. *

* * @param setVisibleToAllUsersRequest * The input to the SetVisibleToAllUsers action. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the SetVisibleToAllUsers * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.SetVisibleToAllUsers */ java.util.concurrent.Future setVisibleToAllUsersAsync( SetVisibleToAllUsersRequest setVisibleToAllUsersRequest); /** *

* Sets whether all AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) users under * your account can access the specified job flows. This action works on * running job flows. You can also set the visibility of a job flow when you * launch it using the VisibleToAllUsers parameter of * RunJobFlow. The SetVisibleToAllUsers action can be called only by * an IAM user who created the job flow or the AWS account that owns the job * flow. *

* * @param setVisibleToAllUsersRequest * The input to the SetVisibleToAllUsers action. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the SetVisibleToAllUsers * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.SetVisibleToAllUsers */ java.util.concurrent.Future setVisibleToAllUsersAsync( SetVisibleToAllUsersRequest setVisibleToAllUsersRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); /** *

* TerminateJobFlows shuts a list of job flows down. When a job flow is shut * down, any step not yet completed is canceled and the EC2 instances on * which the job flow is running are stopped. Any log files not already * saved are uploaded to Amazon S3 if a LogUri was specified when the job * flow was created. *

*

* The maximum number of JobFlows allowed is 10. The call to * TerminateJobFlows is asynchronous. Depending on the configuration of the * job flow, it may take up to 5-20 minutes for the job flow to completely * terminate and release allocated resources, such as Amazon EC2 instances. *

* * @param terminateJobFlowsRequest * Input to the TerminateJobFlows operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the TerminateJobFlows * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsync.TerminateJobFlows */ java.util.concurrent.Future terminateJobFlowsAsync( TerminateJobFlowsRequest terminateJobFlowsRequest); /** *

* TerminateJobFlows shuts a list of job flows down. When a job flow is shut * down, any step not yet completed is canceled and the EC2 instances on * which the job flow is running are stopped. Any log files not already * saved are uploaded to Amazon S3 if a LogUri was specified when the job * flow was created. *

*

* The maximum number of JobFlows allowed is 10. The call to * TerminateJobFlows is asynchronous. Depending on the configuration of the * job flow, it may take up to 5-20 minutes for the job flow to completely * terminate and release allocated resources, such as Amazon EC2 instances. *

* * @param terminateJobFlowsRequest * Input to the TerminateJobFlows operation. * @param asyncHandler * Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the * request. Users can provide an implementation of the callback * methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or * unsuccessful completion of the operation. * @return A Java Future containing the result of the TerminateJobFlows * operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonElasticMapReduceAsyncHandler.TerminateJobFlows */ java.util.concurrent.Future terminateJobFlowsAsync( TerminateJobFlowsRequest terminateJobFlowsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler asyncHandler); }




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