@Stability(value=Stable) public static final class CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder extends Object implements software.amazon.jsii.Builder<CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty>
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty| Constructor and Description |
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Builder() |
@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder dynamoDb(CfnAlarmModel.DynamoDBProperty dynamoDb)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getDynamoDb()dynamoDb - Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created.
The standard action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . One column of the DynamoDB table receives all attribute-value pairs in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in DynamoDBAction . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the hashKeyType parameter can be 'STRING' .
hashKeyField parameter can be $input.GreenhouseInput.name .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the hashKeyValue parameter uses a substitution template.
'${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 6 / 5 + 32} in Fahrenheit'
+ . A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the tableName parameter uses a string concatenation.
'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
If the defined payload type is a string, DynamoDBAction writes non-JSON data to the DynamoDB table as binary data. The DynamoDB console displays the data as Base64-encoded text. The value for the payloadField parameter is <payload-field>_raw .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder dynamoDb(IResolvable dynamoDb)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getDynamoDb()dynamoDb - Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created.
The standard action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . One column of the DynamoDB table receives all attribute-value pairs in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in DynamoDBAction . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the hashKeyType parameter can be 'STRING' .
hashKeyField parameter can be $input.GreenhouseInput.name .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the hashKeyValue parameter uses a substitution template.
'${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 6 / 5 + 32} in Fahrenheit'
+ . A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the tableName parameter uses a string concatenation.
'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
If the defined payload type is a string, DynamoDBAction writes non-JSON data to the DynamoDB table as binary data. The DynamoDB console displays the data as Base64-encoded text. The value for the payloadField parameter is <payload-field>_raw .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder dynamoDBv2(CfnAlarmModel.DynamoDBv2Property dynamoDBv2)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getDynamoDBv2()dynamoDBv2 - Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created.
The default action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . A separate column of the DynamoDB table receives one attribute-value pair in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in DynamoDBv2Action . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the tableName parameter can be 'GreenhouseTemperatureTable' .
tableName parameter can be $variable.ddbtableName .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the contentExpression parameter in Payload uses a substitution template.
'{\"sensorID\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.sensor_id}\", \"temperature\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 9 / 5 + 32}\"}'
+ . A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the tableName parameter uses a string concatenation.
'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
The value for the type parameter in Payload must be JSON .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder dynamoDBv2(IResolvable dynamoDBv2)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getDynamoDBv2()dynamoDBv2 - Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created.
The default action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . A separate column of the DynamoDB table receives one attribute-value pair in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in DynamoDBv2Action . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the tableName parameter can be 'GreenhouseTemperatureTable' .
tableName parameter can be $variable.ddbtableName .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the contentExpression parameter in Payload uses a substitution template.
'{\"sensorID\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.sensor_id}\", \"temperature\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 9 / 5 + 32}\"}'
+ . A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the tableName parameter uses a string concatenation.
'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
The value for the type parameter in Payload must be JSON .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder firehose(CfnAlarmModel.FirehoseProperty firehose)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getFirehose()firehose - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder firehose(IResolvable firehose)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getFirehose()firehose - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotEvents(CfnAlarmModel.IotEventsProperty iotEvents)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotEvents()iotEvents - Sends an AWS IoT Events input, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotEvents(IResolvable iotEvents)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotEvents()iotEvents - Sends an AWS IoT Events input, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotSiteWise(CfnAlarmModel.IotSiteWiseProperty iotSiteWise)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotSiteWise()iotSiteWise - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to a specified asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise .
You must use expressions for all parameters in IotSiteWiseAction . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitutions templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the propertyAlias parameter can be '/company/windfarm/3/turbine/7/temperature' .
assetId parameter can be $input.TurbineInput.assetId1 .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the propertyAlias parameter uses a substitution template.
'company/windfarm/${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.windfarmID}/turbine/ ${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.turbineID}/temperature'
You must specify either propertyAlias or both assetId and propertyId to identify the target asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise .
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotSiteWise(IResolvable iotSiteWise)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotSiteWise()iotSiteWise - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to a specified asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise .
You must use expressions for all parameters in IotSiteWiseAction . The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitutions templates.
Examples - For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the propertyAlias parameter can be '/company/windfarm/3/turbine/7/temperature' .
assetId parameter can be $input.TurbineInput.assetId1 .${} , and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.
In the following example, the value for the propertyAlias parameter uses a substitution template.
'company/windfarm/${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.windfarmID}/turbine/ ${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.turbineID}/temperature'
You must specify either propertyAlias or both assetId and propertyId to identify the target asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise .
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotTopicPublish(CfnAlarmModel.IotTopicPublishProperty iotTopicPublish)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotTopicPublish()iotTopicPublish - Information required to publish the MQTT message through the AWS IoT message broker.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder iotTopicPublish(IResolvable iotTopicPublish)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getIotTopicPublish()iotTopicPublish - Information required to publish the MQTT message through the AWS IoT message broker.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder lambda(CfnAlarmModel.LambdaProperty lambda)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getLambda()lambda - Calls a Lambda function, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder lambda(IResolvable lambda)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getLambda()lambda - Calls a Lambda function, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder sns(CfnAlarmModel.SnsProperty sns)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getSns()sns - `CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Sns`.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder sns(IResolvable sns)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getSns()sns - `CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Sns`.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder sqs(CfnAlarmModel.SqsProperty sqs)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getSqs()sqs - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon SQS queue.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.Builder sqs(IResolvable sqs)
CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty.getSqs()sqs - Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon SQS queue.this@Stability(value=Stable) public CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty build()
build in interface software.amazon.jsii.Builder<CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionProperty>CfnAlarmModel.AlarmActionPropertyNullPointerException - if any required attribute was not providedCopyright © 2022. All rights reserved.