{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-duplicate-exports #-} {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-unused-imports #-} -- | -- Module : Amazonka.IoTJobsData -- Copyright : (c) 2013-2023 Brendan Hay -- License : Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. -- Maintainer : Brendan Hay -- Stability : auto-generated -- Portability : non-portable (GHC extensions) -- -- Derived from API version @2017-09-29@ of the AWS service descriptions, licensed under Apache 2.0. -- -- AWS IoT Jobs is a service that allows you to define a set of jobs — -- remote operations that are sent to and executed on one or more devices -- connected to AWS IoT. For example, you can define a job that instructs a -- set of devices to download and install application or firmware updates, -- reboot, rotate certificates, or perform remote troubleshooting -- operations. -- -- To create a job, you make a job document which is a description of the -- remote operations to be performed, and you specify a list of targets -- that should perform the operations. The targets can be individual -- things, thing groups or both. -- -- AWS IoT Jobs sends a message to inform the targets that a job is -- available. The target starts the execution of the job by downloading the -- job document, performing the operations it specifies, and reporting its -- progress to AWS IoT. The Jobs service provides commands to track the -- progress of a job on a specific target and for all the targets of the -- job module Amazonka.IoTJobsData ( -- * Service Configuration defaultService, -- * Errors -- $errors -- ** CertificateValidationException _CertificateValidationException, -- ** InvalidRequestException _InvalidRequestException, -- ** InvalidStateTransitionException _InvalidStateTransitionException, -- ** ResourceNotFoundException _ResourceNotFoundException, -- ** ServiceUnavailableException _ServiceUnavailableException, -- ** TerminalStateException _TerminalStateException, -- ** ThrottlingException _ThrottlingException, -- * Waiters -- $waiters -- * Operations -- $operations -- ** DescribeJobExecution DescribeJobExecution (DescribeJobExecution'), newDescribeJobExecution, DescribeJobExecutionResponse (DescribeJobExecutionResponse'), newDescribeJobExecutionResponse, -- ** GetPendingJobExecutions GetPendingJobExecutions (GetPendingJobExecutions'), newGetPendingJobExecutions, GetPendingJobExecutionsResponse (GetPendingJobExecutionsResponse'), newGetPendingJobExecutionsResponse, -- ** StartNextPendingJobExecution StartNextPendingJobExecution (StartNextPendingJobExecution'), newStartNextPendingJobExecution, StartNextPendingJobExecutionResponse (StartNextPendingJobExecutionResponse'), newStartNextPendingJobExecutionResponse, -- ** UpdateJobExecution UpdateJobExecution (UpdateJobExecution'), newUpdateJobExecution, UpdateJobExecutionResponse (UpdateJobExecutionResponse'), newUpdateJobExecutionResponse, -- * Types -- ** JobExecutionStatus JobExecutionStatus (..), -- ** JobExecution JobExecution (JobExecution'), newJobExecution, -- ** JobExecutionState JobExecutionState (JobExecutionState'), newJobExecutionState, -- ** JobExecutionSummary JobExecutionSummary (JobExecutionSummary'), newJobExecutionSummary, ) where import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.DescribeJobExecution import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.GetPendingJobExecutions import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.Lens import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.StartNextPendingJobExecution import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.Types import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.UpdateJobExecution import Amazonka.IoTJobsData.Waiters -- $errors -- Error matchers are designed for use with the functions provided by -- . -- This allows catching (and rethrowing) service specific errors returned -- by 'IoTJobsData'. -- $operations -- Some AWS operations return results that are incomplete and require subsequent -- requests in order to obtain the entire result set. The process of sending -- subsequent requests to continue where a previous request left off is called -- pagination. For example, the 'ListObjects' operation of Amazon S3 returns up to -- 1000 objects at a time, and you must send subsequent requests with the -- appropriate Marker in order to retrieve the next page of results. -- -- Operations that have an 'AWSPager' instance can transparently perform subsequent -- requests, correctly setting Markers and other request facets to iterate through -- the entire result set of a truncated API operation. Operations which support -- this have an additional note in the documentation. -- -- Many operations have the ability to filter results on the server side. See the -- individual operation parameters for details. -- $waiters -- Waiters poll by repeatedly sending a request until some remote success condition -- configured by the 'Wait' specification is fulfilled. The 'Wait' specification -- determines how many attempts should be made, in addition to delay and retry strategies.