opentofu/vendor/github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/service/elbv2/service.go

137 lines
5.2 KiB
Go

// Code generated by private/model/cli/gen-api/main.go. DO NOT EDIT.
package elbv2
import (
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/client"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/client/metadata"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/request"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/aws/signer/v4"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/private/protocol/query"
)
// A load balancer distributes incoming traffic across targets, such as your
// EC2 instances. This enables you to increase the availability of your application.
// The load balancer also monitors the health of its registered targets and
// ensures that it routes traffic only to healthy targets. You configure your
// load balancer to accept incoming traffic by specifying one or more listeners,
// which are configured with a protocol and port number for connections from
// clients to the load balancer. You configure a target group with a protocol
// and port number for connections from the load balancer to the targets, and
// with health check settings to be used when checking the health status of
// the targets.
//
// Elastic Load Balancing supports two types of load balancers: Classic Load
// Balancers and Application Load Balancers. A Classic Load Balancer makes routing
// and load balancing decisions either at the transport layer (TCP/SSL) or the
// application layer (HTTP/HTTPS), and supports either EC2-Classic or a VPC.
// An Application Load Balancer makes routing and load balancing decisions at
// the application layer (HTTP/HTTPS), supports path-based routing, and can
// route requests to one or more ports on each EC2 instance or container instance
// in your virtual private cloud (VPC). For more information, see the Elastic
// Load Balancing User Guide (http://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/userguide/).
//
// This reference covers the 2015-12-01 API, which supports Application Load
// Balancers. The 2012-06-01 API supports Classic Load Balancers.
//
// To get started, complete the following tasks:
//
// Create an Application Load Balancer using CreateLoadBalancer.
//
// Create a target group using CreateTargetGroup.
//
// Register targets for the target group using RegisterTargets.
//
// Create one or more listeners for your load balancer using CreateListener.
//
// (Optional) Create one or more rules for content routing based on URL using
// CreateRule.
//
// To delete an Application Load Balancer and its related resources, complete
// the following tasks:
//
// Delete the load balancer using DeleteLoadBalancer.
//
// Delete the target group using DeleteTargetGroup.
//
// All Elastic Load Balancing operations are idempotent, which means that they
// complete at most one time. If you repeat an operation, it succeeds.
// The service client's operations are safe to be used concurrently.
// It is not safe to mutate any of the client's properties though.
// Please also see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/goto/WebAPI/elasticloadbalancingv2-2015-12-01
type ELBV2 struct {
*client.Client
}
// Used for custom client initialization logic
var initClient func(*client.Client)
// Used for custom request initialization logic
var initRequest func(*request.Request)
// Service information constants
const (
ServiceName = "elasticloadbalancing" // Service endpoint prefix API calls made to.
EndpointsID = ServiceName // Service ID for Regions and Endpoints metadata.
)
// New creates a new instance of the ELBV2 client with a session.
// If additional configuration is needed for the client instance use the optional
// aws.Config parameter to add your extra config.
//
// Example:
// // Create a ELBV2 client from just a session.
// svc := elbv2.New(mySession)
//
// // Create a ELBV2 client with additional configuration
// svc := elbv2.New(mySession, aws.NewConfig().WithRegion("us-west-2"))
func New(p client.ConfigProvider, cfgs ...*aws.Config) *ELBV2 {
c := p.ClientConfig(EndpointsID, cfgs...)
return newClient(*c.Config, c.Handlers, c.Endpoint, c.SigningRegion, c.SigningName)
}
// newClient creates, initializes and returns a new service client instance.
func newClient(cfg aws.Config, handlers request.Handlers, endpoint, signingRegion, signingName string) *ELBV2 {
svc := &ELBV2{
Client: client.New(
cfg,
metadata.ClientInfo{
ServiceName: ServiceName,
SigningName: signingName,
SigningRegion: signingRegion,
Endpoint: endpoint,
APIVersion: "2015-12-01",
},
handlers,
),
}
// Handlers
svc.Handlers.Sign.PushBackNamed(v4.SignRequestHandler)
svc.Handlers.Build.PushBackNamed(query.BuildHandler)
svc.Handlers.Unmarshal.PushBackNamed(query.UnmarshalHandler)
svc.Handlers.UnmarshalMeta.PushBackNamed(query.UnmarshalMetaHandler)
svc.Handlers.UnmarshalError.PushBackNamed(query.UnmarshalErrorHandler)
// Run custom client initialization if present
if initClient != nil {
initClient(svc.Client)
}
return svc
}
// newRequest creates a new request for a ELBV2 operation and runs any
// custom request initialization.
func (c *ELBV2) newRequest(op *request.Operation, params, data interface{}) *request.Request {
req := c.NewRequest(op, params, data)
// Run custom request initialization if present
if initRequest != nil {
initRequest(req)
}
return req
}