@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public interface AmazonKinesisFirehoseAsync extends AmazonKinesisFirehose
AsyncHandler
can be used to receive
notification when an asynchronous operation completes.
Note: Do not directly implement this interface, new methods are added to it regularly. Extend from
AbstractAmazonKinesisFirehoseAsync
instead.
Amazon Kinesis Firehose is a fully managed service that delivers real-time streaming data to destinations such as Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3), Amazon Elasticsearch Service (Amazon ES), and Amazon Redshift.
ENDPOINT_PREFIX
createDeliveryStream, deleteDeliveryStream, describeDeliveryStream, getCachedResponseMetadata, getKinesisStream, listDeliveryStreams, putRecord, putRecordBatch, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, updateDestination
Future<CreateDeliveryStreamResult> createDeliveryStreamAsync(CreateDeliveryStreamRequest createDeliveryStreamRequest)
Creates a delivery stream.
By default, you can create up to 20 delivery streams per region.
This is an asynchronous operation that immediately returns. The initial status of the delivery stream is
CREATING
. After the delivery stream is created, its status is ACTIVE
and it now accepts
data. Attempts to send data to a delivery stream that is not in the ACTIVE
state cause an exception.
To check the state of a delivery stream, use DescribeDeliveryStream.
A Kinesis Firehose delivery stream can be configured to receive records directly from providers using
PutRecord or PutRecordBatch, or it can be configured to use an existing Kinesis stream as its
source. To specify a Kinesis stream as input, set the DeliveryStreamType
parameter to
KinesisStreamAsSource
, and provide the Kinesis stream ARN and role ARN in the
KinesisStreamSourceConfiguration
parameter.
A delivery stream is configured with a single destination: Amazon S3, Amazon ES, or Amazon Redshift. You must specify only one of the following destination configuration parameters: ExtendedS3DestinationConfiguration, S3DestinationConfiguration, ElasticsearchDestinationConfiguration, or RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.
When you specify S3DestinationConfiguration, you can also provide the following optional values: BufferingHints, EncryptionConfiguration, and CompressionFormat. By default, if no BufferingHints value is provided, Kinesis Firehose buffers data up to 5 MB or for 5 minutes, whichever condition is satisfied first. Note that BufferingHints is a hint, so there are some cases where the service cannot adhere to these conditions strictly; for example, record boundaries are such that the size is a little over or under the configured buffering size. By default, no encryption is performed. We strongly recommend that you enable encryption to ensure secure data storage in Amazon S3.
A few notes about Amazon Redshift as a destination:
An Amazon Redshift destination requires an S3 bucket as intermediate location, as Kinesis Firehose first delivers
data to S3 and then uses COPY
syntax to load data into an Amazon Redshift table. This is specified
in the RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.S3Configuration parameter.
The compression formats SNAPPY
or ZIP
cannot be specified in
RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.S3Configuration because the Amazon Redshift COPY
operation
that reads from the S3 bucket doesn't support these compression formats.
We strongly recommend that you use the user name and password you provide exclusively with Kinesis Firehose, and
that the permissions for the account are restricted for Amazon Redshift INSERT
permissions.
Kinesis Firehose assumes the IAM role that is configured as part of the destination. The role should allow the Kinesis Firehose principal to assume the role, and the role should have permissions that allow the service to deliver the data. For more information, see Amazon S3 Bucket Access in the Amazon Kinesis Firehose Developer Guide.
createDeliveryStreamRequest
- Future<CreateDeliveryStreamResult> createDeliveryStreamAsync(CreateDeliveryStreamRequest createDeliveryStreamRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateDeliveryStreamRequest,CreateDeliveryStreamResult> asyncHandler)
Creates a delivery stream.
By default, you can create up to 20 delivery streams per region.
This is an asynchronous operation that immediately returns. The initial status of the delivery stream is
CREATING
. After the delivery stream is created, its status is ACTIVE
and it now accepts
data. Attempts to send data to a delivery stream that is not in the ACTIVE
state cause an exception.
To check the state of a delivery stream, use DescribeDeliveryStream.
A Kinesis Firehose delivery stream can be configured to receive records directly from providers using
PutRecord or PutRecordBatch, or it can be configured to use an existing Kinesis stream as its
source. To specify a Kinesis stream as input, set the DeliveryStreamType
parameter to
KinesisStreamAsSource
, and provide the Kinesis stream ARN and role ARN in the
KinesisStreamSourceConfiguration
parameter.
A delivery stream is configured with a single destination: Amazon S3, Amazon ES, or Amazon Redshift. You must specify only one of the following destination configuration parameters: ExtendedS3DestinationConfiguration, S3DestinationConfiguration, ElasticsearchDestinationConfiguration, or RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.
When you specify S3DestinationConfiguration, you can also provide the following optional values: BufferingHints, EncryptionConfiguration, and CompressionFormat. By default, if no BufferingHints value is provided, Kinesis Firehose buffers data up to 5 MB or for 5 minutes, whichever condition is satisfied first. Note that BufferingHints is a hint, so there are some cases where the service cannot adhere to these conditions strictly; for example, record boundaries are such that the size is a little over or under the configured buffering size. By default, no encryption is performed. We strongly recommend that you enable encryption to ensure secure data storage in Amazon S3.
A few notes about Amazon Redshift as a destination:
An Amazon Redshift destination requires an S3 bucket as intermediate location, as Kinesis Firehose first delivers
data to S3 and then uses COPY
syntax to load data into an Amazon Redshift table. This is specified
in the RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.S3Configuration parameter.
The compression formats SNAPPY
or ZIP
cannot be specified in
RedshiftDestinationConfiguration.S3Configuration because the Amazon Redshift COPY
operation
that reads from the S3 bucket doesn't support these compression formats.
We strongly recommend that you use the user name and password you provide exclusively with Kinesis Firehose, and
that the permissions for the account are restricted for Amazon Redshift INSERT
permissions.
Kinesis Firehose assumes the IAM role that is configured as part of the destination. The role should allow the Kinesis Firehose principal to assume the role, and the role should have permissions that allow the service to deliver the data. For more information, see Amazon S3 Bucket Access in the Amazon Kinesis Firehose Developer Guide.
createDeliveryStreamRequest
- 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.Future<DeleteDeliveryStreamResult> deleteDeliveryStreamAsync(DeleteDeliveryStreamRequest deleteDeliveryStreamRequest)
Deletes a delivery stream and its data.
You can delete a delivery stream only if it is in ACTIVE
or DELETING
state, and not in
the CREATING
state. While the deletion request is in process, the delivery stream is in the
DELETING
state.
To check the state of a delivery stream, use DescribeDeliveryStream.
While the delivery stream is DELETING
state, the service may continue to accept the records, but the
service doesn't make any guarantees with respect to delivering the data. Therefore, as a best practice, you
should first stop any applications that are sending records before deleting a delivery stream.
deleteDeliveryStreamRequest
- Future<DeleteDeliveryStreamResult> deleteDeliveryStreamAsync(DeleteDeliveryStreamRequest deleteDeliveryStreamRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteDeliveryStreamRequest,DeleteDeliveryStreamResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes a delivery stream and its data.
You can delete a delivery stream only if it is in ACTIVE
or DELETING
state, and not in
the CREATING
state. While the deletion request is in process, the delivery stream is in the
DELETING
state.
To check the state of a delivery stream, use DescribeDeliveryStream.
While the delivery stream is DELETING
state, the service may continue to accept the records, but the
service doesn't make any guarantees with respect to delivering the data. Therefore, as a best practice, you
should first stop any applications that are sending records before deleting a delivery stream.
deleteDeliveryStreamRequest
- 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.Future<DescribeDeliveryStreamResult> describeDeliveryStreamAsync(DescribeDeliveryStreamRequest describeDeliveryStreamRequest)
Describes the specified delivery stream and gets the status. For example, after your delivery stream is created,
call DescribeDeliveryStream to see if the delivery stream is ACTIVE
and therefore ready for
data to be sent to it.
describeDeliveryStreamRequest
- Future<DescribeDeliveryStreamResult> describeDeliveryStreamAsync(DescribeDeliveryStreamRequest describeDeliveryStreamRequest, AsyncHandler<DescribeDeliveryStreamRequest,DescribeDeliveryStreamResult> asyncHandler)
Describes the specified delivery stream and gets the status. For example, after your delivery stream is created,
call DescribeDeliveryStream to see if the delivery stream is ACTIVE
and therefore ready for
data to be sent to it.
describeDeliveryStreamRequest
- 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.Future<GetKinesisStreamResult> getKinesisStreamAsync(GetKinesisStreamRequest getKinesisStreamRequest)
getKinesisStreamRequest
- Future<GetKinesisStreamResult> getKinesisStreamAsync(GetKinesisStreamRequest getKinesisStreamRequest, AsyncHandler<GetKinesisStreamRequest,GetKinesisStreamResult> asyncHandler)
getKinesisStreamRequest
- 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.Future<ListDeliveryStreamsResult> listDeliveryStreamsAsync(ListDeliveryStreamsRequest listDeliveryStreamsRequest)
Lists your delivery streams.
The number of delivery streams might be too large to return using a single call to ListDeliveryStreams. You can limit the number of delivery streams returned, using the Limit parameter. To determine whether there are more delivery streams to list, check the value of HasMoreDeliveryStreams in the output. If there are more delivery streams to list, you can request them by specifying the name of the last delivery stream returned in the call in the ExclusiveStartDeliveryStreamName parameter of a subsequent call.
listDeliveryStreamsRequest
- Future<ListDeliveryStreamsResult> listDeliveryStreamsAsync(ListDeliveryStreamsRequest listDeliveryStreamsRequest, AsyncHandler<ListDeliveryStreamsRequest,ListDeliveryStreamsResult> asyncHandler)
Lists your delivery streams.
The number of delivery streams might be too large to return using a single call to ListDeliveryStreams. You can limit the number of delivery streams returned, using the Limit parameter. To determine whether there are more delivery streams to list, check the value of HasMoreDeliveryStreams in the output. If there are more delivery streams to list, you can request them by specifying the name of the last delivery stream returned in the call in the ExclusiveStartDeliveryStreamName parameter of a subsequent call.
listDeliveryStreamsRequest
- 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.Future<PutRecordResult> putRecordAsync(PutRecordRequest putRecordRequest)
Writes a single data record into an Amazon Kinesis Firehose delivery stream. To write multiple data records into a delivery stream, use PutRecordBatch. Applications using these operations are referred to as producers.
By default, each delivery stream can take in up to 2,000 transactions per second, 5,000 records per second, or 5 MB per second. Note that if you use PutRecord and PutRecordBatch, the limits are an aggregate across these two operations for each delivery stream. For more information about limits and how to request an increase, see Amazon Kinesis Firehose Limits.
You must specify the name of the delivery stream and the data record when using PutRecord. The data record consists of a data blob that can be up to 1,000 KB in size, and any kind of data, for example, a segment from a log file, geographic location data, website clickstream data, and so on.
Kinesis Firehose buffers records before delivering them to the destination. To disambiguate the data blobs at the
destination, a common solution is to use delimiters in the data, such as a newline (\n
) or some
other character unique within the data. This allows the consumer application to parse individual data items when
reading the data from the destination.
The PutRecord operation returns a RecordId, which is a unique string assigned to each record. Producer applications can use this ID for purposes such as auditability and investigation.
If the PutRecord operation throws a ServiceUnavailableException, back off and retry. If the exception persists, it is possible that the throughput limits have been exceeded for the delivery stream.
Data records sent to Kinesis Firehose are stored for 24 hours from the time they are added to a delivery stream as it attempts to send the records to the destination. If the destination is unreachable for more than 24 hours, the data is no longer available.
putRecordRequest
- Future<PutRecordResult> putRecordAsync(PutRecordRequest putRecordRequest, AsyncHandler<PutRecordRequest,PutRecordResult> asyncHandler)
Writes a single data record into an Amazon Kinesis Firehose delivery stream. To write multiple data records into a delivery stream, use PutRecordBatch. Applications using these operations are referred to as producers.
By default, each delivery stream can take in up to 2,000 transactions per second, 5,000 records per second, or 5 MB per second. Note that if you use PutRecord and PutRecordBatch, the limits are an aggregate across these two operations for each delivery stream. For more information about limits and how to request an increase, see Amazon Kinesis Firehose Limits.
You must specify the name of the delivery stream and the data record when using PutRecord. The data record consists of a data blob that can be up to 1,000 KB in size, and any kind of data, for example, a segment from a log file, geographic location data, website clickstream data, and so on.
Kinesis Firehose buffers records before delivering them to the destination. To disambiguate the data blobs at the
destination, a common solution is to use delimiters in the data, such as a newline (\n
) or some
other character unique within the data. This allows the consumer application to parse individual data items when
reading the data from the destination.
The PutRecord operation returns a RecordId, which is a unique string assigned to each record. Producer applications can use this ID for purposes such as auditability and investigation.
If the PutRecord operation throws a ServiceUnavailableException, back off and retry. If the exception persists, it is possible that the throughput limits have been exceeded for the delivery stream.
Data records sent to Kinesis Firehose are stored for 24 hours from the time they are added to a delivery stream as it attempts to send the records to the destination. If the destination is unreachable for more than 24 hours, the data is no longer available.
putRecordRequest
- 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.Future<PutRecordBatchResult> putRecordBatchAsync(PutRecordBatchRequest putRecordBatchRequest)
Writes multiple data records into a delivery stream in a single call, which can achieve higher throughput per producer than when writing single records. To write single data records into a delivery stream, use PutRecord. Applications using these operations are referred to as producers.
By default, each delivery stream can take in up to 2,000 transactions per second, 5,000 records per second, or 5 MB per second. If you use PutRecord and PutRecordBatch, the limits are an aggregate across these two operations for each delivery stream. For more information about limits, see Amazon Kinesis Firehose Limits.
Each PutRecordBatch request supports up to 500 records. Each record in the request can be as large as 1,000 KB (before 64-bit encoding), up to a limit of 4 MB for the entire request. These limits cannot be changed.
You must specify the name of the delivery stream and the data record when using PutRecord. The data record consists of a data blob that can be up to 1,000 KB in size, and any kind of data. For example, it could be a segment from a log file, geographic location data, web site clickstream data, and so on.
Kinesis Firehose buffers records before delivering them to the destination. To disambiguate the data blobs at the
destination, a common solution is to use delimiters in the data, such as a newline (\n
) or some
other character unique within the data. This allows the consumer application to parse individual data items when
reading the data from the destination.
The PutRecordBatch response includes a count of failed records, FailedPutCount, and an array of responses, RequestResponses. Each entry in the RequestResponses array provides additional information about the processed record. It directly correlates with a record in the request array using the same ordering, from the top to the bottom. The response array always includes the same number of records as the request array. RequestResponses includes both successfully and unsuccessfully processed records. Kinesis Firehose attempts to process all records in each PutRecordBatch request. A single record failure does not stop the processing of subsequent records.
A successfully processed record includes a RecordId value, which is unique for the record. An
unsuccessfully processed record includes ErrorCode and ErrorMessage values. ErrorCode
reflects the type of error, and is one of the following values: ServiceUnavailable
or
InternalFailure
. ErrorMessage provides more detailed information about the error.
If there is an internal server error or a timeout, the write might have completed or it might have failed. If FailedPutCount is greater than 0, retry the request, resending only those records that might have failed processing. This minimizes the possible duplicate records and also reduces the total bytes sent (and corresponding charges). We recommend that you handle any duplicates at the destination.
If PutRecordBatch throws ServiceUnavailableException, back off and retry. If the exception persists, it is possible that the throughput limits have been exceeded for the delivery stream.
Data records sent to Kinesis Firehose are stored for 24 hours from the time they are added to a delivery stream as it attempts to send the records to the destination. If the destination is unreachable for more than 24 hours, the data is no longer available.
putRecordBatchRequest
- Future<PutRecordBatchResult> putRecordBatchAsync(PutRecordBatchRequest putRecordBatchRequest, AsyncHandler<PutRecordBatchRequest,PutRecordBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Writes multiple data records into a delivery stream in a single call, which can achieve higher throughput per producer than when writing single records. To write single data records into a delivery stream, use PutRecord. Applications using these operations are referred to as producers.
By default, each delivery stream can take in up to 2,000 transactions per second, 5,000 records per second, or 5 MB per second. If you use PutRecord and PutRecordBatch, the limits are an aggregate across these two operations for each delivery stream. For more information about limits, see Amazon Kinesis Firehose Limits.
Each PutRecordBatch request supports up to 500 records. Each record in the request can be as large as 1,000 KB (before 64-bit encoding), up to a limit of 4 MB for the entire request. These limits cannot be changed.
You must specify the name of the delivery stream and the data record when using PutRecord. The data record consists of a data blob that can be up to 1,000 KB in size, and any kind of data. For example, it could be a segment from a log file, geographic location data, web site clickstream data, and so on.
Kinesis Firehose buffers records before delivering them to the destination. To disambiguate the data blobs at the
destination, a common solution is to use delimiters in the data, such as a newline (\n
) or some
other character unique within the data. This allows the consumer application to parse individual data items when
reading the data from the destination.
The PutRecordBatch response includes a count of failed records, FailedPutCount, and an array of responses, RequestResponses. Each entry in the RequestResponses array provides additional information about the processed record. It directly correlates with a record in the request array using the same ordering, from the top to the bottom. The response array always includes the same number of records as the request array. RequestResponses includes both successfully and unsuccessfully processed records. Kinesis Firehose attempts to process all records in each PutRecordBatch request. A single record failure does not stop the processing of subsequent records.
A successfully processed record includes a RecordId value, which is unique for the record. An
unsuccessfully processed record includes ErrorCode and ErrorMessage values. ErrorCode
reflects the type of error, and is one of the following values: ServiceUnavailable
or
InternalFailure
. ErrorMessage provides more detailed information about the error.
If there is an internal server error or a timeout, the write might have completed or it might have failed. If FailedPutCount is greater than 0, retry the request, resending only those records that might have failed processing. This minimizes the possible duplicate records and also reduces the total bytes sent (and corresponding charges). We recommend that you handle any duplicates at the destination.
If PutRecordBatch throws ServiceUnavailableException, back off and retry. If the exception persists, it is possible that the throughput limits have been exceeded for the delivery stream.
Data records sent to Kinesis Firehose are stored for 24 hours from the time they are added to a delivery stream as it attempts to send the records to the destination. If the destination is unreachable for more than 24 hours, the data is no longer available.
putRecordBatchRequest
- 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.Future<UpdateDestinationResult> updateDestinationAsync(UpdateDestinationRequest updateDestinationRequest)
Updates the specified destination of the specified delivery stream.
You can use this operation to change the destination type (for example, to replace the Amazon S3 destination with Amazon Redshift) or change the parameters associated with a destination (for example, to change the bucket name of the Amazon S3 destination). The update might not occur immediately. The target delivery stream remains active while the configurations are updated, so data writes to the delivery stream can continue during this process. The updated configurations are usually effective within a few minutes.
Note that switching between Amazon ES and other services is not supported. For an Amazon ES destination, you can only update to another Amazon ES destination.
If the destination type is the same, Kinesis Firehose merges the configuration parameters specified with the destination configuration that already exists on the delivery stream. If any of the parameters are not specified in the call, the existing values are retained. For example, in the Amazon S3 destination, if EncryptionConfiguration is not specified, then the existing EncryptionConfiguration is maintained on the destination.
If the destination type is not the same, for example, changing the destination from Amazon S3 to Amazon Redshift, Kinesis Firehose does not merge any parameters. In this case, all parameters must be specified.
Kinesis Firehose uses CurrentDeliveryStreamVersionId to avoid race conditions and conflicting merges. This is a required field, and the service updates the configuration only if the existing configuration has a version ID that matches. After the update is applied successfully, the version ID is updated, and can be retrieved using DescribeDeliveryStream. Use the new version ID to set CurrentDeliveryStreamVersionId in the next call.
updateDestinationRequest
- Future<UpdateDestinationResult> updateDestinationAsync(UpdateDestinationRequest updateDestinationRequest, AsyncHandler<UpdateDestinationRequest,UpdateDestinationResult> asyncHandler)
Updates the specified destination of the specified delivery stream.
You can use this operation to change the destination type (for example, to replace the Amazon S3 destination with Amazon Redshift) or change the parameters associated with a destination (for example, to change the bucket name of the Amazon S3 destination). The update might not occur immediately. The target delivery stream remains active while the configurations are updated, so data writes to the delivery stream can continue during this process. The updated configurations are usually effective within a few minutes.
Note that switching between Amazon ES and other services is not supported. For an Amazon ES destination, you can only update to another Amazon ES destination.
If the destination type is the same, Kinesis Firehose merges the configuration parameters specified with the destination configuration that already exists on the delivery stream. If any of the parameters are not specified in the call, the existing values are retained. For example, in the Amazon S3 destination, if EncryptionConfiguration is not specified, then the existing EncryptionConfiguration is maintained on the destination.
If the destination type is not the same, for example, changing the destination from Amazon S3 to Amazon Redshift, Kinesis Firehose does not merge any parameters. In this case, all parameters must be specified.
Kinesis Firehose uses CurrentDeliveryStreamVersionId to avoid race conditions and conflicting merges. This is a required field, and the service updates the configuration only if the existing configuration has a version ID that matches. After the update is applied successfully, the version ID is updated, and can be retrieved using DescribeDeliveryStream. Use the new version ID to set CurrentDeliveryStreamVersionId in the next call.
updateDestinationRequest
- 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.Copyright © 2013 Amazon Web Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.