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// Code generated by smithy-go-codegen DO NOT EDIT.
// Package proton provides the API client, operations, and parameter types for AWS
// Proton.
//
// This is the Proton Service API Reference. It provides descriptions, syntax and
// usage examples for each of the actions (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/proton/latest/APIReference/API_Operations.html)
// and data types (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/proton/latest/APIReference/API_Types.html)
// for the Proton service. The documentation for each action shows the Query API
// request parameters and the XML response. Alternatively, you can use the Amazon
// Web Services CLI to access an API. For more information, see the Amazon Web
// Services Command Line Interface User Guide (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/userguide/cli-chap-welcome.html)
// . The Proton service is a two-pronged automation framework. Administrators
// create service templates to provide standardized infrastructure and deployment
// tooling for serverless and container based applications. Developers, in turn,
// select from the available service templates to automate their application or
// service deployments. Because administrators define the infrastructure and
// tooling that Proton deploys and manages, they need permissions to use all of the
// listed API operations. When developers select a specific infrastructure and
// tooling set, Proton deploys their applications. To monitor their applications
// that are running on Proton, developers need permissions to the service create,
// list, update and delete API operations and the service instance list and update
// API operations. To learn more about Proton, see the Proton User Guide (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/proton/latest/userguide/Welcome.html)
// . Ensuring Idempotency When you make a mutating API request, the request
// typically returns a result before the asynchronous workflows of the operation
// are complete. Operations might also time out or encounter other server issues
// before they're complete, even if the request already returned a result. This
// might make it difficult to determine whether the request succeeded. Moreover,
// you might need to retry the request multiple times to ensure that the operation
// completes successfully. However, if the original request and the subsequent
// retries are successful, the operation occurs multiple times. This means that you
// might create more resources than you intended. Idempotency ensures that an API
// request action completes no more than one time. With an idempotent request, if
// the original request action completes successfully, any subsequent retries
// complete successfully without performing any further actions. However, the
// result might contain updated information, such as the current creation status.
// The following lists of APIs are grouped according to methods that ensure
// idempotency. Idempotent create APIs with a client token The API actions in this
// list support idempotency with the use of a client token. The corresponding
// Amazon Web Services CLI commands also support idempotency using a client token.
// A client token is a unique, case-sensitive string of up to 64 ASCII characters.
// To make an idempotent API request using one of these actions, specify a client
// token in the request. We recommend that you don't reuse the same client token
// for other API requests. If you don’t provide a client token for these APIs, a
// default client token is automatically provided by SDKs. Given a request action
// that has succeeded: If you retry the request using the same client token and the
// same parameters, the retry succeeds without performing any further actions other
// than returning the original resource detail data in the response. If you retry
// the request using the same client token, but one or more of the parameters are
// different, the retry throws a ValidationException with an
// IdempotentParameterMismatch error. Client tokens expire eight hours after a
// request is made. If you retry the request with the expired token, a new resource
// is created. If the original resource is deleted and you retry the request, a new
// resource is created. Idempotent create APIs with a client token:
// - CreateEnvironmentTemplateVersion
// - CreateServiceTemplateVersion
// - CreateEnvironmentAccountConnection
//
// Idempotent create APIs Given a request action that has succeeded: If you retry
// the request with an API from this group, and the original resource hasn't been
// modified, the retry succeeds without performing any further actions other than
// returning the original resource detail data in the response. If the original
// resource has been modified, the retry throws a ConflictException . If you retry
// with different input parameters, the retry throws a ValidationException with an
// IdempotentParameterMismatch error. Idempotent create APIs:
// - CreateEnvironmentTemplate
// - CreateServiceTemplate
// - CreateEnvironment
// - CreateService
//
// Idempotent delete APIs Given a request action that has succeeded: When you
// retry the request with an API from this group and the resource was deleted, its
// metadata is returned in the response. If you retry and the resource doesn't
// exist, the response is empty. In both cases, the retry succeeds. Idempotent
// delete APIs:
// - DeleteEnvironmentTemplate
// - DeleteEnvironmentTemplateVersion
// - DeleteServiceTemplate
// - DeleteServiceTemplateVersion
// - DeleteEnvironmentAccountConnection
//
// Asynchronous idempotent delete APIs Given a request action that has succeeded:
// If you retry the request with an API from this group, if the original request
// delete operation status is DELETE_IN_PROGRESS , the retry returns the resource
// detail data in the response without performing any further actions. If the
// original request delete operation is complete, a retry returns an empty
// response. Asynchronous idempotent delete APIs:
// - DeleteEnvironment
// - DeleteService
package proton
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