LicenseRef-OtherLicense licensed by Brendan Hay
Maintained by Brendan Hay
This version can be pinned in stack with:amazonka-codedeploy-1.3.7@sha256:16d99b5f5feb51a778d5be2697e021678e5f1ee27ff873665159f2634274691a,7236

Module documentation for 1.3.7

Amazon CodeDeploy SDK

Version

1.3.7

Description

AWS CodeDeploy Overview

This is the AWS CodeDeploy API Reference. This guide provides descriptions of the AWS CodeDeploy APIs. For additional information, see the <http://docs.aws.amazon.com/codedeploy/latest/userguide AWS CodeDeploy User Guide>.

Using the APIs

You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to work with the following items:

  • Applications are unique identifiers that AWS CodeDeploy uses to ensure that the correct combinations of revisions, deployment configurations, and deployment groups are being referenced during deployments.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, list, and update applications.

  • Deployment configurations are sets of deployment rules and deployment success and failure conditions that AWS CodeDeploy uses during deployments.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, and list deployment configurations.

  • Deployment groups are groups of instances to which application revisions can be deployed.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, delete, get, list, and update deployment groups.

  • Instances represent Amazon EC2 instances to which application revisions are deployed. Instances are identified by their Amazon EC2 tags or Auto Scaling group names. Instances belong to deployment groups.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to get and list instances.

  • Deployments represent the process of deploying revisions to instances.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to create, get, list, and stop deployments.

  • Application revisions are archive files that are stored in Amazon S3 buckets or GitHub repositories. These revisions contain source content (such as source code, web pages, executable files, any deployment scripts, and similar) along with an Application Specification file (AppSpec file). (The AppSpec file is unique to AWS CodeDeploy; it defines a series of deployment actions that you want AWS CodeDeploy to execute.) An application revision is uniquely identified by its Amazon S3 object key and its ETag, version, or both (for application revisions that are stored in Amazon S3 buckets) or by its repository name and commit ID (for applications revisions that are stored in GitHub repositories). Application revisions are deployed through deployment groups.

    You can use the AWS CodeDeploy APIs to get, list, and register application revisions.

Documentation is available via Hackage and the AWS API Reference.

The types from this library are intended to be used with amazonka, which provides mechanisms for specifying AuthN/AuthZ information and sending requests.

Use of lenses is required for constructing and manipulating types. This is due to the amount of nesting of AWS types and transparency regarding de/serialisation into more palatable Haskell values. The provided lenses should be compatible with any of the major lens libraries lens or lens-family-core.

Contribute

For any problems, comments, or feedback please create an issue here on GitHub.

Note: this library is an auto-generated Haskell package. Please see amazonka-gen for more information.

Licence

amazonka-codedeploy is released under the Mozilla Public License Version 2.0.

Parts of the code are derived from AWS service descriptions, licensed under Apache 2.0. Source files subject to this contain an additional licensing clause in their header.