public class AmazonSQSBufferedAsyncClient extends Object implements AmazonSQSAsync
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
static String |
USER_AGENT |
ENDPOINT_PREFIX| Constructor and Description |
|---|
AmazonSQSBufferedAsyncClient(AmazonSQSAsync paramRealSQS) |
AmazonSQSBufferedAsyncClient(AmazonSQSAsync paramRealSQS,
QueueBufferConfig config) |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
AddPermissionResult |
addPermission(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest)
Adds a permission to a queue for a specific principal.
|
AddPermissionResult |
addPermission(String queueUrl,
String label,
List<String> aWSAccountIds,
List<String> actions)
Simplified method form for invoking the AddPermission operation.
|
Future<AddPermissionResult> |
addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest)
Adds a permission to a queue for a specific principal.
|
Future<AddPermissionResult> |
addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest,
AsyncHandler<AddPermissionRequest,AddPermissionResult> asyncHandler)
Adds a permission to a queue for a specific principal.
|
Future<AddPermissionResult> |
addPermissionAsync(String queueUrl,
String label,
List<String> aWSAccountIds,
List<String> actions)
Simplified method form for invoking the AddPermission operation.
|
Future<AddPermissionResult> |
addPermissionAsync(String queueUrl,
String label,
List<String> aWSAccountIds,
List<String> actions,
AsyncHandler<AddPermissionRequest,AddPermissionResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the AddPermission operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
CancelMessageMoveTaskResult |
cancelMessageMoveTask(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest)
Cancels a specified message movement task.
|
Future<CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> |
cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest)
Cancels a specified message movement task.
|
Future<CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> |
cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest,
AsyncHandler<CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest,CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> asyncHandler)
Cancels a specified message movement task.
|
ChangeMessageVisibilityResult |
changeMessageVisibility(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest)
Changes the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value.
|
ChangeMessageVisibilityResult |
changeMessageVisibility(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle,
Integer visibilityTimeout)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibility operation.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest)
Changes the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest,
AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> asyncHandler)
Changes the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityAsync(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle,
Integer visibilityTimeout)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibility operation.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityAsync(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle,
Integer visibilityTimeout,
AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibility operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult |
changeMessageVisibilityBatch(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest)
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages.
|
ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult |
changeMessageVisibilityBatch(String queueUrl,
List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch operation.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest)
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest,
AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch operation.
|
Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> |
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries,
AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
CreateQueueResult |
createQueue(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest)
Creates a new standard or FIFO queue.
|
CreateQueueResult |
createQueue(String queueName)
Simplified method form for invoking the CreateQueue operation.
|
Future<CreateQueueResult> |
createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest)
Creates a new standard or FIFO queue.
|
Future<CreateQueueResult> |
createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest,
AsyncHandler<CreateQueueRequest,CreateQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Creates a new standard or FIFO queue.
|
Future<CreateQueueResult> |
createQueueAsync(String queueName)
Simplified method form for invoking the CreateQueue operation.
|
Future<CreateQueueResult> |
createQueueAsync(String queueName,
AsyncHandler<CreateQueueRequest,CreateQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the CreateQueue operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
DeleteMessageResult |
deleteMessage(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest)
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue.
|
DeleteMessageResult |
deleteMessage(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessage operation.
|
Future<DeleteMessageResult> |
deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest)
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue.
|
Future<DeleteMessageResult> |
deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest,
AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageRequest,DeleteMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue.
|
Future<DeleteMessageResult> |
deleteMessageAsync(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessage operation.
|
Future<DeleteMessageResult> |
deleteMessageAsync(String queueUrl,
String receiptHandle,
AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageRequest,DeleteMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessage operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
DeleteMessageBatchResult |
deleteMessageBatch(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest)
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue.
|
DeleteMessageBatchResult |
deleteMessageBatch(String queueUrl,
List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessageBatch operation.
|
Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> |
deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest)
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue.
|
Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> |
deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest,
AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageBatchRequest,DeleteMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue.
|
Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> |
deleteMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessageBatch operation.
|
Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> |
deleteMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries,
AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageBatchRequest,DeleteMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteMessageBatch operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
DeleteQueueResult |
deleteQueue(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest)
Deletes the queue specified by the
QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents. |
DeleteQueueResult |
deleteQueue(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteQueue operation.
|
Future<DeleteQueueResult> |
deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest)
Deletes the queue specified by the
QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents. |
Future<DeleteQueueResult> |
deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest,
AsyncHandler<DeleteQueueRequest,DeleteQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes the queue specified by the
QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents. |
Future<DeleteQueueResult> |
deleteQueueAsync(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteQueue operation.
|
Future<DeleteQueueResult> |
deleteQueueAsync(String queueUrl,
AsyncHandler<DeleteQueueRequest,DeleteQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteQueue operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
void |
flush()
Flushes all outstanding outbound requests.
|
ResponseMetadata |
getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
Returns additional metadata for a previously executed successful request, typically used for debugging issues
where a service isn't acting as expected.
|
GetQueueAttributesResult |
getQueueAttributes(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest)
Gets attributes for the specified queue.
|
GetQueueAttributesResult |
getQueueAttributes(String queueUrl,
List<String> attributeNames)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueAttributes operation.
|
Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> |
getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest)
Gets attributes for the specified queue.
|
Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> |
getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest,
AsyncHandler<GetQueueAttributesRequest,GetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Gets attributes for the specified queue.
|
Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> |
getQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl,
List<String> attributeNames)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueAttributes operation.
|
Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> |
getQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl,
List<String> attributeNames,
AsyncHandler<GetQueueAttributesRequest,GetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueAttributes operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
GetQueueUrlResult |
getQueueUrl(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest)
Returns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
|
GetQueueUrlResult |
getQueueUrl(String queueName)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueUrl operation.
|
Future<GetQueueUrlResult> |
getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest)
Returns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<GetQueueUrlResult> |
getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest,
AsyncHandler<GetQueueUrlRequest,GetQueueUrlResult> asyncHandler)
Returns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<GetQueueUrlResult> |
getQueueUrlAsync(String queueName)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueUrl operation.
|
Future<GetQueueUrlResult> |
getQueueUrlAsync(String queueName,
AsyncHandler<GetQueueUrlRequest,GetQueueUrlResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the GetQueueUrl operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult |
listDeadLetterSourceQueues(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest)
Returns a list of your queues that have the
RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue. |
Future<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> |
listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest)
Returns a list of your queues that have the
RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue. |
Future<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> |
listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest,
AsyncHandler<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest,ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
Returns a list of your queues that have the
RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue. |
ListMessageMoveTasksResult |
listMessageMoveTasks(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest)
Gets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
|
Future<ListMessageMoveTasksResult> |
listMessageMoveTasksAsync(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest)
Gets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
|
Future<ListMessageMoveTasksResult> |
listMessageMoveTasksAsync(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest,
AsyncHandler<ListMessageMoveTasksRequest,ListMessageMoveTasksResult> asyncHandler)
Gets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
|
ListQueuesResult |
listQueues()
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation.
|
ListQueuesResult |
listQueues(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest)
Returns a list of your queues in the current region.
|
ListQueuesResult |
listQueues(String queueNamePrefix)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync()
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest)
Returns a list of your queues in the current region.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest,
AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
Returns a list of your queues in the current region.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync(String queueNamePrefix)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation.
|
Future<ListQueuesResult> |
listQueuesAsync(String queueNamePrefix,
AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueues operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
ListQueueTagsResult |
listQueueTags(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest)
List all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
ListQueueTagsResult |
listQueueTags(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueueTags operation.
|
Future<ListQueueTagsResult> |
listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest)
List all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<ListQueueTagsResult> |
listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest,
AsyncHandler<ListQueueTagsRequest,ListQueueTagsResult> asyncHandler)
List all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<ListQueueTagsResult> |
listQueueTagsAsync(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueueTags operation.
|
Future<ListQueueTagsResult> |
listQueueTagsAsync(String queueUrl,
AsyncHandler<ListQueueTagsRequest,ListQueueTagsResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ListQueueTags operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
PurgeQueueResult |
purgeQueue(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest)
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the
QueueURL
parameter. |
Future<PurgeQueueResult> |
purgeQueueAsync(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest)
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the
QueueURL
parameter. |
Future<PurgeQueueResult> |
purgeQueueAsync(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest,
AsyncHandler<PurgeQueueRequest,PurgeQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the
QueueURL
parameter. |
ReceiveMessageResult |
receiveMessage(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest)
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue.
|
ReceiveMessageResult |
receiveMessage(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the ReceiveMessage operation.
|
Future<ReceiveMessageResult> |
receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest)
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue.
|
Future<ReceiveMessageResult> |
receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest,
AsyncHandler<ReceiveMessageRequest,ReceiveMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue.
|
Future<ReceiveMessageResult> |
receiveMessageAsync(String queueUrl)
Simplified method form for invoking the ReceiveMessage operation.
|
Future<ReceiveMessageResult> |
receiveMessageAsync(String queueUrl,
AsyncHandler<ReceiveMessageRequest,ReceiveMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the ReceiveMessage operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
RemovePermissionResult |
removePermission(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest)
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified
Label parameter. |
RemovePermissionResult |
removePermission(String queueUrl,
String label)
Simplified method form for invoking the RemovePermission operation.
|
Future<RemovePermissionResult> |
removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest)
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified
Label parameter. |
Future<RemovePermissionResult> |
removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest,
AsyncHandler<RemovePermissionRequest,RemovePermissionResult> asyncHandler)
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified
Label parameter. |
Future<RemovePermissionResult> |
removePermissionAsync(String queueUrl,
String label)
Simplified method form for invoking the RemovePermission operation.
|
Future<RemovePermissionResult> |
removePermissionAsync(String queueUrl,
String label,
AsyncHandler<RemovePermissionRequest,RemovePermissionResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the RemovePermission operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
SendMessageResult |
sendMessage(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest)
Delivers a message to the specified queue.
|
SendMessageResult |
sendMessage(String queueUrl,
String messageBody)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessage operation.
|
Future<SendMessageResult> |
sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest)
Delivers a message to the specified queue.
|
Future<SendMessageResult> |
sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest,
AsyncHandler<SendMessageRequest,SendMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Delivers a message to the specified queue.
|
Future<SendMessageResult> |
sendMessageAsync(String queueUrl,
String messageBody)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessage operation.
|
Future<SendMessageResult> |
sendMessageAsync(String queueUrl,
String messageBody,
AsyncHandler<SendMessageRequest,SendMessageResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessage operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
SendMessageBatchResult |
sendMessageBatch(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest)
You can use
SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). |
SendMessageBatchResult |
sendMessageBatch(String queueUrl,
List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessageBatch operation.
|
Future<SendMessageBatchResult> |
sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest)
You can use
SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). |
Future<SendMessageBatchResult> |
sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest,
AsyncHandler<SendMessageBatchRequest,SendMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
You can use
SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). |
Future<SendMessageBatchResult> |
sendMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessageBatch operation.
|
Future<SendMessageBatchResult> |
sendMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl,
List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries,
AsyncHandler<SendMessageBatchRequest,SendMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the SendMessageBatch operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
void |
setEndpoint(String endpoint)
Overrides the default endpoint for this client ("https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com").
|
SetQueueAttributesResult |
setQueueAttributes(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest)
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy.
|
SetQueueAttributesResult |
setQueueAttributes(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> attributes)
Simplified method form for invoking the SetQueueAttributes operation.
|
Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> |
setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest)
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy.
|
Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> |
setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest,
AsyncHandler<SetQueueAttributesRequest,SetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy.
|
Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> |
setQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> attributes)
Simplified method form for invoking the SetQueueAttributes operation.
|
Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> |
setQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> attributes,
AsyncHandler<SetQueueAttributesRequest,SetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the SetQueueAttributes operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
void |
setRegion(Region region)
An alternative to
AmazonSQS.setEndpoint(String), sets the regional endpoint for this client's service
calls. |
void |
shutdown()
Shuts down this client object, releasing any resources that might be held open.
|
StartMessageMoveTaskResult |
startMessageMoveTask(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest)
Starts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
|
Future<StartMessageMoveTaskResult> |
startMessageMoveTaskAsync(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest)
Starts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
|
Future<StartMessageMoveTaskResult> |
startMessageMoveTaskAsync(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest,
AsyncHandler<StartMessageMoveTaskRequest,StartMessageMoveTaskResult> asyncHandler)
Starts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
|
TagQueueResult |
tagQueue(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> tags)
Simplified method form for invoking the TagQueue operation.
|
TagQueueResult |
tagQueue(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest)
Add cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<TagQueueResult> |
tagQueueAsync(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> tags)
Simplified method form for invoking the TagQueue operation.
|
Future<TagQueueResult> |
tagQueueAsync(String queueUrl,
Map<String,String> tags,
AsyncHandler<TagQueueRequest,TagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the TagQueue operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
Future<TagQueueResult> |
tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest)
Add cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<TagQueueResult> |
tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest,
AsyncHandler<TagQueueRequest,TagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Add cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
UntagQueueResult |
untagQueue(String queueUrl,
List<String> tagKeys)
Simplified method form for invoking the UntagQueue operation.
|
UntagQueueResult |
untagQueue(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest)
Remove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<UntagQueueResult> |
untagQueueAsync(String queueUrl,
List<String> tagKeys)
Simplified method form for invoking the UntagQueue operation.
|
Future<UntagQueueResult> |
untagQueueAsync(String queueUrl,
List<String> tagKeys,
AsyncHandler<UntagQueueRequest,UntagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Simplified method form for invoking the UntagQueue operation with an AsyncHandler.
|
Future<UntagQueueResult> |
untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest)
Remove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
Future<UntagQueueResult> |
untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest,
AsyncHandler<UntagQueueRequest,UntagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
Remove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue.
|
public static final String USER_AGENT
public AmazonSQSBufferedAsyncClient(AmazonSQSAsync paramRealSQS)
public AmazonSQSBufferedAsyncClient(AmazonSQSAsync paramRealSQS, QueueBufferConfig config)
public void setRegion(Region region) throws IllegalArgumentException
AmazonSQSAmazonSQS.setEndpoint(String), sets the regional endpoint for this client's service
calls. Callers can use this method to control which AWS region they want to work with.
By default, all service endpoints in all regions use the https protocol. To use http instead, specify it in the
ClientConfiguration supplied at construction.
This method is not threadsafe. A region should be configured when the client is created and before any service requests are made. Changing it afterwards creates inevitable race conditions for any service requests in transit or retrying.
setRegion in interface AmazonSQSregion - The region this client will communicate with. See Region.getRegion(com.amazonaws.regions.Regions)
for accessing a given region. Must not be null and must be a region where the service is available.IllegalArgumentExceptionRegion.getRegion(com.amazonaws.regions.Regions),
Region.createClient(Class, com.amazonaws.auth.AWSCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration),
Region.isServiceSupported(String)public SetQueueAttributesResult setQueueAttributes(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy. When you change a queue's attributes, the change
can take up to 60 seconds for most of the attributes to propagate throughout the Amazon SQS system. Changes made
to the MessageRetentionPeriod attribute can take up to 15 minutes and will impact existing messages
in the queue potentially causing them to be expired and deleted if the MessageRetentionPeriod is
reduced below the age of existing messages.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
setQueueAttributes in interface AmazonSQSInvalidAttributeNameException - The specified attribute doesn't exist.InvalidAttributeValueException - A queue attribute value is invalid.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.OverLimitException - The specified action violates a limit. For example, ReceiveMessage returns this error if the
maximum number of in flight messages is reached and AddPermission returns this error if the
maximum number of permissions for the queue is reached.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult changeMessageVisibilityBatch(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages. This is a batch version of
ChangeMessageVisibility. The result of the action on each message is reported individually
in the response. You can send up to 10 ChangeMessageVisibility requests with each
ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch action.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
changeMessageVisibilityBatch in interface AmazonSQSTooManyEntriesInBatchRequestException - The batch request contains more entries than permissible.EmptyBatchRequestException - The batch request doesn't contain any entries.BatchEntryIdsNotDistinctException - Two or more batch entries in the request have the same Id.InvalidBatchEntryIdException - The Id of a batch entry in a batch request doesn't abide by the specification.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ChangeMessageVisibilityResult changeMessageVisibility(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSChanges the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value. The default visibility timeout for a message is 30 seconds. The minimum is 0 seconds. The maximum is 12 hours. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
For example, if the default timeout for a queue is 60 seconds, 15 seconds have elapsed since you received the
message, and you send a ChangeMessageVisibility call with VisibilityTimeout set to 10 seconds, the
10 seconds begin to count from the time that you make the ChangeMessageVisibility call. Thus, any
attempt to change the visibility timeout or to delete that message 10 seconds after you initially change the
visibility timeout (a total of 25 seconds) might result in an error.
An Amazon SQS message has three basic states:
Sent to a queue by a producer.
Received from the queue by a consumer.
Deleted from the queue.
A message is considered to be stored after it is sent to a queue by a producer, but not yet received from the queue by a consumer (that is, between states 1 and 2). There is no limit to the number of stored messages. A message is considered to be in flight after it is received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue (that is, between states 2 and 3). There is a limit to the number of in flight messages.
Limits that apply to in flight messages are unrelated to the unlimited number of stored messages.
For most standard queues (depending on queue traffic and message backlog), there can be a maximum of
approximately 120,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the
queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns the OverLimit error message. To avoid reaching
the limit, you should delete messages from the queue after they're processed. You can also increase the number of
queues you use to process your messages. To request a limit increase, file a support request.
For FIFO queues, there can be a maximum of 20,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns no error messages.
If you attempt to set the VisibilityTimeout to a value greater than the maximum time left, Amazon
SQS returns an error. Amazon SQS doesn't automatically recalculate and increase the timeout to the maximum
remaining time.
Unlike with a queue, when you change the visibility timeout for a specific message the timeout value is applied
immediately but isn't saved in memory for that message. If you don't delete a message after it is received, the
visibility timeout for the message reverts to the original timeout value (not to the value you set using the
ChangeMessageVisibility action) the next time the message is received.
changeMessageVisibility in interface AmazonSQSMessageNotInflightException - The specified message isn't in flight.ReceiptHandleIsInvalidException - The specified receipt handle isn't valid.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic SendMessageBatchResult sendMessageBatch(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
You can use SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). This is a batch version of
SendMessage. For a FIFO queue, multiple messages within a single batch are enqueued in the
order they are sent.
The result of sending each message is reported individually in the response. Because the batch request can result
in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check for batch errors even when the call
returns an HTTP status code of 200.
The maximum allowed individual message size and the maximum total payload size (the sum of the individual lengths of all of the batched messages) are both 256 KiB (262,144 bytes).
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
If you don't specify the DelaySeconds parameter for an entry, Amazon SQS uses the default value for
the queue.
sendMessageBatch in interface AmazonSQSTooManyEntriesInBatchRequestException - The batch request contains more entries than permissible.EmptyBatchRequestException - The batch request doesn't contain any entries.BatchEntryIdsNotDistinctException - Two or more batch entries in the request have the same Id.BatchRequestTooLongException - The length of all the messages put together is more than the limit.InvalidBatchEntryIdException - The Id of a batch entry in a batch request doesn't abide by the specification.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.KmsDisabledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.KmsInvalidStateException - The request was rejected because the state of the specified resource is not valid for this request.KmsNotFoundException - The request was rejected because the specified entity or resource could not be found.KmsOptInRequiredException - The request was rejected because the specified key policy isn't syntactically or semantically correct.KmsThrottledException - Amazon Web Services KMS throttles requests for the following conditions.KmsAccessDeniedException - The caller doesn't have the required KMS access.KmsInvalidKeyUsageException - The request was rejected for one of the following reasons:
The KeyUsage value of the KMS key is incompatible with the API operation.
The encryption algorithm or signing algorithm specified for the operation is incompatible with the type of key material in the KMS key (KeySpec).
InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic SendMessageResult sendMessage(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSDelivers a message to the specified queue.
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
sendMessage in interface AmazonSQSInvalidMessageContentsException - The message contains characters outside the allowed set.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.KmsDisabledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.KmsInvalidStateException - The request was rejected because the state of the specified resource is not valid for this request.KmsNotFoundException - The request was rejected because the specified entity or resource could not be found.KmsOptInRequiredException - The request was rejected because the specified key policy isn't syntactically or semantically correct.KmsThrottledException - Amazon Web Services KMS throttles requests for the following conditions.KmsAccessDeniedException - The caller doesn't have the required KMS access.KmsInvalidKeyUsageException - The request was rejected for one of the following reasons:
The KeyUsage value of the KMS key is incompatible with the API operation.
The encryption algorithm or signing algorithm specified for the operation is incompatible with the type of key material in the KMS key (KeySpec).
InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ReceiveMessageResult receiveMessage(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue. Using the WaitTimeSeconds
parameter enables long-poll support. For more information, see Amazon
SQS Long Polling in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Short poll is the default behavior where a weighted random set of machines is sampled on a
ReceiveMessage call. Thus, only the messages on the sampled machines are returned. If the number of
messages in the queue is small (fewer than 1,000), you most likely get fewer messages than you requested per
ReceiveMessage call. If the number of messages in the queue is extremely small, you might not
receive any messages in a particular ReceiveMessage response. If this happens, repeat the request.
For each message returned, the response includes the following:
The message body.
An MD5 digest of the message body. For information about MD5, see RFC1321.
The MessageId you received when you sent the message to the queue.
The receipt handle.
The message attributes.
An MD5 digest of the message attributes.
The receipt handle is the identifier you must provide when deleting the message. For more information, see Queue and Message Identifiers in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
You can provide the VisibilityTimeout parameter in your request. The parameter is applied to the
messages that Amazon SQS returns in the response. If you don't include the parameter, the overall visibility
timeout for the queue is used for the returned messages. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
A message that isn't deleted or a message whose visibility isn't extended before the visibility timeout expires counts as a failed receive. Depending on the configuration of the queue, the message might be sent to the dead-letter queue.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
receiveMessage in interface AmazonSQSUnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.OverLimitException - The specified action violates a limit. For example, ReceiveMessage returns this error if the
maximum number of in flight messages is reached and AddPermission returns this error if the
maximum number of permissions for the queue is reached.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.KmsDisabledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.KmsInvalidStateException - The request was rejected because the state of the specified resource is not valid for this request.KmsNotFoundException - The request was rejected because the specified entity or resource could not be found.KmsOptInRequiredException - The request was rejected because the specified key policy isn't syntactically or semantically correct.KmsThrottledException - Amazon Web Services KMS throttles requests for the following conditions.KmsAccessDeniedException - The caller doesn't have the required KMS access.KmsInvalidKeyUsageException - The request was rejected for one of the following reasons:
The KeyUsage value of the KMS key is incompatible with the API operation.
The encryption algorithm or signing algorithm specified for the operation is incompatible with the type of key material in the KMS key (KeySpec).
InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic DeleteMessageBatchResult deleteMessageBatch(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue. This is a batch version of
DeleteMessage. The result of the action on each message is reported individually in the
response.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
deleteMessageBatch in interface AmazonSQSTooManyEntriesInBatchRequestException - The batch request contains more entries than permissible.EmptyBatchRequestException - The batch request doesn't contain any entries.BatchEntryIdsNotDistinctException - Two or more batch entries in the request have the same Id.InvalidBatchEntryIdException - The Id of a batch entry in a batch request doesn't abide by the specification.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic DeleteMessageResult deleteMessage(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue. To select the message to delete, use the
ReceiptHandle of the message (not the MessageId which you receive when you send
the message). Amazon SQS can delete a message from a queue even if a visibility timeout setting causes the
message to be locked by another consumer. Amazon SQS automatically deletes messages left in a queue longer than
the retention period configured for the queue.
The ReceiptHandle is associated with a specific instance of receiving a message. If you
receive a message more than once, the ReceiptHandle is different each time you receive a message.
When you use the DeleteMessage action, you must provide the most recently received
ReceiptHandle for the message (otherwise, the request succeeds, but the message will not be
deleted).
For standard queues, it is possible to receive a message even after you delete it. This might happen on rare occasions if one of the servers which stores a copy of the message is unavailable when you send the request to delete the message. The copy remains on the server and might be returned to you during a subsequent receive request. You should ensure that your application is idempotent, so that receiving a message more than once does not cause issues.
deleteMessage in interface AmazonSQSInvalidIdFormatException - The specified receipt handle isn't valid for the current version.ReceiptHandleIsInvalidException - The specified receipt handle isn't valid.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic void shutdown()
AmazonSQSpublic void flush()
QueueBuffer to finish.public Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages. This is a batch version of
ChangeMessageVisibility. The result of the action on each message is reported individually
in the response. You can send up to 10 ChangeMessageVisibility requests with each
ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch action.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncChanges the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value. The default visibility timeout for a message is 30 seconds. The minimum is 0 seconds. The maximum is 12 hours. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
For example, if the default timeout for a queue is 60 seconds, 15 seconds have elapsed since you received the
message, and you send a ChangeMessageVisibility call with VisibilityTimeout set to 10 seconds, the
10 seconds begin to count from the time that you make the ChangeMessageVisibility call. Thus, any
attempt to change the visibility timeout or to delete that message 10 seconds after you initially change the
visibility timeout (a total of 25 seconds) might result in an error.
An Amazon SQS message has three basic states:
Sent to a queue by a producer.
Received from the queue by a consumer.
Deleted from the queue.
A message is considered to be stored after it is sent to a queue by a producer, but not yet received from the queue by a consumer (that is, between states 1 and 2). There is no limit to the number of stored messages. A message is considered to be in flight after it is received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue (that is, between states 2 and 3). There is a limit to the number of in flight messages.
Limits that apply to in flight messages are unrelated to the unlimited number of stored messages.
For most standard queues (depending on queue traffic and message backlog), there can be a maximum of
approximately 120,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the
queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns the OverLimit error message. To avoid reaching
the limit, you should delete messages from the queue after they're processed. You can also increase the number of
queues you use to process your messages. To request a limit increase, file a support request.
For FIFO queues, there can be a maximum of 20,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns no error messages.
If you attempt to set the VisibilityTimeout to a value greater than the maximum time left, Amazon
SQS returns an error. Amazon SQS doesn't automatically recalculate and increase the timeout to the maximum
remaining time.
Unlike with a queue, when you change the visibility timeout for a specific message the timeout value is applied
immediately but isn't saved in memory for that message. If you don't delete a message after it is received, the
visibility timeout for the message reverts to the original timeout value (not to the value you set using the
ChangeMessageVisibility action) the next time the message is received.
changeMessageVisibilityAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<SendMessageBatchResult> sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
You can use SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). This is a batch version of
SendMessage. For a FIFO queue, multiple messages within a single batch are enqueued in the
order they are sent.
The result of sending each message is reported individually in the response. Because the batch request can result
in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check for batch errors even when the call
returns an HTTP status code of 200.
The maximum allowed individual message size and the maximum total payload size (the sum of the individual lengths of all of the batched messages) are both 256 KiB (262,144 bytes).
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
If you don't specify the DelaySeconds parameter for an entry, Amazon SQS uses the default value for
the queue.
sendMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<SendMessageResult> sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncDelivers a message to the specified queue.
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
sendMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ReceiveMessageResult> receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue. Using the WaitTimeSeconds
parameter enables long-poll support. For more information, see Amazon
SQS Long Polling in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Short poll is the default behavior where a weighted random set of machines is sampled on a
ReceiveMessage call. Thus, only the messages on the sampled machines are returned. If the number of
messages in the queue is small (fewer than 1,000), you most likely get fewer messages than you requested per
ReceiveMessage call. If the number of messages in the queue is extremely small, you might not
receive any messages in a particular ReceiveMessage response. If this happens, repeat the request.
For each message returned, the response includes the following:
The message body.
An MD5 digest of the message body. For information about MD5, see RFC1321.
The MessageId you received when you sent the message to the queue.
The receipt handle.
The message attributes.
An MD5 digest of the message attributes.
The receipt handle is the identifier you must provide when deleting the message. For more information, see Queue and Message Identifiers in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
You can provide the VisibilityTimeout parameter in your request. The parameter is applied to the
messages that Amazon SQS returns in the response. If you don't include the parameter, the overall visibility
timeout for the queue is used for the returned messages. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
A message that isn't deleted or a message whose visibility isn't extended before the visibility timeout expires counts as a failed receive. Depending on the configuration of the queue, the message might be sent to the dead-letter queue.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
receiveMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue. This is a batch version of
DeleteMessage. The result of the action on each message is reported individually in the
response.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
deleteMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic void setEndpoint(String endpoint) throws IllegalArgumentException
AmazonSQS
Callers can pass in just the endpoint (ex: "sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") or a full URL, including the protocol
(ex: "https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com"). If the protocol is not specified here, the default protocol from
this client's ClientConfiguration will be used, which by default is HTTPS.
For more information on using AWS regions with the AWS SDK for Java, and a complete list of all available endpoints for all AWS services, see: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-java/v1/developer-guide/java-dg-region-selection.html#region-selection- choose-endpoint
This method is not threadsafe. An endpoint should be configured when the client is created and before any service requests are made. Changing it afterwards creates inevitable race conditions for any service requests in transit or retrying.
setEndpoint in interface AmazonSQSendpoint - The endpoint (ex: "sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") or a full URL, including the protocol (ex:
"https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") of the region specific AWS endpoint this client will communicate
with.IllegalArgumentExceptionpublic Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy. When you change a queue's attributes, the change
can take up to 60 seconds for most of the attributes to propagate throughout the Amazon SQS system. Changes made
to the MessageRetentionPeriod attribute can take up to 15 minutes and will impact existing messages
in the queue potentially causing them to be expired and deleted if the MessageRetentionPeriod is
reduced below the age of existing messages.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
setQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<GetQueueUrlResult> getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncReturns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
To access a queue that belongs to another AWS account, use the QueueOwnerAWSAccountId parameter to
specify the account ID of the queue's owner. The queue's owner must grant you permission to access the queue. For
more information about shared queue access, see AddPermission or see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
getQueueUrlAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<RemovePermissionResult> removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified Label parameter.
Only the owner of a queue can remove permissions from it.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
removePermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic GetQueueUrlResult getQueueUrl(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSReturns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
To access a queue that belongs to another AWS account, use the QueueOwnerAWSAccountId parameter to
specify the account ID of the queue's owner. The queue's owner must grant you permission to access the queue. For
more information about shared queue access, see AddPermission or see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
getQueueUrl in interface AmazonSQSRequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic RemovePermissionResult removePermission(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified Label parameter.
Only the owner of a queue can remove permissions from it.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
removePermission in interface AmazonSQSInvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncGets attributes for the specified queue.
To determine whether a queue is FIFO, you
can check whether QueueName ends with the .fifo suffix.
getQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic GetQueueAttributesResult getQueueAttributes(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSGets attributes for the specified queue.
To determine whether a queue is FIFO, you
can check whether QueueName ends with the .fifo suffix.
getQueueAttributes in interface AmazonSQSInvalidAttributeNameException - The specified attribute doesn't exist.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<PurgeQueueResult> purgeQueueAsync(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the QueueURL
parameter.
When you use the PurgeQueue action, you can't retrieve any messages deleted from a queue.
The message deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. We recommend waiting for 60 seconds regardless of your queue's size.
Messages sent to the queue before you call PurgeQueue might be received but are deleted
within the next minute.
Messages sent to the queue after you call PurgeQueue might be deleted while the queue is
being purged.
purgeQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic PurgeQueueResult purgeQueue(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the QueueURL
parameter.
When you use the PurgeQueue action, you can't retrieve any messages deleted from a queue.
The message deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. We recommend waiting for 60 seconds regardless of your queue's size.
Messages sent to the queue before you call PurgeQueue might be received but are deleted
within the next minute.
Messages sent to the queue after you call PurgeQueue might be deleted while the queue is
being purged.
purgeQueue in interface AmazonSQSQueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.PurgeQueueInProgressException - Indicates that the specified queue previously received a PurgeQueue request within the last
60 seconds (the time it can take to delete the messages in the queue).RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteQueueResult> deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes the queue specified by the QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents.
Be careful with the DeleteQueue action: When you delete a queue, any messages in the queue are no
longer available.
When you delete a queue, the deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. Requests you send involving that queue
during the 60 seconds might succeed. For example, a SendMessage request might succeed, but
after 60 seconds the queue and the message you sent no longer exist.
When you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
The delete operation uses the HTTP GET verb.
deleteQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic DeleteQueueResult deleteQueue(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Deletes the queue specified by the QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents.
Be careful with the DeleteQueue action: When you delete a queue, any messages in the queue are no
longer available.
When you delete a queue, the deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. Requests you send involving that queue
during the 60 seconds might succeed. For example, a SendMessage request might succeed, but
after 60 seconds the queue and the message you sent no longer exist.
When you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
The delete operation uses the HTTP GET verb.
deleteQueue in interface AmazonSQSRequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Returns a list of your queues in the current region. The response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you
specify a value for the optional QueueNamePrefix parameter, only queues with a name that begins with
the specified value are returned.
The listQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in the request to
specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set MaxResults,
the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and there are additional
results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use NextToken as a
parameter in your next request to listQueues to receive the next page of results.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ListQueuesResult listQueues(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Returns a list of your queues in the current region. The response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you
specify a value for the optional QueueNamePrefix parameter, only queues with a name that begins with
the specified value are returned.
The listQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in the request to
specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set MaxResults,
the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and there are additional
results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use NextToken as a
parameter in your next request to listQueues to receive the next page of results.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueues in interface AmazonSQSRequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<CreateQueueResult> createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncCreates a new standard or FIFO queue. You can pass one or more attributes in the request. Keep the following in mind:
If you don't specify the FifoQueue attribute, Amazon SQS creates a standard queue.
You can't change the queue type after you create it and you can't convert an existing standard queue into a FIFO queue. You must either create a new FIFO queue for your application or delete your existing standard queue and recreate it as a FIFO queue. For more information, see Moving From a Standard Queue to a FIFO Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
If you don't provide a value for an attribute, the queue is created with the default value for the attribute.
If you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
To successfully create a new queue, you must provide a queue name that adheres to the limits related to queues and is unique within the scope of your queues.
After you create a queue, you must wait at least one second after the queue is created to be able to use the queue.
To get the queue URL, use the GetQueueUrl action. GetQueueUrl
requires only the QueueName parameter. be aware of existing queue names:
If you provide the name of an existing queue along with the exact names and values of all the queue's attributes,
CreateQueue returns the queue URL for the existing queue.
If the queue name, attribute names, or attribute values don't match an existing queue, CreateQueue
returns an error.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
createQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic CreateQueueResult createQueue(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSCreates a new standard or FIFO queue. You can pass one or more attributes in the request. Keep the following in mind:
If you don't specify the FifoQueue attribute, Amazon SQS creates a standard queue.
You can't change the queue type after you create it and you can't convert an existing standard queue into a FIFO queue. You must either create a new FIFO queue for your application or delete your existing standard queue and recreate it as a FIFO queue. For more information, see Moving From a Standard Queue to a FIFO Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
If you don't provide a value for an attribute, the queue is created with the default value for the attribute.
If you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
To successfully create a new queue, you must provide a queue name that adheres to the limits related to queues and is unique within the scope of your queues.
After you create a queue, you must wait at least one second after the queue is created to be able to use the queue.
To get the queue URL, use the GetQueueUrl action. GetQueueUrl
requires only the QueueName parameter. be aware of existing queue names:
If you provide the name of an existing queue along with the exact names and values of all the queue's attributes,
CreateQueue returns the queue URL for the existing queue.
If the queue name, attribute names, or attribute values don't match an existing queue, CreateQueue
returns an error.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
createQueue in interface AmazonSQSQueueDeletedRecentlyException - You must wait 60 seconds after deleting a queue before you can create another queue with the same name.QueueNameExistsException - A queue with this name already exists. Amazon SQS returns this error only if the request includes
attributes whose values differ from those of the existing queue.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidAttributeNameException - The specified attribute doesn't exist.InvalidAttributeValueException - A queue attribute value is invalid.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<AddPermissionResult> addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncAdds a permission to a queue for a specific principal. This allows sharing access to the queue.
When you create a queue, you have full control access rights for the queue. Only you, the owner of the queue, can grant or deny permissions to the queue. For more information about these permissions, see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
AddPermission generates a policy for you. You can use SetQueueAttributes to
upload your policy. For more information, see Using Custom Policies with the Amazon SQS Access Policy Language in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
An Amazon SQS policy can have a maximum of seven actions per statement.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
Amazon SQS AddPermission does not support adding a non-account principal.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
addPermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<AddPermissionResult> addPermissionAsync(String queueUrl, String label, List<String> aWSAccountIds, List<String> actions)
AmazonSQSAsyncaddPermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest)public Future<AddPermissionResult> addPermissionAsync(String queueUrl, String label, List<String> aWSAccountIds, List<String> actions, AsyncHandler<AddPermissionRequest,AddPermissionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncaddPermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public AddPermissionResult addPermission(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAdds a permission to a queue for a specific principal. This allows sharing access to the queue.
When you create a queue, you have full control access rights for the queue. Only you, the owner of the queue, can grant or deny permissions to the queue. For more information about these permissions, see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
AddPermission generates a policy for you. You can use SetQueueAttributes to
upload your policy. For more information, see Using Custom Policies with the Amazon SQS Access Policy Language in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
An Amazon SQS policy can have a maximum of seven actions per statement.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
Amazon SQS AddPermission does not support adding a non-account principal.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
addPermission in interface AmazonSQSOverLimitException - The specified action violates a limit. For example, ReceiveMessage returns this error if the
maximum number of in flight messages is reached and AddPermission returns this error if the
maximum number of permissions for the queue is reached.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
QueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ListQueuesResult listQueues() throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSlistQueues in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.listQueues(ListQueuesRequest)public ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request)
AmazonSQSResponse metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you need to access this extra diagnostic information for an executed request, you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after executing a request.
getCachedResponseMetadata in interface AmazonSQSrequest - The originally executed request.public Future<DeleteMessageResult> deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue. To select the message to delete, use the
ReceiptHandle of the message (not the MessageId which you receive when you send
the message). Amazon SQS can delete a message from a queue even if a visibility timeout setting causes the
message to be locked by another consumer. Amazon SQS automatically deletes messages left in a queue longer than
the retention period configured for the queue.
The ReceiptHandle is associated with a specific instance of receiving a message. If you
receive a message more than once, the ReceiptHandle is different each time you receive a message.
When you use the DeleteMessage action, you must provide the most recently received
ReceiptHandle for the message (otherwise, the request succeeds, but the message will not be
deleted).
For standard queues, it is possible to receive a message even after you delete it. This might happen on rare occasions if one of the servers which stores a copy of the message is unavailable when you send the request to delete the message. The copy remains on the server and might be returned to you during a subsequent receive request. You should ensure that your application is idempotent, so that receiving a message more than once does not cause issues.
deleteMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest changeMessageVisibilityRequest, AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncChanges the visibility timeout of a specified message in a queue to a new value. The default visibility timeout for a message is 30 seconds. The minimum is 0 seconds. The maximum is 12 hours. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
For example, if the default timeout for a queue is 60 seconds, 15 seconds have elapsed since you received the
message, and you send a ChangeMessageVisibility call with VisibilityTimeout set to 10 seconds, the
10 seconds begin to count from the time that you make the ChangeMessageVisibility call. Thus, any
attempt to change the visibility timeout or to delete that message 10 seconds after you initially change the
visibility timeout (a total of 25 seconds) might result in an error.
An Amazon SQS message has three basic states:
Sent to a queue by a producer.
Received from the queue by a consumer.
Deleted from the queue.
A message is considered to be stored after it is sent to a queue by a producer, but not yet received from the queue by a consumer (that is, between states 1 and 2). There is no limit to the number of stored messages. A message is considered to be in flight after it is received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue (that is, between states 2 and 3). There is a limit to the number of in flight messages.
Limits that apply to in flight messages are unrelated to the unlimited number of stored messages.
For most standard queues (depending on queue traffic and message backlog), there can be a maximum of
approximately 120,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the
queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns the OverLimit error message. To avoid reaching
the limit, you should delete messages from the queue after they're processed. You can also increase the number of
queues you use to process your messages. To request a limit increase, file a support request.
For FIFO queues, there can be a maximum of 20,000 in flight messages (received from a queue by a consumer, but not yet deleted from the queue). If you reach this limit, Amazon SQS returns no error messages.
If you attempt to set the VisibilityTimeout to a value greater than the maximum time left, Amazon
SQS returns an error. Amazon SQS doesn't automatically recalculate and increase the timeout to the maximum
remaining time.
Unlike with a queue, when you change the visibility timeout for a specific message the timeout value is applied
immediately but isn't saved in memory for that message. If you don't delete a message after it is received, the
visibility timeout for the message reverts to the original timeout value (not to the value you set using the
ChangeMessageVisibility action) the next time the message is received.
changeMessageVisibilityAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> changeMessageVisibilityAsync(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle, Integer visibilityTimeout)
AmazonSQSAsyncchangeMessageVisibilityAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest)public Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> changeMessageVisibilityAsync(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle, Integer visibilityTimeout, AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncchangeMessageVisibilityAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.changeMessageVisibilityAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<SendMessageResult> sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest sendMessageRequest, AsyncHandler<SendMessageRequest,SendMessageResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncDelivers a message to the specified queue.
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
sendMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<SendMessageResult> sendMessageAsync(String queueUrl, String messageBody)
AmazonSQSAsyncsendMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest)public Future<SendMessageResult> sendMessageAsync(String queueUrl, String messageBody, AsyncHandler<SendMessageRequest,SendMessageResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncsendMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.sendMessageAsync(SendMessageRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<ReceiveMessageResult> receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest receiveMessageRequest, AsyncHandler<ReceiveMessageRequest,ReceiveMessageResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Retrieves one or more messages (up to 10), from the specified queue. Using the WaitTimeSeconds
parameter enables long-poll support. For more information, see Amazon
SQS Long Polling in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Short poll is the default behavior where a weighted random set of machines is sampled on a
ReceiveMessage call. Thus, only the messages on the sampled machines are returned. If the number of
messages in the queue is small (fewer than 1,000), you most likely get fewer messages than you requested per
ReceiveMessage call. If the number of messages in the queue is extremely small, you might not
receive any messages in a particular ReceiveMessage response. If this happens, repeat the request.
For each message returned, the response includes the following:
The message body.
An MD5 digest of the message body. For information about MD5, see RFC1321.
The MessageId you received when you sent the message to the queue.
The receipt handle.
The message attributes.
An MD5 digest of the message attributes.
The receipt handle is the identifier you must provide when deleting the message. For more information, see Queue and Message Identifiers in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
You can provide the VisibilityTimeout parameter in your request. The parameter is applied to the
messages that Amazon SQS returns in the response. If you don't include the parameter, the overall visibility
timeout for the queue is used for the returned messages. For more information, see Visibility Timeout in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
A message that isn't deleted or a message whose visibility isn't extended before the visibility timeout expires counts as a failed receive. Depending on the configuration of the queue, the message might be sent to the dead-letter queue.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
receiveMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ReceiveMessageResult> receiveMessageAsync(String queueUrl)
AmazonSQSAsyncreceiveMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest)public Future<ReceiveMessageResult> receiveMessageAsync(String queueUrl, AsyncHandler<ReceiveMessageRequest,ReceiveMessageResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncreceiveMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.receiveMessageAsync(ReceiveMessageRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<DeleteMessageResult> deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest deleteMessageRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageRequest,DeleteMessageResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes the specified message from the specified queue. To select the message to delete, use the
ReceiptHandle of the message (not the MessageId which you receive when you send
the message). Amazon SQS can delete a message from a queue even if a visibility timeout setting causes the
message to be locked by another consumer. Amazon SQS automatically deletes messages left in a queue longer than
the retention period configured for the queue.
The ReceiptHandle is associated with a specific instance of receiving a message. If you
receive a message more than once, the ReceiptHandle is different each time you receive a message.
When you use the DeleteMessage action, you must provide the most recently received
ReceiptHandle for the message (otherwise, the request succeeds, but the message will not be
deleted).
For standard queues, it is possible to receive a message even after you delete it. This might happen on rare occasions if one of the servers which stores a copy of the message is unavailable when you send the request to delete the message. The copy remains on the server and might be returned to you during a subsequent receive request. You should ensure that your application is idempotent, so that receiving a message more than once does not cause issues.
deleteMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteMessageResult> deleteMessageAsync(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest)public Future<DeleteMessageResult> deleteMessageAsync(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle, AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageRequest,DeleteMessageResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteMessageAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteMessageAsync(DeleteMessageRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest setQueueAttributesRequest, AsyncHandler<SetQueueAttributesRequest,SetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Sets the value of one or more queue attributes, like a policy. When you change a queue's attributes, the change
can take up to 60 seconds for most of the attributes to propagate throughout the Amazon SQS system. Changes made
to the MessageRetentionPeriod attribute can take up to 15 minutes and will impact existing messages
in the queue potentially causing them to be expired and deleted if the MessageRetentionPeriod is
reduced below the age of existing messages.
In the future, new attributes might be added. If you write code that calls this action, we recommend that you structure your code so that it can handle new attributes gracefully.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
setQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> setQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> attributes) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncsetQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQSAsync.setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest)public Future<SetQueueAttributesResult> setQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> attributes, AsyncHandler<SetQueueAttributesRequest,SetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncsetQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQSAsync.setQueueAttributesAsync(SetQueueAttributesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public StartMessageMoveTaskResult startMessageMoveTask(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest)
AmazonSQSStarts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from queues that are configured as dead-letter queues (DLQs) of other Amazon SQS queues only. Non-SQS queue sources of dead-letter queues, such as Lambda or Amazon SNS topics, are currently not supported.
In dead-letter queues redrive context, the StartMessageMoveTask the source queue is the DLQ, while
the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the
dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
startMessageMoveTask in interface AmazonSQSpublic Future<StartMessageMoveTaskResult> startMessageMoveTaskAsync(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncStarts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from queues that are configured as dead-letter queues (DLQs) of other Amazon SQS queues only. Non-SQS queue sources of dead-letter queues, such as Lambda or Amazon SNS topics, are currently not supported.
In dead-letter queues redrive context, the StartMessageMoveTask the source queue is the DLQ, while
the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the
dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
startMessageMoveTaskAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<StartMessageMoveTaskResult> startMessageMoveTaskAsync(StartMessageMoveTaskRequest startMessageMoveTaskRequest, AsyncHandler<StartMessageMoveTaskRequest,StartMessageMoveTaskResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncStarts an asynchronous task to move messages from a specified source queue to a specified destination queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from queues that are configured as dead-letter queues (DLQs) of other Amazon SQS queues only. Non-SQS queue sources of dead-letter queues, such as Lambda or Amazon SNS topics, are currently not supported.
In dead-letter queues redrive context, the StartMessageMoveTask the source queue is the DLQ, while
the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the
dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
startMessageMoveTaskAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public CancelMessageMoveTaskResult cancelMessageMoveTask(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest)
AmazonSQSCancels a specified message movement task. A message movement can only be cancelled when the current status is RUNNING. Cancelling a message movement task does not revert the messages that have already been moved. It can only stop the messages that have not been moved yet.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
cancelMessageMoveTask in interface AmazonSQSpublic Future<CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncCancels a specified message movement task. A message movement can only be cancelled when the current status is RUNNING. Cancelling a message movement task does not revert the messages that have already been moved. It can only stop the messages that have not been moved yet.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync(CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest cancelMessageMoveTaskRequest, AsyncHandler<CancelMessageMoveTaskRequest,CancelMessageMoveTaskResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncCancels a specified message movement task. A message movement can only be cancelled when the current status is RUNNING. Cancelling a message movement task does not revert the messages that have already been moved. It can only stop the messages that have not been moved yet.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
cancelMessageMoveTaskAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public ListMessageMoveTasksResult listMessageMoveTasks(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest)
AmazonSQSGets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
listMessageMoveTasks in interface AmazonSQSpublic Future<ListMessageMoveTasksResult> listMessageMoveTasksAsync(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncGets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
listMessageMoveTasksAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<ListMessageMoveTasksResult> listMessageMoveTasksAsync(ListMessageMoveTasksRequest listMessageMoveTasksRequest, AsyncHandler<ListMessageMoveTasksRequest,ListMessageMoveTasksResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncGets the most recent message movement tasks (up to 10) under a specific source queue.
This action is currently limited to supporting message redrive from dead-letter queues (DLQs) only. In this context, the source queue is the dead-letter queue (DLQ), while the destination queue can be the original source queue (from which the messages were driven to the dead-letter-queue), or a custom destination queue.
Only one active message movement task is supported per queue at any given time.
listMessageMoveTasksAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest changeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest, AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Changes the visibility timeout of multiple messages. This is a batch version of
ChangeMessageVisibility. The result of the action on each message is reported individually
in the response. You can send up to 10 ChangeMessageVisibility requests with each
ChangeMessageVisibilityBatch action.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries)
AmazonSQSAsyncchangeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest)public Future<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> changeMessageVisibilityBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries, AsyncHandler<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest,ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<GetQueueUrlResult> getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest getQueueUrlRequest, AsyncHandler<GetQueueUrlRequest,GetQueueUrlResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncReturns the URL of an existing Amazon SQS queue.
To access a queue that belongs to another AWS account, use the QueueOwnerAWSAccountId parameter to
specify the account ID of the queue's owner. The queue's owner must grant you permission to access the queue. For
more information about shared queue access, see AddPermission or see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
getQueueUrlAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<GetQueueUrlResult> getQueueUrlAsync(String queueName)
AmazonSQSAsyncgetQueueUrlAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest)public Future<GetQueueUrlResult> getQueueUrlAsync(String queueName, AsyncHandler<GetQueueUrlRequest,GetQueueUrlResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncgetQueueUrlAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.getQueueUrlAsync(GetQueueUrlRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<RemovePermissionResult> removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest removePermissionRequest, AsyncHandler<RemovePermissionRequest,RemovePermissionResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Revokes any permissions in the queue policy that matches the specified Label parameter.
Only the owner of a queue can remove permissions from it.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
removePermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<RemovePermissionResult> removePermissionAsync(String queueUrl, String label)
AmazonSQSAsyncremovePermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest)public Future<RemovePermissionResult> removePermissionAsync(String queueUrl, String label, AsyncHandler<RemovePermissionRequest,RemovePermissionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncremovePermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.removePermissionAsync(RemovePermissionRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest getQueueAttributesRequest, AsyncHandler<GetQueueAttributesRequest,GetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncGets attributes for the specified queue.
To determine whether a queue is FIFO, you
can check whether QueueName ends with the .fifo suffix.
getQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> getQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl, List<String> attributeNames)
AmazonSQSAsyncgetQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest)public Future<GetQueueAttributesResult> getQueueAttributesAsync(String queueUrl, List<String> attributeNames, AsyncHandler<GetQueueAttributesRequest,GetQueueAttributesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncgetQueueAttributesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.getQueueAttributesAsync(GetQueueAttributesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<SendMessageBatchResult> sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest sendMessageBatchRequest, AsyncHandler<SendMessageBatchRequest,SendMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
You can use SendMessageBatch to send up to 10 messages to the specified queue by assigning either
identical or different values to each message (or by not assigning values at all). This is a batch version of
SendMessage. For a FIFO queue, multiple messages within a single batch are enqueued in the
order they are sent.
The result of sending each message is reported individually in the response. Because the batch request can result
in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check for batch errors even when the call
returns an HTTP status code of 200.
The maximum allowed individual message size and the maximum total payload size (the sum of the individual lengths of all of the batched messages) are both 256 KiB (262,144 bytes).
A message can include only XML, JSON, and unformatted text. The following Unicode characters are allowed. For more information, see the W3C specification for characters.
#x9 | #xA | #xD | #x20 to #xD7FF |
#xE000 to #xFFFD | #x10000 to #x10FFFF
Amazon SQS does not throw an exception or completely reject the message if it contains invalid characters.
Instead, it replaces those invalid characters with U+FFFD before storing the message in the queue,
as long as the message body contains at least one valid character.
If you don't specify the DelaySeconds parameter for an entry, Amazon SQS uses the default value for
the queue.
sendMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<SendMessageBatchResult> sendMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
AmazonSQSAsyncsendMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest)public Future<SendMessageBatchResult> sendMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries, AsyncHandler<SendMessageBatchRequest,SendMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncsendMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.sendMessageBatchAsync(SendMessageBatchRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<PurgeQueueResult> purgeQueueAsync(PurgeQueueRequest purgeQueueRequest, AsyncHandler<PurgeQueueRequest,PurgeQueueResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes available messages in a queue (including in-flight messages) specified by the QueueURL
parameter.
When you use the PurgeQueue action, you can't retrieve any messages deleted from a queue.
The message deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. We recommend waiting for 60 seconds regardless of your queue's size.
Messages sent to the queue before you call PurgeQueue might be received but are deleted
within the next minute.
Messages sent to the queue after you call PurgeQueue might be deleted while the queue is
being purged.
purgeQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteQueueResult> deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest deleteQueueRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteQueueRequest,DeleteQueueResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes the queue specified by the QueueUrl, regardless of the queue's contents.
Be careful with the DeleteQueue action: When you delete a queue, any messages in the queue are no
longer available.
When you delete a queue, the deletion process takes up to 60 seconds. Requests you send involving that queue
during the 60 seconds might succeed. For example, a SendMessage request might succeed, but
after 60 seconds the queue and the message you sent no longer exist.
When you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
The delete operation uses the HTTP GET verb.
deleteQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteQueueResult> deleteQueueAsync(String queueUrl)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest)public Future<DeleteQueueResult> deleteQueueAsync(String queueUrl, AsyncHandler<DeleteQueueRequest,DeleteQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteQueueAsync(DeleteQueueRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest listQueuesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Returns a list of your queues in the current region. The response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you
specify a value for the optional QueueNamePrefix parameter, only queues with a name that begins with
the specified value are returned.
The listQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in the request to
specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set MaxResults,
the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and there are additional
results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use NextToken as a
parameter in your next request to listQueues to receive the next page of results.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync()
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest)public Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync(String queueNamePrefix)
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest)public Future<ListQueuesResult> listQueuesAsync(String queueNamePrefix, AsyncHandler<ListQueuesRequest,ListQueuesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueuesAsync(ListQueuesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest deleteMessageBatchRequest, AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageBatchRequest,DeleteMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Deletes up to ten messages from the specified queue. This is a batch version of
DeleteMessage. The result of the action on each message is reported individually in the
response.
Because the batch request can result in a combination of successful and unsuccessful actions, you should check
for batch errors even when the call returns an HTTP status code of 200.
deleteMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> deleteMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest)public Future<DeleteMessageBatchResult> deleteMessageBatchAsync(String queueUrl, List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries, AsyncHandler<DeleteMessageBatchRequest,DeleteMessageBatchResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncdeleteMessageBatchAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.deleteMessageBatchAsync(DeleteMessageBatchRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<CreateQueueResult> createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest createQueueRequest, AsyncHandler<CreateQueueRequest,CreateQueueResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncCreates a new standard or FIFO queue. You can pass one or more attributes in the request. Keep the following in mind:
If you don't specify the FifoQueue attribute, Amazon SQS creates a standard queue.
You can't change the queue type after you create it and you can't convert an existing standard queue into a FIFO queue. You must either create a new FIFO queue for your application or delete your existing standard queue and recreate it as a FIFO queue. For more information, see Moving From a Standard Queue to a FIFO Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
If you don't provide a value for an attribute, the queue is created with the default value for the attribute.
If you delete a queue, you must wait at least 60 seconds before creating a queue with the same name.
To successfully create a new queue, you must provide a queue name that adheres to the limits related to queues and is unique within the scope of your queues.
After you create a queue, you must wait at least one second after the queue is created to be able to use the queue.
To get the queue URL, use the GetQueueUrl action. GetQueueUrl
requires only the QueueName parameter. be aware of existing queue names:
If you provide the name of an existing queue along with the exact names and values of all the queue's attributes,
CreateQueue returns the queue URL for the existing queue.
If the queue name, attribute names, or attribute values don't match an existing queue, CreateQueue
returns an error.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
createQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<CreateQueueResult> createQueueAsync(String queueName)
AmazonSQSAsynccreateQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest)public Future<CreateQueueResult> createQueueAsync(String queueName, AsyncHandler<CreateQueueRequest,CreateQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsynccreateQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.createQueueAsync(CreateQueueRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public Future<AddPermissionResult> addPermissionAsync(AddPermissionRequest addPermissionRequest, AsyncHandler<AddPermissionRequest,AddPermissionResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsyncAdds a permission to a queue for a specific principal. This allows sharing access to the queue.
When you create a queue, you have full control access rights for the queue. Only you, the owner of the queue, can grant or deny permissions to the queue. For more information about these permissions, see Allow Developers to Write Messages to a Shared Queue in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
AddPermission generates a policy for you. You can use SetQueueAttributes to
upload your policy. For more information, see Using Custom Policies with the Amazon SQS Access Policy Language in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
An Amazon SQS policy can have a maximum of seven actions per statement.
To remove the ability to change queue permissions, you must deny permission to the AddPermission,
RemovePermission, and SetQueueAttributes actions in your IAM policy.
Amazon SQS AddPermission does not support adding a non-account principal.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
addPermissionAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult listDeadLetterSourceQueues(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQS
Returns a list of your queues that have the RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue.
The ListDeadLetterSourceQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in
the request to specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set
MaxResults, the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and
there are additional results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use
NextToken as a parameter in your next request to ListDeadLetterSourceQueues to receive
the next page of results.
For more information about using dead-letter queues, see Using Amazon SQS Dead-Letter Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listDeadLetterSourceQueues in interface AmazonSQSQueueDoesNotExistException - The specified queue doesn't exist.RequestThrottledException - The request was denied due to request throttling.
The rate of requests per second exceeds the Amazon Web Services KMS request quota for an account and Region.
A burst or sustained high rate of requests to change the state of the same KMS key. This condition is often known as a "hot key."
Requests for operations on KMS keys in a Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store might be throttled at a lower-than-expected rate when the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM cluster associated with the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store is processing numerous commands, including those unrelated to the Amazon Web Services CloudHSM key store.
InvalidSecurityException - When the request to a queue is not HTTPS and SigV4.InvalidAddressException - The accountId is invalid.UnsupportedOperationException - Error code 400. Unsupported operation.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Returns a list of your queues that have the RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue.
The ListDeadLetterSourceQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in
the request to specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set
MaxResults, the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and
there are additional results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use
NextToken as a parameter in your next request to ListDeadLetterSourceQueues to receive
the next page of results.
For more information about using dead-letter queues, see Using Amazon SQS Dead-Letter Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic Future<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync(ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest listDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest, AsyncHandler<ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesRequest,ListDeadLetterSourceQueuesResult> asyncHandler) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSAsync
Returns a list of your queues that have the RedrivePolicy queue attribute configured with a
dead-letter queue.
The ListDeadLetterSourceQueues methods supports pagination. Set parameter MaxResults in
the request to specify the maximum number of results to be returned in the response. If you do not set
MaxResults, the response includes a maximum of 1,000 results. If you set MaxResults and
there are additional results to display, the response includes a value for NextToken. Use
NextToken as a parameter in your next request to ListDeadLetterSourceQueues to receive
the next page of results.
For more information about using dead-letter queues, see Using Amazon SQS Dead-Letter Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listDeadLetterSourceQueuesAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.AmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionpublic SetQueueAttributesResult setQueueAttributes(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> attributes) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSsetQueueAttributes in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.setQueueAttributes(SetQueueAttributesRequest)public ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchResult changeMessageVisibilityBatch(String queueUrl, List<ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequestEntry> entries) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSchangeMessageVisibilityBatch in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.changeMessageVisibilityBatch(ChangeMessageVisibilityBatchRequest)public ChangeMessageVisibilityResult changeMessageVisibility(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle, Integer visibilityTimeout) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSchangeMessageVisibility in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.changeMessageVisibility(ChangeMessageVisibilityRequest)public GetQueueUrlResult getQueueUrl(String queueName) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSgetQueueUrl in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.getQueueUrl(GetQueueUrlRequest)public RemovePermissionResult removePermission(String queueUrl, String label) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSremovePermission in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.removePermission(RemovePermissionRequest)public SendMessageBatchResult sendMessageBatch(String queueUrl, List<SendMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSsendMessageBatch in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.sendMessageBatch(SendMessageBatchRequest)public DeleteQueueResult deleteQueue(String queueUrl) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSdeleteQueue in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.deleteQueue(DeleteQueueRequest)public SendMessageResult sendMessage(String queueUrl, String messageBody) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSsendMessage in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.sendMessage(SendMessageRequest)public ReceiveMessageResult receiveMessage(String queueUrl) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSreceiveMessage in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.receiveMessage(ReceiveMessageRequest)public ListQueuesResult listQueues(String queueNamePrefix) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSlistQueues in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.listQueues(ListQueuesRequest)public DeleteMessageBatchResult deleteMessageBatch(String queueUrl, List<DeleteMessageBatchRequestEntry> entries) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSdeleteMessageBatch in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.deleteMessageBatch(DeleteMessageBatchRequest)public CreateQueueResult createQueue(String queueName) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQScreateQueue in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.createQueue(CreateQueueRequest)public AddPermissionResult addPermission(String queueUrl, String label, List<String> aWSAccountIds, List<String> actions) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSaddPermission in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.addPermission(AddPermissionRequest)public DeleteMessageResult deleteMessage(String queueUrl, String receiptHandle) throws AmazonServiceException, AmazonClientException
AmazonSQSdeleteMessage in interface AmazonSQSAmazonServiceExceptionAmazonClientExceptionAmazonSQS.deleteMessage(DeleteMessageRequest)public GetQueueAttributesResult getQueueAttributes(String queueUrl, List<String> attributeNames)
AmazonSQSgetQueueAttributes in interface AmazonSQSAmazonSQS.getQueueAttributes(GetQueueAttributesRequest)public TagQueueResult tagQueue(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest)
AmazonSQSAdd cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
When you use queue tags, keep the following guidelines in mind:
Adding more than 50 tags to a queue isn't recommended.
Tags don't have any semantic meaning. Amazon SQS interprets tags as character strings.
Tags are case-sensitive.
A new tag with a key identical to that of an existing tag overwrites the existing tag.
For a full list of tag restrictions, see Quotas related to queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
tagQueue in interface AmazonSQSpublic TagQueueResult tagQueue(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> tags)
AmazonSQStagQueue in interface AmazonSQSAmazonSQS.tagQueue(TagQueueRequest)public Future<TagQueueResult> tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncAdd cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
When you use queue tags, keep the following guidelines in mind:
Adding more than 50 tags to a queue isn't recommended.
Tags don't have any semantic meaning. Amazon SQS interprets tags as character strings.
Tags are case-sensitive.
A new tag with a key identical to that of an existing tag overwrites the existing tag.
For a full list of tag restrictions, see Quotas related to queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
tagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<TagQueueResult> tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest tagQueueRequest, AsyncHandler<TagQueueRequest,TagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncAdd cost allocation tags to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
When you use queue tags, keep the following guidelines in mind:
Adding more than 50 tags to a queue isn't recommended.
Tags don't have any semantic meaning. Amazon SQS interprets tags as character strings.
Tags are case-sensitive.
A new tag with a key identical to that of an existing tag overwrites the existing tag.
For a full list of tag restrictions, see Quotas related to queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
tagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public Future<TagQueueResult> tagQueueAsync(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> tags)
AmazonSQSAsynctagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest)public Future<TagQueueResult> tagQueueAsync(String queueUrl, Map<String,String> tags, AsyncHandler<TagQueueRequest,TagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsynctagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.tagQueueAsync(TagQueueRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public UntagQueueResult untagQueue(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest)
AmazonSQSRemove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
untagQueue in interface AmazonSQSpublic UntagQueueResult untagQueue(String queueUrl, List<String> tagKeys)
AmazonSQSuntagQueue in interface AmazonSQSAmazonSQS.untagQueue(UntagQueueRequest)public Future<UntagQueueResult> untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncRemove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
untagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<UntagQueueResult> untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest untagQueueRequest, AsyncHandler<UntagQueueRequest,UntagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncRemove cost allocation tags from the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
untagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public Future<UntagQueueResult> untagQueueAsync(String queueUrl, List<String> tagKeys)
AmazonSQSAsyncuntagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest)public Future<UntagQueueResult> untagQueueAsync(String queueUrl, List<String> tagKeys, AsyncHandler<UntagQueueRequest,UntagQueueResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncuntagQueueAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.untagQueueAsync(UntagQueueRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)public ListQueueTagsResult listQueueTags(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest)
AmazonSQSList all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueueTags in interface AmazonSQSpublic ListQueueTagsResult listQueueTags(String queueUrl)
AmazonSQSlistQueueTags in interface AmazonSQSAmazonSQS.listQueueTags(ListQueueTagsRequest)public Future<ListQueueTagsResult> listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest)
AmazonSQSAsyncList all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueueTagsAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncpublic Future<ListQueueTagsResult> listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest listQueueTagsRequest, AsyncHandler<ListQueueTagsRequest,ListQueueTagsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsyncList all cost allocation tags added to the specified Amazon SQS queue. For an overview, see Tagging Your Amazon SQS Queues in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
Cross-account permissions don't apply to this action. For more information, see Grant cross-account permissions to a role and a username in the Amazon SQS Developer Guide.
listQueueTagsAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncasyncHandler - 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.public Future<ListQueueTagsResult> listQueueTagsAsync(String queueUrl)
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueueTagsAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest)public Future<ListQueueTagsResult> listQueueTagsAsync(String queueUrl, AsyncHandler<ListQueueTagsRequest,ListQueueTagsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonSQSAsynclistQueueTagsAsync in interface AmazonSQSAsyncAmazonSQSAsync.listQueueTagsAsync(ListQueueTagsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)