You are viewing documentation for version 2 of the AWS SDK for Ruby. Version 3 documentation can be found here.
Class: Aws::StorageGateway::Types::CachediSCSIVolume
- Inherits:
-
Struct
- Object
- Struct
- Aws::StorageGateway::Types::CachediSCSIVolume
- Defined in:
- (unknown)
Overview
Describes an iSCSI cached volume.
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#created_date ⇒ Time
The date the volume was created.
-
#kms_key ⇒ String
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of a symmetric customer master key (CMK) used for Amazon S3 server-side encryption.
-
#source_snapshot_id ⇒ String
If the cached volume was created from a snapshot, this field contains the snapshot ID used, e.g., snap-78e22663.
-
#target_name ⇒ String
The name of the iSCSI target used by an initiator to connect to a volume and used as a suffix for the target ARN.
-
#volume_arn ⇒ String
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the storage volume.
-
#volume_attachment_status ⇒ String
A value that indicates whether a storage volume is attached to or detached from a gateway.
-
#volume_id ⇒ String
The unique identifier of the volume, e.g., vol-AE4B946D.
-
#volume_iscsi_attributes ⇒ Types::VolumeiSCSIAttributes
An VolumeiSCSIAttributes object that represents a collection of iSCSI attributes for one stored volume.
-
#volume_progress ⇒ Float
Represents the percentage complete if the volume is restoring or bootstrapping that represents the percent of data transferred.
-
#volume_size_in_bytes ⇒ Integer
The size, in bytes, of the volume capacity.
-
#volume_status ⇒ String
One of the VolumeStatus values that indicates the state of the storage volume.
-
#volume_type ⇒ String
One of the VolumeType enumeration values that describes the type of the volume.
-
#volume_used_in_bytes ⇒ Integer
The size of the data stored on the volume in bytes.
Instance Attribute Details
#created_date ⇒ Time
The date the volume was created. Volumes created prior to March 28, 2017 don’t have this timestamp.
#kms_key ⇒ String
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of a symmetric customer master key (CMK) used for Amazon S3 server-side encryption. Storage Gateway does not support asymmetric CMKs. This value can only be set when KMSEncrypted
is true
. Optional.
#source_snapshot_id ⇒ String
If the cached volume was created from a snapshot, this field contains the snapshot ID used, e.g., snap-78e22663. Otherwise, this field is not included.
#target_name ⇒ String
The name of the iSCSI target used by an initiator to connect to a volume
and used as a suffix for the target ARN. For example, specifying
TargetName
as myvolume results in the target ARN of
arn:aws:storagegateway:us-east-2:111122223333:gateway/sgw-12A3456B/target/iqn.1997-05.com.amazon:myvolume
.
The target name must be unique across all volumes on a gateway.
If you don\'t specify a value, Storage Gateway uses the value that was previously used for this volume as the new target name.
#volume_arn ⇒ String
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the storage volume.
#volume_attachment_status ⇒ String
A value that indicates whether a storage volume is attached to or detached from a gateway. For more information, see Moving your volumes to a different gateway.
#volume_id ⇒ String
The unique identifier of the volume, e.g., vol-AE4B946D.
#volume_iscsi_attributes ⇒ Types::VolumeiSCSIAttributes
An VolumeiSCSIAttributes object that represents a collection of iSCSI attributes for one stored volume.
#volume_progress ⇒ Float
Represents the percentage complete if the volume is restoring or bootstrapping that represents the percent of data transferred. This field does not appear in the response if the cached volume is not restoring or bootstrapping.
#volume_size_in_bytes ⇒ Integer
The size, in bytes, of the volume capacity.
#volume_status ⇒ String
One of the VolumeStatus values that indicates the state of the storage volume.
#volume_type ⇒ String
One of the VolumeType enumeration values that describes the type of the volume.
#volume_used_in_bytes ⇒ Integer
The size of the data stored on the volume in bytes. This value is
calculated based on the number of blocks that are touched, instead of
the actual amount of data written. This value can be useful for
sequential write patterns but less accurate for random write patterns.
VolumeUsedInBytes
is different from the compressed size of the volume,
which is the value that is used to calculate your bill.