@Generated(value="software.amazon.awssdk:codegen") @ThreadSafe public interface AcmPcaAsyncClient extends AwsClient
builder() method.
This is the Amazon Web Services Private Certificate Authority API Reference. It provides descriptions, syntax, and usage examples for each of the actions and data types involved in creating and managing a private certificate authority (CA) for your organization.
The documentation for each action shows the API request parameters and the JSON response. Alternatively, you can use one of the Amazon Web Services SDKs to access an API that is tailored to the programming language or platform that you prefer. For more information, see Amazon Web Services SDKs.
Each Amazon Web Services Private CA API operation has a quota that determines the number of times the operation can be called per second. Amazon Web Services Private CA throttles API requests at different rates depending on the operation. Throttling means that Amazon Web Services Private CA rejects an otherwise valid request because the request exceeds the operation's quota for the number of requests per second. When a request is throttled, Amazon Web Services Private CA returns a ThrottlingException error. Amazon Web Services Private CA does not guarantee a minimum request rate for APIs.
To see an up-to-date list of your Amazon Web Services Private CA quotas, or to request a quota increase, log into your Amazon Web Services account and visit the Service Quotas console.
| Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
|---|---|
static String |
SERVICE_METADATA_ID
Value for looking up the service's metadata from the
ServiceMetadataProvider. |
static String |
SERVICE_NAME |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
static AcmPcaAsyncClientBuilder |
builder()
Create a builder that can be used to configure and create a
AcmPcaAsyncClient. |
static AcmPcaAsyncClient |
create()
Create a
AcmPcaAsyncClient with the region loaded from the
DefaultAwsRegionProviderChain and credentials loaded from the
DefaultCredentialsProvider. |
default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
createCertificateAuthority(Consumer<CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> createCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Creates a root or subordinate private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
createCertificateAuthority(CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest createCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Creates a root or subordinate private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> |
createCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(Consumer<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder> createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Creates an audit report that lists every time that your CA private key is used.
|
default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> |
createCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Creates an audit report that lists every time that your CA private key is used.
|
default CompletableFuture<CreatePermissionResponse> |
createPermission(Consumer<CreatePermissionRequest.Builder> createPermissionRequest)
Grants one or more permissions on a private CA to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (
acm.amazonaws.com). |
default CompletableFuture<CreatePermissionResponse> |
createPermission(CreatePermissionRequest createPermissionRequest)
Grants one or more permissions on a private CA to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (
acm.amazonaws.com). |
default CompletableFuture<DeleteCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
deleteCertificateAuthority(Consumer<DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Deletes a private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<DeleteCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
deleteCertificateAuthority(DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Deletes a private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<DeletePermissionResponse> |
deletePermission(Consumer<DeletePermissionRequest.Builder> deletePermissionRequest)
Revokes permissions on a private CA granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default CompletableFuture<DeletePermissionResponse> |
deletePermission(DeletePermissionRequest deletePermissionRequest)
Revokes permissions on a private CA granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default CompletableFuture<DeletePolicyResponse> |
deletePolicy(Consumer<DeletePolicyRequest.Builder> deletePolicyRequest)
Deletes the resource-based policy attached to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<DeletePolicyResponse> |
deletePolicy(DeletePolicyRequest deletePolicyRequest)
Deletes the resource-based policy attached to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
describeCertificateAuthority(Consumer<DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> describeCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Lists information about your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
describeCertificateAuthority(DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest describeCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Lists information about your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> |
describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(Consumer<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder> describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Lists information about a specific audit report created by calling the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action.
|
default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> |
describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Lists information about a specific audit report created by calling the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateResponse> |
getCertificate(Consumer<GetCertificateRequest.Builder> getCertificateRequest)
Retrieves a certificate from your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateResponse> |
getCertificate(GetCertificateRequest getCertificateRequest)
Retrieves a certificate from your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> |
getCertificateAuthorityCertificate(Consumer<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder> getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Retrieves the certificate and certificate chain for your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been
shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> |
getCertificateAuthorityCertificate(GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Retrieves the certificate and certificate chain for your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been
shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrResponse> |
getCertificateAuthorityCsr(Consumer<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest.Builder> getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest)
Retrieves the certificate signing request (CSR) for your private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrResponse> |
getCertificateAuthorityCsr(GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest)
Retrieves the certificate signing request (CSR) for your private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<GetPolicyResponse> |
getPolicy(Consumer<GetPolicyRequest.Builder> getPolicyRequest)
Retrieves the resource-based policy attached to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<GetPolicyResponse> |
getPolicy(GetPolicyRequest getPolicyRequest)
Retrieves the resource-based policy attached to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> |
importCertificateAuthorityCertificate(Consumer<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder> importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Imports a signed private CA certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> |
importCertificateAuthorityCertificate(ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Imports a signed private CA certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<IssueCertificateResponse> |
issueCertificate(Consumer<IssueCertificateRequest.Builder> issueCertificateRequest)
Uses your private certificate authority (CA), or one that has been shared with you, to issue a client
certificate.
|
default CompletableFuture<IssueCertificateResponse> |
issueCertificate(IssueCertificateRequest issueCertificateRequest)
Uses your private certificate authority (CA), or one that has been shared with you, to issue a client
certificate.
|
default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> |
listCertificateAuthorities()
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> |
listCertificateAuthorities(Consumer<ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder> listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> |
listCertificateAuthorities(ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher |
listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator()
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher |
listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(Consumer<ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder> listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher |
listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
|
default CompletableFuture<ListPermissionsResponse> |
listPermissions(Consumer<ListPermissionsRequest.Builder> listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default CompletableFuture<ListPermissionsResponse> |
listPermissions(ListPermissionsRequest listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default ListPermissionsPublisher |
listPermissionsPaginator(Consumer<ListPermissionsRequest.Builder> listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default ListPermissionsPublisher |
listPermissionsPaginator(ListPermissionsRequest listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal
(acm.amazonaws.com).
|
default CompletableFuture<ListTagsResponse> |
listTags(Consumer<ListTagsRequest.Builder> listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<ListTagsResponse> |
listTags(ListTagsRequest listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default ListTagsPublisher |
listTagsPaginator(Consumer<ListTagsRequest.Builder> listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default ListTagsPublisher |
listTagsPaginator(ListTagsRequest listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you.
|
default CompletableFuture<PutPolicyResponse> |
putPolicy(Consumer<PutPolicyRequest.Builder> putPolicyRequest)
Attaches a resource-based policy to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<PutPolicyResponse> |
putPolicy(PutPolicyRequest putPolicyRequest)
Attaches a resource-based policy to a private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<RestoreCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
restoreCertificateAuthority(Consumer<RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Restores a certificate authority (CA) that is in the
DELETED state. |
default CompletableFuture<RestoreCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
restoreCertificateAuthority(RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Restores a certificate authority (CA) that is in the
DELETED state. |
default CompletableFuture<RevokeCertificateResponse> |
revokeCertificate(Consumer<RevokeCertificateRequest.Builder> revokeCertificateRequest)
Revokes a certificate that was issued inside Amazon Web Services Private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<RevokeCertificateResponse> |
revokeCertificate(RevokeCertificateRequest revokeCertificateRequest)
Revokes a certificate that was issued inside Amazon Web Services Private CA.
|
default AcmPcaServiceClientConfiguration |
serviceClientConfiguration() |
default CompletableFuture<TagCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
tagCertificateAuthority(Consumer<TagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> tagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Adds one or more tags to your private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<TagCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
tagCertificateAuthority(TagCertificateAuthorityRequest tagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Adds one or more tags to your private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<UntagCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
untagCertificateAuthority(Consumer<UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> untagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Remove one or more tags from your private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<UntagCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
untagCertificateAuthority(UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest untagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Remove one or more tags from your private CA.
|
default CompletableFuture<UpdateCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
updateCertificateAuthority(Consumer<UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> updateCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Updates the status or configuration of a private certificate authority (CA).
|
default CompletableFuture<UpdateCertificateAuthorityResponse> |
updateCertificateAuthority(UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest updateCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Updates the status or configuration of a private certificate authority (CA).
|
default AcmPcaAsyncWaiter |
waiter()
Create an instance of
AcmPcaAsyncWaiter using this client. |
serviceNameclosestatic final String SERVICE_NAME
static final String SERVICE_METADATA_ID
ServiceMetadataProvider.default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityResponse> createCertificateAuthority(CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest createCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Creates a root or subordinate private certificate authority (CA). You must specify the CA configuration, an optional configuration for Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) and/or a certificate revocation list (CRL), the CA type, and an optional idempotency token to avoid accidental creation of multiple CAs. The CA configuration specifies the name of the algorithm and key size to be used to create the CA private key, the type of signing algorithm that the CA uses, and X.500 subject information. The OCSP configuration can optionally specify a custom URL for the OCSP responder. The CRL configuration specifies the CRL expiration period in days (the validity period of the CRL), the Amazon S3 bucket that will contain the CRL, and a CNAME alias for the S3 bucket that is included in certificates issued by the CA. If successful, this action returns the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the CA.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA assets that are stored in Amazon S3 can be protected with encryption. For more information, see Encrypting Your CRLs.
createCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityResponse> createCertificateAuthority(Consumer<CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> createCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Creates a root or subordinate private certificate authority (CA). You must specify the CA configuration, an optional configuration for Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) and/or a certificate revocation list (CRL), the CA type, and an optional idempotency token to avoid accidental creation of multiple CAs. The CA configuration specifies the name of the algorithm and key size to be used to create the CA private key, the type of signing algorithm that the CA uses, and X.500 subject information. The OCSP configuration can optionally specify a custom URL for the OCSP responder. The CRL configuration specifies the CRL expiration period in days (the validity period of the CRL), the Amazon S3 bucket that will contain the CRL, and a CNAME alias for the S3 bucket that is included in certificates issued by the CA. If successful, this action returns the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the CA.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA assets that are stored in Amazon S3 can be protected with encryption. For more information, see Encrypting Your CRLs.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
createCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on CreateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create a
request.default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> createCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Creates an audit report that lists every time that your CA private key is used. The report is saved in the Amazon S3 bucket that you specify on input. The IssueCertificate and RevokeCertificate actions use the private key.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA assets that are stored in Amazon S3 can be protected with encryption. For more information, see Encrypting Your Audit Reports.
You can generate a maximum of one report every 30 minutes.
createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest - default CompletableFuture<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> createCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(Consumer<CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder> createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Creates an audit report that lists every time that your CA private key is used. The report is saved in the Amazon S3 bucket that you specify on input. The IssueCertificate and RevokeCertificate actions use the private key.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA assets that are stored in Amazon S3 can be protected with encryption. For more information, see Encrypting Your Audit Reports.
You can generate a maximum of one report every 30 minutes.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the
CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via
CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.builder()
createCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder
to create a request.default CompletableFuture<CreatePermissionResponse> createPermission(CreatePermissionRequest createPermissionRequest)
Grants one or more permissions on a private CA to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (
acm.amazonaws.com). These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in
the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
You can list current permissions with the ListPermissions action and revoke them with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
createPermissionRequest - default CompletableFuture<CreatePermissionResponse> createPermission(Consumer<CreatePermissionRequest.Builder> createPermissionRequest)
Grants one or more permissions on a private CA to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (
acm.amazonaws.com). These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in
the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
You can list current permissions with the ListPermissions action and revoke them with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the CreatePermissionRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via CreatePermissionRequest.builder()
createPermissionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on CreatePermissionRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<DeleteCertificateAuthorityResponse> deleteCertificateAuthority(DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Deletes a private certificate authority (CA). You must provide the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the private CA that you want to delete. You can find the ARN by calling the ListCertificateAuthorities action.
Deleting a CA will invalidate other CAs and certificates below it in your CA hierarchy.
Before you can delete a CA that you have created and activated, you must disable it. To do this, call the
UpdateCertificateAuthority action and set the CertificateAuthorityStatus parameter to
DISABLED.
Additionally, you can delete a CA if you are waiting for it to be created (that is, the status of the CA is
CREATING). You can also delete it if the CA has been created but you haven't yet imported the signed
certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA (that is, the status of the CA is
PENDING_CERTIFICATE).
When you successfully call DeleteCertificateAuthority, the CA's status changes to DELETED. However, the CA won't be
permanently deleted until the restoration period has passed. By default, if you do not set the
PermanentDeletionTimeInDays parameter, the CA remains restorable for 30 days. You can set the
parameter from 7 to 30 days. The DescribeCertificateAuthority action returns the time remaining in the restoration window of a private CA in
the DELETED state. To restore an eligible CA, call the RestoreCertificateAuthority action.
deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<DeleteCertificateAuthorityResponse> deleteCertificateAuthority(Consumer<DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Deletes a private certificate authority (CA). You must provide the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the private CA that you want to delete. You can find the ARN by calling the ListCertificateAuthorities action.
Deleting a CA will invalidate other CAs and certificates below it in your CA hierarchy.
Before you can delete a CA that you have created and activated, you must disable it. To do this, call the
UpdateCertificateAuthority action and set the CertificateAuthorityStatus parameter to
DISABLED.
Additionally, you can delete a CA if you are waiting for it to be created (that is, the status of the CA is
CREATING). You can also delete it if the CA has been created but you haven't yet imported the signed
certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA (that is, the status of the CA is
PENDING_CERTIFICATE).
When you successfully call DeleteCertificateAuthority, the CA's status changes to DELETED. However, the CA won't be
permanently deleted until the restoration period has passed. By default, if you do not set the
PermanentDeletionTimeInDays parameter, the CA remains restorable for 30 days. You can set the
parameter from 7 to 30 days. The DescribeCertificateAuthority action returns the time remaining in the restoration window of a private CA in
the DELETED state. To restore an eligible CA, call the RestoreCertificateAuthority action.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
deleteCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DeleteCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create a
request.default CompletableFuture<DeletePermissionResponse> deletePermission(DeletePermissionRequest deletePermissionRequest)
Revokes permissions on a private CA granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA. If you revoke these permissions, ACM will no longer renew the affected certificates automatically.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and listed with the ListPermissions action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
deletePermissionRequest - default CompletableFuture<DeletePermissionResponse> deletePermission(Consumer<DeletePermissionRequest.Builder> deletePermissionRequest)
Revokes permissions on a private CA granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA. If you revoke these permissions, ACM will no longer renew the affected certificates automatically.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and listed with the ListPermissions action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DeletePermissionRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via DeletePermissionRequest.builder()
deletePermissionRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DeletePermissionRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<DeletePolicyResponse> deletePolicy(DeletePolicyRequest deletePolicyRequest)
Deletes the resource-based policy attached to a private CA. Deletion will remove any access that the policy has granted. If there is no policy attached to the private CA, this action will return successful.
If you delete a policy that was applied through Amazon Web Services Resource Access Manager (RAM), the CA will be removed from all shares in which it was included.
The Certificate Manager Service Linked Role that the policy supports is not affected when you delete the policy.
The current policy can be shown with GetPolicy and updated with PutPolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
deletePolicyRequest - default CompletableFuture<DeletePolicyResponse> deletePolicy(Consumer<DeletePolicyRequest.Builder> deletePolicyRequest)
Deletes the resource-based policy attached to a private CA. Deletion will remove any access that the policy has granted. If there is no policy attached to the private CA, this action will return successful.
If you delete a policy that was applied through Amazon Web Services Resource Access Manager (RAM), the CA will be removed from all shares in which it was included.
The Certificate Manager Service Linked Role that the policy supports is not affected when you delete the policy.
The current policy can be shown with GetPolicy and updated with PutPolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DeletePolicyRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via DeletePolicyRequest.builder()
deletePolicyRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DeletePolicyRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityResponse> describeCertificateAuthority(DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest describeCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Lists information about your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you. You specify the private CA on input by its ARN (Amazon Resource Name). The output contains the status of your CA. This can be any of the following:
CREATING - Amazon Web Services Private CA is creating your private certificate authority.
PENDING_CERTIFICATE - The certificate is pending. You must use your Amazon Web Services Private
CA-hosted or on-premises root or subordinate CA to sign your private CA CSR and then import it into Amazon Web
Services Private CA.
ACTIVE - Your private CA is active.
DISABLED - Your private CA has been disabled.
EXPIRED - Your private CA certificate has expired.
FAILED - Your private CA has failed. Your CA can fail because of problems such a network outage or
back-end Amazon Web Services failure or other errors. A failed CA can never return to the pending state. You must
create a new CA.
DELETED - Your private CA is within the restoration period, after which it is permanently deleted.
The length of time remaining in the CA's restoration period is also included in this action's output.
describeCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityResponse> describeCertificateAuthority(Consumer<DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> describeCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Lists information about your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you. You specify the private CA on input by its ARN (Amazon Resource Name). The output contains the status of your CA. This can be any of the following:
CREATING - Amazon Web Services Private CA is creating your private certificate authority.
PENDING_CERTIFICATE - The certificate is pending. You must use your Amazon Web Services Private
CA-hosted or on-premises root or subordinate CA to sign your private CA CSR and then import it into Amazon Web
Services Private CA.
ACTIVE - Your private CA is active.
DISABLED - Your private CA has been disabled.
EXPIRED - Your private CA certificate has expired.
FAILED - Your private CA has failed. Your CA can fail because of problems such a network outage or
back-end Amazon Web Services failure or other errors. A failed CA can never return to the pending state. You must
create a new CA.
DELETED - Your private CA is within the restoration period, after which it is permanently deleted.
The length of time remaining in the CA's restoration period is also included in this action's output.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder
avoiding the need to create one manually via DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
describeCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on DescribeCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create
a request.default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Lists information about a specific audit report created by calling the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action. Audit information is created every time the certificate authority (CA) private key is used. The private key is used when you call the IssueCertificate action or the RevokeCertificate action.
describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest - default CompletableFuture<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportResponse> describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReport(Consumer<DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder> describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest)
Lists information about a specific audit report created by calling the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action. Audit information is created every time the certificate authority (CA) private key is used. The private key is used when you call the IssueCertificate action or the RevokeCertificate action.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the
DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via
DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.builder()
describeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on
DescribeCertificateAuthorityAuditReportRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateResponse> getCertificate(GetCertificateRequest getCertificateRequest)
Retrieves a certificate from your private CA or one that has been shared with you. The ARN of the certificate is returned when you call the IssueCertificate action. You must specify both the ARN of your private CA and the ARN of the issued certificate when calling the GetCertificate action. You can retrieve the certificate if it is in the ISSUED state. You can call the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action to create a report that contains information about all of the certificates issued and revoked by your private CA.
getCertificateRequest - default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateResponse> getCertificate(Consumer<GetCertificateRequest.Builder> getCertificateRequest)
Retrieves a certificate from your private CA or one that has been shared with you. The ARN of the certificate is returned when you call the IssueCertificate action. You must specify both the ARN of your private CA and the ARN of the issued certificate when calling the GetCertificate action. You can retrieve the certificate if it is in the ISSUED state. You can call the CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport action to create a report that contains information about all of the certificates issued and revoked by your private CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the GetCertificateRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via GetCertificateRequest.builder()
getCertificateRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on GetCertificateRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> getCertificateAuthorityCertificate(GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Retrieves the certificate and certificate chain for your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you. Both the certificate and the chain are base64 PEM-encoded. The chain does not include the CA certificate. Each certificate in the chain signs the one before it.
getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest - default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> getCertificateAuthorityCertificate(Consumer<GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder> getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Retrieves the certificate and certificate chain for your private certificate authority (CA) or one that has been shared with you. Both the certificate and the chain are base64 PEM-encoded. The chain does not include the CA certificate. Each certificate in the chain signs the one before it.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder
avoiding the need to create one manually via GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.builder()
getCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on GetCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder to
create a request.default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrResponse> getCertificateAuthorityCsr(GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest)
Retrieves the certificate signing request (CSR) for your private certificate authority (CA). The CSR is created when you call the CreateCertificateAuthority action. Sign the CSR with your Amazon Web Services Private CA-hosted or on-premises root or subordinate CA. Then import the signed certificate back into Amazon Web Services Private CA by calling the ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificate action. The CSR is returned as a base64 PEM-encoded string.
getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest - default CompletableFuture<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrResponse> getCertificateAuthorityCsr(Consumer<GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest.Builder> getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest)
Retrieves the certificate signing request (CSR) for your private certificate authority (CA). The CSR is created when you call the CreateCertificateAuthority action. Sign the CSR with your Amazon Web Services Private CA-hosted or on-premises root or subordinate CA. Then import the signed certificate back into Amazon Web Services Private CA by calling the ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificate action. The CSR is returned as a base64 PEM-encoded string.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest.builder()
getCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on GetCertificateAuthorityCsrRequest.Builder to create a
request.default CompletableFuture<GetPolicyResponse> getPolicy(GetPolicyRequest getPolicyRequest)
Retrieves the resource-based policy attached to a private CA. If either the private CA resource or the policy
cannot be found, this action returns a ResourceNotFoundException.
The policy can be attached or updated with PutPolicy and removed with DeletePolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
getPolicyRequest - default CompletableFuture<GetPolicyResponse> getPolicy(Consumer<GetPolicyRequest.Builder> getPolicyRequest)
Retrieves the resource-based policy attached to a private CA. If either the private CA resource or the policy
cannot be found, this action returns a ResourceNotFoundException.
The policy can be attached or updated with PutPolicy and removed with DeletePolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the GetPolicyRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via GetPolicyRequest.builder()
getPolicyRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on GetPolicyRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> importCertificateAuthorityCertificate(ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Imports a signed private CA certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA. This action is used when you are using a chain of trust whose root is located outside Amazon Web Services Private CA. Before you can call this action, the following preparations must in place:
In Amazon Web Services Private CA, call the CreateCertificateAuthority action to create the private CA that you plan to back with the imported certificate.
Call the GetCertificateAuthorityCsr action to generate a certificate signing request (CSR).
Sign the CSR using a root or intermediate CA hosted by either an on-premises PKI hierarchy or by a commercial CA.
Create a certificate chain and copy the signed certificate and the certificate chain to your working directory.
Amazon Web Services Private CA supports three scenarios for installing a CA certificate:
Installing a certificate for a root CA hosted by Amazon Web Services Private CA.
Installing a subordinate CA certificate whose parent authority is hosted by Amazon Web Services Private CA.
Installing a subordinate CA certificate whose parent authority is externally hosted.
The following additional requirements apply when you import a CA certificate.
Only a self-signed certificate can be imported as a root CA.
A self-signed certificate cannot be imported as a subordinate CA.
Your certificate chain must not include the private CA certificate that you are importing.
Your root CA must be the last certificate in your chain. The subordinate certificate, if any, that your root CA signed must be next to last. The subordinate certificate signed by the preceding subordinate CA must come next, and so on until your chain is built.
The chain must be PEM-encoded.
The maximum allowed size of a certificate is 32 KB.
The maximum allowed size of a certificate chain is 2 MB.
Enforcement of Critical Constraints
Amazon Web Services Private CA allows the following extensions to be marked critical in the imported CA certificate or chain.
Basic constraints (must be marked critical)
Subject alternative names
Key usage
Extended key usage
Authority key identifier
Subject key identifier
Issuer alternative name
Subject directory attributes
Subject information access
Certificate policies
Policy mappings
Inhibit anyPolicy
Amazon Web Services Private CA rejects the following extensions when they are marked critical in an imported CA certificate or chain.
Name constraints
Policy constraints
CRL distribution points
Authority information access
Freshest CRL
Any other extension
importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest - default CompletableFuture<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateResponse> importCertificateAuthorityCertificate(Consumer<ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder> importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest)
Imports a signed private CA certificate into Amazon Web Services Private CA. This action is used when you are using a chain of trust whose root is located outside Amazon Web Services Private CA. Before you can call this action, the following preparations must in place:
In Amazon Web Services Private CA, call the CreateCertificateAuthority action to create the private CA that you plan to back with the imported certificate.
Call the GetCertificateAuthorityCsr action to generate a certificate signing request (CSR).
Sign the CSR using a root or intermediate CA hosted by either an on-premises PKI hierarchy or by a commercial CA.
Create a certificate chain and copy the signed certificate and the certificate chain to your working directory.
Amazon Web Services Private CA supports three scenarios for installing a CA certificate:
Installing a certificate for a root CA hosted by Amazon Web Services Private CA.
Installing a subordinate CA certificate whose parent authority is hosted by Amazon Web Services Private CA.
Installing a subordinate CA certificate whose parent authority is externally hosted.
The following additional requirements apply when you import a CA certificate.
Only a self-signed certificate can be imported as a root CA.
A self-signed certificate cannot be imported as a subordinate CA.
Your certificate chain must not include the private CA certificate that you are importing.
Your root CA must be the last certificate in your chain. The subordinate certificate, if any, that your root CA signed must be next to last. The subordinate certificate signed by the preceding subordinate CA must come next, and so on until your chain is built.
The chain must be PEM-encoded.
The maximum allowed size of a certificate is 32 KB.
The maximum allowed size of a certificate chain is 2 MB.
Enforcement of Critical Constraints
Amazon Web Services Private CA allows the following extensions to be marked critical in the imported CA certificate or chain.
Basic constraints (must be marked critical)
Subject alternative names
Key usage
Extended key usage
Authority key identifier
Subject key identifier
Issuer alternative name
Subject directory attributes
Subject information access
Certificate policies
Policy mappings
Inhibit anyPolicy
Amazon Web Services Private CA rejects the following extensions when they are marked critical in an imported CA certificate or chain.
Name constraints
Policy constraints
CRL distribution points
Authority information access
Freshest CRL
Any other extension
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the
ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder avoiding the need to create one manually via
ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.builder()
importCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificateRequest.Builder
to create a request.default CompletableFuture<IssueCertificateResponse> issueCertificate(IssueCertificateRequest issueCertificateRequest)
Uses your private certificate authority (CA), or one that has been shared with you, to issue a client certificate. This action returns the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the certificate. You can retrieve the certificate by calling the GetCertificate action and specifying the ARN.
You cannot use the ACM ListCertificateAuthorities action to retrieve the ARNs of the certificates that you issue by using Amazon Web Services Private CA.
issueCertificateRequest - default CompletableFuture<IssueCertificateResponse> issueCertificate(Consumer<IssueCertificateRequest.Builder> issueCertificateRequest)
Uses your private certificate authority (CA), or one that has been shared with you, to issue a client certificate. This action returns the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the certificate. You can retrieve the certificate by calling the GetCertificate action and specifying the ARN.
You cannot use the ACM ListCertificateAuthorities action to retrieve the ARNs of the certificates that you issue by using Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the IssueCertificateRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via IssueCertificateRequest.builder()
issueCertificateRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on IssueCertificateRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> listCertificateAuthorities(ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest - NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> listCertificateAuthorities(Consumer<ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder> listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.builder()
listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder to create a
request.NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default CompletableFuture<ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse> listCertificateAuthorities()
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator()
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
This is a variant of
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation.
NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
This is a variant of
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation.
listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest - NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(Consumer<ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder> listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
Lists the private certificate authorities that you created by using the CreateCertificateAuthority action.
This is a variant of
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation. The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages.
SDK will internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListCertificateAuthoritiesPublisher publisher = client.listCertificateAuthoritiesPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listCertificateAuthorities(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest)
operation.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.builder()
listCertificateAuthoritiesRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListCertificateAuthoritiesRequest.Builder to create a
request.NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default CompletableFuture<ListPermissionsResponse> listPermissions(ListPermissionsRequest listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and revoked with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
listPermissionsRequest - NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default CompletableFuture<ListPermissionsResponse> listPermissions(Consumer<ListPermissionsRequest.Builder> listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and revoked with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListPermissionsRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via ListPermissionsRequest.builder()
listPermissionsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListPermissionsRequest.Builder to create a request.NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default ListPermissionsPublisher listPermissionsPaginator(ListPermissionsRequest listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and revoked with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a variant of
listPermissions(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsRequest) operation. The
return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will
internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListPermissionsPublisher publisher = client.listPermissionsPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListPermissionsPublisher publisher = client.listPermissionsPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listPermissions(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsRequest) operation.
listPermissionsRequest - NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default ListPermissionsPublisher listPermissionsPaginator(Consumer<ListPermissionsRequest.Builder> listPermissionsRequest)
List all permissions on a private CA, if any, granted to the Certificate Manager (ACM) service principal (acm.amazonaws.com).
These permissions allow ACM to issue and renew ACM certificates that reside in the same Amazon Web Services account as the CA.
Permissions can be granted with the CreatePermission action and revoked with the DeletePermission action.
About Permissions
If the private CA and the certificates it issues reside in the same account, you can use
CreatePermission to grant permissions for ACM to carry out automatic certificate renewals.
For automatic certificate renewal to succeed, the ACM service principal needs permissions to create, retrieve, and list certificates.
If the private CA and the ACM certificates reside in different accounts, then permissions cannot be used to enable automatic renewals. Instead, the ACM certificate owner must set up a resource-based policy to enable cross-account issuance and renewals. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
This is a variant of
listPermissions(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsRequest) operation. The
return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will
internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListPermissionsPublisher publisher = client.listPermissionsPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListPermissionsPublisher publisher = client.listPermissionsPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listPermissions(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListPermissionsRequest) operation.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListPermissionsRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via ListPermissionsRequest.builder()
listPermissionsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListPermissionsRequest.Builder to create a request.NextToken argument is not valid.
Use the token returned from your previous call to ListCertificateAuthorities.default CompletableFuture<ListTagsResponse> listTags(ListTagsRequest listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your CAs. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. Call the TagCertificateAuthority action to add one or more tags to your CA. Call the UntagCertificateAuthority action to remove tags.
listTagsRequest - default CompletableFuture<ListTagsResponse> listTags(Consumer<ListTagsRequest.Builder> listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your CAs. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. Call the TagCertificateAuthority action to add one or more tags to your CA. Call the UntagCertificateAuthority action to remove tags.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListTagsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via ListTagsRequest.builder()
listTagsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListTagsRequest.Builder to create a request.default ListTagsPublisher listTagsPaginator(ListTagsRequest listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your CAs. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. Call the TagCertificateAuthority action to add one or more tags to your CA. Call the UntagCertificateAuthority action to remove tags.
This is a variant of listTags(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsRequest) operation.
The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will
internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListTagsPublisher publisher = client.listTagsPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListTagsPublisher publisher = client.listTagsPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listTags(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsRequest) operation.
listTagsRequest - default ListTagsPublisher listTagsPaginator(Consumer<ListTagsRequest.Builder> listTagsRequest)
Lists the tags, if any, that are associated with your private CA or one that has been shared with you. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your CAs. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. Call the TagCertificateAuthority action to add one or more tags to your CA. Call the UntagCertificateAuthority action to remove tags.
This is a variant of listTags(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsRequest) operation.
The return type is a custom publisher that can be subscribed to request a stream of response pages. SDK will
internally handle making service calls for you.
When the operation is called, an instance of this class is returned. At this point, no service calls are made yet
and so there is no guarantee that the request is valid. If there are errors in your request, you will see the
failures only after you start streaming the data. The subscribe method should be called as a request to start
streaming data. For more info, see
Publisher.subscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber). Each call to the subscribe
method will result in a new Subscription i.e., a new contract to stream data from the
starting request.
The following are few ways to use the response class:
1) Using the subscribe helper method
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListTagsPublisher publisher = client.listTagsPaginator(request);
CompletableFuture<Void> future = publisher.subscribe(res -> { // Do something with the response });
future.get();
2) Using a custom subscriber
software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.paginators.ListTagsPublisher publisher = client.listTagsPaginator(request);
publisher.subscribe(new Subscriber<software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsResponse>() {
public void onSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber subscription) { //... };
public void onNext(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsResponse response) { //... };
});
As the response is a publisher, it can work well with third party reactive streams implementations like RxJava2.
Please notice that the configuration of MaxResults won't limit the number of results you get with the paginator. It only limits the number of results in each page.
Note: If you prefer to have control on service calls, use the
listTags(software.amazon.awssdk.services.acmpca.model.ListTagsRequest) operation.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the ListTagsRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via ListTagsRequest.builder()
listTagsRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on ListTagsRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<PutPolicyResponse> putPolicy(PutPolicyRequest putPolicyRequest)
Attaches a resource-based policy to a private CA.
A policy can also be applied by sharing a private CA through Amazon Web Services Resource Access Manager (RAM). For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
The policy can be displayed with GetPolicy and removed with DeletePolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
putPolicyRequest - default CompletableFuture<PutPolicyResponse> putPolicy(Consumer<PutPolicyRequest.Builder> putPolicyRequest)
Attaches a resource-based policy to a private CA.
A policy can also be applied by sharing a private CA through Amazon Web Services Resource Access Manager (RAM). For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
The policy can be displayed with GetPolicy and removed with DeletePolicy.
About Policies
A policy grants access on a private CA to an Amazon Web Services customer account, to Amazon Web Services Organizations, or to an Amazon Web Services Organizations unit. Policies are under the control of a CA administrator. For more information, see Using a Resource Based Policy with Amazon Web Services Private CA.
A policy permits a user of Certificate Manager (ACM) to issue ACM certificates signed by a CA in another account.
For ACM to manage automatic renewal of these certificates, the ACM user must configure a Service Linked Role (SLR). The SLR allows the ACM service to assume the identity of the user, subject to confirmation against the Amazon Web Services Private CA policy. For more information, see Using a Service Linked Role with ACM.
Updates made in Amazon Web Services Resource Manager (RAM) are reflected in policies. For more information, see Attach a Policy for Cross-Account Access.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the PutPolicyRequest.Builder avoiding the need to
create one manually via PutPolicyRequest.builder()
putPolicyRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on PutPolicyRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<RestoreCertificateAuthorityResponse> restoreCertificateAuthority(RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Restores a certificate authority (CA) that is in the DELETED state. You can restore a CA during the
period that you defined in the PermanentDeletionTimeInDays parameter of the DeleteCertificateAuthority action. Currently, you can specify 7 to 30 days. If you did not specify a
PermanentDeletionTimeInDays value, by default you can restore the CA at any time in a 30 day period. You
can check the time remaining in the restoration period of a private CA in the DELETED state by
calling the DescribeCertificateAuthority or ListCertificateAuthorities actions. The status of a restored CA is set to its pre-deletion status when the
RestoreCertificateAuthority action returns. To change its status to ACTIVE, call the UpdateCertificateAuthority action. If the private CA was in the PENDING_CERTIFICATE state at
deletion, you must use the ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificate action to import a certificate authority into the private CA before it
can be activated. You cannot restore a CA after the restoration period has ended.
restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<RestoreCertificateAuthorityResponse> restoreCertificateAuthority(Consumer<RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Restores a certificate authority (CA) that is in the DELETED state. You can restore a CA during the
period that you defined in the PermanentDeletionTimeInDays parameter of the DeleteCertificateAuthority action. Currently, you can specify 7 to 30 days. If you did not specify a
PermanentDeletionTimeInDays value, by default you can restore the CA at any time in a 30 day period. You
can check the time remaining in the restoration period of a private CA in the DELETED state by
calling the DescribeCertificateAuthority or ListCertificateAuthorities actions. The status of a restored CA is set to its pre-deletion status when the
RestoreCertificateAuthority action returns. To change its status to ACTIVE, call the UpdateCertificateAuthority action. If the private CA was in the PENDING_CERTIFICATE state at
deletion, you must use the ImportCertificateAuthorityCertificate action to import a certificate authority into the private CA before it
can be activated. You cannot restore a CA after the restoration period has ended.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder
avoiding the need to create one manually via RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
restoreCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on RestoreCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create
a request.default CompletableFuture<RevokeCertificateResponse> revokeCertificate(RevokeCertificateRequest revokeCertificateRequest)
Revokes a certificate that was issued inside Amazon Web Services Private CA. If you enable a certificate
revocation list (CRL) when you create or update your private CA, information about the revoked certificates will
be included in the CRL. Amazon Web Services Private CA writes the CRL to an S3 bucket that you specify. A CRL is
typically updated approximately 30 minutes after a certificate is revoked. If for any reason the CRL update
fails, Amazon Web Services Private CA attempts makes further attempts every 15 minutes. With Amazon CloudWatch,
you can create alarms for the metrics CRLGenerated and MisconfiguredCRLBucket. For more
information, see Supported
CloudWatch Metrics.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA also writes revocation information to the audit report. For more information, see CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport.
You cannot revoke a root CA self-signed certificate.
revokeCertificateRequest - default CompletableFuture<RevokeCertificateResponse> revokeCertificate(Consumer<RevokeCertificateRequest.Builder> revokeCertificateRequest)
Revokes a certificate that was issued inside Amazon Web Services Private CA. If you enable a certificate
revocation list (CRL) when you create or update your private CA, information about the revoked certificates will
be included in the CRL. Amazon Web Services Private CA writes the CRL to an S3 bucket that you specify. A CRL is
typically updated approximately 30 minutes after a certificate is revoked. If for any reason the CRL update
fails, Amazon Web Services Private CA attempts makes further attempts every 15 minutes. With Amazon CloudWatch,
you can create alarms for the metrics CRLGenerated and MisconfiguredCRLBucket. For more
information, see Supported
CloudWatch Metrics.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
Amazon Web Services Private CA also writes revocation information to the audit report. For more information, see CreateCertificateAuthorityAuditReport.
You cannot revoke a root CA self-signed certificate.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the RevokeCertificateRequest.Builder avoiding the need
to create one manually via RevokeCertificateRequest.builder()
revokeCertificateRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on RevokeCertificateRequest.Builder to create a request.default CompletableFuture<TagCertificateAuthorityResponse> tagCertificateAuthority(TagCertificateAuthorityRequest tagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Adds one or more tags to your private CA. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your Amazon Web Services resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You specify the private CA on input by its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You specify the tag by using a key-value pair. You can apply a tag to just one private CA if you want to identify a specific characteristic of that CA, or you can apply the same tag to multiple private CAs if you want to filter for a common relationship among those CAs. To remove one or more tags, use the UntagCertificateAuthority action. Call the ListTags action to see what tags are associated with your CA.
To attach tags to a private CA during the creation procedure, a CA administrator must first associate an inline
IAM policy with the CreateCertificateAuthority action and explicitly allow tagging. For more
information, see Attaching
tags to a CA at the time of creation.
tagCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<TagCertificateAuthorityResponse> tagCertificateAuthority(Consumer<TagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> tagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Adds one or more tags to your private CA. Tags are labels that you can use to identify and organize your Amazon Web Services resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You specify the private CA on input by its Amazon Resource Name (ARN). You specify the tag by using a key-value pair. You can apply a tag to just one private CA if you want to identify a specific characteristic of that CA, or you can apply the same tag to multiple private CAs if you want to filter for a common relationship among those CAs. To remove one or more tags, use the UntagCertificateAuthority action. Call the ListTags action to see what tags are associated with your CA.
To attach tags to a private CA during the creation procedure, a CA administrator must first associate an inline
IAM policy with the CreateCertificateAuthority action and explicitly allow tagging. For more
information, see Attaching
tags to a CA at the time of creation.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the TagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via TagCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
tagCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on TagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create a
request.default CompletableFuture<UntagCertificateAuthorityResponse> untagCertificateAuthority(UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest untagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Remove one or more tags from your private CA. A tag consists of a key-value pair. If you do not specify the value portion of the tag when calling this action, the tag will be removed regardless of value. If you specify a value, the tag is removed only if it is associated with the specified value. To add tags to a private CA, use the TagCertificateAuthority. Call the ListTags action to see what tags are associated with your CA.
untagCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<UntagCertificateAuthorityResponse> untagCertificateAuthority(Consumer<UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> untagCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Remove one or more tags from your private CA. A tag consists of a key-value pair. If you do not specify the value portion of the tag when calling this action, the tag will be removed regardless of value. If you specify a value, the tag is removed only if it is associated with the specified value. To add tags to a private CA, use the TagCertificateAuthority. Call the ListTags action to see what tags are associated with your CA.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
untagCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on UntagCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create a
request.default CompletableFuture<UpdateCertificateAuthorityResponse> updateCertificateAuthority(UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest updateCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Updates the status or configuration of a private certificate authority (CA). Your private CA must be in the
ACTIVE or DISABLED state before you can update it. You can disable a private CA that is
in the ACTIVE state or make a CA that is in the DISABLED state active again.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
updateCertificateAuthorityRequest - default CompletableFuture<UpdateCertificateAuthorityResponse> updateCertificateAuthority(Consumer<UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder> updateCertificateAuthorityRequest)
Updates the status or configuration of a private certificate authority (CA). Your private CA must be in the
ACTIVE or DISABLED state before you can update it. You can disable a private CA that is
in the ACTIVE state or make a CA that is in the DISABLED state active again.
Both Amazon Web Services Private CA and the IAM principal must have permission to write to the S3 bucket that you specify. If the IAM principal making the call does not have permission to write to the bucket, then an exception is thrown. For more information, see Access policies for CRLs in Amazon S3.
This is a convenience which creates an instance of the UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder avoiding
the need to create one manually via UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest.builder()
updateCertificateAuthorityRequest - A Consumer that will call methods on UpdateCertificateAuthorityRequest.Builder to create a
request.default AcmPcaAsyncWaiter waiter()
AcmPcaAsyncWaiter using this client.
Waiters created via this method are managed by the SDK and resources will be released when the service client is closed.
AcmPcaAsyncWaiterdefault AcmPcaServiceClientConfiguration serviceClientConfiguration()
serviceClientConfiguration in interface AwsClientserviceClientConfiguration in interface SdkClientstatic AcmPcaAsyncClient create()
AcmPcaAsyncClient with the region loaded from the
DefaultAwsRegionProviderChain and credentials loaded from the
DefaultCredentialsProvider.static AcmPcaAsyncClientBuilder builder()
AcmPcaAsyncClient.Copyright © 2023. All rights reserved.