Copyright | (c) 2013-2016 Brendan Hay |
---|---|
License | Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
Maintainer | Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay@gmail.com> |
Stability | auto-generated |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Deletes the specified mount target.
This operation forcibly breaks any mounts of the file system via the mount target being deleted, which might disrupt instances or applications using those mounts. To avoid applications getting cut off abruptly, you might consider unmounting any mounts of the mount target, if feasible. The operation also deletes the associated network interface. Uncommitted writes may be lost, but breaking a mount target using this operation does not corrupt the file system itself. The file system you created remains. You can mount an EC2 instance in your VPC using another mount target.
This operation requires permission for the following action on the file system:
- 'elasticfilesystem:DeleteMountTarget'
The DeleteMountTarget
call returns while the mount target state is
still "deleting". You can check the mount target deletion by calling
the DescribeMountTargets API, which returns a list of mount target
descriptions for the given file system.
The operation also requires permission for the following Amazon EC2 action on the mount target's network interface:
- 'ec2:DeleteNetworkInterface'
Creating a Request
Creates a value of DeleteMountTarget
with the minimum fields required to make a request.
Use one of the following lenses to modify other fields as desired:
data DeleteMountTarget Source #
See: deleteMountTarget
smart constructor.
Request Lenses
dMountTargetId :: Lens' DeleteMountTarget Text Source #
String. The ID of the mount target to delete.
Destructuring the Response
deleteMountTargetResponse :: DeleteMountTargetResponse Source #
Creates a value of DeleteMountTargetResponse
with the minimum fields required to make a request.
data DeleteMountTargetResponse Source #
See: deleteMountTargetResponse
smart constructor.