amazonka-redshift: Amazon Redshift SDK.

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Amazon Redshift Overview This is an interface reference for Amazon Redshift. It contains documentation for one of the programming or command line interfaces you can use to manage Amazon Redshift clusters. Note that Amazon Redshift is asynchronous, which means that some interfaces may require techniques, such as polling or asynchronous callback handlers, to determine when a command has been applied. In this reference, the parameter descriptions indicate whether a change is applied immediately, on the next instance reboot, or during the next maintenance window. For a summary of the Amazon Redshift cluster management interfaces, go to Using the Amazon Redshift Management Interfaces. Amazon Redshift manages all the work of setting up, operating, and scaling a data warehouse: provisioning capacity, monitoring and backing up the cluster, and applying patches and upgrades to the Amazon Redshift engine. You can focus on using your data to acquire new insights for your business and customers. If you are a first-time user of Amazon Redshift, we recommend that you begin by reading the The Amazon Redshift Getting Started Guide If you are a database developer, the Amazon Redshift Database Developer Guide explains how to design, build, query, and maintain the databases that make up your data warehouse.

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

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

See Network.AWS.Redshift and the AWS API Reference to get started.


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Versions [RSS] 0.0.0, 0.0.1, 0.0.2, 0.0.3, 0.0.4, 0.0.5, 0.0.6, 0.0.7, 0.0.8, 0.1.0, 0.1.1, 0.1.2, 0.1.3, 0.1.4, 0.2.0, 0.2.1, 0.2.2, 0.2.3, 0.3.0, 0.3.1, 0.3.2, 0.3.3, 0.3.4, 0.3.5, 0.3.6, 1.0.0, 1.0.1, 1.1.0, 1.2.0, 1.2.0.1, 1.2.0.2, 1.3.0, 1.3.1, 1.3.2, 1.3.3, 1.3.3.1, 1.3.4, 1.3.5, 1.3.6, 1.3.7, 1.4.0, 1.4.1, 1.4.2, 1.4.3, 1.4.4, 1.4.5, 1.5.0, 1.6.0, 1.6.1, 2.0
Dependencies amazonka-core (>=1.3.3 && <1.3.4), base (>=4.7 && <5) [details]
License LicenseRef-OtherLicense
Copyright Copyright (c) 2013-2015 Brendan Hay
Author Brendan Hay
Maintainer Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay@gmail.com>
Category Network, AWS, Cloud, Distributed Computing
Home page https://github.com/brendanhay/amazonka
Bug tracker https://github.com/brendanhay/amazonka/issues
Source repo head: git clone git://github.com/brendanhay/amazonka.git
Uploaded by BrendanHay at 2015-10-09T10:42:31Z
Distributions LTSHaskell:2.0, NixOS:2.0
Reverse Dependencies 1 direct, 0 indirect [details]
Downloads 36750 total (161 in the last 30 days)
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Status Docs available [build log]
Last success reported on 2015-10-10 [all 1 reports]

Readme for amazonka-redshift-1.3.3

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Amazon Redshift SDK

Version

1.3.3

Description

Amazon Redshift Overview

This is an interface reference for Amazon Redshift. It contains documentation for one of the programming or command line interfaces you can use to manage Amazon Redshift clusters. Note that Amazon Redshift is asynchronous, which means that some interfaces may require techniques, such as polling or asynchronous callback handlers, to determine when a command has been applied. In this reference, the parameter descriptions indicate whether a change is applied immediately, on the next instance reboot, or during the next maintenance window. For a summary of the Amazon Redshift cluster management interfaces, go to <http://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/using-aws-sdk.html Using the Amazon Redshift Management Interfaces>.

Amazon Redshift manages all the work of setting up, operating, and scaling a data warehouse: provisioning capacity, monitoring and backing up the cluster, and applying patches and upgrades to the Amazon Redshift engine. You can focus on using your data to acquire new insights for your business and customers.

If you are a first-time user of Amazon Redshift, we recommend that you begin by reading the The <http://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/gsg/getting-started.html Amazon Redshift Getting Started Guide>

If you are a database developer, the <http://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/welcome.html Amazon Redshift Database Developer Guide> explains how to design, build, query, and maintain the databases that make up your data warehouse.

Documentation is available via Hackage and the AWS API Reference.

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

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

Contribute

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

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

Licence

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

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