AWS.Tools.AIOps.XML
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<doc> <assembly> <name>AWS.Tools.AIOps</name> </assembly> <members> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.AddAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet"> <summary> Assigns one or more tags (key-value pairs) to the specified resource. <para> Tags can help you organize and categorize your resources. You can also use them to scope user permissions by granting a user permission to access or change only resources with certain tag values. </para><para> Tags don't have any semantic meaning to Amazon Web Services and are interpreted strictly as strings of characters. </para><para> You can associate as many as 50 tags with a resource. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.AddAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn"> <summary> <para> <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource that you want to apply the tags to. You can use the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/operationalinvestigations/latest/AmazonQDeveloperOperationalInvestigationsAPIReference/API_ListInvestigationGroups.html">ListInvestigationGroups</a> operation to find the ARNs of investigation groups.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.AddAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Tag"> <summary> <para> <para>The list of key-value pairs to associate with the resource.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.AddAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.TagResourceResponse). Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.AddAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet"> <summary> Returns the configuration information for the specified investigation group. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to view.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.GetInvestigationGroupResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.GetInvestigationGroupResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupListCmdlet"> <summary> Returns the ARN and name of each investigation group in the account.<br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupListCmdlet.MaxResult"> <summary> <para> <para>The maximum number of results to return in one operation. If you omit this parameter, the default of 50 is used.</para> </para> <para> <br/><b>Note:</b> In AWSPowerShell and AWSPowerShell.NetCore this parameter is used to limit the total number of items returned by the cmdlet. <br/>In AWS.Tools this parameter is simply passed to the service to specify how many items should be returned by each service call. <br/>Pipe the output of this cmdlet into Select-Object -First to terminate retrieving data pages early and control the number of items returned. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupListCmdlet.NextToken"> <summary> <para> <para>Include this value, if it was returned by the previous operation, to get the next set of service operations.</para> </para> <para> <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call. <br/>'NextToken' is only returned by the cmdlet when '-Select *' is specified. In order to manually control output pagination, set '-NextToken' to null for the first call then set the 'NextToken' using the same property output from the previous call for subsequent calls. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupListCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'InvestigationGroups'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.ListInvestigationGroupsResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.ListInvestigationGroupsResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupListCmdlet.NoAutoIteration"> <summary> By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken as the start point. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet"> <summary> Returns the IAM resource policy that is associated with the specified investigation group. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to view the policy of.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.GetInvestigationGroupPolicyResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.GetInvestigationGroupPolicyResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet"> <summary> Displays the tags associated with a Amazon Q Developer operational investigations resource. Currently, investigation groups support tagging. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn"> <summary> <para> <para>The ARN of the Amazon Q Developer operational investigations resource that you want to view tags for. You can use the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/operationalinvestigations/latest/AmazonQDeveloperOperationalInvestigationsAPIReference/API_ListInvestigationGroups.html">ListInvestigationGroups</a> operation to find the ARNs of investigation groups.</para><para>The ARN format for an investigation group is <c>arn:aws:aiops:<i>Region</i>:<i>account-id</i>:investigation-group:<i>investigation-group-id</i></c>.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.GetAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'Tags'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.ListTagsForResourceResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.ListTagsForResourceResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet"> <summary> Creates an <i>investigation group</i> in your account. Creating an investigation group is a one-time setup task for each Region in your account. It is a necessary task to be able to perform investigations. <para> Settings in the investigation group help you centrally manage the common properties of your investigations, such as the following: </para><ul><li><para> Who can access the investigations </para></li><li><para> Whether investigation data is encrypted with a customer managed Key Management Service key. </para></li><li><para> How long investigations and their data are retained by default. </para></li></ul><para> Currently, you can have one investigation group in each Region in your account. Each investigation in a Region is a part of the investigation group in that Region </para><para> To create an investigation group and set up Amazon Q Developer operational investigations, you must be signed in to an IAM principal that has the either the <c>AIOpsConsoleAdminPolicy</c> or the <c>AdministratorAccess</c> IAM policy attached, or to an account that has similar permissions. </para><important><para> You can configure CloudWatch alarms to start investigations and add events to investigations. If you create your investigation group with <c>CreateInvestigationGroup</c> and you want to enable alarms to do this, you must use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/operationalinvestigations/latest/AmazonQDeveloperOperationalInvestigationsAPIReference/API_PutInvestigationGroupPolicy.html">PutInvestigationGroupPolicy</a> to create a resource policy that grants this permission to CloudWatch alarms. </para><para> For more information about configuring CloudWatch alarms to work with Amazon Q Developer operational investigations, see </para></important> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.ChatbotNotificationChannel"> <summary> <para> <para>Use this structure to integrate Amazon Q Developer operational investigations with Amazon Q in chat applications. This structure is a string array. For the first string, specify the ARN of an Amazon SNS topic. For the array of strings, specify the ARNs of one or more Amazon Q in chat applications configurations that you want to associate with that topic. For more information about these configuration ARNs, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/chatbot/latest/adminguide/getting-started.html">Getting started with Amazon Q in chat applications</a> and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/service-authorization/latest/reference/list_awschatbot.html#awschatbot-resources-for-iam-policies">Resource type defined by Amazon Web Services Chatbot</a>.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.IsCloudTrailEventHistoryEnabled"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify <c>true</c> to enable Amazon Q Developer operational investigations to have access to change events that are recorded by CloudTrail. The default is <c>true</c>.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.EncryptionConfiguration_KmsKeyId"> <summary> <para> <para>If the investigation group uses a customer managed key for encryption, this field displays the ID of that key.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Name"> <summary> <para> <para>A name for the investigation group.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.RetentionInDay"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify how long that investigation data is kept. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/monitoring/Investigations-Retention.html">Operational investigation data retention</a>. </para><para>If you omit this parameter, the default of 90 days is used.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.RoleArn"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify the ARN of the IAM role that Amazon Q Developer operational investigations will use when it gathers investigation data. The permissions in this role determine which of your resources that Amazon Q Developer operational investigations will have access to during investigations.</para><para>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/monitoring/Investigations-Security.html#Investigations-Security-Data">How to control what data Amazon Q has access to during investigations</a>.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.TagKeyBoundary"> <summary> <para> <para>Enter the existing custom tag keys for custom applications in your system. Resource tags help Amazon Q narrow the search space when it is unable to discover definite relationships between resources. For example, to discover that an Amazon ECS service depends on an Amazon RDS database, Amazon Q can discover this relationship using data sources such as X-Ray and CloudWatch Application Signals. However, if you haven't deployed these features, Amazon Q will attempt to identify possible relationships. Tag boundaries can be used to narrow the resources that will be discovered by Amazon Q in these cases.</para><para>You don't need to enter tags created by myApplications or CloudFormation, because Amazon Q can automatically detect those tags.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Tag"> <summary> <para> <para>A list of key-value pairs to associate with the investigation group. You can associate as many as 50 tags with an investigation group. To be able to associate tags when you create the investigation group, you must have the <c>cloudwatch:TagResource</c> permission.</para><para>Tags can help you organize and categorize your resources. You can also use them to scope user permissions by granting a user permission to access or change only resources with certain tag values.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.EncryptionConfiguration_Type"> <summary> <para> <para>Displays whether investigation data is encrypted by a customer managed key or an Amazon Web Services owned kay.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'Arn'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.CreateInvestigationGroupResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.CreateInvestigationGroupResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.NewAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet"> <summary> Deletes the specified investigation group from your account. You can currently have one investigation group per Region in your account. After you delete an investigation group, you can later create a new investigation group in the same Region. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to delete.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.DeleteInvestigationGroupResponse). Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet"> <summary> Removes the IAM resource policy from being associated with the investigation group that you specify. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to remove the policy from.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.DeleteInvestigationGroupPolicyResponse). Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet"> <summary> Removes one or more tags from the specified resource. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn"> <summary> <para> <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource that you want to remove the tags from. You can use the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/operationalinvestigations/latest/AmazonQDeveloperOperationalInvestigationsAPIReference/API_ListInvestigationGroups.html">ListInvestigationGroups</a> operation to find the ARNs of investigation groups.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.TagKey"> <summary> <para> <para>The list of tag keys to remove from the resource.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.UntagResourceResponse). Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.RemoveAIOpsResourceTagCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet"> <summary> Updates the configuration of the specified investigation group. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.ChatbotNotificationChannel"> <summary> <para> <para>Use this structure to integrate Amazon Q Developer operational investigations with Amazon Q in chat applications. This structure is a string array. For the first string, specify the ARN of an Amazon SNS topic. For the array of strings, specify the ARNs of one or more Amazon Q in chat applications configurations that you want to associate with that topic. For more information about these configuration ARNs, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/chatbot/latest/adminguide/getting-started.html">Getting started with Amazon Q in chat applications</a> and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/service-authorization/latest/reference/list_awschatbot.html#awschatbot-resources-for-iam-policies">Resource type defined by Amazon Web Services Chatbot</a>.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to modify.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.IsCloudTrailEventHistoryEnabled"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify <c>true</c> to enable Amazon Q Developer operational investigations to have access to change events that are recorded by CloudTrail. The default is <c>true</c>.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.EncryptionConfiguration_KmsKeyId"> <summary> <para> <para>If the investigation group uses a customer managed key for encryption, this field displays the ID of that key.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.RoleArn"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify this field if you want to change the IAM role that Amazon Q Developer operational investigations will use when it gathers investigation data. To do so, specify the ARN of the new role.</para><para>The permissions in this role determine which of your resources that Amazon Q Developer operational investigations will have access to during investigations.</para><para>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudWatch/latest/monitoring/Investigations-Security.html#Investigations-Security-Data">EHow to control what data Amazon Q has access to during investigations</a>.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.TagKeyBoundary"> <summary> <para> <para>Enter the existing custom tag keys for custom applications in your system. Resource tags help Amazon Q narrow the search space when it is unable to discover definite relationships between resources. For example, to discover that an Amazon ECS service depends on an Amazon RDS database, Amazon Q can discover this relationship using data sources such as X-Ray and CloudWatch Application Signals. However, if you haven't deployed these features, Amazon Q will attempt to identify possible relationships. Tag boundaries can be used to narrow the resources that will be discovered by Amazon Q in these cases.</para><para>You don't need to enter tags created by myApplications or CloudFormation, because Amazon Q can automatically detect those tags.</para><para /> Starting with version 4 of the SDK this property will default to null. If no data for this property is returned from the service the property will also be null. This was changed to improve performance and allow the SDK and caller to distinguish between a property not set or a property being empty to clear out a value. To retain the previous SDK behavior set the AWSConfigs.InitializeCollections static property to true. </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.EncryptionConfiguration_Type"> <summary> <para> <para>Displays whether investigation data is encrypted by a customer managed key or an Amazon Web Services owned kay.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.UpdateInvestigationGroupResponse). Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.UpdateAIOpsInvestigationGroupCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.WriteAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet"> <summary> Creates an IAM resource policy and assigns it to the specified investigation group. <para> If you create your investigation group with <c>CreateInvestigationGroup</c> and you want to enable CloudWatch alarms to create investigations and add events to investigations, you must use this operation to create a policy similar to this example. </para><para><c>{ "Version": "2008-10-17", "Statement": [{ "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "Service": "aiops.alarms.cloudwatch.amazonaws.com" }, "Action": ["aiops:CreateInvestigation", "aiops:CreateInvestigationEvent"], "Resource": "*", "Condition": { "StringEquals": { "aws:SourceAccount": "<i>account-id</i>" }, "ArnLike": { "aws:SourceArn": "arn:aws:cloudwatch:<i>region</i>:<i>account-id</i>:alarm:*" } } }] }</c></para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.WriteAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Identifier"> <summary> <para> <para>Specify either the name or the ARN of the investigation group that you want to assign the policy to.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.WriteAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Policy"> <summary> <para> <para>The policy, in JSON format.</para> </para> </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.WriteAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Select"> <summary> Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'InvestigationGroupArn'. Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.AIOps.Model.PutInvestigationGroupPolicyResponse). Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.AIOps.Model.PutInvestigationGroupPolicyResponse will result in that property being returned. Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value. </summary> </member> <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.AIOps.WriteAIOpsInvestigationGroupPolicyCmdlet.Force"> <summary> This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always be used with caution. </summary> </member> </members> </doc> |