Class PutResourcePolicyRequest

    • Method Detail

      • resourceArn

        public final String resourceArn()

        The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the DynamoDB resource to which the policy will be attached. The resources you can specify include tables and streams.

        You can control index permissions using the base table's policy. To specify the same permission level for your table and its indexes, you can provide both the table and index Amazon Resource Name (ARN)s in the Resource field of a given Statement in your policy document. Alternatively, to specify different permissions for your table, indexes, or both, you can define multiple Statement fields in your policy document.

        Returns:
        The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the DynamoDB resource to which the policy will be attached. The resources you can specify include tables and streams.

        You can control index permissions using the base table's policy. To specify the same permission level for your table and its indexes, you can provide both the table and index Amazon Resource Name (ARN)s in the Resource field of a given Statement in your policy document. Alternatively, to specify different permissions for your table, indexes, or both, you can define multiple Statement fields in your policy document.

      • policy

        public final String policy()

        An Amazon Web Services resource-based policy document in JSON format.

        The maximum size supported for a resource-based policy document is 20 KB. DynamoDB counts whitespaces when calculating the size of a policy against this limit. For a full list of all considerations that you should keep in mind while attaching a resource-based policy, see Resource-based policy considerations.

        Returns:
        An Amazon Web Services resource-based policy document in JSON format.

        The maximum size supported for a resource-based policy document is 20 KB. DynamoDB counts whitespaces when calculating the size of a policy against this limit. For a full list of all considerations that you should keep in mind while attaching a resource-based policy, see Resource-based policy considerations.

      • expectedRevisionId

        public final String expectedRevisionId()

        A string value that you can use to conditionally update your policy. You can provide the revision ID of your existing policy to make mutating requests against that policy. When you provide an expected revision ID, if the revision ID of the existing policy on the resource doesn't match or if there's no policy attached to the resource, your request will be rejected with a PolicyNotFoundException.

        To conditionally put a policy when no policy exists for the resource, specify NO_POLICY for the revision ID.

        Returns:
        A string value that you can use to conditionally update your policy. You can provide the revision ID of your existing policy to make mutating requests against that policy. When you provide an expected revision ID, if the revision ID of the existing policy on the resource doesn't match or if there's no policy attached to the resource, your request will be rejected with a PolicyNotFoundException.

        To conditionally put a policy when no policy exists for the resource, specify NO_POLICY for the revision ID.

      • confirmRemoveSelfResourceAccess

        public final Boolean confirmRemoveSelfResourceAccess()

        Set this parameter to true to confirm that you want to remove your permissions to change the policy of this resource in the future.

        Returns:
        Set this parameter to true to confirm that you want to remove your permissions to change the policy of this resource in the future.
      • toString

        public final String toString()
        Returns a string representation of this object. This is useful for testing and debugging. Sensitive data will be redacted from this string using a placeholder value.
        Overrides:
        toString in class Object