See: Description
| Interface | Description |
|---|---|
| QldbSessionAsyncClient |
Service client for accessing QLDB Session asynchronously.
|
| QldbSessionAsyncClientBuilder |
A builder for creating an instance of
QldbSessionAsyncClient. |
| QldbSessionBaseClientBuilder<B extends QldbSessionBaseClientBuilder<B,C>,C> |
This includes configuration specific to QLDB Session that is supported by both
QldbSessionClientBuilder and
QldbSessionAsyncClientBuilder. |
| QldbSessionClient |
Service client for accessing QLDB Session.
|
| QldbSessionClientBuilder |
A builder for creating an instance of
QldbSessionClient. |
| QldbSessionServiceClientConfiguration.Builder |
A builder for creating a
QldbSessionServiceClientConfiguration |
| Class | Description |
|---|---|
| QldbSessionServiceClientConfiguration |
Class to expose the service client settings to the user.
|
The transactional data APIs for Amazon QLDB
Instead of interacting directly with this API, we recommend using the QLDB driver or the QLDB shell to execute data transactions on a ledger.
If you are working with an AWS SDK, use the QLDB driver. The driver provides a high-level abstraction layer above
this QLDB Session data plane and manages SendCommand API calls for you. For information and a
list of supported programming languages, see Getting started with the
driver in the Amazon QLDB Developer Guide.
If you are working with the AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI), use the QLDB shell. The shell is a command line interface that uses the QLDB driver to interact with a ledger. For information, see Accessing Amazon QLDB using the QLDB shell.
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