SetVaultNotificationsResponse Class
(QtAws::Glacier::SetVaultNotificationsResponse)The SetVaultNotificationsResponse class provides an interace for Glacier SetVaultNotifications responses. More...
| Header: | #include <SetVaultNotificationsResponse> |
| Inherits: | QtAws::Glacier::GlacierResponse |
Public Functions
| SetVaultNotificationsResponse(const SetVaultNotificationsRequest &request, QNetworkReply * const reply, QObject * const parent = 0) |
Reimplemented Public Functions
| virtual const SetVaultNotificationsRequest * | request() const override |
- 7 public functions inherited from QtAws::Core::AwsAbstractResponse
Protected Slots
| virtual void | parseSuccess(QIODevice &response) override |
- 1 protected slot inherited from QtAws::Glacier::GlacierResponse
- 1 protected slot inherited from QtAws::Core::AwsAbstractResponse
Additional Inherited Members
- 1 signal inherited from QtAws::Core::AwsAbstractResponse
- 1 static public member inherited from QtAws::Core::AwsAbstractResponse
- 7 protected functions inherited from QtAws::Core::AwsAbstractResponse
Detailed Description
The SetVaultNotificationsResponse class provides an interace for Glacier SetVaultNotifications responses.
Amazon Glacier is a storage solution for "cold
data.>
Amazon Glacier is an extremely low-cost storage service that provides secure, durable, and easy-to-use storage for data backup and archival. With Amazon Glacier, customers can store their data cost effectively for months, years, or decades. Amazon Glacier also enables customers to offload the administrative burdens of operating and scaling storage to AWS, so they don't have to worry about capacity planning, hardware provisioning, data replication, hardware failure and recovery, or time-consuming hardware
migrations>
Amazon Glacier is a great storage choice when low storage cost is paramount, your data is rarely retrieved, and retrieval latency of several hours is acceptable. If your application requires fast or frequent access to your data, consider using Amazon S3. For more information, see <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/s3/">Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon
S3)</a>>
You can store any kind of data in any format. There is no maximum limit on the total amount of data you can store in Amazon
Glacier>
If you are a first-time user of Amazon Glacier, we recommend that you begin by reading the following sections in the <i>Amazon Glacier Developer
Guide</i>> <ul> <li>
<a href="http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazonglacier/latest/dev/introduction.html">What is Amazon Glacier</a> - This section of the Developer Guide describes the underlying data model, the operations it supports, and the AWS SDKs that you can use to interact with the
service> </li> <li>
<a href="http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazonglacier/latest/dev/amazon-glacier-getting-started.html">Getting Started with Amazon Glacier</a> - The Getting Started section walks you through the process of creating a vault, uploading archives, creating jobs to download archives, retrieving the job output, and deleting
See also GlacierClient::setVaultNotifications.
Member Function Documentation
SetVaultNotificationsResponse::SetVaultNotificationsResponse(const SetVaultNotificationsRequest &request, QNetworkReply * const reply, QObject * const parent = 0)
Constructs a SetVaultNotificationsResponse object for reply to request, with parent parent.
[override virtual protected slot] void SetVaultNotificationsResponse::parseSuccess(QIODevice &response)
Reimplemented from AwsAbstractResponse::parseSuccess().
Parses a successful Glacier SetVaultNotifications response.
[override virtual] const SetVaultNotificationsRequest *SetVaultNotificationsResponse::request() const
Reimplemented from AwsAbstractResponse::request().
© 2018 Paul Colby Documentation contributions included herein are the copyrights of their respective owners. The documentation provided herein is licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Qt and respective logos are trademarks of The Qt Company Ltd. in Finland and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.