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agent-claw/cdk/node_modules/aws-cdk-lib/aws-eks-v2/lib/fargate-profile.d.ts
2026-05-06 18:55:16 -05:00

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import { Construct } from 'constructs';
import type { Cluster } from './cluster';
import * as ec2 from '../../aws-ec2';
import * as iam from '../../aws-iam';
import type { ITaggable, RemovalPolicy } from '../../core';
import { TagManager } from '../../core';
/**
* Options for defining EKS Fargate Profiles.
*/
export interface FargateProfileOptions {
/**
* The name of the Fargate profile.
* @default - generated
*/
readonly fargateProfileName?: string;
/**
* The pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the
* Fargate profile. The pod execution role allows Fargate infrastructure to
* register with your cluster as a node, and it provides read access to Amazon
* ECR image repositories.
*
* @see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/pod-execution-role.html
* @default - a role will be automatically created
*/
readonly podExecutionRole?: iam.IRole;
/**
* The selectors to match for pods to use this Fargate profile. Each selector
* must have an associated namespace. Optionally, you can also specify labels
* for a namespace.
*
* At least one selector is required and you may specify up to five selectors.
*/
readonly selectors: Selector[];
/**
* The VPC from which to select subnets to launch your pods into.
*
* By default, all private subnets are selected. You can customize this using
* `subnetSelection`.
*
* @default - all private subnets used by the EKS cluster
*/
readonly vpc?: ec2.IVpc;
/**
* Select which subnets to launch your pods into. At this time, pods running
* on Fargate are not assigned public IP addresses, so only private subnets
* (with no direct route to an Internet Gateway) are allowed.
*
* You must specify the VPC to customize the subnet selection
*
* @default - all private subnets of the VPC are selected.
*/
readonly subnetSelection?: ec2.SubnetSelection;
/**
* The removal policy applied to the custom resource that manages the Fargate profile.
*
* The removal policy controls what happens to the resource if it stops being managed by CloudFormation.
* This can happen in one of three situations:
*
* - The resource is removed from the template, so CloudFormation stops managing it
* - A change to the resource is made that requires it to be replaced, so CloudFormation stops managing it
* - The stack is deleted, so CloudFormation stops managing all resources in it
*
* @default RemovalPolicy.DESTROY
*/
readonly removalPolicy?: RemovalPolicy;
}
/**
* Configuration props for EKS Fargate Profiles.
*/
export interface FargateProfileProps extends FargateProfileOptions {
/**
* The EKS cluster to apply the Fargate profile to.
* [disable-awslint:ref-via-interface]
*/
readonly cluster: Cluster;
}
/**
* Fargate profile selector.
*/
export interface Selector {
/**
* The Kubernetes namespace that the selector should match.
*
* You must specify a namespace for a selector. The selector only matches pods
* that are created in this namespace, but you can create multiple selectors
* to target multiple namespaces.
*/
readonly namespace: string;
/**
* The Kubernetes labels that the selector should match. A pod must contain
* all of the labels that are specified in the selector for it to be
* considered a match.
*
* @default - all pods within the namespace will be selected.
*/
readonly labels?: {
[key: string]: string;
};
}
/**
* Fargate profiles allows an administrator to declare which pods run on
* Fargate. This declaration is done through the profiles selectors. Each
* profile can have up to five selectors that contain a namespace and optional
* labels. You must define a namespace for every selector. The label field
* consists of multiple optional key-value pairs. Pods that match a selector (by
* matching a namespace for the selector and all of the labels specified in the
* selector) are scheduled on Fargate. If a namespace selector is defined
* without any labels, Amazon EKS will attempt to schedule all pods that run in
* that namespace onto Fargate using the profile. If a to-be-scheduled pod
* matches any of the selectors in the Fargate profile, then that pod is
* scheduled on Fargate.
*
* If a pod matches multiple Fargate profiles, Amazon EKS picks one of the
* matches at random. In this case, you can specify which profile a pod should
* use by adding the following Kubernetes label to the pod specification:
* eks.amazonaws.com/fargate-profile: profile_name. However, the pod must still
* match a selector in that profile in order to be scheduled onto Fargate.
*/
export declare class FargateProfile extends Construct implements ITaggable {
/**
* The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Fargate profile.
*
* @attribute
*/
readonly fargateProfileArn: string;
/**
* The name of the Fargate profile.
*
* @attribute
*/
readonly fargateProfileName: string;
/**
* Resource tags.
*/
readonly tags: TagManager;
/**
* The pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the
* Fargate profile. The pod execution role allows Fargate infrastructure to
* register with your cluster as a node, and it provides read access to Amazon
* ECR image repositories.
*/
readonly podExecutionRole: iam.IRole;
constructor(scope: Construct, id: string, props: FargateProfileProps);
}