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Paws::Glue::JobRun(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Paws::Glue::JobRun(3)

Paws::Glue::JobRun

This class represents one of two things:

Arguments in a call to a service

Use the attributes of this class as arguments to methods. You shouldn't make instances of this class. Each attribute should be used as a named argument in the calls that expect this type of object.

As an example, if Att1 is expected to be a Paws::Glue::JobRun object:

  $service_obj->Method(Att1 => { AllocatedCapacity => $value, ..., WorkerType => $value  });

Results returned from an API call

Use accessors for each attribute. If Att1 is expected to be an Paws::Glue::JobRun object:

  $result = $service_obj->Method(...);
  $result->Att1->AllocatedCapacity

Contains information about a job run.

This field is deprecated. Use "MaxCapacity" instead.

The number of Glue data processing units (DPUs) allocated to this JobRun. From 2 to 100 DPUs can be allocated; the default is 10. A DPU is a relative measure of processing power that consists of 4 vCPUs of compute capacity and 16 GB of memory. For more information, see the Glue pricing page (https://aws.amazon.com/glue/pricing/).

The job arguments associated with this run. For this job run, they replace the default arguments set in the job definition itself.

You can specify arguments here that your own job-execution script consumes, as well as arguments that Glue itself consumes.

For information about how to specify and consume your own job arguments, see the Calling Glue APIs in Python (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/aws-glue-programming-python-calling.html) topic in the developer guide.

For information about the key-value pairs that Glue consumes to set up your job, see the Special Parameters Used by Glue (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/aws-glue-programming-etl-glue-arguments.html) topic in the developer guide.

The number of the attempt to run this job.

The date and time that this job run completed.

An error message associated with this job run.

The amount of time (in seconds) that the job run consumed resources.

Glue version determines the versions of Apache Spark and Python that Glue supports. The Python version indicates the version supported for jobs of type Spark.

For more information about the available Glue versions and corresponding Spark and Python versions, see Glue version (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/add-job.html) in the developer guide.

Jobs that are created without specifying a Glue version default to Glue 0.9.

The ID of this job run.

The name of the job definition being used in this run.

The current state of the job run. For more information about the statuses of jobs that have terminated abnormally, see Glue Job Run Statuses (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/job-run-statuses.html).

The last time that this job run was modified.

The name of the log group for secure logging that can be server-side encrypted in Amazon CloudWatch using KMS. This name can be "/aws-glue/jobs/", in which case the default encryption is "NONE". If you add a role name and "SecurityConfiguration" name (in other words, "/aws-glue/jobs-yourRoleName-yourSecurityConfigurationName/"), then that security configuration is used to encrypt the log group.

The number of Glue data processing units (DPUs) that can be allocated when this job runs. A DPU is a relative measure of processing power that consists of 4 vCPUs of compute capacity and 16 GB of memory. For more information, see the Glue pricing page (https://aws.amazon.com/glue/pricing/).

Do not set "Max Capacity" if using "WorkerType" and "NumberOfWorkers".

The value that can be allocated for "MaxCapacity" depends on whether you are running a Python shell job or an Apache Spark ETL job:

  • When you specify a Python shell job ("JobCommand.Name"="pythonshell"), you can allocate either 0.0625 or 1 DPU. The default is 0.0625 DPU.
  • When you specify an Apache Spark ETL job ("JobCommand.Name"="glueetl"), you can allocate from 2 to 100 DPUs. The default is 10 DPUs. This job type cannot have a fractional DPU allocation.

Specifies configuration properties of a job run notification.

The number of workers of a defined "workerType" that are allocated when a job runs.

The maximum number of workers you can define are 299 for "G.1X", and 149 for "G.2X".

A list of predecessors to this job run.

The ID of the previous run of this job. For example, the "JobRunId" specified in the "StartJobRun" action.

The name of the "SecurityConfiguration" structure to be used with this job run.

The date and time at which this job run was started.

The "JobRun" timeout in minutes. This is the maximum time that a job run can consume resources before it is terminated and enters "TIMEOUT" status. The default is 2,880 minutes (48 hours). This overrides the timeout value set in the parent job.

The name of the trigger that started this job run.

The type of predefined worker that is allocated when a job runs. Accepts a value of Standard, G.1X, or G.2X.

  • For the "Standard" worker type, each worker provides 4 vCPU, 16 GB of memory and a 50GB disk, and 2 executors per worker.
  • For the "G.1X" worker type, each worker provides 4 vCPU, 16 GB of memory and a 64GB disk, and 1 executor per worker.
  • For the "G.2X" worker type, each worker provides 8 vCPU, 32 GB of memory and a 128GB disk, and 1 executor per worker.

This class forms part of Paws, describing an object used in Paws::Glue

The source code is located here: <https://github.com/pplu/aws-sdk-perl>

Please report bugs to: <https://github.com/pplu/aws-sdk-perl/issues>

2022-06-01 perl v5.40.2

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