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Malicious PyPI Package Exploits Deezer API for Coordinated Music Piracy
Socket researchers uncovered a malicious PyPI package exploiting Deezer’s API to enable coordinated music piracy through API abuse and C2 server control.
@aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer
Advanced tools
AWS SDK for JavaScript Compute Optimizer Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
AWS SDK for JavaScript ComputeOptimizer Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native.
AWS Compute Optimizer is a service that analyzes the configuration and utilization metrics of your AWS compute resources, such as EC2 instances, Auto Scaling groups, and Amazon EBS volumes. It reports whether your resources are optimal, and generates optimization recommendations to reduce the cost and improve the performance of your workloads. Compute Optimizer also provides recent utilization metric data, as well as projected utilization metric data for the recommendations, which you can use to evaluate which recommendation provides the best price-performance trade-off. The analysis of your usage patterns can help you decide when to move or resize your running resources, and still meet your performance and capacity requirements. For more information about Compute Optimizer, including the required permissions to use the service, see the AWS Compute Optimizer User Guide.
To install the this package, simply type add or install @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer using your favorite package manager:
npm install @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer
yarn add @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer
pnpm add @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer
The AWS SDK is modulized by clients and commands.
To send a request, you only need to import the ComputeOptimizerClient
and
the commands you need, for example DescribeRecommendationExportJobsCommand
:
// ES5 example
const {
ComputeOptimizerClient,
DescribeRecommendationExportJobsCommand,
} = require("@aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer");
// ES6+ example
import { ComputeOptimizerClient, DescribeRecommendationExportJobsCommand } from "@aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer";
To send a request, you:
send
operation on client with command object as input.destroy()
to close open connections.// a client can be shared by difference commands.
const client = new ComputeOptimizerClient({ region: "REGION" });
const params = {
/** input parameters */
};
const command = new DescribeRecommendationExportJobsCommand(params);
We recommend using await operator to wait for the promise returned by send operation as follows:
// async/await.
try {
const data = await client.send(command);
// process data.
} catch (error) {
// error handling.
} finally {
// finally.
}
Async-await is clean, concise, intuitive, easy to debug and has better error handling as compared to using Promise chains or callbacks.
You can also use Promise chaining to execute send operation.
client.send(command).then(
(data) => {
// process data.
},
(error) => {
// error handling.
}
);
Promises can also be called using .catch()
and .finally()
as follows:
client
.send(command)
.then((data) => {
// process data.
})
.catch((error) => {
// error handling.
})
.finally(() => {
// finally.
});
We do not recommend using callbacks because of callback hell, but they are supported by the send operation.
// callbacks.
client.send(command, (err, data) => {
// proccess err and data.
});
The client can also send requests using v2 compatible style. However, it results in a bigger bundle size and may be dropped in next major version. More details in the blog post on modular packages in AWS SDK for JavaScript
import * as AWS from "@aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer";
const client = new AWS.ComputeOptimizer({ region: "REGION" });
// async/await.
try {
const data = client.describeRecommendationExportJobs(params);
// process data.
} catch (error) {
// error handling.
}
// Promises.
client
.describeRecommendationExportJobs(params)
.then((data) => {
// process data.
})
.catch((error) => {
// error handling.
});
// callbacks.
client.describeRecommendationExportJobs(params, (err, data) => {
// proccess err and data.
});
When the service returns an exception, the error will include the exception information, as well as response metadata (e.g. request id).
try {
const data = await client.send(command);
// process data.
} catch (error) {
const { requestId, cfId, extendedRequestId } = error.$metadata;
console.log({ requestId, cfId, extendedRequestId });
/**
* The keys within exceptions are also parsed.
* You can access them by specifying exception names:
* if (error.name === 'SomeServiceException') {
* const value = error.specialKeyInException;
* }
*/
}
Please use these community resources for getting help. We use the GitHub issues for tracking bugs and feature requests, but have limited bandwidth to address them.
aws-sdk-js
on AWS Developer Blog.aws-sdk-js
.To test your universal JavaScript code in Node.js, browser and react-native environments, visit our code samples repo.
This client code is generated automatically. Any modifications will be overwritten the next time the @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer
package is updated.
To contribute to client you can check our generate clients scripts.
This SDK is distributed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, see LICENSE for more information.
3.4.0 (2021-01-28)
FAQs
AWS SDK for JavaScript Compute Optimizer Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
The npm package @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer receives a total of 34,394 weekly downloads. As such, @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @aws-sdk/client-compute-optimizer demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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