Installation guide
DescribeEvents DescribeReplicationGroups
DescribeReservedCacheNodes DescribeReservedCacheNodesOfferings
ModifyCacheCluster ModifyCacheParameterGroup
ModifyCacheSubnetGroup ModifyReplicationGroup
PurchaseReservedCacheNodesOffering RebootCacheCluster
ResetCacheParameterGroup RevokeCacheSecurityGroupIngress
AWS Elastic Beanstalk
This guide focuses on the AWS SDK for PHP client for AWS Elastic Beanstalk. This guide assumes that you have
already downloaded and installed the AWS SDK for PHP. See Installation for more information on getting started.
Creating a client
First you need to create a client object using one of the following techniques.
Factory method
The easiest way to get up and running quickly is to use the
Aws\ElasticBeanstalk\ElasticBeanstalkClient::factory() method and provide your credentials
(key and secret).
A region parameter is also required and must be set to one of the following values: us-east-1,
ap-northeast-1, sa-east-1, ap-southeast-1, ap-southeast-2, us-west-2, us-west-1, eu-west-1
use Aws\ElasticBeanstalk\ElasticBeanstalkClient;
$client = ElasticBeanstalkClient::factory(array(
'key' => '<aws access key>',
'secret' => '<aws secret key>',
'region' => '<region name>'
));
You can provide your access keys like in the preceding example, or you can choose to omit them if you are using
AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles for EC2 instances or credentials sourced from the
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY environment variables.
Service builder
A more robust way to connect to AWS Elastic Beanstalk is through the service builder. This allows you to specify
credentials and other configuration settings in a configuration file. These settings can then be shared across all
clients so that you only have to specify your settings once.
use Aws\Common\Aws;
// Create a service builder using a configuration file
$aws = Aws::factory('/path/to/my_config.json');
// Get the client from the builder by namespace
$client = $aws->get('ElasticBeanstalk');
This guide is incomplete
This guide is not quite finished. If you are looking for a good way to contribute to the SDK and to the rest of the
AWS PHP community, then helping to write documentation is a great place to start. Our guides are written in
AWS Elastic Beanstalk
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