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Cisco Meraki v0.2.4 published on Friday, Jun 14, 2024 by Pulumi

meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses

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Cisco Meraki v0.2.4 published on Friday, Jun 14, 2024 by Pulumi

    ~>Warning: This resource does not represent a real-world entity in Meraki Dashboard, therefore changing or deleting this resource on its own has no immediate effect. Instead, it is a task part of a Meraki Dashboard workflow. It is executed in Meraki without any additional verification. It does not check if it was executed before or if a similar configuration or action already existed previously.

    Example Usage

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    package generated_program;
    
    import com.pulumi.Context;
    import com.pulumi.Pulumi;
    import com.pulumi.core.Output;
    import com.pulumi.meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses;
    import com.pulumi.meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs;
    import com.pulumi.meraki.networks.inputs.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs;
    import java.util.List;
    import java.util.ArrayList;
    import java.util.Map;
    import java.io.File;
    import java.nio.file.Files;
    import java.nio.file.Paths;
    
    public class App {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            Pulumi.run(App::stack);
        }
    
        public static void stack(Context ctx) {
            var example = new ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses("example", ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs.builder()
                .networkId("string")
                .parameters(ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs.builder()
                    .max_jitter(100)
                    .max_latency(100)
                    .max_loss_percentage(5)
                    .name("myCustomPerformanceClass")
                    .build())
                .build());
    
            ctx.export("merakiNetworksApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesExample", example);
        }
    }
    
    resources:
      example:
        type: meraki:networks:ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses
        properties:
          networkId: string
          parameters:
            max_jitter: 100
            max_latency: 100
            max_loss_percentage: 5
            name: myCustomPerformanceClass
    outputs:
      merakiNetworksApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesExample: ${example}
    

    Create ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses Resource

    Resources are created with functions called constructors. To learn more about declaring and configuring resources, see Resources.

    Constructor syntax

    new ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(name: string, args: ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs, opts?: CustomResourceOptions);
    @overload
    def ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(resource_name: str,
                                                        args: ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs,
                                                        opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None)
    
    @overload
    def ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(resource_name: str,
                                                        opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None,
                                                        network_id: Optional[str] = None,
                                                        parameters: Optional[ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs] = None)
    func NewApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(ctx *Context, name string, args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs, opts ...ResourceOption) (*ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses, error)
    public ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(string name, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs args, CustomResourceOptions? opts = null)
    public ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(String name, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs args)
    public ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(String name, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs args, CustomResourceOptions options)
    
    type: meraki:networks:ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses
    properties: # The arguments to resource properties.
    options: # Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
    
    

    Parameters

    name string
    The unique name of the resource.
    args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs
    The arguments to resource properties.
    opts CustomResourceOptions
    Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
    resource_name str
    The unique name of the resource.
    args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs
    The arguments to resource properties.
    opts ResourceOptions
    Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
    ctx Context
    Context object for the current deployment.
    name string
    The unique name of the resource.
    args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs
    The arguments to resource properties.
    opts ResourceOption
    Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
    name string
    The unique name of the resource.
    args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs
    The arguments to resource properties.
    opts CustomResourceOptions
    Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
    name String
    The unique name of the resource.
    args ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs
    The arguments to resource properties.
    options CustomResourceOptions
    Bag of options to control resource's behavior.

    Constructor example

    The following reference example uses placeholder values for all input properties.

    var applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource = new Meraki.Networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses("applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource", new()
    {
        NetworkId = "string",
        Parameters = new Meraki.Networks.Inputs.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs
        {
            MaxJitter = 0,
            MaxLatency = 0,
            MaxLossPercentage = 0,
            Name = "string",
        },
    });
    
    example, err := networks.NewApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(ctx, "applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource", &networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs{
    	NetworkId: pulumi.String("string"),
    	Parameters: &networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs{
    		MaxJitter:         pulumi.Int(0),
    		MaxLatency:        pulumi.Int(0),
    		MaxLossPercentage: pulumi.Int(0),
    		Name:              pulumi.String("string"),
    	},
    })
    
    var applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource = new ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses("applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource", ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesArgs.builder()
        .networkId("string")
        .parameters(ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs.builder()
            .maxJitter(0)
            .maxLatency(0)
            .maxLossPercentage(0)
            .name("string")
            .build())
        .build());
    
    appliance_traffic_shaping_custom_performance_classes_resource = meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses("applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource",
        network_id="string",
        parameters=meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs(
            max_jitter=0,
            max_latency=0,
            max_loss_percentage=0,
            name="string",
        ))
    
    const applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource = new meraki.networks.ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses("applianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesResource", {
        networkId: "string",
        parameters: {
            maxJitter: 0,
            maxLatency: 0,
            maxLossPercentage: 0,
            name: "string",
        },
    });
    
    type: meraki:networks:ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses
    properties:
        networkId: string
        parameters:
            maxJitter: 0
            maxLatency: 0
            maxLossPercentage: 0
            name: string
    

    ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses Resource Properties

    To learn more about resource properties and how to use them, see Inputs and Outputs in the Architecture and Concepts docs.

    Inputs

    The ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses resource accepts the following input properties:

    networkId String
    networkId path parameter. Network ID
    parameters Property Map

    Outputs

    All input properties are implicitly available as output properties. Additionally, the ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses resource produces the following output properties:

    Id string
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
    Id string
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
    id String
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
    id string
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
    id str
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
    id String
    The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.

    Look up Existing ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses Resource

    Get an existing ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses resource’s state with the given name, ID, and optional extra properties used to qualify the lookup.

    public static get(name: string, id: Input<ID>, state?: ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesState, opts?: CustomResourceOptions): ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses
    @staticmethod
    def get(resource_name: str,
            id: str,
            opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None,
            network_id: Optional[str] = None,
            parameters: Optional[ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs] = None) -> ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses
    func GetApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses(ctx *Context, name string, id IDInput, state *ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesState, opts ...ResourceOption) (*ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses, error)
    public static ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses Get(string name, Input<string> id, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesState? state, CustomResourceOptions? opts = null)
    public static ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClasses get(String name, Output<String> id, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesState state, CustomResourceOptions options)
    Resource lookup is not supported in YAML
    name
    The unique name of the resulting resource.
    id
    The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
    state
    Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
    opts
    A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
    resource_name
    The unique name of the resulting resource.
    id
    The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
    name
    The unique name of the resulting resource.
    id
    The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
    state
    Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
    opts
    A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
    name
    The unique name of the resulting resource.
    id
    The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
    state
    Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
    opts
    A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
    name
    The unique name of the resulting resource.
    id
    The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
    state
    Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
    opts
    A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
    The following state arguments are supported:
    networkId String
    networkId path parameter. Network ID
    parameters Property Map

    Supporting Types

    ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParameters, ApplianceTrafficShapingCustomPerformanceClassesParametersArgs

    MaxJitter int
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    MaxLatency int
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    MaxLossPercentage int
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    Name string
    Name of the custom performance class
    MaxJitter int
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    MaxLatency int
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    MaxLossPercentage int
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    Name string
    Name of the custom performance class
    maxJitter Integer
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    maxLatency Integer
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    maxLossPercentage Integer
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    name String
    Name of the custom performance class
    maxJitter number
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    maxLatency number
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    maxLossPercentage number
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    name string
    Name of the custom performance class
    max_jitter int
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    max_latency int
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    max_loss_percentage int
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    name str
    Name of the custom performance class
    maxJitter Number
    Maximum jitter in milliseconds
    maxLatency Number
    Maximum latency in milliseconds
    maxLossPercentage Number
    Maximum percentage of packet loss
    name String
    Name of the custom performance class

    Package Details

    Repository
    meraki pulumi/pulumi-meraki
    License
    Apache-2.0
    Notes
    This Pulumi package is based on the meraki Terraform Provider.
    meraki logo
    Cisco Meraki v0.2.4 published on Friday, Jun 14, 2024 by Pulumi