import type { DocumentType as __DocumentType } from "@smithy/types"; import type { DeletionProtectionType, DeviceRememberedStatusType, ExplicitAuthFlowsType, FeedbackValueType, OAuthFlowType, PreventUserExistenceErrorTypes, TermsEnforcementType, TermsSourceType, UpdateReplicaStatusType, UserPoolMfaType, UserPoolTierType, VerifiedAttributeType, VerifySoftwareTokenResponseType } from "./enums"; import type { AccountRecoverySettingType, AdminCreateUserConfigType, AnalyticsConfigurationType, AssetType, AttributeType, CodeDeliveryDetailsType, CustomDomainConfigType, DeviceConfigurationType, EmailConfigurationType, GroupType, IdentityProviderType, IssuerConfigurationType, KeyConfigurationType, LambdaConfigType, ManagedLoginBrandingType, RefreshTokenRotationType, ResourceServerScopeType, ResourceServerType, RoutingType, SmsConfigurationType, TermsType, TokenValidityUnitsType, UserAttributeUpdateSettingsType, UserPoolAddOnsType, UserPoolClientType, UserPoolPolicyType, UserPoolReplicaType, VerificationMessageTemplateType } from "./models_0"; /** * @public */ export interface UntagResourceResponse { } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateAuthEventFeedbackRequest { /** *
The ID of the user pool where you want to update auth event feedback.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The name of the user that you want to query or modify. The value of this parameter
* is typically your user's username, but it can be any of their alias attributes. If
* username isn't an alias attribute in your user pool, this value
* must be the sub of a local user or the username of a user from a
* third-party IdP.
The ID of the authentication event that you want to submit feedback for.
* @public */ EventId: string | undefined; /** *The feedback token, an encrypted object generated by Amazon Cognito and passed to your user in * the notification email message from the event.
* @public */ FeedbackToken: string | undefined; /** *Your feedback to the authentication event. When you provide a FeedbackValue
* value of valid, you tell Amazon Cognito that you trust a user session where Amazon Cognito
* has evaluated some level of risk. When you provide a FeedbackValue value of
* invalid, you tell Amazon Cognito that you don't trust a user session, or you
* don't believe that Amazon Cognito evaluated a high-enough risk level.
Represents the request to update the device status.
* @public */ export interface UpdateDeviceStatusRequest { /** *A valid access token that Amazon Cognito issued to the currently signed-in user. Must include a scope claim for
* aws.cognito.signin.user.admin.
The device key of the device you want to update, for example
* us-west-2_a1b2c3d4-5678-90ab-cdef-EXAMPLE11111.
To enable device authentication with the specified device, set to
* remembered.To disable, set to not_remembered.
The response to the request to update the device status.
* @public */ export interface UpdateDeviceStatusResponse { } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateGroupRequest { /** *The name of the group that you want to update.
* @public */ GroupName: string | undefined; /** *The ID of the user pool that contains the group you want to update.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *A new description of the existing group.
* @public */ Description?: string | undefined; /** *The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an IAM role that you want to associate with the
* group. The role assignment contributes to the cognito:roles and
* cognito:preferred_role claims in group members' tokens.
A non-negative integer value that specifies the precedence of this group relative to
* the other groups that a user can belong to in the user pool. Zero is the highest
* precedence value. Groups with lower Precedence values take precedence over
* groups with higher or null Precedence values. If a user belongs to two or
* more groups, it is the group with the lowest precedence value whose role ARN is given in
* the user's tokens for the cognito:roles and
* cognito:preferred_role claims.
Two groups can have the same Precedence value. If this happens, neither
* group takes precedence over the other. If two groups with the same
* Precedence have the same role ARN, that role is used in the
* cognito:preferred_role claim in tokens for users in each group. If the
* two groups have different role ARNs, the cognito:preferred_role claim isn't
* set in users' tokens.
The default Precedence value is null. The maximum Precedence
* value is 2^31-1.
Contains the updated details of the group, including precedence, IAM role, and * description.
* @public */ Group?: GroupType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateIdentityProviderRequest { /** *The Id of the user pool where you want to update your IdP.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The name of the IdP that you want to update. You can pass the identity provider name
* in the identity_provider query parameter of requests to the Authorize endpoint to silently redirect to sign-in with the associated
* IdP.
The scopes, URLs, and identifiers for your external identity provider. The following
* examples describe the provider detail keys for each IdP type. These values and their
* schema are subject to change. Social IdP authorize_scopes values must match
* the values listed here.
Amazon Cognito accepts the following elements when it can't discover endpoint
* URLs from oidc_issuer: attributes_url,
* authorize_url, jwks_uri,
* token_url.
Create or update request: "ProviderDetails": \{
* "attributes_request_method": "GET", "attributes_url":
* "https://auth.example.com/userInfo", "authorize_scopes": "openid profile
* email", "authorize_url": "https://auth.example.com/authorize",
* "client_id": "1example23456789", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret", "jwks_uri":
* "https://auth.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json", "oidc_issuer":
* "https://auth.example.com", "token_url": "https://example.com/token"
* \}
*
Describe response: "ProviderDetails": \{ "attributes_request_method":
* "GET", "attributes_url": "https://auth.example.com/userInfo",
* "attributes_url_add_attributes": "false", "authorize_scopes": "openid
* profile email", "authorize_url": "https://auth.example.com/authorize",
* "client_id": "1example23456789", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret", "jwks_uri":
* "https://auth.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json", "oidc_issuer":
* "https://auth.example.com", "token_url": "https://example.com/token"
* \}
*
Create or update request with Metadata URL: "ProviderDetails": \{ "IDPInit": "true",
* "IDPSignout": "true", "EncryptedResponses" : "true", "MetadataURL":
* "https://auth.example.com/sso/saml/metadata", "RequestSigningAlgorithm":
* "rsa-sha256" \}
*
Create or update request with Metadata file: "ProviderDetails": \{ "IDPInit": "true",
* "IDPSignout": "true", "EncryptedResponses" : "true",
* "MetadataFile": "[metadata XML]", "RequestSigningAlgorithm":
* "rsa-sha256" \}
*
The value of MetadataFile must be the plaintext metadata document with all
* quote (") characters escaped by backslashes.
Describe response: "ProviderDetails": \{ "IDPInit": "true",
* "IDPSignout": "true", "EncryptedResponses" : "true", "ActiveEncryptionCertificate": "[certificate]",
* "MetadataURL": "https://auth.example.com/sso/saml/metadata", "RequestSigningAlgorithm":
* "rsa-sha256", "SLORedirectBindingURI":
* "https://auth.example.com/slo/saml", "SSORedirectBindingURI":
* "https://auth.example.com/sso/saml" \}
*
Create or update request: "ProviderDetails": \{ "authorize_scopes":
* "profile postal_code", "client_id":
* "amzn1.application-oa2-client.1example23456789", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret"
*
Describe response: "ProviderDetails": \{ "attributes_url":
* "https://api.amazon.com/user/profile", "attributes_url_add_attributes":
* "false", "authorize_scopes": "profile postal_code", "authorize_url":
* "https://www.amazon.com/ap/oa", "client_id":
* "amzn1.application-oa2-client.1example23456789", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret", "token_request_method": "POST",
* "token_url": "https://api.amazon.com/auth/o2/token" \}
*
Create or update request: "ProviderDetails": \{ "authorize_scopes":
* "email profile openid", "client_id":
* "1example23456789.apps.googleusercontent.com", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret" \}
*
Describe response: "ProviderDetails": \{ "attributes_url":
* "https://people.googleapis.com/v1/people/me?personFields=",
* "attributes_url_add_attributes": "true", "authorize_scopes": "email
* profile openid", "authorize_url":
* "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth", "client_id":
* "1example23456789.apps.googleusercontent.com", "client_secret":
* "provider-app-client-secret", "oidc_issuer":
* "https://accounts.google.com", "token_request_method": "POST",
* "token_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v4/token"
* \}
*
Create or update request: "ProviderDetails": \{ "authorize_scopes":
* "email name", "client_id": "com.example.cognito", "private_key": "1EXAMPLE",
* "key_id": "2EXAMPLE", "team_id": "3EXAMPLE" \}
*
Describe response: "ProviderDetails": \{
* "attributes_url_add_attributes": "false", "authorize_scopes": "email
* name", "authorize_url": "https://appleid.apple.com/auth/authorize",
* "client_id": "com.example.cognito", "key_id": "1EXAMPLE", "oidc_issuer":
* "https://appleid.apple.com", "team_id": "2EXAMPLE",
* "token_request_method": "POST", "token_url":
* "https://appleid.apple.com/auth/token" \}
*
Create or update request: "ProviderDetails": \{ "api_version": "v17.0",
* "authorize_scopes": "public_profile, email", "client_id": "1example23456789",
* "client_secret": "provider-app-client-secret" \}
*
Describe response: "ProviderDetails":
* \{ "api_version": "v17.0", "attributes_url": "https://graph.facebook.com/v17.0/me?fields=",
* "attributes_url_add_attributes": "true", "authorize_scopes": "public_profile, email",
* "authorize_url": "https://www.facebook.com/v17.0/dialog/oauth", "client_id":
* "1example23456789", "client_secret": "provider-app-client-secret", "token_request_method":
* "GET", "token_url": "https://graph.facebook.com/v17.0/oauth/access_token" \}
*
A mapping of IdP attributes to standard and custom user pool attributes. Specify a * user pool attribute as the key of the key-value pair, and the IdP attribute claim name * as the value.
* @public */ AttributeMapping?: RecordAn array of IdP identifiers, for example "IdPIdentifiers": [ "MyIdP", "MyIdP2"
* ]. Identifiers are friendly names that you can pass in the
* idp_identifier query parameter of requests to the Authorize endpoint to silently redirect to sign-in with the associated IdP.
* Identifiers in a domain format also enable the use of email-address matching with SAML providers.
The identity provider details.
* @public */ IdentityProvider: IdentityProviderType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateManagedLoginBrandingRequest { /** *The ID of the user pool that contains the managed login branding style that you want * to update.
* @public */ UserPoolId?: string | undefined; /** *The ID of the managed login branding style that you want to update.
* @public */ ManagedLoginBrandingId?: string | undefined; /** *When true, applies the default branding style options. This option
* reverts to default style options that are managed by Amazon Cognito. You can modify them later in
* the branding editor.
When you specify true for this option, you must also omit values for
* Settings and Assets in the request.
A JSON file, encoded as a Document type, with the the settings that you
* want to apply to your style.
The following components are not currently implemented and reserved for future * use:
*
* signUp
*
* instructions
*
* sessionTimerDisplay
*
* languageSelector (for localization, see Managed login localization)
*
An array of image files that you want to apply to roles like backgrounds, logos, and * icons. Each object must also indicate whether it is for dark mode, light mode, or * browser-adaptive mode.
* @public */ Assets?: AssetType[] | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateManagedLoginBrandingResponse { /** *The details of the branding style that you updated.
* @public */ ManagedLoginBranding?: ManagedLoginBrandingType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateResourceServerRequest { /** *The ID of the user pool that contains the resource server that you want to * update.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *A unique resource server identifier for the resource server. The identifier can be an
* API friendly name like solar-system-data. You can also set an API URL like
* https://solar-system-data-api.example.com as your identifier.
Amazon Cognito represents scopes in the access token in the format
* $resource-server-identifier/$scope. Longer scope-identifier strings
* increase the size of your access tokens.
The updated name of the resource server.
* @public */ Name: string | undefined; /** *An array of updated custom scope names and descriptions that you want to associate * with your resource server.
* @public */ Scopes?: ResourceServerScopeType[] | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateResourceServerResponse { /** *The updated details of the requested resource server.
* @public */ ResourceServer: ResourceServerType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateTermsRequest { /** *The ID of the terms document that you want to update.
* @public */ TermsId: string | undefined; /** *The ID of the user pool that contains the terms that you want to update.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The new name that you want to apply to the requested terms documents.
* @public */ TermsName?: string | undefined; /** *This parameter is reserved for future use and currently accepts only one value.
* @public */ TermsSource?: TermsSourceType | undefined; /** *This parameter is reserved for future use and currently accepts only one value.
* @public */ Enforcement?: TermsEnforcementType | undefined; /** *A map of URLs to languages. For each localized language that will view the requested
* TermsName, assign a URL. A selection of cognito:default
* displays for all languages that don't have a language-specific URL.
For example, "cognito:default": "https://terms.example.com", "cognito:spanish":
* "https://terms.example.com/es".
A summary of the updates to your terms documents.
* @public */ Terms?: TermsType | undefined; } /** *Represents the request to update user attributes.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserAttributesRequest { /** *An array of name-value pairs representing user attributes.
*For custom attributes, you must add a custom: prefix to the attribute
* name.
If you have set an attribute to require verification before Amazon Cognito updates its value, * this request doesn’t immediately update the value of that attribute. After your user * receives and responds to a verification message to verify the new value, Amazon Cognito updates * the attribute value. Your user can sign in and receive messages with the original * attribute value until they verify the new value.
* @public */ UserAttributes: AttributeType[] | undefined; /** *A valid access token that Amazon Cognito issued to the currently signed-in user. Must include a scope claim for
* aws.cognito.signin.user.admin.
A map of custom key-value pairs that you can provide as input for any custom workflows * that this action triggers. You create custom workflows by assigning Lambda functions * to user pool triggers.
*When Amazon Cognito invokes any of these functions, it passes a JSON payload, which the
* function receives as input. This payload contains a clientMetadata
* attribute that provides the data that you assigned to the ClientMetadata parameter in
* your request. In your function code, you can process the clientMetadata
* value to enhance your workflow for your specific needs.
To review the Lambda trigger types that Amazon Cognito invokes at runtime with API requests, see * Connecting API actions to Lambda triggers in the Amazon Cognito Developer Guide.
*When you use the ClientMetadata parameter, note that Amazon Cognito won't do the
* following:
Store the ClientMetadata value. This data is available only
* to Lambda triggers that are assigned to a user pool to support custom
* workflows. If your user pool configuration doesn't include triggers, the
* ClientMetadata parameter serves no purpose.
Validate the ClientMetadata value.
Encrypt the ClientMetadata value. Don't send sensitive
* information in this parameter.
Represents the response from the server for the request to update user * attributes.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserAttributesResponse { /** *When the attribute-update request includes an email address or phone number attribute,
* Amazon Cognito sends a message to users with a code that confirms ownership of the new value that
* they entered. The CodeDeliveryDetails object is information about the
* delivery destination for that link or code. This behavior happens in user pools
* configured to automatically verify changes to those attributes. For more information,
* see Verifying when users change their email or phone
* number.
Represents the request to update the user pool.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolRequest { /** *The ID of the user pool you want to update.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The password policy and sign-in policy in the user pool. The password policy sets * options like password complexity requirements and password history. The sign-in policy * sets the options available to applications in choice-based authentication.
* @public */ Policies?: UserPoolPolicyType | undefined; /** *When active, DeletionProtection prevents accidental deletion of your user
* pool. Before you can delete a user pool that you have protected against deletion, you
* must deactivate this feature.
When you try to delete a protected user pool in a DeleteUserPool API request,
* Amazon Cognito returns an InvalidParameterException error. To delete a protected user pool,
* send a new DeleteUserPool request after you deactivate deletion protection in an
* UpdateUserPool API request.
A collection of user pool Lambda triggers. Amazon Cognito invokes triggers at several possible * stages of authentication operations. Triggers can modify the outcome of the operations * that invoked them.
* @public */ LambdaConfig?: LambdaConfigType | undefined; /** *The attributes that you want your user pool to automatically verify. Possible values: * email, phone_number. For more information see Verifying contact information at sign-up.
* @public */ AutoVerifiedAttributes?: VerifiedAttributeType[] | undefined; /** *This parameter is no longer used.
* @public */ SmsVerificationMessage?: string | undefined; /** *This parameter is no longer used.
* @public */ EmailVerificationMessage?: string | undefined; /** *This parameter is no longer used.
* @public */ EmailVerificationSubject?: string | undefined; /** *The template for the verification message that your user pool delivers to users who * set an email address or phone number attribute.
*Set the email message type that corresponds to your DefaultEmailOption
* selection. For CONFIRM_WITH_LINK, specify an
* EmailMessageByLink and leave EmailMessage blank. For
* CONFIRM_WITH_CODE, specify an EmailMessage and leave
* EmailMessageByLink blank. When you supply both parameters with either
* choice, Amazon Cognito returns an error.
The contents of the SMS message that your user pool sends to users in SMS * authentication.
* @public */ SmsAuthenticationMessage?: string | undefined; /** *The settings for updates to user attributes. These settings include the property AttributesRequireVerificationBeforeUpdate,
* a user-pool setting that tells Amazon Cognito how to handle changes to the value of your users' email address and phone number attributes. For
* more information, see
* Verifying updates to email addresses and phone numbers.
Sets multi-factor authentication (MFA) to be on, off, or optional. When
* ON, all users must set up MFA before they can sign in. When
* OPTIONAL, your application must make a client-side determination of
* whether a user wants to register an MFA device. For user pools with adaptive
* authentication with threat protection, choose OPTIONAL.
When MfaConfiguration is OPTIONAL, managed login
* doesn't automatically prompt users to set up MFA. Amazon Cognito generates MFA prompts in
* API responses and in managed login for users who have chosen and configured a preferred
* MFA factor.
The device-remembering configuration for a user pool. Device remembering or device * tracking is a "Remember me on this device" option for user pools that perform * authentication with the device key of a trusted device in the back end, instead of a * user-provided MFA code. For more information about device authentication, see Working with user devices in your user pool. A null value indicates that * you have deactivated device remembering in your user pool.
*When you provide a value for any DeviceConfiguration field, you
* activate the Amazon Cognito device-remembering feature. For more information, see Working with devices.
The email configuration of your user pool. The email configuration type sets your * preferred sending method, Amazon Web Services Region, and sender for email invitation and verification * messages from your user pool.
* @public */ EmailConfiguration?: EmailConfigurationType | undefined; /** *The SMS configuration with the settings for your Amazon Cognito user pool to send SMS message * with Amazon Simple Notification Service. To send SMS messages with Amazon SNS in the Amazon Web Services Region that you want, the * Amazon Cognito user pool uses an Identity and Access Management (IAM) role in your Amazon Web Services account. For * more information see SMS message settings.
* @public */ SmsConfiguration?: SmsConfigurationType | undefined; /** *The tag keys and values to assign to the user pool. A tag is a label that you can use * to categorize and manage user pools in different ways, such as by purpose, owner, * environment, or other criteria.
* @public */ UserPoolTags?: RecordThe configuration for administrative creation of users. Includes the template for the * invitation message for new users, the duration of temporary passwords, and permitting * self-service sign-up.
* @public */ AdminCreateUserConfig?: AdminCreateUserConfigType | undefined; /** *Contains settings for activation of threat protection, including the operating
* mode and additional authentication types. To log user security information but take
* no action, set to AUDIT. To configure automatic security responses to
* potentially unwanted traffic to your user pool, set to ENFORCED.
For more information, see Adding advanced security to a user pool. To activate this setting, your user pool must be on the * Plus tier.
* @public */ UserPoolAddOns?: UserPoolAddOnsType | undefined; /** *The available verified method a user can use to recover their password when they call
* ForgotPassword. You can use this setting to define a preferred method
* when a user has more than one method available. With this setting, SMS doesn't qualify
* for a valid password recovery mechanism if the user also has SMS multi-factor
* authentication (MFA) activated. In the absence of this setting, Amazon Cognito uses the legacy
* behavior to determine the recovery method where SMS is preferred through email.
The updated name of your user pool.
* @public */ PoolName?: string | undefined; /** *The user pool feature plan, or tier. This parameter determines the
* eligibility of the user pool for features like managed login, access-token
* customization, and threat protection. Defaults to ESSENTIALS.
The key configuration for the user pool. In secondary regions, this parameter must * match the existing configuration and cannot be modified.
* @public */ KeyConfiguration?: KeyConfigurationType | undefined; /** *The issuer configuration for the user pool. In secondary regions, this parameter must * match the existing configuration and cannot be modified.
* @public */ IssuerConfiguration?: IssuerConfigurationType | undefined; } /** *Represents the response from the server when you make a request to update the user * pool.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolResponse { } /** *Represents the request to update the user pool client.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolClientRequest { /** *The ID of the user pool where you want to update the app client.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The ID of the app client that you want to update.
* @public */ ClientId: string | undefined; /** *A friendly name for the app client.
* @public */ ClientName?: string | undefined; /** *The refresh token time limit. After this limit expires, your user can't use
* their refresh token. To specify the time unit for RefreshTokenValidity as
* seconds, minutes, hours, or days,
* set a TokenValidityUnits value in your API request.
For example, when you set RefreshTokenValidity as 10 and
* TokenValidityUnits as days, your user can refresh their session
* and retrieve new access and ID tokens for 10 days.
The default time unit for RefreshTokenValidity in an API request is days.
* You can't set RefreshTokenValidity to 0. If you do, Amazon Cognito overrides the
* value with the default value of 30 days. Valid range is displayed below
* in seconds.
If you don't specify otherwise in the configuration of your app client, your refresh * tokens are valid for 30 days.
* @public */ RefreshTokenValidity?: number | undefined; /** *The access token time limit. After this limit expires, your user can't use
* their access token. To specify the time unit for AccessTokenValidity as
* seconds, minutes, hours, or days,
* set a TokenValidityUnits value in your API request.
For example, when you set AccessTokenValidity to 10 and
* TokenValidityUnits to hours, your user can authorize access with
* their access token for 10 hours.
The default time unit for AccessTokenValidity in an API request is hours.
* Valid range is displayed below in seconds.
If you don't specify otherwise in the configuration of your app client, your access * tokens are valid for one hour.
* @public */ AccessTokenValidity?: number | undefined; /** *The ID token time limit. After this limit expires, your user can't use
* their ID token. To specify the time unit for IdTokenValidity as
* seconds, minutes, hours, or days,
* set a TokenValidityUnits value in your API request.
For example, when you set IdTokenValidity as 10 and
* TokenValidityUnits as hours, your user can authenticate their
* session with their ID token for 10 hours.
The default time unit for IdTokenValidity in an API request is hours.
* Valid range is displayed below in seconds.
If you don't specify otherwise in the configuration of your app client, your ID * tokens are valid for one hour.
* @public */ IdTokenValidity?: number | undefined; /** *The units that validity times are represented in. The default unit for refresh tokens * is days, and the default for ID and access tokens are hours.
* @public */ TokenValidityUnits?: TokenValidityUnitsType | undefined; /** *The list of user attributes that you want your app client to have read access to. * After your user authenticates in your app, their access token authorizes them to read * their own attribute value for any attribute in this list.
*When you don't specify the ReadAttributes for your app client, your
* app can read the values of email_verified,
* phone_number_verified, and the standard attributes of your user pool.
* When your user pool app client has read access to these default attributes,
* ReadAttributes doesn't return any information. Amazon Cognito only
* populates ReadAttributes in the API response if you have specified your own
* custom set of read attributes.
The list of user attributes that you want your app client to have write access to. * After your user authenticates in your app, their access token authorizes them to set or * modify their own attribute value for any attribute in this list.
*When you don't specify the WriteAttributes for your app client, your
* app can write the values of the Standard attributes of your user pool. When your user
* pool has write access to these default attributes, WriteAttributes
* doesn't return any information. Amazon Cognito only populates
* WriteAttributes in the API response if you have specified your own
* custom set of write attributes.
If your app client allows users to sign in through an IdP, this array must include all * attributes that you have mapped to IdP attributes. Amazon Cognito updates mapped attributes when * users sign in to your application through an IdP. If your app client does not have write * access to a mapped attribute, Amazon Cognito throws an error when it tries to update the * attribute. For more information, see Specifying IdP Attribute Mappings for Your user * pool.
* @public */ WriteAttributes?: string[] | undefined; /** *The authentication flows that you want your user pool client to support. For each app * client in your user pool, you can sign in your users with any combination of one or more flows, including with * a user name and Secure Remote Password (SRP), a user name and password, or a custom authentication process that * you define with Lambda functions.
*If you don't specify a value for ExplicitAuthFlows, your app client supports
* ALLOW_REFRESH_TOKEN_AUTH, ALLOW_USER_SRP_AUTH, and ALLOW_CUSTOM_AUTH.
*
The values for authentication flow options include the following.
*
* ALLOW_USER_AUTH: Enable selection-based sign-in
* with USER_AUTH. This setting covers username-password,
* secure remote password (SRP), passwordless, and passkey authentication.
* This authentiation flow can do username-password and SRP authentication
* without other ExplicitAuthFlows permitting them. For example
* users can complete an SRP challenge through USER_AUTH
* without the flow USER_SRP_AUTH being active for the app
* client. This flow doesn't include CUSTOM_AUTH.
*
To activate this setting, your user pool must be in the * Essentials tier or higher.
*
* ALLOW_ADMIN_USER_PASSWORD_AUTH: Enable admin based user password
* authentication flow ADMIN_USER_PASSWORD_AUTH. This setting replaces
* the ADMIN_NO_SRP_AUTH setting. With this authentication flow, your app
* passes a user name and password to Amazon Cognito in the request, instead of using the Secure
* Remote Password (SRP) protocol to securely transmit the password.
* ALLOW_CUSTOM_AUTH: Enable Lambda trigger based
* authentication.
* ALLOW_USER_PASSWORD_AUTH: Enable user password-based
* authentication. In this flow, Amazon Cognito receives the password in the request instead
* of using the SRP protocol to verify passwords.
* ALLOW_USER_SRP_AUTH: Enable SRP-based authentication.
* ALLOW_REFRESH_TOKEN_AUTH: Enable authflow to refresh
* tokens.
In some environments, you will see the values ADMIN_NO_SRP_AUTH, CUSTOM_AUTH_FLOW_ONLY, or USER_PASSWORD_AUTH.
* You can't assign these legacy ExplicitAuthFlows values to user pool clients at the same time as values that begin with ALLOW_,
* like ALLOW_USER_SRP_AUTH.
A list of provider names for the identity providers (IdPs) that are supported on this
* client. The following are supported: COGNITO, Facebook,
* Google, SignInWithApple, and LoginWithAmazon.
* You can also specify the names that you configured for the SAML and OIDC IdPs in your
* user pool, for example MySAMLIdP or MyOIDCIdP.
This parameter sets the IdPs that managed
* login will display on the login page for your app client. The removal of
* COGNITO from this list doesn't prevent authentication operations
* for local users with the user pools API in an Amazon Web Services SDK. The only way to prevent
* SDK-based authentication is to block access with a WAF rule.
*
A list of allowed redirect, or callback, URLs for managed login authentication. These * URLs are the paths where you want to send your users' browsers after they complete * authentication with managed login or a third-party IdP. Typically, callback URLs are the * home of an application that uses OAuth or OIDC libraries to process authentication * outcomes.
*A redirect URI must meet the following requirements:
*Be an absolute URI.
*Be registered with the authorization server. Amazon Cognito doesn't accept
* authorization requests with redirect_uri values that aren't in
* the list of CallbackURLs that you provide in this parameter.
Not include a fragment component.
*See OAuth 2.0 - * Redirection Endpoint.
*Amazon Cognito requires HTTPS over HTTP except for http://localhost for testing purposes * only.
*App callback URLs such as myapp://example are also supported.
A list of allowed logout URLs for managed login authentication. When you pass
* logout_uri and client_id parameters to
* /logout, Amazon Cognito signs out your user and redirects them to the logout
* URL. This parameter describes the URLs that you want to be the permitted targets of
* logout_uri. A typical use of these URLs is when a user selects "Sign
* out" and you redirect them to your public homepage. For more information, see Logout
* endpoint.
The default redirect URI. In app clients with one assigned IdP, replaces
* redirect_uri in authentication requests. Must be in the
* CallbackURLs list.
The OAuth grant types that you want your app client to generate. To create an app
* client that generates client credentials grants, you must add
* client_credentials as the only allowed OAuth flow.
Use a code grant flow, which provides an authorization code as the
* response. This code can be exchanged for access tokens with the
* /oauth2/token endpoint.
Issue the access token (and, optionally, ID token, based on scopes) * directly to your user.
*Issue the access token from the /oauth2/token endpoint
* directly to a non-person user using a combination of the client ID and
* client secret.
The OAuth, OpenID Connect (OIDC), and custom scopes that you want to permit your app
* client to authorize access with. Scopes govern access control to user pool self-service
* API operations, user data from the userInfo endpoint, and third-party APIs.
* Scope values include phone, email, openid, and
* profile. The aws.cognito.signin.user.admin scope
* authorizes user self-service operations. Custom scopes with resource servers authorize
* access to external APIs.
Set to true to use OAuth 2.0 authorization server features in your app client.
This parameter must have a value of true before you can configure
* the following features in your app client.
* CallBackURLs: Callback URLs.
* LogoutURLs: Sign-out redirect URLs.
* AllowedOAuthScopes: OAuth 2.0 scopes.
* AllowedOAuthFlows: Support for authorization code, implicit, and client credentials OAuth 2.0 grants.
To use authorization server features, configure one of these features in the Amazon Cognito console or set
* AllowedOAuthFlowsUserPoolClient to true in a CreateUserPoolClient or
* UpdateUserPoolClient API request. If you don't set a value for
* AllowedOAuthFlowsUserPoolClient in a request with the CLI or SDKs, it defaults
* to false. When false, only SDK-based API sign-in is permitted.
The user pool analytics configuration for collecting metrics and sending them to your * Amazon Pinpoint campaign.
*In Amazon Web Services Regions where Amazon Pinpoint isn't available, user pools might not have access to * analytics or might be configurable with campaigns in the US East (N. Virginia) Region. For * more information, see Using Amazon Pinpoint analytics.
* @public */ AnalyticsConfiguration?: AnalyticsConfigurationType | undefined; /** *When ENABLED, suppresses messages that might indicate a valid user exists
* when someone attempts sign-in. This parameters sets your preference for the errors and
* responses that you want Amazon Cognito APIs to return during authentication, account
* confirmation, and password recovery when the user doesn't exist in the user pool. When
* set to ENABLED and the user doesn't exist, authentication returns an error
* indicating either the username or password was incorrect. Account confirmation and
* password recovery return a response indicating a code was sent to a simulated
* destination. When set to LEGACY, those APIs return a
* UserNotFoundException exception if the user doesn't exist in the user
* pool.
Defaults to LEGACY.
Activates or deactivates token * revocation in the target app client.
* @public */ EnableTokenRevocation?: boolean | undefined; /** *When true, your application can include additional
* UserContextData in authentication requests. This data includes the IP
* address, and contributes to analysis by threat protection features. For more information
* about propagation of user context data, see Adding session data to API requests. If you don’t include this parameter,
* you can't send the source IP address to Amazon Cognito threat protection features. You can only
* activate EnablePropagateAdditionalUserContextData in an app client that has
* a client secret.
Amazon Cognito creates a session token for each API request in an authentication flow. AuthSessionValidity is the duration,
* in minutes, of that session token. Your user pool native user must respond to each authentication challenge before the session expires.
The configuration of your app client for refresh token rotation. When enabled, your * app client issues new ID, access, and refresh tokens when users renew their sessions * with refresh tokens. When disabled, token refresh issues only ID and access * tokens.
* @public */ RefreshTokenRotation?: RefreshTokenRotationType | undefined; } /** *Represents the response from the server to the request to update the user pool * client.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolClientResponse { /** *The updated details of your app client.
* @public */ UserPoolClient?: UserPoolClientType | undefined; } /** *The UpdateUserPoolDomain request input.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolDomainRequest { /** *The name of the domain that you want to update. For custom domains, this is the
* fully-qualified domain name, for example auth.example.com. For prefix
* domains, this is the prefix alone, such as myprefix.
The ID of the user pool that is associated with the domain you're updating.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *A version number that indicates the state of managed login for your domain. Version
* 1 is hosted UI (classic). Version 2 is the newer managed
* login with the branding editor. For more information, see Managed login.
The configuration for a custom domain that hosts managed login for your application.
* In an UpdateUserPoolDomain request, this parameter specifies an SSL
* certificate for the managed login hosted webserver. The certificate must be an ACM ARN
* in us-east-1.
When you create a custom domain, the passkey RP ID defaults to the custom domain. If * you had a prefix domain active, this will cause passkey integration for your prefix * domain to stop working due to a mismatch in RP ID. To keep the prefix domain passkey * integration working, you can explicitly set RP ID to the prefix domain.
* @public */ CustomDomainConfig?: CustomDomainConfigType | undefined; /** *The routing configuration for the user pool domain. Specifies failover settings for * multi-region deployments.
* @public */ Routing?: RoutingType | undefined; } /** *The UpdateUserPoolDomain response output.
* @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolDomainResponse { /** *A version number that indicates the state of managed login for your domain. Version
* 1 is hosted UI (classic). Version 2 is the newer managed
* login with the branding editor. For more information, see Managed login.
The fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the Amazon CloudFront distribution that hosts your
* managed login or classic hosted UI pages. You domain-name authority must have an alias
* record that points requests for your custom domain to this FQDN. Amazon Cognito returns this
* value if you set a custom domain with CustomDomainConfig. If you set an
* Amazon Cognito prefix domain, this operation returns a blank response.
The updated routing configuration for the user pool domain.
* @public */ Routing?: RoutingType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolReplicaRequest { /** *The ID of the user pool that contains the replica to update.
* @public */ UserPoolId: string | undefined; /** *The Amazon Web Services Region of the replica to update.
* @public */ RegionName: string | undefined; /** *The status to set for the replica. Valid values are ACTIVE and INACTIVE.
* @public */ Status: UpdateReplicaStatusType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface UpdateUserPoolReplicaResponse { /** *Information about the updated user pool replica.
* @public */ UserPoolReplica?: UserPoolReplicaType | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface VerifySoftwareTokenRequest { /** *A valid access token that Amazon Cognito issued to the currently signed-in user. Must include a scope claim for
* aws.cognito.signin.user.admin.
The session ID from an AssociateSoftwareToken request.
A TOTP that the user generated in their configured authenticator app.
* @public */ UserCode: string | undefined; /** *A friendly name for the device that's running the TOTP authenticator.
* @public */ FriendlyDeviceName?: string | undefined; } /** * @public */ export interface VerifySoftwareTokenResponse { /** *Amazon Cognito can accept or reject the code that you provide. This response parameter * indicates the success of TOTP verification. Some reasons that this operation might * return an error are clock skew on the user's device and excessive retries.
* @public */ Status?: VerifySoftwareTokenResponseType | undefined; /** *This session ID satisfies an MFA_SETUP challenge. Supply the session ID
* in your challenge response.
Represents the request to verify user attributes.
* @public */ export interface VerifyUserAttributeRequest { /** *A valid access token that Amazon Cognito issued to the currently signed-in user. Must include a scope claim for
* aws.cognito.signin.user.admin.
The name of the attribute that you want to verify.
* @public */ AttributeName: string | undefined; /** *The verification code that your user pool sent to the added or changed attribute, for * example the user's email address.
* @public */ Code: string | undefined; } /** *A container representing the response from the server from the request to verify user * attributes.
* @public */ export interface VerifyUserAttributeResponse { }