[ aws . glacier ]

abort-vault-lock

Description

This operation aborts the vault locking process if the vault lock is not in the Locked state. If the vault lock is in the Locked state when this operation is requested, the operation returns an AccessDeniedException error. Aborting the vault locking process removes the vault lock policy from the specified vault.

A vault lock is put into the InProgress state by calling InitiateVaultLock . A vault lock is put into the Locked state by calling CompleteVaultLock . You can get the state of a vault lock by calling GetVaultLock . For more information about the vault locking process, see Amazon Glacier Vault Lock . For more information about vault lock policies, see Amazon Glacier Access Control with Vault Lock Policies .

This operation is idempotent. You can successfully invoke this operation multiple times, if the vault lock is in the InProgress state or if there is no policy associated with the vault.

See also: AWS API Documentation

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Synopsis

  abort-vault-lock
--account-id <value>
--vault-name <value>
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]

Options

--account-id (string)

The AccountId value is the AWS account ID. This value must match the AWS account ID associated with the credentials used to sign the request. You can either specify an AWS account ID or optionally a single ‘- ‘ (hyphen), in which case Amazon Glacier uses the AWS account ID associated with the credentials used to sign the request. If you specify your account ID, do not include any hyphens (‘-‘) in the ID.

--vault-name (string)

The name of the vault.

--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml (string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml.

--generate-cli-skeleton (string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json. Similarly, if provided yaml-input it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml. If provided with the value output, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.

See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.

Examples

Note

To use the following examples, you must have the AWS CLI installed and configured. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.

Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide .

To abort an in-progress vault lock process

The following abort-vault-lock example deletes a vault lock policy from the specified vault and resets the lock state of the vault lock to unlocked.

aws glacier abort-vault-lock \
    --account-id - \
    --vault-name MyVaultName

This command produces no output.

For more information, see Abort Vault Lock (DELETE lock-policy) in the Amazon Glacier API Developer Guide.

Output

None