AWS.Tools.Batch.XML

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<doc>
    <assembly>
        <name>AWS.Tools.Batch</name>
    </assembly>
    <members>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Associates the specified tags to a resource with the specified <c>resourceArn</c>.
            If existing tags on a resource aren't specified in the request parameters, they aren't
            changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags that are associated with that resource
            are deleted as well. Batch resources that support tags are compute environments, jobs,
            job definitions, job queues, and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array
            and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs aren't supported.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource that tags are added to. Batch resources
            that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues, and
            scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs
            aren't supported.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the resource to help you categorize and organize your resources.
            Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws_tagging.html">Tagging
            Amazon Web Services Resources</a> in <i>Amazon Web Services General Reference</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.TagResourceResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the ResourceArn parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^ResourceArn' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.AddBATResourceTagCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Describes one or more of your compute environments.
             
              
            <para>
            If you're using an unmanaged compute environment, you can use the <c>DescribeComputeEnvironment</c>
            operation to determine the <c>ecsClusterArn</c> that you launch your Amazon ECS container
            instances into.
            </para><br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeEnvironment">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of up to 100 compute environment names or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) entries.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.MaxResult">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of cluster results returned by <c>DescribeComputeEnvironments</c>
            in paginated output. When this parameter is used, <c>DescribeComputeEnvironments</c>
            only returns <c>maxResults</c> results in a single page along with a <c>nextToken</c>
            response element. The remaining results of the initial request can be seen by sending
            another <c>DescribeComputeEnvironments</c> request with the returned <c>nextToken</c>
            value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter isn't used, then <c>DescribeComputeEnvironments</c>
            returns up to 100 results and a <c>nextToken</c> value if applicable.</para>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> In AWSPowerShell and AWSPowerShell.NetCore this parameter is used to limit the total number of items returned by the cmdlet.
            <br/>In AWS.Tools this parameter is simply passed to the service to specify how many items should be returned by each service call.
            <br/>Pipe the output of this cmdlet into Select-Object -First to terminate retrieving data pages early and control the number of items returned.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.NextToken">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The <c>nextToken</c> value returned from a previous paginated <c>DescribeComputeEnvironments</c>
            request where <c>maxResults</c> was used and the results exceeded the value of that
            parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned
            the <c>nextToken</c> value. This value is <c>null</c> when there are no more results
            to return.</para><note><para>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to retrieve the next items
            in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call.
            <br/>In order to manually control output pagination, use '-NextToken $null' for the first call and '-NextToken $AWSHistory.LastServiceResponse.NextToken' for subsequent calls.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'ComputeEnvironments'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeComputeEnvironmentsResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeComputeEnvironmentsResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.NoAutoIteration">
            <summary>
            By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple
            service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken
            as the start point.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Describes a list of job definitions. You can specify a <c>status</c> (such as <c>ACTIVE</c>)
            to only return job definitions that match that status.<br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.JobDefinitionName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the job definition to describe.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.JobDefinition">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of up to 100 job definitions. Each entry in the list can either be an ARN in
            the format <c>arn:aws:batch:${Region}:${Account}:job-definition/${JobDefinitionName}:${Revision}</c>
            or a short version using the form <c>${JobDefinitionName}:${Revision}</c>. This parameter
            can't be used with other parameters.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Status">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The status used to filter job definitions.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.MaxResult">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of results returned by <c>DescribeJobDefinitions</c> in paginated
            output. When this parameter is used, <c>DescribeJobDefinitions</c> only returns <c>maxResults</c>
            results in a single page and a <c>nextToken</c> response element. The remaining results
            of the initial request can be seen by sending another <c>DescribeJobDefinitions</c>
            request with the returned <c>nextToken</c> value. This value can be between 1 and
            100. If this parameter isn't used, then <c>DescribeJobDefinitions</c> returns up to
            100 results and a <c>nextToken</c> value if applicable.</para>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> In AWSPowerShell and AWSPowerShell.NetCore this parameter is used to limit the total number of items returned by the cmdlet.
            <br/>In AWS.Tools this parameter is simply passed to the service to specify how many items should be returned by each service call.
            <br/>Pipe the output of this cmdlet into Select-Object -First to terminate retrieving data pages early and control the number of items returned.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NextToken">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The <c>nextToken</c> value returned from a previous paginated <c>DescribeJobDefinitions</c>
            request where <c>maxResults</c> was used and the results exceeded the value of that
            parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned
            the <c>nextToken</c> value. This value is <c>null</c> when there are no more results
            to return.</para><note><para>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to retrieve the next items
            in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call.
            <br/>In order to manually control output pagination, use '-NextToken $null' for the first call and '-NextToken $AWSHistory.LastServiceResponse.NextToken' for subsequent calls.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'JobDefinitions'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobDefinitionsResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobDefinitionsResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobDefinitionName parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobDefinitionName' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NoAutoIteration">
            <summary>
            By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple
            service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken
            as the start point.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDetailCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Describes a list of Batch jobs.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDetailCmdlet.Job">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of up to 100 job IDs.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDetailCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'Jobs'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobsResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobsResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobDetailCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the Job parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^Job' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Returns a list of Batch jobs.
             
              
            <para>
            You must specify only one of the following items:
            </para><ul><li><para>
            A job queue ID to return a list of jobs in that job queue
            </para></li><li><para>
            A multi-node parallel job ID to return a list of nodes for that job
            </para></li><li><para>
            An array job ID to return a list of the children for that job
            </para></li></ul><para>
            You can filter the results by job status with the <c>jobStatus</c> parameter. If you
            don't specify a status, only <c>RUNNING</c> jobs are returned.
            </para><br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.ArrayJobId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The job ID for an array job. Specifying an array job ID with this parameter lists
            all child jobs from within the specified array.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.Filter">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The filter to apply to the query. Only one filter can be used at a time. When the
            filter is used, <c>jobStatus</c> is ignored. The filter doesn't apply to child jobs
            in an array or multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. The results are sorted by the <c>createdAt</c>
            field, with the most recent jobs being first.</para><dl><dt>JOB_NAME</dt><dd><para>The value of the filter is a case-insensitive match for the job name. If the value
            ends with an asterisk (*), the filter matches any job name that begins with the string
            before the '*'. This corresponds to the <c>jobName</c> value. For example, <c>test1</c>
            matches both <c>Test1</c> and <c>test1</c>, and <c>test1*</c> matches both <c>test1</c>
            and <c>Test10</c>. When the <c>JOB_NAME</c> filter is used, the results are grouped
            by the job name and version.</para></dd><dt>JOB_DEFINITION</dt><dd><para>The value for the filter is the name or Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job definition.
            This corresponds to the <c>jobDefinition</c> value. The value is case sensitive. When
            the value for the filter is the job definition name, the results include all the jobs
            that used any revision of that job definition name. If the value ends with an asterisk
            (*), the filter matches any job definition name that begins with the string before
            the '*'. For example, <c>jd1</c> matches only <c>jd1</c>, and <c>jd1*</c> matches
            both <c>jd1</c> and <c>jd1A</c>. The version of the job definition that's used doesn't
            affect the sort order. When the <c>JOB_DEFINITION</c> filter is used and the ARN is
            used (which is in the form <c>arn:${Partition}:batch:${Region}:${Account}:job-definition/${JobDefinitionName}:${Revision}</c>),
            the results include jobs that used the specified revision of the job definition. Asterisk
            (*) isn't supported when the ARN is used.</para></dd><dt>BEFORE_CREATED_AT</dt><dd><para>The value for the filter is the time that's before the job was created. This corresponds
            to the <c>createdAt</c> value. The value is a string representation of the number
            of milliseconds since 00:00:00 UTC (midnight) on January 1, 1970.</para></dd><dt>AFTER_CREATED_AT</dt><dd><para>The value for the filter is the time that's after the job was created. This corresponds
            to the <c>createdAt</c> value. The value is a string representation of the number
            of milliseconds since 00:00:00 UTC (midnight) on January 1, 1970.</para></dd></dl>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.JobQueue">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job queue used to list jobs.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.JobStatus">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The job status used to filter jobs in the specified queue. If the <c>filters</c> parameter
            is specified, the <c>jobStatus</c> parameter is ignored and jobs with any status are
            returned. If you don't specify a status, only <c>RUNNING</c> jobs are returned.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.MultiNodeJobId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The job ID for a multi-node parallel job. Specifying a multi-node parallel job ID
            with this parameter lists all nodes that are associated with the specified job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.MaxResult">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of results returned by <c>ListJobs</c> in paginated output. When
            this parameter is used, <c>ListJobs</c> only returns <c>maxResults</c> results in
            a single page and a <c>nextToken</c> response element. The remaining results of the
            initial request can be seen by sending another <c>ListJobs</c> request with the returned
            <c>nextToken</c> value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter isn't
            used, then <c>ListJobs</c> returns up to 100 results and a <c>nextToken</c> value
            if applicable.</para>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> In AWSPowerShell and AWSPowerShell.NetCore this parameter is used to limit the total number of items returned by the cmdlet.
            <br/>In AWS.Tools this parameter is simply passed to the service to specify how many items should be returned by each service call.
            <br/>Pipe the output of this cmdlet into Select-Object -First to terminate retrieving data pages early and control the number of items returned.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.NextToken">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The <c>nextToken</c> value returned from a previous paginated <c>ListJobs</c> request
            where <c>maxResults</c> was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter.
            Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the <c>nextToken</c>
            value. This value is <c>null</c> when there are no more results to return.</para><note><para>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to retrieve the next items
            in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call.
            <br/>In order to manually control output pagination, use '-NextToken $null' for the first call and '-NextToken $AWSHistory.LastServiceResponse.NextToken' for subsequent calls.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'JobSummaryList'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.ListJobsResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.ListJobsResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobQueue parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobQueue' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobListCmdlet.NoAutoIteration">
            <summary>
            By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple
            service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken
            as the start point.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Describes one or more of your job queues.<br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet.JobQueue">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of up to 100 queue names or full queue Amazon Resource Name (ARN) entries.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet.MaxResult">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of results returned by <c>DescribeJobQueues</c> in paginated output.
            When this parameter is used, <c>DescribeJobQueues</c> only returns <c>maxResults</c>
            results in a single page and a <c>nextToken</c> response element. The remaining results
            of the initial request can be seen by sending another <c>DescribeJobQueues</c> request
            with the returned <c>nextToken</c> value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If
            this parameter isn't used, then <c>DescribeJobQueues</c> returns up to 100 results
            and a <c>nextToken</c> value if applicable.</para>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> In AWSPowerShell and AWSPowerShell.NetCore this parameter is used to limit the total number of items returned by the cmdlet.
            <br/>In AWS.Tools this parameter is simply passed to the service to specify how many items should be returned by each service call.
            <br/>Pipe the output of this cmdlet into Select-Object -First to terminate retrieving data pages early and control the number of items returned.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet.NextToken">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The <c>nextToken</c> value returned from a previous paginated <c>DescribeJobQueues</c>
            request where <c>maxResults</c> was used and the results exceeded the value of that
            parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned
            the <c>nextToken</c> value. This value is <c>null</c> when there are no more results
            to return.</para><note><para>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to retrieve the next items
            in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call.
            <br/>In order to manually control output pagination, use '-NextToken $null' for the first call and '-NextToken $AWSHistory.LastServiceResponse.NextToken' for subsequent calls.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'JobQueues'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobQueuesResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeJobQueuesResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATJobQueueCmdlet.NoAutoIteration">
            <summary>
            By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple
            service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken
            as the start point.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATResourceTagCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Lists the tags for an Batch resource. Batch resources that support tags are compute
            environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues, and scheduling policies. ARNs for
            child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs aren't supported.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that identifies the resource that tags are listed for.
            Batch resources that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions,
            job queues, and scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel
            (MNP) jobs aren't supported.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATResourceTagCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.ListTagsForResourceResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.ListTagsForResourceResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATResourceTagCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the ResourceArn parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^ResourceArn' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Describes one or more of your scheduling policies.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Arn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of up to 100 scheduling policy Amazon Resource Name (ARN) entries.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'SchedulingPolicies'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeSchedulingPoliciesResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.DescribeSchedulingPoliciesResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyListCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Returns a list of Batch scheduling policies.<br/><br/>This cmdlet automatically pages all available results to the pipeline - parameters related to iteration are only needed if you want to manually control the paginated output. To disable autopagination, use -NoAutoIteration.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyListCmdlet.MaxResult">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of results that's returned by <c>ListSchedulingPolicies</c> in
            paginated output. When this parameter is used, <c>ListSchedulingPolicies</c> only
            returns <c>maxResults</c> results in a single page and a <c>nextToken</c> response
            element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another
            <c>ListSchedulingPolicies</c> request with the returned <c>nextToken</c> value. This
            value can be between 1 and 100. If this parameter isn't used, <c>ListSchedulingPolicies</c>
            returns up to 100 results and a <c>nextToken</c> value if applicable.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyListCmdlet.NextToken">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The <c>nextToken</c> value that's returned from a previous paginated <c>ListSchedulingPolicies</c>
            request where <c>maxResults</c> was used and the results exceeded the value of that
            parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned
            the <c>nextToken</c> value. This value is <c>null</c> when there are no more results
            to return.</para><note><para>Treat this token as an opaque identifier that's only used to retrieve the next items
            in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>
            <br/><b>Note:</b> This parameter is only used if you are manually controlling output pagination of the service API call.
            <br/>In order to manually control output pagination, use '-NextToken $null' for the first call and '-NextToken $AWSHistory.LastServiceResponse.NextToken' for subsequent calls.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyListCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is 'SchedulingPolicies'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.ListSchedulingPoliciesResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.ListSchedulingPoliciesResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.GetBATSchedulingPolicyListCmdlet.NoAutoIteration">
            <summary>
            By default the cmdlet will auto-iterate and retrieve all results to the pipeline by performing multiple
            service calls. If set, the cmdlet will retrieve only the next 'page' of results using the value of NextToken
            as the start point.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Creates an Batch compute environment. You can create <c>MANAGED</c> or <c>UNMANAGED</c>
            compute environments. <c>MANAGED</c> compute environments can use Amazon EC2 or Fargate
            resources. <c>UNMANAGED</c> compute environments can only use EC2 resources.
             
              
            <para>
            In a managed compute environment, Batch manages the capacity and instance types of
            the compute resources within the environment. This is based on the compute resource
            specification that you define or the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-launch-templates.html">launch
            template</a> that you specify when you create the compute environment. Either, you
            can choose to use EC2 On-Demand Instances and EC2 Spot Instances. Or, you can use
            Fargate and Fargate Spot capacity in your managed compute environment. You can optionally
            set a maximum price so that Spot Instances only launch when the Spot Instance price
            is less than a specified percentage of the On-Demand price.
            </para><note><para>
            Multi-node parallel jobs aren't supported on Spot Instances.
            </para></note><para>
            In an unmanaged compute environment, you can manage your own EC2 compute resources
            and have flexibility with how you configure your compute resources. For example, you
            can use custom AMIs. However, you must verify that each of your AMIs meet the Amazon
            ECS container instance AMI specification. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/container_instance_AMIs.html">container
            instance AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.
            After you created your unmanaged compute environment, you can use the <a>DescribeComputeEnvironments</a>
            operation to find the Amazon ECS cluster that's associated with it. Then, launch your
            container instances into that Amazon ECS cluster. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/launch_container_instance.html">Launching
            an Amazon ECS container instance</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
            Guide</i>.
            </para><note><para>
            To create a compute environment that uses EKS resources, the caller must have permissions
            to call <c>eks:DescribeCluster</c>.
            </para></note><note><para>
            Batch doesn't automatically upgrade the AMIs in a compute environment after it's created.
            For example, it also doesn't update the AMIs in your compute environment when a newer
            version of the Amazon ECS optimized AMI is available. You're responsible for the management
            of the guest operating system. This includes any updates and security patches. You're
            also responsible for any additional application software or utilities that you install
            on the compute resources. There are two ways to use a new AMI for your Batch jobs.
            The original method is to complete these steps:
            </para><ol><li><para>
            Create a new compute environment with the new AMI.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Add the compute environment to an existing job queue.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Remove the earlier compute environment from your job queue.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Delete the earlier compute environment.
            </para></li></ol><para>
            In April 2022, Batch added enhanced support for updating compute environments. For
            more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a>. To use the enhanced updating of compute environments to
            update AMIs, follow these rules:
            </para><ul><li><para>
            Either don't set the service role (<c>serviceRole</c>) parameter or set it to the
            <b>AWSBatchServiceRole</b> service-linked role.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Set the allocation strategy (<c>allocationStrategy</c>) parameter to <c>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</c>,
            <c>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>, or <c>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Set the update to latest image version (<c>updateToLatestImageVersion</c>) parameter
            to <c>true</c>. The <c>updateToLatestImageVersion</c> parameter is used when you update
            a compute environment. This parameter is ignored when you create a compute environment.
            </para></li><li><para>
            Don't specify an AMI ID in <c>imageId</c>, <c>imageIdOverride</c> (in <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/APIReference/API_Ec2Configuration.html"><c>ec2Configuration</c></a>), or in the launch template (<c>launchTemplate</c>).
            In that case, Batch selects the latest Amazon ECS optimized AMI that's supported by
            Batch at the time the infrastructure update is initiated. Alternatively, you can specify
            the AMI ID in the <c>imageId</c> or <c>imageIdOverride</c> parameters, or the launch
            template identified by the <c>LaunchTemplate</c> properties. Changing any of these
            properties starts an infrastructure update. If the AMI ID is specified in the launch
            template, it can't be replaced by specifying an AMI ID in either the <c>imageId</c>
            or <c>imageIdOverride</c> parameters. It can only be replaced by specifying a different
            launch template, or if the launch template version is set to <c>$Default</c> or <c>$Latest</c>,
            by setting either a new default version for the launch template (if <c>$Default</c>)
            or by adding a new version to the launch template (if <c>$Latest</c>).
            </para></li></ul><para>
            If these rules are followed, any update that starts an infrastructure update causes
            the AMI ID to be re-selected. If the <c>version</c> setting in the launch template
            (<c>launchTemplate</c>) is set to <c>$Latest</c> or <c>$Default</c>, the latest or
            default version of the launch template is evaluated up at the time of the infrastructure
            update, even if the <c>launchTemplate</c> wasn't updated.
            </para></note>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_AllocationStrategy">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The allocation strategy to use for the compute resource if not enough instances of
            the best fitting instance type can be allocated. This might be because of availability
            of the instance type in the Region or <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon
            EC2 service limits</a>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/allocation-strategies.html">Allocation
            strategies</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><dl><dt>BEST_FIT (default)</dt><dd><para>Batch selects an instance type that best fits the needs of the jobs with a preference
            for the lowest-cost instance type. If additional instances of the selected instance
            type aren't available, Batch waits for the additional instances to be available. If
            there aren't enough instances available or the user is reaching <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon
            EC2 service limits</a>, additional jobs aren't run until the currently running jobs
            are completed. This allocation strategy keeps costs lower but can limit scaling. If
            you're using Spot Fleets with <c>BEST_FIT</c>, the Spot Fleet IAM Role must be specified.
            Compute resources that use a <c>BEST_FIT</c> allocation strategy don't support infrastructure
            updates and can't update some parameters. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></dd><dt>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</dt><dd><para>Batch selects additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements
            of the jobs in the queue. Its preference is for instance types with lower cost vCPUs.
            If additional instances of the previously selected instance types aren't available,
            Batch selects new instance types.</para></dd><dt>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt><dd><para>Batch selects one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements
            of the jobs in the queue. Its preference is for instance types that are less likely
            to be interrupted. This allocation strategy is only available for Spot Instance compute
            resources.</para></dd><dt>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt><dd><para>The price and capacity optimized allocation strategy looks at both price and capacity
            to select the Spot Instance pools that are the least likely to be interrupted and
            have the lowest possible price. This allocation strategy is only available for Spot
            Instance compute resources.</para></dd></dl><para>With <c>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</c>,<c>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c> and <c>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>
            (recommended) strategies using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <c>BEST_FIT</c>
            strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <c>maxvCpus</c> to meet
            your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <c>maxvCpus</c> by
            more than a single instance.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_BidPercentage">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum percentage that a Spot Instance price can be when compared with the On-Demand
            price for that instance type before instances are launched. For example, if your maximum
            percentage is 20%, then the Spot price must be less than 20% of the current On-Demand
            price for that Amazon EC2 instance. You always pay the lowest (market) price and never
            more than your maximum percentage. If you leave this field empty, the default value
            is 100% of the On-Demand price. For most use cases, we recommend leaving this field
            empty.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeEnvironmentName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name for your compute environment. It can be up to 128 characters long. It can
            contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_DesiredvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The desired number of vCPUS in the compute environment. Batch modifies this value
            between the minimum and maximum values based on job queue demand.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Ec2Configuration">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Provides information that's used to select Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) for Amazon
            EC2 instances in the compute environment. If <c>Ec2Configuration</c> isn't specified,
            the default is <c>ECS_AL2</c>.</para><para>One or two values can be provided.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Ec2KeyPair">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 key pair that's used for instances launched in the compute environment.
            You can use this key pair to log in to your instances with SSH.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.EksConfiguration_EksClusterArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon EKS cluster. An example is <c>arn:<i>aws</i>:eks:<i>us-east-1</i>:<i>123456789012</i>:cluster/<i>ClusterForBatch</i></c>. </para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_InstanceRole">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon ECS instance profile applied to Amazon EC2 instances in a compute environment.
            This parameter is required for Amazon EC2 instances types. You can specify the short
            name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example, <c><i>ecsInstanceRole</i></c> or <c>arn:aws:iam::<i>&lt;aws_account_id&gt;</i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i></c>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/instance_IAM_role.html">Amazon
            ECS instance role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_InstanceType">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The instances types that can be launched. You can specify instance families to launch
            any instance type within those families (for example, <c>c5</c> or <c>p3</c>), or
            you can specify specific sizes within a family (such as <c>c5.8xlarge</c>). You can
            also choose <c>optimal</c> to select instance types (from the C4, M4, and R4 instance
            families) that match the demand of your job queues.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><note><para>When you create a compute environment, the instance types that you select for the
            compute environment must share the same architecture. For example, you can't mix x86
            and ARM instances in the same compute environment.</para></note><note><para>Currently, <c>optimal</c> uses instance types from the C4, M4, and R4 instance families.
            In Regions that don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types
            from the C5, M5, and R5 instance families are used.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.EksConfiguration_KubernetesNamespace">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The namespace of the Amazon EKS cluster. Batch manages pods in this namespace. The
            value can't left empty or null. It must be fewer than 64 characters long, can't be
            set to <c>default</c>, can't start with "<c>kube-</c>," and must match this regular
            expression: <c>^[a-z0-9]([-a-z0-9]*[a-z0-9])?$</c>. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/namespaces/">Namespaces</a>
            in the Kubernetes documentation.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_LaunchTemplateId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The ID of the launch template.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_LaunchTemplateName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the launch template.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_MaxvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of vCPUs that a compute environment can support.</para><note><para>With <c>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</c>,<c>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c> and <c>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>
            (recommended) strategies using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <c>BEST_FIT</c>
            strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <c>maxvCpus</c> to meet
            your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <c>maxvCpus</c> by
            more than a single instance.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_MinvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The minimum number of vCPUs that a compute environment should maintain (even if the
            compute environment is <c>DISABLED</c>).</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_PlacementGroup">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 placement group to associate with your compute resources. If you intend
            to submit multi-node parallel jobs to your compute environment, you should consider
            creating a cluster placement group and associate it with your compute resources. This
            keeps your multi-node parallel job on a logical grouping of instances within a single
            Availability Zone with high network flow potential. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/placement-groups.html">Placement
            groups</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_SecurityGroupId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 security groups that are associated with instances launched in the
            compute environment. One or more security groups must be specified, either in <c>securityGroupIds</c>
            or using a launch template referenced in <c>launchTemplate</c>. This parameter is
            required for jobs that are running on Fargate resources and must contain at least
            one security group. Fargate doesn't support launch templates. If security groups are
            specified using both <c>securityGroupIds</c> and <c>launchTemplate</c>, the values
            in <c>securityGroupIds</c> are used.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ServiceRole">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that allows Batch to make calls
            to other Amazon Web Services services on your behalf. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/service_IAM_role.html">Batch
            service IAM role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><important><para>If your account already created the Batch service-linked role, that role is used by
            default for your compute environment unless you specify a different role here. If
            the Batch service-linked role doesn't exist in your account, and no role is specified
            here, the service attempts to create the Batch service-linked role in your account.</para></important><para>If your specified role has a path other than <c>/</c>, then you must specify either
            the full role ARN (recommended) or prefix the role name with the path. For example,
            if a role with the name <c>bar</c> has a path of <c>/foo/</c>, specify <c>/foo/bar</c>
            as the role name. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/reference_identifiers.html#identifiers-friendly-names">Friendly
            names and paths</a> in the <i>IAM User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>Depending on how you created your Batch service role, its ARN might contain the <c>service-role</c>
            path prefix. When you only specify the name of the service role, Batch assumes that
            your ARN doesn't use the <c>service-role</c> path prefix. Because of this, we recommend
            that you specify the full ARN of your service role when you create compute environments.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_SpotIamFleetRole">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet IAM role applied to a
            <c>SPOT</c> compute environment. This role is required if the allocation strategy
            set to <c>BEST_FIT</c> or if the allocation strategy isn't specified. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon
            EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><important><para>To tag your Spot Instances on creation, the Spot Fleet IAM role specified here must
            use the newer <b>AmazonEC2SpotFleetTaggingRole</b> managed policy. The previously
            recommended <b>AmazonEC2SpotFleetRole</b> managed policy doesn't have the required
            permissions to tag Spot Instances. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#spot-instance-no-tag">Spot
            instances not tagged on creation</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></important>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.State">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The state of the compute environment. If the state is <c>ENABLED</c>, then the compute
            environment accepts jobs from a queue and can scale out automatically based on queues.</para><para>If the state is <c>ENABLED</c>, then the Batch scheduler can attempt to place jobs
            from an associated job queue on the compute resources within the environment. If the
            compute environment is managed, then it can scale its instances out or in automatically,
            based on the job queue demand.</para><para>If the state is <c>DISABLED</c>, then the Batch scheduler doesn't attempt to place
            jobs within the environment. Jobs in a <c>STARTING</c> or <c>RUNNING</c> state continue
            to progress normally. Managed compute environments in the <c>DISABLED</c> state don't
            scale out. </para><note><para>Compute environments in a <c>DISABLED</c> state may continue to incur billing charges.
            To prevent additional charges, turn off and then delete the compute environment. For
            more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environment_parameters.html#compute_environment_state">State</a>
            in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></note><para>When an instance is idle, the instance scales down to the <c>minvCpus</c> value. However,
            the instance size doesn't change. For example, consider a <c>c5.8xlarge</c> instance
            with a <c>minvCpus</c> value of <c>4</c> and a <c>desiredvCpus</c> value of <c>36</c>.
            This instance doesn't scale down to a <c>c5.large</c> instance.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Subnet">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The VPC subnets where the compute resources are launched. These subnets must be within
            the same VPC. Fargate compute resources can contain up to 16 subnets. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/VPC_Subnets.html">VPCs
            and subnets</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>Batch on Amazon EC2 and Batch on Amazon EKS support Local Zones. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/using-regions-availability-zones.html#concepts-local-zones">
            Local Zones</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i>, <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/local-zones.html">Amazon
            EKS and Amazon Web Services Local Zones</a> in the <i>Amazon EKS User Guide</i> and
            <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/cluster-regions-zones.html#clusters-local-zones">
            Amazon ECS clusters in Local Zones, Wavelength Zones, and Amazon Web Services Outposts</a>
            in the <i>Amazon ECS Developer Guide</i>.</para><para>Batch on Fargate doesn't currently support Local Zones.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Key-value pair tags to be applied to Amazon EC2 resources that are launched in the
            compute environment. For Batch, these take the form of <c>"String1": "String2"</c>,
            where <c>String1</c> is the tag key and <c>String2</c> is the tag value-for example,
            <c>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</c>. This is helpful for recognizing
            your Batch instances in the Amazon EC2 console. Updating these tags requires an infrastructure
            update to the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>. These tags aren't seen when
            using the Batch <c>ListTagsForResource</c> API operation.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the compute environment to help you categorize and organize
            your resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws_tagging.html">Tagging
            Amazon Web Services Resources</a> in <i>Amazon Web Services General Reference</i>.</para><para>These tags can be updated or removed using the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/APIReference/API_TagResource.html">TagResource</a>
            and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/APIReference/API_UntagResource.html">UntagResource</a>
            API operations. These tags don't propagate to the underlying compute resources.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Type">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type of compute environment: <c>EC2</c>, <c>SPOT</c>, <c>FARGATE</c>, or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>.
            For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute
            environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><para> If you choose <c>SPOT</c>, you must also specify an Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet role with
            the <c>spotIamFleetRole</c> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon
            EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Type">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type of the compute environment: <c>MANAGED</c> or <c>UNMANAGED</c>. For more
            information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute
            Environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.UnmanagedvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of vCPUs for an unmanaged compute environment. This parameter is
            only used for fair share scheduling to reserve vCPU capacity for new share identifiers.
            If this parameter isn't provided for a fair share job queue, no vCPU capacity is reserved.</para><note><para>This parameter is only supported when the <c>type</c> parameter is set to <c>UNMANAGED</c>.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_Version">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The version number of the launch template, <c>$Latest</c>, or <c>$Default</c>.</para><para>If the value is <c>$Latest</c>, the latest version of the launch template is used.
            If the value is <c>$Default</c>, the default version of the launch template is used.</para><important><para>If the AMI ID that's used in a compute environment is from the launch template, the
            AMI isn't changed when the compute environment is updated. It's only changed if the
            <c>updateToLatestImageVersion</c> parameter for the compute environment is set to
            <c>true</c>. During an infrastructure update, if either <c>$Latest</c> or <c>$Default</c>
            is specified, Batch re-evaluates the launch template version, and it might use a different
            version of the launch template. This is the case even if the launch template isn't
            specified in the update. When updating a compute environment, changing the launch
            template requires an infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></important><para>Default: <c>$Default</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_ImageId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Machine Image (AMI) ID used for instances launched in the compute environment.
            This parameter is overridden by the <c>imageIdOverride</c> member of the <c>Ec2Configuration</c>
            structure.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><note><para>The AMI that you choose for a compute environment must match the architecture of the
            instance types that you intend to use for that compute environment. For example, if
            your compute environment uses A1 instance types, the compute resource AMI that you
            choose must support ARM instances. Amazon ECS vends both x86 and ARM versions of the
            Amazon ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#ecs-optimized-ami-linux-variants.html">Amazon
            ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
            Guide</i>.</para></note>
            </para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated.</para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateComputeEnvironmentResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateComputeEnvironmentResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Creates an Batch job queue. When you create a job queue, you associate one or more
            compute environments to the queue and assign an order of preference for the compute
            environments.
             
              
            <para>
            You also set a priority to the job queue that determines the order that the Batch
            scheduler places jobs onto its associated compute environments. For example, if a
            compute environment is associated with more than one job queue, the job queue with
            a higher priority is given preference for scheduling jobs to that compute environment.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.ComputeEnvironmentOrder">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The set of compute environments mapped to a job queue and their order relative to
            each other. The job scheduler uses this parameter to determine which compute environment
            runs a specific job. Compute environments must be in the <c>VALID</c> state before
            you can associate them with a job queue. You can associate up to three compute environments
            with a job queue. All of the compute environments must be either EC2 (<c>EC2</c> or
            <c>SPOT</c>) or Fargate (<c>FARGATE</c> or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>); EC2 and Fargate compute
            environments can't be mixed.</para><note><para>All compute environments that are associated with a job queue must share the same
            architecture. Batch doesn't support mixing compute environment architecture types
            in a single job queue.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.JobQueueName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the job queue. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain uppercase
            and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.Priority">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The priority of the job queue. Job queues with a higher priority (or a higher integer
            value for the <c>priority</c> parameter) are evaluated first when associated with
            the same compute environment. Priority is determined in descending order. For example,
            a job queue with a priority value of <c>10</c> is given scheduling preference over
            a job queue with a priority value of <c>1</c>. All of the compute environments must
            be either EC2 (<c>EC2</c> or <c>SPOT</c>) or Fargate (<c>FARGATE</c> or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>);
            EC2 and Fargate compute environments can't be mixed.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.SchedulingPolicyArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the fair share scheduling policy. If this parameter
            is specified, the job queue uses a fair share scheduling policy. If this parameter
            isn't specified, the job queue uses a first in, first out (FIFO) scheduling policy.
            After a job queue is created, you can replace but can't remove the fair share scheduling
            policy. The format is <c>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i></c>. An example is <c>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.State">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The state of the job queue. If the job queue state is <c>ENABLED</c>, it is able to
            accept jobs. If the job queue state is <c>DISABLED</c>, new jobs can't be added to
            the queue, but jobs already in the queue can finish.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the job queue to help you categorize and organize your
            resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using-tags.html">Tagging
            your Batch resources</a> in <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateJobQueueResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateJobQueueResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATJobQueueCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Creates an Batch scheduling policy.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ComputeReservation">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A value used to reserve some of the available maximum vCPU for fair share identifiers
            that aren't already used.</para><para>The reserved ratio is <c>(<i>computeReservation</i>/100)^<i>ActiveFairShares</i></c>
            where <c><i>ActiveFairShares</i></c> is the number of active fair share identifiers.</para><para>For example, a <c>computeReservation</c> value of 50 indicates that Batch reserves
            50% of the maximum available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier. It reserves
            25% if there are two fair share identifiers. It reserves 12.5% if there are three
            fair share identifiers. A <c>computeReservation</c> value of 25 indicates that Batch
            should reserve 25% of the maximum available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier,
            6.25% if there are two fair share identifiers, and 1.56% if there are three fair share
            identifiers.</para><para>The minimum value is 0 and the maximum value is 99.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Name">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the scheduling policy. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can contain
            uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ShareDecaySecond">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The amount of time (in seconds) to use to calculate a fair share percentage for each
            fair share identifier in use. A value of zero (0) indicates that only current usage
            is measured. The decay allows for more recently run jobs to have more weight than
            jobs that ran earlier. The maximum supported value is 604800 (1 week).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ShareDistribution">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>An array of <c>SharedIdentifier</c> objects that contain the weights for the fair
            share identifiers for the fair share policy. Fair share identifiers that aren't included
            have a default weight of <c>1.0</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the scheduling policy to help you categorize and organize
            your resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws_tagging.html">Tagging
            Amazon Web Services Resources</a> in <i>Amazon Web Services General Reference</i>.</para><para>These tags can be updated or removed using the <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/APIReference/API_TagResource.html">TagResource</a>
            and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/APIReference/API_UntagResource.html">UntagResource</a>
            API operations.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateSchedulingPolicyResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.CreateSchedulingPolicyResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the Name parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^Name' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.NewBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Registers an Batch job definition.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NetworkConfiguration_AssignPublicIp">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Indicates whether the job has a public IP address. For a job that's running on Fargate
            resources in a private subnet to send outbound traffic to the internet (for example,
            to pull container images), the private subnet requires a NAT gateway be attached to
            route requests to the internet. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-networking.html">Amazon
            ECS task networking</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.
            The default value is "<c>DISABLED</c>".</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.RetryStrategy_Attempt">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The number of times to move a job to the <c>RUNNABLE</c> status. You can specify between
            1 and 10 attempts. If the value of <c>attempts</c> is greater than one, the job is
            retried on failure the same number of attempts as the value.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Command">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The command that's passed to the container. This parameter maps to <c>Cmd</c> in the
            <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a>
            section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a>
            and the <c>COMMAND</c> parameter to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd">https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/#cmd</a>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_Container">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The properties of the container that's used on the Amazon EKS pod.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.RuntimePlatform_CpuArchitecture">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para> The vCPU architecture. The default value is <c>X86_64</c>. Valid values are <c>X86_64</c>
            and <c>ARM64</c>.</para><note><para>This parameter must be set to <c>X86_64</c> for Windows containers.</para></note><note><para>Fargate Spot is not supported for <c>ARM64</c> and Windows-based containers on Fargate.
            A job queue will be blocked if a Fargate <c>ARM64</c> or Windows job is submitted
            to a job queue with only Fargate Spot compute environments. However, you can attach
            both <c>FARGATE</c> and <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c> compute environments to the same job queue.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.RepositoryCredentials_CredentialsParameter">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the secret containing the private repository credentials.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_Device">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Any of the host devices to expose to the container. This parameter maps to <c>Devices</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--device</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            provide it for these jobs.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_DnsPolicy">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The DNS policy for the pod. The default value is <c>ClusterFirst</c>. If the <c>hostNetwork</c>
            parameter is not specified, the default is <c>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</c>. <c>ClusterFirst</c>
            indicates that any DNS query that does not match the configured cluster domain suffix
            is forwarded to the upstream nameserver inherited from the node. For more information,
            see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dns-pod-service/#pod-s-dns-policy">Pod's
            DNS policy</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</para><para>Valid values: <c>Default</c> | <c>ClusterFirst</c> | <c>ClusterFirstWithHostNet</c></para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Environment">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The environment variables to pass to a container. This parameter maps to <c>Env</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--env</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><important><para>We don't recommend using plaintext environment variables for sensitive information,
            such as credential data.</para></important><note><para>Environment variables cannot start with "<c>AWS_BATCH</c>". This naming convention
            is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.RetryStrategy_EvaluateOnExit">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Array of up to 5 objects that specify the conditions where jobs are retried or failed.
            If this parameter is specified, then the <c>attempts</c> parameter must also be specified.
            If none of the listed conditions match, then the job is retried.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_ExecutionRoleArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the execution role that Batch can assume. For jobs
            that run on Fargate resources, you must provide an execution role. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/execution-IAM-role.html">Batch
            execution IAM role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_HostNetwork">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Indicates if the pod uses the hosts' network IP address. The default value is <c>true</c>.
            Setting this to <c>false</c> enables the Kubernetes pod networking model. Most Batch
            workloads are egress-only and don't require the overhead of IP allocation for each
            pod for incoming connections. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-policy/#host-namespaces">Host
            namespaces</a> and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/#pod-networking">Pod
            networking</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Image">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Required. The image used to start a container. This string is passed directly to the
            Docker daemon. Images in the Docker Hub registry are available by default. Other repositories
            are specified with <c><i>repository-url</i>/<i>image</i>:<i>tag</i></c>. It can
            be 255 characters long. It can contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens
            (-), underscores (_), colons (:), periods (.), forward slashes (/), and number signs
            (#). This parameter maps to <c>Image</c> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>IMAGE</c> parameter of <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><note><para>Docker image architecture must match the processor architecture of the compute resources
            that they're scheduled on. For example, ARM-based Docker images can only run on ARM-based
            compute resources.</para></note><ul><li><para>Images in Amazon ECR Public repositories use the full <c>registry/repository[:tag]</c>
            or <c>registry/repository[@digest]</c> naming conventions. For example, <c>public.ecr.aws/<i>registry_alias</i>/<i>my-web-app</i>:<i>latest</i></c>.</para></li><li><para>Images in Amazon ECR repositories use the full registry and repository URI (for example,
            <c>123456789012.dkr.ecr.&lt;region-name&gt;.amazonaws.com/&lt;repository-name&gt;</c>).</para></li><li><para>Images in official repositories on Docker Hub use a single name (for example, <c>ubuntu</c>
            or <c>mongo</c>).</para></li><li><para>Images in other repositories on Docker Hub are qualified with an organization name
            (for example, <c>amazon/amazon-ecs-agent</c>).</para></li><li><para>Images in other online repositories are qualified further by a domain name (for example,
            <c>quay.io/assemblyline/ubuntu</c>).</para></li></ul>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_InitContainer">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>These containers run before application containers, always runs to completion, and
            must complete successfully before the next container starts. These containers are
            registered with the Amazon EKS Connector agent and persists the registration information
            in the Kubernetes backend data store. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/init-containers/">Init
            Containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</para><note><para>This object is limited to 10 elements</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_InitProcessEnabled">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>If true, run an <c>init</c> process inside the container that forwards signals and
            reaps processes. This parameter maps to the <c>--init</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>. This parameter requires version 1.25 of the Docker Remote API or greater
            on your container instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container
            instance, log in to your container instance and run the following command: <c>sudo
            docker version | grep "Server API version"</c></para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_InstanceType">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job. All node groups in a multi-node
            parallel job must use the same instance type.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to single-node container jobs or jobs that run on
            Fargate resources, and shouldn't be provided.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.JobDefinitionName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the job definition to register. It can be up to 128 letters long. It can
            contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_JobRoleArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that the container can assume for Amazon
            Web Services permissions. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/task-iam-roles.html">IAM
            roles for tasks</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Metadata_Label">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Key-value pairs used to identify, sort, and organize cube resources. Can contain up
            to 63 uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores
            (_). Labels can be added or modified at any time. Each resource can have multiple
            labels, but each key must be unique for a given object.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LogConfiguration_LogDriver">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The log driver to use for the container. The valid values that are listed for this
            parameter are log drivers that the Amazon ECS container agent can communicate with
            by default.</para><para>The supported log drivers are <c>awslogs</c>, <c>fluentd</c>, <c>gelf</c>, <c>json-file</c>,
            <c>journald</c>, <c>logentries</c>, <c>syslog</c>, and <c>splunk</c>.</para><note><para>Jobs that are running on Fargate resources are restricted to the <c>awslogs</c> and
            <c>splunk</c> log drivers.</para></note><dl><dt>awslogs</dt><dd><para>Specifies the Amazon CloudWatch Logs logging driver. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using_awslogs.html">Using
            the awslogs log driver</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i> and <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/awslogs/">Amazon
            CloudWatch Logs logging driver</a> in the Docker documentation.</para></dd><dt>fluentd</dt><dd><para>Specifies the Fluentd logging driver. For more information including usage and options,
            see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/fluentd/">Fluentd logging
            driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd><dt>gelf</dt><dd><para>Specifies the Graylog Extended Format (GELF) logging driver. For more information
            including usage and options, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/gelf/">Graylog
            Extended Format logging driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd><dt>journald</dt><dd><para>Specifies the journald logging driver. For more information including usage and options,
            see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/journald/">Journald
            logging driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd><dt>json-file</dt><dd><para>Specifies the JSON file logging driver. For more information including usage and options,
            see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/json-file/">JSON File
            logging driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd><dt>splunk</dt><dd><para>Specifies the Splunk logging driver. For more information including usage and options,
            see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/splunk/">Splunk logging
            driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd><dt>syslog</dt><dd><para>Specifies the syslog logging driver. For more information including usage and options,
            see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/syslog/">Syslog logging
            driver</a> in the <i>Docker documentation</i>.</para></dd></dl><note><para>If you have a custom driver that's not listed earlier that you want to work with the
            Amazon ECS container agent, you can fork the Amazon ECS container agent project that's
            <a href="https://github.com/aws/amazon-ecs-agent">available on GitHub</a> and customize
            it to work with that driver. We encourage you to submit pull requests for changes
            that you want to have included. However, Amazon Web Services doesn't currently support
            running modified copies of this software.</para></note><para>This parameter requires version 1.18 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container
            instance. To check the Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in
            to your container instance and run the following command: <c>sudo docker version |
            grep "Server API version"</c></para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NodeProperties_MainNode">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies the node index for the main node of a multi-node parallel job. This node
            index value must be fewer than the number of nodes.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_MaxSwap">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The total amount of swap memory (in MiB) a container can use. This parameter is translated
            to the <c>--memory-swap</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a> where the value is the sum of the container memory plus the <c>maxSwap</c>
            value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/resource_constraints/#--memory-swap-details"><c>--memory-swap</c> details</a> in the Docker documentation.</para><para>If a <c>maxSwap</c> value of <c>0</c> is specified, the container doesn't use swap.
            Accepted values are <c>0</c> or any positive integer. If the <c>maxSwap</c> parameter
            is omitted, the container doesn't use the swap configuration for the container instance
            that it's running on. A <c>maxSwap</c> value must be set for the <c>swappiness</c>
            parameter to be used.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            provide it for these jobs.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_MountPoint">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The mount points for data volumes in your container. This parameter maps to <c>Volumes</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--volume</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NodeProperties_NodeRangeProperty">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of node ranges and their properties that are associated with a multi-node parallel
            job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.NodeProperties_NumNode">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The number of nodes that are associated with a multi-node parallel job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.RuntimePlatform_OperatingSystemFamily">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The operating system for the compute environment. Valid values are: <c>LINUX</c> (default),
            <c>WINDOWS_SERVER_2019_CORE</c>, <c>WINDOWS_SERVER_2019_FULL</c>, <c>WINDOWS_SERVER_2022_CORE</c>,
            and <c>WINDOWS_SERVER_2022_FULL</c>.</para><note><para>The following parameters can’t be set for Windows containers: <c>linuxParameters</c>,
            <c>privileged</c>, <c>user</c>, <c>ulimits</c>, <c>readonlyRootFilesystem</c>, and
            <c>efsVolumeConfiguration</c>.</para></note><note><para>The Batch Scheduler checks the compute environments that are attached to the job queue
            before registering a task definition with Fargate. In this scenario, the job queue
            is where the job is submitted. If the job requires a Windows container and the first
            compute environment is <c>LINUX</c>, the compute environment is skipped and the next
            compute environment is checked until a Windows-based compute environment is found.</para></note><note><para>Fargate Spot is not supported for <c>ARM64</c> and Windows-based containers on Fargate.
            A job queue will be blocked if a Fargate <c>ARM64</c> or Windows job is submitted
            to a job queue with only Fargate Spot compute environments. However, you can attach
            both <c>FARGATE</c> and <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c> compute environments to the same job queue.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LogConfiguration_Option">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The configuration options to send to the log driver. This parameter requires version
            1.19 of the Docker Remote API or greater on your container instance. To check the
            Docker Remote API version on your container instance, log in to your container instance
            and run the following command: <c>sudo docker version | grep "Server API version"</c></para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Parameter">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Default parameter substitution placeholders to set in the job definition. Parameters
            are specified as a key-value pair mapping. Parameters in a <c>SubmitJob</c> request
            override any corresponding parameter defaults from the job definition.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PlatformCapability">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The platform capabilities required by the job definition. If no value is specified,
            it defaults to <c>EC2</c>. To run the job on Fargate resources, specify <c>FARGATE</c>.</para><note><para>If the job runs on Amazon EKS resources, then you must not specify <c>platformCapabilities</c>.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.FargatePlatformConfiguration_PlatformVersion">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Fargate platform version where the jobs are running. A platform version is specified
            only for jobs that are running on Fargate resources. If one isn't specified, the <c>LATEST</c>
            platform version is used by default. This uses a recent, approved version of the Fargate
            platform for compute resources. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/platform_versions.html">Fargate
            platform versions</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Privileged">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>When this parameter is true, the container is given elevated permissions on the host
            container instance (similar to the <c>root</c> user). This parameter maps to <c>Privileged</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--privileged</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>. The default value is false.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and
            shouldn't be provided, or specified as false.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PropagateTag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding
            Amazon ECS task. If no value is specified, the tags are not propagated. Tags can only
            be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For tags with the same name, job
            tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined
            tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <c>FAILED</c>
            state.</para><note><para>If the job runs on Amazon EKS resources, then you must not specify <c>propagateTags</c>.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_ReadonlyRootFilesystem">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>When this parameter is true, the container is given read-only access to its root file
            system. This parameter maps to <c>ReadonlyRootfs</c> in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--read-only</c> option to <c>docker run</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_ResourceRequirement">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. The supported resources
            include <c>GPU</c>, <c>MEMORY</c>, and <c>VCPU</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.SchedulingPriority">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The scheduling priority for jobs that are submitted with this job definition. This
            only affects jobs in job queues with a fair share policy. Jobs with a higher scheduling
            priority are scheduled before jobs with a lower scheduling priority.</para><para>The minimum supported value is 0 and the maximum supported value is 9999.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LogConfiguration_SecretOption">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The secrets to pass to the log configuration. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying
            sensitive data</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Secret">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The secrets for the container. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/specifying-sensitive-data.html">Specifying
            sensitive data</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_ServiceAccountName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the service account that's used to run the pod. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/service-accounts.html">Kubernetes
            service accounts</a> and <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/associate-service-account-role.html">Configure
            a Kubernetes service account to assume an IAM role</a> in the <i>Amazon EKS User Guide</i>
            and <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-service-account/">Configure
            service accounts for pods</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_SharedMemorySize">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The value for the size (in MiB) of the <c>/dev/shm</c> volume. This parameter maps
            to the <c>--shm-size</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            provide it for these jobs.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_ShareProcessNamespace">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Indicates if the processes in a container are shared, or visible, to other containers
            in the same pod. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/share-process-namespace/">Share
            Process Namespace between Containers in a Pod</a>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.EphemeralStorage_SizeInGiB">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The total amount, in GiB, of ephemeral storage to set for the task. The minimum supported
            value is <c>21</c> GiB and the maximum supported value is <c>200</c> GiB.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_Swappiness">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>You can use this parameter to tune a container's memory swappiness behavior. A <c>swappiness</c>
            value of <c>0</c> causes swapping to not occur unless absolutely necessary. A <c>swappiness</c>
            value of <c>100</c> causes pages to be swapped aggressively. Valid values are whole
            numbers between <c>0</c> and <c>100</c>. If the <c>swappiness</c> parameter isn't
            specified, a default value of <c>60</c> is used. If a value isn't specified for <c>maxSwap</c>,
            then this parameter is ignored. If <c>maxSwap</c> is set to 0, the container doesn't
            use swap. This parameter maps to the <c>--memory-swappiness</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><para>Consider the following when you use a per-container swap configuration.</para><ul><li><para>Swap space must be enabled and allocated on the container instance for the containers
            to use.</para><note><para>By default, the Amazon ECS optimized AMIs don't have swap enabled. You must enable
            swap on the instance to use this feature. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/instance-store-swap-volumes.html">Instance
            store swap volumes</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i> or
            <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/ec2-memory-swap-file/">How
            do I allocate memory to work as swap space in an Amazon EC2 instance by using a swap
            file?</a></para></note></li><li><para>The swap space parameters are only supported for job definitions using EC2 resources.</para></li><li><para>If the <c>maxSwap</c> and <c>swappiness</c> parameters are omitted from a job definition,
            each container has a default <c>swappiness</c> value of 60. Moreover, the total swap
            usage is limited to two times the memory reservation of the container.</para></li></ul><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            provide it for these jobs.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the job definition to help you categorize and organize
            your resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/using-tags.html">Tagging
            Amazon Web Services Resources</a> in <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.EcsProperties_TaskProperty">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>An object that contains the properties for the Amazon ECS task definition of a job.</para><note><para>This object is currently limited to one element.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Timeout">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The timeout configuration for jobs that are submitted with this job definition, after
            which Batch terminates your jobs if they have not finished. If a job is terminated
            due to a timeout, it isn't retried. The minimum value for the timeout is 60 seconds.
            Any timeout configuration that's specified during a <a>SubmitJob</a> operation overrides
            the timeout configuration defined here. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/job_timeouts.html">Job
            Timeouts</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.LinuxParameters_Tmpf">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The container path, mount options, and size (in MiB) of the <c>tmpfs</c> mount. This
            parameter maps to the <c>--tmpfs</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            provide this parameter for this resource type.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Type">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type of job definition. For more information about multi-node parallel jobs, see
            <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/multi-node-job-def.html">Creating
            a multi-node parallel job definition</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><ul><li><para>If the value is <c>container</c>, then one of the following is required: <c>containerProperties</c>,
            <c>ecsProperties</c>, or <c>eksProperties</c>.</para></li><li><para>If the value is <c>multinode</c>, then <c>nodeProperties</c> is required.</para></li></ul><note><para>If the job is run on Fargate resources, then <c>multinode</c> isn't supported.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Ulimit">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of <c>ulimits</c> to set in the container. This parameter maps to <c>Ulimits</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--ulimit</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources and
            shouldn't be provided.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_User">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The user name to use inside the container. This parameter maps to <c>User</c> in the
            <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create a container</a>
            section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker Remote API</a>
            and the <c>--user</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Volume">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of data volumes used in a job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PodProperties_Volume">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies the volumes for a job definition that uses Amazon EKS resources.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Memory">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated, use <c>resourceRequirements</c> to specify the memory
            requirements for the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate
            resources. For jobs that run on Amazon EC2 resources, it specifies the memory hard
            limit (in MiB) for a container. If your container attempts to exceed the specified
            number, it's terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job using
            this parameter. The memory hard limit can be specified in several places. It must
            be specified for each node at least once.</para>
            </para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated.</para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.ContainerProperties_Vcpus">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated, use <c>resourceRequirements</c> to specify the vCPU
            requirements for the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on Fargate
            resources. For jobs running on Amazon EC2 resources, it specifies the number of vCPUs
            reserved for the job.</para><para>Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. This parameter maps to <c>CpuShares</c>
            in the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/#create-a-container">Create
            a container</a> section of the <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/v1.23/">Docker
            Remote API</a> and the <c>--cpu-shares</c> option to <a href="https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/run/">docker
            run</a>. The number of vCPUs must be specified but can be specified in several places.
            You must specify it at least once for each node.</para>
            </para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated.</para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.RegisterJobDefinitionResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.RegisterJobDefinitionResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobDefinitionName parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobDefinitionName' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RegisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Deletes an Batch compute environment.
             
              
            <para>
            Before you can delete a compute environment, you must set its state to <c>DISABLED</c>
            with the <a>UpdateComputeEnvironment</a> API operation and disassociate it from any
            job queues with the <a>UpdateJobQueue</a> API operation. Compute environments that
            use Fargate resources must terminate all active jobs on that compute environment before
            deleting the compute environment. If this isn't done, the compute environment enters
            an invalid state.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeEnvironment">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name or Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the compute environment to delete.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DeleteComputeEnvironmentResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the ComputeEnvironment parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^ComputeEnvironment' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Terminates a job in a job queue. Jobs that are in the <c>STARTING</c> or <c>RUNNING</c>
            state are terminated, which causes them to transition to <c>FAILED</c>. Jobs that
            have not progressed to the <c>STARTING</c> state are cancelled.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet.JobId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Batch job ID of the job to terminate.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet.Reason">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A message to attach to the job that explains the reason for canceling it. This message
            is returned by future <a>DescribeJobs</a> operations on the job. This message is also
            recorded in the Batch activity logs.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.TerminateJobResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobId parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobId' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobQueueCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Deletes the specified job queue. You must first disable submissions for a queue with
            the <a>UpdateJobQueue</a> operation. All jobs in the queue are eventually terminated
            when you delete a job queue. The jobs are terminated at a rate of about 16 jobs each
            second.
             
              
            <para>
            It's not necessary to disassociate compute environments from a queue before submitting
            a <c>DeleteJobQueue</c> request.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobQueueCmdlet.JobQueue">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The short name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the queue to delete.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobQueueCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DeleteJobQueueResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobQueueCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobQueue parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobQueue' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATJobQueueCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Deletes specified tags from an Batch resource.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet.ResourceArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource from which to delete tags. Batch resources
            that support tags are compute environments, jobs, job definitions, job queues, and
            scheduling policies. ARNs for child jobs of array and multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs
            aren't supported.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet.TagKey">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The keys of the tags to be removed.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.UntagResourceResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the ResourceArn parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^ResourceArn' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATResourceTagCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Deletes the specified scheduling policy.
             
              
            <para>
            You can't delete a scheduling policy that's used in any job queues.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Arn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the scheduling policy to delete.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DeleteSchedulingPolicyResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the Arn parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^Arn' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.RemoveBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Cancels a job in an Batch job queue. Jobs that are in the <c>SUBMITTED</c> or <c>PENDING</c>
            are canceled. A job in<c>RUNNABLE</c> remains in <c>RUNNABLE</c> until it reaches
            the head of the job queue. Then the job status is updated to <c>FAILED</c>.
             
             <note><para>
            A <c>PENDING</c> job is canceled after all dependency jobs are completed. Therefore,
            it may take longer than expected to cancel a job in <c>PENDING</c> status.
            </para><para>
            When you try to cancel an array parent job in <c>PENDING</c>, Batch attempts to cancel
            all child jobs. The array parent job is canceled when all child jobs are completed.
            </para></note><para>
            Jobs that progressed to the <c>STARTING</c> or <c>RUNNING</c> state aren't canceled.
            However, the API operation still succeeds, even if no job is canceled. These jobs
            must be terminated with the <a>TerminateJob</a> operation.
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet.JobId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Batch job ID of the job to cancel.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet.Reason">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A message to attach to the job that explains the reason for canceling it. This message
            is returned by future <a>DescribeJobs</a> operations on the job. This message is also
            recorded in the Batch activity logs.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.CancelJobResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobId parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobId' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.StopBATJobCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Submits an Batch job from a job definition. Parameters that are specified during <a>SubmitJob</a>
            override parameters defined in the job definition. vCPU and memory requirements that
            are specified in the <c>resourceRequirements</c> objects in the job definition are
            the exception. They can't be overridden this way using the <c>memory</c> and <c>vcpus</c>
            parameters. Rather, you must specify updates to job definition parameters in a <c>resourceRequirements</c>
            object that's included in the <c>containerOverrides</c> parameter.
             
             <note><para>
            Job queues with a scheduling policy are limited to 500 active fair share identifiers
            at a time.
            </para></note><important><para>
            Jobs that run on Fargate resources can't be guaranteed to run for more than 14 days.
            This is because, after 14 days, Fargate resources might become unavailable and job
            might be terminated.
            </para></important>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.RetryStrategy_Attempt">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The number of times to move a job to the <c>RUNNABLE</c> status. You can specify between
            1 and 10 attempts. If the value of <c>attempts</c> is greater than one, the job is
            retried on failure the same number of attempts as the value.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_Command">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The command to send to the container that overrides the default command from the Docker
            image or the job definition.</para><note><para>This parameter can't contain an empty string.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.PodProperties_Container">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The overrides for the container that's used on the Amazon EKS pod.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.DependsOn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A list of dependencies for the job. A job can depend upon a maximum of 20 jobs. You
            can specify a <c>SEQUENTIAL</c> type dependency without specifying a job ID for array
            jobs so that each child array job completes sequentially, starting at index 0. You
            can also specify an <c>N_TO_N</c> type dependency with a job ID for array jobs. In
            that case, each index child of this job must wait for the corresponding index child
            of each dependency to complete before it can begin.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_Environment">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The environment variables to send to the container. You can add new environment variables,
            which are added to the container at launch, or you can override the existing environment
            variables from the Docker image or the job definition.</para><note><para>Environment variables cannot start with "<c>AWS_BATCH</c>". This naming convention
            is reserved for variables that Batch sets.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.RetryStrategy_EvaluateOnExit">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Array of up to 5 objects that specify the conditions where jobs are retried or failed.
            If this parameter is specified, then the <c>attempts</c> parameter must also be specified.
            If none of the listed conditions match, then the job is retried.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.PodProperties_InitContainer">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The overrides for the conatainers defined in the Amazon EKS pod. These containers
            run before application containers, always runs to completion, and must complete successfully
            before the next container starts. These containers are registered with the Amazon
            EKS Connector agent and persists the registration information in the Kubernetes backend
            data store. For more information, see <a href="https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/init-containers/">Init
            Containers</a> in the <i>Kubernetes documentation</i>.</para><note><para>This object is limited to 10 elements</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_InstanceType">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to single-node container jobs or jobs that run on
            Fargate resources, and shouldn't be provided.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.JobDefinition">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The job definition used by this job. This value can be one of <c>definition-name</c>,
            <c>definition-name:revision</c>, or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the job definition,
            with or without the revision (<c>arn:aws:batch:<i>region</i>:<i>account</i>:job-definition/<i>definition-name</i>:<i>revision</i></c>, or <c>arn:aws:batch:<i>region</i>:<i>account</i>:job-definition/<i>definition-name</i></c>).</para><para>If the revision is not specified, then the latest active revision is used.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.JobName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the job. It can be up to 128 letters long. The first character must be
            alphanumeric, can contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and
            underscores (_).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.JobQueue">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The job queue where the job is submitted. You can specify either the name or the Amazon
            Resource Name (ARN) of the queue.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Metadata_Label">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Key-value pairs used to identify, sort, and organize cube resources. Can contain up
            to 63 uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores
            (_). Labels can be added or modified at any time. Each resource can have multiple
            labels, but each key must be unique for a given object.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.NodeOverrides_NodePropertyOverride">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The node property overrides for the job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.NodeOverrides_NumNode">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The number of nodes to use with a multi-node parallel job. This value overrides the
            number of nodes that are specified in the job definition. To use this override, you
            must meet the following conditions:</para><ul><li><para>There must be at least one node range in your job definition that has an open upper
            boundary, such as <c>:</c> or <c>n:</c>.</para></li><li><para>The lower boundary of the node range that's specified in the job definition must be
            fewer than the number of nodes specified in the override.</para></li><li><para>The main node index that's specified in the job definition must be fewer than the
            number of nodes specified in the override.</para></li></ul>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Parameter">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Additional parameters passed to the job that replace parameter substitution placeholders
            that are set in the job definition. Parameters are specified as a key and value pair
            mapping. Parameters in a <c>SubmitJob</c> request override any corresponding parameter
            defaults from the job definition.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.PropagateTag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding
            Amazon ECS task. If no value is specified, the tags aren't propagated. Tags can only
            be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For tags with the same name, job
            tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined
            tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the <c>FAILED</c>
            state. When specified, this overrides the tag propagation setting in the job definition.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_ResourceRequirement">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. This overrides the settings
            in the job definition. The supported resources include <c>GPU</c>, <c>MEMORY</c>,
            and <c>VCPU</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.SchedulingPriorityOverride">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The scheduling priority for the job. This only affects jobs in job queues with a fair
            share policy. Jobs with a higher scheduling priority are scheduled before jobs with
            a lower scheduling priority. This overrides any scheduling priority in the job definition
            and works only within a single share identifier.</para><para>The minimum supported value is 0 and the maximum supported value is 9999.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ShareIdentifier">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The share identifier for the job. Don't specify this parameter if the job queue doesn't
            have a scheduling policy. If the job queue has a scheduling policy, then this parameter
            must be specified.</para><para>This string is limited to 255 alphanumeric characters, and can be followed by an asterisk
            (*).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ArrayProperties_Size">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The size of the array job.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The tags that you apply to the job request to help you categorize and organize your
            resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws_tagging.html">Tagging
            Amazon Web Services Resources</a> in <i>Amazon Web Services General Reference</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.EcsPropertiesOverride_TaskProperty">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The overrides for the Amazon ECS task definition of a job.</para><note><para>This object is currently limited to one element.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Timeout">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The timeout configuration for this <a>SubmitJob</a> operation. You can specify a timeout
            duration after which Batch terminates your jobs if they haven't finished. If a job
            is terminated due to a timeout, it isn't retried. The minimum value for the timeout
            is 60 seconds. This configuration overrides any timeout configuration specified in
            the job definition. For array jobs, child jobs have the same timeout configuration
            as the parent job. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/job_timeouts.html">Job
            Timeouts</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_Memory">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated, use <c>resourceRequirements</c> to override the memory
            requirements specified in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running
            on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on Amazon EC2 resources, it overrides the
            <c>memory</c> parameter set in the job definition, but doesn't override any memory
            requirement that's specified in the <c>resourceRequirements</c> structure in the job
            definition. To override memory requirements that are specified in the <c>resourceRequirements</c>
            structure in the job definition, <c>resourceRequirements</c> must be specified in
            the <c>SubmitJob</c> request, with <c>type</c> set to <c>MEMORY</c> and <c>value</c>
            set to the new value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't
            override job definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated.</para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.ContainerOverrides_Vcpus">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated, use <c>resourceRequirements</c> to override the <c>vcpus</c>
            parameter that's set in the job definition. It's not supported for jobs running on
            Fargate resources. For jobs that run on Amazon EC2 resources, it overrides the <c>vcpus</c>
            parameter set in the job definition, but doesn't override any vCPU requirement specified
            in the <c>resourceRequirements</c> structure in the job definition. To override vCPU
            requirements that are specified in the <c>resourceRequirements</c> structure in the
            job definition, <c>resourceRequirements</c> must be specified in the <c>SubmitJob</c>
            request, with <c>type</c> set to <c>VCPU</c> and <c>value</c> set to the new value.
            For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#override-resource-requirements">Can't
            override job definition resource requirements</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            <para>This parameter is deprecated.</para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.SubmitJobResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.SubmitJobResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobName parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobName' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.SubmitBATJobCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UnregisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Deregisters an Batch job definition. Job definitions are permanently deleted after
            180 days.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UnregisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.JobDefinition">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name and revision (<c>name:revision</c>) or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of
            the job definition to deregister.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UnregisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.DeregisterJobDefinitionResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UnregisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobDefinition parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobDefinition' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UnregisterBATJobDefinitionCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Updates an Batch compute environment.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_AllocationStrategy">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The allocation strategy to use for the compute resource if there's not enough instances
            of the best fitting instance type that can be allocated. This might be because of
            availability of the instance type in the Region or <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-resource-limits.html">Amazon
            EC2 service limits</a>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/allocation-strategies.html">Allocation
            strategies</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the allocation strategy requires an
            infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>. <c>BEST_FIT</c> isn't supported
            when updating a compute environment.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><dl><dt>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</dt><dd><para>Batch selects additional instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements
            of the jobs in the queue. Its preference is for instance types with lower cost vCPUs.
            If additional instances of the previously selected instance types aren't available,
            Batch selects new instance types.</para></dd><dt>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt><dd><para>Batch selects one or more instance types that are large enough to meet the requirements
            of the jobs in the queue. Its preference is for instance types that are less likely
            to be interrupted. This allocation strategy is only available for Spot Instance compute
            resources.</para></dd><dt>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</dt><dd><para>The price and capacity optimized allocation strategy looks at both price and capacity
            to select the Spot Instance pools that are the least likely to be interrupted and
            have the lowest possible price. This allocation strategy is only available for Spot
            Instance compute resources.</para></dd></dl><para>With <c>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</c>,<c>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c> and <c>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>
            (recommended) strategies using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <c>BEST_FIT</c>
            strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <c>maxvCpus</c> to meet
            your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <c>maxvCpus</c> by
            more than a single instance.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_BidPercentage">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum percentage that a Spot Instance price can be when compared with the On-Demand
            price for that instance type before instances are launched. For example, if your maximum
            percentage is 20%, the Spot price must be less than 20% of the current On-Demand price
            for that Amazon EC2 instance. You always pay the lowest (market) price and never more
            than your maximum percentage. For most use cases, we recommend leaving this field
            empty.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the bid percentage requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeEnvironment">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name or full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the compute environment to update.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_DesiredvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The desired number of vCPUS in the compute environment. Batch modifies this value
            between the minimum and maximum values based on job queue demand.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><note><para>Batch doesn't support changing the desired number of vCPUs of an existing compute
            environment. Don't specify this parameter for compute environments using Amazon EKS
            clusters.</para></note><note><para>When you update the <c>desiredvCpus</c> setting, the value must be between the <c>minvCpus</c>
            and <c>maxvCpus</c> values. </para><para>Additionally, the updated <c>desiredvCpus</c> value must be greater than or equal
            to the current <c>desiredvCpus</c> value. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html#error-desired-vcpus-update">Troubleshooting
            Batch</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Ec2Configuration">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Provides information used to select Amazon Machine Images (AMIs) for Amazon EC2 instances
            in the compute environment. If <c>Ec2Configuration</c> isn't specified, the default
            is <c>ECS_AL2</c>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>. To remove the Amazon EC2
            configuration and any custom AMI ID specified in <c>imageIdOverride</c>, set this
            value to an empty string.</para><para>One or two values can be provided.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Ec2KeyPair">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 key pair that's used for instances launched in the compute environment.
            You can use this key pair to log in to your instances with SSH. To remove the Amazon
            EC2 key pair, set this value to an empty string.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the Amazon EC2 key pair requires an
            infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_ImageId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Machine Image (AMI) ID used for instances launched in the compute environment.
            This parameter is overridden by the <c>imageIdOverride</c> member of the <c>Ec2Configuration</c>
            structure. To remove the custom AMI ID and use the default AMI ID, set this value
            to an empty string.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the AMI ID requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><note><para>The AMI that you choose for a compute environment must match the architecture of the
            instance types that you intend to use for that compute environment. For example, if
            your compute environment uses A1 instance types, the compute resource AMI that you
            choose must support ARM instances. Amazon ECS vends both x86 and ARM versions of the
            Amazon ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/ecs-optimized_AMI.html#ecs-optimized-ami-linux-variants.html">Amazon
            ECS-optimized Amazon Linux 2 AMI</a> in the <i>Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer
            Guide</i>.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_InstanceRole">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon ECS instance profile applied to Amazon EC2 instances in a compute environment.
            Required for Amazon EC2 instances. You can specify the short name or full Amazon Resource
            Name (ARN) of an instance profile. For example, <c><i>ecsInstanceRole</i></c> or
            <c>arn:aws:iam::<i>&lt;aws_account_id&gt;</i>:instance-profile/<i>ecsInstanceRole</i></c>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/instance_IAM_role.html">Amazon
            ECS instance role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_InstanceType">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The instances types that can be launched. You can specify instance families to launch
            any instance type within those families (for example, <c>c5</c> or <c>p3</c>), or
            you can specify specific sizes within a family (such as <c>c5.8xlarge</c>). You can
            also choose <c>optimal</c> to select instance types (from the C4, M4, and R4 instance
            families) that match the demand of your job queues.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note><note><para>When you create a compute environment, the instance types that you select for the
            compute environment must share the same architecture. For example, you can't mix x86
            and ARM instances in the same compute environment.</para></note><note><para>Currently, <c>optimal</c> uses instance types from the C4, M4, and R4 instance families.
            In Regions that don't have instance types from those instance families, instance types
            from the C5, M5, and R5 instance families are used.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.UpdatePolicy_JobExecutionTimeoutMinute">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies the job timeout (in minutes) when the compute environment infrastructure
            is updated. The default value is 30.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_LaunchTemplateId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The ID of the launch template.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_LaunchTemplateName">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name of the launch template.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_MaxvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of Amazon EC2 vCPUs that an environment can reach.</para><note><para>With <c>BEST_FIT_PROGRESSIVE</c>,<c>SPOT_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c> and <c>SPOT_PRICE_CAPACITY_OPTIMIZED</c>
            (recommended) strategies using On-Demand or Spot Instances, and the <c>BEST_FIT</c>
            strategy using Spot Instances, Batch might need to exceed <c>maxvCpus</c> to meet
            your capacity requirements. In this event, Batch never exceeds <c>maxvCpus</c> by
            more than a single instance.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_MinvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The minimum number of vCPUs that an environment should maintain (even if the compute
            environment is <c>DISABLED</c>).</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_PlacementGroup">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 placement group to associate with your compute resources. If you intend
            to submit multi-node parallel jobs to your compute environment, you should consider
            creating a cluster placement group and associate it with your compute resources. This
            keeps your multi-node parallel job on a logical grouping of instances within a single
            Availability Zone with high network flow potential. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/placement-groups.html">Placement
            groups</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the placement group requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_SecurityGroupId">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon EC2 security groups that are associated with instances launched in the
            compute environment. This parameter is required for Fargate compute resources, where
            it can contain up to 5 security groups. For Fargate compute resources, providing an
            empty list is handled as if this parameter wasn't specified and no change is made.
            For Amazon EC2 compute resources, providing an empty list removes the security groups
            from the compute resource.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the Amazon EC2 security groups requires
            an infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ServiceRole">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that allows Batch to make calls
            to other Amazon Web Services services on your behalf. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/service_IAM_role.html">Batch
            service IAM role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><important><para>If the compute environment has a service-linked role, it can't be changed to use a
            regular IAM role. Likewise, if the compute environment has a regular IAM role, it
            can't be changed to use a service-linked role. To update the parameters for the compute
            environment that require an infrastructure update to change, the <b>AWSServiceRoleForBatch</b>
            service-linked role must be used. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></important><para>If your specified role has a path other than <c>/</c>, then you must either specify
            the full role ARN (recommended) or prefix the role name with the path.</para><note><para>Depending on how you created your Batch service role, its ARN might contain the <c>service-role</c>
            path prefix. When you only specify the name of the service role, Batch assumes that
            your ARN doesn't use the <c>service-role</c> path prefix. Because of this, we recommend
            that you specify the full ARN of your service role when you create compute environments.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.State">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The state of the compute environment. Compute environments in the <c>ENABLED</c> state
            can accept jobs from a queue and scale in or out automatically based on the workload
            demand of its associated queues.</para><para>If the state is <c>ENABLED</c>, then the Batch scheduler can attempt to place jobs
            from an associated job queue on the compute resources within the environment. If the
            compute environment is managed, then it can scale its instances out or in automatically,
            based on the job queue demand.</para><para>If the state is <c>DISABLED</c>, then the Batch scheduler doesn't attempt to place
            jobs within the environment. Jobs in a <c>STARTING</c> or <c>RUNNING</c> state continue
            to progress normally. Managed compute environments in the <c>DISABLED</c> state don't
            scale out. </para><note><para>Compute environments in a <c>DISABLED</c> state may continue to incur billing charges.
            To prevent additional charges, turn off and then delete the compute environment. For
            more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environment_parameters.html#compute_environment_state">State</a>
            in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></note><para>When an instance is idle, the instance scales down to the <c>minvCpus</c> value. However,
            the instance size doesn't change. For example, consider a <c>c5.8xlarge</c> instance
            with a <c>minvCpus</c> value of <c>4</c> and a <c>desiredvCpus</c> value of <c>36</c>.
            This instance doesn't scale down to a <c>c5.large</c> instance.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Subnet">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The VPC subnets where the compute resources are launched. Fargate compute resources
            can contain up to 16 subnets. For Fargate compute resources, providing an empty list
            will be handled as if this parameter wasn't specified and no change is made. For Amazon
            EC2 compute resources, providing an empty list removes the VPC subnets from the compute
            resource. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/VPC_Subnets.html">VPCs
            and subnets</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the VPC subnets requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>Batch on Amazon EC2 and Batch on Amazon EKS support Local Zones. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/using-regions-availability-zones.html#concepts-local-zones">
            Local Zones</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances</i>, <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/local-zones.html">Amazon
            EKS and Amazon Web Services Local Zones</a> in the <i>Amazon EKS User Guide</i> and
            <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/cluster-regions-zones.html#clusters-local-zones">
            Amazon ECS clusters in Local Zones, Wavelength Zones, and Amazon Web Services Outposts</a>
            in the <i>Amazon ECS Developer Guide</i>.</para><para>Batch on Fargate doesn't currently support Local Zones.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Tag">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Key-value pair tags to be applied to Amazon EC2 resources that are launched in the
            compute environment. For Batch, these take the form of <c>"String1": "String2"</c>,
            where <c>String1</c> is the tag key and <c>String2</c> is the tag value-for example,
            <c>{ "Name": "Batch Instance - C4OnDemand" }</c>. This is helpful for recognizing
            your Batch instances in the Amazon EC2 console. These tags aren't seen when using
            the Batch <c>ListTagsForResource</c> API operation.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><note><para>This parameter isn't applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources. Don't
            specify it.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.UpdatePolicy_TerminateJobsOnUpdate">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies whether jobs are automatically terminated when the computer environment
            infrastructure is updated. The default value is <c>false</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_Type">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The type of compute environment: <c>EC2</c>, <c>SPOT</c>, <c>FARGATE</c>, or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>.
            For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/compute_environments.html">Compute
            environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><para> If you choose <c>SPOT</c>, you must also specify an Amazon EC2 Spot Fleet role with
            the <c>spotIamFleetRole</c> parameter. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/spot_fleet_IAM_role.html">Amazon
            EC2 spot fleet role</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para><para>When updating a compute environment, changing the type of a compute environment requires
            an infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.UnmanagedvCpu">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The maximum number of vCPUs expected to be used for an unmanaged compute environment.
            Don't specify this parameter for a managed compute environment. This parameter is
            only used for fair share scheduling to reserve vCPU capacity for new share identifiers.
            If this parameter isn't provided for a fair share job queue, no vCPU capacity is reserved.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.ComputeResources_UpdateToLatestImageVersion">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Specifies whether the AMI ID is updated to the latest one that's supported by Batch
            when the compute environment has an infrastructure update. The default value is <c>false</c>.</para><note><para>An AMI ID can either be specified in the <c>imageId</c> or <c>imageIdOverride</c>
            parameters or be determined by the launch template that's specified in the <c>launchTemplate</c>
            parameter. If an AMI ID is specified any of these ways, this parameter is ignored.
            For more information about to update AMI IDs during an infrastructure update, see
            <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html#updating-compute-environments-ami">Updating
            the AMI ID</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></note><para>When updating a compute environment, changing this setting requires an infrastructure
            update of the compute environment. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.LaunchTemplate_Version">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The version number of the launch template, <c>$Latest</c>, or <c>$Default</c>.</para><para>If the value is <c>$Latest</c>, the latest version of the launch template is used.
            If the value is <c>$Default</c>, the default version of the launch template is used.</para><important><para>If the AMI ID that's used in a compute environment is from the launch template, the
            AMI isn't changed when the compute environment is updated. It's only changed if the
            <c>updateToLatestImageVersion</c> parameter for the compute environment is set to
            <c>true</c>. During an infrastructure update, if either <c>$Latest</c> or <c>$Default</c>
            is specified, Batch re-evaluates the launch template version, and it might use a different
            version of the launch template. This is the case even if the launch template isn't
            specified in the update. When updating a compute environment, changing the launch
            template requires an infrastructure update of the compute environment. For more information,
            see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/batch/latest/userguide/updating-compute-environments.html">Updating
            compute environments</a> in the <i>Batch User Guide</i>.</para></important><para>Default: <c>$Default</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.UpdateComputeEnvironmentResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.UpdateComputeEnvironmentResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the ComputeEnvironment parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^ComputeEnvironment' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATComputeEnvironmentCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Updates a job queue.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.ComputeEnvironmentOrder">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Details the set of compute environments mapped to a job queue and their order relative
            to each other. This is one of the parameters used by the job scheduler to determine
            which compute environment runs a given job. Compute environments must be in the <c>VALID</c>
            state before you can associate them with a job queue. All of the compute environments
            must be either EC2 (<c>EC2</c> or <c>SPOT</c>) or Fargate (<c>FARGATE</c> or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>).
            EC2 and Fargate compute environments can't be mixed.</para><note><para>All compute environments that are associated with a job queue must share the same
            architecture. Batch doesn't support mixing compute environment architecture types
            in a single job queue.</para></note>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.JobQueue">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The name or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the job queue.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.Priority">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The priority of the job queue. Job queues with a higher priority (or a higher integer
            value for the <c>priority</c> parameter) are evaluated first when associated with
            the same compute environment. Priority is determined in descending order. For example,
            a job queue with a priority value of <c>10</c> is given scheduling preference over
            a job queue with a priority value of <c>1</c>. All of the compute environments must
            be either EC2 (<c>EC2</c> or <c>SPOT</c>) or Fargate (<c>FARGATE</c> or <c>FARGATE_SPOT</c>).
            EC2 and Fargate compute environments can't be mixed.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.SchedulingPolicyArn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the fair share scheduling policy. Once a job queue is
            created, the fair share scheduling policy can be replaced but not removed. The format
            is <c>aws:<i>Partition</i>:batch:<i>Region</i>:<i>Account</i>:scheduling-policy/<i>Name</i></c>. For example, <c>aws:aws:batch:us-west-2:123456789012:scheduling-policy/MySchedulingPolicy</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.State">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>Describes the queue's ability to accept new jobs. If the job queue state is <c>ENABLED</c>,
            it can accept jobs. If the job queue state is <c>DISABLED</c>, new jobs can't be added
            to the queue, but jobs already in the queue can finish.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The default value is '*'.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.UpdateJobQueueResponse).
            Specifying the name of a property of type Amazon.Batch.Model.UpdateJobQueueResponse will result in that property being returned.
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the JobQueue parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^JobQueue' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATJobQueueCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="T:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet">
            <summary>
            Updates a scheduling policy.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Arn">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the scheduling policy to update.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ComputeReservation">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>A value used to reserve some of the available maximum vCPU for fair share identifiers
            that aren't already used.</para><para>The reserved ratio is <c>(<i>computeReservation</i>/100)^<i>ActiveFairShares</i></c>
            where <c><i>ActiveFairShares</i></c> is the number of active fair share identifiers.</para><para>For example, a <c>computeReservation</c> value of 50 indicates that Batch reserves
            50% of the maximum available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier. It reserves
            25% if there are two fair share identifiers. It reserves 12.5% if there are three
            fair share identifiers. A <c>computeReservation</c> value of 25 indicates that Batch
            should reserve 25% of the maximum available vCPU if there's only one fair share identifier,
            6.25% if there are two fair share identifiers, and 1.56% if there are three fair share
            identifiers.</para><para>The minimum value is 0 and the maximum value is 99.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ShareDecaySecond">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>The amount of time (in seconds) to use to calculate a fair share percentage for each
            fair share identifier in use. A value of zero (0) indicates that only current usage
            is measured. The decay allows for more recently run jobs to have more weight than
            jobs that ran earlier. The maximum supported value is 604800 (1 week).</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.FairsharePolicy_ShareDistribution">
            <summary>
            <para>
            <para>An array of <c>SharedIdentifier</c> objects that contain the weights for the fair
            share identifiers for the fair share policy. Fair share identifiers that aren't included
            have a default weight of <c>1.0</c>.</para>
            </para>
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Select">
            <summary>
            Use the -Select parameter to control the cmdlet output. The cmdlet doesn't have a return value by default.
            Specifying -Select '*' will result in the cmdlet returning the whole service response (Amazon.Batch.Model.UpdateSchedulingPolicyResponse).
            Specifying -Select '^ParameterName' will result in the cmdlet returning the selected cmdlet parameter value.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.PassThru">
            <summary>
            Changes the cmdlet behavior to return the value passed to the Arn parameter.
            The -PassThru parameter is deprecated, use -Select '^Arn' instead. This parameter will be removed in a future version.
            </summary>
        </member>
        <member name="P:Amazon.PowerShell.Cmdlets.BAT.UpdateBATSchedulingPolicyCmdlet.Force">
            <summary>
            This parameter overrides confirmation prompts to force
            the cmdlet to continue its operation. This parameter should always
            be used with caution.
            </summary>
        </member>
    </members>
</doc>