/AWS1/IF_GDY=>DELETEFILTER()¶
About DeleteFilter¶
Deletes the filter specified by the filter name.
Method Signature¶
METHODS /AWS1/IF_GDY~DELETEFILTER
IMPORTING
!IV_DETECTORID TYPE /AWS1/GDYDETECTORID OPTIONAL
!IV_FILTERNAME TYPE /AWS1/GDYSTRING OPTIONAL
RETURNING
VALUE(OO_OUTPUT) TYPE REF TO /aws1/cl_gdydeletefilterrsp
RAISING
/AWS1/CX_GDYBADREQUESTEX
/AWS1/CX_GDYINTERNALSERVERER00
/AWS1/CX_GDYCLIENTEXC
/AWS1/CX_GDYSERVEREXC
/AWS1/CX_RT_TECHNICAL_GENERIC
/AWS1/CX_RT_SERVICE_GENERIC.
IMPORTING¶
Required arguments:¶
iv_detectorid TYPE /AWS1/GDYDETECTORID /AWS1/GDYDETECTORID¶
The unique ID of the detector that is associated with the filter.
To find the
detectorIdin the current Region, see the Settings page in the GuardDuty console, or run the ListDetectors API.
iv_filtername TYPE /AWS1/GDYSTRING /AWS1/GDYSTRING¶
The name of the filter that you want to delete.
RETURNING¶
oo_output TYPE REF TO /aws1/cl_gdydeletefilterrsp /AWS1/CL_GDYDELETEFILTERRSP¶
Domain /AWS1/RT_ACCOUNT_ID Primitive Type NUMC
Examples¶
Syntax Example¶
This is an example of the syntax for calling the method. It includes every possible argument and initializes every possible value. The data provided is not necessarily semantically accurate (for example the value "string" may be provided for something that is intended to be an instance ID, or in some cases two arguments may be mutually exclusive). The syntax shows the ABAP syntax for creating the various data structures.
DATA(lo_result) = lo_client->deletefilter(
iv_detectorid = |string|
iv_filtername = |string|
).
This is an example of reading all possible response values
lo_result = lo_result.
IF lo_result IS NOT INITIAL.
ENDIF.