63 stable releases

new 1.63.0 Dec 4, 2024
1.61.0 Nov 6, 2024
1.39.0 Jul 22, 2024
1.19.0 Mar 26, 2024
0.8.0 Nov 20, 2023

#865 in Network programming

Download history 562/week @ 2024-08-14 324/week @ 2024-08-21 197/week @ 2024-08-28 189/week @ 2024-09-04 278/week @ 2024-09-11 327/week @ 2024-09-18 416/week @ 2024-09-25 212/week @ 2024-10-02 220/week @ 2024-10-09 156/week @ 2024-10-16 349/week @ 2024-10-23 509/week @ 2024-10-30 673/week @ 2024-11-06 479/week @ 2024-11-13 505/week @ 2024-11-20 452/week @ 2024-11-27

2,207 downloads per month
Used in 4 crates (3 directly)

Apache-2.0

4.5MB
71K SLoC

aws-sdk-bedrock

Describes the API operations for creating, managing, fine-turning, and evaluating Amazon Bedrock models.

Getting Started

Examples are available for many services and operations, check out the examples folder in GitHub.

The SDK provides one crate per AWS service. You must add Tokio as a dependency within your Rust project to execute asynchronous code. To add aws-sdk-bedrock to your project, add the following to your Cargo.toml file:

[dependencies]
aws-config = { version = "1.1.7", features = ["behavior-version-latest"] }
aws-sdk-bedrock = "1.63.0"
tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }

Then in code, a client can be created with the following:

use aws_sdk_bedrock as bedrock;

#[::tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), bedrock::Error> {
    let config = aws_config::load_from_env().await;
    let client = aws_sdk_bedrock::Client::new(&config);

    // ... make some calls with the client

    Ok(())
}

See the client documentation for information on what calls can be made, and the inputs and outputs for each of those calls.

Using the SDK

Until the SDK is released, we will be adding information about using the SDK to the Developer Guide. Feel free to suggest additional sections for the guide by opening an issue and describing what you are trying to do.

Getting Help

License

This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.

Dependencies

~8–20MB
~287K SLoC