import { EndpointParameterInstructions } from "@aws-sdk/middleware-endpoint";
import { Command as $Command } from "@aws-sdk/smithy-client";
import { Handler, HttpHandlerOptions as __HttpHandlerOptions, MetadataBearer as __MetadataBearer, MiddlewareStack } from "@aws-sdk/types";
import { HeadObjectOutput, HeadObjectRequest } from "../models/models_0";
import { S3ClientResolvedConfig, ServiceInputTypes, ServiceOutputTypes } from "../S3Client";
export interface HeadObjectCommandInput extends HeadObjectRequest {
}
export interface HeadObjectCommandOutput extends HeadObjectOutput, __MetadataBearer {
}
/**
 * <p>The HEAD action retrieves metadata from an object without returning the object
 *          itself. This action is useful if you're only interested in an object's metadata. To use
 *          HEAD, you must have READ access to the object.</p>
 *
 *          <p>A <code>HEAD</code> request has the same options as a <code>GET</code> action on an
 *          object. The response is identical to the <code>GET</code> response except that there is no
 *          response body. Because of this, if the <code>HEAD</code> request generates an error, it
 *          returns a generic <code>404 Not Found</code> or <code>403 Forbidden</code> code. It is not
 *          possible to retrieve the exact exception beyond these error codes.</p>
 *
 *          <p>If you encrypt an object by using server-side encryption with customer-provided
 *          encryption keys (SSE-C) when you store the object in Amazon S3, then when you retrieve the
 *          metadata from the object, you must use the following headers:</p>
 *          <ul>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm</p>
 *             </li>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key</p>
 *             </li>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key-MD5</p>
 *             </li>
 *          </ul>
 *          <p>For more information about SSE-C, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/ServerSideEncryptionCustomerKeys.html">Server-Side Encryption (Using
 *             Customer-Provided Encryption Keys)</a>.</p>
 *          <note>
 *             <ul>
 *                <li>
 *                   <p>Encryption request headers, like <code>x-amz-server-side-encryption</code>, should
 *             not be sent for GET requests if your object uses server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS)
 *             or server-side encryption with Amazon S3–managed encryption keys
 *             (SSE-S3). If your object does use these types of keys, you’ll get an HTTP 400 BadRequest
 *             error.</p>
 *                </li>
 *                <li>
 *                   <p>
 *                The last modified property in this case is the creation date of the object.</p>
 *                </li>
 *             </ul>
 *          </note>
 *
 *
 *          <p>Request headers are limited to 8 KB in size. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTCommonRequestHeaders.html">Common Request
 *             Headers</a>.</p>
 *          <p>Consider the following when using request headers:</p>
 *          <ul>
 *             <li>
 *                <p> Consideration 1 – If both of the <code>If-Match</code> and
 *                   <code>If-Unmodified-Since</code> headers are present in the request as
 *                follows:</p>
 *                <ul>
 *                   <li>
 *                      <p>
 *                         <code>If-Match</code> condition evaluates to <code>true</code>, and;</p>
 *                   </li>
 *                   <li>
 *                      <p>
 *                         <code>If-Unmodified-Since</code> condition evaluates to
 *                      <code>false</code>;</p>
 *                   </li>
 *                </ul>
 *                <p>Then Amazon S3 returns <code>200 OK</code> and the data requested.</p>
 *             </li>
 *             <li>
 *                <p> Consideration 2 – If both of the <code>If-None-Match</code> and
 *                   <code>If-Modified-Since</code> headers are present in the request as
 *                follows:</p>
 *                <ul>
 *                   <li>
 *                      <p>
 *                         <code>If-None-Match</code> condition evaluates to <code>false</code>,
 *                      and;</p>
 *                   </li>
 *                   <li>
 *                      <p>
 *                         <code>If-Modified-Since</code> condition evaluates to
 *                      <code>true</code>;</p>
 *                   </li>
 *                </ul>
 *                <p>Then Amazon S3 returns the <code>304 Not Modified</code> response code.</p>
 *             </li>
 *          </ul>
 *
 *          <p>For more information about conditional requests, see <a href="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7232">RFC 7232</a>.</p>
 *
 *          <p>
 *             <b>Permissions</b>
 *          </p>
 *          <p>You need the relevant read object (or version) permission for this operation. For more
 *          information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/using-with-s3-actions.html">Specifying Permissions
 *             in a Policy</a>. If the object you request does not exist, the error Amazon S3 returns
 *          depends on whether you also have the s3:ListBucket permission.</p>
 *          <ul>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>If you have the <code>s3:ListBucket</code> permission on the bucket, Amazon S3 returns
 *                an HTTP status code 404 ("no such key") error.</p>
 *             </li>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>If you don’t have the <code>s3:ListBucket</code> permission, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP
 *                status code 403 ("access denied") error.</p>
 *             </li>
 *          </ul>
 *
 *          <p>The following actions are related to <code>HeadObject</code>:</p>
 *          <ul>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>
 *                   <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObject.html">GetObject</a>
 *                </p>
 *             </li>
 *             <li>
 *                <p>
 *                   <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/API_GetObjectAttributes.html">GetObjectAttributes</a>
 *                </p>
 *             </li>
 *          </ul>
 * @example
 * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
 * ```javascript
 * import { S3Client, HeadObjectCommand } from "@aws-sdk/client-s3"; // ES Modules import
 * // const { S3Client, HeadObjectCommand } = require("@aws-sdk/client-s3"); // CommonJS import
 * const client = new S3Client(config);
 * const command = new HeadObjectCommand(input);
 * const response = await client.send(command);
 * ```
 *
 * @see {@link HeadObjectCommandInput} for command's `input` shape.
 * @see {@link HeadObjectCommandOutput} for command's `response` shape.
 * @see {@link S3ClientResolvedConfig | config} for S3Client's `config` shape.
 *
 */
export declare class HeadObjectCommand extends $Command<HeadObjectCommandInput, HeadObjectCommandOutput, S3ClientResolvedConfig> {
    readonly input: HeadObjectCommandInput;
    static getEndpointParameterInstructions(): EndpointParameterInstructions;
    constructor(input: HeadObjectCommandInput);
    /**
     * @internal
     */
    resolveMiddleware(clientStack: MiddlewareStack<ServiceInputTypes, ServiceOutputTypes>, configuration: S3ClientResolvedConfig, options?: __HttpHandlerOptions): Handler<HeadObjectCommandInput, HeadObjectCommandOutput>;
    private serialize;
    private deserialize;
}
