/* * Copyright 2018-2023 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with * the License. A copy of the License is located at * * http://aws.amazon.com/apache2.0 * * or in the "license" file accompanying this file. This file is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR * CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. */ package com.amazonaws.services.ec2; import javax.annotation.Generated; import com.amazonaws.*; import com.amazonaws.regions.*; import com.amazonaws.services.ec2.model.*; import com.amazonaws.services.ec2.waiters.AmazonEC2Waiters; /** * Interface for accessing Amazon EC2. *
* Note: Do not directly implement this interface, new methods are added to it regularly. Extend from * {@link com.amazonaws.services.ec2.AbstractAmazonEC2} instead. *
*
*
* Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) provides secure and resizable computing capacity in the Amazon Web Services * Cloud. Using Amazon EC2 eliminates the need to invest in hardware up front, so you can develop and deploy * applications faster. Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) enables you to provision a logically isolated section * of the Amazon Web Services Cloud where you can launch Amazon Web Services resources in a virtual network that you've * defined. Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) provides block level storage volumes for use with EC2 instances. EBS * volumes are highly available and reliable storage volumes that can be attached to any running instance and used like * a hard drive. *
** To learn more, see the following resources: *
** Amazon EC2: Amazon EC2 product page, Amazon EC2 documentation *
** Amazon EBS: Amazon EBS product page, Amazon EBS documentation *
** Amazon VPC: Amazon VPC product page, Amazon VPC documentation *
** VPN: VPN product page, VPN documentation *
** Callers can pass in just the endpoint (ex: "ec2.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") or a full URL, including the protocol * (ex: "https://ec2.us-east-1.amazonaws.com"). If the protocol is not specified here, the default protocol from * this client's {@link ClientConfiguration} will be used, which by default is HTTPS. *
* For more information on using AWS regions with the AWS SDK for Java, and a complete list of all available * endpoints for all AWS services, see: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-java/v1/developer-guide/java-dg-region-selection.html#region-selection- * choose-endpoint *
* This method is not threadsafe. An endpoint should be configured when the client is created and before any * service requests are made. Changing it afterwards creates inevitable race conditions for any service requests in * transit or retrying. * * @param endpoint * The endpoint (ex: "ec2.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") or a full URL, including the protocol (ex: * "https://ec2.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") of the region specific AWS endpoint this client will communicate * with. * @deprecated use {@link AwsClientBuilder#setEndpointConfiguration(AwsClientBuilder.EndpointConfiguration)} for * example: * {@code builder.setEndpointConfiguration(new EndpointConfiguration(endpoint, signingRegion));} */ @Deprecated void setEndpoint(String endpoint); /** * An alternative to {@link AmazonEC2#setEndpoint(String)}, sets the regional endpoint for this client's service * calls. Callers can use this method to control which AWS region they want to work with. *
* By default, all service endpoints in all regions use the https protocol. To use http instead, specify it in the * {@link ClientConfiguration} supplied at construction. *
* This method is not threadsafe. A region should be configured when the client is created and before any service * requests are made. Changing it afterwards creates inevitable race conditions for any service requests in transit * or retrying. * * @param region * The region this client will communicate with. See * {@link com.amazonaws.regions.Region#getRegion(com.amazonaws.regions.Regions)} for accessing a given * region. Must not be null and must be a region where the service is available. * * @see Region#getRegion(com.amazonaws.regions.Regions) * @see Region#createClient(Class, com.amazonaws.auth.AWSCredentialsProvider, ClientConfiguration) * @see com.amazonaws.regions.Region#isServiceSupported(String) * @deprecated use {@link AwsClientBuilder#setRegion(String)} */ @Deprecated void setRegion(com.amazonaws.regions.Region region); /** *
* Accepts an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Accept a transferred Elastic IP address in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param acceptAddressTransferRequest * @return Result of the AcceptAddressTransfer operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AcceptAddressTransfer * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AcceptAddressTransferResult acceptAddressTransfer(AcceptAddressTransferRequest acceptAddressTransferRequest); /** ** Accepts the Convertible Reserved Instance exchange quote described in the * GetReservedInstancesExchangeQuote call. *
* * @param acceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest * Contains the parameters for accepting the quote. * @return Result of the AcceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuote operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AcceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuote * @see AWS API Documentation */ AcceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteResult acceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuote( AcceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest acceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest); /** ** Accepts a request to associate subnets with a transit gateway multicast domain. *
* * @param acceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the AcceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AcceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ AcceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsResult acceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations( AcceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest acceptTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest); /** *
* Accepts a transit gateway peering attachment request. The peering attachment must be in the
* pendingAcceptance
state.
*
* Accepts a request to attach a VPC to a transit gateway. *
*
* The VPC attachment must be in the pendingAcceptance
state. Use
* DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachments to view your pending VPC attachment requests. Use
* RejectTransitGatewayVpcAttachment to reject a VPC attachment request.
*
* Accepts connection requests to your VPC endpoint service. *
* * @param acceptVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the AcceptVpcEndpointConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AcceptVpcEndpointConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ AcceptVpcEndpointConnectionsResult acceptVpcEndpointConnections(AcceptVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest acceptVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest); /** *
* Accept a VPC peering connection request. To accept a request, the VPC peering connection must be in the
* pending-acceptance
state, and you must be the owner of the peer VPC. Use
* DescribeVpcPeeringConnections to view your outstanding VPC peering connection requests.
*
* For an inter-Region VPC peering connection request, you must accept the VPC peering connection in the Region of * the accepter VPC. *
* * @param acceptVpcPeeringConnectionRequest * @return Result of the AcceptVpcPeeringConnection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AcceptVpcPeeringConnection * @see AWS * API Documentation */ AcceptVpcPeeringConnectionResult acceptVpcPeeringConnection(AcceptVpcPeeringConnectionRequest acceptVpcPeeringConnectionRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the AcceptVpcPeeringConnection operation. * * @see #acceptVpcPeeringConnection(AcceptVpcPeeringConnectionRequest) */ AcceptVpcPeeringConnectionResult acceptVpcPeeringConnection(); /** ** Advertises an IPv4 or IPv6 address range that is provisioned for use with your Amazon Web Services resources * through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). *
** You can perform this operation at most once every 10 seconds, even if you specify different address ranges each * time. *
** We recommend that you stop advertising the BYOIP CIDR from other locations when you advertise it from Amazon Web * Services. To minimize down time, you can configure your Amazon Web Services resources to use an address from a * BYOIP CIDR before it is advertised, and then simultaneously stop advertising it from the current location and * start advertising it through Amazon Web Services. *
** It can take a few minutes before traffic to the specified addresses starts routing to Amazon Web Services because * of BGP propagation delays. *
** To stop advertising the BYOIP CIDR, use WithdrawByoipCidr. *
* * @param advertiseByoipCidrRequest * @return Result of the AdvertiseByoipCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AdvertiseByoipCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AdvertiseByoipCidrResult advertiseByoipCidr(AdvertiseByoipCidrRequest advertiseByoipCidrRequest); /** ** Allocates an Elastic IP address to your Amazon Web Services account. After you allocate the Elastic IP address * you can associate it with an instance or network interface. After you release an Elastic IP address, it is * released to the IP address pool and can be allocated to a different Amazon Web Services account. *
** You can allocate an Elastic IP address from an address pool owned by Amazon Web Services or from an address pool * created from a public IPv4 address range that you have brought to Amazon Web Services for use with your Amazon * Web Services resources using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** If you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address * that you released after it is allocated to another Amazon Web Services account. To attempt to recover an Elastic * IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. *
** For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** You can allocate a carrier IP address which is a public IP address from a telecommunication carrier, to a network * interface which resides in a subnet in a Wavelength Zone (for example an EC2 instance). *
* * @param allocateAddressRequest * @return Result of the AllocateAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AllocateAddress * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AllocateAddressResult allocateAddress(AllocateAddressRequest allocateAddressRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the AllocateAddress operation. * * @see #allocateAddress(AllocateAddressRequest) */ AllocateAddressResult allocateAddress(); /** ** Allocates a Dedicated Host to your account. At a minimum, specify the supported instance type or instance family, * the Availability Zone in which to allocate the host, and the number of hosts to allocate. *
* * @param allocateHostsRequest * @return Result of the AllocateHosts operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AllocateHosts * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AllocateHostsResult allocateHosts(AllocateHostsRequest allocateHostsRequest); /** ** Allocate a CIDR from an IPAM pool. The Region you use should be the IPAM pool locale. The locale is the Amazon * Web Services Region where this IPAM pool is available for allocations. *
** In IPAM, an allocation is a CIDR assignment from an IPAM pool to another IPAM pool or to a resource. For more * information, see Allocate * CIDRs in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
** This action creates an allocation with strong consistency. The returned CIDR will not overlap with any other * allocations from the same pool. *
** Applies a security group to the association between the target network and the Client VPN endpoint. This action * replaces the existing security groups with the specified security groups. *
* * @param applySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest * @return Result of the ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetwork operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetwork * @see AWS API Documentation */ ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkResult applySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetwork( ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest applySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest); /** ** Assigns one or more IPv6 addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific IPv6 * addresses, or you can specify the number of IPv6 addresses to be automatically assigned from within the subnet's * IPv6 CIDR block range. You can assign as many IPv6 addresses to a network interface as you can assign private * IPv4 addresses, and the limit varies per instance type. For information, see IP Addresses Per * Network Interface Per Instance Type in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** You must specify either the IPv6 addresses or the IPv6 address count in the request. *
** You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPV6 Prefix * Delegation prefixes, or the IPv6 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 * network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param assignIpv6AddressesRequest * @return Result of the AssignIpv6Addresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssignIpv6Addresses * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AssignIpv6AddressesResult assignIpv6Addresses(AssignIpv6AddressesRequest assignIpv6AddressesRequest); /** ** Assigns one or more secondary private IP addresses to the specified network interface. *
** You can specify one or more specific secondary IP addresses, or you can specify the number of secondary IP * addresses to be automatically assigned within the subnet's CIDR block range. The number of secondary IP addresses * that you can assign to an instance varies by instance type. For information about instance types, see Instance Types in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information about Elastic IP addresses, see Elastic IP Addresses * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** When you move a secondary private IP address to another network interface, any Elastic IP address that is * associated with the IP address is also moved. *
*
* Remapping an IP address is an asynchronous operation. When you move an IP address from one network interface to
* another, check network/interfaces/macs/mac/local-ipv4s
in the instance metadata to confirm that the
* remapping is complete.
*
* You must specify either the IP addresses or the IP address count in the request. *
** You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPv4 Prefix * Delegation prefixes, or the IPv4 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 * network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param assignPrivateIpAddressesRequest * Contains the parameters for AssignPrivateIpAddresses. * @return Result of the AssignPrivateIpAddresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssignPrivateIpAddresses * @see AWS * API Documentation */ AssignPrivateIpAddressesResult assignPrivateIpAddresses(AssignPrivateIpAddressesRequest assignPrivateIpAddressesRequest); /** ** Assigns one or more private IPv4 addresses to a private NAT gateway. For more information, see Work with * NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param assignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest * @return Result of the AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddress * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult assignPrivateNatGatewayAddress(AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest assignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest); /** ** Associates an Elastic IP address, or carrier IP address (for instances that are in subnets in Wavelength Zones) * with an instance or a network interface. Before you can use an Elastic IP address, you must allocate it to your * account. *
** If the Elastic IP address is already associated with a different instance, it is disassociated from that instance * and associated with the specified instance. If you associate an Elastic IP address with an instance that has an * existing Elastic IP address, the existing address is disassociated from the instance, but remains allocated to * your account. *
** [Subnets in Wavelength Zones] You can associate an IP address from the telecommunication carrier to the instance * or network interface. *
** You cannot associate an Elastic IP address with an interface in a different network border group. *
** This is an idempotent operation. If you perform the operation more than once, Amazon EC2 doesn't return an error, * and you may be charged for each time the Elastic IP address is remapped to the same instance. For more * information, see the Elastic IP Addresses section of Amazon * EC2 Pricing. *
** Associates a target network with a Client VPN endpoint. A target network is a subnet in a VPC. You can associate * multiple subnets from the same VPC with a Client VPN endpoint. You can associate only one subnet in each * Availability Zone. We recommend that you associate at least two subnets to provide Availability Zone redundancy. *
** If you specified a VPC when you created the Client VPN endpoint or if you have previous subnet associations, the * specified subnet must be in the same VPC. To specify a subnet that's in a different VPC, you must first modify * the Client VPN endpoint (ModifyClientVpnEndpoint) and change the VPC that's associated with it. *
* * @param associateClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest * @return Result of the AssociateClientVpnTargetNetwork operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateClientVpnTargetNetwork * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateClientVpnTargetNetworkResult associateClientVpnTargetNetwork(AssociateClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest associateClientVpnTargetNetworkRequest); /** ** Associates a set of DHCP options (that you've previously created) with the specified VPC, or associates no DHCP * options with the VPC. *
** After you associate the options with the VPC, any existing instances and all new instances that you launch in * that VPC use the options. You don't need to restart or relaunch the instances. They automatically pick up the * changes within a few hours, depending on how frequently the instance renews its DHCP lease. You can explicitly * renew the lease using the operating system on the instance. *
** For more information, see DHCP * options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param associateDhcpOptionsRequest * @return Result of the AssociateDhcpOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateDhcpOptions * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AssociateDhcpOptionsResult associateDhcpOptions(AssociateDhcpOptionsRequest associateDhcpOptionsRequest); /** ** Associates an Identity and Access Management (IAM) role with an Certificate Manager (ACM) certificate. This * enables the certificate to be used by the ACM for Nitro Enclaves application inside an enclave. For more * information, see Certificate * Manager for Nitro Enclaves in the Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves User Guide. *
** When the IAM role is associated with the ACM certificate, the certificate, certificate chain, and encrypted * private key are placed in an Amazon S3 location that only the associated IAM role can access. The private key of * the certificate is encrypted with an Amazon Web Services managed key that has an attached attestation-based key * policy. *
*
* To enable the IAM role to access the Amazon S3 object, you must grant it permission to call
* s3:GetObject
on the Amazon S3 bucket returned by the command. To enable the IAM role to access the
* KMS key, you must grant it permission to call kms:Decrypt
on the KMS key returned by the command.
* For more information, see Grant the role
* permission to access the certificate and encryption key in the Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves User
* Guide.
*
* Associates an IAM instance profile with a running or stopped instance. You cannot associate more than one IAM * instance profile with an instance. *
* * @param associateIamInstanceProfileRequest * @return Result of the AssociateIamInstanceProfile operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateIamInstanceProfile * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateIamInstanceProfileResult associateIamInstanceProfile(AssociateIamInstanceProfileRequest associateIamInstanceProfileRequest); /** ** Associates one or more targets with an event window. Only one type of target (instance IDs, Dedicated Host IDs, * or tags) can be specified with an event window. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param associateInstanceEventWindowRequest * @return Result of the AssociateInstanceEventWindow operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateInstanceEventWindow * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateInstanceEventWindowResult associateInstanceEventWindow(AssociateInstanceEventWindowRequest associateInstanceEventWindowRequest); /** ** Associates an IPAM resource discovery with an Amazon VPC IPAM. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that * enables IPAM to manage and monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param associateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest * @return Result of the AssociateIpamResourceDiscovery operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateIpamResourceDiscovery * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateIpamResourceDiscoveryResult associateIpamResourceDiscovery(AssociateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest associateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest); /** ** Associates Elastic IP addresses (EIPs) and private IPv4 addresses with a public NAT gateway. For more * information, see Work with * NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** By default, you can associate up to 2 Elastic IP addresses per public NAT gateway. You can increase the limit by * requesting a quota adjustment. For more information, see Elastic IP address * quotas in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param associateNatGatewayAddressRequest * @return Result of the AssociateNatGatewayAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateNatGatewayAddress * @see AWS * API Documentation */ AssociateNatGatewayAddressResult associateNatGatewayAddress(AssociateNatGatewayAddressRequest associateNatGatewayAddressRequest); /** ** Associates a subnet in your VPC or an internet gateway or virtual private gateway attached to your VPC with a * route table in your VPC. This association causes traffic from the subnet or gateway to be routed according to the * routes in the route table. The action returns an association ID, which you need in order to disassociate the * route table later. A route table can be associated with multiple subnets. *
** For more information, see Route * tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param associateRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the AssociateRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateRouteTable * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AssociateRouteTableResult associateRouteTable(AssociateRouteTableRequest associateRouteTableRequest); /** ** Associates a CIDR block with your subnet. You can only associate a single IPv6 CIDR block with your subnet. An * IPv6 CIDR block must have a prefix length of /64. *
* * @param associateSubnetCidrBlockRequest * @return Result of the AssociateSubnetCidrBlock operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateSubnetCidrBlock * @see AWS * API Documentation */ AssociateSubnetCidrBlockResult associateSubnetCidrBlock(AssociateSubnetCidrBlockRequest associateSubnetCidrBlockRequest); /** ** Associates the specified subnets and transit gateway attachments with the specified transit gateway multicast * domain. *
** The transit gateway attachment must be in the available state before you can add a resource. Use DescribeTransitGatewayAttachments to see the state of the attachment. *
* * @param associateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest * @return Result of the AssociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainResult associateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain( AssociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest associateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest); /** ** Associates the specified transit gateway attachment with a transit gateway policy table. *
* * @param associateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest * @return Result of the AssociateTransitGatewayPolicyTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateTransitGatewayPolicyTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableResult associateTransitGatewayPolicyTable( AssociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest associateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest); /** ** Associates the specified attachment with the specified transit gateway route table. You can associate only one * route table with an attachment. *
* * @param associateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTableResult associateTransitGatewayRouteTable(AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest associateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** This API action is currently in limited preview only. If you are interested in using this feature, contact * your account manager. *
** Associates a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. *
*
* Before you create the association, run the create-network-interface command and set --interface-type
to trunk
. You must also
* create a network interface for each branch network interface that you want to associate with the trunk network
* interface.
*
* Associates a CIDR block with your VPC. You can associate a secondary IPv4 CIDR block, an Amazon-provided IPv6 * CIDR block, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned through bring your own IP * addresses (BYOIP). The IPv6 CIDR * block size is fixed at /56. *
** You must specify one of the following in the request: an IPv4 CIDR block, an IPv6 pool, or an Amazon-provided * IPv6 CIDR block. *
** For more information about associating CIDR blocks with your VPC and applicable restrictions, see IP addressing for your VPCs and * subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param associateVpcCidrBlockRequest * @return Result of the AssociateVpcCidrBlock operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AssociateVpcCidrBlock * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AssociateVpcCidrBlockResult associateVpcCidrBlock(AssociateVpcCidrBlockRequest associateVpcCidrBlockRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
*
* Links an EC2-Classic instance to a ClassicLink-enabled VPC through one or more of the VPC security groups. You
* cannot link an EC2-Classic instance to more than one VPC at a time. You can only link an instance that's in the
* running
state. An instance is automatically unlinked from a VPC when it's stopped - you can link it
* to the VPC again when you restart it.
*
* After you've linked an instance, you cannot change the VPC security groups that are associated with it. To change * the security groups, you must first unlink the instance, and then link it again. *
** Linking your instance to a VPC is sometimes referred to as attaching your instance. *
* * @param attachClassicLinkVpcRequest * @return Result of the AttachClassicLinkVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachClassicLinkVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AttachClassicLinkVpcResult attachClassicLinkVpc(AttachClassicLinkVpcRequest attachClassicLinkVpcRequest); /** ** Attaches an internet gateway or a virtual private gateway to a VPC, enabling connectivity between the internet * and the VPC. For more information, see Internet gateways in the * Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param attachInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the AttachInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachInternetGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AttachInternetGatewayResult attachInternetGateway(AttachInternetGatewayRequest attachInternetGatewayRequest); /** ** Attaches a network interface to an instance. *
* * @param attachNetworkInterfaceRequest * Contains the parameters for AttachNetworkInterface. * @return Result of the AttachNetworkInterface operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachNetworkInterface * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AttachNetworkInterfaceResult attachNetworkInterface(AttachNetworkInterfaceRequest attachNetworkInterfaceRequest); /** ** Attaches the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider to the specified Amazon Web Services * Verified Access instance. *
* * @param attachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest * @return Result of the AttachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider * @see AWS API Documentation */ AttachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult attachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(AttachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest attachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest); /** ** Attaches an EBS volume to a running or stopped instance and exposes it to the instance with the specified device * name. *
** Encrypted EBS volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see * Amazon EBS encryption in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** After you attach an EBS volume, you must make it available. For more information, see Make an EBS volume available * for use. *
** If a volume has an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code: *
** The volume can be attached only to a stopped instance. *
** Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes are copied from the volume to the instance. *
** You must be subscribed to the product. *
** The instance type and operating system of the instance must support the product. For example, you can't detach a * volume from a Windows instance and attach it to a Linux instance. *
** For more information, see Attach an Amazon EBS volume * to an instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param attachVolumeRequest * @return Result of the AttachVolume operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachVolume * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AttachVolumeResult attachVolume(AttachVolumeRequest attachVolumeRequest); /** ** Attaches a virtual private gateway to a VPC. You can attach one virtual private gateway to one VPC at a time. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param attachVpnGatewayRequest * Contains the parameters for AttachVpnGateway. * @return Result of the AttachVpnGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AttachVpnGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ AttachVpnGatewayResult attachVpnGateway(AttachVpnGatewayRequest attachVpnGatewayRequest); /** ** Adds an ingress authorization rule to a Client VPN endpoint. Ingress authorization rules act as firewall rules * that grant access to networks. You must configure ingress authorization rules to enable clients to access * resources in Amazon Web Services or on-premises networks. *
* * @param authorizeClientVpnIngressRequest * @return Result of the AuthorizeClientVpnIngress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AuthorizeClientVpnIngress * @see AWS * API Documentation */ AuthorizeClientVpnIngressResult authorizeClientVpnIngress(AuthorizeClientVpnIngressRequest authorizeClientVpnIngressRequest); /** ** Adds the specified outbound (egress) rules to a security group for use with a VPC. *
*
* An outbound rule permits instances to send traffic to the specified IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR address ranges, or to the
* instances that are associated with the specified source security groups. When specifying an outbound rule for
* your security group in a VPC, the IpPermissions
must include a destination for the traffic.
*
* You specify a protocol for each rule (for example, TCP). For the TCP and UDP protocols, you must also specify the * destination port or port range. For the ICMP protocol, you must also specify the ICMP type and code. You can use * -1 for the type or code to mean all types or all codes. *
** Rule changes are propagated to affected instances as quickly as possible. However, a small delay might occur. *
** For information about VPC security group quotas, see Amazon VPC quotas. *
* * @param authorizeSecurityGroupEgressRequest * @return Result of the AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress * @see AWS API Documentation */ AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgressResult authorizeSecurityGroupEgress(AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgressRequest authorizeSecurityGroupEgressRequest); /** ** Adds the specified inbound (ingress) rules to a security group. *
*
* An inbound rule permits instances to receive traffic from the specified IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR address range, or from
* the instances that are associated with the specified destination security groups. When specifying an inbound rule
* for your security group in a VPC, the IpPermissions
must include a source for the traffic.
*
* You specify a protocol for each rule (for example, TCP). For TCP and UDP, you must also specify the destination * port or port range. For ICMP/ICMPv6, you must also specify the ICMP/ICMPv6 type and code. You can use -1 to mean * all types or all codes. *
** Rule changes are propagated to instances within the security group as quickly as possible. However, a small delay * might occur. *
** For more information about VPC security group quotas, see Amazon VPC quotas. *
* * @param authorizeSecurityGroupIngressRequest * @return Result of the AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress * @see AWS API Documentation */ AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngressResult authorizeSecurityGroupIngress(AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngressRequest authorizeSecurityGroupIngressRequest); /** ** Bundles an Amazon instance store-backed Windows instance. *
** During bundling, only the root device volume (C:\) is bundled. Data on other instance store volumes is not * preserved. *
** This action is not applicable for Linux/Unix instances or Windows instances that are backed by Amazon EBS. *
** Cancels a bundling operation for an instance store-backed Windows instance. *
* * @param cancelBundleTaskRequest * Contains the parameters for CancelBundleTask. * @return Result of the CancelBundleTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelBundleTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CancelBundleTaskResult cancelBundleTask(CancelBundleTaskRequest cancelBundleTaskRequest); /** *
* Cancels the specified Capacity Reservation, releases the reserved capacity, and changes the Capacity
* Reservation's state to cancelled
.
*
* Instances running in the reserved capacity continue running until you stop them. Stopped instances that target * the Capacity Reservation can no longer launch. Modify these instances to either target a different Capacity * Reservation, launch On-Demand Instance capacity, or run in any open Capacity Reservation that has matching * attributes and sufficient capacity. *
* * @param cancelCapacityReservationRequest * @return Result of the CancelCapacityReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelCapacityReservation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CancelCapacityReservationResult cancelCapacityReservation(CancelCapacityReservationRequest cancelCapacityReservationRequest); /** ** Cancels one or more Capacity Reservation Fleets. When you cancel a Capacity Reservation Fleet, the following * happens: *
*
* The Capacity Reservation Fleet's status changes to cancelled
.
*
* The individual Capacity Reservations in the Fleet are cancelled. Instances running in the Capacity Reservations * at the time of cancelling the Fleet continue to run in shared capacity. *
** The Fleet stops creating new Capacity Reservations. *
** Cancels an active conversion task. The task can be the import of an instance or volume. The action removes all * artifacts of the conversion, including a partially uploaded volume or instance. If the conversion is complete or * is in the process of transferring the final disk image, the command fails and returns an exception. *
** For more information, see Importing a * Virtual Machine Using the Amazon EC2 CLI. *
* * @param cancelConversionTaskRequest * @return Result of the CancelConversionTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelConversionTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CancelConversionTaskResult cancelConversionTask(CancelConversionTaskRequest cancelConversionTaskRequest); /** ** Cancels an active export task. The request removes all artifacts of the export, including any partially-created * Amazon S3 objects. If the export task is complete or is in the process of transferring the final disk image, the * command fails and returns an error. *
* * @param cancelExportTaskRequest * @return Result of the CancelExportTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelExportTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CancelExportTaskResult cancelExportTask(CancelExportTaskRequest cancelExportTaskRequest); /** ** Removes your Amazon Web Services account from the launch permissions for the specified AMI. For more information, * see Cancel having an * AMI shared with your Amazon Web Services account in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param cancelImageLaunchPermissionRequest * @return Result of the CancelImageLaunchPermission operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelImageLaunchPermission * @see AWS API Documentation */ CancelImageLaunchPermissionResult cancelImageLaunchPermission(CancelImageLaunchPermissionRequest cancelImageLaunchPermissionRequest); /** ** Cancels an in-process import virtual machine or import snapshot task. *
* * @param cancelImportTaskRequest * @return Result of the CancelImportTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelImportTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CancelImportTaskResult cancelImportTask(CancelImportTaskRequest cancelImportTaskRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the CancelImportTask operation. * * @see #cancelImportTask(CancelImportTaskRequest) */ CancelImportTaskResult cancelImportTask(); /** ** Cancels the specified Reserved Instance listing in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. *
** For more information, see Reserved Instance * Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param cancelReservedInstancesListingRequest * Contains the parameters for CancelReservedInstancesListing. * @return Result of the CancelReservedInstancesListing operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CancelReservedInstancesListing * @see AWS API Documentation */ CancelReservedInstancesListingResult cancelReservedInstancesListing(CancelReservedInstancesListingRequest cancelReservedInstancesListingRequest); /** ** Cancels the specified Spot Fleet requests. *
** After you cancel a Spot Fleet request, the Spot Fleet launches no new instances. *
*
* You must also specify whether a canceled Spot Fleet request should terminate its instances. If you choose to
* terminate the instances, the Spot Fleet request enters the cancelled_terminating
state. Otherwise,
* the Spot Fleet request enters the cancelled_running
state and the instances continue to run until
* they are interrupted or you terminate them manually.
*
* Cancels one or more Spot Instance requests. *
** Canceling a Spot Instance request does not terminate running Spot Instances associated with the request. *
** Determines whether a product code is associated with an instance. This action can only be used by the owner of * the product code. It is useful when a product code owner must verify whether another user's instance is eligible * for support. *
* * @param confirmProductInstanceRequest * @return Result of the ConfirmProductInstance operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ConfirmProductInstance * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ConfirmProductInstanceResult confirmProductInstance(ConfirmProductInstanceRequest confirmProductInstanceRequest); /** ** Copies the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI) to the current Region. *
* * @param copyFpgaImageRequest * @return Result of the CopyFpgaImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CopyFpgaImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CopyFpgaImageResult copyFpgaImage(CopyFpgaImageRequest copyFpgaImageRequest); /** ** Initiates the copy of an AMI. You can copy an AMI from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You * can't copy an AMI from an Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. To copy * an AMI to another partition, see CreateStoreImageTask. *
*
* To copy an AMI from one Region to another, specify the source Region using the SourceRegion parameter, and
* specify the destination Region using its endpoint. Copies of encrypted backing snapshots for the AMI are
* encrypted. Copies of unencrypted backing snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you set Encrypted
* during the copy operation. You cannot create an unencrypted copy of an encrypted backing snapshot.
*
* To copy an AMI from a Region to an Outpost, specify the source Region using the SourceRegion parameter, * and specify the ARN of the destination Outpost using DestinationOutpostArn. Backing snapshots copied to an * Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a different key that you * specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted snapshots. For more * information, Amazon * EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** For more information about the prerequisites and limits when copying an AMI, see Copy an AMI in the Amazon EC2 * User Guide. *
* * @param copyImageRequest * Contains the parameters for CopyImage. * @return Result of the CopyImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CopyImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CopyImageResult copyImage(CopyImageRequest copyImageRequest); /** ** Copies a point-in-time snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can copy a snapshot within the * same Region, from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You can't copy a snapshot from an * Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. *
** You can use the snapshot to create EBS volumes or Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). *
** When copying snapshots to a Region, copies of encrypted EBS snapshots remain encrypted. Copies of unencrypted * snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you enable encryption for the snapshot copy operation. By default, encrypted * snapshot copies use the default Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key; however, you can specify a different KMS * key. To copy an encrypted snapshot that has been shared from another account, you must have permissions for the * KMS key used to encrypt the snapshot. *
** Snapshots copied to an Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a * different key that you specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted * snapshots. For more information, Amazon EBS local * snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** Snapshots created by copying another snapshot have an arbitrary volume ID that should not be used for any * purpose. *
** For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param copySnapshotRequest * @return Result of the CopySnapshot operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CopySnapshot * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CopySnapshotResult copySnapshot(CopySnapshotRequest copySnapshotRequest); /** ** Creates a new Capacity Reservation with the specified attributes. *
** Capacity Reservations enable you to reserve capacity for your Amazon EC2 instances in a specific Availability * Zone for any duration. This gives you the flexibility to selectively add capacity reservations and still get the * Regional RI discounts for that usage. By creating Capacity Reservations, you ensure that you always have access * to Amazon EC2 capacity when you need it, for as long as you need it. For more information, see Capacity * Reservations in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** Your request to create a Capacity Reservation could fail if Amazon EC2 does not have sufficient capacity to * fulfill the request. If your request fails due to Amazon EC2 capacity constraints, either try again at a later * time, try in a different Availability Zone, or request a smaller capacity reservation. If your application is * flexible across instance types and sizes, try to create a Capacity Reservation with different instance * attributes. *
** Your request could also fail if the requested quantity exceeds your On-Demand Instance limit for the selected * instance type. If your request fails due to limit constraints, increase your On-Demand Instance limit for the * required instance type and try again. For more information about increasing your instance limits, see Amazon EC2 Service Quotas * in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createCapacityReservationRequest * @return Result of the CreateCapacityReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCapacityReservation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateCapacityReservationResult createCapacityReservation(CreateCapacityReservationRequest createCapacityReservationRequest); /** ** Creates a Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Create a * Capacity Reservation Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createCapacityReservationFleetRequest * @return Result of the CreateCapacityReservationFleet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCapacityReservationFleet * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateCapacityReservationFleetResult createCapacityReservationFleet(CreateCapacityReservationFleetRequest createCapacityReservationFleetRequest); /** ** Creates a carrier gateway. For more information about carrier gateways, see Carrier gateways in the Amazon Web Services Wavelength Developer Guide. *
* * @param createCarrierGatewayRequest * @return Result of the CreateCarrierGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCarrierGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateCarrierGatewayResult createCarrierGateway(CreateCarrierGatewayRequest createCarrierGatewayRequest); /** ** Creates a Client VPN endpoint. A Client VPN endpoint is the resource you create and configure to enable and * manage client VPN sessions. It is the destination endpoint at which all client VPN sessions are terminated. *
* * @param createClientVpnEndpointRequest * @return Result of the CreateClientVpnEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateClientVpnEndpoint * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateClientVpnEndpointResult createClientVpnEndpoint(CreateClientVpnEndpointRequest createClientVpnEndpointRequest); /** ** Adds a route to a network to a Client VPN endpoint. Each Client VPN endpoint has a route table that describes the * available destination network routes. Each route in the route table specifies the path for traffic to specific * resources or networks. *
* * @param createClientVpnRouteRequest * @return Result of the CreateClientVpnRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateClientVpnRoute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateClientVpnRouteResult createClientVpnRoute(CreateClientVpnRouteRequest createClientVpnRouteRequest); /** ** Creates a range of customer-owned IP addresses. *
* * @param createCoipCidrRequest * @return Result of the CreateCoipCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCoipCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateCoipCidrResult createCoipCidr(CreateCoipCidrRequest createCoipCidrRequest); /** ** Creates a pool of customer-owned IP (CoIP) addresses. *
* * @param createCoipPoolRequest * @return Result of the CreateCoipPool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCoipPool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateCoipPoolResult createCoipPool(CreateCoipPoolRequest createCoipPoolRequest); /** ** Provides information to Amazon Web Services about your customer gateway device. The customer gateway device is * the appliance at your end of the VPN connection. You must provide the IP address of the customer gateway device’s * external interface. The IP address must be static and can be behind a device performing network address * translation (NAT). *
** For devices that use Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), you can also provide the device's BGP Autonomous System * Number (ASN). You can use an existing ASN assigned to your network. If you don't have an ASN already, you can use * a private ASN. For more information, see Customer gateway options for your * Site-to-Site VPN connection in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
** To create more than one customer gateway with the same VPN type, IP address, and BGP ASN, specify a unique device * name for each customer gateway. An identical request returns information about the existing customer gateway; it * doesn't create a new customer gateway. *
* * @param createCustomerGatewayRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateCustomerGateway. * @return Result of the CreateCustomerGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateCustomerGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateCustomerGatewayResult createCustomerGateway(CreateCustomerGatewayRequest createCustomerGatewayRequest); /** *
* Creates a default subnet with a size /20
IPv4 CIDR block in the specified Availability Zone in your
* default VPC. You can have only one default subnet per Availability Zone. For more information, see Create a default
* subnet in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
*
* Creates a default VPC with a size /16
IPv4 CIDR block and a default subnet in each Availability
* Zone. For more information about the components of a default VPC, see Default VPCs in the Amazon VPC
* User Guide. You cannot specify the components of the default VPC yourself.
*
* If you deleted your previous default VPC, you can create a default VPC. You cannot have more than one default VPC * per Region. *
* * @param createDefaultVpcRequest * @return Result of the CreateDefaultVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateDefaultVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateDefaultVpcResult createDefaultVpc(CreateDefaultVpcRequest createDefaultVpcRequest); /** ** Creates a set of DHCP options for your VPC. After creating the set, you must associate it with the VPC, causing * all existing and new instances that you launch in the VPC to use this set of DHCP options. The following are the * individual DHCP options you can specify. For more information about the options, see RFC 2132. *
*
* domain-name-servers
- The IP addresses of up to four domain name servers, or AmazonProvidedDNS. The
* default DHCP option set specifies AmazonProvidedDNS. If specifying more than one domain name server, specify the
* IP addresses in a single parameter, separated by commas. To have your instance receive a custom DNS hostname as
* specified in domain-name
, you must set domain-name-servers
to a custom DNS server.
*
* domain-name
- If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in us-east-1
, specify
* ec2.internal
. If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in another Region, specify
* region.compute.internal
(for example, ap-northeast-1.compute.internal
). Otherwise,
* specify a domain name (for example, ExampleCompany.com
). This value is used to complete unqualified
* DNS hostnames. Important: Some Linux operating systems accept multiple domain names separated by spaces.
* However, Windows and other Linux operating systems treat the value as a single domain, which results in
* unexpected behavior. If your DHCP options set is associated with a VPC that has instances with multiple operating
* systems, specify only one domain name.
*
* ntp-servers
- The IP addresses of up to four Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers.
*
* netbios-name-servers
- The IP addresses of up to four NetBIOS name servers.
*
* netbios-node-type
- The NetBIOS node type (1, 2, 4, or 8). We recommend that you specify 2
* (broadcast and multicast are not currently supported). For more information about these node types, see RFC 2132.
*
* Your VPC automatically starts out with a set of DHCP options that includes only a DNS server that we provide
* (AmazonProvidedDNS). If you create a set of options, and if your VPC has an internet gateway, make sure to set
* the domain-name-servers
option either to AmazonProvidedDNS
or to a domain name server
* of your choice. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the
* Amazon VPC User Guide.
*
* [IPv6 only] Creates an egress-only internet gateway for your VPC. An egress-only internet gateway is used to * enable outbound communication over IPv6 from instances in your VPC to the internet, and prevents hosts outside of * your VPC from initiating an IPv6 connection with your instance. *
* * @param createEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the CreateEgressOnlyInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateEgressOnlyInternetGateway * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateEgressOnlyInternetGatewayResult createEgressOnlyInternetGateway(CreateEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest createEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest); /** ** Creates an EC2 Fleet that contains the configuration information for On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances. * Instances are launched immediately if there is available capacity. *
** A single EC2 Fleet can include multiple launch specifications that vary by instance type, AMI, Availability Zone, * or subnet. *
** For more information, see EC2 * Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createFleetRequest * @return Result of the CreateFleet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateFleet * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateFleetResult createFleet(CreateFleetRequest createFleetRequest); /** ** Creates one or more flow logs to capture information about IP traffic for a specific network interface, subnet, * or VPC. *
** Flow log data for a monitored network interface is recorded as flow log records, which are log events consisting * of fields that describe the traffic flow. For more information, see Flow log records in * the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
** When publishing to CloudWatch Logs, flow log records are published to a log group, and each network interface has * a unique log stream in the log group. When publishing to Amazon S3, flow log records for all of the monitored * network interfaces are published to a single log file object that is stored in the specified bucket. *
** For more information, see VPC Flow * Logs in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createFlowLogsRequest * @return Result of the CreateFlowLogs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateFlowLogs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateFlowLogsResult createFlowLogs(CreateFlowLogsRequest createFlowLogsRequest); /** ** Creates an Amazon FPGA Image (AFI) from the specified design checkpoint (DCP). *
** The create operation is asynchronous. To verify that the AFI is ready for use, check the output logs. *
** An AFI contains the FPGA bitstream that is ready to download to an FPGA. You can securely deploy an AFI on * multiple FPGA-accelerated instances. For more information, see the Amazon Web Services FPGA Hardware Development Kit. *
* * @param createFpgaImageRequest * @return Result of the CreateFpgaImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateFpgaImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateFpgaImageResult createFpgaImage(CreateFpgaImageRequest createFpgaImageRequest); /** ** Creates an Amazon EBS-backed AMI from an Amazon EBS-backed instance that is either running or stopped. *
** If you customized your instance with instance store volumes or Amazon EBS volumes in addition to the root device * volume, the new AMI contains block device mapping information for those volumes. When you launch an instance from * this new AMI, the instance automatically launches with those additional volumes. *
** For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS-backed * Linux AMI in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createImageRequest * @return Result of the CreateImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateImageResult createImage(CreateImageRequest createImageRequest); /** ** Creates an EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint. *
** An EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint allows you to connect to an instance, without requiring the instance to have a * public IPv4 address. For more information, see Connect to your instances without requiring a public IPv4 address using EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createInstanceConnectEndpointRequest * @return Result of the CreateInstanceConnectEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateInstanceConnectEndpoint * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateInstanceConnectEndpointResult createInstanceConnectEndpoint(CreateInstanceConnectEndpointRequest createInstanceConnectEndpointRequest); /** ** Creates an event window in which scheduled events for the associated Amazon EC2 instances can run. *
** You can define either a set of time ranges or a cron expression when creating the event window, but not both. All * event window times are in UTC. *
** You can create up to 200 event windows per Amazon Web Services Region. *
** When you create the event window, targets (instance IDs, Dedicated Host IDs, or tags) are not yet associated with * it. To ensure that the event window can be used, you must associate one or more targets with it by using the * AssociateInstanceEventWindow API. *
** Event windows are applicable only for scheduled events that stop, reboot, or terminate instances. *
** Event windows are not applicable for: *
** Expedited scheduled events and network maintenance events. *
** Unscheduled maintenance such as AutoRecovery and unplanned reboots. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createInstanceEventWindowRequest * @return Result of the CreateInstanceEventWindow operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateInstanceEventWindow * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateInstanceEventWindowResult createInstanceEventWindow(CreateInstanceEventWindowRequest createInstanceEventWindowRequest); /** ** Exports a running or stopped instance to an Amazon S3 bucket. *
** For information about the prerequisites for your Amazon S3 bucket, supported operating systems, image formats, * and known limitations for the types of instances you can export, see Exporting an instance as a VM Using * VM Import/Export in the VM Import/Export User Guide. *
* * @param createInstanceExportTaskRequest * @return Result of the CreateInstanceExportTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateInstanceExportTask * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateInstanceExportTaskResult createInstanceExportTask(CreateInstanceExportTaskRequest createInstanceExportTaskRequest); /** ** Creates an internet gateway for use with a VPC. After creating the internet gateway, you attach it to a VPC using * AttachInternetGateway. *
** For more information, see Internet gateways in the * Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the CreateInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateInternetGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateInternetGatewayResult createInternetGateway(CreateInternetGatewayRequest createInternetGatewayRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the CreateInternetGateway operation. * * @see #createInternetGateway(CreateInternetGatewayRequest) */ CreateInternetGatewayResult createInternetGateway(); /** ** Create an IPAM. Amazon VPC IP Address Manager (IPAM) is a VPC feature that you can use to automate your IP * address management workflows including assigning, tracking, troubleshooting, and auditing IP addresses across * Amazon Web Services Regions and accounts throughout your Amazon Web Services Organization. *
** For more information, see Create an * IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param createIpamRequest * @return Result of the CreateIpam operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateIpam * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateIpamResult createIpam(CreateIpamRequest createIpamRequest); /** ** Create an IP address pool for Amazon VPC IP Address Manager (IPAM). In IPAM, a pool is a collection of contiguous * IP addresses CIDRs. Pools enable you to organize your IP addresses according to your routing and security needs. * For example, if you have separate routing and security needs for development and production applications, you can * create a pool for each. *
** For more information, see Create a * top-level pool in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param createIpamPoolRequest * @return Result of the CreateIpamPool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateIpamPool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateIpamPoolResult createIpamPool(CreateIpamPoolRequest createIpamPoolRequest); /** ** Creates an IPAM resource discovery. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that enables IPAM to manage and * monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param createIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest * @return Result of the CreateIpamResourceDiscovery operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateIpamResourceDiscovery * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateIpamResourceDiscoveryResult createIpamResourceDiscovery(CreateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest createIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest); /** ** Create an IPAM scope. In IPAM, a scope is the highest-level container within IPAM. An IPAM contains two default * scopes. Each scope represents the IP space for a single network. The private scope is intended for all private IP * address space. The public scope is intended for all public IP address space. Scopes enable you to reuse IP * addresses across multiple unconnected networks without causing IP address overlap or conflict. *
** For more information, see Add a * scope in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param createIpamScopeRequest * @return Result of the CreateIpamScope operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateIpamScope * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateIpamScopeResult createIpamScope(CreateIpamScopeRequest createIpamScopeRequest); /** ** Creates an ED25519 or 2048-bit RSA key pair with the specified name and in the specified PEM or PPK format. * Amazon EC2 stores the public key and displays the private key for you to save to a file. The private key is * returned as an unencrypted PEM encoded PKCS#1 private key or an unencrypted PPK formatted private key for use * with PuTTY. If a key with the specified name already exists, Amazon EC2 returns an error. *
** The key pair returned to you is available only in the Amazon Web Services Region in which you create it. If you * prefer, you can create your own key pair using a third-party tool and upload it to any Region using * ImportKeyPair. *
** You can have up to 5,000 key pairs per Amazon Web Services Region. *
** For more information, see Amazon * EC2 key pairs in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createKeyPairRequest * @return Result of the CreateKeyPair operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateKeyPair * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateKeyPairResult createKeyPair(CreateKeyPairRequest createKeyPairRequest); /** ** Creates a launch template. *
** A launch template contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using * RunInstances, you can specify a launch template instead of providing the launch parameters in the request. * For more information, see Launch an instance from a * launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** If you want to clone an existing launch template as the basis for creating a new launch template, you can use the * Amazon EC2 console. The API, SDKs, and CLI do not support cloning a template. For more information, see Create a launch template from an existing launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User * Guide. *
* * @param createLaunchTemplateRequest * @return Result of the CreateLaunchTemplate operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateLaunchTemplate * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateLaunchTemplateResult createLaunchTemplate(CreateLaunchTemplateRequest createLaunchTemplateRequest); /** ** Creates a new version of a launch template. You can specify an existing version of launch template from which to * base the new version. *
** Launch template versions are numbered in the order in which they are created. You cannot specify, change, or * replace the numbering of launch template versions. *
** Launch templates are immutable; after you create a launch template, you can't modify it. Instead, you can create * a new version of the launch template that includes any changes you require. *
** For more information, see Modify a launch template (manage launch template versions) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User * Guide. *
* * @param createLaunchTemplateVersionRequest * @return Result of the CreateLaunchTemplateVersion operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateLaunchTemplateVersion * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateLaunchTemplateVersionResult createLaunchTemplateVersion(CreateLaunchTemplateVersionRequest createLaunchTemplateVersionRequest); /** ** Creates a static route for the specified local gateway route table. You must specify one of the following * targets: *
*
* LocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroupId
*
* NetworkInterfaceId
*
* Creates a local gateway route table. *
* * @param createLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the CreateLocalGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateLocalGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableResult createLocalGatewayRouteTable(CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest createLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** Creates a local gateway route table virtual interface group association. *
* * @param createLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest * @return Result of the CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationResult createLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation( CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest createLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest); /** ** Associates the specified VPC with the specified local gateway route table. *
* * @param createLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest * @return Result of the CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationResult createLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation( CreateLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest createLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest); /** ** Creates a managed prefix list. You can specify one or more entries for the prefix list. Each entry consists of a * CIDR block and an optional description. *
* * @param createManagedPrefixListRequest * @return Result of the CreateManagedPrefixList operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateManagedPrefixList * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateManagedPrefixListResult createManagedPrefixList(CreateManagedPrefixListRequest createManagedPrefixListRequest); /** ** Creates a NAT gateway in the specified subnet. This action creates a network interface in the specified subnet * with a private IP address from the IP address range of the subnet. You can create either a public NAT gateway or * a private NAT gateway. *
** With a public NAT gateway, internet-bound traffic from a private subnet can be routed to the NAT gateway, so that * instances in a private subnet can connect to the internet. *
** With a private NAT gateway, private communication is routed across VPCs and on-premises networks through a * transit gateway or virtual private gateway. Common use cases include running large workloads behind a small pool * of allowlisted IPv4 addresses, preserving private IPv4 addresses, and communicating between overlapping networks. *
** For more information, see NAT * gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createNatGatewayRequest * @return Result of the CreateNatGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNatGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateNatGatewayResult createNatGateway(CreateNatGatewayRequest createNatGatewayRequest); /** ** Creates a network ACL in a VPC. Network ACLs provide an optional layer of security (in addition to security * groups) for the instances in your VPC. *
** For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createNetworkAclRequest * @return Result of the CreateNetworkAcl operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkAcl * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateNetworkAclResult createNetworkAcl(CreateNetworkAclRequest createNetworkAclRequest); /** ** Creates an entry (a rule) in a network ACL with the specified rule number. Each network ACL has a set of numbered * ingress rules and a separate set of numbered egress rules. When determining whether a packet should be allowed in * or out of a subnet associated with the ACL, we process the entries in the ACL according to the rule numbers, in * ascending order. Each network ACL has a set of ingress rules and a separate set of egress rules. *
** We recommend that you leave room between the rule numbers (for example, 100, 110, 120, ...), and not number them * one right after the other (for example, 101, 102, 103, ...). This makes it easier to add a rule between existing * ones without having to renumber the rules. *
** After you add an entry, you can't modify it; you must either replace it, or create an entry and delete the old * one. *
** For more information about network ACLs, see Network ACLs in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createNetworkAclEntryRequest * @return Result of the CreateNetworkAclEntry operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkAclEntry * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateNetworkAclEntryResult createNetworkAclEntry(CreateNetworkAclEntryRequest createNetworkAclEntryRequest); /** ** Creates a Network Access Scope. *
** Amazon Web Services Network Access Analyzer enables cloud networking and cloud operations teams to verify that * their networks on Amazon Web Services conform to their network security and governance objectives. For more * information, see the Amazon Web * Services Network Access Analyzer Guide. *
* * @param createNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest * @return Result of the CreateNetworkInsightsAccessScope operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkInsightsAccessScope * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateNetworkInsightsAccessScopeResult createNetworkInsightsAccessScope(CreateNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest createNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest); /** ** Creates a path to analyze for reachability. *
** Reachability Analyzer enables you to analyze and debug network reachability between two resources in your virtual * private cloud (VPC). For more information, see the Reachability Analyzer Guide. *
* * @param createNetworkInsightsPathRequest * @return Result of the CreateNetworkInsightsPath operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkInsightsPath * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateNetworkInsightsPathResult createNetworkInsightsPath(CreateNetworkInsightsPathRequest createNetworkInsightsPathRequest); /** ** Creates a network interface in the specified subnet. *
** The number of IP addresses you can assign to a network interface varies by instance type. For more information, * see IP Addresses * Per ENI Per Instance Type in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
** For more information about network interfaces, see Elastic network interfaces in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createNetworkInterfaceRequest * @return Result of the CreateNetworkInterface operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkInterface * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateNetworkInterfaceResult createNetworkInterface(CreateNetworkInterfaceRequest createNetworkInterfaceRequest); /** ** Grants an Amazon Web Services-authorized account permission to attach the specified network interface to an * instance in their account. *
** You can grant permission to a single Amazon Web Services account only, and only one account at a time. *
* * @param createNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateNetworkInterfacePermission. * @return Result of the CreateNetworkInterfacePermission operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateNetworkInterfacePermission * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionResult createNetworkInterfacePermission(CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest createNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest); /** ** Creates a placement group in which to launch instances. The strategy of the placement group determines how the * instances are organized within the group. *
*
* A cluster
placement group is a logical grouping of instances within a single Availability Zone that
* benefit from low network latency, high network throughput. A spread
placement group places instances
* on distinct hardware. A partition
placement group places groups of instances in different
* partitions, where instances in one partition do not share the same hardware with instances in another partition.
*
* For more information, see Placement groups in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createPlacementGroupRequest * @return Result of the CreatePlacementGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreatePlacementGroup * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreatePlacementGroupResult createPlacementGroup(CreatePlacementGroupRequest createPlacementGroupRequest); /** ** Creates a public IPv4 address pool. A public IPv4 pool is an EC2 IP address pool required for the public IPv4 * CIDRs that you own and bring to Amazon Web Services to manage with IPAM. IPv6 addresses you bring to Amazon Web * Services, however, use IPAM pools only. To monitor the status of pool creation, use DescribePublicIpv4Pools. *
* * @param createPublicIpv4PoolRequest * @return Result of the CreatePublicIpv4Pool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreatePublicIpv4Pool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreatePublicIpv4PoolResult createPublicIpv4Pool(CreatePublicIpv4PoolRequest createPublicIpv4PoolRequest); /** *
* Replaces the EBS-backed root volume for a running
instance with a new volume that is restored to the
* original root volume's launch state, that is restored to a specific snapshot taken from the original root volume,
* or that is restored from an AMI that has the same key characteristics as that of the instance.
*
* For more information, see Replace * a root volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createReplaceRootVolumeTaskRequest * @return Result of the CreateReplaceRootVolumeTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTask * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskResult createReplaceRootVolumeTask(CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskRequest createReplaceRootVolumeTaskRequest); /** ** Creates a listing for Amazon EC2 Standard Reserved Instances to be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. You * can submit one Standard Reserved Instance listing at a time. To get a list of your Standard Reserved Instances, * you can use the DescribeReservedInstances operation. *
** Only Standard Reserved Instances can be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible Reserved Instances * cannot be sold. *
** The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Standard Reserved Instance capacity that * they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold * through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. *
** To sell your Standard Reserved Instances, you must first register as a seller in the Reserved Instance * Marketplace. After completing the registration process, you can create a Reserved Instance Marketplace listing of * some or all of your Standard Reserved Instances, and specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Standard * Reserved Instance listings then become available for purchase. To view the details of your Standard Reserved * Instance listing, you can use the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. *
** For more information, see Reserved Instance * Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createReservedInstancesListingRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateReservedInstancesListing. * @return Result of the CreateReservedInstancesListing operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateReservedInstancesListing * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateReservedInstancesListingResult createReservedInstancesListing(CreateReservedInstancesListingRequest createReservedInstancesListingRequest); /** ** Starts a task that restores an AMI from an Amazon S3 object that was previously created by using CreateStoreImageTask. *
** To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see Permissions * for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** For more information, see Store and restore an AMI using * Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createRestoreImageTaskRequest * @return Result of the CreateRestoreImageTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateRestoreImageTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateRestoreImageTaskResult createRestoreImageTask(CreateRestoreImageTaskRequest createRestoreImageTaskRequest); /** ** Creates a route in a route table within a VPC. *
** You must specify either a destination CIDR block or a prefix list ID. You must also specify exactly one of the * resources from the parameter list. *
*
* When determining how to route traffic, we use the route with the most specific match. For example, traffic is
* destined for the IPv4 address 192.0.2.3
, and the route table includes the following two IPv4 routes:
*
* 192.0.2.0/24
(goes to some target A)
*
* 192.0.2.0/28
(goes to some target B)
*
* Both routes apply to the traffic destined for 192.0.2.3
. However, the second route in the list
* covers a smaller number of IP addresses and is therefore more specific, so we use that route to determine where
* to target the traffic.
*
* For more information about route tables, see Route tables in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createRouteRequest * @return Result of the CreateRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateRoute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateRouteResult createRoute(CreateRouteRequest createRouteRequest); /** ** Creates a route table for the specified VPC. After you create a route table, you can add routes and associate the * table with a subnet. *
** For more information, see Route * tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param createRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the CreateRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateRouteTable * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateRouteTableResult createRouteTable(CreateRouteTableRequest createRouteTableRequest); /** ** Creates a security group. *
** A security group acts as a virtual firewall for your instance to control inbound and outbound traffic. For more * information, see Amazon * EC2 security groups in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide and Security groups for your * VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
** When you create a security group, you specify a friendly name of your choice. You can't have two security groups * for the same VPC with the same name. *
** You have a default security group for use in your VPC. If you don't specify a security group when you launch an * instance, the instance is launched into the appropriate default security group. A default security group includes * a default rule that grants instances unrestricted network access to each other. *
** You can add or remove rules from your security groups using AuthorizeSecurityGroupIngress, * AuthorizeSecurityGroupEgress, RevokeSecurityGroupIngress, and RevokeSecurityGroupEgress. *
** For more information about VPC security group limits, see Amazon VPC Limits. *
* * @param createSecurityGroupRequest * @return Result of the CreateSecurityGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSecurityGroup * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateSecurityGroupResult createSecurityGroup(CreateSecurityGroupRequest createSecurityGroupRequest); /** ** Creates a snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can use snapshots for backups, to make copies * of EBS volumes, and to save data before shutting down an instance. *
** You can create snapshots of volumes in a Region and volumes on an Outpost. If you create a snapshot of a volume * in a Region, the snapshot must be stored in the same Region as the volume. If you create a snapshot of a volume * on an Outpost, the snapshot can be stored on the same Outpost as the volume, or in the Region for that Outpost. *
** When a snapshot is created, any Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes that are associated with the source * volume are propagated to the snapshot. *
*
* You can take a snapshot of an attached volume that is in use. However, snapshots only capture data that has been
* written to your Amazon EBS volume at the time the snapshot command is issued; this might exclude any data that
* has been cached by any applications or the operating system. If you can pause any file systems on the volume long
* enough to take a snapshot, your snapshot should be complete. However, if you cannot pause all file writes to the
* volume, you should unmount the volume from within the instance, issue the snapshot command, and then remount the
* volume to ensure a consistent and complete snapshot. You may remount and use your volume while the snapshot
* status is pending
.
*
* When you create a snapshot for an EBS volume that serves as a root device, we recommend that you stop the * instance before taking the snapshot. *
** Snapshots that are taken from encrypted volumes are automatically encrypted. Volumes that are created from * encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. Your encrypted volumes and any associated snapshots always * remain protected. *
** You can tag your snapshots during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in * the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** For more information, see Amazon * Elastic Block Store and Amazon EBS encryption in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createSnapshotRequest * @return Result of the CreateSnapshot operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSnapshot * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateSnapshotResult createSnapshot(CreateSnapshotRequest createSnapshotRequest); /** ** Creates crash-consistent snapshots of multiple EBS volumes and stores the data in S3. Volumes are chosen by * specifying an instance. Any attached volumes will produce one snapshot each that is crash-consistent across the * instance. *
** You can include all of the volumes currently attached to the instance, or you can exclude the root volume or * specific data (non-root) volumes from the multi-volume snapshot set. *
** You can create multi-volume snapshots of instances in a Region and instances on an Outpost. If you create * snapshots from an instance in a Region, the snapshots must be stored in the same Region as the instance. If you * create snapshots from an instance on an Outpost, the snapshots can be stored on the same Outpost as the instance, * or in the Region for that Outpost. *
* * @param createSnapshotsRequest * @return Result of the CreateSnapshots operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSnapshots * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateSnapshotsResult createSnapshots(CreateSnapshotsRequest createSnapshotsRequest); /** ** Creates a data feed for Spot Instances, enabling you to view Spot Instance usage logs. You can create one data * feed per Amazon Web Services account. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. *
* * @param createSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateSpotDatafeedSubscription. * @return Result of the CreateSpotDatafeedSubscription operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscription * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult createSpotDatafeedSubscription(CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest createSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest); /** ** Stores an AMI as a single object in an Amazon S3 bucket. *
** To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see Permissions * for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** For more information, see Store and restore an AMI using * Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createStoreImageTaskRequest * @return Result of the CreateStoreImageTask operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateStoreImageTask * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateStoreImageTaskResult createStoreImageTask(CreateStoreImageTaskRequest createStoreImageTaskRequest); /** ** Creates a subnet in the specified VPC. For an IPv4 only subnet, specify an IPv4 CIDR block. If the VPC has an * IPv6 CIDR block, you can create an IPv6 only subnet or a dual stack subnet instead. For an IPv6 only subnet, * specify an IPv6 CIDR block. For a dual stack subnet, specify both an IPv4 CIDR block and an IPv6 CIDR block. *
** A subnet CIDR block must not overlap the CIDR block of an existing subnet in the VPC. After you create a subnet, * you can't change its CIDR block. *
** The allowed size for an IPv4 subnet is between a /28 netmask (16 IP addresses) and a /16 netmask (65,536 IP * addresses). Amazon Web Services reserves both the first four and the last IPv4 address in each subnet's CIDR * block. They're not available for your use. *
** If you've associated an IPv6 CIDR block with your VPC, you can associate an IPv6 CIDR block with a subnet when * you create it. The allowed block size for an IPv6 subnet is a /64 netmask. *
** If you add more than one subnet to a VPC, they're set up in a star topology with a logical router in the middle. *
** When you stop an instance in a subnet, it retains its private IPv4 address. It's therefore possible to have a * subnet with no running instances (they're all stopped), but no remaining IP addresses available. *
** For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC * User Guide. *
* * @param createSubnetRequest * @return Result of the CreateSubnet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSubnet * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateSubnetResult createSubnet(CreateSubnetRequest createSubnetRequest); /** ** Creates a subnet CIDR reservation. For information about subnet CIDR reservations, see Subnet CIDR reservations * in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createSubnetCidrReservationRequest * @return Result of the CreateSubnetCidrReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateSubnetCidrReservation * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateSubnetCidrReservationResult createSubnetCidrReservation(CreateSubnetCidrReservationRequest createSubnetCidrReservationRequest); /** ** Adds or overwrites only the specified tags for the specified Amazon EC2 resource or resources. When you specify * an existing tag key, the value is overwritten with the new value. Each resource can have a maximum of 50 tags. * Each tag consists of a key and optional value. Tag keys must be unique per resource. *
** For more information about tags, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in * the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information about creating IAM policies that control * users' access to resources based on tags, see Supported * resource-level permissions for Amazon EC2 API actions in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createTagsRequest * @return Result of the CreateTags operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTags * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateTagsResult createTags(CreateTagsRequest createTagsRequest); /** ** Creates a Traffic Mirror filter. *
** A Traffic Mirror filter is a set of rules that defines the traffic to mirror. *
** By default, no traffic is mirrored. To mirror traffic, use CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRule to add Traffic Mirror rules to the filter. The rules you add define what * traffic gets mirrored. You can also use ModifyTrafficMirrorFilterNetworkServices to mirror supported network services. *
* * @param createTrafficMirrorFilterRequest * @return Result of the CreateTrafficMirrorFilter operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTrafficMirrorFilter * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateTrafficMirrorFilterResult createTrafficMirrorFilter(CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRequest createTrafficMirrorFilterRequest); /** ** Creates a Traffic Mirror filter rule. *
** A Traffic Mirror rule defines the Traffic Mirror source traffic to mirror. *
** You need the Traffic Mirror filter ID when you create the rule. *
* * @param createTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest * @return Result of the CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRule operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRule * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRuleResult createTrafficMirrorFilterRule(CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest createTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest); /** ** Creates a Traffic Mirror session. *
** A Traffic Mirror session actively copies packets from a Traffic Mirror source to a Traffic Mirror target. Create * a filter, and then assign it to the session to define a subset of the traffic to mirror, for example all TCP * traffic. *
** The Traffic Mirror source and the Traffic Mirror target (monitoring appliances) can be in the same VPC, or in a * different VPC connected via VPC peering or a transit gateway. *
** By default, no traffic is mirrored. Use CreateTrafficMirrorFilter to create filter rules that specify the traffic to mirror. *
* * @param createTrafficMirrorSessionRequest * @return Result of the CreateTrafficMirrorSession operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTrafficMirrorSession * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateTrafficMirrorSessionResult createTrafficMirrorSession(CreateTrafficMirrorSessionRequest createTrafficMirrorSessionRequest); /** ** Creates a target for your Traffic Mirror session. *
** A Traffic Mirror target is the destination for mirrored traffic. The Traffic Mirror source and the Traffic Mirror * target (monitoring appliances) can be in the same VPC, or in different VPCs connected via VPC peering or a * transit gateway. *
** A Traffic Mirror target can be a network interface, a Network Load Balancer, or a Gateway Load Balancer endpoint. *
** To use the target in a Traffic Mirror session, use CreateTrafficMirrorSession. *
* * @param createTrafficMirrorTargetRequest * @return Result of the CreateTrafficMirrorTarget operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTrafficMirrorTarget * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateTrafficMirrorTargetResult createTrafficMirrorTarget(CreateTrafficMirrorTargetRequest createTrafficMirrorTargetRequest); /** ** Creates a transit gateway. *
*
* You can use a transit gateway to interconnect your virtual private clouds (VPC) and on-premises networks. After
* the transit gateway enters the available
state, you can attach your VPCs and VPN connections to the
* transit gateway.
*
* To attach your VPCs, use CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachment. *
** To attach a VPN connection, use CreateCustomerGateway to create a customer gateway and specify the ID of * the customer gateway and the ID of the transit gateway in a call to CreateVpnConnection. *
** When you create a transit gateway, we create a default transit gateway route table and use it as the default * association route table and the default propagation route table. You can use * CreateTransitGatewayRouteTable to create additional transit gateway route tables. If you disable automatic * route propagation, we do not create a default transit gateway route table. You can use * EnableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation to propagate routes from a resource attachment to a transit * gateway route table. If you disable automatic associations, you can use AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTable * to associate a resource attachment with a transit gateway route table. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayResult createTransitGateway(CreateTransitGatewayRequest createTransitGatewayRequest); /** ** Creates a Connect attachment from a specified transit gateway attachment. A Connect attachment is a GRE-based * tunnel attachment that you can use to establish a connection between a transit gateway and an appliance. *
** A Connect attachment uses an existing VPC or Amazon Web Services Direct Connect attachment as the underlying * transport mechanism. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayConnectRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayConnect operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayConnect * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayConnectResult createTransitGatewayConnect(CreateTransitGatewayConnectRequest createTransitGatewayConnectRequest); /** ** Creates a Connect peer for a specified transit gateway Connect attachment between a transit gateway and an * appliance. *
** The peer address and transit gateway address must be the same IP address family (IPv4 or IPv6). *
** For more information, see Connect peers in the * Transit Gateways Guide. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeer operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeer * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult createTransitGatewayConnectPeer(CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest createTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest); /** ** Creates a multicast domain using the specified transit gateway. *
** The transit gateway must be in the available state before you create a domain. Use DescribeTransitGateways to see the state of transit gateway. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainResult createTransitGatewayMulticastDomain( CreateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest createTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest); /** ** Requests a transit gateway peering attachment between the specified transit gateway (requester) and a peer * transit gateway (accepter). The peer transit gateway can be in your account or a different Amazon Web Services * account. *
** After you create the peering attachment, the owner of the accepter transit gateway must accept the attachment * request. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentResult createTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment( CreateTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest createTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest); /** ** Creates a transit gateway policy table. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayPolicyTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayPolicyTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayPolicyTableResult createTransitGatewayPolicyTable(CreateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest createTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest); /** ** Creates a reference (route) to a prefix list in a specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayPrefixListReference operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayPrefixListReference * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceResult createTransitGatewayPrefixListReference( CreateTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest createTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest); /** ** Creates a static route for the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayRouteRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayRouteResult createTransitGatewayRoute(CreateTransitGatewayRouteRequest createTransitGatewayRouteRequest); /** ** Creates a route table for the specified transit gateway. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableResult createTransitGatewayRouteTable(CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest createTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** Advertises a new transit gateway route table. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementResult createTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement( CreateTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest createTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest); /** ** Attaches the specified VPC to the specified transit gateway. *
** If you attach a VPC with a CIDR range that overlaps the CIDR range of a VPC that is already attached, the new VPC * CIDR range is not propagated to the default propagation route table. *
** To send VPC traffic to an attached transit gateway, add a route to the VPC route table using CreateRoute. *
* * @param createTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentResult createTransitGatewayVpcAttachment(CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest createTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest); /** ** An Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint is where you define your application along with an optional * endpoint-level access policy. *
* * @param createVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest * @return Result of the CreateVerifiedAccessEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVerifiedAccessEndpoint * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateVerifiedAccessEndpointResult createVerifiedAccessEndpoint(CreateVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest createVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest); /** ** An Amazon Web Services Verified Access group is a collection of Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoints * who's associated applications have similar security requirements. Each instance within a Verified Access group * shares an Verified Access policy. For example, you can group all Verified Access instances associated with * "sales" applications together and use one common Verified Access policy. *
* * @param createVerifiedAccessGroupRequest * @return Result of the CreateVerifiedAccessGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVerifiedAccessGroup * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateVerifiedAccessGroupResult createVerifiedAccessGroup(CreateVerifiedAccessGroupRequest createVerifiedAccessGroupRequest); /** ** An Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance is a regional entity that evaluates application requests and * grants access only when your security requirements are met. *
* * @param createVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest * @return Result of the CreateVerifiedAccessInstance operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVerifiedAccessInstance * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateVerifiedAccessInstanceResult createVerifiedAccessInstance(CreateVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest createVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest); /** ** A trust provider is a third-party entity that creates, maintains, and manages identity information for users and * devices. When an application request is made, the identity information sent by the trust provider is evaluated by * Verified Access before allowing or denying the application request. *
* * @param createVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest * @return Result of the CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProvider operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProvider * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult createVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest createVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest); /** ** Creates an EBS volume that can be attached to an instance in the same Availability Zone. *
** You can create a new empty volume or restore a volume from an EBS snapshot. Any Amazon Web Services Marketplace * product codes from the snapshot are propagated to the volume. *
** You can create encrypted volumes. Encrypted volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS * encryption. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. For more * information, see Amazon EBS * encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in * the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS * volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param createVolumeRequest * @return Result of the CreateVolume operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVolume * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateVolumeResult createVolume(CreateVolumeRequest createVolumeRequest); /** ** Creates a VPC with the specified CIDR blocks. For more information, see IP addressing for your VPCs and * subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** You can optionally request an IPv6 CIDR block for the VPC. You can request an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block * from Amazon's pool of IPv6 addresses, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned * through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). *
** By default, each instance that you launch in the VPC has the default DHCP options, which include only a default * DNS server that we provide (AmazonProvidedDNS). For more information, see DHCP option sets in the * Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** You can specify the instance tenancy value for the VPC when you create it. You can't change this value for the * VPC after you create it. For more information, see Dedicated Instances in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param createVpcRequest * @return Result of the CreateVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateVpcResult createVpc(CreateVpcRequest createVpcRequest); /** ** Creates a VPC endpoint. A VPC endpoint provides a private connection between the specified VPC and the specified * endpoint service. You can use an endpoint service provided by Amazon Web Services, an Amazon Web Services * Marketplace Partner, or another Amazon Web Services account. For more information, see the Amazon Web Services PrivateLink User Guide. *
* * @param createVpcEndpointRequest * @return Result of the CreateVpcEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpcEndpoint * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateVpcEndpointResult createVpcEndpoint(CreateVpcEndpointRequest createVpcEndpointRequest); /** ** Creates a connection notification for a specified VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. A connection notification * notifies you of specific endpoint events. You must create an SNS topic to receive notifications. For more * information, see Create a Topic in the * Amazon Simple Notification Service Developer Guide. *
** You can create a connection notification for interface endpoints only. *
* * @param createVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest * @return Result of the CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotification * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult createVpcEndpointConnectionNotification( CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest createVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest); /** ** Creates a VPC endpoint service to which service consumers (Amazon Web Services accounts, users, and IAM roles) * can connect. *
** Before you create an endpoint service, you must create one of the following for your service: *
** A Network Load Balancer. Service * consumers connect to your service using an interface endpoint. *
** A Gateway Load Balancer. Service * consumers connect to your service using a Gateway Load Balancer endpoint. *
** If you set the private DNS name, you must prove that you own the private DNS domain name. *
** For more information, see the Amazon Web Services * PrivateLink Guide. *
* * @param createVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest * @return Result of the CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration * @see AWS API Documentation */ CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult createVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration( CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest createVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest); /** ** Requests a VPC peering connection between two VPCs: a requester VPC that you own and an accepter VPC with which * to create the connection. The accepter VPC can belong to another Amazon Web Services account and can be in a * different Region to the requester VPC. The requester VPC and accepter VPC cannot have overlapping CIDR blocks. *
** Limitations and rules apply to a VPC peering connection. For more information, see the limitations section in the VPC Peering Guide. *
** The owner of the accepter VPC must accept the peering request to activate the peering connection. The VPC peering * connection request expires after 7 days, after which it cannot be accepted or rejected. *
*
* If you create a VPC peering connection request between VPCs with overlapping CIDR blocks, the VPC peering
* connection has a status of failed
.
*
* Creates a VPN connection between an existing virtual private gateway or transit gateway and a customer gateway.
* The supported connection type is ipsec.1
.
*
* The response includes information that you need to give to your network administrator to configure your customer * gateway. *
** We strongly recommend that you use HTTPS when calling this operation because the response contains sensitive * cryptographic information for configuring your customer gateway device. *
** If you decide to shut down your VPN connection for any reason and later create a new VPN connection, you must * reconfigure your customer gateway with the new information returned from this call. *
** This is an idempotent operation. If you perform the operation more than once, Amazon EC2 doesn't return an error. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param createVpnConnectionRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateVpnConnection. * @return Result of the CreateVpnConnection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpnConnection * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateVpnConnectionResult createVpnConnection(CreateVpnConnectionRequest createVpnConnectionRequest); /** ** Creates a static route associated with a VPN connection between an existing virtual private gateway and a VPN * customer gateway. The static route allows traffic to be routed from the virtual private gateway to the VPN * customer gateway. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param createVpnConnectionRouteRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateVpnConnectionRoute. * @return Result of the CreateVpnConnectionRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpnConnectionRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ CreateVpnConnectionRouteResult createVpnConnectionRoute(CreateVpnConnectionRouteRequest createVpnConnectionRouteRequest); /** ** Creates a virtual private gateway. A virtual private gateway is the endpoint on the VPC side of your VPN * connection. You can create a virtual private gateway before creating the VPC itself. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param createVpnGatewayRequest * Contains the parameters for CreateVpnGateway. * @return Result of the CreateVpnGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.CreateVpnGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ CreateVpnGatewayResult createVpnGateway(CreateVpnGatewayRequest createVpnGatewayRequest); /** ** Deletes a carrier gateway. *
** If you do not delete the route that contains the carrier gateway as the Target, the route is a blackhole route. * For information about how to delete a route, see DeleteRoute. *
** Deletes the specified Client VPN endpoint. You must disassociate all target networks before you can delete a * Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param deleteClientVpnEndpointRequest * @return Result of the DeleteClientVpnEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteClientVpnEndpoint * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteClientVpnEndpointResult deleteClientVpnEndpoint(DeleteClientVpnEndpointRequest deleteClientVpnEndpointRequest); /** ** Deletes a route from a Client VPN endpoint. You can only delete routes that you manually added using the * CreateClientVpnRoute action. You cannot delete routes that were automatically added when associating a * subnet. To remove routes that have been automatically added, disassociate the target subnet from the Client VPN * endpoint. *
* * @param deleteClientVpnRouteRequest * @return Result of the DeleteClientVpnRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteClientVpnRoute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteClientVpnRouteResult deleteClientVpnRoute(DeleteClientVpnRouteRequest deleteClientVpnRouteRequest); /** ** Deletes a range of customer-owned IP addresses. *
* * @param deleteCoipCidrRequest * @return Result of the DeleteCoipCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteCoipCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteCoipCidrResult deleteCoipCidr(DeleteCoipCidrRequest deleteCoipCidrRequest); /** ** Deletes a pool of customer-owned IP (CoIP) addresses. *
* * @param deleteCoipPoolRequest * @return Result of the DeleteCoipPool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteCoipPool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteCoipPoolResult deleteCoipPool(DeleteCoipPoolRequest deleteCoipPoolRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified customer gateway. You must delete the VPN connection before you can delete the customer * gateway. *
* * @param deleteCustomerGatewayRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteCustomerGateway. * @return Result of the DeleteCustomerGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteCustomerGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteCustomerGatewayResult deleteCustomerGateway(DeleteCustomerGatewayRequest deleteCustomerGatewayRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified set of DHCP options. You must disassociate the set of DHCP options before you can delete * it. You can disassociate the set of DHCP options by associating either a new set of options or the default set of * options with the VPC. *
* * @param deleteDhcpOptionsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteDhcpOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteDhcpOptions * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteDhcpOptionsResult deleteDhcpOptions(DeleteDhcpOptionsRequest deleteDhcpOptionsRequest); /** ** Deletes an egress-only internet gateway. *
* * @param deleteEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the DeleteEgressOnlyInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteEgressOnlyInternetGateway * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteEgressOnlyInternetGatewayResult deleteEgressOnlyInternetGateway(DeleteEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest deleteEgressOnlyInternetGatewayRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified EC2 Fleets. *
** After you delete an EC2 Fleet, it launches no new instances. *
*
* You must also specify whether a deleted EC2 Fleet should terminate its instances. If you choose to terminate the
* instances, the EC2 Fleet enters the deleted_terminating
state. Otherwise, the EC2 Fleet enters the
* deleted_running
state, and the instances continue to run until they are interrupted or you terminate
* them manually.
*
* For instant
fleets, EC2 Fleet must terminate the instances when the fleet is deleted. A deleted
* instant
fleet with running instances is not supported.
*
* Restrictions *
*
* You can delete up to 25 instant
fleets in a single request. If you exceed this number, no
* instant
fleets are deleted and an error is returned. There is no restriction on the number of fleets
* of type maintain
or request
that can be deleted in a single request.
*
* Up to 1000 instances can be terminated in a single request to delete instant
fleets.
*
* For more information, see Delete an EC2 * Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param deleteFleetsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteFleets operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteFleets * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteFleetsResult deleteFleets(DeleteFleetsRequest deleteFleetsRequest); /** ** Deletes one or more flow logs. *
* * @param deleteFlowLogsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteFlowLogs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteFlowLogs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteFlowLogsResult deleteFlowLogs(DeleteFlowLogsRequest deleteFlowLogsRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI). *
* * @param deleteFpgaImageRequest * @return Result of the DeleteFpgaImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteFpgaImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteFpgaImageResult deleteFpgaImage(DeleteFpgaImageRequest deleteFpgaImageRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint. *
* * @param deleteInstanceConnectEndpointRequest * @return Result of the DeleteInstanceConnectEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteInstanceConnectEndpoint * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteInstanceConnectEndpointResult deleteInstanceConnectEndpoint(DeleteInstanceConnectEndpointRequest deleteInstanceConnectEndpointRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified event window. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param deleteInstanceEventWindowRequest * @return Result of the DeleteInstanceEventWindow operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteInstanceEventWindow * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteInstanceEventWindowResult deleteInstanceEventWindow(DeleteInstanceEventWindowRequest deleteInstanceEventWindowRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified internet gateway. You must detach the internet gateway from the VPC before you can delete * it. *
* * @param deleteInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the DeleteInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteInternetGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteInternetGatewayResult deleteInternetGateway(DeleteInternetGatewayRequest deleteInternetGatewayRequest); /** ** Delete an IPAM. Deleting an IPAM removes all monitored data associated with the IPAM including the historical * data for CIDRs. *
** For more information, see Delete an * IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param deleteIpamRequest * @return Result of the DeleteIpam operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteIpam * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteIpamResult deleteIpam(DeleteIpamRequest deleteIpamRequest); /** ** Delete an IPAM pool. *
** You cannot delete an IPAM pool if there are allocations in it or CIDRs provisioned to it. To release allocations, * see * ReleaseIpamPoolAllocation. To deprovision pool CIDRs, see DeprovisionIpamPoolCidr. *
** For more information, see Delete a * pool in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param deleteIpamPoolRequest * @return Result of the DeleteIpamPool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteIpamPool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteIpamPoolResult deleteIpamPool(DeleteIpamPoolRequest deleteIpamPoolRequest); /** ** Deletes an IPAM resource discovery. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that enables IPAM to manage and * monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param deleteIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest * @return Result of the DeleteIpamResourceDiscovery operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteIpamResourceDiscovery * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteIpamResourceDiscoveryResult deleteIpamResourceDiscovery(DeleteIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest deleteIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest); /** ** Delete the scope for an IPAM. You cannot delete the default scopes. *
** For more information, see Delete a * scope in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param deleteIpamScopeRequest * @return Result of the DeleteIpamScope operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteIpamScope * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteIpamScopeResult deleteIpamScope(DeleteIpamScopeRequest deleteIpamScopeRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified key pair, by removing the public key from Amazon EC2. *
* * @param deleteKeyPairRequest * @return Result of the DeleteKeyPair operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteKeyPair * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteKeyPairResult deleteKeyPair(DeleteKeyPairRequest deleteKeyPairRequest); /** ** Deletes a launch template. Deleting a launch template deletes all of its versions. *
* * @param deleteLaunchTemplateRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLaunchTemplate operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLaunchTemplate * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteLaunchTemplateResult deleteLaunchTemplate(DeleteLaunchTemplateRequest deleteLaunchTemplateRequest); /** ** Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You cannot delete the default version of a launch template; * you must first assign a different version as the default. If the default version is the only version for the * launch template, you must delete the entire launch template using DeleteLaunchTemplate. *
* * @param deleteLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLaunchTemplateVersions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsResult deleteLaunchTemplateVersions(DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest deleteLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified route from the specified local gateway route table. *
* * @param deleteLocalGatewayRouteRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLocalGatewayRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLocalGatewayRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteLocalGatewayRouteResult deleteLocalGatewayRoute(DeleteLocalGatewayRouteRequest deleteLocalGatewayRouteRequest); /** ** Deletes a local gateway route table. *
* * @param deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableResult deleteLocalGatewayRouteTable(DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** Deletes a local gateway route table virtual interface group association. *
* * @param deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationResult deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociation( DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified association between a VPC and local gateway route table. *
* * @param deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest * @return Result of the DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationResult deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociation( DeleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest deleteLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified managed prefix list. You must first remove all references to the prefix list in your * resources. *
* * @param deleteManagedPrefixListRequest * @return Result of the DeleteManagedPrefixList operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteManagedPrefixList * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteManagedPrefixListResult deleteManagedPrefixList(DeleteManagedPrefixListRequest deleteManagedPrefixListRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified NAT gateway. Deleting a public NAT gateway disassociates its Elastic IP address, but does * not release the address from your account. Deleting a NAT gateway does not delete any NAT gateway routes in your * route tables. *
* * @param deleteNatGatewayRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNatGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNatGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteNatGatewayResult deleteNatGateway(DeleteNatGatewayRequest deleteNatGatewayRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified network ACL. You can't delete the ACL if it's associated with any subnets. You can't delete * the default network ACL. *
* * @param deleteNetworkAclRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkAcl operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkAcl * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteNetworkAclResult deleteNetworkAcl(DeleteNetworkAclRequest deleteNetworkAclRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified ingress or egress entry (rule) from the specified network ACL. *
* * @param deleteNetworkAclEntryRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkAclEntry operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkAclEntry * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteNetworkAclEntryResult deleteNetworkAclEntry(DeleteNetworkAclEntryRequest deleteNetworkAclEntryRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Network Access Scope. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScope operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScope * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeResult deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScope(DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Network Access Scope analysis. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisResult deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis( DeleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest deleteNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified network insights analysis. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInsightsAnalysis operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInsightsAnalysis * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInsightsAnalysisResult deleteNetworkInsightsAnalysis(DeleteNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest deleteNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified path. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInsightsPathRequest * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInsightsPath operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInsightsPath * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInsightsPathResult deleteNetworkInsightsPath(DeleteNetworkInsightsPathRequest deleteNetworkInsightsPathRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified network interface. You must detach the network interface before you can delete it. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInterfaceRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteNetworkInterface. * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInterface operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInterface * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInterfaceResult deleteNetworkInterface(DeleteNetworkInterfaceRequest deleteNetworkInterfaceRequest); /** ** Deletes a permission for a network interface. By default, you cannot delete the permission if the account for * which you're removing the permission has attached the network interface to an instance. However, you can force * delete the permission, regardless of any attachment. *
* * @param deleteNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteNetworkInterfacePermission. * @return Result of the DeleteNetworkInterfacePermission operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteNetworkInterfacePermission * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteNetworkInterfacePermissionResult deleteNetworkInterfacePermission(DeleteNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest deleteNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified placement group. You must terminate all instances in the placement group before you can * delete the placement group. For more information, see Placement groups in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param deletePlacementGroupRequest * @return Result of the DeletePlacementGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeletePlacementGroup * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeletePlacementGroupResult deletePlacementGroup(DeletePlacementGroupRequest deletePlacementGroupRequest); /** ** Delete a public IPv4 pool. A public IPv4 pool is an EC2 IP address pool required for the public IPv4 CIDRs that * you own and bring to Amazon Web Services to manage with IPAM. IPv6 addresses you bring to Amazon Web Services, * however, use IPAM pools only. *
* * @param deletePublicIpv4PoolRequest * @return Result of the DeletePublicIpv4Pool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeletePublicIpv4Pool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeletePublicIpv4PoolResult deletePublicIpv4Pool(DeletePublicIpv4PoolRequest deletePublicIpv4PoolRequest); /** ** Deletes the queued purchases for the specified Reserved Instances. *
* * @param deleteQueuedReservedInstancesRequest * @return Result of the DeleteQueuedReservedInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteQueuedReservedInstances * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteQueuedReservedInstancesResult deleteQueuedReservedInstances(DeleteQueuedReservedInstancesRequest deleteQueuedReservedInstancesRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified route from the specified route table. *
* * @param deleteRouteRequest * @return Result of the DeleteRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteRoute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteRouteResult deleteRoute(DeleteRouteRequest deleteRouteRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified route table. You must disassociate the route table from any subnets before you can delete * it. You can't delete the main route table. *
* * @param deleteRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the DeleteRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteRouteTable * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteRouteTableResult deleteRouteTable(DeleteRouteTableRequest deleteRouteTableRequest); /** ** Deletes a security group. *
*
* If you attempt to delete a security group that is associated with an instance or network interface or is
* referenced by another security group, the operation fails with DependencyViolation
.
*
* Deletes the specified snapshot. *
** When you make periodic snapshots of a volume, the snapshots are incremental, and only the blocks on the device * that have changed since your last snapshot are saved in the new snapshot. When you delete a snapshot, only the * data not needed for any other snapshot is removed. So regardless of which prior snapshots have been deleted, all * active snapshots will have access to all the information needed to restore the volume. *
** You cannot delete a snapshot of the root device of an EBS volume used by a registered AMI. You must first * de-register the AMI before you can delete the snapshot. *
** For more information, see Delete an Amazon EBS * snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param deleteSnapshotRequest * @return Result of the DeleteSnapshot operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteSnapshot * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteSnapshotResult deleteSnapshot(DeleteSnapshotRequest deleteSnapshotRequest); /** ** Deletes the data feed for Spot Instances. *
* * @param deleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscription. * @return Result of the DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscription operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscription * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult deleteSpotDatafeedSubscription(DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest deleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscription operation. * * @see #deleteSpotDatafeedSubscription(DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest) */ DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult deleteSpotDatafeedSubscription(); /** ** Deletes the specified subnet. You must terminate all running instances in the subnet before you can delete the * subnet. *
* * @param deleteSubnetRequest * @return Result of the DeleteSubnet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteSubnet * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteSubnetResult deleteSubnet(DeleteSubnetRequest deleteSubnetRequest); /** ** Deletes a subnet CIDR reservation. *
* * @param deleteSubnetCidrReservationRequest * @return Result of the DeleteSubnetCidrReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteSubnetCidrReservation * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteSubnetCidrReservationResult deleteSubnetCidrReservation(DeleteSubnetCidrReservationRequest deleteSubnetCidrReservationRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified set of tags from the specified set of resources. *
** To list the current tags, use DescribeTags. For more information about tags, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in * the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param deleteTagsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTags operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTags * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteTagsResult deleteTags(DeleteTagsRequest deleteTagsRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror filter. *
** You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror filter that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session. *
* * @param deleteTrafficMirrorFilterRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTrafficMirrorFilter operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTrafficMirrorFilter * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterResult deleteTrafficMirrorFilter(DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterRequest deleteTrafficMirrorFilterRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror rule. *
* * @param deleteTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterRule operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterRule * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterRuleResult deleteTrafficMirrorFilterRule(DeleteTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest deleteTrafficMirrorFilterRuleRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror session. *
* * @param deleteTrafficMirrorSessionRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTrafficMirrorSession operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTrafficMirrorSession * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteTrafficMirrorSessionResult deleteTrafficMirrorSession(DeleteTrafficMirrorSessionRequest deleteTrafficMirrorSessionRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror target. *
** You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror target that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session. *
* * @param deleteTrafficMirrorTargetRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTrafficMirrorTarget operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTrafficMirrorTarget * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteTrafficMirrorTargetResult deleteTrafficMirrorTarget(DeleteTrafficMirrorTargetRequest deleteTrafficMirrorTargetRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified transit gateway. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayResult deleteTransitGateway(DeleteTransitGatewayRequest deleteTransitGatewayRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Connect attachment. You must first delete any Connect peers for the attachment. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayConnectRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayConnect operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayConnect * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayConnectResult deleteTransitGatewayConnect(DeleteTransitGatewayConnectRequest deleteTransitGatewayConnectRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified Connect peer. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayConnectPeer operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayConnectPeer * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult deleteTransitGatewayConnectPeer(DeleteTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest deleteTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified transit gateway multicast domain. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomain operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomain * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomainResult deleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomain( DeleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest deleteTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest); /** ** Deletes a transit gateway peering attachment. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentResult deleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment( DeleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest deleteTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified transit gateway policy table. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayPolicyTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayPolicyTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayPolicyTableResult deleteTransitGatewayPolicyTable(DeleteTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest deleteTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest); /** ** Deletes a reference (route) to a prefix list in a specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReference operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReference * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceResult deleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReference( DeleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest deleteTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified route from the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayRouteRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayRouteResult deleteTransitGatewayRoute(DeleteTransitGatewayRouteRequest deleteTransitGatewayRouteRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. You must disassociate the route table from any transit gateway * route tables before you can delete it. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableResult deleteTransitGatewayRouteTable(DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest deleteTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** Advertises to the transit gateway that a transit gateway route table is deleted. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementResult deleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncement( DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest deleteTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified VPC attachment. *
* * @param deleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the DeleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentResult deleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachment(DeleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest deleteTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest); /** ** Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint. *
* * @param deleteVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVerifiedAccessEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVerifiedAccessEndpoint * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteVerifiedAccessEndpointResult deleteVerifiedAccessEndpoint(DeleteVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest deleteVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest); /** ** Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access group. *
* * @param deleteVerifiedAccessGroupRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVerifiedAccessGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVerifiedAccessGroup * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteVerifiedAccessGroupResult deleteVerifiedAccessGroup(DeleteVerifiedAccessGroupRequest deleteVerifiedAccessGroupRequest); /** ** Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance. *
* * @param deleteVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVerifiedAccessInstance operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVerifiedAccessInstance * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteVerifiedAccessInstanceResult deleteVerifiedAccessInstance(DeleteVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest deleteVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest); /** ** Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider. *
* * @param deleteVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVerifiedAccessTrustProvider operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVerifiedAccessTrustProvider * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult deleteVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(DeleteVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest deleteVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest); /** *
* Deletes the specified EBS volume. The volume must be in the available
state (not attached to an
* instance).
*
* The volume can remain in the deleting
state for several minutes.
*
* For more information, see Delete an Amazon EBS * volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param deleteVolumeRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVolume operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVolume * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteVolumeResult deleteVolume(DeleteVolumeRequest deleteVolumeRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified VPC. You must detach or delete all gateways and resources that are associated with the VPC * before you can delete it. For example, you must terminate all instances running in the VPC, delete all security * groups associated with the VPC (except the default one), delete all route tables associated with the VPC (except * the default one), and so on. *
* * @param deleteVpcRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteVpcResult deleteVpc(DeleteVpcRequest deleteVpcRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified VPC endpoint connection notifications. *
* * @param deleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsResult deleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications( DeleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest deleteVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest); /** *
* Deletes the specified VPC endpoint service configurations. Before you can delete an endpoint service
* configuration, you must reject any Available
or PendingAcceptance
interface endpoint
* connections that are attached to the service.
*
* Deletes the specified VPC endpoints. *
** When you delete a gateway endpoint, we delete the endpoint routes in the route tables for the endpoint. *
** When you delete a Gateway Load Balancer endpoint, we delete its endpoint network interfaces. You can only delete * Gateway Load Balancer endpoints when the routes that are associated with the endpoint are deleted. *
** When you delete an interface endpoint, we delete its endpoint network interfaces. *
* * @param deleteVpcEndpointsRequest * @return Result of the DeleteVpcEndpoints operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpcEndpoints * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteVpcEndpointsResult deleteVpcEndpoints(DeleteVpcEndpointsRequest deleteVpcEndpointsRequest); /** *
* Deletes a VPC peering connection. Either the owner of the requester VPC or the owner of the accepter VPC can
* delete the VPC peering connection if it's in the active
state. The owner of the requester VPC can
* delete a VPC peering connection in the pending-acceptance
state. You cannot delete a VPC peering
* connection that's in the failed
state.
*
* Deletes the specified VPN connection. *
** If you're deleting the VPC and its associated components, we recommend that you detach the virtual private * gateway from the VPC and delete the VPC before deleting the VPN connection. If you believe that the tunnel * credentials for your VPN connection have been compromised, you can delete the VPN connection and create a new one * that has new keys, without needing to delete the VPC or virtual private gateway. If you create a new VPN * connection, you must reconfigure the customer gateway device using the new configuration information returned * with the new VPN connection ID. *
** For certificate-based authentication, delete all Certificate Manager (ACM) private certificates used for the * Amazon Web Services-side tunnel endpoints for the VPN connection before deleting the VPN connection. *
* * @param deleteVpnConnectionRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnConnection. * @return Result of the DeleteVpnConnection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpnConnection * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteVpnConnectionResult deleteVpnConnection(DeleteVpnConnectionRequest deleteVpnConnectionRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified static route associated with a VPN connection between an existing virtual private gateway * and a VPN customer gateway. The static route allows traffic to be routed from the virtual private gateway to the * VPN customer gateway. *
* * @param deleteVpnConnectionRouteRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnConnectionRoute. * @return Result of the DeleteVpnConnectionRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpnConnectionRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeleteVpnConnectionRouteResult deleteVpnConnectionRoute(DeleteVpnConnectionRouteRequest deleteVpnConnectionRouteRequest); /** ** Deletes the specified virtual private gateway. You must first detach the virtual private gateway from the VPC. * Note that you don't need to delete the virtual private gateway if you plan to delete and recreate the VPN * connection between your VPC and your network. *
* * @param deleteVpnGatewayRequest * Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnGateway. * @return Result of the DeleteVpnGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeleteVpnGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeleteVpnGatewayResult deleteVpnGateway(DeleteVpnGatewayRequest deleteVpnGatewayRequest); /** ** Releases the specified address range that you provisioned for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through * bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) and deletes the corresponding address pool. *
** Before you can release an address range, you must stop advertising it using WithdrawByoipCidr and you must * not have any IP addresses allocated from its address range. *
* * @param deprovisionByoipCidrRequest * @return Result of the DeprovisionByoipCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeprovisionByoipCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeprovisionByoipCidrResult deprovisionByoipCidr(DeprovisionByoipCidrRequest deprovisionByoipCidrRequest); /** ** Deprovision a CIDR provisioned from an IPAM pool. If you deprovision a CIDR from a pool that has a source pool, * the CIDR is recycled back into the source pool. For more information, see Deprovision pool CIDRs in the * Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param deprovisionIpamPoolCidrRequest * @return Result of the DeprovisionIpamPoolCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeprovisionIpamPoolCidr * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DeprovisionIpamPoolCidrResult deprovisionIpamPoolCidr(DeprovisionIpamPoolCidrRequest deprovisionIpamPoolCidrRequest); /** ** Deprovision a CIDR from a public IPv4 pool. *
* * @param deprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest * @return Result of the DeprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrResult deprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr(DeprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest deprovisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest); /** ** Deregisters the specified AMI. After you deregister an AMI, it can't be used to launch new instances. *
** If you deregister an AMI that matches a Recycle Bin retention rule, the AMI is retained in the Recycle Bin for * the specified retention period. For more information, see Recycle Bin in the Amazon EC2 * User Guide. *
** When you deregister an AMI, it doesn't affect any instances that you've already launched from the AMI. You'll * continue to incur usage costs for those instances until you terminate them. *
** When you deregister an Amazon EBS-backed AMI, it doesn't affect the snapshot that was created for the root volume * of the instance during the AMI creation process. When you deregister an instance store-backed AMI, it doesn't * affect the files that you uploaded to Amazon S3 when you created the AMI. *
* * @param deregisterImageRequest * Contains the parameters for DeregisterImage. * @return Result of the DeregisterImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeregisterImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DeregisterImageResult deregisterImage(DeregisterImageRequest deregisterImageRequest); /** ** Deregisters tag keys to prevent tags that have the specified tag keys from being included in scheduled event * notifications for resources in the Region. *
* * @param deregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest * @return Result of the DeregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesResult deregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes( DeregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest deregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest); /** ** Deregisters the specified members (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group. *
* * @param deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest * @return Result of the DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers( DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest); /** ** Deregisters the specified sources (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group. *
* * @param deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest * @return Result of the DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources * @see AWS API Documentation */ DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources( DeregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest deregisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest); /** ** Describes attributes of your Amazon Web Services account. The following are the supported account attributes: *
*
* default-vpc
: The ID of the default VPC for your account, or none
.
*
* max-instances
: This attribute is no longer supported. The returned value does not reflect your
* actual vCPU limit for running On-Demand Instances. For more information, see On-Demand Instance Limits in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
*
* max-elastic-ips
: The maximum number of Elastic IP addresses that you can allocate.
*
* supported-platforms
: This attribute is deprecated.
*
* vpc-max-elastic-ips
: The maximum number of Elastic IP addresses that you can allocate.
*
* vpc-max-security-groups-per-interface
: The maximum number of security groups that you can assign to
* a network interface.
*
* Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP * addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
** When you transfer an Elastic IP address, there is a two-step handshake between the source and transfer Amazon Web * Services accounts. When the source account starts the transfer, the transfer account has seven days to accept the * Elastic IP address transfer. During those seven days, the source account can view the pending transfer by using * this action. After seven days, the transfer expires and ownership of the Elastic IP address returns to the source * account. Accepted transfers are visible to the source account for three days after the transfers have been * accepted. *
* * @param describeAddressTransfersRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAddressTransfers operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeAddressTransfers * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeAddressTransfersResult describeAddressTransfers(DescribeAddressTransfersRequest describeAddressTransfersRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Elastic IP addresses or all of your Elastic IP addresses. *
* * @param describeAddressesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAddresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeAddresses * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeAddressesResult describeAddresses(DescribeAddressesRequest describeAddressesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeAddresses operation. * * @see #describeAddresses(DescribeAddressesRequest) */ DescribeAddressesResult describeAddresses(); /** ** Describes the attributes of the specified Elastic IP addresses. For requirements, see Using reverse DNS for email applications. *
* * @param describeAddressesAttributeRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAddressesAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeAddressesAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeAddressesAttributeResult describeAddressesAttribute(DescribeAddressesAttributeRequest describeAddressesAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the longer ID format settings for all resource types in a specific Region. This request is useful for * performing a quick audit to determine whether a specific Region is fully opted in for longer IDs (17-character * IDs). *
** This request only returns information about resource types that support longer IDs. *
*
* The following resource types support longer IDs: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| instance
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| reservation
| route-table
|
* route-table-association
| security-group
| snapshot
| subnet
* | subnet-cidr-block-association
| volume
| vpc
|
* vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. If there is an * event impacting a zone, you can use this request to view the state and any provided messages for that zone. *
** For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and * zones in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeAvailabilityZonesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAvailabilityZones operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeAvailabilityZones * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult describeAvailabilityZones(DescribeAvailabilityZonesRequest describeAvailabilityZonesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeAvailabilityZones operation. * * @see #describeAvailabilityZones(DescribeAvailabilityZonesRequest) */ DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult describeAvailabilityZones(); /** ** Describes the current Infrastructure Performance metric subscriptions. *
* * @param describeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionsResult describeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptions( DescribeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionsRequest describeAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified bundle tasks or all of your bundle tasks. *
*
* Completed bundle tasks are listed for only a limited time. If your bundle task is no longer in the list, you can
* still register an AMI from it. Just use RegisterImage
with the Amazon S3 bucket name and image
* manifest name you provided to the bundle task.
*
* Describes the IP address ranges that were specified in calls to ProvisionByoipCidr. *
** To describe the address pools that were created when you provisioned the address ranges, use * DescribePublicIpv4Pools or DescribeIpv6Pools. *
* * @param describeByoipCidrsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeByoipCidrs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeByoipCidrs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeByoipCidrsResult describeByoipCidrs(DescribeByoipCidrsRequest describeByoipCidrsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more Capacity Reservation Fleets. *
* * @param describeCapacityReservationFleetsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeCapacityReservationFleets operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeCapacityReservationFleets * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeCapacityReservationFleetsResult describeCapacityReservationFleets(DescribeCapacityReservationFleetsRequest describeCapacityReservationFleetsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your Capacity Reservations. The results describe only the Capacity Reservations in the * Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using. *
* * @param describeCapacityReservationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeCapacityReservations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeCapacityReservations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeCapacityReservationsResult describeCapacityReservations(DescribeCapacityReservationsRequest describeCapacityReservationsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your carrier gateways. *
* * @param describeCarrierGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeCarrierGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeCarrierGateways * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeCarrierGatewaysResult describeCarrierGateways(DescribeCarrierGatewaysRequest describeCarrierGatewaysRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Describes one or more of your linked EC2-Classic instances. This request only returns information about * EC2-Classic instances linked to a VPC through ClassicLink. You cannot use this request to return information * about other instances. *
* * @param describeClassicLinkInstancesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClassicLinkInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClassicLinkInstances * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult describeClassicLinkInstances(DescribeClassicLinkInstancesRequest describeClassicLinkInstancesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeClassicLinkInstances operation. * * @see #describeClassicLinkInstances(DescribeClassicLinkInstancesRequest) */ DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult describeClassicLinkInstances(); /** ** Describes the authorization rules for a specified Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param describeClientVpnAuthorizationRulesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClientVpnAuthorizationRules operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClientVpnAuthorizationRules * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeClientVpnAuthorizationRulesResult describeClientVpnAuthorizationRules( DescribeClientVpnAuthorizationRulesRequest describeClientVpnAuthorizationRulesRequest); /** ** Describes active client connections and connections that have been terminated within the last 60 minutes for the * specified Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param describeClientVpnConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClientVpnConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClientVpnConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeClientVpnConnectionsResult describeClientVpnConnections(DescribeClientVpnConnectionsRequest describeClientVpnConnectionsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more Client VPN endpoints in the account. *
* * @param describeClientVpnEndpointsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClientVpnEndpoints operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClientVpnEndpoints * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeClientVpnEndpointsResult describeClientVpnEndpoints(DescribeClientVpnEndpointsRequest describeClientVpnEndpointsRequest); /** ** Describes the routes for the specified Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param describeClientVpnRoutesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClientVpnRoutes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClientVpnRoutes * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeClientVpnRoutesResult describeClientVpnRoutes(DescribeClientVpnRoutesRequest describeClientVpnRoutesRequest); /** ** Describes the target networks associated with the specified Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param describeClientVpnTargetNetworksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeClientVpnTargetNetworks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeClientVpnTargetNetworks * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeClientVpnTargetNetworksResult describeClientVpnTargetNetworks(DescribeClientVpnTargetNetworksRequest describeClientVpnTargetNetworksRequest); /** ** Describes the specified customer-owned address pools or all of your customer-owned address pools. *
* * @param describeCoipPoolsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeCoipPools operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeCoipPools * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeCoipPoolsResult describeCoipPools(DescribeCoipPoolsRequest describeCoipPoolsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified conversion tasks or all your conversion tasks. For more information, see the VM Import/Export User Guide. *
** For information about the import manifest referenced by this API action, see VM Import Manifest. *
* * @param describeConversionTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeConversionTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeConversionTasks * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeConversionTasksResult describeConversionTasks(DescribeConversionTasksRequest describeConversionTasksRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeConversionTasks operation. * * @see #describeConversionTasks(DescribeConversionTasksRequest) */ DescribeConversionTasksResult describeConversionTasks(); /** ** Describes one or more of your VPN customer gateways. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param describeCustomerGatewaysRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeCustomerGateways. * @return Result of the DescribeCustomerGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeCustomerGateways * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeCustomerGatewaysResult describeCustomerGateways(DescribeCustomerGatewaysRequest describeCustomerGatewaysRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeCustomerGateways operation. * * @see #describeCustomerGateways(DescribeCustomerGatewaysRequest) */ DescribeCustomerGatewaysResult describeCustomerGateways(); /** ** Describes one or more of your DHCP options sets. *
** For more information, see DHCP * options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param describeDhcpOptionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeDhcpOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeDhcpOptions * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeDhcpOptionsResult describeDhcpOptions(DescribeDhcpOptionsRequest describeDhcpOptionsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeDhcpOptions operation. * * @see #describeDhcpOptions(DescribeDhcpOptionsRequest) */ DescribeDhcpOptionsResult describeDhcpOptions(); /** ** Describes one or more of your egress-only internet gateways. *
* * @param describeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGateways * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysResult describeEgressOnlyInternetGateways( DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysRequest describeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysRequest); /** ** Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances. For more information about Elastic * Graphics, see Amazon * Elastic Graphics. *
* * @param describeElasticGpusRequest * @return Result of the DescribeElasticGpus operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeElasticGpus * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeElasticGpusResult describeElasticGpus(DescribeElasticGpusRequest describeElasticGpusRequest); /** ** Describes the specified export image tasks or all of your export image tasks. *
* * @param describeExportImageTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeExportImageTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeExportImageTasks * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeExportImageTasksResult describeExportImageTasks(DescribeExportImageTasksRequest describeExportImageTasksRequest); /** ** Describes the specified export instance tasks or all of your export instance tasks. *
* * @param describeExportTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeExportTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeExportTasks * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeExportTasksResult describeExportTasks(DescribeExportTasksRequest describeExportTasksRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeExportTasks operation. * * @see #describeExportTasks(DescribeExportTasksRequest) */ DescribeExportTasksResult describeExportTasks(); /** ** Describe details for Windows AMIs that are configured for faster launching. *
* * @param describeFastLaunchImagesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFastLaunchImages operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFastLaunchImages * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeFastLaunchImagesResult describeFastLaunchImages(DescribeFastLaunchImagesRequest describeFastLaunchImagesRequest); /** ** Describes the state of fast snapshot restores for your snapshots. *
* * @param describeFastSnapshotRestoresRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFastSnapshotRestores operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFastSnapshotRestores * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeFastSnapshotRestoresResult describeFastSnapshotRestores(DescribeFastSnapshotRestoresRequest describeFastSnapshotRestoresRequest); /** ** Describes the events for the specified EC2 Fleet during the specified time. *
** EC2 Fleet events are delayed by up to 30 seconds before they can be described. This ensures that you can query by * the last evaluated time and not miss a recorded event. EC2 Fleet events are available for 48 hours. *
** For more information, see Monitor fleet events using Amazon * EventBridge in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeFleetHistoryRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFleetHistory operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFleetHistory * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeFleetHistoryResult describeFleetHistory(DescribeFleetHistoryRequest describeFleetHistoryRequest); /** ** Describes the running instances for the specified EC2 Fleet. *
** For more information, see Monitor your * EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeFleetInstancesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFleetInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFleetInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeFleetInstancesResult describeFleetInstances(DescribeFleetInstancesRequest describeFleetInstancesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified EC2 Fleets or all of your EC2 Fleets. *
** For more information, see Monitor your * EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeFleetsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFleets operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFleets * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeFleetsResult describeFleets(DescribeFleetsRequest describeFleetsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more flow logs. *
** To view the published flow log records, you must view the log destination. For example, the CloudWatch Logs log * group, the Amazon S3 bucket, or the Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream. *
* * @param describeFlowLogsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFlowLogs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFlowLogs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeFlowLogsResult describeFlowLogs(DescribeFlowLogsRequest describeFlowLogsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeFlowLogs operation. * * @see #describeFlowLogs(DescribeFlowLogsRequest) */ DescribeFlowLogsResult describeFlowLogs(); /** ** Describes the specified attribute of the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI). *
* * @param describeFpgaImageAttributeRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFpgaImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFpgaImageAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeFpgaImageAttributeResult describeFpgaImageAttribute(DescribeFpgaImageAttributeRequest describeFpgaImageAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the Amazon FPGA Images (AFIs) available to you. These include public AFIs, private AFIs that you own, * and AFIs owned by other Amazon Web Services accounts for which you have load permissions. *
* * @param describeFpgaImagesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeFpgaImages operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeFpgaImages * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeFpgaImagesResult describeFpgaImages(DescribeFpgaImagesRequest describeFpgaImagesRequest); /** ** Describes the Dedicated Host reservations that are available to purchase. *
** The results describe all of the Dedicated Host reservation offerings, including offerings that might not match * the instance family and Region of your Dedicated Hosts. When purchasing an offering, ensure that the instance * family and Region of the offering matches that of the Dedicated Hosts with which it is to be associated. For more * information about supported instance types, see Dedicated Hosts in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeHostReservationOfferingsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeHostReservationOfferings operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeHostReservationOfferings * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeHostReservationOfferingsResult describeHostReservationOfferings(DescribeHostReservationOfferingsRequest describeHostReservationOfferingsRequest); /** ** Describes reservations that are associated with Dedicated Hosts in your account. *
* * @param describeHostReservationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeHostReservations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeHostReservations * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeHostReservationsResult describeHostReservations(DescribeHostReservationsRequest describeHostReservationsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Dedicated Hosts or all your Dedicated Hosts. *
*
* The results describe only the Dedicated Hosts in the Region you're currently using. All listed instances consume
* capacity on your Dedicated Host. Dedicated Hosts that have recently been released are listed with the state
* released
.
*
* Describes your IAM instance profile associations. *
* * @param describeIamInstanceProfileAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociationsResult describeIamInstanceProfileAssociations( DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociationsRequest describeIamInstanceProfileAssociationsRequest); /** ** Describes the ID format settings for your resources on a per-Region basis, for example, to view which resource * types are enabled for longer IDs. This request only returns information about resource types whose ID formats can * be modified; it does not return information about other resource types. *
*
* The following resource types support longer IDs: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| instance
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| reservation
| route-table
|
* route-table-association
| security-group
| snapshot
| subnet
* | subnet-cidr-block-association
| volume
| vpc
|
* vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* These settings apply to the IAM user who makes the request; they do not apply to the entire Amazon Web Services
* account. By default, an IAM user defaults to the same settings as the root user, unless they explicitly override
* the settings by running the ModifyIdFormat command. Resources created with longer IDs are visible to all
* IAM users, regardless of these settings and provided that they have permission to use the relevant
* Describe
command for the resource type.
*
* Describes the ID format settings for resources for the specified IAM user, IAM role, or root user. For example, * you can view the resource types that are enabled for longer IDs. This request only returns information about * resource types whose ID formats can be modified; it does not return information about other resource types. For * more information, see Resource * IDs in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
*
* The following resource types support longer IDs: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| instance
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| reservation
| route-table
|
* route-table-association
| security-group
| snapshot
| subnet
* | subnet-cidr-block-association
| volume
| vpc
|
* vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* These settings apply to the principal specified in the request. They do not apply to the principal that makes the * request. *
* * @param describeIdentityIdFormatRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIdentityIdFormat operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIdentityIdFormat * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeIdentityIdFormatResult describeIdentityIdFormat(DescribeIdentityIdFormatRequest describeIdentityIdFormatRequest); /** ** Describes the specified attribute of the specified AMI. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
* * @param describeImageAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeImageAttribute. * @return Result of the DescribeImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeImageAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeImageAttributeResult describeImageAttribute(DescribeImageAttributeRequest describeImageAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the specified images (AMIs, AKIs, and ARIs) available to you or all of the images available to you. *
** The images available to you include public images, private images that you own, and private images owned by other * Amazon Web Services accounts for which you have explicit launch permissions. *
** Recently deregistered images appear in the returned results for a short interval and then return empty results. * After all instances that reference a deregistered AMI are terminated, specifying the ID of the image will * eventually return an error indicating that the AMI ID cannot be found. *
* * @param describeImagesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeImages operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeImages * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeImagesResult describeImages(DescribeImagesRequest describeImagesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeImages operation. * * @see #describeImages(DescribeImagesRequest) */ DescribeImagesResult describeImages(); /** ** Displays details about an import virtual machine or import snapshot tasks that are already created. *
* * @param describeImportImageTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeImportImageTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeImportImageTasks * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeImportImageTasksResult describeImportImageTasks(DescribeImportImageTasksRequest describeImportImageTasksRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeImportImageTasks operation. * * @see #describeImportImageTasks(DescribeImportImageTasksRequest) */ DescribeImportImageTasksResult describeImportImageTasks(); /** ** Describes your import snapshot tasks. *
* * @param describeImportSnapshotTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeImportSnapshotTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeImportSnapshotTasks * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeImportSnapshotTasksResult describeImportSnapshotTasks(DescribeImportSnapshotTasksRequest describeImportSnapshotTasksRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeImportSnapshotTasks operation. * * @see #describeImportSnapshotTasks(DescribeImportSnapshotTasksRequest) */ DescribeImportSnapshotTasksResult describeImportSnapshotTasks(); /** *
* Describes the specified attribute of the specified instance. You can specify only one attribute at a time. Valid
* attribute values are: instanceType
| kernel
| ramdisk
|
* userData
| disableApiTermination
| instanceInitiatedShutdownBehavior
|
* rootDeviceName
| blockDeviceMapping
| productCodes
|
* sourceDestCheck
| groupSet
| ebsOptimized
| sriovNetSupport
*
* Describes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints or all EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints. *
* * @param describeInstanceConnectEndpointsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceConnectEndpoints operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceConnectEndpoints * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeInstanceConnectEndpointsResult describeInstanceConnectEndpoints(DescribeInstanceConnectEndpointsRequest describeInstanceConnectEndpointsRequest); /** *
* Describes the credit option for CPU usage of the specified burstable performance instances. The credit options
* are standard
and unlimited
.
*
* If you do not specify an instance ID, Amazon EC2 returns burstable performance instances with the
* unlimited
credit option, as well as instances that were previously configured as T2, T3, and T3a
* with the unlimited
credit option. For example, if you resize a T2 instance, while it is configured
* as unlimited
, to an M4 instance, Amazon EC2 returns the M4 instance.
*
* If you specify one or more instance IDs, Amazon EC2 returns the credit option (standard
or
* unlimited
) of those instances. If you specify an instance ID that is not valid, such as an instance
* that is not a burstable performance instance, an error is returned.
*
* Recently terminated instances might appear in the returned results. This interval is usually less than one hour. *
** If an Availability Zone is experiencing a service disruption and you specify instance IDs in the affected zone, * or do not specify any instance IDs at all, the call fails. If you specify only instance IDs in an unaffected * zone, the call works normally. *
** For more information, see Burstable * performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeInstanceCreditSpecificationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceCreditSpecifications operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceCreditSpecifications * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeInstanceCreditSpecificationsResult describeInstanceCreditSpecifications( DescribeInstanceCreditSpecificationsRequest describeInstanceCreditSpecificationsRequest); /** ** Describes the tag keys that are registered to appear in scheduled event notifications for resources in the * current Region. *
* * @param describeInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceEventNotificationAttributes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceEventNotificationAttributes * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeInstanceEventNotificationAttributesResult describeInstanceEventNotificationAttributes( DescribeInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest describeInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified event windows or all event windows. *
** If you specify event window IDs, the output includes information for only the specified event windows. If you * specify filters, the output includes information for only those event windows that meet the filter criteria. If * you do not specify event windows IDs or filters, the output includes information for all event windows, which can * affect performance. We recommend that you use pagination to ensure that the operation returns quickly and * successfully. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeInstanceEventWindowsRequest * Describe instance event windows by InstanceEventWindow. * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceEventWindows operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceEventWindows * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeInstanceEventWindowsResult describeInstanceEventWindows(DescribeInstanceEventWindowsRequest describeInstanceEventWindowsRequest); /** ** Describes the status of the specified instances or all of your instances. By default, only running instances are * described, unless you specifically indicate to return the status of all instances. *
** Instance status includes the following components: *
** Status checks - Amazon EC2 performs status checks on running EC2 instances to identify hardware and * software issues. For more information, see Status * checks for your instances and Troubleshoot instances * with failed status checks in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** Scheduled events - Amazon EC2 can schedule events (such as reboot, stop, or terminate) for your instances * related to hardware issues, software updates, or system maintenance. For more information, see Scheduled * events for your instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** Instance state - You can manage your instances from the moment you launch them through their termination. * For more information, see Instance lifecycle in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** Returns a list of all instance types offered. The results can be filtered by location (Region or Availability * Zone). If no location is specified, the instance types offered in the current Region are returned. *
* * @param describeInstanceTypeOfferingsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceTypeOfferings operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceTypeOfferings * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeInstanceTypeOfferingsResult describeInstanceTypeOfferings(DescribeInstanceTypeOfferingsRequest describeInstanceTypeOfferingsRequest); /** ** Describes the details of the instance types that are offered in a location. The results can be filtered by the * attributes of the instance types. *
* * @param describeInstanceTypesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstanceTypes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstanceTypes * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeInstanceTypesResult describeInstanceTypes(DescribeInstanceTypesRequest describeInstanceTypesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified instances or all instances. *
** If you specify instance IDs, the output includes information for only the specified instances. If you specify * filters, the output includes information for only those instances that meet the filter criteria. If you do not * specify instance IDs or filters, the output includes information for all instances, which can affect performance. * We recommend that you use pagination to ensure that the operation returns quickly and successfully. *
** If you specify an instance ID that is not valid, an error is returned. If you specify an instance that you do not * own, it is not included in the output. *
** Recently terminated instances might appear in the returned results. This interval is usually less than one hour. *
** If you describe instances in the rare case where an Availability Zone is experiencing a service disruption and * you specify instance IDs that are in the affected zone, or do not specify any instance IDs at all, the call * fails. If you describe instances and specify only instance IDs that are in an unaffected zone, the call works * normally. *
* * @param describeInstancesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeInstancesResult describeInstances(DescribeInstancesRequest describeInstancesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeInstances operation. * * @see #describeInstances(DescribeInstancesRequest) */ DescribeInstancesResult describeInstances(); /** ** Describes one or more of your internet gateways. *
* * @param describeInternetGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeInternetGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeInternetGateways * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeInternetGatewaysResult describeInternetGateways(DescribeInternetGatewaysRequest describeInternetGatewaysRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeInternetGateways operation. * * @see #describeInternetGateways(DescribeInternetGatewaysRequest) */ DescribeInternetGatewaysResult describeInternetGateways(); /** ** Get information about your IPAM pools. *
* * @param describeIpamPoolsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpamPools operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpamPools * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeIpamPoolsResult describeIpamPools(DescribeIpamPoolsRequest describeIpamPoolsRequest); /** ** Describes IPAM resource discoveries. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that enables IPAM to manage and * monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param describeIpamResourceDiscoveriesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveries operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveries * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveriesResult describeIpamResourceDiscoveries(DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveriesRequest describeIpamResourceDiscoveriesRequest); /** ** Describes resource discovery association with an Amazon VPC IPAM. An associated resource discovery is a resource * discovery that has been associated with an IPAM.. *
* * @param describeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociationsResult describeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociations( DescribeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociationsRequest describeIpamResourceDiscoveryAssociationsRequest); /** ** Get information about your IPAM scopes. *
* * @param describeIpamScopesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpamScopes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpamScopes * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeIpamScopesResult describeIpamScopes(DescribeIpamScopesRequest describeIpamScopesRequest); /** ** Get information about your IPAM pools. *
** For more information, see What is * IPAM? in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param describeIpamsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpams operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpams * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeIpamsResult describeIpams(DescribeIpamsRequest describeIpamsRequest); /** ** Describes your IPv6 address pools. *
* * @param describeIpv6PoolsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeIpv6Pools operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeIpv6Pools * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeIpv6PoolsResult describeIpv6Pools(DescribeIpv6PoolsRequest describeIpv6PoolsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified key pairs or all of your key pairs. *
** For more information about key pairs, see Amazon EC2 key pairs in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeKeyPairsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeKeyPairs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeKeyPairs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeKeyPairsResult describeKeyPairs(DescribeKeyPairsRequest describeKeyPairsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeKeyPairs operation. * * @see #describeKeyPairs(DescribeKeyPairsRequest) */ DescribeKeyPairsResult describeKeyPairs(); /** ** Describes one or more versions of a specified launch template. You can describe all versions, individual * versions, or a range of versions. You can also describe all the latest versions or all the default versions of * all the launch templates in your account. *
* * @param describeLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLaunchTemplateVersionsResult describeLaunchTemplateVersions(DescribeLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest describeLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more launch templates. *
* * @param describeLaunchTemplatesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLaunchTemplates operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLaunchTemplates * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeLaunchTemplatesResult describeLaunchTemplates(DescribeLaunchTemplatesRequest describeLaunchTemplatesRequest); /** ** Describes the associations between virtual interface groups and local gateway route tables. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociations operation returned by the * service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationsResult describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociations( DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationsRequest describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVirtualInterfaceGroupAssociationsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified associations between VPCs and local gateway route tables. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationsResult describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociations( DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationsRequest describeLocalGatewayRouteTableVpcAssociationsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more local gateway route tables. By default, all local gateway route tables are described. * Alternatively, you can filter the results. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewayRouteTablesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTables operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTables * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTablesResult describeLocalGatewayRouteTables(DescribeLocalGatewayRouteTablesRequest describeLocalGatewayRouteTablesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified local gateway virtual interface groups. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroupsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroups * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroupsResult describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroups( DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroupsRequest describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaceGroupsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified local gateway virtual interfaces. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfacesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaces operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaces * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfacesResult describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfaces( DescribeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfacesRequest describeLocalGatewayVirtualInterfacesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more local gateways. By default, all local gateways are described. Alternatively, you can filter * the results. *
* * @param describeLocalGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeLocalGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeLocalGateways * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeLocalGatewaysResult describeLocalGateways(DescribeLocalGatewaysRequest describeLocalGatewaysRequest); /** ** Describes your managed prefix lists and any Amazon Web Services-managed prefix lists. *
** To view the entries for your prefix list, use GetManagedPrefixListEntries. *
* * @param describeManagedPrefixListsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeManagedPrefixLists operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeManagedPrefixLists * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeManagedPrefixListsResult describeManagedPrefixLists(DescribeManagedPrefixListsRequest describeManagedPrefixListsRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Describes your Elastic IP addresses that are being moved from or being restored to the EC2-Classic platform. This * request does not return information about any other Elastic IP addresses in your account. *
* * @param describeMovingAddressesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeMovingAddresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeMovingAddresses * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeMovingAddressesResult describeMovingAddresses(DescribeMovingAddressesRequest describeMovingAddressesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeMovingAddresses operation. * * @see #describeMovingAddresses(DescribeMovingAddressesRequest) */ DescribeMovingAddressesResult describeMovingAddresses(); /** ** Describes one or more of your NAT gateways. *
* * @param describeNatGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNatGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNatGateways * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeNatGatewaysResult describeNatGateways(DescribeNatGatewaysRequest describeNatGatewaysRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your network ACLs. *
** For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param describeNetworkAclsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkAcls operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkAcls * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeNetworkAclsResult describeNetworkAcls(DescribeNetworkAclsRequest describeNetworkAclsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeNetworkAcls operation. * * @see #describeNetworkAcls(DescribeNetworkAclsRequest) */ DescribeNetworkAclsResult describeNetworkAcls(); /** ** Describes the specified Network Access Scope analyses. *
* * @param describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalyses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalyses * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysesResult describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalyses( DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysesRequest describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Network Access Scopes. *
* * @param describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopes * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopesResult describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopes( DescribeNetworkInsightsAccessScopesRequest describeNetworkInsightsAccessScopesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your network insights analyses. *
* * @param describeNetworkInsightsAnalysesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInsightsAnalyses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInsightsAnalyses * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInsightsAnalysesResult describeNetworkInsightsAnalyses(DescribeNetworkInsightsAnalysesRequest describeNetworkInsightsAnalysesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your paths. *
* * @param describeNetworkInsightsPathsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInsightsPaths operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInsightsPaths * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInsightsPathsResult describeNetworkInsightsPaths(DescribeNetworkInsightsPathsRequest describeNetworkInsightsPathsRequest); /** ** Describes a network interface attribute. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
* * @param describeNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute. * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttributeResult describeNetworkInterfaceAttribute(DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest describeNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the permissions for your network interfaces. *
* * @param describeNetworkInterfacePermissionsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissions. * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissionsResult describeNetworkInterfacePermissions( DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissionsRequest describeNetworkInterfacePermissionsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your network interfaces. *
* * @param describeNetworkInterfacesRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfaces. * @return Result of the DescribeNetworkInterfaces operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeNetworkInterfaces * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeNetworkInterfacesResult describeNetworkInterfaces(DescribeNetworkInterfacesRequest describeNetworkInterfacesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeNetworkInterfaces operation. * * @see #describeNetworkInterfaces(DescribeNetworkInterfacesRequest) */ DescribeNetworkInterfacesResult describeNetworkInterfaces(); /** ** Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. For more information, see Placement groups in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describePlacementGroupsRequest * @return Result of the DescribePlacementGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribePlacementGroups * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribePlacementGroupsResult describePlacementGroups(DescribePlacementGroupsRequest describePlacementGroupsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribePlacementGroups operation. * * @see #describePlacementGroups(DescribePlacementGroupsRequest) */ DescribePlacementGroupsResult describePlacementGroups(); /** ** Describes available Amazon Web Services services in a prefix list format, which includes the prefix list name and * prefix list ID of the service and the IP address range for the service. *
** We recommend that you use DescribeManagedPrefixLists instead. *
* * @param describePrefixListsRequest * @return Result of the DescribePrefixLists operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribePrefixLists * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribePrefixListsResult describePrefixLists(DescribePrefixListsRequest describePrefixListsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribePrefixLists operation. * * @see #describePrefixLists(DescribePrefixListsRequest) */ DescribePrefixListsResult describePrefixLists(); /** ** Describes the ID format settings for the root user and all IAM roles and IAM users that have explicitly specified * a longer ID (17-character ID) preference. *
** By default, all IAM roles and IAM users default to the same ID settings as the root user, unless they explicitly * override the settings. This request is useful for identifying those IAM users and IAM roles that have overridden * the default ID settings. *
*
* The following resource types support longer IDs: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| instance
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| reservation
| route-table
|
* route-table-association
| security-group
| snapshot
| subnet
* | subnet-cidr-block-association
| volume
| vpc
|
* vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* Describes the specified IPv4 address pools. *
* * @param describePublicIpv4PoolsRequest * @return Result of the DescribePublicIpv4Pools operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribePublicIpv4Pools * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribePublicIpv4PoolsResult describePublicIpv4Pools(DescribePublicIpv4PoolsRequest describePublicIpv4PoolsRequest); /** ** Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. *
** For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud endpoints and * quotas. *
** For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Managing Amazon Web Services Regions * in the Amazon Web Services General Reference. *
* * @param describeRegionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeRegions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeRegions * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeRegionsResult describeRegions(DescribeRegionsRequest describeRegionsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeRegions operation. * * @see #describeRegions(DescribeRegionsRequest) */ DescribeRegionsResult describeRegions(); /** ** Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeReplaceRootVolumeTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasks * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksResult describeReplaceRootVolumeTasks(DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksRequest describeReplaceRootVolumeTasksRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of the Reserved Instances that you purchased. *
** For more information about Reserved Instances, see Reserved * Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeReservedInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstances. * @return Result of the DescribeReservedInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeReservedInstances * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeReservedInstancesResult describeReservedInstances(DescribeReservedInstancesRequest describeReservedInstancesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeReservedInstances operation. * * @see #describeReservedInstances(DescribeReservedInstancesRequest) */ DescribeReservedInstancesResult describeReservedInstances(); /** ** Describes your account's Reserved Instance listings in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. *
** The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Reserved Instance capacity that they no * longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the * Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. *
** As a seller, you choose to list some or all of your Reserved Instances, and you specify the upfront price to * receive for them. Your Reserved Instances are then listed in the Reserved Instance Marketplace and are available * for purchase. *
** As a buyer, you specify the configuration of the Reserved Instance to purchase, and the Marketplace matches what * you're searching for with what's available. The Marketplace first sells the lowest priced Reserved Instances to * you, and continues to sell available Reserved Instance listings to you until your demand is met. You are charged * based on the total price of all of the listings that you purchase. *
** For more information, see Reserved Instance * Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeReservedInstancesListingsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesListings. * @return Result of the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeReservedInstancesListings * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult describeReservedInstancesListings(DescribeReservedInstancesListingsRequest describeReservedInstancesListingsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. * * @see #describeReservedInstancesListings(DescribeReservedInstancesListingsRequest) */ DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult describeReservedInstancesListings(); /** ** Describes the modifications made to your Reserved Instances. If no parameter is specified, information about all * your Reserved Instances modification requests is returned. If a modification ID is specified, only information * about the specific modification is returned. *
** For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeReservedInstancesModificationsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesModifications. * @return Result of the DescribeReservedInstancesModifications operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeReservedInstancesModifications * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult describeReservedInstancesModifications( DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsRequest describeReservedInstancesModificationsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeReservedInstancesModifications operation. * * @see #describeReservedInstancesModifications(DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsRequest) */ DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult describeReservedInstancesModifications(); /** ** Describes Reserved Instance offerings that are available for purchase. With Reserved Instances, you purchase the * right to launch instances for a period of time. During that time period, you do not receive insufficient capacity * errors, and you pay a lower usage rate than the rate charged for On-Demand instances for the actual time used. *
** If you have listed your own Reserved Instances for sale in the Reserved Instance Marketplace, they will be * excluded from these results. This is to ensure that you do not purchase your own Reserved Instances. *
** For more information, see Reserved Instance * Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeReservedInstancesOfferingsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings. * @return Result of the DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult describeReservedInstancesOfferings( DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsRequest describeReservedInstancesOfferingsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings operation. * * @see #describeReservedInstancesOfferings(DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsRequest) */ DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult describeReservedInstancesOfferings(); /** ** Describes one or more of your route tables. *
** Each subnet in your VPC must be associated with a route table. If a subnet is not explicitly associated with any * route table, it is implicitly associated with the main route table. This command does not return the subnet ID * for implicit associations. *
** For more information, see Route * tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param describeRouteTablesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeRouteTables operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeRouteTables * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeRouteTablesResult describeRouteTables(DescribeRouteTablesRequest describeRouteTablesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeRouteTables operation. * * @see #describeRouteTables(DescribeRouteTablesRequest) */ DescribeRouteTablesResult describeRouteTables(); /** ** Finds available schedules that meet the specified criteria. *
** You can search for an available schedule no more than 3 months in advance. You must meet the minimum required * duration of 1,200 hours per year. For example, the minimum daily schedule is 4 hours, the minimum weekly schedule * is 24 hours, and the minimum monthly schedule is 100 hours. *
** After you find a schedule that meets your needs, call PurchaseScheduledInstances to purchase Scheduled * Instances with that schedule. *
* * @param describeScheduledInstanceAvailabilityRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability. * @return Result of the DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailabilityResult describeScheduledInstanceAvailability( DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailabilityRequest describeScheduledInstanceAvailabilityRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Scheduled Instances or all your Scheduled Instances. *
* * @param describeScheduledInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeScheduledInstances. * @return Result of the DescribeScheduledInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeScheduledInstances * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeScheduledInstancesResult describeScheduledInstances(DescribeScheduledInstancesRequest describeScheduledInstancesRequest); /** ** Describes the VPCs on the other side of a VPC peering connection that are referencing the security groups you've * specified in this request. *
* * @param describeSecurityGroupReferencesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSecurityGroupReferences operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSecurityGroupReferences * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeSecurityGroupReferencesResult describeSecurityGroupReferences(DescribeSecurityGroupReferencesRequest describeSecurityGroupReferencesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your security group rules. *
* * @param describeSecurityGroupRulesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSecurityGroupRules operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSecurityGroupRules * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSecurityGroupRulesResult describeSecurityGroupRules(DescribeSecurityGroupRulesRequest describeSecurityGroupRulesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified security groups or all of your security groups. *
* * @param describeSecurityGroupsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSecurityGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSecurityGroups * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeSecurityGroupsResult describeSecurityGroups(DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest describeSecurityGroupsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSecurityGroups operation. * * @see #describeSecurityGroups(DescribeSecurityGroupsRequest) */ DescribeSecurityGroupsResult describeSecurityGroups(); /** ** Describes the specified attribute of the specified snapshot. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
** For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeSnapshotAttributeRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSnapshotAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSnapshotAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSnapshotAttributeResult describeSnapshotAttribute(DescribeSnapshotAttributeRequest describeSnapshotAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the storage tier status of one or more Amazon EBS snapshots. *
* * @param describeSnapshotTierStatusRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSnapshotTierStatus operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSnapshotTierStatus * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSnapshotTierStatusResult describeSnapshotTierStatus(DescribeSnapshotTierStatusRequest describeSnapshotTierStatusRequest); /** ** Describes the specified EBS snapshots available to you or all of the EBS snapshots available to you. *
** The snapshots available to you include public snapshots, private snapshots that you own, and private snapshots * owned by other Amazon Web Services accounts for which you have explicit create volume permissions. *
** The create volume permissions fall into the following categories: *
*
* public: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions for the snapshot to the
* all
group. All Amazon Web Services accounts have create volume permissions for these snapshots.
*
* explicit: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions to a specific Amazon Web Services * account. *
** implicit: An Amazon Web Services account has implicit create volume permissions for all snapshots it owns. *
** The list of snapshots returned can be filtered by specifying snapshot IDs, snapshot owners, or Amazon Web * Services accounts with create volume permissions. If no options are specified, Amazon EC2 returns all snapshots * for which you have create volume permissions. *
** If you specify one or more snapshot IDs, only snapshots that have the specified IDs are returned. If you specify * an invalid snapshot ID, an error is returned. If you specify a snapshot ID for which you do not have access, it * is not included in the returned results. *
*
* If you specify one or more snapshot owners using the OwnerIds
option, only snapshots from the
* specified owners and for which you have access are returned. The results can include the Amazon Web Services
* account IDs of the specified owners, amazon
for snapshots owned by Amazon, or self
for
* snapshots that you own.
*
* If you specify a list of restorable users, only snapshots with create snapshot permissions for those users are
* returned. You can specify Amazon Web Services account IDs (if you own the snapshots), self
for
* snapshots for which you own or have explicit permissions, or all
for public snapshots.
*
* If you are describing a long list of snapshots, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more * manageable. For more information, see Pagination. *
** To get the state of fast snapshot restores for a snapshot, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. *
** For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeSnapshotsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSnapshots operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSnapshots * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeSnapshotsResult describeSnapshots(DescribeSnapshotsRequest describeSnapshotsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSnapshots operation. * * @see #describeSnapshots(DescribeSnapshotsRequest) */ DescribeSnapshotsResult describeSnapshots(); /** ** Describes the data feed for Spot Instances. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. *
* * @param describeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscription. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscription operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscription * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult describeSpotDatafeedSubscription(DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest describeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscription operation. * * @see #describeSpotDatafeedSubscription(DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest) */ DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult describeSpotDatafeedSubscription(); /** ** Describes the running instances for the specified Spot Fleet. *
* * @param describeSpotFleetInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotFleetInstances. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotFleetInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotFleetInstances * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSpotFleetInstancesResult describeSpotFleetInstances(DescribeSpotFleetInstancesRequest describeSpotFleetInstancesRequest); /** ** Describes the events for the specified Spot Fleet request during the specified time. *
** Spot Fleet events are delayed by up to 30 seconds before they can be described. This ensures that you can query * by the last evaluated time and not miss a recorded event. Spot Fleet events are available for 48 hours. *
** For more information, see Monitor fleet events using Amazon * EventBridge in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeSpotFleetRequestHistoryRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotFleetRequestHistory. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotFleetRequestHistory operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotFleetRequestHistory * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeSpotFleetRequestHistoryResult describeSpotFleetRequestHistory(DescribeSpotFleetRequestHistoryRequest describeSpotFleetRequestHistoryRequest); /** ** Describes your Spot Fleet requests. *
** Spot Fleet requests are deleted 48 hours after they are canceled and their instances are terminated. *
* * @param describeSpotFleetRequestsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotFleetRequests. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotFleetRequests operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotFleetRequests * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSpotFleetRequestsResult describeSpotFleetRequests(DescribeSpotFleetRequestsRequest describeSpotFleetRequestsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSpotFleetRequests operation. * * @see #describeSpotFleetRequests(DescribeSpotFleetRequestsRequest) */ DescribeSpotFleetRequestsResult describeSpotFleetRequests(); /** ** Describes the specified Spot Instance requests. *
*
* You can use DescribeSpotInstanceRequests
to find a running Spot Instance by examining the response.
* If the status of the Spot Instance is fulfilled
, the instance ID appears in the response and
* contains the identifier of the instance. Alternatively, you can use DescribeInstances with a
* filter to look for instances where the instance lifecycle is spot
.
*
* We recommend that you set MaxResults
to a value between 5 and 1000 to limit the number of items
* returned. This paginates the output, which makes the list more manageable and returns the items faster. If the
* list of items exceeds your MaxResults
value, then that number of items is returned along with a
* NextToken
value that can be passed to a subsequent DescribeSpotInstanceRequests
request
* to retrieve the remaining items.
*
* Spot Instance requests are deleted four hours after they are canceled and their instances are terminated. *
* * @param describeSpotInstanceRequestsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotInstanceRequests. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotInstanceRequests operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotInstanceRequests * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsResult describeSpotInstanceRequests(DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsRequest describeSpotInstanceRequestsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSpotInstanceRequests operation. * * @see #describeSpotInstanceRequests(DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsRequest) */ DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsResult describeSpotInstanceRequests(); /** ** Describes the Spot price history. For more information, see Spot Instance * pricing history in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. *
** When you specify a start and end time, the operation returns the prices of the instance types within that time * range. It also returns the last price change before the start time, which is the effective price as of the start * time. *
* * @param describeSpotPriceHistoryRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeSpotPriceHistory. * @return Result of the DescribeSpotPriceHistory operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSpotPriceHistory * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult describeSpotPriceHistory(DescribeSpotPriceHistoryRequest describeSpotPriceHistoryRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSpotPriceHistory operation. * * @see #describeSpotPriceHistory(DescribeSpotPriceHistoryRequest) */ DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult describeSpotPriceHistory(); /** ** Describes the stale security group rules for security groups in a specified VPC. Rules are stale when they * reference a deleted security group in the same VPC or in a peer VPC, or if they reference a security group in a * peer VPC for which the VPC peering connection has been deleted. *
* * @param describeStaleSecurityGroupsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeStaleSecurityGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeStaleSecurityGroups * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeStaleSecurityGroupsResult describeStaleSecurityGroups(DescribeStaleSecurityGroupsRequest describeStaleSecurityGroupsRequest); /** ** Describes the progress of the AMI store tasks. You can describe the store tasks for specified AMIs. If you don't * specify the AMIs, you get a paginated list of store tasks from the last 31 days. *
*
* For each AMI task, the response indicates if the task is InProgress
, Completed
, or
* Failed
. For tasks InProgress
, the response shows the estimated progress as a
* percentage.
*
* Tasks are listed in reverse chronological order. Currently, only tasks from the past 31 days can be viewed. *
** To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see Permissions * for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** For more information, see Store and restore an AMI using * Amazon S3 in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param describeStoreImageTasksRequest * @return Result of the DescribeStoreImageTasks operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeStoreImageTasks * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeStoreImageTasksResult describeStoreImageTasks(DescribeStoreImageTasksRequest describeStoreImageTasksRequest); /** ** Describes one or more of your subnets. *
** For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC * User Guide. *
* * @param describeSubnetsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeSubnets operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeSubnets * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeSubnetsResult describeSubnets(DescribeSubnetsRequest describeSubnetsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeSubnets operation. * * @see #describeSubnets(DescribeSubnetsRequest) */ DescribeSubnetsResult describeSubnets(); /** ** Describes the specified tags for your EC2 resources. *
** For more information about tags, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in * the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeTagsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTags operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTags * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeTagsResult describeTags(DescribeTagsRequest describeTagsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeTags operation. * * @see #describeTags(DescribeTagsRequest) */ DescribeTagsResult describeTags(); /** ** Describes one or more Traffic Mirror filters. *
* * @param describeTrafficMirrorFiltersRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTrafficMirrorFilters operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilters * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTrafficMirrorFiltersResult describeTrafficMirrorFilters(DescribeTrafficMirrorFiltersRequest describeTrafficMirrorFiltersRequest); /** ** Describes one or more Traffic Mirror sessions. By default, all Traffic Mirror sessions are described. * Alternatively, you can filter the results. *
* * @param describeTrafficMirrorSessionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTrafficMirrorSessions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTrafficMirrorSessions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTrafficMirrorSessionsResult describeTrafficMirrorSessions(DescribeTrafficMirrorSessionsRequest describeTrafficMirrorSessionsRequest); /** ** Information about one or more Traffic Mirror targets. *
* * @param describeTrafficMirrorTargetsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTrafficMirrorTargets operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTrafficMirrorTargets * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTrafficMirrorTargetsResult describeTrafficMirrorTargets(DescribeTrafficMirrorTargetsRequest describeTrafficMirrorTargetsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more attachments between resources and transit gateways. By default, all attachments are * described. Alternatively, you can filter the results by attachment ID, attachment state, resource ID, or resource * owner. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayAttachmentsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayAttachments operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayAttachments * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayAttachmentsResult describeTransitGatewayAttachments(DescribeTransitGatewayAttachmentsRequest describeTransitGatewayAttachmentsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more Connect peers. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayConnectPeersRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayConnectPeers operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayConnectPeers * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayConnectPeersResult describeTransitGatewayConnectPeers( DescribeTransitGatewayConnectPeersRequest describeTransitGatewayConnectPeersRequest); /** ** Describes one or more Connect attachments. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayConnectsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayConnects operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayConnects * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayConnectsResult describeTransitGatewayConnects(DescribeTransitGatewayConnectsRequest describeTransitGatewayConnectsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more transit gateway multicast domains. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayMulticastDomainsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayMulticastDomains operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayMulticastDomains * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayMulticastDomainsResult describeTransitGatewayMulticastDomains( DescribeTransitGatewayMulticastDomainsRequest describeTransitGatewayMulticastDomainsRequest); /** ** Describes your transit gateway peering attachments. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachments operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachments * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentsResult describeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachments( DescribeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentsRequest describeTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more transit gateway route policy tables. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayPolicyTablesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayPolicyTables operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayPolicyTables * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayPolicyTablesResult describeTransitGatewayPolicyTables( DescribeTransitGatewayPolicyTablesRequest describeTransitGatewayPolicyTablesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more transit gateway route table advertisements. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncements operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncements * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementsResult describeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncements( DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementsRequest describeTransitGatewayRouteTableAnnouncementsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more transit gateway route tables. By default, all transit gateway route tables are described. * Alternatively, you can filter the results. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayRouteTablesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTables operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTables * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTablesResult describeTransitGatewayRouteTables(DescribeTransitGatewayRouteTablesRequest describeTransitGatewayRouteTablesRequest); /** ** Describes one or more VPC attachments. By default, all VPC attachments are described. Alternatively, you can * filter the results. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachments operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachments * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentsResult describeTransitGatewayVpcAttachments( DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentsRequest describeTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentsRequest); /** ** Describes one or more transit gateways. By default, all transit gateways are described. Alternatively, you can * filter the results. *
* * @param describeTransitGatewaysRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTransitGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTransitGateways * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeTransitGatewaysResult describeTransitGateways(DescribeTransitGatewaysRequest describeTransitGatewaysRequest); /** ** This API action is currently in limited preview only. If you are interested in using this feature, contact * your account manager. *
** Describes one or more network interface trunk associations. *
* * @param describeTrunkInterfaceAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeTrunkInterfaceAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeTrunkInterfaceAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeTrunkInterfaceAssociationsResult describeTrunkInterfaceAssociations( DescribeTrunkInterfaceAssociationsRequest describeTrunkInterfaceAssociationsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoints. *
* * @param describeVerifiedAccessEndpointsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVerifiedAccessEndpoints operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVerifiedAccessEndpoints * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVerifiedAccessEndpointsResult describeVerifiedAccessEndpoints(DescribeVerifiedAccessEndpointsRequest describeVerifiedAccessEndpointsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Verified Access groups. *
* * @param describeVerifiedAccessGroupsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVerifiedAccessGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVerifiedAccessGroups * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVerifiedAccessGroupsResult describeVerifiedAccessGroups(DescribeVerifiedAccessGroupsRequest describeVerifiedAccessGroupsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access instances. *
* * @param describeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationsResult describeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurations( DescribeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationsRequest describeVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access instances. *
* * @param describeVerifiedAccessInstancesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVerifiedAccessInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVerifiedAccessInstances * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVerifiedAccessInstancesResult describeVerifiedAccessInstances(DescribeVerifiedAccessInstancesRequest describeVerifiedAccessInstancesRequest); /** ** Describes the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust providers. *
* * @param describeVerifiedAccessTrustProvidersRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVerifiedAccessTrustProviders operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVerifiedAccessTrustProviders * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVerifiedAccessTrustProvidersResult describeVerifiedAccessTrustProviders( DescribeVerifiedAccessTrustProvidersRequest describeVerifiedAccessTrustProvidersRequest); /** ** Describes the specified attribute of the specified volume. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
** For more information about EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS volumes in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeVolumeAttributeRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVolumeAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVolumeAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DescribeVolumeAttributeResult describeVolumeAttribute(DescribeVolumeAttributeRequest describeVolumeAttributeRequest); /** ** Describes the status of the specified volumes. Volume status provides the result of the checks performed on your * volumes to determine events that can impair the performance of your volumes. The performance of a volume can be * affected if an issue occurs on the volume's underlying host. If the volume's underlying host experiences a power * outage or system issue, after the system is restored, there could be data inconsistencies on the volume. Volume * events notify you if this occurs. Volume actions notify you if any action needs to be taken in response to the * event. *
*
* The DescribeVolumeStatus
operation provides the following information about the specified volumes:
*
* Status: Reflects the current status of the volume. The possible values are ok
,
* impaired
, warning
, or insufficient-data
. If all checks pass, the overall
* status of the volume is ok
. If the check fails, the overall status is impaired
. If the
* status is insufficient-data
, then the checks might still be taking place on your volume at the time.
* We recommend that you retry the request. For more information about volume status, see Monitor the status of
* your volumes in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
*
* Events: Reflect the cause of a volume status and might require you to take action. For example, if your
* volume returns an impaired
status, then the volume event might be
* potential-data-inconsistency
. This means that your volume has been affected by an issue with the
* underlying host, has all I/O operations disabled, and might have inconsistent data.
*
* Actions: Reflect the actions you might have to take in response to an event. For example, if the status of
* the volume is impaired
and the volume event shows potential-data-inconsistency
, then
* the action shows enable-volume-io
. This means that you may want to enable the I/O operations for the
* volume by calling the EnableVolumeIO action and then check the volume for data consistency.
*
* Volume status is based on the volume status checks, and does not reflect the volume state. Therefore, volume
* status does not indicate volumes in the error
state (for example, when a volume is incapable of
* accepting I/O.)
*
* Describes the specified EBS volumes or all of your EBS volumes. *
** If you are describing a long list of volumes, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more * manageable. For more information, see Pagination. *
** For more information about EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS volumes in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeVolumesRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVolumes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVolumes * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVolumesResult describeVolumes(DescribeVolumesRequest describeVolumesRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVolumes operation. * * @see #describeVolumes(DescribeVolumesRequest) */ DescribeVolumesResult describeVolumes(); /** ** Describes the most recent volume modification request for the specified EBS volumes. *
** If a volume has never been modified, some information in the output will be null. If a volume has been modified * more than once, the output includes only the most recent modification request. *
** You can also use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about * CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon * CloudWatch Events User Guide. For more information, see Monitor the * progress of volume modifications in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param describeVolumesModificationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVolumesModifications operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVolumesModifications * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVolumesModificationsResult describeVolumesModifications(DescribeVolumesModificationsRequest describeVolumesModificationsRequest); /** ** Describes the specified attribute of the specified VPC. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
* * @param describeVpcAttributeRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpcAttributeResult describeVpcAttribute(DescribeVpcAttributeRequest describeVpcAttributeRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Describes the ClassicLink status of the specified VPCs. *
* * @param describeVpcClassicLinkRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcClassicLink operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcClassicLink * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpcClassicLinkResult describeVpcClassicLink(DescribeVpcClassicLinkRequest describeVpcClassicLinkRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpcClassicLink operation. * * @see #describeVpcClassicLink(DescribeVpcClassicLinkRequest) */ DescribeVpcClassicLinkResult describeVpcClassicLink(); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Describes the ClassicLink DNS support status of one or more VPCs. If enabled, the DNS hostname of a linked * EC2-Classic instance resolves to its private IP address when addressed from an instance in the VPC to which it's * linked. Similarly, the DNS hostname of an instance in a VPC resolves to its private IP address when addressed * from a linked EC2-Classic instance. *
* * @param describeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportResult describeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport(DescribeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest describeVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest); /** ** Describes the connection notifications for VPC endpoints and VPC endpoint services. *
* * @param describeVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsResult describeVpcEndpointConnectionNotifications( DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest describeVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationsRequest); /** ** Describes the VPC endpoint connections to your VPC endpoint services, including any endpoints that are pending * your acceptance. *
* * @param describeVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcEndpointConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcEndpointConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionsResult describeVpcEndpointConnections(DescribeVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest describeVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest); /** ** Describes the VPC endpoint service configurations in your account (your services). *
* * @param describeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurations * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationsResult describeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurations( DescribeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationsRequest describeVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationsRequest); /** ** Describes the principals (service consumers) that are permitted to discover your VPC endpoint service. *
* * @param describeVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcEndpointServicePermissions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcEndpointServicePermissions * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcEndpointServicePermissionsResult describeVpcEndpointServicePermissions( DescribeVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest describeVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest); /** ** Describes available services to which you can create a VPC endpoint. *
*
* When the service provider and the consumer have different accounts in multiple Availability Zones, and the
* consumer views the VPC endpoint service information, the response only includes the common Availability Zones.
* For example, when the service provider account uses us-east-1a
and us-east-1c
and the
* consumer uses us-east-1a
and us-east-1b
, the response includes the VPC endpoint
* services in the common Availability Zone, us-east-1a
.
*
* Describes your VPC endpoints. *
* * @param describeVpcEndpointsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcEndpoints operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcEndpoints * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpcEndpointsResult describeVpcEndpoints(DescribeVpcEndpointsRequest describeVpcEndpointsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpcEndpoints operation. * * @see #describeVpcEndpoints(DescribeVpcEndpointsRequest) */ DescribeVpcEndpointsResult describeVpcEndpoints(); /** ** Describes one or more of your VPC peering connections. *
* * @param describeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcPeeringConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult describeVpcPeeringConnections(DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest describeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections operation. * * @see #describeVpcPeeringConnections(DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest) */ DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult describeVpcPeeringConnections(); /** ** Describes one or more of your VPCs. *
* * @param describeVpcsRequest * @return Result of the DescribeVpcs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpcs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpcsResult describeVpcs(DescribeVpcsRequest describeVpcsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpcs operation. * * @see #describeVpcs(DescribeVpcsRequest) */ DescribeVpcsResult describeVpcs(); /** ** Describes one or more of your VPN connections. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param describeVpnConnectionsRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeVpnConnections. * @return Result of the DescribeVpnConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpnConnections * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpnConnectionsResult describeVpnConnections(DescribeVpnConnectionsRequest describeVpnConnectionsRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpnConnections operation. * * @see #describeVpnConnections(DescribeVpnConnectionsRequest) */ DescribeVpnConnectionsResult describeVpnConnections(); /** ** Describes one or more of your virtual private gateways. *
** For more information, see Amazon Web * Services Site-to-Site VPN in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param describeVpnGatewaysRequest * Contains the parameters for DescribeVpnGateways. * @return Result of the DescribeVpnGateways operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DescribeVpnGateways * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DescribeVpnGatewaysResult describeVpnGateways(DescribeVpnGatewaysRequest describeVpnGatewaysRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the DescribeVpnGateways operation. * * @see #describeVpnGateways(DescribeVpnGatewaysRequest) */ DescribeVpnGatewaysResult describeVpnGateways(); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Unlinks (detaches) a linked EC2-Classic instance from a VPC. After the instance has been unlinked, the VPC * security groups are no longer associated with it. An instance is automatically unlinked from a VPC when it's * stopped. *
* * @param detachClassicLinkVpcRequest * @return Result of the DetachClassicLinkVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DetachClassicLinkVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DetachClassicLinkVpcResult detachClassicLinkVpc(DetachClassicLinkVpcRequest detachClassicLinkVpcRequest); /** ** Detaches an internet gateway from a VPC, disabling connectivity between the internet and the VPC. The VPC must * not contain any running instances with Elastic IP addresses or public IPv4 addresses. *
* * @param detachInternetGatewayRequest * @return Result of the DetachInternetGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DetachInternetGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DetachInternetGatewayResult detachInternetGateway(DetachInternetGatewayRequest detachInternetGatewayRequest); /** ** Detaches a network interface from an instance. *
* * @param detachNetworkInterfaceRequest * Contains the parameters for DetachNetworkInterface. * @return Result of the DetachNetworkInterface operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DetachNetworkInterface * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DetachNetworkInterfaceResult detachNetworkInterface(DetachNetworkInterfaceRequest detachNetworkInterfaceRequest); /** ** Detaches the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider from the specified Amazon Web Services * Verified Access instance. *
* * @param detachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest * @return Result of the DetachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DetachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider * @see AWS API Documentation */ DetachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult detachVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(DetachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest detachVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest); /** *
* Detaches an EBS volume from an instance. Make sure to unmount any file systems on the device within your
* operating system before detaching the volume. Failure to do so can result in the volume becoming stuck in the
* busy
state while detaching. If this happens, detachment can be delayed indefinitely until you
* unmount the volume, force detachment, reboot the instance, or all three. If an EBS volume is the root device of
* an instance, it can't be detached while the instance is running. To detach the root volume, stop the instance
* first.
*
* When a volume with an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code is detached from an instance, the product code * is no longer associated with the instance. *
** For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS * volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param detachVolumeRequest * @return Result of the DetachVolume operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DetachVolume * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DetachVolumeResult detachVolume(DetachVolumeRequest detachVolumeRequest); /** ** Detaches a virtual private gateway from a VPC. You do this if you're planning to turn off the VPC and not use it * anymore. You can confirm a virtual private gateway has been completely detached from a VPC by describing the * virtual private gateway (any attachments to the virtual private gateway are also described). *
*
* You must wait for the attachment's state to switch to detached
before you can delete the VPC or
* attach a different VPC to the virtual private gateway.
*
* Disables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP * addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param disableAddressTransferRequest * @return Result of the DisableAddressTransfer operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableAddressTransfer * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DisableAddressTransferResult disableAddressTransfer(DisableAddressTransferRequest disableAddressTransferRequest); /** ** Disables Infrastructure Performance metric subscriptions. *
* * @param disableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest * @return Result of the DisableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionResult disableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription( DisableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest disableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest); /** ** Disables EBS encryption by default for your account in the current Region. *
** After you disable encryption by default, you can still create encrypted volumes by enabling encryption when you * create each volume. *
** Disabling encryption by default does not change the encryption status of your existing volumes. *
** For more information, see Amazon * EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param disableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest * @return Result of the DisableEbsEncryptionByDefault operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableEbsEncryptionByDefault * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableEbsEncryptionByDefaultResult disableEbsEncryptionByDefault(DisableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest disableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest); /** ** Discontinue faster launching for a Windows AMI, and clean up existing pre-provisioned snapshots. When you disable * faster launching, the AMI uses the standard launch process for each instance. All pre-provisioned snapshots must * be removed before you can enable faster launching again. *
** To change these settings, you must own the AMI. *
** Disables fast snapshot restores for the specified snapshots in the specified Availability Zones. *
* * @param disableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest * @return Result of the DisableFastSnapshotRestores operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableFastSnapshotRestores * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableFastSnapshotRestoresResult disableFastSnapshotRestores(DisableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest disableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest); /** ** Cancels the deprecation of the specified AMI. *
** For more information, see Deprecate an AMI in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param disableImageDeprecationRequest * @return Result of the DisableImageDeprecation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableImageDeprecation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DisableImageDeprecationResult disableImageDeprecation(DisableImageDeprecationRequest disableImageDeprecationRequest); /** ** Disable the IPAM account. For more information, see Enable integration with * Organizations in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param disableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest * @return Result of the DisableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountResult disableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount( DisableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest disableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest); /** ** Disables access to the EC2 serial console of all instances for your account. By default, access to the EC2 serial * console is disabled for your account. For more information, see Manage account access to the EC2 serial console in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param disableSerialConsoleAccessRequest * @return Result of the DisableSerialConsoleAccess operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableSerialConsoleAccess * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DisableSerialConsoleAccessResult disableSerialConsoleAccess(DisableSerialConsoleAccessRequest disableSerialConsoleAccessRequest); /** ** Disables the specified resource attachment from propagating routes to the specified propagation route table. *
* * @param disableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest * @return Result of the DisableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationResult disableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation( DisableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest disableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest); /** ** Disables a virtual private gateway (VGW) from propagating routes to a specified route table of a VPC. *
* * @param disableVgwRoutePropagationRequest * Contains the parameters for DisableVgwRoutePropagation. * @return Result of the DisableVgwRoutePropagation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableVgwRoutePropagation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DisableVgwRoutePropagationResult disableVgwRoutePropagation(DisableVgwRoutePropagationRequest disableVgwRoutePropagationRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Disables ClassicLink for a VPC. You cannot disable ClassicLink for a VPC that has EC2-Classic instances linked to * it. *
* * @param disableVpcClassicLinkRequest * @return Result of the DisableVpcClassicLink operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableVpcClassicLink * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DisableVpcClassicLinkResult disableVpcClassicLink(DisableVpcClassicLinkRequest disableVpcClassicLinkRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Disables ClassicLink DNS support for a VPC. If disabled, DNS hostnames resolve to public IP addresses when * addressed between a linked EC2-Classic instance and instances in the VPC to which it's linked. *
** You must specify a VPC ID in the request. *
* * @param disableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest * @return Result of the DisableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportResult disableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport(DisableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest disableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest); /** ** Disassociates an Elastic IP address from the instance or network interface it's associated with. *
** This is an idempotent operation. If you perform the operation more than once, Amazon EC2 doesn't return an error. *
* * @param disassociateAddressRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateAddress * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DisassociateAddressResult disassociateAddress(DisassociateAddressRequest disassociateAddressRequest); /** ** Disassociates a target network from the specified Client VPN endpoint. When you disassociate the last target * network from a Client VPN, the following happens: *
** The route that was automatically added for the VPC is deleted *
** All active client connections are terminated *
** New client connections are disallowed *
*
* The Client VPN endpoint's status changes to pending-associate
*
* Disassociates an IAM role from an Certificate Manager (ACM) certificate. Disassociating an IAM role from an ACM * certificate removes the Amazon S3 object that contains the certificate, certificate chain, and encrypted private * key from the Amazon S3 bucket. It also revokes the IAM role's permission to use the KMS key used to encrypt the * private key. This effectively revokes the role's permission to use the certificate. *
* * @param disassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRoleRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRoleResult disassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole( DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRoleRequest disassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRoleRequest); /** ** Disassociates an IAM instance profile from a running or stopped instance. *
** Use DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociations to get the association ID. *
* * @param disassociateIamInstanceProfileRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateIamInstanceProfile operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateIamInstanceProfile * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateIamInstanceProfileResult disassociateIamInstanceProfile(DisassociateIamInstanceProfileRequest disassociateIamInstanceProfileRequest); /** ** Disassociates one or more targets from an event window. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param disassociateInstanceEventWindowRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateInstanceEventWindow operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateInstanceEventWindow * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateInstanceEventWindowResult disassociateInstanceEventWindow(DisassociateInstanceEventWindowRequest disassociateInstanceEventWindowRequest); /** ** Disassociates a resource discovery from an Amazon VPC IPAM. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that * enables IPAM to manage and monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param disassociateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateIpamResourceDiscovery operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateIpamResourceDiscovery * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateIpamResourceDiscoveryResult disassociateIpamResourceDiscovery(DisassociateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest disassociateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest); /** ** Disassociates secondary Elastic IP addresses (EIPs) from a public NAT gateway. You cannot disassociate your * primary EIP. For more information, see Edit * secondary IP address associations in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** While disassociating is in progress, you cannot associate/disassociate additional EIPs while the connections are * being drained. You are, however, allowed to delete the NAT gateway. *
** An EIP is released only at the end of MaxDrainDurationSeconds. It stays associated and supports the existing * connections but does not support any new connections (new connections are distributed across the remaining * associated EIPs). As the existing connections drain out, the EIPs (and the corresponding private IP addresses * mapped to them) are released. *
* * @param disassociateNatGatewayAddressRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateNatGatewayAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateNatGatewayAddress * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateNatGatewayAddressResult disassociateNatGatewayAddress(DisassociateNatGatewayAddressRequest disassociateNatGatewayAddressRequest); /** ** Disassociates a subnet or gateway from a route table. *
** After you perform this action, the subnet no longer uses the routes in the route table. Instead, it uses the * routes in the VPC's main route table. For more information about route tables, see Route tables in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param disassociateRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateRouteTable * @see AWS API * Documentation */ DisassociateRouteTableResult disassociateRouteTable(DisassociateRouteTableRequest disassociateRouteTableRequest); /** ** Disassociates a CIDR block from a subnet. Currently, you can disassociate an IPv6 CIDR block only. You must * detach or delete all gateways and resources that are associated with the CIDR block before you can disassociate * it. *
* * @param disassociateSubnetCidrBlockRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateSubnetCidrBlock operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateSubnetCidrBlock * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateSubnetCidrBlockResult disassociateSubnetCidrBlock(DisassociateSubnetCidrBlockRequest disassociateSubnetCidrBlockRequest); /** ** Disassociates the specified subnets from the transit gateway multicast domain. *
* * @param disassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainResult disassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomain( DisassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest disassociateTransitGatewayMulticastDomainRequest); /** ** Removes the association between an an attachment and a policy table. *
* * @param disassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableResult disassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTable( DisassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest disassociateTransitGatewayPolicyTableRequest); /** ** Disassociates a resource attachment from a transit gateway route table. *
* * @param disassociateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateTransitGatewayRouteTable operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateTransitGatewayRouteTable * @see AWS API Documentation */ DisassociateTransitGatewayRouteTableResult disassociateTransitGatewayRouteTable( DisassociateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest disassociateTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest); /** ** This API action is currently in limited preview only. If you are interested in using this feature, contact * your account manager. *
** Removes an association between a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. *
* * @param disassociateTrunkInterfaceRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateTrunkInterface operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateTrunkInterface * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DisassociateTrunkInterfaceResult disassociateTrunkInterface(DisassociateTrunkInterfaceRequest disassociateTrunkInterfaceRequest); /** ** Disassociates a CIDR block from a VPC. To disassociate the CIDR block, you must specify its association ID. You * can get the association ID by using DescribeVpcs. You must detach or delete all gateways and resources * that are associated with the CIDR block before you can disassociate it. *
** You cannot disassociate the CIDR block with which you originally created the VPC (the primary CIDR block). *
* * @param disassociateVpcCidrBlockRequest * @return Result of the DisassociateVpcCidrBlock operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.DisassociateVpcCidrBlock * @see AWS * API Documentation */ DisassociateVpcCidrBlockResult disassociateVpcCidrBlock(DisassociateVpcCidrBlockRequest disassociateVpcCidrBlockRequest); /** ** Enables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP * addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param enableAddressTransferRequest * @return Result of the EnableAddressTransfer operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableAddressTransfer * @see AWS API * Documentation */ EnableAddressTransferResult enableAddressTransfer(EnableAddressTransferRequest enableAddressTransferRequest); /** ** Enables Infrastructure Performance subscriptions. *
* * @param enableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest * @return Result of the EnableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionResult enableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscription( EnableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest enableAwsNetworkPerformanceMetricSubscriptionRequest); /** ** Enables EBS encryption by default for your account in the current Region. *
** After you enable encryption by default, the EBS volumes that you create are always encrypted, either using the * default KMS key or the KMS key that you specified when you created each volume. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** You can specify the default KMS key for encryption by default using ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyId or * ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId. *
** Enabling encryption by default has no effect on the encryption status of your existing volumes. *
** After you enable encryption by default, you can no longer launch instances using instance types that do not * support encryption. For more information, see Supported instance types. *
* * @param enableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest * @return Result of the EnableEbsEncryptionByDefault operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableEbsEncryptionByDefault * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableEbsEncryptionByDefaultResult enableEbsEncryptionByDefault(EnableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest enableEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest); /** ** When you enable faster launching for a Windows AMI, images are pre-provisioned, using snapshots to launch * instances up to 65% faster. To create the optimized Windows image, Amazon EC2 launches an instance and runs * through Sysprep steps, rebooting as required. Then it creates a set of reserved snapshots that are used for * subsequent launches. The reserved snapshots are automatically replenished as they are used, depending on your * settings for launch frequency. *
** To change these settings, you must own the AMI. *
** Enables fast snapshot restores for the specified snapshots in the specified Availability Zones. *
*
* You get the full benefit of fast snapshot restores after they enter the enabled
state. To get the
* current state of fast snapshot restores, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. To disable fast snapshot
* restores, use DisableFastSnapshotRestores.
*
* For more information, see Amazon EBS fast * snapshot restore in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param enableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest * @return Result of the EnableFastSnapshotRestores operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableFastSnapshotRestores * @see AWS * API Documentation */ EnableFastSnapshotRestoresResult enableFastSnapshotRestores(EnableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest enableFastSnapshotRestoresRequest); /** ** Enables deprecation of the specified AMI at the specified date and time. *
** For more information, see Deprecate an AMI in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param enableImageDeprecationRequest * @return Result of the EnableImageDeprecation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableImageDeprecation * @see AWS API * Documentation */ EnableImageDeprecationResult enableImageDeprecation(EnableImageDeprecationRequest enableImageDeprecationRequest); /** ** Enable an Organizations member account as the IPAM admin account. You cannot select the Organizations management * account as the IPAM admin account. For more information, see Enable integration with * Organizations in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param enableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest * @return Result of the EnableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountResult enableIpamOrganizationAdminAccount( EnableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest enableIpamOrganizationAdminAccountRequest); /** ** Establishes a trust relationship between Reachability Analyzer and Organizations. This operation must be * performed by the management account for the organization. *
** After you establish a trust relationship, a user in the management account or a delegated administrator account * can run a cross-account analysis using resources from the member accounts. *
* * @param enableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharingRequest * @return Result of the EnableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharing operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharing * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharingResult enableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharing( EnableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharingRequest enableReachabilityAnalyzerOrganizationSharingRequest); /** ** Enables access to the EC2 serial console of all instances for your account. By default, access to the EC2 serial * console is disabled for your account. For more information, see Manage account access to the EC2 serial console in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param enableSerialConsoleAccessRequest * @return Result of the EnableSerialConsoleAccess operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableSerialConsoleAccess * @see AWS * API Documentation */ EnableSerialConsoleAccessResult enableSerialConsoleAccess(EnableSerialConsoleAccessRequest enableSerialConsoleAccessRequest); /** ** Enables the specified attachment to propagate routes to the specified propagation route table. *
* * @param enableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest * @return Result of the EnableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationResult enableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagation( EnableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest enableTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationRequest); /** ** Enables a virtual private gateway (VGW) to propagate routes to the specified route table of a VPC. *
* * @param enableVgwRoutePropagationRequest * Contains the parameters for EnableVgwRoutePropagation. * @return Result of the EnableVgwRoutePropagation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableVgwRoutePropagation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ EnableVgwRoutePropagationResult enableVgwRoutePropagation(EnableVgwRoutePropagationRequest enableVgwRoutePropagationRequest); /** ** Enables I/O operations for a volume that had I/O operations disabled because the data on the volume was * potentially inconsistent. *
* * @param enableVolumeIORequest * @return Result of the EnableVolumeIO operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableVolumeIO * @see AWS API * Documentation */ EnableVolumeIOResult enableVolumeIO(EnableVolumeIORequest enableVolumeIORequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
*
* Enables a VPC for ClassicLink. You can then link EC2-Classic instances to your ClassicLink-enabled VPC to allow
* communication over private IP addresses. You cannot enable your VPC for ClassicLink if any of your VPC route
* tables have existing routes for address ranges within the 10.0.0.0/8
IP address range, excluding
* local routes for VPCs in the 10.0.0.0/16
and 10.1.0.0/16
IP address ranges.
*
* This action is deprecated. *
** Enables a VPC to support DNS hostname resolution for ClassicLink. If enabled, the DNS hostname of a linked * EC2-Classic instance resolves to its private IP address when addressed from an instance in the VPC to which it's * linked. Similarly, the DNS hostname of an instance in a VPC resolves to its private IP address when addressed * from a linked EC2-Classic instance. *
** You must specify a VPC ID in the request. *
* * @param enableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest * @return Result of the EnableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.EnableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport * @see AWS API Documentation */ EnableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportResult enableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupport(EnableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest enableVpcClassicLinkDnsSupportRequest); /** ** Downloads the client certificate revocation list for the specified Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param exportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest * @return Result of the ExportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ExportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList * @see AWS API Documentation */ ExportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListResult exportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList( ExportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest exportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest); /** ** Downloads the contents of the Client VPN endpoint configuration file for the specified Client VPN endpoint. The * Client VPN endpoint configuration file includes the Client VPN endpoint and certificate information clients need * to establish a connection with the Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param exportClientVpnClientConfigurationRequest * @return Result of the ExportClientVpnClientConfiguration operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ExportClientVpnClientConfiguration * @see AWS API Documentation */ ExportClientVpnClientConfigurationResult exportClientVpnClientConfiguration( ExportClientVpnClientConfigurationRequest exportClientVpnClientConfigurationRequest); /** ** Exports an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) to a VM file. For more information, see Exporting a VM directly from an * Amazon Machine Image (AMI) in the VM Import/Export User Guide. *
* * @param exportImageRequest * @return Result of the ExportImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ExportImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ExportImageResult exportImage(ExportImageRequest exportImageRequest); /** ** Exports routes from the specified transit gateway route table to the specified S3 bucket. By default, all routes * are exported. Alternatively, you can filter by CIDR range. *
** The routes are saved to the specified bucket in a JSON file. For more information, see Export Route * Tables to Amazon S3 in Transit Gateways. *
* * @param exportTransitGatewayRoutesRequest * @return Result of the ExportTransitGatewayRoutes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ExportTransitGatewayRoutes * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ExportTransitGatewayRoutesResult exportTransitGatewayRoutes(ExportTransitGatewayRoutesRequest exportTransitGatewayRoutesRequest); /** ** Returns the IAM roles that are associated with the specified ACM (ACM) certificate. It also returns the name of * the Amazon S3 bucket and the Amazon S3 object key where the certificate, certificate chain, and encrypted private * key bundle are stored, and the ARN of the KMS key that's used to encrypt the private key. *
* * @param getAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRolesRequest * @return Result of the GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRoles operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRoles * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRolesResult getAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRoles( GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRolesRequest getAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRolesRequest); /** ** Gets information about the IPv6 CIDR block associations for a specified IPv6 address pool. *
* * @param getAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsRequest * @return Result of the GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrs * @see AWS * API Documentation */ GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsResult getAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrs(GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsRequest getAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsRequest); /** ** Gets network performance data. *
* * @param getAwsNetworkPerformanceDataRequest * @return Result of the GetAwsNetworkPerformanceData operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetAwsNetworkPerformanceData * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetAwsNetworkPerformanceDataResult getAwsNetworkPerformanceData(GetAwsNetworkPerformanceDataRequest getAwsNetworkPerformanceDataRequest); /** ** Gets usage information about a Capacity Reservation. If the Capacity Reservation is shared, it shows usage * information for the Capacity Reservation owner and each Amazon Web Services account that is currently using the * shared capacity. If the Capacity Reservation is not shared, it shows only the Capacity Reservation owner's usage. *
* * @param getCapacityReservationUsageRequest * @return Result of the GetCapacityReservationUsage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetCapacityReservationUsage * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetCapacityReservationUsageResult getCapacityReservationUsage(GetCapacityReservationUsageRequest getCapacityReservationUsageRequest); /** ** Describes the allocations from the specified customer-owned address pool. *
* * @param getCoipPoolUsageRequest * @return Result of the GetCoipPoolUsage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetCoipPoolUsage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetCoipPoolUsageResult getCoipPoolUsage(GetCoipPoolUsageRequest getCoipPoolUsageRequest); /** ** Gets the console output for the specified instance. For Linux instances, the instance console output displays the * exact console output that would normally be displayed on a physical monitor attached to a computer. For Windows * instances, the instance console output includes the last three system event log errors. *
** By default, the console output returns buffered information that was posted shortly after an instance transition * state (start, stop, reboot, or terminate). This information is available for at least one hour after the most * recent post. Only the most recent 64 KB of console output is available. *
** You can optionally retrieve the latest serial console output at any time during the instance lifecycle. This * option is supported on instance types that use the Nitro hypervisor. *
** For more information, see Instance console output in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param getConsoleOutputRequest * @return Result of the GetConsoleOutput operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetConsoleOutput * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetConsoleOutputResult getConsoleOutput(GetConsoleOutputRequest getConsoleOutputRequest); /** ** Retrieve a JPG-format screenshot of a running instance to help with troubleshooting. *
** The returned content is Base64-encoded. *
* * @param getConsoleScreenshotRequest * @return Result of the GetConsoleScreenshot operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetConsoleScreenshot * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetConsoleScreenshotResult getConsoleScreenshot(GetConsoleScreenshotRequest getConsoleScreenshotRequest); /** ** Describes the default credit option for CPU usage of a burstable performance instance family. *
** For more information, see Burstable * performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param getDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest * @return Result of the GetDefaultCreditSpecification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetDefaultCreditSpecification * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetDefaultCreditSpecificationResult getDefaultCreditSpecification(GetDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest getDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest); /** ** Describes the default KMS key for EBS encryption by default for your account in this Region. You can change the * default KMS key for encryption by default using ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyId or * ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId. *
** For more information, see Amazon * EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param getEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest * @return Result of the GetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdResult getEbsDefaultKmsKeyId(GetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest getEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest); /** ** Describes whether EBS encryption by default is enabled for your account in the current Region. *
** For more information, see Amazon * EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param getEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest * @return Result of the GetEbsEncryptionByDefault operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetEbsEncryptionByDefault * @see AWS * API Documentation */ GetEbsEncryptionByDefaultResult getEbsEncryptionByDefault(GetEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest getEbsEncryptionByDefaultRequest); /** ** Generates a CloudFormation template that streamlines and automates the integration of VPC flow logs with Amazon * Athena. This make it easier for you to query and gain insights from VPC flow logs data. Based on the information * that you provide, we configure resources in the template to do the following: *
** Create a table in Athena that maps fields to a custom log format *
** Create a Lambda function that updates the table with new partitions on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis *
** Create a table partitioned between two timestamps in the past *
** Create a set of named queries in Athena that you can use to get started quickly *
*
* GetFlowLogsIntegrationTemplate
does not support integration between Amazon Web Services Transit
* Gateway Flow Logs and Amazon Athena.
*
* Lists the resource groups to which a Capacity Reservation has been added. *
* * @param getGroupsForCapacityReservationRequest * @return Result of the GetGroupsForCapacityReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetGroupsForCapacityReservation * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetGroupsForCapacityReservationResult getGroupsForCapacityReservation(GetGroupsForCapacityReservationRequest getGroupsForCapacityReservationRequest); /** ** Preview a reservation purchase with configurations that match those of your Dedicated Host. You must have active * Dedicated Hosts in your account before you purchase a reservation. *
** This is a preview of the PurchaseHostReservation action and does not result in the offering being * purchased. *
* * @param getHostReservationPurchasePreviewRequest * @return Result of the GetHostReservationPurchasePreview operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetHostReservationPurchasePreview * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetHostReservationPurchasePreviewResult getHostReservationPurchasePreview(GetHostReservationPurchasePreviewRequest getHostReservationPurchasePreviewRequest); /** ** Returns a list of instance types with the specified instance attributes. You can use the response to preview the * instance types without launching instances. Note that the response does not consider capacity. *
** When you specify multiple parameters, you get instance types that satisfy all of the specified parameters. If you * specify multiple values for a parameter, you get instance types that satisfy any of the specified values. *
** For more information, see Preview instance types with specified attributes, Attribute-based instance type selection for EC2 Fleet, Attribute-based instance type selection for Spot Fleet, and Spot placement score in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide, and Creating * an Auto Scaling group using attribute-based instance type selection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User * Guide. *
* * @param getInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirementsRequest * @return Result of the GetInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirements operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirements * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirementsResult getInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirements( GetInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirementsRequest getInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirementsRequest); /** ** A binary representation of the UEFI variable store. Only non-volatile variables are stored. This is a base64 * encoded and zlib compressed binary value that must be properly encoded. *
*
* When you use register-image to create an
* AMI, you can create an exact copy of your variable store by passing the UEFI data in the UefiData
* parameter. You can modify the UEFI data by using the python-uefivars tool on GitHub. You can use the tool to
* convert the UEFI data into a human-readable format (JSON), which you can inspect and modify, and then convert
* back into the binary format to use with register-image.
*
* For more information, see UEFI Secure Boot in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param getInstanceUefiDataRequest * @return Result of the GetInstanceUefiData operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetInstanceUefiData * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetInstanceUefiDataResult getInstanceUefiData(GetInstanceUefiDataRequest getInstanceUefiDataRequest); /** ** Retrieve historical information about a CIDR within an IPAM scope. For more information, see View the history of IP * addresses in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param getIpamAddressHistoryRequest * @return Result of the GetIpamAddressHistory operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetIpamAddressHistory * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetIpamAddressHistoryResult getIpamAddressHistory(GetIpamAddressHistoryRequest getIpamAddressHistoryRequest); /** ** Gets IPAM discovered accounts. A discovered account is an Amazon Web Services account that is monitored under a * resource discovery. If you have integrated IPAM with Amazon Web Services Organizations, all accounts in the * organization are discovered accounts. Only the IPAM account can get all discovered accounts in the organization. *
* * @param getIpamDiscoveredAccountsRequest * @return Result of the GetIpamDiscoveredAccounts operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetIpamDiscoveredAccounts * @see AWS * API Documentation */ GetIpamDiscoveredAccountsResult getIpamDiscoveredAccounts(GetIpamDiscoveredAccountsRequest getIpamDiscoveredAccountsRequest); /** ** Returns the resource CIDRs that are monitored as part of a resource discovery. A discovered resource is a * resource CIDR monitored under a resource discovery. The following resources can be discovered: VPCs, Public IPv4 * pools, VPC subnets, and Elastic IP addresses. *
* * @param getIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrsRequest * @return Result of the GetIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrs * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrsResult getIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrs(GetIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrsRequest getIpamDiscoveredResourceCidrsRequest); /** ** Get a list of all the CIDR allocations in an IPAM pool. The Region you use should be the IPAM pool locale. The * locale is the Amazon Web Services Region where this IPAM pool is available for allocations. *
** If you use this action after AllocateIpamPoolCidr or ReleaseIpamPoolAllocation, note that all EC2 API actions follow an eventual consistency model. *
** Get the CIDRs provisioned to an IPAM pool. *
* * @param getIpamPoolCidrsRequest * @return Result of the GetIpamPoolCidrs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetIpamPoolCidrs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetIpamPoolCidrsResult getIpamPoolCidrs(GetIpamPoolCidrsRequest getIpamPoolCidrsRequest); /** ** Returns resource CIDRs managed by IPAM in a given scope. If an IPAM is associated with more than one resource * discovery, the resource CIDRs across all of the resource discoveries is returned. A resource discovery is an IPAM * component that enables IPAM to manage and monitor resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param getIpamResourceCidrsRequest * @return Result of the GetIpamResourceCidrs operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetIpamResourceCidrs * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetIpamResourceCidrsResult getIpamResourceCidrs(GetIpamResourceCidrsRequest getIpamResourceCidrsRequest); /** ** Retrieves the configuration data of the specified instance. You can use this data to create a launch template. *
*
* This action calls on other describe actions to get instance information. Depending on your instance
* configuration, you may need to allow the following actions in your IAM policy:
* DescribeSpotInstanceRequests
, DescribeInstanceCreditSpecifications
,
* DescribeVolumes
, DescribeInstanceAttribute
, and DescribeElasticGpus
. Or,
* you can allow describe*
depending on your instance requirements.
*
* Gets information about the resources that are associated with the specified managed prefix list. *
* * @param getManagedPrefixListAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the GetManagedPrefixListAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetManagedPrefixListAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetManagedPrefixListAssociationsResult getManagedPrefixListAssociations(GetManagedPrefixListAssociationsRequest getManagedPrefixListAssociationsRequest); /** ** Gets information about the entries for a specified managed prefix list. *
* * @param getManagedPrefixListEntriesRequest * @return Result of the GetManagedPrefixListEntries operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetManagedPrefixListEntries * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetManagedPrefixListEntriesResult getManagedPrefixListEntries(GetManagedPrefixListEntriesRequest getManagedPrefixListEntriesRequest); /** ** Gets the findings for the specified Network Access Scope analysis. *
* * @param getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindingsRequest * @return Result of the GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindings operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindings * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindingsResult getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindings( GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindingsRequest getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisFindingsRequest); /** ** Gets the content for the specified Network Access Scope. *
* * @param getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContentRequest * @return Result of the GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContent operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContent * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContentResult getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContent( GetNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContentRequest getNetworkInsightsAccessScopeContentRequest); /** ** Retrieves the encrypted administrator password for a running Windows instance. *
*
* The Windows password is generated at boot by the EC2Config
service or EC2Launch
scripts
* (Windows Server 2016 and later). This usually only happens the first time an instance is launched. For more
* information, see EC2Config and EC2Launch in the Amazon EC2
* User Guide.
*
* For the EC2Config
service, the password is not generated for rebundled AMIs unless
* Ec2SetPassword
is enabled before bundling.
*
* The password is encrypted using the key pair that you specified when you launched the instance. You must provide * the corresponding key pair file. *
** When you launch an instance, password generation and encryption may take a few minutes. If you try to retrieve * the password before it's available, the output returns an empty string. We recommend that you wait up to 15 * minutes after launching an instance before trying to retrieve the generated password. *
* * @param getPasswordDataRequest * @return Result of the GetPasswordData operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetPasswordData * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetPasswordDataResult getPasswordData(GetPasswordDataRequest getPasswordDataRequest); /** ** Returns a quote and exchange information for exchanging one or more specified Convertible Reserved Instances for * a new Convertible Reserved Instance. If the exchange cannot be performed, the reason is returned in the response. * Use AcceptReservedInstancesExchangeQuote to perform the exchange. *
* * @param getReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest * Contains the parameters for GetReservedInstanceExchangeQuote. * @return Result of the GetReservedInstancesExchangeQuote operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetReservedInstancesExchangeQuote * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteResult getReservedInstancesExchangeQuote(GetReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest getReservedInstancesExchangeQuoteRequest); /** ** Retrieves the access status of your account to the EC2 serial console of all instances. By default, access to the * EC2 serial console is disabled for your account. For more information, see Manage account access to the EC2 serial console in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param getSerialConsoleAccessStatusRequest * @return Result of the GetSerialConsoleAccessStatus operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetSerialConsoleAccessStatus * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetSerialConsoleAccessStatusResult getSerialConsoleAccessStatus(GetSerialConsoleAccessStatusRequest getSerialConsoleAccessStatusRequest); /** ** Calculates the Spot placement score for a Region or Availability Zone based on the specified target capacity and * compute requirements. *
*
* You can specify your compute requirements either by using InstanceRequirementsWithMetadata
and
* letting Amazon EC2 choose the optimal instance types to fulfill your Spot request, or you can specify the
* instance types by using InstanceTypes
.
*
* For more information, see Spot placement score in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param getSpotPlacementScoresRequest * @return Result of the GetSpotPlacementScores operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetSpotPlacementScores * @see AWS API * Documentation */ GetSpotPlacementScoresResult getSpotPlacementScores(GetSpotPlacementScoresRequest getSpotPlacementScoresRequest); /** ** Gets information about the subnet CIDR reservations. *
* * @param getSubnetCidrReservationsRequest * @return Result of the GetSubnetCidrReservations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetSubnetCidrReservations * @see AWS * API Documentation */ GetSubnetCidrReservationsResult getSubnetCidrReservations(GetSubnetCidrReservationsRequest getSubnetCidrReservationsRequest); /** ** Lists the route tables to which the specified resource attachment propagates routes. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagationsRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagationsResult getTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagations( GetTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagationsRequest getTransitGatewayAttachmentPropagationsRequest); /** ** Gets information about the associations for the transit gateway multicast domain. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsResult getTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations( GetTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest getTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest); /** ** Gets a list of the transit gateway policy table associations. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociationsResult getTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociations( GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociationsRequest getTransitGatewayPolicyTableAssociationsRequest); /** ** Returns a list of transit gateway policy table entries. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntriesRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntries operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntries * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntriesResult getTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntries( GetTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntriesRequest getTransitGatewayPolicyTableEntriesRequest); /** ** Gets information about the prefix list references in a specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayPrefixListReferencesRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayPrefixListReferences operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayPrefixListReferences * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayPrefixListReferencesResult getTransitGatewayPrefixListReferences( GetTransitGatewayPrefixListReferencesRequest getTransitGatewayPrefixListReferencesRequest); /** ** Gets information about the associations for the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociationsResult getTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociations( GetTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociationsRequest getTransitGatewayRouteTableAssociationsRequest); /** ** Gets information about the route table propagations for the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param getTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationsRequest * @return Result of the GetTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagations * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationsResult getTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagations( GetTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationsRequest getTransitGatewayRouteTablePropagationsRequest); /** ** Get the Verified Access policy associated with the endpoint. *
* * @param getVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest * @return Result of the GetVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyResult getVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy(GetVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest getVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest); /** ** Shows the contents of the Verified Access policy associated with the group. *
* * @param getVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest * @return Result of the GetVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyResult getVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy(GetVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest getVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest); /** ** Download an Amazon Web Services-provided sample configuration file to be used with the customer gateway device * specified for your Site-to-Site VPN connection. *
* * @param getVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfigurationRequest * @return Result of the GetVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfiguration operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfiguration * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfigurationResult getVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfiguration( GetVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfigurationRequest getVpnConnectionDeviceSampleConfigurationRequest); /** ** Obtain a list of customer gateway devices for which sample configuration files can be provided. The request has * no additional parameters. You can also see the list of device types with sample configuration files available * under Your customer gateway device in * the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param getVpnConnectionDeviceTypesRequest * @return Result of the GetVpnConnectionDeviceTypes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetVpnConnectionDeviceTypes * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetVpnConnectionDeviceTypesResult getVpnConnectionDeviceTypes(GetVpnConnectionDeviceTypesRequest getVpnConnectionDeviceTypesRequest); /** ** Get details of available tunnel endpoint maintenance. *
* * @param getVpnTunnelReplacementStatusRequest * @return Result of the GetVpnTunnelReplacementStatus operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.GetVpnTunnelReplacementStatus * @see AWS API Documentation */ GetVpnTunnelReplacementStatusResult getVpnTunnelReplacementStatus(GetVpnTunnelReplacementStatusRequest getVpnTunnelReplacementStatusRequest); /** ** Uploads a client certificate revocation list to the specified Client VPN endpoint. Uploading a client certificate * revocation list overwrites the existing client certificate revocation list. *
** Uploading a client certificate revocation list resets existing client connections. *
* * @param importClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest * @return Result of the ImportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList * @see AWS API Documentation */ ImportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListResult importClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationList( ImportClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest importClientVpnClientCertificateRevocationListRequest); /** ** To import your virtual machines (VMs) with a console-based experience, you can use the Import virtual machine * images to Amazon Web Services template in the Migration Hub Orchestrator console. For more * information, see the Migration * Hub Orchestrator User Guide . *
** Import single or multi-volume disk images or EBS snapshots into an Amazon Machine Image (AMI). *
*
* Amazon Web Services VM Import/Export strongly recommends specifying a value for either the
* --license-type
or --usage-operation
parameter when you create a new VM Import task.
* This ensures your operating system is licensed appropriately and your billing is optimized.
*
* For more information, see Importing a VM as an * image using VM Import/Export in the VM Import/Export User Guide. *
* * @param importImageRequest * @return Result of the ImportImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ImportImageResult importImage(ImportImageRequest importImageRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ImportImage operation. * * @see #importImage(ImportImageRequest) */ ImportImageResult importImage(); /** *
* We recommend that you use the ImportImage
* API. For more information, see Importing a VM as an
* image using VM Import/Export in the VM Import/Export User Guide.
*
* Creates an import instance task using metadata from the specified disk image. *
** This API action is not supported by the Command Line Interface (CLI). For information about using the Amazon EC2 * CLI, which is deprecated, see Importing a VM to Amazon * EC2 in the Amazon EC2 CLI Reference PDF file. *
** This API action supports only single-volume VMs. To import multi-volume VMs, use ImportImage instead. *
** For information about the import manifest referenced by this API action, see VM Import Manifest. *
* * @param importInstanceRequest * @return Result of the ImportInstance operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportInstance * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ImportInstanceResult importInstance(ImportInstanceRequest importInstanceRequest); /** ** Imports the public key from an RSA or ED25519 key pair that you created with a third-party tool. Compare this * with CreateKeyPair, in which Amazon Web Services creates the key pair and gives the keys to you (Amazon * Web Services keeps a copy of the public key). With ImportKeyPair, you create the key pair and give Amazon Web * Services just the public key. The private key is never transferred between you and Amazon Web Services. *
** For more information about key pairs, see Amazon EC2 key pairs in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param importKeyPairRequest * @return Result of the ImportKeyPair operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportKeyPair * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ImportKeyPairResult importKeyPair(ImportKeyPairRequest importKeyPairRequest); /** ** Imports a disk into an EBS snapshot. *
** For more information, see Importing a disk as a * snapshot using VM Import/Export in the VM Import/Export User Guide. *
* * @param importSnapshotRequest * @return Result of the ImportSnapshot operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportSnapshot * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ImportSnapshotResult importSnapshot(ImportSnapshotRequest importSnapshotRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the ImportSnapshot operation. * * @see #importSnapshot(ImportSnapshotRequest) */ ImportSnapshotResult importSnapshot(); /** ** Creates an import volume task using metadata from the specified disk image. *
** This API action supports only single-volume VMs. To import multi-volume VMs, use ImportImage instead. To * import a disk to a snapshot, use ImportSnapshot instead. *
** This API action is not supported by the Command Line Interface (CLI). For information about using the Amazon EC2 * CLI, which is deprecated, see Importing Disks to * Amazon EBS in the Amazon EC2 CLI Reference PDF file. *
** For information about the import manifest referenced by this API action, see VM Import Manifest. *
* * @param importVolumeRequest * @return Result of the ImportVolume operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ImportVolume * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ImportVolumeResult importVolume(ImportVolumeRequest importVolumeRequest); /** ** Lists one or more AMIs that are currently in the Recycle Bin. For more information, see Recycle Bin in the Amazon EC2 * User Guide. *
* * @param listImagesInRecycleBinRequest * @return Result of the ListImagesInRecycleBin operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ListImagesInRecycleBin * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ListImagesInRecycleBinResult listImagesInRecycleBin(ListImagesInRecycleBinRequest listImagesInRecycleBinRequest); /** ** Lists one or more snapshots that are currently in the Recycle Bin. *
* * @param listSnapshotsInRecycleBinRequest * @return Result of the ListSnapshotsInRecycleBin operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ListSnapshotsInRecycleBin * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ListSnapshotsInRecycleBinResult listSnapshotsInRecycleBin(ListSnapshotsInRecycleBinRequest listSnapshotsInRecycleBinRequest); /** ** Modifies an attribute of the specified Elastic IP address. For requirements, see Using reverse DNS for email applications. *
* * @param modifyAddressAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyAddressAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyAddressAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyAddressAttributeResult modifyAddressAttribute(ModifyAddressAttributeRequest modifyAddressAttributeRequest); /** ** Changes the opt-in status of the Local Zone and Wavelength Zone group for your account. *
*
* Use
* DescribeAvailabilityZones to view the value for GroupName
.
*
* Modifies a Capacity Reservation's capacity and the conditions under which it is to be released. You cannot change * a Capacity Reservation's instance type, EBS optimization, instance store settings, platform, Availability Zone, * or instance eligibility. If you need to modify any of these attributes, we recommend that you cancel the Capacity * Reservation, and then create a new one with the required attributes. *
* * @param modifyCapacityReservationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyCapacityReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyCapacityReservation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyCapacityReservationResult modifyCapacityReservation(ModifyCapacityReservationRequest modifyCapacityReservationRequest); /** ** Modifies a Capacity Reservation Fleet. *
** When you modify the total target capacity of a Capacity Reservation Fleet, the Fleet automatically creates new * Capacity Reservations, or modifies or cancels existing Capacity Reservations in the Fleet to meet the new total * target capacity. When you modify the end date for the Fleet, the end dates for all of the individual Capacity * Reservations in the Fleet are updated accordingly. *
* * @param modifyCapacityReservationFleetRequest * @return Result of the ModifyCapacityReservationFleet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyCapacityReservationFleet * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyCapacityReservationFleetResult modifyCapacityReservationFleet(ModifyCapacityReservationFleetRequest modifyCapacityReservationFleetRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified Client VPN endpoint. Modifying the DNS server resets existing client connections. *
* * @param modifyClientVpnEndpointRequest * @return Result of the ModifyClientVpnEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyClientVpnEndpoint * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyClientVpnEndpointResult modifyClientVpnEndpoint(ModifyClientVpnEndpointRequest modifyClientVpnEndpointRequest); /** ** Modifies the default credit option for CPU usage of burstable performance instances. The default credit option is * set at the account level per Amazon Web Services Region, and is specified per instance family. All new burstable * performance instances in the account launch using the default credit option. *
*
* ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification
is an asynchronous operation, which works at an Amazon Web Services
* Region level and modifies the credit option for each Availability Zone. All zones in a Region are updated within
* five minutes. But if instances are launched during this operation, they might not get the new credit option until
* the zone is updated. To verify whether the update has occurred, you can call
* GetDefaultCreditSpecification
and check DefaultCreditSpecification
for updates.
*
* For more information, see Burstable * performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationResult modifyDefaultCreditSpecification(ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest modifyDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest); /** ** Changes the default KMS key for EBS encryption by default for your account in this Region. *
** Amazon Web Services creates a unique Amazon Web Services managed KMS key in each Region for use with encryption * by default. If you change the default KMS key to a symmetric customer managed KMS key, it is used instead of the * Amazon Web Services managed KMS key. To reset the default KMS key to the Amazon Web Services managed KMS key for * EBS, use ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId. Amazon EBS does not support asymmetric KMS keys. *
** If you delete or disable the customer managed KMS key that you specified for use with encryption by default, your * instances will fail to launch. *
** For more information, see Amazon * EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param modifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest * @return Result of the ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyId operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyId * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdResult modifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyId(ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest modifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified EC2 Fleet. *
*
* You can only modify an EC2 Fleet request of type maintain
.
*
* While the EC2 Fleet is being modified, it is in the modifying
state.
*
* To scale up your EC2 Fleet, increase its target capacity. The EC2 Fleet launches the additional Spot Instances
* according to the allocation strategy for the EC2 Fleet request. If the allocation strategy is
* lowest-price
, the EC2 Fleet launches instances using the Spot Instance pool with the lowest price.
* If the allocation strategy is diversified
, the EC2 Fleet distributes the instances across the Spot
* Instance pools. If the allocation strategy is capacity-optimized
, EC2 Fleet launches instances from
* Spot Instance pools with optimal capacity for the number of instances that are launching.
*
* To scale down your EC2 Fleet, decrease its target capacity. First, the EC2 Fleet cancels any open requests that
* exceed the new target capacity. You can request that the EC2 Fleet terminate Spot Instances until the size of the
* fleet no longer exceeds the new target capacity. If the allocation strategy is lowest-price
, the EC2
* Fleet terminates the instances with the highest price per unit. If the allocation strategy is
* capacity-optimized
, the EC2 Fleet terminates the instances in the Spot Instance pools that have the
* least available Spot Instance capacity. If the allocation strategy is diversified
, the EC2 Fleet
* terminates instances across the Spot Instance pools. Alternatively, you can request that the EC2 Fleet keep the
* fleet at its current size, but not replace any Spot Instances that are interrupted or that you terminate
* manually.
*
* If you are finished with your EC2 Fleet for now, but will use it again later, you can set the target capacity to * 0. *
* * @param modifyFleetRequest * @return Result of the ModifyFleet operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyFleet * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyFleetResult modifyFleet(ModifyFleetRequest modifyFleetRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified attribute of the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI). *
* * @param modifyFpgaImageAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyFpgaImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyFpgaImageAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyFpgaImageAttributeResult modifyFpgaImageAttribute(ModifyFpgaImageAttributeRequest modifyFpgaImageAttributeRequest); /** *
* Modify the auto-placement setting of a Dedicated Host. When auto-placement is enabled, any instances that you
* launch with a tenancy of host
but without a specific host ID are placed onto any available Dedicated
* Host in your account that has auto-placement enabled. When auto-placement is disabled, you need to provide a host
* ID to have the instance launch onto a specific host. If no host ID is provided, the instance is launched onto a
* suitable host with auto-placement enabled.
*
* You can also use this API action to modify a Dedicated Host to support either multiple instance types in an * instance family, or to support a specific instance type only. *
* * @param modifyHostsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyHosts operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyHosts * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyHostsResult modifyHosts(ModifyHostsRequest modifyHostsRequest); /** ** Modifies the ID format for the specified resource on a per-Region basis. You can specify that resources should * receive longer IDs (17-character IDs) when they are created. *
*
* This request can only be used to modify longer ID settings for resource types that are within the opt-in period.
* Resources currently in their opt-in period include: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| route-table
| route-table-association
|
* security-group
| subnet
| subnet-cidr-block-association
| vpc
* | vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* This setting applies to the IAM user who makes the request; it does not apply to the entire Amazon Web Services * account. By default, an IAM user defaults to the same settings as the root user. If you're using this action as * the root user, then these settings apply to the entire account, unless an IAM user explicitly overrides these * settings for themselves. For more information, see Resource IDs in the Amazon * Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
*
* Resources created with longer IDs are visible to all IAM roles and users, regardless of these settings and
* provided that they have permission to use the relevant Describe
command for the resource type.
*
* Modifies the ID format of a resource for a specified IAM user, IAM role, or the root user for an account; or all * IAM users, IAM roles, and the root user for an account. You can specify that resources should receive longer IDs * (17-character IDs) when they are created. *
*
* This request can only be used to modify longer ID settings for resource types that are within the opt-in period.
* Resources currently in their opt-in period include: bundle
| conversion-task
|
* customer-gateway
| dhcp-options
| elastic-ip-allocation
|
* elastic-ip-association
| export-task
| flow-log
| image
|
* import-task
| internet-gateway
| network-acl
|
* network-acl-association
| network-interface
| network-interface-attachment
* | prefix-list
| route-table
| route-table-association
|
* security-group
| subnet
| subnet-cidr-block-association
| vpc
* | vpc-cidr-block-association
| vpc-endpoint
| vpc-peering-connection
|
* vpn-connection
| vpn-gateway
.
*
* For more information, see Resource IDs in the Amazon * Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** This setting applies to the principal specified in the request; it does not apply to the principal that makes the * request. *
*
* Resources created with longer IDs are visible to all IAM roles and users, regardless of these settings and
* provided that they have permission to use the relevant Describe
command for the resource type.
*
* Modifies the specified attribute of the specified AMI. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
*
* To specify the attribute, you can use the Attribute
parameter, or one of the following parameters:
* Description
, ImdsSupport
, or LaunchPermission
.
*
* Images with an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code cannot be made public. *
** To enable the SriovNetSupport enhanced networking attribute of an image, enable SriovNetSupport on an instance * and create an AMI from the instance. *
* * @param modifyImageAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for ModifyImageAttribute. * @return Result of the ModifyImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyImageAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyImageAttributeResult modifyImageAttribute(ModifyImageAttributeRequest modifyImageAttributeRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified attribute of the specified instance. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
** Note: Using this action to change the security groups associated with an elastic network interface (ENI) * attached to an instance can result in an error if the instance has more than one ENI. To change the security * groups associated with an ENI attached to an instance that has multiple ENIs, we recommend that you use the * ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttribute action. *
** To modify some attributes, the instance must be stopped. For more information, see Modify a stopped instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyInstanceAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceAttributeResult modifyInstanceAttribute(ModifyInstanceAttributeRequest modifyInstanceAttributeRequest); /** *
* Modifies the Capacity Reservation settings for a stopped instance. Use this action to configure an instance to
* target a specific Capacity Reservation, run in any open
Capacity Reservation with matching
* attributes, or run On-Demand Instance capacity.
*
* Modifies the credit option for CPU usage on a running or stopped burstable performance instance. The credit
* options are standard
and unlimited
.
*
* For more information, see Burstable * performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyInstanceCreditSpecificationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceCreditSpecification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceCreditSpecification * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceCreditSpecificationResult modifyInstanceCreditSpecification(ModifyInstanceCreditSpecificationRequest modifyInstanceCreditSpecificationRequest); /** ** Modifies the start time for a scheduled Amazon EC2 instance event. *
* * @param modifyInstanceEventStartTimeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceEventStartTime operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceEventStartTime * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceEventStartTimeResult modifyInstanceEventStartTime(ModifyInstanceEventStartTimeRequest modifyInstanceEventStartTimeRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified event window. *
** You can define either a set of time ranges or a cron expression when modifying the event window, but not both. *
** To modify the targets associated with the event window, use the AssociateInstanceEventWindow and * DisassociateInstanceEventWindow API. *
** If Amazon Web Services has already scheduled an event, modifying an event window won't change the time of the * scheduled event. *
** For more information, see Define * event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyInstanceEventWindowRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceEventWindow operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceEventWindow * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceEventWindowResult modifyInstanceEventWindow(ModifyInstanceEventWindowRequest modifyInstanceEventWindowRequest); /** ** Modifies the recovery behavior of your instance to disable simplified automatic recovery or set the recovery * behavior to default. The default configuration will not enable simplified automatic recovery for an unsupported * instance type. For more information, see Simplified automatic recovery. *
* * @param modifyInstanceMaintenanceOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceMaintenanceOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceMaintenanceOptions * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceMaintenanceOptionsResult modifyInstanceMaintenanceOptions(ModifyInstanceMaintenanceOptionsRequest modifyInstanceMaintenanceOptionsRequest); /** ** Modify the instance metadata parameters on a running or stopped instance. When you modify the parameters on a * stopped instance, they are applied when the instance is started. When you modify the parameters on a running * instance, the API responds with a state of “pending”. After the parameter modifications are successfully applied * to the instance, the state of the modifications changes from “pending” to “applied” in subsequent * describe-instances API calls. For more information, see Instance metadata and user * data in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyInstanceMetadataOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyInstanceMetadataOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyInstanceMetadataOptions * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyInstanceMetadataOptionsResult modifyInstanceMetadataOptions(ModifyInstanceMetadataOptionsRequest modifyInstanceMetadataOptionsRequest); /** ** Modifies the placement attributes for a specified instance. You can do the following: *
*
* Modify the affinity between an instance and a Dedicated Host. When
* affinity is set to host
and the instance is not associated with a specific Dedicated Host, the next
* time the instance is launched, it is automatically associated with the host on which it lands. If the instance is
* restarted or rebooted, this relationship persists.
*
* Change the Dedicated Host with which an instance is associated. *
** Change the instance tenancy of an instance. *
** Move an instance to or from a placement group. *
** At least one attribute for affinity, host ID, tenancy, or placement group name must be specified in the request. * Affinity and tenancy can be modified in the same request. *
*
* To modify the host ID, tenancy, placement group, or partition for an instance, the instance must be in the
* stopped
state.
*
* Modify the configurations of an IPAM. *
* * @param modifyIpamRequest * @return Result of the ModifyIpam operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyIpam * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyIpamResult modifyIpam(ModifyIpamRequest modifyIpamRequest); /** ** Modify the configurations of an IPAM pool. *
** For more information, see Modify a * pool in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param modifyIpamPoolRequest * @return Result of the ModifyIpamPool operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyIpamPool * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyIpamPoolResult modifyIpamPool(ModifyIpamPoolRequest modifyIpamPoolRequest); /** ** Modify a resource CIDR. You can use this action to transfer resource CIDRs between scopes and ignore resource * CIDRs that you do not want to manage. If set to false, the resource will not be tracked for overlap, it cannot be * auto-imported into a pool, and it will be removed from any pool it has an allocation in. *
** For more information, see Move * resource CIDRs between scopes and Change the monitoring state * of resource CIDRs in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param modifyIpamResourceCidrRequest * @return Result of the ModifyIpamResourceCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyIpamResourceCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyIpamResourceCidrResult modifyIpamResourceCidr(ModifyIpamResourceCidrRequest modifyIpamResourceCidrRequest); /** ** Modifies a resource discovery. A resource discovery is an IPAM component that enables IPAM to manage and monitor * resources that belong to the owning account. *
* * @param modifyIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest * @return Result of the ModifyIpamResourceDiscovery operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyIpamResourceDiscovery * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyIpamResourceDiscoveryResult modifyIpamResourceDiscovery(ModifyIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest modifyIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest); /** ** Modify an IPAM scope. *
* * @param modifyIpamScopeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyIpamScope operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyIpamScope * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyIpamScopeResult modifyIpamScope(ModifyIpamScopeRequest modifyIpamScopeRequest); /** ** Modifies a launch template. You can specify which version of the launch template to set as the default version. * When launching an instance, the default version applies when a launch template version is not specified. *
* * @param modifyLaunchTemplateRequest * @return Result of the ModifyLaunchTemplate operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyLaunchTemplate * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyLaunchTemplateResult modifyLaunchTemplate(ModifyLaunchTemplateRequest modifyLaunchTemplateRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified local gateway route. *
* * @param modifyLocalGatewayRouteRequest * @return Result of the ModifyLocalGatewayRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyLocalGatewayRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyLocalGatewayRouteResult modifyLocalGatewayRoute(ModifyLocalGatewayRouteRequest modifyLocalGatewayRouteRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified managed prefix list. *
** Adding or removing entries in a prefix list creates a new version of the prefix list. Changing the name of the * prefix list does not affect the version. *
** If you specify a current version number that does not match the true current version number, the request fails. *
* * @param modifyManagedPrefixListRequest * @return Result of the ModifyManagedPrefixList operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyManagedPrefixList * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyManagedPrefixListResult modifyManagedPrefixList(ModifyManagedPrefixListRequest modifyManagedPrefixListRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified network interface attribute. You can specify only one attribute at a time. You can use * this action to attach and detach security groups from an existing EC2 instance. *
* * @param modifyNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttribute. * @return Result of the ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttribute * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttributeResult modifyNetworkInterfaceAttribute(ModifyNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest modifyNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest); /** ** Modifies the options for instance hostnames for the specified instance. *
* * @param modifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptions * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsResult modifyPrivateDnsNameOptions(ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsRequest modifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsRequest); /** ** Modifies the configuration of your Reserved Instances, such as the Availability Zone, instance count, or instance * type. The Reserved Instances to be modified must be identical, except for Availability Zone, network platform, * and instance type. *
** For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyReservedInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for ModifyReservedInstances. * @return Result of the ModifyReservedInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyReservedInstances * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyReservedInstancesResult modifyReservedInstances(ModifyReservedInstancesRequest modifyReservedInstancesRequest); /** ** Modifies the rules of a security group. *
* * @param modifySecurityGroupRulesRequest * @return Result of the ModifySecurityGroupRules operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifySecurityGroupRules * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifySecurityGroupRulesResult modifySecurityGroupRules(ModifySecurityGroupRulesRequest modifySecurityGroupRulesRequest); /** ** Adds or removes permission settings for the specified snapshot. You may add or remove specified Amazon Web * Services account IDs from a snapshot's list of create volume permissions, but you cannot do both in a single * operation. If you need to both add and remove account IDs for a snapshot, you must use multiple operations. You * can make up to 500 modifications to a snapshot in a single operation. *
** Encrypted snapshots and snapshots with Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes cannot be made public. * Snapshots encrypted with your default KMS key cannot be shared with other accounts. *
** For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a * snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param modifySnapshotAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifySnapshotAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifySnapshotAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifySnapshotAttributeResult modifySnapshotAttribute(ModifySnapshotAttributeRequest modifySnapshotAttributeRequest); /** ** Archives an Amazon EBS snapshot. When you archive a snapshot, it is converted to a full snapshot that includes * all of the blocks of data that were written to the volume at the time the snapshot was created, and moved from * the standard tier to the archive tier. For more information, see Archive Amazon EBS snapshots * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param modifySnapshotTierRequest * @return Result of the ModifySnapshotTier operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifySnapshotTier * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifySnapshotTierResult modifySnapshotTier(ModifySnapshotTierRequest modifySnapshotTierRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified Spot Fleet request. *
*
* You can only modify a Spot Fleet request of type maintain
.
*
* While the Spot Fleet request is being modified, it is in the modifying
state.
*
* To scale up your Spot Fleet, increase its target capacity. The Spot Fleet launches the additional Spot Instances
* according to the allocation strategy for the Spot Fleet request. If the allocation strategy is
* lowestPrice
, the Spot Fleet launches instances using the Spot Instance pool with the lowest price.
* If the allocation strategy is diversified
, the Spot Fleet distributes the instances across the Spot
* Instance pools. If the allocation strategy is capacityOptimized
, Spot Fleet launches instances from
* Spot Instance pools with optimal capacity for the number of instances that are launching.
*
* To scale down your Spot Fleet, decrease its target capacity. First, the Spot Fleet cancels any open requests that
* exceed the new target capacity. You can request that the Spot Fleet terminate Spot Instances until the size of
* the fleet no longer exceeds the new target capacity. If the allocation strategy is lowestPrice
, the
* Spot Fleet terminates the instances with the highest price per unit. If the allocation strategy is
* capacityOptimized
, the Spot Fleet terminates the instances in the Spot Instance pools that have the
* least available Spot Instance capacity. If the allocation strategy is diversified
, the Spot Fleet
* terminates instances across the Spot Instance pools. Alternatively, you can request that the Spot Fleet keep the
* fleet at its current size, but not replace any Spot Instances that are interrupted or that you terminate
* manually.
*
* If you are finished with your Spot Fleet for now, but will use it again later, you can set the target capacity to * 0. *
* * @param modifySpotFleetRequestRequest * Contains the parameters for ModifySpotFleetRequest. * @return Result of the ModifySpotFleetRequest operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifySpotFleetRequest * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifySpotFleetRequestResult modifySpotFleetRequest(ModifySpotFleetRequestRequest modifySpotFleetRequestRequest); /** ** Modifies a subnet attribute. You can only modify one attribute at a time. *
** Use this action to modify subnets on Amazon Web Services Outposts. *
*
* To modify a subnet on an Outpost rack, set both MapCustomerOwnedIpOnLaunch
and
* CustomerOwnedIpv4Pool
. These two parameters act as a single attribute.
*
* To modify a subnet on an Outpost server, set either EnableLniAtDeviceIndex
or
* DisableLniAtDeviceIndex
.
*
* For more information about Amazon Web Services Outposts, see the following: *
** Outpost servers *
** Outpost racks *
** Allows or restricts mirroring network services. *
*
* By default, Amazon DNS network services are not eligible for Traffic Mirror. Use AddNetworkServices
* to add network services to a Traffic Mirror filter. When a network service is added to the Traffic Mirror filter,
* all traffic related to that network service will be mirrored. When you no longer want to mirror network services,
* use RemoveNetworkServices
to remove the network services from the Traffic Mirror filter.
*
* Modifies the specified Traffic Mirror rule. *
*
* DestinationCidrBlock
and SourceCidrBlock
must both be an IPv4 range or an IPv6 range.
*
* Modifies a Traffic Mirror session. *
* * @param modifyTrafficMirrorSessionRequest * @return Result of the ModifyTrafficMirrorSession operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyTrafficMirrorSession * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyTrafficMirrorSessionResult modifyTrafficMirrorSession(ModifyTrafficMirrorSessionRequest modifyTrafficMirrorSessionRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified transit gateway. When you modify a transit gateway, the modified options are applied to * new transit gateway attachments only. Your existing transit gateway attachments are not modified. *
* * @param modifyTransitGatewayRequest * @return Result of the ModifyTransitGateway operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyTransitGateway * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyTransitGatewayResult modifyTransitGateway(ModifyTransitGatewayRequest modifyTransitGatewayRequest); /** ** Modifies a reference (route) to a prefix list in a specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param modifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest * @return Result of the ModifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReference operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReference * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceResult modifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReference( ModifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest modifyTransitGatewayPrefixListReferenceRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified VPC attachment. *
* * @param modifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the ModifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentResult modifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachment(ModifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest modifyTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentRequest); /** ** Modifies the configuration of the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpoint * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointResult modifyVerifiedAccessEndpoint(ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest modifyVerifiedAccessEndpointRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint policy. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyResult modifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicy( ModifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest modifyVerifiedAccessEndpointPolicyRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access group configuration. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessGroupRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessGroup operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessGroup * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupResult modifyVerifiedAccessGroup(ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupRequest modifyVerifiedAccessGroupRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access group policy. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyResult modifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicy(ModifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest modifyVerifiedAccessGroupPolicyRequest); /** ** Modifies the configuration of the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessInstance operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessInstance * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceResult modifyVerifiedAccessInstance(ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest modifyVerifiedAccessInstanceRequest); /** ** Modifies the logging configuration for the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfiguration operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfiguration * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationResult modifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfiguration( ModifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationRequest modifyVerifiedAccessInstanceLoggingConfigurationRequest); /** ** Modifies the configuration of the specified Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider. *
* * @param modifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProvider operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProvider * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult modifyVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest modifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderRequest); /** ** You can modify several parameters of an existing EBS volume, including volume size, volume type, and IOPS * capacity. If your EBS volume is attached to a current-generation EC2 instance type, you might be able to apply * these changes without stopping the instance or detaching the volume from it. For more information about modifying * EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS * Elastic Volumes (Linux instances) or Amazon EBS Elastic * Volumes (Windows instances). *
** When you complete a resize operation on your volume, you need to extend the volume's file-system size to take * advantage of the new storage capacity. For more information, see Extend a Linux file system or Extend a Windows file system. *
** You can use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about * CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon * CloudWatch Events User Guide. You can also track the status of a modification using * DescribeVolumesModifications. For information about tracking status changes using either method, see Monitor the * progress of volume modifications. *
** With previous-generation instance types, resizing an EBS volume might require detaching and reattaching the * volume or stopping and restarting the instance. *
*
* After modifying a volume, you must wait at least six hours and ensure that the volume is in the
* in-use
or available
state before you can modify the same volume. This is sometimes
* referred to as a cooldown period.
*
* Modifies a volume attribute. *
** By default, all I/O operations for the volume are suspended when the data on the volume is determined to be * potentially inconsistent, to prevent undetectable, latent data corruption. The I/O access to the volume can be * resumed by first enabling I/O access and then checking the data consistency on your volume. *
** You can change the default behavior to resume I/O operations. We recommend that you change this only for boot * volumes or for volumes that are stateless or disposable. *
* * @param modifyVolumeAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVolumeAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVolumeAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVolumeAttributeResult modifyVolumeAttribute(ModifyVolumeAttributeRequest modifyVolumeAttributeRequest); /** ** Modifies the specified attribute of the specified VPC. *
* * @param modifyVpcAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVpcAttributeResult modifyVpcAttribute(ModifyVpcAttributeRequest modifyVpcAttributeRequest); /** ** Modifies attributes of a specified VPC endpoint. The attributes that you can modify depend on the type of VPC * endpoint (interface, gateway, or Gateway Load Balancer). For more information, see the Amazon Web Services PrivateLink Guide. *
* * @param modifyVpcEndpointRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcEndpoint operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcEndpoint * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVpcEndpointResult modifyVpcEndpoint(ModifyVpcEndpointRequest modifyVpcEndpointRequest); /** ** Modifies a connection notification for VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. You can change the SNS topic for the * notification, or the events for which to be notified. *
* * @param modifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotification * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult modifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotification( ModifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest modifyVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest); /** ** Modifies the attributes of your VPC endpoint service configuration. You can change the Network Load Balancers or * Gateway Load Balancers for your service, and you can specify whether acceptance is required for requests to * connect to your endpoint service through an interface VPC endpoint. *
** If you set or modify the private DNS name, you must prove that you own the private DNS domain name. *
* * @param modifyVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult modifyVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration( ModifyVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest modifyVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationRequest); /** ** Modifies the payer responsibility for your VPC endpoint service. *
* * @param modifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibilityRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibility operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibility * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibilityResult modifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibility( ModifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibilityRequest modifyVpcEndpointServicePayerResponsibilityRequest); /** ** Modifies the permissions for your VPC endpoint service. You can add or remove permissions for service consumers * (Amazon Web Services accounts, users, and IAM roles) to connect to your endpoint service. *
** If you grant permissions to all principals, the service is public. Any users who know the name of a public * service can send a request to attach an endpoint. If the service does not require manual approval, attachments * are automatically approved. *
* * @param modifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissions * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsResult modifyVpcEndpointServicePermissions( ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest modifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsRequest); /** ** Modifies the VPC peering connection options on one side of a VPC peering connection. *
** If the peered VPCs are in the same Amazon Web Services account, you can enable DNS resolution for queries from * the local VPC. This ensures that queries from the local VPC resolve to private IP addresses in the peer VPC. This * option is not available if the peered VPCs are in different Amazon Web Services accounts or different Regions. * For peered VPCs in different Amazon Web Services accounts, each Amazon Web Services account owner must initiate a * separate request to modify the peering connection options. For inter-region peering connections, you must use the * Region for the requester VPC to modify the requester VPC peering options and the Region for the accepter VPC to * modify the accepter VPC peering options. To verify which VPCs are the accepter and the requester for a VPC * peering connection, use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections command. *
* * @param modifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptions * @see AWS API Documentation */ ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsResult modifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptions(ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsRequest modifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsRequest); /** *
* Modifies the instance tenancy attribute of the specified VPC. You can change the instance tenancy attribute of a
* VPC to default
only. You cannot change the instance tenancy attribute to dedicated
.
*
* After you modify the tenancy of the VPC, any new instances that you launch into the VPC have a tenancy of
* default
, unless you specify otherwise during launch. The tenancy of any existing instances in the
* VPC is not affected.
*
* For more information, see Dedicated Instances in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param modifyVpcTenancyRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpcTenancy operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpcTenancy * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVpcTenancyResult modifyVpcTenancy(ModifyVpcTenancyRequest modifyVpcTenancyRequest); /** ** Modifies the customer gateway or the target gateway of an Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN connection. To * modify the target gateway, the following migration options are available: *
** An existing virtual private gateway to a new virtual private gateway *
** An existing virtual private gateway to a transit gateway *
** An existing transit gateway to a new transit gateway *
** An existing transit gateway to a virtual private gateway *
** Before you perform the migration to the new gateway, you must configure the new gateway. Use * CreateVpnGateway to create a virtual private gateway, or CreateTransitGateway to create a transit * gateway. *
** This step is required when you migrate from a virtual private gateway with static routes to a transit gateway. *
** You must delete the static routes before you migrate to the new gateway. *
** Keep a copy of the static route before you delete it. You will need to add back these routes to the transit * gateway after the VPN connection migration is complete. *
** After you migrate to the new gateway, you might need to modify your VPC route table. Use CreateRoute and * DeleteRoute to make the changes described in Update VPC route * tables in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
** When the new gateway is a transit gateway, modify the transit gateway route table to allow traffic between the * VPC and the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN connection. Use CreateTransitGatewayRoute to add the * routes. *
** If you deleted VPN static routes, you must add the static routes to the transit gateway route table. *
** After you perform this operation, the VPN endpoint's IP addresses on the Amazon Web Services side and the tunnel * options remain intact. Your Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN connection will be temporarily unavailable for a * brief period while we provision the new endpoints. *
* * @param modifyVpnConnectionRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpnConnection operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpnConnection * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVpnConnectionResult modifyVpnConnection(ModifyVpnConnectionRequest modifyVpnConnectionRequest); /** ** Modifies the connection options for your Site-to-Site VPN connection. *
** When you modify the VPN connection options, the VPN endpoint IP addresses on the Amazon Web Services side do not * change, and the tunnel options do not change. Your VPN connection will be temporarily unavailable for a brief * period while the VPN connection is updated. *
* * @param modifyVpnConnectionOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpnConnectionOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpnConnectionOptions * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyVpnConnectionOptionsResult modifyVpnConnectionOptions(ModifyVpnConnectionOptionsRequest modifyVpnConnectionOptionsRequest); /** ** Modifies the VPN tunnel endpoint certificate. *
* * @param modifyVpnTunnelCertificateRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpnTunnelCertificate operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpnTunnelCertificate * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ModifyVpnTunnelCertificateResult modifyVpnTunnelCertificate(ModifyVpnTunnelCertificateRequest modifyVpnTunnelCertificateRequest); /** ** Modifies the options for a VPN tunnel in an Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN connection. You can modify * multiple options for a tunnel in a single request, but you can only modify one tunnel at a time. For more * information, see Site-to-Site VPN tunnel * options for your Site-to-Site VPN connection in the Amazon Web Services Site-to-Site VPN User Guide. *
* * @param modifyVpnTunnelOptionsRequest * @return Result of the ModifyVpnTunnelOptions operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ModifyVpnTunnelOptions * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ModifyVpnTunnelOptionsResult modifyVpnTunnelOptions(ModifyVpnTunnelOptionsRequest modifyVpnTunnelOptionsRequest); /** ** Enables detailed monitoring for a running instance. Otherwise, basic monitoring is enabled. For more information, * see Monitor your instances * using CloudWatch in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** To disable detailed monitoring, see UnmonitorInstances. *
* * @param monitorInstancesRequest * @return Result of the MonitorInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.MonitorInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ MonitorInstancesResult monitorInstances(MonitorInstancesRequest monitorInstancesRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Moves an Elastic IP address from the EC2-Classic platform to the EC2-VPC platform. The Elastic IP address must be * allocated to your account for more than 24 hours, and it must not be associated with an instance. After the * Elastic IP address is moved, it is no longer available for use in the EC2-Classic platform, unless you move it * back using the RestoreAddressToClassic request. You cannot move an Elastic IP address that was originally * allocated for use in the EC2-VPC platform to the EC2-Classic platform. *
* * @param moveAddressToVpcRequest * @return Result of the MoveAddressToVpc operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.MoveAddressToVpc * @see AWS API * Documentation */ MoveAddressToVpcResult moveAddressToVpc(MoveAddressToVpcRequest moveAddressToVpcRequest); /** ** Move a BYOIPv4 CIDR to IPAM from a public IPv4 pool. *
** If you already have a BYOIPv4 CIDR with Amazon Web Services, you can move the CIDR to IPAM from a public IPv4 * pool. You cannot move an IPv6 CIDR to IPAM. If you are bringing a new IP address to Amazon Web Services for the * first time, complete the steps in Tutorial: BYOIP address CIDRs to * IPAM. *
* * @param moveByoipCidrToIpamRequest * @return Result of the MoveByoipCidrToIpam operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.MoveByoipCidrToIpam * @see AWS API * Documentation */ MoveByoipCidrToIpamResult moveByoipCidrToIpam(MoveByoipCidrToIpamRequest moveByoipCidrToIpamRequest); /** ** Provisions an IPv4 or IPv6 address range for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own * IP addresses (BYOIP) and creates a corresponding address pool. After the address range is provisioned, it is * ready to be advertised using AdvertiseByoipCidr. *
** Amazon Web Services verifies that you own the address range and are authorized to advertise it. You must ensure * that the address range is registered to you and that you created an RPKI ROA to authorize Amazon ASNs 16509 and * 14618 to advertise the address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) * in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
*
* Provisioning an address range is an asynchronous operation, so the call returns immediately, but the address
* range is not ready to use until its status changes from pending-provision
to
* provisioned
. To monitor the status of an address range, use DescribeByoipCidrs. To allocate
* an Elastic IP address from your IPv4 address pool, use AllocateAddress with either the specific address
* from the address pool or the ID of the address pool.
*
* Provision a CIDR to an IPAM pool. You can use this action to provision new CIDRs to a top-level pool or to * transfer a CIDR from a top-level pool to a pool within it. *
** For more information, see Provision * CIDRs to pools in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param provisionIpamPoolCidrRequest * @return Result of the ProvisionIpamPoolCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ProvisionIpamPoolCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ProvisionIpamPoolCidrResult provisionIpamPoolCidr(ProvisionIpamPoolCidrRequest provisionIpamPoolCidrRequest); /** ** Provision a CIDR to a public IPv4 pool. *
** For more information about IPAM, see What is IPAM? in the Amazon VPC * IPAM User Guide. *
* * @param provisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest * @return Result of the ProvisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ProvisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr * @see AWS API Documentation */ ProvisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrResult provisionPublicIpv4PoolCidr(ProvisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest provisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrRequest); /** ** Purchase a reservation with configurations that match those of your Dedicated Host. You must have active * Dedicated Hosts in your account before you purchase a reservation. This action results in the specified * reservation being purchased and charged to your account. *
* * @param purchaseHostReservationRequest * @return Result of the PurchaseHostReservation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.PurchaseHostReservation * @see AWS * API Documentation */ PurchaseHostReservationResult purchaseHostReservation(PurchaseHostReservationRequest purchaseHostReservationRequest); /** ** Purchases a Reserved Instance for use with your account. With Reserved Instances, you pay a lower hourly rate * compared to On-Demand instance pricing. *
** Use DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings to get a list of Reserved Instance offerings that match your * specifications. After you've purchased a Reserved Instance, you can check for your new Reserved Instance with * DescribeReservedInstances. *
** To queue a purchase for a future date and time, specify a purchase time. If you do not specify a purchase time, * the default is the current time. *
** For more information, see Reserved * Instances and Reserved * Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param purchaseReservedInstancesOfferingRequest * Contains the parameters for PurchaseReservedInstancesOffering. * @return Result of the PurchaseReservedInstancesOffering operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.PurchaseReservedInstancesOffering * @see AWS API Documentation */ PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult purchaseReservedInstancesOffering(PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingRequest purchaseReservedInstancesOfferingRequest); /** ** You can no longer purchase Scheduled Instances. *
** Purchases the Scheduled Instances with the specified schedule. *
** Scheduled Instances enable you to purchase Amazon EC2 compute capacity by the hour for a one-year term. Before * you can purchase a Scheduled Instance, you must call DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability to check for * available schedules and obtain a purchase token. After you purchase a Scheduled Instance, you must call * RunScheduledInstances during each scheduled time period. *
** After you purchase a Scheduled Instance, you can't cancel, modify, or resell your purchase. *
* * @param purchaseScheduledInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for PurchaseScheduledInstances. * @return Result of the PurchaseScheduledInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.PurchaseScheduledInstances * @see AWS * API Documentation */ PurchaseScheduledInstancesResult purchaseScheduledInstances(PurchaseScheduledInstancesRequest purchaseScheduledInstancesRequest); /** ** Requests a reboot of the specified instances. This operation is asynchronous; it only queues a request to reboot * the specified instances. The operation succeeds if the instances are valid and belong to you. Requests to reboot * terminated instances are ignored. *
** If an instance does not cleanly shut down within a few minutes, Amazon EC2 performs a hard reboot. *
** For more information about troubleshooting, see Troubleshoot an unreachable * instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param rebootInstancesRequest * @return Result of the RebootInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RebootInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RebootInstancesResult rebootInstances(RebootInstancesRequest rebootInstancesRequest); /** ** Registers an AMI. When you're creating an AMI, this is the final step you must complete before you can launch an * instance from the AMI. For more information about creating AMIs, see Create your own AMI in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** For Amazon EBS-backed instances, CreateImage creates and registers the AMI in a single request, so you * don't have to register the AMI yourself. We recommend that you always use CreateImage unless you have a * specific reason to use RegisterImage. *
** If needed, you can deregister an AMI at any time. Any modifications you make to an AMI backed by an instance * store volume invalidates its registration. If you make changes to an image, deregister the previous image and * register the new image. *
** Register a snapshot of a root device volume *
*
* You can use RegisterImage
to create an Amazon EBS-backed Linux AMI from a snapshot of a root device
* volume. You specify the snapshot using a block device mapping. You can't set the encryption state of the volume
* using the block device mapping. If the snapshot is encrypted, or encryption by default is enabled, the root
* volume of an instance launched from the AMI is encrypted.
*
* For more information, see Create a Linux AMI from a snapshot and Use encryption with Amazon * EBS-backed AMIs in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
** Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes *
** If any snapshots have Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes, they are copied to the new AMI. *
** Windows and some Linux distributions, such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server * (SLES), use the Amazon EC2 billing product code associated with an AMI to verify the subscription status for * package updates. To create a new AMI for operating systems that require a billing product code, instead of * registering the AMI, do the following to preserve the billing product code association: *
** Launch an instance from an existing AMI with that billing product code. *
** Customize the instance. *
** Create an AMI from the instance using CreateImage. *
** If you purchase a Reserved Instance to apply to an On-Demand Instance that was launched from an AMI with a * billing product code, make sure that the Reserved Instance has the matching billing product code. If you purchase * a Reserved Instance without the matching billing product code, the Reserved Instance will not be applied to the * On-Demand Instance. For information about how to obtain the platform details and billing information of an AMI, * see Understand AMI billing * information in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param registerImageRequest * Contains the parameters for RegisterImage. * @return Result of the RegisterImage operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RegisterImage * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RegisterImageResult registerImage(RegisterImageRequest registerImageRequest); /** ** Registers a set of tag keys to include in scheduled event notifications for your resources. *
** To remove tags, use DeregisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes. *
* * @param registerInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest * @return Result of the RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributes * @see AWS API Documentation */ RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesResult registerInstanceEventNotificationAttributes( RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest registerInstanceEventNotificationAttributesRequest); /** ** Registers members (network interfaces) with the transit gateway multicast group. A member is a network interface * associated with a supported EC2 instance that receives multicast traffic. For information about supported * instances, see Multicast * Consideration in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. *
** After you add the members, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the members were added to the transit gateway multicast * group. *
* * @param registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest * @return Result of the RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers * @see AWS API Documentation */ RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers( RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest); /** ** Registers sources (network interfaces) with the specified transit gateway multicast group. *
** A multicast source is a network interface attached to a supported instance that sends multicast traffic. For * information about supported instances, see Multicast * Considerations in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. *
** After you add the source, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the source was added to the multicast group. *
* * @param registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest * @return Result of the RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources * @see AWS API Documentation */ RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources( RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest); /** ** Rejects a request to associate cross-account subnets with a transit gateway multicast domain. *
* * @param rejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest * @return Result of the RejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations * @see AWS API Documentation */ RejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsResult rejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociations( RejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest rejectTransitGatewayMulticastDomainAssociationsRequest); /** ** Rejects a transit gateway peering attachment request. *
* * @param rejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest * @return Result of the RejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment * @see AWS API Documentation */ RejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentResult rejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachment( RejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest rejectTransitGatewayPeeringAttachmentRequest); /** ** Rejects a request to attach a VPC to a transit gateway. *
*
* The VPC attachment must be in the pendingAcceptance
state. Use
* DescribeTransitGatewayVpcAttachments to view your pending VPC attachment requests. Use
* AcceptTransitGatewayVpcAttachment to accept a VPC attachment request.
*
* Rejects VPC endpoint connection requests to your VPC endpoint service. *
* * @param rejectVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the RejectVpcEndpointConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RejectVpcEndpointConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ RejectVpcEndpointConnectionsResult rejectVpcEndpointConnections(RejectVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest rejectVpcEndpointConnectionsRequest); /** *
* Rejects a VPC peering connection request. The VPC peering connection must be in the
* pending-acceptance
state. Use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections request to view your
* outstanding VPC peering connection requests. To delete an active VPC peering connection, or to delete a VPC
* peering connection request that you initiated, use DeleteVpcPeeringConnection.
*
* Releases the specified Elastic IP address. *
** [Default VPC] Releasing an Elastic IP address automatically disassociates it from any instance that it's * associated with. To disassociate an Elastic IP address without releasing it, use DisassociateAddress. *
*
* [Nondefault VPC] You must use DisassociateAddress to disassociate the Elastic IP address before you can
* release it. Otherwise, Amazon EC2 returns an error (InvalidIPAddress.InUse
).
*
* After releasing an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool. Be sure to update your DNS records
* and any servers or devices that communicate with the address. If you attempt to release an Elastic IP address
* that you already released, you'll get an AuthFailure
error if the address is already allocated to
* another Amazon Web Services account.
*
* After you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see * AllocateAddress. *
* * @param releaseAddressRequest * @return Result of the ReleaseAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReleaseAddress * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReleaseAddressResult releaseAddress(ReleaseAddressRequest releaseAddressRequest); /** *
* When you no longer want to use an On-Demand Dedicated Host it can be released. On-Demand billing is stopped and
* the host goes into released
state. The host ID of Dedicated Hosts that have been released can no
* longer be specified in another request, for example, to modify the host. You must stop or terminate all instances
* on a host before it can be released.
*
* When Dedicated Hosts are released, it may take some time for them to stop counting toward your limit and you may * receive capacity errors when trying to allocate new Dedicated Hosts. Wait a few minutes and then try again. *
** Released hosts still appear in a DescribeHosts response. *
* * @param releaseHostsRequest * @return Result of the ReleaseHosts operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReleaseHosts * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReleaseHostsResult releaseHosts(ReleaseHostsRequest releaseHostsRequest); /** ** Release an allocation within an IPAM pool. The Region you use should be the IPAM pool locale. The locale is the * Amazon Web Services Region where this IPAM pool is available for allocations. You can only use this action to * release manual allocations. To remove an allocation for a resource without deleting the resource, set its * monitored state to false using ModifyIpamResourceCidr. For more information, see Release an allocation in the * Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. *
** All EC2 API actions follow an eventual consistency model. *
** Replaces an IAM instance profile for the specified running instance. You can use this action to change the IAM * instance profile that's associated with an instance without having to disassociate the existing IAM instance * profile first. *
** Use DescribeIamInstanceProfileAssociations to get the association ID. *
* * @param replaceIamInstanceProfileAssociationRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceIamInstanceProfileAssociation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceIamInstanceProfileAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ ReplaceIamInstanceProfileAssociationResult replaceIamInstanceProfileAssociation( ReplaceIamInstanceProfileAssociationRequest replaceIamInstanceProfileAssociationRequest); /** ** Changes which network ACL a subnet is associated with. By default when you create a subnet, it's automatically * associated with the default network ACL. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
** This is an idempotent operation. *
* * @param replaceNetworkAclAssociationRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceNetworkAclAssociation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceNetworkAclAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ ReplaceNetworkAclAssociationResult replaceNetworkAclAssociation(ReplaceNetworkAclAssociationRequest replaceNetworkAclAssociationRequest); /** ** Replaces an entry (rule) in a network ACL. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon * VPC User Guide. *
* * @param replaceNetworkAclEntryRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceNetworkAclEntry operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceNetworkAclEntry * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReplaceNetworkAclEntryResult replaceNetworkAclEntry(ReplaceNetworkAclEntryRequest replaceNetworkAclEntryRequest); /** ** Replaces an existing route within a route table in a VPC. *
** You must specify either a destination CIDR block or a prefix list ID. You must also specify exactly one of the * resources from the parameter list, or reset the local route to its default target. *
** For more information, see Route * tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
* * @param replaceRouteRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceRoute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReplaceRouteResult replaceRoute(ReplaceRouteRequest replaceRouteRequest); /** ** Changes the route table associated with a given subnet, internet gateway, or virtual private gateway in a VPC. * After the operation completes, the subnet or gateway uses the routes in the new route table. For more information * about route tables, see Route * tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** You can also use this operation to change which table is the main route table in the VPC. Specify the main route * table's association ID and the route table ID of the new main route table. *
* * @param replaceRouteTableAssociationRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceRouteTableAssociation operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceRouteTableAssociation * @see AWS API Documentation */ ReplaceRouteTableAssociationResult replaceRouteTableAssociation(ReplaceRouteTableAssociationRequest replaceRouteTableAssociationRequest); /** ** Replaces the specified route in the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param replaceTransitGatewayRouteRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceTransitGatewayRoute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceTransitGatewayRoute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ReplaceTransitGatewayRouteResult replaceTransitGatewayRoute(ReplaceTransitGatewayRouteRequest replaceTransitGatewayRouteRequest); /** ** Trigger replacement of specified VPN tunnel. *
* * @param replaceVpnTunnelRequest * @return Result of the ReplaceVpnTunnel operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReplaceVpnTunnel * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReplaceVpnTunnelResult replaceVpnTunnel(ReplaceVpnTunnelRequest replaceVpnTunnelRequest); /** *
* Submits feedback about the status of an instance. The instance must be in the running
state. If your
* experience with the instance differs from the instance status returned by DescribeInstanceStatus, use
* ReportInstanceStatus to report your experience with the instance. Amazon EC2 collects this information to
* improve the accuracy of status checks.
*
* Use of this action does not change the value returned by DescribeInstanceStatus. *
* * @param reportInstanceStatusRequest * @return Result of the ReportInstanceStatus operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ReportInstanceStatus * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ReportInstanceStatusResult reportInstanceStatus(ReportInstanceStatusRequest reportInstanceStatusRequest); /** ** Creates a Spot Fleet request. *
** The Spot Fleet request specifies the total target capacity and the On-Demand target capacity. Amazon EC2 * calculates the difference between the total capacity and On-Demand capacity, and launches the difference as Spot * capacity. *
** You can submit a single request that includes multiple launch specifications that vary by instance type, AMI, * Availability Zone, or subnet. *
** By default, the Spot Fleet requests Spot Instances in the Spot Instance pool where the price per unit is the * lowest. Each launch specification can include its own instance weighting that reflects the value of the instance * type to your application workload. *
** Alternatively, you can specify that the Spot Fleet distribute the target capacity across the Spot pools included * in its launch specifications. By ensuring that the Spot Instances in your Spot Fleet are in different Spot pools, * you can improve the availability of your fleet. *
*
* You can specify tags for the Spot Fleet request and instances launched by the fleet. You cannot tag other
* resource types in a Spot Fleet request because only the spot-fleet-request
and instance
* resource types are supported.
*
* For more information, see Spot Fleet requests in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotFleet API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. For * options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** Creates a Spot Instance request. *
** For more information, see Spot * Instance requests in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. *
** We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotInstances API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. * For options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. *
** Resets the attribute of the specified IP address. For requirements, see Using reverse DNS for email applications. *
* * @param resetAddressAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ResetAddressAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetAddressAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ResetAddressAttributeResult resetAddressAttribute(ResetAddressAttributeRequest resetAddressAttributeRequest); /** ** Resets the default KMS key for EBS encryption for your account in this Region to the Amazon Web Services managed * KMS key for EBS. *
** After resetting the default KMS key to the Amazon Web Services managed KMS key, you can continue to encrypt by a * customer managed KMS key by specifying it when you create the volume. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the * Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param resetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest * @return Result of the ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdResult resetEbsDefaultKmsKeyId(ResetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest resetEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest); /** ** Resets the specified attribute of the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI) to its default value. You can only reset * the load permission attribute. *
* * @param resetFpgaImageAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ResetFpgaImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetFpgaImageAttribute * @see AWS * API Documentation */ ResetFpgaImageAttributeResult resetFpgaImageAttribute(ResetFpgaImageAttributeRequest resetFpgaImageAttributeRequest); /** ** Resets an attribute of an AMI to its default value. *
* * @param resetImageAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for ResetImageAttribute. * @return Result of the ResetImageAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetImageAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ResetImageAttributeResult resetImageAttribute(ResetImageAttributeRequest resetImageAttributeRequest); /** *
* Resets an attribute of an instance to its default value. To reset the kernel
or ramdisk
* , the instance must be in a stopped state. To reset the sourceDestCheck
, the instance can be either
* running or stopped.
*
* The sourceDestCheck
attribute controls whether source/destination checking is enabled. The default
* value is true
, which means checking is enabled. This value must be false
for a NAT
* instance to perform NAT. For more information, see NAT Instances in the
* Amazon VPC User Guide.
*
* Resets a network interface attribute. You can specify only one attribute at a time. *
* * @param resetNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest * Contains the parameters for ResetNetworkInterfaceAttribute. * @return Result of the ResetNetworkInterfaceAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetNetworkInterfaceAttribute * @see AWS API Documentation */ ResetNetworkInterfaceAttributeResult resetNetworkInterfaceAttribute(ResetNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest resetNetworkInterfaceAttributeRequest); /** ** Resets permission settings for the specified snapshot. *
** For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a * snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param resetSnapshotAttributeRequest * @return Result of the ResetSnapshotAttribute operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.ResetSnapshotAttribute * @see AWS API * Documentation */ ResetSnapshotAttributeResult resetSnapshotAttribute(ResetSnapshotAttributeRequest resetSnapshotAttributeRequest); /** ** This action is deprecated. *
** Restores an Elastic IP address that was previously moved to the EC2-VPC platform back to the EC2-Classic * platform. You cannot move an Elastic IP address that was originally allocated for use in EC2-VPC. The Elastic IP * address must not be associated with an instance or network interface. *
* * @param restoreAddressToClassicRequest * @return Result of the RestoreAddressToClassic operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RestoreAddressToClassic * @see AWS * API Documentation */ RestoreAddressToClassicResult restoreAddressToClassic(RestoreAddressToClassicRequest restoreAddressToClassicRequest); /** ** Restores an AMI from the Recycle Bin. For more information, see Recycle Bin in the Amazon EC2 * User Guide. *
* * @param restoreImageFromRecycleBinRequest * @return Result of the RestoreImageFromRecycleBin operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RestoreImageFromRecycleBin * @see AWS * API Documentation */ RestoreImageFromRecycleBinResult restoreImageFromRecycleBin(RestoreImageFromRecycleBinRequest restoreImageFromRecycleBinRequest); /** ** Restores the entries from a previous version of a managed prefix list to a new version of the prefix list. *
* * @param restoreManagedPrefixListVersionRequest * @return Result of the RestoreManagedPrefixListVersion operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RestoreManagedPrefixListVersion * @see AWS API Documentation */ RestoreManagedPrefixListVersionResult restoreManagedPrefixListVersion(RestoreManagedPrefixListVersionRequest restoreManagedPrefixListVersionRequest); /** ** Restores a snapshot from the Recycle Bin. For more information, see Restore snapshots from the Recycle Bin in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param restoreSnapshotFromRecycleBinRequest * @return Result of the RestoreSnapshotFromRecycleBin operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RestoreSnapshotFromRecycleBin * @see AWS API Documentation */ RestoreSnapshotFromRecycleBinResult restoreSnapshotFromRecycleBin(RestoreSnapshotFromRecycleBinRequest restoreSnapshotFromRecycleBinRequest); /** ** Restores an archived Amazon EBS snapshot for use temporarily or permanently, or modifies the restore period or * restore type for a snapshot that was previously temporarily restored. *
** For more information see Restore an archived snapshot and modify the restore period or restore type for a temporarily restored snapshot in the Amazon Elastic * Compute Cloud User Guide. *
* * @param restoreSnapshotTierRequest * @return Result of the RestoreSnapshotTier operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RestoreSnapshotTier * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RestoreSnapshotTierResult restoreSnapshotTier(RestoreSnapshotTierRequest restoreSnapshotTierRequest); /** ** Removes an ingress authorization rule from a Client VPN endpoint. *
* * @param revokeClientVpnIngressRequest * @return Result of the RevokeClientVpnIngress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RevokeClientVpnIngress * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RevokeClientVpnIngressResult revokeClientVpnIngress(RevokeClientVpnIngressRequest revokeClientVpnIngressRequest); /** ** Removes the specified outbound (egress) rules from the specified security group. *
** You can specify rules using either rule IDs or security group rule properties. If you use rule properties, the * values that you specify (for example, ports) must match the existing rule's values exactly. Each rule has a * protocol, from and to ports, and destination (CIDR range, security group, or prefix list). For the TCP and UDP * protocols, you must also specify the destination port or range of ports. For the ICMP protocol, you must also * specify the ICMP type and code. If the security group rule has a description, you do not need to specify the * description to revoke the rule. *
** For a default VPC, if the values you specify do not match the existing rule's values, no error is returned, and * the output describes the security group rules that were not revoked. *
** Amazon Web Services recommends that you describe the security group to verify that the rules were removed. *
** Rule changes are propagated to instances within the security group as quickly as possible. However, a small delay * might occur. *
* * @param revokeSecurityGroupEgressRequest * @return Result of the RevokeSecurityGroupEgress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RevokeSecurityGroupEgress * @see AWS * API Documentation */ RevokeSecurityGroupEgressResult revokeSecurityGroupEgress(RevokeSecurityGroupEgressRequest revokeSecurityGroupEgressRequest); /** ** Removes the specified inbound (ingress) rules from a security group. *
** You can specify rules using either rule IDs or security group rule properties. If you use rule properties, the * values that you specify (for example, ports) must match the existing rule's values exactly. Each rule has a * protocol, from and to ports, and source (CIDR range, security group, or prefix list). For the TCP and UDP * protocols, you must also specify the destination port or range of ports. For the ICMP protocol, you must also * specify the ICMP type and code. If the security group rule has a description, you do not need to specify the * description to revoke the rule. *
** For a default VPC, if the values you specify do not match the existing rule's values, no error is returned, and * the output describes the security group rules that were not revoked. *
** Amazon Web Services recommends that you describe the security group to verify that the rules were removed. *
** Rule changes are propagated to instances within the security group as quickly as possible. However, a small delay * might occur. *
* * @param revokeSecurityGroupIngressRequest * @return Result of the RevokeSecurityGroupIngress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RevokeSecurityGroupIngress * @see AWS * API Documentation */ RevokeSecurityGroupIngressResult revokeSecurityGroupIngress(RevokeSecurityGroupIngressRequest revokeSecurityGroupIngressRequest); /** * Simplified method form for invoking the RevokeSecurityGroupIngress operation. * * @see #revokeSecurityGroupIngress(RevokeSecurityGroupIngressRequest) */ @Deprecated RevokeSecurityGroupIngressResult revokeSecurityGroupIngress(); /** ** Launches the specified number of instances using an AMI for which you have permissions. *
** You can specify a number of options, or leave the default options. The following rules apply: *
** If you don't specify a subnet ID, we choose a default subnet from your default VPC for you. If you don't have a * default VPC, you must specify a subnet ID in the request. *
** All instances have a network interface with a primary private IPv4 address. If you don't specify this address, we * choose one from the IPv4 range of your subnet. *
** Not all instance types support IPv6 addresses. For more information, see Instance types. *
** If you don't specify a security group ID, we use the default security group. For more information, see Security groups. *
** If any of the AMIs have a product code attached for which the user has not subscribed, the request fails. *
** You can create a launch * template, which is a resource that contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance * using RunInstances, you can specify the launch template instead of specifying the launch parameters. *
** To ensure faster instance launches, break up large requests into smaller batches. For example, create five * separate launch requests for 100 instances each instead of one launch request for 500 instances. *
*
* An instance is ready for you to use when it's in the running
state. You can check the state of your
* instance using DescribeInstances. You can tag instances and EBS volumes during launch, after launch, or
* both. For more information, see CreateTags and Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources.
*
* Linux instances have access to the public key of the key pair at boot. You can use this key to provide secure * access to the instance. Amazon EC2 public images use this feature to provide secure access without passwords. For * more information, see Key * pairs. *
** For troubleshooting, see What to do if * an instance immediately terminates, and Troubleshooting connecting to your instance. *
* * @param runInstancesRequest * @return Result of the RunInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RunInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RunInstancesResult runInstances(RunInstancesRequest runInstancesRequest); /** ** Launches the specified Scheduled Instances. *
** Before you can launch a Scheduled Instance, you must purchase it and obtain an identifier using * PurchaseScheduledInstances. *
** You must launch a Scheduled Instance during its scheduled time period. You can't stop or reboot a Scheduled * Instance, but you can terminate it as needed. If you terminate a Scheduled Instance before the current scheduled * time period ends, you can launch it again after a few minutes. For more information, see Scheduled Instances * in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param runScheduledInstancesRequest * Contains the parameters for RunScheduledInstances. * @return Result of the RunScheduledInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.RunScheduledInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ RunScheduledInstancesResult runScheduledInstances(RunScheduledInstancesRequest runScheduledInstancesRequest); /** ** Searches for routes in the specified local gateway route table. *
* * @param searchLocalGatewayRoutesRequest * @return Result of the SearchLocalGatewayRoutes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.SearchLocalGatewayRoutes * @see AWS * API Documentation */ SearchLocalGatewayRoutesResult searchLocalGatewayRoutes(SearchLocalGatewayRoutesRequest searchLocalGatewayRoutesRequest); /** ** Searches one or more transit gateway multicast groups and returns the group membership information. *
* * @param searchTransitGatewayMulticastGroupsRequest * @return Result of the SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups * @see AWS API Documentation */ SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroupsResult searchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups( SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroupsRequest searchTransitGatewayMulticastGroupsRequest); /** ** Searches for routes in the specified transit gateway route table. *
* * @param searchTransitGatewayRoutesRequest * @return Result of the SearchTransitGatewayRoutes operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.SearchTransitGatewayRoutes * @see AWS * API Documentation */ SearchTransitGatewayRoutesResult searchTransitGatewayRoutes(SearchTransitGatewayRoutesRequest searchTransitGatewayRoutesRequest); /** ** Sends a diagnostic interrupt to the specified Amazon EC2 instance to trigger a kernel panic (on Linux * instances), or a blue screen/stop error (on Windows instances). For instances based on Intel and * AMD processors, the interrupt is received as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). *
** In general, the operating system crashes and reboots when a kernel panic or stop error is triggered. The * operating system can also be configured to perform diagnostic tasks, such as generating a memory dump file, * loading a secondary kernel, or obtaining a call trace. *
** Before sending a diagnostic interrupt to your instance, ensure that its operating system is configured to perform * the required diagnostic tasks. *
** For more information about configuring your operating system to generate a crash dump when a kernel panic or stop * error occurs, see Send a * diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) (Linux instances) or Send a diagnostic * interrupt (for advanced users) (Windows instances). *
* * @param sendDiagnosticInterruptRequest * @return Result of the SendDiagnosticInterrupt operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.SendDiagnosticInterrupt * @see AWS * API Documentation */ SendDiagnosticInterruptResult sendDiagnosticInterrupt(SendDiagnosticInterruptRequest sendDiagnosticInterruptRequest); /** ** Starts an Amazon EBS-backed instance that you've previously stopped. *
** Instances that use Amazon EBS volumes as their root devices can be quickly stopped and started. When an instance * is stopped, the compute resources are released and you are not billed for instance usage. However, your root * partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume * usage. You can restart your instance at any time. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a * one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. *
** Before stopping an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does * not preserve data stored in RAM. *
** Performing this operation on an instance that uses an instance store as its root device returns an error. *
*
* If you attempt to start a T3 instance with host
tenancy and the unlimted
CPU credit
* option, the request fails. The unlimited
CPU credit option is not supported on Dedicated Hosts.
* Before you start the instance, either change its CPU credit option to standard
, or change its
* tenancy to default
or dedicated
.
*
* For more information, see Stop and * start your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param startInstancesRequest * @return Result of the StartInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.StartInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ StartInstancesResult startInstances(StartInstancesRequest startInstancesRequest); /** ** Starts analyzing the specified Network Access Scope. *
* * @param startNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest * @return Result of the StartNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.StartNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis * @see AWS API Documentation */ StartNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisResult startNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysis( StartNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest startNetworkInsightsAccessScopeAnalysisRequest); /** ** Starts analyzing the specified path. If the path is reachable, the operation returns the shortest feasible path. *
* * @param startNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest * @return Result of the StartNetworkInsightsAnalysis operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.StartNetworkInsightsAnalysis * @see AWS API Documentation */ StartNetworkInsightsAnalysisResult startNetworkInsightsAnalysis(StartNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest startNetworkInsightsAnalysisRequest); /** ** Initiates the verification process to prove that the service provider owns the private DNS name domain for the * endpoint service. *
** The service provider must successfully perform the verification before the consumer can use the name to access * the service. *
** Before the service provider runs this command, they must add a record to the DNS server. *
* * @param startVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationRequest * @return Result of the StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerification operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerification * @see AWS API Documentation */ StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationResult startVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerification( StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationRequest startVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationRequest); /** ** Stops an Amazon EBS-backed instance. For more information, see Stop and start your instance in * the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** You can use the Stop action to hibernate an instance if the instance is enabled for hibernation * and it meets the hibernation * prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the * Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** We don't charge usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees; however, your root partition Amazon EBS * volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. Every time * you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per * second for instance usage. *
** You can't stop or hibernate instance store-backed instances. You can't use the Stop action to hibernate Spot * Instances, but you can specify that Amazon EC2 should hibernate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For * more information, see Hibernating interrupted Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** When you stop or hibernate an instance, we shut it down. You can restart your instance at any time. Before * stopping or hibernating an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an * instance does not preserve data stored in RAM, but hibernating an instance does preserve data stored in RAM. If * an instance cannot hibernate successfully, a normal shutdown occurs. *
** Stopping and hibernating an instance is different to rebooting or terminating it. For example, when you stop or * hibernate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate * an instance, the root device and any other devices attached during the instance launch are automatically deleted. * For more information about the differences between rebooting, stopping, hibernating, and terminating instances, * see Instance * lifecycle in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
** When you stop an instance, we attempt to shut it down forcibly after a short while. If your instance appears * stuck in the stopping state after a period of time, there may be an issue with the underlying host computer. For * more information, see Troubleshoot * stopping your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param stopInstancesRequest * @return Result of the StopInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.StopInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ StopInstancesResult stopInstances(StopInstancesRequest stopInstancesRequest); /** ** Terminates active Client VPN endpoint connections. This action can be used to terminate a specific client * connection, or up to five connections established by a specific user. *
* * @param terminateClientVpnConnectionsRequest * @return Result of the TerminateClientVpnConnections operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.TerminateClientVpnConnections * @see AWS API Documentation */ TerminateClientVpnConnectionsResult terminateClientVpnConnections(TerminateClientVpnConnectionsRequest terminateClientVpnConnectionsRequest); /** ** Shuts down the specified instances. This operation is idempotent; if you terminate an instance more than once, * each call succeeds. *
** If you specify multiple instances and the request fails (for example, because of a single incorrect instance ID), * none of the instances are terminated. *
** If you terminate multiple instances across multiple Availability Zones, and one or more of the specified * instances are enabled for termination protection, the request fails with the following results: *
** The specified instances that are in the same Availability Zone as the protected instance are not terminated. *
** The specified instances that are in different Availability Zones, where no other specified instances are * protected, are successfully terminated. *
** For example, say you have the following instances: *
*
* Instance A: us-east-1a
; Not protected
*
* Instance B: us-east-1a
; Not protected
*
* Instance C: us-east-1b
; Protected
*
* Instance D: us-east-1b
; not protected
*
* If you attempt to terminate all of these instances in the same request, the request reports failure with the * following results: *
*
* Instance A and Instance B are successfully terminated because none of the specified instances in
* us-east-1a
are enabled for termination protection.
*
* Instance C and Instance D fail to terminate because at least one of the specified instances in
* us-east-1b
(Instance C) is enabled for termination protection.
*
* Terminated instances remain visible after termination (for approximately one hour). *
** By default, Amazon EC2 deletes all EBS volumes that were attached when the instance launched. Volumes attached * after instance launch continue running. *
*
* You can stop, start, and terminate EBS-backed instances. You can only terminate instance store-backed instances.
* What happens to an instance differs if you stop it or terminate it. For example, when you stop an instance, the
* root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate an instance, any attached
* EBS volumes with the DeleteOnTermination
block device mapping parameter set to true
are
* automatically deleted. For more information about the differences between stopping and terminating instances, see
* Instance lifecycle
* in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
*
* For more information about troubleshooting, see Troubleshooting terminating your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param terminateInstancesRequest * @return Result of the TerminateInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.TerminateInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ TerminateInstancesResult terminateInstances(TerminateInstancesRequest terminateInstancesRequest); /** ** Unassigns one or more IPv6 addresses IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes from a network interface. *
* * @param unassignIpv6AddressesRequest * @return Result of the UnassignIpv6Addresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UnassignIpv6Addresses * @see AWS API * Documentation */ UnassignIpv6AddressesResult unassignIpv6Addresses(UnassignIpv6AddressesRequest unassignIpv6AddressesRequest); /** ** Unassigns one or more secondary private IP addresses, or IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes from a network * interface. *
* * @param unassignPrivateIpAddressesRequest * Contains the parameters for UnassignPrivateIpAddresses. * @return Result of the UnassignPrivateIpAddresses operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UnassignPrivateIpAddresses * @see AWS * API Documentation */ UnassignPrivateIpAddressesResult unassignPrivateIpAddresses(UnassignPrivateIpAddressesRequest unassignPrivateIpAddressesRequest); /** ** Unassigns secondary private IPv4 addresses from a private NAT gateway. You cannot unassign your primary private * IP. For more information, see Edit * secondary IP address associations in the Amazon VPC User Guide. *
** While unassigning is in progress, you cannot assign/unassign additional IP addresses while the connections are * being drained. You are, however, allowed to delete the NAT gateway. *
** A private IP address will only be released at the end of MaxDrainDurationSeconds. The private IP addresses stay * associated and support the existing connections, but do not support any new connections (new connections are * distributed across the remaining assigned private IP address). After the existing connections drain out, the * private IP addresses are released. *
* * * * @param unassignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest * @return Result of the UnassignPrivateNatGatewayAddress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UnassignPrivateNatGatewayAddress * @see AWS API Documentation */ UnassignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult unassignPrivateNatGatewayAddress(UnassignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest unassignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest); /** ** Disables detailed monitoring for a running instance. For more information, see Monitoring your instances and * volumes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. *
* * @param unmonitorInstancesRequest * @return Result of the UnmonitorInstances operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UnmonitorInstances * @see AWS API * Documentation */ UnmonitorInstancesResult unmonitorInstances(UnmonitorInstancesRequest unmonitorInstancesRequest); /** ** Updates the description of an egress (outbound) security group rule. You can replace an existing description, or * add a description to a rule that did not have one previously. You can remove a description for a security group * rule by omitting the description parameter in the request. *
* * @param updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgressRequest * @return Result of the UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgress * @see AWS API Documentation */ UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgressResult updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgress( UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgressRequest updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsEgressRequest); /** ** Updates the description of an ingress (inbound) security group rule. You can replace an existing description, or * add a description to a rule that did not have one previously. You can remove a description for a security group * rule by omitting the description parameter in the request. *
* * @param updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngressRequest * @return Result of the UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngress operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngress * @see AWS API Documentation */ UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngressResult updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngress( UpdateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngressRequest updateSecurityGroupRuleDescriptionsIngressRequest); /** ** Stops advertising an address range that is provisioned as an address pool. *
** You can perform this operation at most once every 10 seconds, even if you specify different address ranges each * time. *
** It can take a few minutes before traffic to the specified addresses stops routing to Amazon Web Services because * of BGP propagation delays. *
* * @param withdrawByoipCidrRequest * @return Result of the WithdrawByoipCidr operation returned by the service. * @sample AmazonEC2.WithdrawByoipCidr * @see AWS API * Documentation */ WithdrawByoipCidrResult withdrawByoipCidr(WithdrawByoipCidrRequest withdrawByoipCidrRequest); /** * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the provided Amazon EC2 operation, without actually running * it. The returned DryRunResult object contains the information of whether the dry-run was successful. This method * will throw exception when the service response does not clearly indicate whether you have the permission. * * @param request * The request object for any Amazon EC2 operation supported with dry-run. * * @return A DryRunResult object that contains the information of whether the dry-run was successful. * * @throws AmazonClientException * If any internal errors are encountered inside the client while attempting to make the request or handle * the response. Or if the service response does not clearly indicate whether you have the permission. * @throws AmazonServiceException * If an error response is returned by Amazon EC2 indicating either a problem with the data in the request, * or a server side issue. */* Response metadata is only cached for a limited period of time, so if you need to access this extra diagnostic * information for an executed request, you should use this method to retrieve it as soon as possible after * executing a request. * * @param request * The originally executed request. * * @return The response metadata for the specified request, or null if none is available. */ ResponseMetadata getCachedResponseMetadata(AmazonWebServiceRequest request); AmazonEC2Waiters waiters(); }