Module Awso_globalaccelerator_lwtSource

Sourceval allow_custom_routing_traffic : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.AllowCustomRoutingTrafficRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_accelerator : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteAcceleratorRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_cross_account_attachment : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteCrossAccountAttachmentRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_custom_routing_accelerator : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteCustomRoutingAcceleratorRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_custom_routing_endpoint_group : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteCustomRoutingEndpointGroupRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_custom_routing_listener : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteCustomRoutingListenerRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_endpoint_group : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteEndpointGroupRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval delete_listener : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DeleteListenerRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval deny_custom_routing_traffic : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DenyCustomRoutingTrafficRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval remove_custom_routing_endpoints : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.RemoveCustomRoutingEndpointsRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
Sourceval remove_endpoints : ?endpoint_url:string -> ?cfg:Awso.Cfg.t -> Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.RemoveEndpointsRequest.t -> (unit, unit) Result.t Lwt.t
include module type of struct include Awso_globalaccelerator.Values end
Sourceval service : Awso.Service.t
Sourceval apiVersion : string
Sourceval endpointPrefix : string
Sourceval serviceFullName : string
Sourceval signatureVersion : string
Sourceval protocol : string
Sourceval globalEndpoint : string
Sourceval targetPrefix : string
Sourceval simple_to_json : ('a -> Awso__Botodata.value) -> 'a -> Yojson.Safe.t
Sourceval composed_to_json : ('a -> Awso__Botodata.value) -> 'a -> Yojson.Safe.t
Sourceval to_query : ('a -> Awso.Client.Query.value) -> 'a -> Awso.Client.Query.t
Sourceval structure_to_value_aux : ('a * 'b option) list -> f:(('a * 'b) list -> 'c) -> [> `Structure of 'c ]
Sourceval structure_to_value : ('a * 'b option) list -> [> `Structure of ('a * 'b) list ]
Sourceval structure_to_wrapped_value : wrapper:'a -> response:'a -> ('b * 'c option) list -> [> `Structure of ('a * [> `Structure of ('b * 'c) list ]) list ]

A complex type for a range of ports for a listener.

A complex type for an endpoint. Each endpoint group can include one or more endpoints, such as load balancers.

Override specific listener ports used to route traffic to endpoints that are part of an endpoint group. For example, you can create a port override in which the listener receives user traffic on ports 80 and 443, but your accelerator routes that traffic to ports 1080 and 1443, respectively, on the endpoints. For more information, see Overriding listener ports in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

An IP address/port combination.

For a custom routing accelerator, describes the port range and protocol for all endpoints (virtual private cloud subnets) in an endpoint group to accept client traffic on.

A complex type for an endpoint for a custom routing accelerator. Each endpoint group can include one or more endpoints, which are virtual private cloud (VPC) subnets.

A complex type for the set of IP addresses for an accelerator.

A resource is one of the following: the ARN for an Amazon Web Services resource that is supported by Global Accelerator to be added as an endpoint, or a CIDR range that specifies a bring your own IP (BYOIP) address pool.

A complex type that contains a Message and a Timestamp value for changes that you make in the status of an IP address range that you bring to Global Accelerator through bring your own IP address (BYOIP).

A complex type that contains a Timestamp value and Message for changes that you make to an accelerator in Global Accelerator. Messages stored here provide progress or error information when you update an accelerator from IPv4 to dual-stack, or from dual-stack to IPv4. Global Accelerator stores a maximum of ten event messages.

A complex type for endpoints. A resource must be valid and active when you add it as an endpoint.

A complex type that contains a Tag key and Tag value.

A complex type for an endpoint. Specifies information about the endpoint to remove from the endpoint group.

A complex type for a listener.

A complex type for the endpoint group. An Amazon Web Services Region can have only one endpoint group for a specific listener.

Returns the ports and associated IP addresses and ports of Amazon EC2 instances in your virtual private cloud (VPC) subnets. Custom routing is a port mapping protocol in Global Accelerator that statically associates port ranges with VPC subnets, which allows Global Accelerator to route to specific instances and ports within one or more subnets.

The port mappings for a specified endpoint IP address (destination).

A complex type for a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

A complex type for the endpoint group for a custom routing accelerator. An Amazon Web Services Region can have only one endpoint group for a specific listener.

Attributes of a custom routing accelerator.

An endpoint (Amazon Web Services resource) or an IP address range, in CIDR format, that is listed in a cross-account attachment. A cross-account resource can be added to an accelerator by specified principals, which are also listed in the attachment. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

A cross-account attachment in Global Accelerator. A cross-account attachment specifies the principals who have permission to work with resources in your account, which you also list in the attachment.

Information about an IP address range that is provisioned for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP address (BYOIP). The following describes each BYOIP State that your IP address range can be in. PENDING_PROVISIONING — You’ve submitted a request to provision an IP address range but it is not yet provisioned with Global Accelerator. READY — The address range is provisioned with Global Accelerator and can be advertised. PENDING_ADVERTISING — You’ve submitted a request for Global Accelerator to advertise an address range but it is not yet being advertised. ADVERTISING — The address range is being advertised by Global Accelerator. PENDING_WITHDRAWING — You’ve submitted a request to withdraw an address range from being advertised but it is still being advertised by Global Accelerator. PENDING_DEPROVISIONING — You’ve submitted a request to deprovision an address range from Global Accelerator but it is still provisioned. DEPROVISIONED — The address range is deprovisioned from Global Accelerator. FAILED_PROVISION — The request to provision the address range from Global Accelerator was not successful. Please make sure that you provide all of the correct information, and try again. If the request fails a second time, contact Amazon Web Services support. FAILED_ADVERTISING — The request for Global Accelerator to advertise the address range was not successful. Please make sure that you provide all of the correct information, and try again. If the request fails a second time, contact Amazon Web Services support. FAILED_WITHDRAW — The request to withdraw the address range from advertising by Global Accelerator was not successful. Please make sure that you provide all of the correct information, and try again. If the request fails a second time, contact Amazon Web Services support. FAILED_DEPROVISION — The request to deprovision the address range from Global Accelerator was not successful. Please make sure that you provide all of the correct information, and try again. If the request fails a second time, contact Amazon Web Services support.

An accelerator is a complex type that includes one or more listeners that process inbound connections and then direct traffic to one or more endpoint groups, each of which includes endpoints, such as load balancers.

For a custom routing accelerator, sets the port range and protocol for all endpoints (virtual private cloud subnets) in an endpoint group to accept client traffic on.

The list of endpoint objects. For custom routing, this is a list of virtual private cloud (VPC) subnet IDs.

You don't have access permission.

The CIDR that you specified was not found or is incorrect.

The CIDR that you specified is not valid for this action. For example, the state of the CIDR might be incorrect for this action.

There was an internal error for Global Accelerator.

An argument that you specified is invalid.

The port numbers that you specified are not valid numbers or are not unique for this accelerator.

Processing your request would cause you to exceed an Global Accelerator limit.

The listener that you specified doesn't exist.

The endpoint group that you specified doesn't exist.

The accelerator that you specified doesn't exist.

You can't use both of those options.

There's already a transaction in progress. Another transaction can't be processed.

Attributes of a custom routing accelerator.

No cross-account attachment was found.

Attributes of an accelerator.

Provides authorization for Amazon to bring a specific IP address range to a specific Amazon Web Services account using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

There isn't another item to return.

The endpoint that you specified doesn't exist.

The endpoint group that you specified already exists.

The endpoint that you specified doesn't exist.

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 propagation delays. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

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 propagation delays. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Update a listener.

Update a listener.

Update an endpoint group. A resource must be valid and active when you add it as an endpoint.

Update an endpoint group. A resource must be valid and active when you add it as an endpoint.

Update a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

Update a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

Update a custom routing accelerator.

Update a custom routing accelerator.

Sourcemodule UpdateCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesResponse = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.UpdateCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesResponse

Update the attributes for a custom routing accelerator.

Sourcemodule UpdateCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesRequest = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.UpdateCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesRequest

Update the attributes for a custom routing accelerator.

Update a cross-account attachment to add or remove principals or resources. When you update an attachment to remove a principal (account ID or accelerator) or a resource, Global Accelerator revokes the permission for specific resources. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Update a cross-account attachment to add or remove principals or resources. When you update an attachment to remove a principal (account ID or accelerator) or a resource, Global Accelerator revokes the permission for specific resources. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Update an accelerator to make changes, such as the following: Change the name of the accelerator. Disable the accelerator so that it no longer accepts or routes traffic, or so that you can delete it. Enable the accelerator, if it is disabled. Change the IP address type to dual-stack if it is IPv4, or change the IP address type to IPv4 if it's dual-stack. Be aware that static IP addresses remain assigned to your accelerator for as long as it exists, even if you disable the accelerator and it no longer accepts or routes traffic. However, when you delete the accelerator, you lose the static IP addresses that are assigned to it, so you can no longer route traffic by using them. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

Update an accelerator to make changes, such as the following: Change the name of the accelerator. Disable the accelerator so that it no longer accepts or routes traffic, or so that you can delete it. Enable the accelerator, if it is disabled. Change the IP address type to dual-stack if it is IPv4, or change the IP address type to IPv4 if it's dual-stack. Be aware that static IP addresses remain assigned to your accelerator for as long as it exists, even if you disable the accelerator and it no longer accepts or routes traffic. However, when you delete the accelerator, you lose the static IP addresses that are assigned to it, so you can no longer route traffic by using them. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

Update the attributes for an accelerator.

Update the attributes for an accelerator.

Remove tags from a Global Accelerator resource. When you specify a tag key, the action removes both that key and its associated value. The operation succeeds even if you attempt to remove tags from an accelerator that was already removed. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Remove tags from a Global Accelerator resource. When you specify a tag key, the action removes both that key and its associated value. The operation succeeds even if you attempt to remove tags from an accelerator that was already removed. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Add tags to an accelerator resource. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Add tags to an accelerator resource. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Remove endpoints from an endpoint group. The RemoveEndpoints API operation is the recommended option for removing endpoints. The alternative is to remove endpoints by updating an endpoint group by using the UpdateEndpointGroup API operation. There are two advantages to using AddEndpoints to remove endpoints instead: It's more convenient, because you only need to specify the endpoints that you want to remove. With the UpdateEndpointGroup API operation, you must specify all of the endpoints in the endpoint group except the ones that you want to remove from the group. It's faster, because Global Accelerator doesn't need to resolve any endpoints. With the UpdateEndpointGroup API operation, Global Accelerator must resolve all of the endpoints that remain in the group.

Remove endpoints from a custom routing accelerator.

Provisions an IP address range to 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. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Provisions an IP address range to 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. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

List all tags for an accelerator. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

List all tags for an accelerator. For more information, see Tagging in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

List the listeners for an accelerator.

List the listeners for an accelerator.

List the endpoint groups that are associated with a listener.

List the endpoint groups that are associated with a listener.

Provides a complete mapping from the public accelerator IP address and port to destination EC2 instance IP addresses and ports in the virtual public cloud (VPC) subnet endpoint for a custom routing accelerator. For each subnet endpoint that you add, Global Accelerator creates a new static port mapping for the accelerator. The port mappings don't change after Global Accelerator generates them, so you can retrieve and cache the full mapping on your servers. If you remove a subnet from your accelerator, Global Accelerator removes (reclaims) the port mappings. If you add a subnet to your accelerator, Global Accelerator creates new port mappings (the existing ones don't change). If you add or remove EC2 instances in your subnet, the port mappings don't change, because the mappings are created when you add the subnet to Global Accelerator. The mappings also include a flag for each destination denoting which destination IP addresses and ports are allowed or denied traffic.

Provides a complete mapping from the public accelerator IP address and port to destination EC2 instance IP addresses and ports in the virtual public cloud (VPC) subnet endpoint for a custom routing accelerator. For each subnet endpoint that you add, Global Accelerator creates a new static port mapping for the accelerator. The port mappings don't change after Global Accelerator generates them, so you can retrieve and cache the full mapping on your servers. If you remove a subnet from your accelerator, Global Accelerator removes (reclaims) the port mappings. If you add a subnet to your accelerator, Global Accelerator creates new port mappings (the existing ones don't change). If you add or remove EC2 instances in your subnet, the port mappings don't change, because the mappings are created when you add the subnet to Global Accelerator. The mappings also include a flag for each destination denoting which destination IP addresses and ports are allowed or denied traffic.

Sourcemodule ListCustomRoutingPortMappingsByDestinationResponse = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.ListCustomRoutingPortMappingsByDestinationResponse

List the port mappings for a specific EC2 instance (destination) in a VPC subnet endpoint. The response is the mappings for one destination IP address. This is useful when your subnet endpoint has mappings that span multiple custom routing accelerators in your account, or for scenarios where you only want to list the port mappings for a specific destination instance.

Sourcemodule ListCustomRoutingPortMappingsByDestinationRequest = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.ListCustomRoutingPortMappingsByDestinationRequest

List the port mappings for a specific EC2 instance (destination) in a VPC subnet endpoint. The response is the mappings for one destination IP address. This is useful when your subnet endpoint has mappings that span multiple custom routing accelerators in your account, or for scenarios where you only want to list the port mappings for a specific destination instance.

List the listeners for a custom routing accelerator.

List the listeners for a custom routing accelerator.

List the endpoint groups that are associated with a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

List the endpoint groups that are associated with a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

List the custom routing accelerators for an Amazon Web Services account.

List the custom routing accelerators for an Amazon Web Services account.

List the cross-account resources available to work with.

List the cross-account resources available to work with.

List the accounts that have cross-account resources. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

List the accounts that have cross-account resources. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

List the cross-account attachments that have been created in Global Accelerator.

List the cross-account attachments that have been created in Global Accelerator.

Lists the IP address ranges that were specified in calls to ProvisionByoipCidr, including the current state and a history of state changes.

Lists the IP address ranges that were specified in calls to ProvisionByoipCidr, including the current state and a history of state changes.

List the accelerators for an Amazon Web Services account.

List the accelerators for an Amazon Web Services account.

Describe a listener.

Describe a listener.

Describe an endpoint group.

Describe an endpoint group.

The description of a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

The description of a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

Sourcemodule DescribeCustomRoutingEndpointGroupResponse = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DescribeCustomRoutingEndpointGroupResponse

Describe an endpoint group for a custom routing accelerator.

Describe an endpoint group for a custom routing accelerator.

Describe a custom routing accelerator.

Describe a custom routing accelerator.

Sourcemodule DescribeCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesResponse = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DescribeCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesResponse

Describe the attributes of a custom routing accelerator.

Sourcemodule DescribeCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesRequest = Awso_globalaccelerator.Values.DescribeCustomRoutingAcceleratorAttributesRequest

Describe the attributes of a custom routing accelerator.

Gets configuration information about a cross-account attachment.

Gets configuration information about a cross-account attachment.

Describe an accelerator.

Describe an accelerator.

Describe the attributes of an accelerator.

Describe the attributes of an accelerator.

Releases the specified address range that you provisioned to 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 by using WithdrawByoipCidr and you must not have any accelerators that are using static IP addresses allocated from its address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Releases the specified address range that you provisioned to 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 by using WithdrawByoipCidr and you must not have any accelerators that are using static IP addresses allocated from its address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Specify the Amazon EC2 instance (destination) IP addresses and ports for a VPC subnet endpoint that cannot receive traffic for a custom routing accelerator. You can deny traffic to all destinations in the VPC endpoint, or deny traffic to a specified list of destination IP addresses and ports. Note that you cannot specify IP addresses or ports outside of the range that you configured for the endpoint group. After you make changes, you can verify that the updates are complete by checking the status of your accelerator: the status changes from IN_PROGRESS to DEPLOYED.

Delete a listener from an accelerator.

Delete an endpoint group from a listener.

Delete a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

Delete an endpoint group from a listener for a custom routing accelerator.

Delete a custom routing accelerator. Before you can delete an accelerator, you must disable it and remove all dependent resources (listeners and endpoint groups). To disable the accelerator, update the accelerator to set Enabled to false. When you create a custom routing accelerator, by default, Global Accelerator provides you with a set of two static IP addresses. The IP addresses are assigned to your accelerator for as long as it exists, even if you disable the accelerator and it no longer accepts or routes traffic. However, when you delete an accelerator, you lose the static IP addresses that are assigned to the accelerator, so you can no longer route traffic by using them. As a best practice, ensure that you have permissions in place to avoid inadvertently deleting accelerators. You can use IAM policies with Global Accelerator to limit the users who have permissions to delete an accelerator. For more information, see Identity and access management in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Delete a cross-account attachment. When you delete an attachment, Global Accelerator revokes the permission to use the resources in the attachment from all principals in the list of principals. Global Accelerator revokes the permission for specific resources. For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Delete an accelerator. Before you can delete an accelerator, you must disable it and remove all dependent resources (listeners and endpoint groups). To disable the accelerator, update the accelerator to set Enabled to false. When you create an accelerator, by default, Global Accelerator provides you with a set of two static IP addresses. Alternatively, you can bring your own IP address ranges to Global Accelerator and assign IP addresses from those ranges. The IP addresses are assigned to your accelerator for as long as it exists, even if you disable the accelerator and it no longer accepts or routes traffic. However, when you delete an accelerator, you lose the static IP addresses that are assigned to the accelerator, so you can no longer route traffic by using them. As a best practice, ensure that you have permissions in place to avoid inadvertently deleting accelerators. You can use IAM policies with Global Accelerator to limit the users who have permissions to delete an accelerator. For more information, see Identity and access management in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Create a listener to process inbound connections from clients to an accelerator. Connections arrive to assigned static IP addresses on a port, port range, or list of port ranges that you specify.

Create a listener to process inbound connections from clients to an accelerator. Connections arrive to assigned static IP addresses on a port, port range, or list of port ranges that you specify.

Create an endpoint group for the specified listener. An endpoint group is a collection of endpoints in one Amazon Web Services Region. A resource must be valid and active when you add it as an endpoint. For more information about endpoint types and requirements for endpoints that you can add to Global Accelerator, see Endpoints for standard accelerators in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Create an endpoint group for the specified listener. An endpoint group is a collection of endpoints in one Amazon Web Services Region. A resource must be valid and active when you add it as an endpoint. For more information about endpoint types and requirements for endpoints that you can add to Global Accelerator, see Endpoints for standard accelerators in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Create a listener to process inbound connections from clients to a custom routing accelerator. Connections arrive to assigned static IP addresses on the port range that you specify.

Create a listener to process inbound connections from clients to a custom routing accelerator. Connections arrive to assigned static IP addresses on the port range that you specify.

Create an endpoint group for the specified listener for a custom routing accelerator. An endpoint group is a collection of endpoints in one Amazon Web Services Region.

Create an endpoint group for the specified listener for a custom routing accelerator. An endpoint group is a collection of endpoints in one Amazon Web Services Region.

Create a custom routing accelerator. A custom routing accelerator directs traffic to one of possibly thousands of Amazon EC2 instance destinations running in a single or multiple virtual private clouds (VPC) subnet endpoints. Be aware that, by default, all destination EC2 instances in a VPC subnet endpoint cannot receive traffic. To enable all destinations to receive traffic, or to specify individual port mappings that can receive traffic, see the AllowCustomRoutingTraffic operation. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

Create a custom routing accelerator. A custom routing accelerator directs traffic to one of possibly thousands of Amazon EC2 instance destinations running in a single or multiple virtual private clouds (VPC) subnet endpoints. Be aware that, by default, all destination EC2 instances in a VPC subnet endpoint cannot receive traffic. To enable all destinations to receive traffic, or to specify individual port mappings that can receive traffic, see the AllowCustomRoutingTraffic operation. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

Create a cross-account attachment in Global Accelerator. You create a cross-account attachment to specify the principals who have permission to work with resources in accelerators in their own account. You specify, in the same attachment, the resources that are shared. A principal can be an Amazon Web Services account number or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for an accelerator. For account numbers that are listed as principals, to work with a resource listed in the attachment, you must sign in to an account specified as a principal. Then, you can work with resources that are listed, with any of your accelerators. If an accelerator ARN is listed in the cross-account attachment as a principal, anyone with permission to make updates to the accelerator can work with resources that are listed in the attachment. Specify each principal and resource separately. To specify two CIDR address pools, list them individually under Resources, and so on. For a command line operation, for example, you might use a statement like the following: "Resources": [{"Cidr": "169.254.60.0/24"},{"Cidr": "169.254.59.0/24"}] For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Create a cross-account attachment in Global Accelerator. You create a cross-account attachment to specify the principals who have permission to work with resources in accelerators in their own account. You specify, in the same attachment, the resources that are shared. A principal can be an Amazon Web Services account number or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for an accelerator. For account numbers that are listed as principals, to work with a resource listed in the attachment, you must sign in to an account specified as a principal. Then, you can work with resources that are listed, with any of your accelerators. If an accelerator ARN is listed in the cross-account attachment as a principal, anyone with permission to make updates to the accelerator can work with resources that are listed in the attachment. Specify each principal and resource separately. To specify two CIDR address pools, list them individually under Resources, and so on. For a command line operation, for example, you might use a statement like the following: "Resources": [{"Cidr": "169.254.60.0/24"},{"Cidr": "169.254.59.0/24"}] For more information, see Working with cross-account attachments and resources in Global Accelerator in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Create an accelerator. An accelerator includes one or more listeners that process inbound connections and direct traffic to one or more endpoint groups, each of which includes endpoints, such as Network Load Balancers. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

Create an accelerator. An accelerator includes one or more listeners that process inbound connections and direct traffic to one or more endpoint groups, each of which includes endpoints, such as Network Load Balancers. Global Accelerator is a global service that supports endpoints in multiple Amazon Web Services Regions but you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region to create, update, or otherwise work with accelerators. That is, for example, specify --region us-west-2 on Amazon Web Services CLI commands.

The accelerator that you specified has a listener associated with it. You must remove all dependent resources from an accelerator before you can delete it.

The listener that you specified has an endpoint group associated with it. You must remove all dependent resources from a listener before you can delete it.

Specify the Amazon EC2 instance (destination) IP addresses and ports for a VPC subnet endpoint that can receive traffic for a custom routing accelerator. You can allow traffic to all destinations in the subnet endpoint, or allow traffic to a specified list of destination IP addresses and ports in the subnet. Note that you cannot specify IP addresses or ports outside of the range that you configured for the endpoint group. After you make changes, you can verify that the updates are complete by checking the status of your accelerator: the status changes from IN_PROGRESS to DEPLOYED.

Advertises an IPv4 address range that is provisioned for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). It can take a few minutes before traffic to the specified addresses starts routing to Amazon Web Services because of propagation delays. To stop advertising the BYOIP address range, use WithdrawByoipCidr. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Advertises an IPv4 address range that is provisioned for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). It can take a few minutes before traffic to the specified addresses starts routing to Amazon Web Services because of propagation delays. To stop advertising the BYOIP address range, use WithdrawByoipCidr. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Add endpoints to an endpoint group. The AddEndpoints API operation is the recommended option for adding endpoints. The alternative options are to add endpoints when you create an endpoint group (with the CreateEndpointGroup API) or when you update an endpoint group (with the UpdateEndpointGroup API). There are two advantages to using AddEndpoints to add endpoints in Global Accelerator: It's faster, because Global Accelerator only has to resolve the new endpoints that you're adding, rather than resolving new and existing endpoints. It's more convenient, because you don't need to specify the current endpoints that are already in the endpoint group, in addition to the new endpoints that you want to add. For information about endpoint types and requirements for endpoints that you can add to Global Accelerator, see Endpoints for standard accelerators in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Add endpoints to an endpoint group. The AddEndpoints API operation is the recommended option for adding endpoints. The alternative options are to add endpoints when you create an endpoint group (with the CreateEndpointGroup API) or when you update an endpoint group (with the UpdateEndpointGroup API). There are two advantages to using AddEndpoints to add endpoints in Global Accelerator: It's faster, because Global Accelerator only has to resolve the new endpoints that you're adding, rather than resolving new and existing endpoints. It's more convenient, because you don't need to specify the current endpoints that are already in the endpoint group, in addition to the new endpoints that you want to add. For information about endpoint types and requirements for endpoints that you can add to Global Accelerator, see Endpoints for standard accelerators in the Global Accelerator Developer Guide.

Associate a virtual private cloud (VPC) subnet endpoint with your custom routing accelerator. The listener port range must be large enough to support the number of IP addresses that can be specified in your subnet. The number of ports required is: subnet size times the number of ports per destination EC2 instances. For example, a subnet defined as /24 requires a listener port range of at least 255 ports. Note: You must have enough remaining listener ports available to map to the subnet ports, or the call will fail with a LimitExceededException. By default, all destinations in a subnet in a custom routing accelerator cannot receive traffic. To enable all destinations to receive traffic, or to specify individual port mappings that can receive traffic, see the AllowCustomRoutingTraffic operation.

Associate a virtual private cloud (VPC) subnet endpoint with your custom routing accelerator. The listener port range must be large enough to support the number of IP addresses that can be specified in your subnet. The number of ports required is: subnet size times the number of ports per destination EC2 instances. For example, a subnet defined as /24 requires a listener port range of at least 255 ports. Note: You must have enough remaining listener ports available to map to the subnet ports, or the call will fail with a LimitExceededException. By default, all destinations in a subnet in a custom routing accelerator cannot receive traffic. To enable all destinations to receive traffic, or to specify individual port mappings that can receive traffic, see the AllowCustomRoutingTraffic operation.

The accelerator that you specified could not be disabled.