Awso_evs.ValuesSourceval structure_to_value_aux :
('a * 'b option) list ->
f:(('a * 'b) list -> 'c) ->
[> `Structure of 'c ]val structure_to_wrapped_value :
wrapper:'a ->
response:'a ->
('b * 'c option) list ->
[> `Structure of ('a * [> `Structure of ('b * 'c) list ]) list ]An Elastic IP address association with the elastic network interface in the VLAN subnet.
An elastic network interface (ENI) that connects hosts to the VLAN subnets. Amazon EVS provisions two identically configured ENIs in the VMkernel management subnet during host creation. One ENI is active, and the other is in standby mode for automatic switchover during a failure scenario.
A check on a connector to identify connectivity health.
Stores information about a field passed inside a request that resulted in an exception.
An object that contains error details for an entitlement.
A check on the environment to identify environment health and validate VMware VCF licensing compliance.
The license information that Amazon EVS requires to create an environment. Amazon EVS requires two license keys: a VCF solution key and a vSAN license key.
A managed secret that contains the credentials for installing vCenter Server, NSX, and SDDC Manager. During environment creation, the Amazon EVS control plane uses Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager to create, encrypt, validate, and store secrets. If you choose to delete your environment, Amazon EVS also deletes the secrets that are associated with your environment. Amazon EVS does not provide managed rotation of secrets. We recommend that you rotate secrets regularly to ensure that secrets are not long-lived.
An object that represents a Windows Server License entitlement for a virtual machine in an Amazon EVS environment.
A list of environments with summarized environment details.
An ESX host that runs on an Amazon EC2 bare metal instance. Four hosts are created in an Amazon EVS environment during environment creation. You can add hosts to an environment using the CreateEnvironmentHost operation. Amazon EVS supports 4-16 hosts per environment.
An object that represents a connector for an Amazon EVS environment. A connector establishes a vCenter connection using the credentials stored in Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager.
Information about ESX versions offered for each EC2 instance type.
Information about a VCF versions provided by Amazon EVS, including its status, default ESX version, and EC2 instance types.
The connectivity configuration for the environment. Amazon EVS requires that you specify two route server peer IDs. During environment creation, the route server endpoints peer with the NSX uplink VLAN for connectivity to the NSX overlay network.
The security groups that allow traffic between the Amazon EVS control plane and your VPC for Amazon EVS service access. If a security group is not specified, Amazon EVS uses the default security group in your account for service access.
The DNS hostnames that Amazon EVS uses to install VMware vCenter Server, NSX, SDDC Manager, and Cloud Builder. Each hostname must be unique, and resolve to a domain name that you've registered in your DNS service of choice. Hostnames cannot be changed. VMware VCF requires the deployment of two NSX Edge nodes, and three NSX Manager virtual machines.
An object that represents a host. You cannot use dedicatedHostId and placementGroupId together in the same HostInfoForCreateobject. This results in a ValidationException response.
An object that represents an initial VLAN subnet for the Amazon EVS environment. Amazon EVS creates initial VLAN subnets when you first create the environment. Amazon EVS creates the following 10 VLAN subnets: host management VLAN, vMotion VLAN, vSAN VLAN, VTEP VLAN, Edge VTEP VLAN, Management VM VLAN, HCX uplink VLAN, NSX uplink VLAN, expansion VLAN 1, expansion VLAN 2. For each Amazon EVS VLAN subnet, you must specify a non-overlapping CIDR block. Amazon EVS VLAN subnets have a minimum CIDR block size of /28 and a maximum size of /24.
A service resource associated with the request could not be found. The resource might not be specified correctly, or it may have a state of DELETED.
The operation could not be performed because the service is throttling requests. This exception is thrown when the service endpoint receives too many concurrent requests.
The input fails to satisfy the specified constraints. You will see this exception if invalid inputs are provided for any of the Amazon EVS environment operations, or if a list operation is performed on an environment resource that is still initializing.
TagPolicyException is deprecated. See ValidationException instead. The request doesn't comply with IAM tag policy. Correct your request and then retry it.
The number of one or more Amazon EVS resources exceeds the maximum allowed. For a list of Amazon EVS quotas, see Amazon EVS endpoints and quotas in the Amazon EVS User Guide. Delete some resources or request an increase in your service quota. To request an increase, see Amazon Web Services Service Quotas in the Amazon Web Services General Reference Guide.
TooManyTagsException is deprecated. See ServiceQuotaExceededException instead. A service resource associated with the request has more than 200 tags.
An internal server error occurred. Retry your request.
An object that represents an Amazon EVS environment.
The initial VLAN subnets for the environment. Amazon EVS VLAN subnets have a minimum CIDR block size of /28 and a maximum size of /24. Amazon EVS VLAN subnet CIDR blocks must not overlap with other subnets in the VPC.
Updates a connector for an Amazon EVS environment. You can update the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret ARN or the appliance FQDN to reconfigure the connector metadata. You cannot update both the secret and the FQDN in the same request.
Updates a connector for an Amazon EVS environment. You can update the Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret ARN or the appliance FQDN to reconfigure the connector metadata. You cannot update both the secret and the FQDN in the same request.
Deletes specified tags from an Amazon EVS resource.
Deletes specified tags from an Amazon EVS resource.
Associates the specified tags to an Amazon EVS resource with the specified resourceArn. If existing tags on a resource are not specified in the request parameters, they aren't changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags associated with that resource are also deleted. Tags that you create for Amazon EVS resources don't propagate to any other resources associated with the environment. For example, if you tag an environment with this operation, that tag doesn't automatically propagate to the VLAN subnets and hosts associated with the environment.
Associates the specified tags to an Amazon EVS resource with the specified resourceArn. If existing tags on a resource are not specified in the request parameters, they aren't changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags associated with that resource are also deleted. Tags that you create for Amazon EVS resources don't propagate to any other resources associated with the environment. For example, if you tag an environment with this operation, that tag doesn't automatically propagate to the VLAN subnets and hosts associated with the environment.
Lists the Windows Server License entitlements for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment. Returns existing entitlements for virtual machines associated with the specified environment and connector.
Lists the Windows Server License entitlements for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment. Returns existing entitlements for virtual machines associated with the specified environment and connector.
Lists the tags for an Amazon EVS resource.
Lists the tags for an Amazon EVS resource.
Lists the Amazon EVS environments in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.
Lists the Amazon EVS environments in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.
Lists environment VLANs that are associated with the specified environment.
Lists environment VLANs that are associated with the specified environment.
List the hosts within an environment.
List the hosts within an environment.
Lists the connectors within an environment. Returns the status of each connector and its applicable checks, among other connector details.
Lists the connectors within an environment. Returns the status of each connector and its applicable checks, among other connector details.
Returns information about VCF versions, ESX versions and EC2 instance types provided by Amazon EVS. For each VCF version, the response also includes the default ESX version and provided EC2 instance types.
Returns information about VCF versions, ESX versions and EC2 instance types provided by Amazon EVS. For each VCF version, the response also includes the default ESX version and provided EC2 instance types.
Returns a description of the specified environment.
Returns a description of the specified environment.
Disassociates an Elastic IP address from a public HCX VLAN. This operation is only allowed for public HCX VLANs at this time.
Disassociates an Elastic IP address from a public HCX VLAN. This operation is only allowed for public HCX VLANs at this time.
Deletes an Amazon EVS environment. Amazon EVS environments will only be enabled for deletion once the hosts are deleted. You can delete hosts using the DeleteEnvironmentHost action. Environment deletion also deletes the associated Amazon EVS VLAN subnets and Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secrets that Amazon EVS created. Amazon Web Services resources that you create are not deleted. These resources may continue to incur costs.
Deletes an Amazon EVS environment. Amazon EVS environments will only be enabled for deletion once the hosts are deleted. You can delete hosts using the DeleteEnvironmentHost action. Environment deletion also deletes the associated Amazon EVS VLAN subnets and Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secrets that Amazon EVS created. Amazon Web Services resources that you create are not deleted. These resources may continue to incur costs.
Deletes a host from an Amazon EVS environment. Before deleting a host, you must unassign and decommission the host from within the SDDC Manager user interface. Not doing so could impact the availability of your virtual machines or result in data loss.
Deletes a host from an Amazon EVS environment. Before deleting a host, you must unassign and decommission the host from within the SDDC Manager user interface. Not doing so could impact the availability of your virtual machines or result in data loss.
Deletes a connector from an Amazon EVS environment. Before deleting a connector, you must remove all entitlements that are associated with the same vCenter.
Deletes a connector from an Amazon EVS environment. Before deleting a connector, you must remove all entitlements that are associated with the same vCenter.
Deletes a Windows Server License entitlement for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment. Deleting an entitlement stops usage tracking for the specified virtual machines.
Deletes a Windows Server License entitlement for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment. Deleting an entitlement stops usage tracking for the specified virtual machines.
Creates an Amazon EVS environment that runs VCF software, such as SDDC Manager, NSX Manager, and vCenter Server. During environment creation, Amazon EVS performs validations on DNS settings, provisions VLAN subnets and hosts, and deploys the supplied version of VCF. It can take several hours to create an environment. After the deployment completes, you can configure VCF in the vSphere user interface according to your needs. When creating a new environment, the default ESX version for the selected VCF version will be used, you cannot choose a specific ESX version in CreateEnvironment action. When a host has been added with a specific ESX version, it can only be upgraded using vCenter Lifecycle Manager. You cannot use the dedicatedHostId and placementGroupId parameters together in the same CreateEnvironment action. This results in a ValidationException response.
Creates an Amazon EVS environment that runs VCF software, such as SDDC Manager, NSX Manager, and vCenter Server. During environment creation, Amazon EVS performs validations on DNS settings, provisions VLAN subnets and hosts, and deploys the supplied version of VCF. It can take several hours to create an environment. After the deployment completes, you can configure VCF in the vSphere user interface according to your needs. When creating a new environment, the default ESX version for the selected VCF version will be used, you cannot choose a specific ESX version in CreateEnvironment action. When a host has been added with a specific ESX version, it can only be upgraded using vCenter Lifecycle Manager. You cannot use the dedicatedHostId and placementGroupId parameters together in the same CreateEnvironment action. This results in a ValidationException response.
Creates an ESX host and adds it to an Amazon EVS environment. Amazon EVS supports 4-16 hosts per environment. This action can only be used after the Amazon EVS environment is deployed. You can use the dedicatedHostId parameter to specify an Amazon EC2 Dedicated Host for ESX host creation. You can use the placementGroupId parameter to specify a cluster or partition placement group to launch EC2 instances into. If you don't specify an ESX version when adding hosts using CreateEnvironmentHost action, Amazon EVS automatically uses the default ESX version associated with your environment's VCF version. To find the default ESX version for a particular VCF version, use the GetVersions action. You cannot use the dedicatedHostId and placementGroupId parameters together in the same CreateEnvironmentHost action. This results in a ValidationException response.
Creates an ESX host and adds it to an Amazon EVS environment. Amazon EVS supports 4-16 hosts per environment. This action can only be used after the Amazon EVS environment is deployed. You can use the dedicatedHostId parameter to specify an Amazon EC2 Dedicated Host for ESX host creation. You can use the placementGroupId parameter to specify a cluster or partition placement group to launch EC2 instances into. If you don't specify an ESX version when adding hosts using CreateEnvironmentHost action, Amazon EVS automatically uses the default ESX version associated with your environment's VCF version. To find the default ESX version for a particular VCF version, use the GetVersions action. You cannot use the dedicatedHostId and placementGroupId parameters together in the same CreateEnvironmentHost action. This results in a ValidationException response.
Creates a connector for an Amazon EVS environment. A connector establishes a connection to a VCF appliance, such as vCenter, using a fully qualified domain name and an Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret that stores the appliance credentials.
Creates a connector for an Amazon EVS environment. A connector establishes a connection to a VCF appliance, such as vCenter, using a fully qualified domain name and an Amazon Web Services Secrets Manager secret that stores the appliance credentials.
Creates a Windows Server License entitlement for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment using the provided vCenter Server connector. This is an asynchronous operation. Amazon EVS validates the specified virtual machines before starting usage tracking.
Creates a Windows Server License entitlement for virtual machines in an Amazon EVS environment using the provided vCenter Server connector. This is an asynchronous operation. Amazon EVS validates the specified virtual machines before starting usage tracking.
Associates an Elastic IP address with a public HCX VLAN. This operation is only allowed for public HCX VLANs at this time.
Associates an Elastic IP address with a public HCX VLAN. This operation is only allowed for public HCX VLANs at this time.