Awso_ec2.Values_6SourceDescribes one or more of your security group rules.
Describes one or more of your security group rules.
Describes the VPCs on the other side of a VPC peering or Transit Gateway connection that are referencing the security groups you've specified in this request.
Describes the VPCs on the other side of a VPC peering or Transit Gateway connection that are referencing the security groups you've specified in this request.
Describes one or more of your secondary subnets.
Describes one or more of your secondary subnets.
Describes one or more secondary networks.
Describes one or more secondary networks.
Describes one or more of your secondary interfaces.
Describes one or more of your secondary interfaces.
Contains the output of DescribeScheduledInstances.
Contains the parameters for DescribeScheduledInstances.
Contains the output of DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability.
Contains the parameters for DescribeScheduledInstanceAvailability.
Contains the output of DescribeRouteTables.
Describes your route tables. The default is to describe all your route tables. Alternatively, you can specify specific route table IDs or filter the results to include only the route tables that match specific criteria. 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.
Describes one or more route servers. Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature, VPC Route Server dynamically updates VPC and internet gateway route tables with your preferred IPv4 or IPv6 routes to achieve routing fault tolerance for those workloads. This enables you to automatically reroute traffic within a VPC, which increases the manageability of VPC routing and interoperability with third-party workloads. Route server supports the follow route table types: VPC route tables not associated with subnets Subnet route tables Internet gateway route tables Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use Transit Gateway Connect. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes one or more route servers. Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature, VPC Route Server dynamically updates VPC and internet gateway route tables with your preferred IPv4 or IPv6 routes to achieve routing fault tolerance for those workloads. This enables you to automatically reroute traffic within a VPC, which increases the manageability of VPC routing and interoperability with third-party workloads. Route server supports the follow route table types: VPC route tables not associated with subnets Subnet route tables Internet gateway route tables Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use Transit Gateway Connect. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes one or more route server peers. A route server peer is a session between a route server endpoint and the device deployed in Amazon Web Services (such as a firewall appliance or other network security function running on an EC2 instance). The device must meet these requirements: Have an elastic network interface in the VPC Support BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) Can initiate BGP sessions For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes one or more route server peers. A route server peer is a session between a route server endpoint and the device deployed in Amazon Web Services (such as a firewall appliance or other network security function running on an EC2 instance). The device must meet these requirements: Have an elastic network interface in the VPC Support BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) Can initiate BGP sessions For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes one or more route server endpoints. A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) connections between your route server and your BGP peers. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes one or more route server endpoints. A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) connections between your route server and your BGP peers. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Contains the output for DescribeReservedInstances.
Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstances.
Contains the output of DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings.
Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings.
Contains the output of DescribeReservedInstancesModifications.
Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesModifications.
Contains the output of DescribeReservedInstancesListings.
Contains the parameters for DescribeReservedInstancesListings.
Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon EC2 service endpoints. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Specify which Amazon Web Services Regions your account can use in the Amazon Web Services Account Management Reference Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon EC2 service endpoints. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Specify which Amazon Web Services Regions your account can use in the Amazon Web Services Account Management Reference Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the specified IPv4 address pools.
Describes the specified IPv4 address pools.
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 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 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.
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.
Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. To describe a specific placement group that is shared with your account, you must specify the ID of the placement group using the GroupId parameter. Specifying the name of a shared placement group using the GroupNames parameter will result in an error. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. To describe a specific placement group that is shared with your account, you must specify the ID of the placement group using the GroupId parameter. Specifying the name of a shared placement group using the GroupNames parameter will result in an error. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the Outposts link aggregation groups (LAGs). LAGs are only available for second-generation Outposts racks at this time.
Describes the Outposts link aggregation groups (LAGs). LAGs are only available for second-generation Outposts racks at this time.
Describes the specified network interfaces or all your network interfaces. If you have a large number of network interfaces, the operation fails unless you use pagination or one of the following filters: group-id, mac-address, private-dns-name, private-ip-address, subnet-id, or vpc-id. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts.
Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfaces.
Contains the output for DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissions.
Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfacePermissions.
Contains the output of DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute.
Contains the parameters for DescribeNetworkInterfaceAttribute.
Describes one or more of your paths.
Describes one or more of your paths.
Describes one or more of your network insights analyses.
Describes one or more of your network insights analyses.
Describes the specified Network Access Scopes.
Describes the specified Network Access Scopes.
Describes the specified Network Access Scope analyses.
Describes the specified Network Access Scope analyses.
Describes your network ACLs. The default is to describe all your network ACLs. Alternatively, you can specify specific network ACL IDs or filter the results to include only the network ACLs that match specific criteria. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes your network ACLs. The default is to describe all your network ACLs. Alternatively, you can specify specific network ACL IDs or filter the results to include only the network ACLs that match specific criteria. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes your NAT gateways. The default is to describe all your NAT gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific NAT gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the NAT gateways that match specific criteria.
Describes your NAT gateways. The default is to describe all your NAT gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific NAT gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the NAT gateways that match specific criteria.
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.
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.
Describes your managed prefix lists and any Amazon Web Services-managed prefix lists.
Describes your managed prefix lists and any Amazon Web Services-managed prefix lists.
Describes a System Integrity Protection (SIP) modification task or volume ownership delegation task for an Amazon EC2 Mac instance. For more information, see Configure SIP for Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes a System Integrity Protection (SIP) modification task or volume ownership delegation task for an Amazon EC2 Mac instance. For more information, see Configure SIP for Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the specified EC2 Mac Dedicated Host or all of your EC2 Mac Dedicated Hosts.
Describes the specified EC2 Mac Dedicated Host or all of your EC2 Mac Dedicated Hosts.
Describes the lock status for a snapshot.
Describes the lock status for a snapshot.
Describes one or more local gateways. By default, all local gateways are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results.
Describes one or more local gateways. By default, all local gateways are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results.
Describes the specified local gateway virtual interfaces.
Describes the specified local gateway virtual interfaces.
Describes the specified local gateway virtual interface groups.
Describes the specified local gateway virtual interface groups.
Describes one or more local gateway route tables. By default, all local gateway route tables are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results.
Describes one or more local gateway route tables. By default, all local gateway route tables are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results.
Describes the specified associations between VPCs and local gateway route tables.
Describes the specified associations between VPCs and local gateway route tables.
Describes the associations between virtual interface groups and local gateway route tables.
Describes the associations between virtual interface groups and local gateway route tables.
Describes one or more launch templates.
Describes one or more launch templates.
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.
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.
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 EC2 User Guide.
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 EC2 User Guide.
Describes your IPv6 address pools.
Describes your IPv6 address pools.
Get information about your IPAM pools. For more information, see What is IPAM? in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
Get information about your IPAM pools. For more information, see What is IPAM? in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
Get information about your IPAM scopes.
Get information about your IPAM scopes.
Describes resource discovery association with an Amazon VPC IPAM. An associated resource discovery is a resource discovery that has been associated with an IPAM..
Describes resource discovery association with an Amazon VPC IPAM. An associated resource discovery is a resource discovery that has been associated with an IPAM..
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.
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.
Describes one or more IPAM prefix list resolvers. Use this operation to view the configuration, status, and properties of your resolvers.
Describes one or more IPAM prefix list resolvers. Use this operation to view the configuration, status, and properties of your resolvers.
Describes one or more IPAM prefix list resolver Targets. Use this operation to view the configuration and status of resolver targets.
Describes one or more IPAM prefix list resolver Targets. Use this operation to view the configuration and status of resolver targets.
Get information about your IPAM pools.
Get information about your IPAM pools.
Describes one or more IPAM policies. An IPAM policy is a set of rules that define how public IPv4 addresses from IPAM pools are allocated to Amazon Web Services resources. Each rule maps an Amazon Web Services service to IPAM pools that the service will use to get IP addresses. A single policy can have multiple rules and be applied to multiple Amazon Web Services Regions. If the IPAM pool run out of addresses then the services fallback to Amazon-provided IP addresses. A policy can be applied to an individual Amazon Web Services account or an entity within Amazon Web Services Organizations.
Describes one or more IPAM policies. An IPAM policy is a set of rules that define how public IPv4 addresses from IPAM pools are allocated to Amazon Web Services resources. Each rule maps an Amazon Web Services service to IPAM pools that the service will use to get IP addresses. A single policy can have multiple rules and be applied to multiple Amazon Web Services Regions. If the IPAM pool run out of addresses then the services fallback to Amazon-provided IP addresses. A policy can be applied to an individual Amazon Web Services account or an entity within Amazon Web Services Organizations.
Describe verification tokens. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
Describe verification tokens. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
Describes your Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs), their provisioning statuses, and the BYOIP CIDRs with which they are associated. For more information, see Tutorial: Bring your ASN to IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM guide.
Describes your Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs), their provisioning statuses, and the BYOIP CIDRs with which they are associated. For more information, see Tutorial: Bring your ASN to IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM guide.
Describes your internet gateways. The default is to describe all your internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the internet gateways that match specific criteria.
Describes your internet gateways. The default is to describe all your internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the internet gateways that match specific criteria.
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. The response includes SQL license exemption status information for instances registered with the SQL LE service, providing visibility into license exemption configuration and status. 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. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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. The response includes SQL license exemption status information for instances registered with the SQL LE service, providing visibility into license exemption configuration and status. 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. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the specified instance types. By default, all instance types for the current Region are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results. To include instance types that are not supported in the current Region, set IncludeUnsupportedInRegion to true.
Describes the specified instance types. By default, all instance types for the current Region are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results. To include instance types that are not supported in the current Region, set IncludeUnsupportedInRegion to true.
Lists the instance types that are offered for the specified location. If no location is specified, the default is to list the instance types that are offered in the current Region.
Lists the instance types that are offered for the specified location. If no location is specified, the default is to list the instance types that are offered in the current Region.
Describes a tree-based hierarchy that represents the physical host placement of your EC2 instances within an Availability Zone or Local Zone. You can use this information to determine the relative proximity of your EC2 instances within the Amazon Web Services network to support your tightly coupled workloads. Instance topology is supported for specific instance types only. For more information, see Prerequisites for Amazon EC2 instance topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model due to the distributed nature of the system supporting it. As a result, when you call the DescribeInstanceTopology API command immediately after launching instances, the response might return a null value for capacityBlockId because the data might not have fully propagated across all subsystems. For more information, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. For more information, see Amazon EC2 topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes a tree-based hierarchy that represents the physical host placement of your EC2 instances within an Availability Zone or Local Zone. You can use this information to determine the relative proximity of your EC2 instances within the Amazon Web Services network to support your tightly coupled workloads. Instance topology is supported for specific instance types only. For more information, see Prerequisites for Amazon EC2 instance topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model due to the distributed nature of the system supporting it. As a result, when you call the DescribeInstanceTopology API command immediately after launching instances, the response might return a null value for capacityBlockId because the data might not have fully propagated across all subsystems. For more information, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. For more information, see Amazon EC2 topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
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. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the SQL Server High Availability states for Amazon EC2 instances that are enabled for Amazon EC2 High Availability for SQL Server monitoring.
Describes the SQL Server High Availability states for Amazon EC2 instances that are enabled for Amazon EC2 High Availability for SQL Server monitoring.
Describes the historical SQL Server High Availability states for Amazon EC2 instances that are enabled for Amazon EC2 High Availability for SQL Server monitoring.
Describes the historical SQL Server High Availability states for Amazon EC2 instances that are enabled for Amazon EC2 High Availability for SQL Server monitoring.
Describes the AMI that was used to launch an instance, even if the AMI is deprecated, deregistered, made private (no longer public or shared with your account), or not allowed. 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. If you specify an instance ID that is not valid, an instance that doesn't exist, or an instance that you do not own, an error (InvalidInstanceID.NotFound) is returned. Recently terminated instances might appear in the returned results. This interval is usually less than one hour. In the rare case where an Availability Zone is experiencing a service disruption and you specify instance IDs that are in the affected Availability Zone, or do not specify any instance IDs at all, the call fails. If you specify only instance IDs that are in an unaffected Availability Zone, the call works normally. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the AMI that was used to launch an instance, even if the AMI is deprecated, deregistered, made private (no longer public or shared with your account), or not allowed. 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. If you specify an instance ID that is not valid, an instance that doesn't exist, or an instance that you do not own, an error (InvalidInstanceID.NotFound) is returned. Recently terminated instances might appear in the returned results. This interval is usually less than one hour. In the rare case where an Availability Zone is experiencing a service disruption and you specify instance IDs that are in the affected Availability Zone, or do not specify any instance IDs at all, the call fails. If you specify only instance IDs that are in an unaffected Availability Zone, the call works normally. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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.
Describe instance event windows by InstanceEventWindow.
Describes the tag keys that are registered to appear in scheduled event notifications for resources in the current Region.
Describes the tag keys that are registered to appear in scheduled event notifications for resources in the current Region.
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.
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.
Describes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints or all EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints.
Describes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints or all EC2 Instance Connect Endpoints.
Describes the specified attribute of the specified instance. You can specify only one attribute at a time. Available attributes include SQL license exemption configuration for instances registered with the SQL LE service.
Describes your import snapshot tasks.
Describes your import snapshot tasks.
Displays details about an import virtual machine or import snapshot tasks that are already created.
Displays details about an import virtual machine or import snapshot tasks that are already created.
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. When Allowed AMIs is set to enabled, only allowed images are returned in the results, with the imageAllowed field set to true for each image. In audit-mode, the imageAllowed field is set to true for images that meet the account's Allowed AMIs criteria, and false for images that don't meet the criteria. For more information, see Allowed AMIs. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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. When Allowed AMIs is set to enabled, only allowed images are returned in the results, with the imageAllowed field set to true for each image. In audit-mode, the imageAllowed field is set to true for images that meet the account's Allowed AMIs criteria, and false for images that don't meet the criteria. For more information, see Allowed AMIs. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model. This means that the result of an API command you run that creates or modifies resources might not be immediately available to all subsequent commands you run. For guidance on how to manage eventual consistency, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the configuration and status of image usage reports, filtered by report IDs or image IDs. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the configuration and status of image usage reports, filtered by report IDs or image IDs. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the entries in image usage reports, showing how your images are used across other Amazon Web Services accounts. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the entries in image usage reports, showing how your images are used across other Amazon Web Services accounts. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes your Amazon Web Services resources that are referencing the specified images. For more information, see Identify your resources referencing specified AMIs in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes your Amazon Web Services resources that are referencing the specified images. For more information, see Identify your resources referencing specified AMIs in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Contains the parameters for DescribeImageAttribute.
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.
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.
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 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 your IAM instance profile associations.
Describes your IAM instance profile associations.
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 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 reservations that are associated with Dedicated Hosts in your account.
Describes reservations that are associated with Dedicated Hosts in your account.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Describes the specified attribute of the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI).
Describes the specified attribute of the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI).
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.
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.
Describes the specified EC2 Fleet or all of your EC2 Fleets. If a fleet is of type instant, you must specify the fleet ID in the request, otherwise the fleet does not appear in the response. For more information, see Describe your EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the specified EC2 Fleet or all of your EC2 Fleets. If a fleet is of type instant, you must specify the fleet ID in the request, otherwise the fleet does not appear in the response. For more information, see Describe your EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the running instances for the specified EC2 Fleet. Currently, DescribeFleetInstances does not support fleets of type instant. Instead, use DescribeFleets, specifying the instant fleet ID in the request. For more information, see Describe your EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes the running instances for the specified EC2 Fleet. Currently, DescribeFleetInstances does not support fleets of type instant. Instead, use DescribeFleets, specifying the instant fleet ID in the request. For more information, see Describe your EC2 Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
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.
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.
Describes the state of fast snapshot restores for your snapshots.
Describes the state of fast snapshot restores for your snapshots.
Describe details for Windows AMIs that are configured for Windows fast launch.
Describe details for Windows AMIs that are configured for Windows fast launch.
Describes the specified export instance tasks or all of your export instance tasks.
Describes the specified export instance tasks or all of your export instance tasks.
Describes the specified export image tasks or all of your export image tasks.
Describes the specified export image tasks or all of your export image tasks.
Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances.
Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances.
Describes your egress-only internet gateways. The default is to describe all your egress-only internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific egress-only internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the egress-only internet gateways that match specific criteria.
Describes your egress-only internet gateways. The default is to describe all your egress-only internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific egress-only internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the egress-only internet gateways that match specific criteria.
Describes your DHCP option sets. The default is to describe all your DHCP option sets. Alternatively, you can specify specific DHCP option set IDs or filter the results to include only the DHCP option sets that match specific criteria. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes your DHCP option sets. The default is to describe all your DHCP option sets. Alternatively, you can specify specific DHCP option set IDs or filter the results to include only the DHCP option sets that match specific criteria. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Describes the metadata of an account status report, including the status of the report. To view the full report, download it from the Amazon S3 bucket where it was saved. Reports are accessible only when they have the complete status. Reports with other statuses (running, cancelled, or error) are not available in the S3 bucket. For more information about downloading objects from an S3 bucket, see Downloading objects in the Amazon Simple Storage Service User Guide. For more information, see Generating the account status report for declarative policies in the Amazon Web Services Organizations User Guide.
Describes the metadata of an account status report, including the status of the report. To view the full report, download it from the Amazon S3 bucket where it was saved. Reports are accessible only when they have the complete status. Reports with other statuses (running, cancelled, or error) are not available in the S3 bucket. For more information about downloading objects from an S3 bucket, see Downloading objects in the Amazon Simple Storage Service User Guide. For more information, see Generating the account status report for declarative policies in the Amazon Web Services Organizations User Guide.
Contains the output of DescribeCustomerGateways.
Contains the parameters for DescribeCustomerGateways.
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.
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.
Describes the specified customer-owned address pools or all of your customer-owned address pools.
Describes the specified customer-owned address pools or all of your customer-owned address pools.
Describes the target networks associated with the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes the target networks associated with the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes the routes for the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes the routes for the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes one or more Client VPN endpoints in the account.
Describes one or more Client VPN endpoints in the account.
Describes active client connections and connections that have been terminated within the last 60 minutes for the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes active client connections and connections that have been terminated within the last 60 minutes for the specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes the authorization rules for a specified Client VPN endpoint.
Describes the authorization rules for a specified Client VPN endpoint.
This action is deprecated. Describes 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.
This action is deprecated. Describes 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.
Describes one or more of your carrier gateways.
Describes one or more of your carrier gateways.
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.
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.
Describes a tree-based hierarchy that represents the physical host placement of your pending or active Capacity Reservations within an Availability Zone or Local Zone. You can use this information to determine the relative proximity of your capacity within the Amazon Web Services network before it is launched and use this information to allocate capacity together to support your tightly coupled workloads. Capacity Reservation topology is supported for specific instance types only. For more information, see Prerequisites for Amazon EC2 instance topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model due to the distributed nature of the system supporting it. As a result, when you call the DescribeCapacityReservationTopology API command immediately after launching instances, the response might return a null value for capacityBlockId because the data might not have fully propagated across all subsystems. For more information, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. For more information, see Amazon EC2 topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes a tree-based hierarchy that represents the physical host placement of your pending or active Capacity Reservations within an Availability Zone or Local Zone. You can use this information to determine the relative proximity of your capacity within the Amazon Web Services network before it is launched and use this information to allocate capacity together to support your tightly coupled workloads. Capacity Reservation topology is supported for specific instance types only. For more information, see Prerequisites for Amazon EC2 instance topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The Amazon EC2 API follows an eventual consistency model due to the distributed nature of the system supporting it. As a result, when you call the DescribeCapacityReservationTopology API command immediately after launching instances, the response might return a null value for capacityBlockId because the data might not have fully propagated across all subsystems. For more information, see Eventual consistency in the Amazon EC2 API in the Amazon EC2 Developer Guide. For more information, see Amazon EC2 topology in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Describes one or more Capacity Reservation Fleets.
Describes one or more Capacity Reservation Fleets.
Describes a request to assign the billing of the unused capacity of a Capacity Reservation. For more information, see Billing assignment for shared Amazon EC2 Capacity Reservations.
Describes a request to assign the billing of the unused capacity of a Capacity Reservation. For more information, see Billing assignment for shared Amazon EC2 Capacity Reservations.
Describes one or more Capacity Manager data export configurations. Returns information about export settings, delivery status, and recent export activity.
Describes one or more Capacity Manager data export configurations. Returns information about export settings, delivery status, and recent export activity.
Describes details about Capacity Blocks in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using.
Describes details about Capacity Blocks in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using.
Describes the availability of capacity for the specified Capacity blocks, or all of your Capacity Blocks.
Describes the availability of capacity for the specified Capacity blocks, or all of your Capacity Blocks.
Describes Capacity Block offerings available for purchase in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using. With Capacity Blocks, you can purchase a specific GPU instance type or EC2 UltraServer for a period of time. To search for an available Capacity Block offering, you specify a reservation duration and instance count.
Describes Capacity Block offerings available for purchase in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using. With Capacity Blocks, you can purchase a specific GPU instance type or EC2 UltraServer for a period of time. To search for an available Capacity Block offering, you specify a reservation duration and instance count.
Describes Capacity Block extension offerings available for purchase in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using.
Describes Capacity Block extension offerings available for purchase in the Amazon Web Services Region that you're currently using.
Describes the events for the specified Capacity Block extension during the specified time.
Describes the events for the specified Capacity Block extension during the specified time.
Describes the IP address ranges that were provisioned for use with Amazon Web Services resources through through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP).
Describes the IP address ranges that were provisioned for use with Amazon Web Services resources through through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP).
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. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the current Infrastructure Performance metric subscriptions.
Describes the current Infrastructure Performance metric subscriptions.
Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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 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 specified Elastic IP addresses or all of your Elastic IP addresses.
Describes the specified Elastic IP addresses or all of your Elastic IP addresses.
Describes the attributes of the specified Elastic IP addresses. For requirements, see Using reverse DNS for email applications.
Describes the attributes of the specified Elastic IP addresses. For requirements, see Using reverse DNS for email applications.
Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC 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 14 days after the transfers have been accepted.
Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC 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 14 days after the transfers have been accepted.
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. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
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. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
Deregisters the specified sources (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group.
Deregisters the specified sources (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group.
Deregisters the specified members (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group.
Deregisters the specified members (network interfaces) from the transit gateway multicast group.
Deregisters tag keys to prevent tags that have the specified tag keys from being included in scheduled event notifications for resources in the Region.
Deregisters tag keys to prevent tags that have the specified tag keys from being included in scheduled event notifications for resources in the Region.
Deregisters the specified AMI. A deregistered AMI can't be used to launch new instances. If a deregistered EBS-backed AMI matches a Recycle Bin retention rule, it moves to the Recycle Bin for the specified retention period. It can be restored before its retention period expires, after which it is permanently deleted. If the deregistered AMI doesn't match a retention rule, it is permanently deleted immediately. For more information, see Recover deleted Amazon EBS snapshots and EBS-backed AMIs with Recycle Bin in the Amazon EBS User Guide. When deregistering an EBS-backed AMI, you can optionally delete its associated snapshots at the same time. However, if a snapshot is associated with multiple AMIs, it won't be deleted even if specified for deletion, although the AMI will still be deregistered. Deregistering an AMI does not delete the following: Instances already launched from the AMI. You'll continue to incur usage costs for the instances until you terminate them. For EBS-backed AMIs: Snapshots that are associated with multiple AMIs. You'll continue to incur snapshot storage costs. For instance store-backed AMIs: The files uploaded to Amazon S3 during AMI creation. You'll continue to incur S3 storage costs. For more information, see Deregister an Amazon EC2 AMI in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Contains the parameters for DeregisterImage.
Deprovision a CIDR from a public IPv4 pool.
Deprovision a CIDR from a public IPv4 pool.
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.
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.
Deprovisions your Autonomous System Number (ASN) from your Amazon Web Services account. This action can only be called after any BYOIP CIDR associations are removed from your Amazon Web Services account with DisassociateIpamByoasn. For more information, see Tutorial: Bring your ASN to IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM guide.
Deprovisions your Autonomous System Number (ASN) from your Amazon Web Services account. This action can only be called after any BYOIP CIDR associations are removed from your Amazon Web Services account with DisassociateIpamByoasn. For more information, see Tutorial: Bring your ASN to IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM guide.
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 and you must not have any IP addresses allocated from its address range.
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 and you must not have any IP addresses allocated from its address range.
Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnGateway.
Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnConnectionRoute.
Contains the parameters for DeleteVpnConnection.
Deletes the specified VPN concentrator.
Deletes the specified VPN concentrator.
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. When you delete the VPC, it deletes the default security group, network ACL, and route table for the VPC. If you created a flow log for the VPC that you are deleting, note that flow logs for deleted VPCs are eventually automatically removed.
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 or rejected state.
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 or rejected state.
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.
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.
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 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 endpoint connection notifications.
Deletes the specified VPC endpoint connection notifications.
Deletes a VPC Encryption Control configuration. This removes the encryption policy enforcement from the specified VPC. For more information, see Enforce VPC encryption in transit in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Deletes a VPC Encryption Control configuration. This removes the encryption policy enforcement from the specified VPC. For more information, see Enforce VPC encryption in transit in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Delete a VPC Block Public Access (BPA) exclusion. A VPC BPA exclusion is a mode that can be applied to a single VPC or subnet that exempts it from the account’s BPA mode and will allow bidirectional or egress-only access. You can create BPA exclusions for VPCs and subnets even when BPA is not enabled on the account to ensure that there is no traffic disruption to the exclusions when VPC BPA is turned on. To learn more about VPC BPA, see Block public access to VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Delete a VPC Block Public Access (BPA) exclusion. A VPC BPA exclusion is a mode that can be applied to a single VPC or subnet that exempts it from the account’s BPA mode and will allow bidirectional or egress-only access. You can create BPA exclusions for VPCs and subnets even when BPA is not enabled on the account to ensure that there is no traffic disruption to the exclusions when VPC BPA is turned on. To learn more about VPC BPA, see Block public access to VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
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 EBS User Guide.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access trust provider.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access group.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access group.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint.
Delete an Amazon Web Services Verified Access endpoint.
Deletes the specified VPC attachment.
Deletes the specified VPC attachment.
Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. If there are any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table, you must first run DisassociateRouteTable before you can delete the transit gateway route table. This removes any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table.
Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. If there are any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table, you must first run DisassociateRouteTable before you can delete the transit gateway route table. This removes any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table.
Advertises to the transit gateway that a transit gateway route table is deleted.
Advertises to the transit gateway that a transit gateway route table is deleted.
Deletes the specified route from the specified transit gateway route table.
Deletes the specified route from the specified transit gateway route table.
Deletes the specified transit gateway.
Deletes the specified transit gateway.
Deletes a reference (route) to a prefix list in a specified transit gateway route table.
Deletes a reference (route) to a prefix list in a specified transit gateway route table.
Deletes the specified transit gateway policy table.
Deletes the specified transit gateway policy table.
Deletes a transit gateway peering attachment.
Deletes a transit gateway peering attachment.
Deletes the specified transit gateway multicast domain.
Deletes the specified transit gateway multicast domain.
Deletes a transit gateway metering policy.
Deletes a transit gateway metering policy.
Deletes an entry from a transit gateway metering policy.
Deletes an entry from a transit gateway metering policy.
Deletes the specified Connect attachment. You must first delete any Connect peers for the attachment.
Deletes the specified Connect attachment. You must first delete any Connect peers for the attachment.
Deletes the specified Connect peer.
Deletes the specified Connect peer.
Deletes a Transit Gateway attachment for a Client VPN endpoint. The Transit Gateway owner can delete the attachment to remove the association between the Client VPN endpoint and the Transit Gateway.
Deletes a Transit Gateway attachment for a Client VPN endpoint. The Transit Gateway owner can delete the attachment to remove the association between the Client VPN endpoint and the Transit Gateway.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror target. You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror target that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror target. You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror target that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror session.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror session.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror rule.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror rule.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror filter. You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror filter that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session.
Deletes the specified Traffic Mirror filter. You cannot delete a Traffic Mirror filter that is in use by a Traffic Mirror session.
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.
Deletes the specified subnet. You must terminate all running instances in the subnet before you can delete the subnet.
Deletes a subnet CIDR reservation.
Deletes a subnet CIDR reservation.
Contains the parameters for DeleteSpotDatafeedSubscription.
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 deregister the AMI before you can delete the snapshot. For more information, see Delete an Amazon EBS snapshot in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
Deletes a security group. If you attempt to delete a security group that is associated with an instance or network interface, is referenced by another security group in the same VPC, or has a VPC association, the operation fails with DependencyViolation.
Deletes a security group. If you attempt to delete a security group that is associated with an instance or network interface, is referenced by another security group in the same VPC, or has a VPC association, the operation fails with DependencyViolation.
Deletes a secondary subnet. A secondary subnet must not contain any secondary interfaces prior to deletion.
Deletes a secondary subnet. A secondary subnet must not contain any secondary interfaces prior to deletion.
Deletes a secondary network. You must delete all secondary subnets in the secondary network before you can delete the secondary network.
Deletes a secondary network. You must delete all secondary subnets in the secondary network before you can delete the secondary network.
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.
Deletes the specified route server. Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature, VPC Route Server dynamically updates VPC and internet gateway route tables with your preferred IPv4 or IPv6 routes to achieve routing fault tolerance for those workloads. This enables you to automatically reroute traffic within a VPC, which increases the manageability of VPC routing and interoperability with third-party workloads. Route server supports the follow route table types: VPC route tables not associated with subnets Subnet route tables Internet gateway route tables Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use Transit Gateway Connect. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Deletes the specified route server. Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature, VPC Route Server dynamically updates VPC and internet gateway route tables with your preferred IPv4 or IPv6 routes to achieve routing fault tolerance for those workloads. This enables you to automatically reroute traffic within a VPC, which increases the manageability of VPC routing and interoperability with third-party workloads. Route server supports the follow route table types: VPC route tables not associated with subnets Subnet route tables Internet gateway route tables Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use Transit Gateway Connect. For more information see Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
Deletes the specified BGP peer from a route server. A route server peer is a session between a route server endpoint and the device deployed in Amazon Web Services (such as a firewall appliance or other network security function running on an EC2 instance). The device must meet these requirements: Have an elastic network interface in the VPC Support BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) Can initiate BGP sessions
Deletes the specified BGP peer from a route server. A route server peer is a session between a route server endpoint and the device deployed in Amazon Web Services (such as a firewall appliance or other network security function running on an EC2 instance). The device must meet these requirements: Have an elastic network interface in the VPC Support BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) Can initiate BGP sessions
Deletes the specified route server endpoint. A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) connections between your route server and your BGP peers.
Deletes the specified route server endpoint. A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) connections between your route server and your BGP peers.
Deletes the specified route from the specified route table.
Deletes the queued purchases for the specified Reserved Instances.
Deletes the queued purchases for the specified Reserved Instances.
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.
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.
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.
Contains the parameters for DeleteNetworkInterface.
Contains the output for DeleteNetworkInterfacePermission.
Contains the parameters for DeleteNetworkInterfacePermission.
Deletes the specified path.
Deletes the specified path.
Deletes the specified network insights analysis.
Deletes the specified network insights analysis.
Deletes the specified Network Access Scope.
Deletes the specified Network Access Scope.
Deletes the specified Network Access Scope analysis.
Deletes the specified Network Access Scope analysis.
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.
Deletes the specified ingress or egress entry (rule) from the specified network ACL.
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.
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.
Deletes the specified managed prefix list. You must first remove all references to the prefix list in your resources.
Deletes the specified managed prefix list. You must first remove all references to the prefix list in your resources.
Deletes the specified local gateway virtual interface.
Deletes the specified local gateway virtual interface.
Delete the specified local gateway interface group.
Delete the specified local gateway interface group.
Deletes the specified association between a VPC and local gateway route table.
Deletes the specified association between a VPC and local gateway route table.
Deletes a local gateway route table virtual interface group association.
Deletes a local gateway route table virtual interface group association.
Deletes a local gateway route table.
Deletes a local gateway route table.
Deletes the specified route from the specified local gateway route table.
Deletes the specified route from the specified local gateway route table.
Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't 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. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't 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. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes a launch template. Deleting a launch template deletes all of its versions.
Deletes a launch template. Deleting a launch template deletes all of its versions.
Deletes the specified key pair, by removing the public key from Amazon EC2.
Deletes the specified key pair, by removing the public key from Amazon EC2.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Deletes an IPAM prefix list resolver target. This removes the association between the resolver and the managed prefix list, stopping automatic CIDR synchronization. For more information about IPAM prefix list resolver, see Automate prefix list updates with IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
Deletes an IPAM prefix list resolver target. This removes the association between the resolver and the managed prefix list, stopping automatic CIDR synchronization. For more information about IPAM prefix list resolver, see Automate prefix list updates with IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
Deletes an IPAM prefix list resolver. Before deleting a resolver, you must first delete all resolver targets associated with it.
Deletes an IPAM prefix list resolver. Before deleting a resolver, you must first delete all resolver targets associated with it.
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.
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.
Deletes an IPAM policy. An IPAM policy is a set of rules that define how public IPv4 addresses from IPAM pools are allocated to Amazon Web Services resources. Each rule maps an Amazon Web Services service to IPAM pools that the service will use to get IP addresses. A single policy can have multiple rules and be applied to multiple Amazon Web Services Regions. If the IPAM pool run out of addresses then the services fallback to Amazon-provided IP addresses. A policy can be applied to an individual Amazon Web Services account or an entity within Amazon Web Services Organizations.
Deletes an IPAM policy. An IPAM policy is a set of rules that define how public IPv4 addresses from IPAM pools are allocated to Amazon Web Services resources. Each rule maps an Amazon Web Services service to IPAM pools that the service will use to get IP addresses. A single policy can have multiple rules and be applied to multiple Amazon Web Services Regions. If the IPAM pool run out of addresses then the services fallback to Amazon-provided IP addresses. A policy can be applied to an individual Amazon Web Services account or an entity within Amazon Web Services Organizations.
Delete a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
Delete a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
Deletes the specified internet gateway. You must detach the internet gateway from the VPC before you can delete it.
Deletes the specified event window. For more information, see Define event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes the specified event window. For more information, see Define event windows for scheduled events in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint.
Deletes the specified EC2 Instance Connect Endpoint.
Deletes the specified image usage report. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes the specified image usage report. For more information, see View your AMI usage in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI).
Deletes the specified Amazon FPGA Image (AFI).
Deletes one or more flow logs.
Deletes one or more flow logs.
Deletes the specified EC2 Fleet request. After you delete an EC2 Fleet request, it launches no new instances. You must also specify whether a deleted EC2 Fleet request should terminate its instances. If you choose to terminate the instances, the EC2 Fleet request enters the deleted_terminating state. Otherwise, it enters the deleted_running state, and the instances continue to run until they are interrupted or you terminate them manually. A deleted instant fleet with running instances is not supported. When you delete an instant fleet, Amazon EC2 automatically terminates all its instances. For fleets with more than 1000 instances, the deletion request might fail. If your fleet has more than 1000 instances, first terminate most of the instances manually, leaving 1000 or fewer. Then delete the fleet, and the remaining instances will be terminated automatically. Terminating an instance is permanent and irreversible. After you terminate an instance, you can no longer connect to it, and it can't be recovered. All attached Amazon EBS volumes that are configured to be deleted on termination are also permanently deleted and can't be recovered. All data stored on instance store volumes is permanently lost. For more information, see How instance termination works. Before you terminate an instance, ensure that you have backed up all data that you need to retain after the termination to persistent storage. Restrictions You can delete up to 25 fleets of type instant in a single request. You can delete up to 100 fleets of type maintain or request in a single request. You can delete up to 125 fleets in a single request, provided you do not exceed the quota for each fleet type, as specified above. If you exceed the specified number of fleets to delete, no fleets are deleted. For more information, see Delete an EC2 Fleet request and the instances in the fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes the specified EC2 Fleet request. After you delete an EC2 Fleet request, it launches no new instances. You must also specify whether a deleted EC2 Fleet request should terminate its instances. If you choose to terminate the instances, the EC2 Fleet request enters the deleted_terminating state. Otherwise, it enters the deleted_running state, and the instances continue to run until they are interrupted or you terminate them manually. A deleted instant fleet with running instances is not supported. When you delete an instant fleet, Amazon EC2 automatically terminates all its instances. For fleets with more than 1000 instances, the deletion request might fail. If your fleet has more than 1000 instances, first terminate most of the instances manually, leaving 1000 or fewer. Then delete the fleet, and the remaining instances will be terminated automatically. Terminating an instance is permanent and irreversible. After you terminate an instance, you can no longer connect to it, and it can't be recovered. All attached Amazon EBS volumes that are configured to be deleted on termination are also permanently deleted and can't be recovered. All data stored on instance store volumes is permanently lost. For more information, see How instance termination works. Before you terminate an instance, ensure that you have backed up all data that you need to retain after the termination to persistent storage. Restrictions You can delete up to 25 fleets of type instant in a single request. You can delete up to 100 fleets of type maintain or request in a single request. You can delete up to 125 fleets in a single request, provided you do not exceed the quota for each fleet type, as specified above. If you exceed the specified number of fleets to delete, no fleets are deleted. For more information, see Delete an EC2 Fleet request and the instances in the fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Deletes an egress-only internet gateway.
Deletes an egress-only internet gateway.
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.