@aws-sdk/client-ec2 3.782.0 → 3.787.0

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Files changed (43) hide show
  1. package/dist-types/commands/AssociateRouteServerCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  2. package/dist-types/commands/CreateRestoreImageTaskCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  3. package/dist-types/commands/CreateRouteServerCommand.d.ts +4 -3
  4. package/dist-types/commands/CreateRouteServerEndpointCommand.d.ts +2 -1
  5. package/dist-types/commands/CreateRouteServerPeerCommand.d.ts +2 -1
  6. package/dist-types/commands/CreateStoreImageTaskCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  7. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteRouteServerCommand.d.ts +4 -3
  8. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteRouteServerEndpointCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  9. package/dist-types/commands/DeleteRouteServerPeerCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  10. package/dist-types/commands/DeregisterImageCommand.d.ts +23 -11
  11. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeRouteServerEndpointsCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  12. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeRouteServerPeersCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  13. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeRouteServersCommand.d.ts +4 -3
  14. package/dist-types/commands/DescribeStoreImageTasksCommand.d.ts +3 -3
  15. package/dist-types/commands/DisableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  16. package/dist-types/commands/DisableImageBlockPublicAccessCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  17. package/dist-types/commands/DisableImageCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  18. package/dist-types/commands/DisableImageDeprecationCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  19. package/dist-types/commands/DisableImageDeregistrationProtectionCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  20. package/dist-types/commands/DisableRouteServerPropagationCommand.d.ts +4 -3
  21. package/dist-types/commands/DisassociateRouteServerCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  22. package/dist-types/commands/EnableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  23. package/dist-types/commands/EnableImageBlockPublicAccessCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  24. package/dist-types/commands/EnableImageCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  25. package/dist-types/commands/EnableImageDeprecationCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  26. package/dist-types/commands/EnableImageDeregistrationProtectionCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  27. package/dist-types/commands/EnableRouteServerPropagationCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  28. package/dist-types/commands/GetAllowedImagesSettingsCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  29. package/dist-types/commands/GetImageBlockPublicAccessStateCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  30. package/dist-types/commands/GetRouteServerAssociationsCommand.d.ts +2 -2
  31. package/dist-types/commands/GetRouteServerPropagationsCommand.d.ts +3 -2
  32. package/dist-types/commands/GetRouteServerRoutingDatabaseCommand.d.ts +3 -2
  33. package/dist-types/commands/ListImagesInRecycleBinCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  34. package/dist-types/commands/ModifyRouteServerCommand.d.ts +4 -3
  35. package/dist-types/commands/ReplaceImageCriteriaInAllowedImagesSettingsCommand.d.ts +1 -1
  36. package/dist-types/models/models_0.d.ts +1 -1
  37. package/dist-types/models/models_1.d.ts +5 -4
  38. package/dist-types/models/models_2.d.ts +8 -7
  39. package/dist-types/models/models_4.d.ts +15 -10
  40. package/dist-types/models/models_5.d.ts +3 -3
  41. package/dist-types/models/models_6.d.ts +4 -4
  42. package/dist-types/models/models_7.d.ts +8 -1
  43. package/package.json +5 -5
@@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ declare const AssociateRouteServerCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Associates a route server with a VPC to enable dynamic route updates.</p>
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- * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC. This is a fundamental configuration step that enables the route server to work with appliances in your VPC.</p>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -30,9 +30,9 @@ declare const CreateRestoreImageTaskCommand_base: {
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  * <p>Starts a task that restores an AMI from an Amazon S3 object that was previously created by
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  * using <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_CreateStoreImageTask.html">CreateStoreImageTask</a>.</p>
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  * <p>To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html#ami-s3-permissions">Permissions for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3</a> in the
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- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html">Store and restore an AMI using
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- * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,11 +28,12 @@ declare const CreateRouteServerCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Creates a new route server to manage dynamic routing in a VPC.</p>
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- * <p>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 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.</p>
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+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
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+ * 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.</p>
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  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
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+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
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  * </li>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -42,7 +43,7 @@ declare const CreateRouteServerCommand_base: {
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  * </li>
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  * </ul>
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  * <p>Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/tgw/tgw-connect.html">Transit Gateway Connect</a>.</p>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,8 @@ declare const CreateRouteServerEndpointCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Creates a new endpoint for a route server in a specified subnet.</p>
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- * <p>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. Create two endpoints per subnet for redundancy.</p>
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+ * <p>A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Gateway_Protocol">BGP (Border Gateway Protocol)</a> connections between your route server and your BGP peers.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const CreateRouteServerPeerCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Creates a new BGP peer for a specified route server endpoint.</p>
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- * <p>A route server peer is a network appliance or function deployed in Amazon Web Services, such as firewall appliances and other network security functions, that meet these requirements:</p>
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+ * <p>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:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Have an elastic network interface in the VPC</p>
@@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ declare const CreateRouteServerPeerCommand_base: {
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  * <p>Can initiate BGP sessions</p>
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  * </li>
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  * </ul>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -29,9 +29,9 @@ declare const CreateStoreImageTaskCommand_base: {
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  /**
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  * <p>Stores an AMI as a single object in an Amazon S3 bucket.</p>
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  * <p>To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html#ami-s3-permissions">Permissions for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3</a> in the
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- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html">Store and restore an AMI using
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- * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,11 +28,12 @@ declare const DeleteRouteServerCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Deletes the specified route server.</p>
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- * <p>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 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.</p>
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+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
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+ * 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.</p>
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  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
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+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
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  * </li>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -42,7 +43,7 @@ declare const DeleteRouteServerCommand_base: {
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  * </li>
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  * </ul>
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  * <p>Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/tgw/tgw-connect.html">Transit Gateway Connect</a>.</p>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const DeleteRouteServerEndpointCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Deletes the specified route server endpoint.</p>
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- * <p>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. Create two endpoints per subnet for redundancy.</p>
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+ * <p>A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Gateway_Protocol">BGP (Border Gateway Protocol)</a> connections between your route server and your BGP peers.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const DeleteRouteServerPeerCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Deletes the specified BGP peer from a route server.</p>
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- * <p>A route server peer is a network appliance or function deployed in Amazon Web Services, such as firewall appliances and other network security functions, that meet these requirements:</p>
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+ * <p>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:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Have an elastic network interface in the VPC</p>
@@ -27,18 +27,30 @@ declare const DeregisterImageCommand_base: {
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  getEndpointParameterInstructions(): import("@smithy/middleware-endpoint").EndpointParameterInstructions;
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  };
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  /**
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- * <p>Deregisters the specified AMI. After you deregister an AMI, it can't be used to launch new
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+ * <p>Deregisters the specified AMI. A deregistered AMI can't be used to launch new
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  * instances.</p>
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- * <p>If you deregister an AMI that matches a Recycle Bin retention rule, the AMI is retained in
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- * the Recycle Bin for the specified retention period. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/recycle-bin.html">Recycle Bin</a> in
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- * the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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- * <p>When you deregister an AMI, it doesn't affect any instances that you've already launched
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- * from the AMI. You'll continue to incur usage costs for those instances until you terminate
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- * them.</p>
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- * <p>When you deregister an Amazon EBS-backed AMI, it doesn't affect the snapshot that was created
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- * for the root volume of the instance during the AMI creation process. When you deregister an
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- * instance store-backed AMI, it doesn't affect the files that you uploaded to Amazon S3 when you
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- * created the AMI.</p>
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+ * <p>If a deregistered EBS-backed AMI matches a Recycle Bin retention rule, it moves to the
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+ * Recycle Bin for the specified retention period. It can be restored before its retention period
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+ * expires, after which it is permanently deleted. If the deregistered AMI doesn't match a
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+ * retention rule, it is permanently deleted immediately. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/recycle-bin.html">Recycle Bin</a> in
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+ * the <i>Amazon EBS User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>Deregistering an AMI does not delete the following:</p>
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+ * <ul>
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+ * <li>
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+ * <p>Instances already launched from the AMI. You'll continue to incur usage costs for the
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+ * instances until you terminate them.</p>
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+ * </li>
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+ * <li>
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+ * <p>For EBS-backed AMIs: The snapshots that were created of the root and data volumes of
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+ * the instance during AMI creation. You'll continue to incur snapshot storage costs.</p>
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+ * </li>
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+ * <li>
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+ * <p>For instance store-backed AMIs: The files uploaded to Amazon S3 during AMI creation. You'll
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+ * continue to incur S3 storage costs.</p>
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+ * </li>
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+ * </ul>
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+ * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/deregister-ami.html">Deregister an Amazon EC2 AMI</a> in the
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+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ declare const DescribeRouteServerEndpointsCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Describes one or more route server endpoints.</p>
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- * <p>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. Create two endpoints per subnet for redundancy.</p>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Gateway_Protocol">BGP (Border Gateway Protocol)</a> connections between your route server and your BGP peers.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const DescribeRouteServerPeersCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Describes one or more route server peers.</p>
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- * <p>A route server peer is a network appliance or function deployed in Amazon Web Services, such as firewall appliances and other network security functions, that meet these requirements:</p>
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+ * <p>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:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Have an elastic network interface in the VPC</p>
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ declare const DescribeRouteServerPeersCommand_base: {
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  * <p>Can initiate BGP sessions</p>
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  * </li>
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  * </ul>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,11 +28,12 @@ declare const DescribeRouteServersCommand_base: {
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  };
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  /**
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  * <p>Describes one or more route servers.</p>
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- * <p>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 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.</p>
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+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
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+ * 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.</p>
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  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
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  * <ul>
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  * <li>
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- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
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+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
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  * </li>
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  * <li>
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  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -42,7 +43,7 @@ declare const DescribeRouteServersCommand_base: {
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  * </li>
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  * </ul>
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  * <p>Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/tgw/tgw-connect.html">Transit Gateway Connect</a>.</p>
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- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -31,14 +31,14 @@ declare const DescribeStoreImageTasksCommand_base: {
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  * specified AMIs. If you don't specify the AMIs, you get a paginated list of store tasks from
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  * the last 31 days.</p>
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  * <p>For each AMI task, the response indicates if the task is <code>InProgress</code>,
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- * <code>Completed</code>, or <code>Failed</code>. For tasks <code>InProgress</code>, the
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+ * <code>Completed</code>, or <code>Failed</code>. For tasks <code>InProgress</code>, the
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  * response shows the estimated progress as a percentage.</p>
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  * <p>Tasks are listed in reverse chronological order. Currently, only tasks from the past 31
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  * days can be viewed.</p>
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  * <p>To use this API, you must have the required permissions. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html#ami-s3-permissions">Permissions for storing and restoring AMIs using Amazon S3</a> in the
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- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-store-restore.html">Store and restore an AMI using
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- * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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+ * Amazon S3</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
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  * @example
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  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
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  * ```javascript
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const DisableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Disables Allowed AMIs for your account in the specified Amazon Web Services Region. When set to
31
- * <code>disabled</code>, the image criteria in your Allowed AMIs settings do not apply, and no
31
+ * <code>disabled</code>, the image criteria in your Allowed AMIs settings do not apply, and no
32
32
  * restrictions are placed on AMI discoverability or usage. Users in your account can launch
33
33
  * instances using any public AMI or AMI shared with your account.</p>
34
34
  * <note>
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ declare const DisableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
37
37
  * usable by users in your account.</p>
38
38
  * </note>
39
39
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html">Control the discovery and use of AMIs in
40
- * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
40
+ * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
41
41
  * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
42
42
  * @example
43
43
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
@@ -32,11 +32,11 @@ declare const DisableImageBlockPublicAccessCommand_base: {
32
32
  * from your account. With the restriction removed, you can publicly share your AMIs in the
33
33
  * specified Amazon Web Services Region.</p>
34
34
  * <p>The API can take up to 10 minutes to configure this setting. During this time, if you run
35
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_GetImageBlockPublicAccessState.html">GetImageBlockPublicAccessState</a>, the response will be
35
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_GetImageBlockPublicAccessState.html">GetImageBlockPublicAccessState</a>, the response will be
36
36
  * <code>block-new-sharing</code>. When the API has completed the configuration, the response
37
37
  * will be <code>unblocked</code>.</p>
38
38
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/sharingamis-intro.html#block-public-access-to-amis">Block
39
- * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
39
+ * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
40
40
  * @example
41
41
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
42
42
  * ```javascript
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ declare const DisableImageCommand_base: {
37
37
  * <p>Only the AMI owner can disable an AMI.</p>
38
38
  * <p>You can re-enable a disabled AMI using <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_EnableImage.html">EnableImage</a>.</p>
39
39
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/disable-an-ami.html">Disable an AMI</a> in the
40
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
40
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
41
41
  * @example
42
42
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
43
43
  * ```javascript
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ declare const DisableImageDeprecationCommand_base: {
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Cancels the deprecation of the specified AMI.</p>
31
31
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-deprecate.html">Deprecate an AMI</a> in the
32
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
32
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
35
35
  * ```javascript
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ declare const DisableImageDeregistrationProtectionCommand_base: {
33
33
  * protection for the AMI, then, when you disable deregistration protection, you won’t
34
34
  * immediately be able to deregister the AMI.</p>
35
35
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/deregister-ami.html#ami-deregistration-protection">Protect an
36
- * AMI from deregistration</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
36
+ * AMI from deregistration</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
37
37
  * @example
38
38
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
39
39
  * ```javascript
@@ -29,11 +29,12 @@ declare const DisableRouteServerPropagationCommand_base: {
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Disables route propagation from a route server to a specified route table.</p>
31
31
  * <p>When enabled, route server propagation installs the routes in the FIB on the route table you've specified. Route server supports IPv4 and IPv6 route propagation.</p>
32
- * <p>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 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.</p>
32
+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
33
+ * 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.</p>
33
34
  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
34
35
  * <ul>
35
36
  * <li>
36
- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
37
+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
37
38
  * </li>
38
39
  * <li>
39
40
  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -43,7 +44,7 @@ declare const DisableRouteServerPropagationCommand_base: {
43
44
  * </li>
44
45
  * </ul>
45
46
  * <p>Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/tgw/tgw-connect.html">Transit Gateway Connect</a>.</p>
46
- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
47
+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
47
48
  * @example
48
49
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
49
50
  * ```javascript
@@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ declare const DisassociateRouteServerCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Disassociates a route server from a VPC.</p>
31
- * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC. This is a fundamental configuration step that enables the route server to work with appliances in your VPC.</p>
32
- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
31
+ * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC.</p>
32
+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
35
35
  * ```javascript
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ declare const EnableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
43
43
  * can launch instances using any public AMI or AMI shared with your account.</p>
44
44
  * <p>The purpose of <code>audit-mode</code> is to indicate which AMIs will be affected when
45
45
  * Allowed AMIs is <code>enabled</code>. In <code>audit-mode</code>, each AMI displays either
46
- * <code>"ImageAllowed": true</code> or <code>"ImageAllowed": false</code> to indicate
46
+ * <code>"ImageAllowed": true</code> or <code>"ImageAllowed": false</code> to indicate
47
47
  * whether the AMI will be discoverable and available to users in the account when Allowed
48
48
  * AMIs is enabled.</p>
49
49
  * </li>
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ declare const EnableAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
54
54
  * usable by users in your account.</p>
55
55
  * </note>
56
56
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html">Control the discovery and use of AMIs in
57
- * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
57
+ * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
58
58
  * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
59
59
  * @example
60
60
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
@@ -31,11 +31,11 @@ declare const EnableImageBlockPublicAccessCommand_base: {
31
31
  * specified Amazon Web Services Region. This prevents the public sharing of your AMIs. However, if you already
32
32
  * have public AMIs, they will remain publicly available.</p>
33
33
  * <p>The API can take up to 10 minutes to configure this setting. During this time, if you run
34
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_GetImageBlockPublicAccessState.html">GetImageBlockPublicAccessState</a>, the response will be <code>unblocked</code>. When
34
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_GetImageBlockPublicAccessState.html">GetImageBlockPublicAccessState</a>, the response will be <code>unblocked</code>. When
35
35
  * the API has completed the configuration, the response will be
36
36
  * <code>block-new-sharing</code>.</p>
37
37
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/sharingamis-intro.html#block-public-access-to-amis">Block
38
- * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
38
+ * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
39
39
  * @example
40
40
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
41
41
  * ```javascript
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ declare const EnableImageCommand_base: {
34
34
  * them again.</p>
35
35
  * <p>Only the AMI owner can re-enable a disabled AMI.</p>
36
36
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/disable-an-ami.html">Disable an AMI</a> in the
37
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
37
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
38
38
  * @example
39
39
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
40
40
  * ```javascript
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ declare const EnableImageDeprecationCommand_base: {
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Enables deprecation of the specified AMI at the specified date and time.</p>
31
31
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ami-deprecate.html">Deprecate an AMI</a> in the
32
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
32
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
35
35
  * ```javascript
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ declare const EnableImageDeregistrationProtectionCommand_base: {
32
32
  * <p>To allow the AMI to be deregistered, you must first disable deregistration protection
33
33
  * using <a>DisableImageDeregistrationProtection</a>.</p>
34
34
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/deregister-ami.html#ami-deregistration-protection">Protect an
35
- * AMI from deregistration</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
35
+ * AMI from deregistration</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
36
36
  * @example
37
37
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
38
38
  * ```javascript
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ declare const EnableRouteServerPropagationCommand_base: {
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Defines which route tables the route server can update with routes.</p>
31
31
  * <p>When enabled, route server propagation installs the routes in the FIB on the route table you've specified. Route server supports IPv4 and IPv6 route propagation.</p>
32
- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
32
+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
35
35
  * ```javascript
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ declare const GetAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
35
35
  * usable by users in your account.</p>
36
36
  * </note>
37
37
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html">Control the discovery and use of AMIs in
38
- * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
38
+ * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
39
39
  * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
40
40
  * @example
41
41
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ declare const GetImageBlockPublicAccessStateCommand_base: {
30
30
  * <p>Gets the current state of <i>block public access for AMIs</i> at the account
31
31
  * level in the specified Amazon Web Services Region.</p>
32
32
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/sharingamis-intro.html#block-public-access-to-amis">Block
33
- * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
33
+ * public access to your AMIs</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
34
34
  * @example
35
35
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
36
36
  * ```javascript
@@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ declare const GetRouteServerAssociationsCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Gets information about the associations for the specified route server.</p>
31
- * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC. This is a fundamental configuration step that enables the route server to work with appliances in your VPC.</p>
32
- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
31
+ * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC.</p>
32
+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
35
35
  * ```javascript
@@ -29,11 +29,12 @@ declare const GetRouteServerPropagationsCommand_base: {
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Gets information about the route propagations for the specified route server.</p>
31
31
  * <p>When enabled, route server propagation installs the routes in the FIB on the route table you've specified. Route server supports IPv4 and IPv6 route propagation.</p>
32
- * <p>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 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.</p>
32
+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
33
+ * 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.</p>
33
34
  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
34
35
  * <ul>
35
36
  * <li>
36
- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
37
+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
37
38
  * </li>
38
39
  * <li>
39
40
  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -28,11 +28,12 @@ declare const GetRouteServerRoutingDatabaseCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Gets the routing database for the specified route server. The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing_table">Routing Information Base (RIB)</a> serves as a database that stores all the routing information and network topology data collected by a router or routing system, such as routes learned from BGP peers. The RIB is constantly updated as new routing information is received or existing routes change. This ensures that the route server always has the most current view of the network topology and can make optimal routing decisions.</p>
31
- * <p>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 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.</p>
31
+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
32
+ * 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.</p>
32
33
  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
33
34
  * <ul>
34
35
  * <li>
35
- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
36
+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
36
37
  * </li>
37
38
  * <li>
38
39
  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ declare const ListImagesInRecycleBinCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Lists one or more AMIs that are currently in the Recycle Bin. For more information, see
31
- * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/recycle-bin.html">Recycle
31
+ * <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/recycle-bin.html">Recycle
32
32
  * Bin</a> in the <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
33
33
  * @example
34
34
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
@@ -28,11 +28,12 @@ declare const ModifyRouteServerCommand_base: {
28
28
  };
29
29
  /**
30
30
  * <p>Modifies the configuration of an existing route server.</p>
31
- * <p>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 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.</p>
31
+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
32
+ * 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.</p>
32
33
  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
33
34
  * <ul>
34
35
  * <li>
35
- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
36
+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
36
37
  * </li>
37
38
  * <li>
38
39
  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -42,7 +43,7 @@ declare const ModifyRouteServerCommand_base: {
42
43
  * </li>
43
44
  * </ul>
44
45
  * <p>Route server does not support route tables associated with virtual private gateways. To propagate routes into a transit gateway route table, use <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/tgw/tgw-connect.html">Transit Gateway Connect</a>.</p>
45
- * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/access.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
46
+ * <p>For more information see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/dynamic-routing-route-server.html">Dynamic routing in your VPC with VPC Route Server</a> in the <i>Amazon VPC User Guide</i>.</p>
46
47
  * @example
47
48
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
48
49
  * ```javascript
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ declare const ReplaceImageCriteriaInAllowedImagesSettingsCommand_base: {
34
34
  * usable by users in your account.</p>
35
35
  * </note>
36
36
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html">Control the discovery and use of AMIs in
37
- * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
37
+ * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
38
38
  * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
39
39
  * @example
40
40
  * Use a bare-bones client and the command you need to make an API call.
@@ -4470,7 +4470,7 @@ export declare const RouteServerAssociationState: {
4470
4470
  export type RouteServerAssociationState = (typeof RouteServerAssociationState)[keyof typeof RouteServerAssociationState];
4471
4471
  /**
4472
4472
  * <p>Describes the association between a route server and a VPC.</p>
4473
- * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC. This is a fundamental configuration step that enables the route server to work with appliances in your VPC.</p>
4473
+ * <p>A route server association is the connection established between a route server and a VPC.</p>
4474
4474
  * @public
4475
4475
  */
4476
4476
  export interface RouteServerAssociation {
@@ -9489,10 +9489,11 @@ export interface LaunchTemplateInstanceNetworkInterfaceSpecificationRequest {
9489
9489
  */
9490
9490
  Description?: string | undefined;
9491
9491
  /**
9492
- * <p>The device index for the network interface attachment. Each network interface requires
9493
- * a device index. If you create a launch template that includes secondary network interfaces
9494
- * but not a primary network interface, then you must add a primary network interface as a
9495
- * launch parameter when you launch an instance from the template.</p>
9492
+ * <p>The device index for the network interface attachment. The primary network interface
9493
+ * has a device index of 0. Each network interface is of type <code>interface</code>, you
9494
+ * must specify a device index. If you create a launch template that includes secondary
9495
+ * network interfaces but not a primary network interface, then you must add a primary
9496
+ * network interface as a launch parameter when you launch an instance from the template.</p>
9496
9497
  * @public
9497
9498
  */
9498
9499
  DeviceIndex?: number | undefined;
@@ -2638,7 +2638,7 @@ export interface CreateRestoreImageTaskRequest {
2638
2638
  * </li>
2639
2639
  * <li>
2640
2640
  * <p>To tag the snapshots, the value for <code>ResourceType</code> must be
2641
- * <code>snapshot</code>. The same tag is applied to all of the snapshots that are
2641
+ * <code>snapshot</code>. The same tag is applied to all of the snapshots that are
2642
2642
  * created.</p>
2643
2643
  * </li>
2644
2644
  * </ul>
@@ -2851,11 +2851,12 @@ export declare const RouteServerState: {
2851
2851
  export type RouteServerState = (typeof RouteServerState)[keyof typeof RouteServerState];
2852
2852
  /**
2853
2853
  * <p>Describes a route server and its configuration.</p>
2854
- * <p>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 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.</p>
2854
+ * <p>Amazon VPC Route Server simplifies routing for traffic between workloads that are deployed within a VPC and its internet gateways. With this feature,
2855
+ * 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.</p>
2855
2856
  * <p>Route server supports the follow route table types:</p>
2856
2857
  * <ul>
2857
2858
  * <li>
2858
- * <p>VPC route tables</p>
2859
+ * <p>VPC route tables not associated with subnets</p>
2859
2860
  * </li>
2860
2861
  * <li>
2861
2862
  * <p>Subnet route tables</p>
@@ -2971,7 +2972,7 @@ export declare const RouteServerEndpointState: {
2971
2972
  export type RouteServerEndpointState = (typeof RouteServerEndpointState)[keyof typeof RouteServerEndpointState];
2972
2973
  /**
2973
2974
  * <p>Describes a route server endpoint and its properties.</p>
2974
- * <p>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. Create two endpoints per subnet for redundancy.</p>
2975
+ * <p>A route server endpoint is an Amazon Web Services-managed component inside a subnet that facilitates <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Gateway_Protocol">BGP (Border Gateway Protocol)</a> connections between your route server and your BGP peers.</p>
2975
2976
  * @public
2976
2977
  */
2977
2978
  export interface RouteServerEndpoint {
@@ -3080,7 +3081,7 @@ export interface CreateRouteServerPeerRequest {
3080
3081
  */
3081
3082
  RouteServerEndpointId: string | undefined;
3082
3083
  /**
3083
- * <p>The IPv4 address of the peer.</p>
3084
+ * <p>The IPv4 address of the peer device.</p>
3084
3085
  * @public
3085
3086
  */
3086
3087
  PeerAddress: string | undefined;
@@ -3194,7 +3195,7 @@ export declare const RouteServerPeerState: {
3194
3195
  export type RouteServerPeerState = (typeof RouteServerPeerState)[keyof typeof RouteServerPeerState];
3195
3196
  /**
3196
3197
  * <p>Describes a BGP peer configuration for a route server endpoint.</p>
3197
- * <p>A route server peer is a network appliance or function deployed in Amazon Web Services, such as firewall appliances and other network security functions, that meet these requirements:</p>
3198
+ * <p>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:</p>
3198
3199
  * <ul>
3199
3200
  * <li>
3200
3201
  * <p>Have an elastic network interface in the VPC</p>
@@ -3255,7 +3256,7 @@ export interface RouteServerPeer {
3255
3256
  */
3256
3257
  EndpointEniAddress?: string | undefined;
3257
3258
  /**
3258
- * <p>The IPv4 address of the peer.</p>
3259
+ * <p>The IPv4 address of the peer device.</p>
3259
3260
  * @public
3260
3261
  */
3261
3262
  PeerAddress?: string | undefined;
@@ -4074,8 +4074,8 @@ export interface Image {
4074
4074
  /**
4075
4075
  * <p>If <code>true</code>, the AMI satisfies the criteria for Allowed AMIs and can be
4076
4076
  * discovered and used in the account. If <code>false</code> and Allowed AMIs is set to
4077
- * <code>enabled</code>, the AMI can't be discovered or used in the account. If
4078
- * <code>false</code> and Allowed AMIs is set to <code>audit-mode</code>, the AMI can be
4077
+ * <code>enabled</code>, the AMI can't be discovered or used in the account. If
4078
+ * <code>false</code> and Allowed AMIs is set to <code>audit-mode</code>, the AMI can be
4079
4079
  * discovered and used in the account.</p>
4080
4080
  * <p>For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html">Control the discovery and use of AMIs in
4081
4081
  * Amazon EC2 with Allowed AMIs</a> in
@@ -5076,7 +5076,7 @@ export interface DescribeInstanceImageMetadataRequest {
5076
5076
  * <li>
5077
5077
  * <p>
5078
5078
  * <code>availability-zone</code> - The name of the Availability Zone (for example,
5079
- * <code>us-west-2a</code>) or Local Zone (for example, <code>us-west-2-lax-1b</code>) of
5079
+ * <code>us-west-2a</code>) or Local Zone (for example, <code>us-west-2-lax-1b</code>) of
5080
5080
  * the instance.</p>
5081
5081
  * </li>
5082
5082
  * <li>
@@ -5091,8 +5091,8 @@ export interface DescribeInstanceImageMetadataRequest {
5091
5091
  * <li>
5092
5092
  * <p>
5093
5093
  * <code>instance-state-name</code> - The state of the instance (<code>pending</code> |
5094
- * <code>running</code> | <code>shutting-down</code> | <code>terminated</code> |
5095
- * <code>stopping</code> | <code>stopped</code>).</p>
5094
+ * <code>running</code> | <code>shutting-down</code> | <code>terminated</code> |
5095
+ * <code>stopping</code> | <code>stopped</code>).</p>
5096
5096
  * </li>
5097
5097
  * <li>
5098
5098
  * <p>
@@ -5103,13 +5103,13 @@ export interface DescribeInstanceImageMetadataRequest {
5103
5103
  * <p>
5104
5104
  * <code>launch-time</code> - The time when the instance was launched, in the ISO 8601
5105
5105
  * format in the UTC time zone (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ), for example,
5106
- * <code>2023-09-29T11:04:43.305Z</code>. You can use a wildcard (<code>*</code>), for
5106
+ * <code>2023-09-29T11:04:43.305Z</code>. You can use a wildcard (<code>*</code>), for
5107
5107
  * example, <code>2023-09-29T*</code>, which matches an entire day.</p>
5108
5108
  * </li>
5109
5109
  * <li>
5110
5110
  * <p>
5111
5111
  * <code>owner-alias</code> - The owner alias (<code>amazon</code> |
5112
- * <code>aws-marketplace</code> | <code>aws-backup-vault</code>). The valid aliases are
5112
+ * <code>aws-marketplace</code> | <code>aws-backup-vault</code>). The valid aliases are
5113
5113
  * defined in an Amazon-maintained list. This is not the Amazon Web Services account alias that can be set
5114
5114
  * using the IAM console. We recommend that you use the <code>Owner</code> request parameter
5115
5115
  * instead of this filter.</p>
@@ -5131,7 +5131,7 @@ export interface DescribeInstanceImageMetadataRequest {
5131
5131
  * <li>
5132
5132
  * <p>
5133
5133
  * <code>zone-id</code> - The ID of the Availability Zone (for example,
5134
- * <code>usw2-az2</code>) or Local Zone (for example, <code>usw2-lax1-az1</code>) of the
5134
+ * <code>usw2-az2</code>) or Local Zone (for example, <code>usw2-lax1-az1</code>) of the
5135
5135
  * instance.</p>
5136
5136
  * </li>
5137
5137
  * </ul>
@@ -5195,7 +5195,7 @@ export interface ImageMetadata {
5195
5195
  /**
5196
5196
  * <p>The alias of the AMI owner.</p>
5197
5197
  * <p>Valid values: <code>amazon</code> | <code>aws-backup-vault</code> |
5198
- * <code>aws-marketplace</code>
5198
+ * <code>aws-marketplace</code>
5199
5199
  * </p>
5200
5200
  * @public
5201
5201
  */
@@ -5207,7 +5207,7 @@ export interface ImageMetadata {
5207
5207
  CreationDate?: string | undefined;
5208
5208
  /**
5209
5209
  * <p>The deprecation date and time of the AMI, in UTC, in the following format:
5210
- * <i>YYYY</i>-<i>MM</i>-<i>DD</i>T<i>HH</i>:<i>MM</i>:<i>SS</i>Z.</p>
5210
+ * <i>YYYY</i>-<i>MM</i>-<i>DD</i>T<i>HH</i>:<i>MM</i>:<i>SS</i>Z.</p>
5211
5211
  * @public
5212
5212
  */
5213
5213
  DeprecationTime?: string | undefined;
@@ -7857,6 +7857,11 @@ export interface DescribeInstanceTypesRequest {
7857
7857
  * </li>
7858
7858
  * <li>
7859
7859
  * <p>
7860
+ * <code>dedicated-hosts-supported</code> - Indicates whether the instance type supports
7861
+ * Dedicated Hosts. (<code>true</code> | <code>false</code>)</p>
7862
+ * </li>
7863
+ * <li>
7864
+ * <p>
7860
7865
  * <code>ebs-info.ebs-optimized-info.baseline-bandwidth-in-mbps</code> - The baseline
7861
7866
  * bandwidth performance for an EBS-optimized instance type, in Mbps.</p>
7862
7867
  * </li>
@@ -5878,7 +5878,7 @@ export interface DescribeStoreImageTasksRequest {
5878
5878
  * <li>
5879
5879
  * <p>
5880
5880
  * <code>task-state</code> - Returns tasks in a certain state (<code>InProgress</code> |
5881
- * <code>Completed</code> | <code>Failed</code>)</p>
5881
+ * <code>Completed</code> | <code>Failed</code>)</p>
5882
5882
  * </li>
5883
5883
  * <li>
5884
5884
  * <p>
@@ -5940,13 +5940,13 @@ export interface StoreImageTaskResult {
5940
5940
  ProgressPercentage?: number | undefined;
5941
5941
  /**
5942
5942
  * <p>The state of the store task (<code>InProgress</code>, <code>Completed</code>, or
5943
- * <code>Failed</code>).</p>
5943
+ * <code>Failed</code>).</p>
5944
5944
  * @public
5945
5945
  */
5946
5946
  StoreTaskState?: string | undefined;
5947
5947
  /**
5948
5948
  * <p>If the tasks fails, the reason for the failure is returned. If the task succeeds,
5949
- * <code>null</code> is returned.</p>
5949
+ * <code>null</code> is returned.</p>
5950
5950
  * @public
5951
5951
  */
5952
5952
  StoreTaskFailureReason?: string | undefined;
@@ -996,7 +996,7 @@ export interface EnableEbsEncryptionByDefaultResult {
996
996
  * <p>Request to create a launch template for a Windows fast launch enabled AMI.</p>
997
997
  * <note>
998
998
  * <p>Note - You can specify either the <code>LaunchTemplateName</code> or the
999
- * <code>LaunchTemplateId</code>, but not both.</p>
999
+ * <code>LaunchTemplateId</code>, but not both.</p>
1000
1000
  * </note>
1001
1001
  * @public
1002
1002
  */
@@ -1370,7 +1370,7 @@ export interface EnableImageDeprecationRequest {
1370
1370
  ImageId: string | undefined;
1371
1371
  /**
1372
1372
  * <p>The date and time to deprecate the AMI, in UTC, in the following format:
1373
- * <i>YYYY</i>-<i>MM</i>-<i>DD</i>T<i>HH</i>:<i>MM</i>:<i>SS</i>Z.
1373
+ * <i>YYYY</i>-<i>MM</i>-<i>DD</i>T<i>HH</i>:<i>MM</i>:<i>SS</i>Z.
1374
1374
  * If you specify a value for seconds, Amazon EC2 rounds the seconds to the nearest minute.</p>
1375
1375
  * <p>You can’t specify a date in the past. The upper limit for <code>DeprecateAt</code> is 10
1376
1376
  * years from now, except for public AMIs, where the upper limit is 2 years from the creation
@@ -2143,7 +2143,7 @@ export interface GetAllowedImagesSettingsRequest {
2143
2143
  * <p>Up to 10 <code>imageCriteria</code> objects can be specified, and up to a total of 200
2144
2144
  * values for all <code>imageProviders</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html#allowed-amis-json-configuration">JSON
2145
2145
  * configuration for the Allowed AMIs criteria</a> in the
2146
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
2146
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
2147
2147
  * @public
2148
2148
  */
2149
2149
  export interface ImageCriterion {
@@ -5219,7 +5219,7 @@ export interface RouteServerRoute {
5219
5219
  /**
5220
5220
  * <p>The current status of the route in the routing database. Values are <code>in-rib</code> or <code>in-fib</code> depending on if the routes are in the RIB or the FIB database.</p>
5221
5221
  * <p>The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing_table">Routing Information Base (RIB)</a> serves as a database that stores all the routing information and network topology data collected by a router or routing system, such as routes learned from BGP peers. The RIB is constantly updated as new routing information is received or existing routes change. This ensures that the route server always has the most current view of the network topology and can make optimal routing decisions.</p>
5222
- * <p>The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forwarding_information_base">Forwarding Information Base (FIB)</a> serves as a forwarding table for what route server has determined are the best-path routes in the RIB after evaluating all available routing information and policies. The FIB routes that are installed on the route tables. The FIB is recomputed whenever there are changes to the RIB.</p>
5222
+ * <p>The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forwarding_information_base">Forwarding Information Base (FIB)</a> serves as a forwarding table for what route server has determined are the best-path routes in the RIB after evaluating all available routing information and policies. The FIB routes are installed on the route tables. The FIB is recomputed whenever there are changes to the RIB.</p>
5223
5223
  * @public
5224
5224
  */
5225
5225
  RouteStatus?: RouteServerRouteStatus | undefined;
@@ -1600,6 +1600,13 @@ export interface ModifyInstanceAttributeRequest {
1600
1600
  InstanceId: string | undefined;
1601
1601
  /**
1602
1602
  * <p>The name of the attribute to modify.</p>
1603
+ * <note>
1604
+ * <p>When changing the instance type: If the original instance type is configured for
1605
+ * configurable bandwidth, and the desired instance type doesn't support configurable
1606
+ * bandwidth, first set the existing bandwidth configuration to <code>default</code>
1607
+ * using the <a>ModifyInstanceNetworkPerformanceOptions</a>
1608
+ * operation.</p>
1609
+ * </note>
1603
1610
  * <important>
1604
1611
  * <p>You can modify the following attributes only: <code>disableApiTermination</code> |
1605
1612
  * <code>instanceType</code> | <code>kernel</code> | <code>ramdisk</code> |
@@ -7036,7 +7043,7 @@ export interface ReplaceIamInstanceProfileAssociationResult {
7036
7043
  * <p>Up to 10 <code>imageCriteria</code> objects can be specified, and up to a total of 200
7037
7044
  * values for all <code>imageProviders</code>. For more information, see <a href="https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ec2-allowed-amis.html#allowed-amis-json-configuration">JSON
7038
7045
  * configuration for the Allowed AMIs criteria</a> in the
7039
- * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
7046
+ * <i>Amazon EC2 User Guide</i>.</p>
7040
7047
  * @public
7041
7048
  */
7042
7049
  export interface ImageCriterionRequest {
package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
1
1
  {
2
2
  "name": "@aws-sdk/client-ec2",
3
3
  "description": "AWS SDK for JavaScript Ec2 Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native",
4
- "version": "3.782.0",
4
+ "version": "3.787.0",
5
5
  "scripts": {
6
6
  "build": "concurrently 'yarn:build:cjs' 'yarn:build:es' 'yarn:build:types'",
7
7
  "build:cjs": "node ../../scripts/compilation/inline client-ec2",
@@ -21,17 +21,17 @@
21
21
  "@aws-crypto/sha256-browser": "5.2.0",
22
22
  "@aws-crypto/sha256-js": "5.2.0",
23
23
  "@aws-sdk/core": "3.775.0",
24
- "@aws-sdk/credential-provider-node": "3.782.0",
24
+ "@aws-sdk/credential-provider-node": "3.787.0",
25
25
  "@aws-sdk/middleware-host-header": "3.775.0",
26
26
  "@aws-sdk/middleware-logger": "3.775.0",
27
27
  "@aws-sdk/middleware-recursion-detection": "3.775.0",
28
28
  "@aws-sdk/middleware-sdk-ec2": "3.775.0",
29
- "@aws-sdk/middleware-user-agent": "3.782.0",
29
+ "@aws-sdk/middleware-user-agent": "3.787.0",
30
30
  "@aws-sdk/region-config-resolver": "3.775.0",
31
31
  "@aws-sdk/types": "3.775.0",
32
- "@aws-sdk/util-endpoints": "3.782.0",
32
+ "@aws-sdk/util-endpoints": "3.787.0",
33
33
  "@aws-sdk/util-user-agent-browser": "3.775.0",
34
- "@aws-sdk/util-user-agent-node": "3.782.0",
34
+ "@aws-sdk/util-user-agent-node": "3.787.0",
35
35
  "@smithy/config-resolver": "^4.1.0",
36
36
  "@smithy/core": "^3.2.0",
37
37
  "@smithy/fetch-http-handler": "^5.0.2",