aws-sdk 2.956.0 → 2.957.0

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/clients/ec2.d.ts CHANGED
@@ -69,11 +69,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  advertiseByoipCidr(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AdvertiseByoipCidrResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AdvertiseByoipCidrResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Allocates an Elastic IP address to your account. After you allocate the Elastic IP address you can associate it with an instance or network interface. After you release an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool and can be allocated to a different account. You can allocate an Elastic IP address from an address pool owned by Amazon Web Services or from an address pool created from a public IPv4 address range that you have brought to Amazon Web Services for use with your Amazon Web Services resources using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. [EC2-VPC] If you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address that you released after it is allocated to another account. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address for EC2-Classic. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. An Elastic IP address is for use either in the EC2-Classic platform or in a VPC. By default, you can allocate 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-Classic per Region and 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-VPC per Region. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can allocate a carrier IP address which is a public IP address from a telecommunication carrier, to a network interface which resides in a subnet in a Wavelength Zone (for example an EC2 instance).
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+ * Allocates an Elastic IP address to your Amazon Web Services account. After you allocate the Elastic IP address you can associate it with an instance or network interface. After you release an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool and can be allocated to a different Amazon Web Services account. You can allocate an Elastic IP address from an address pool owned by Amazon Web Services or from an address pool created from a public IPv4 address range that you have brought to Amazon Web Services for use with your Amazon Web Services resources using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. [EC2-VPC] If you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address that you released after it is allocated to another Amazon Web Services account. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address for EC2-Classic. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. An Elastic IP address is for use either in the EC2-Classic platform or in a VPC. By default, you can allocate 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-Classic per Region and 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-VPC per Region. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can allocate a carrier IP address which is a public IP address from a telecommunication carrier, to a network interface which resides in a subnet in a Wavelength Zone (for example an EC2 instance).
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  */
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  allocateAddress(params: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Allocates an Elastic IP address to your account. After you allocate the Elastic IP address you can associate it with an instance or network interface. After you release an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool and can be allocated to a different account. You can allocate an Elastic IP address from an address pool owned by Amazon Web Services or from an address pool created from a public IPv4 address range that you have brought to Amazon Web Services for use with your Amazon Web Services resources using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. [EC2-VPC] If you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address that you released after it is allocated to another account. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address for EC2-Classic. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. An Elastic IP address is for use either in the EC2-Classic platform or in a VPC. By default, you can allocate 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-Classic per Region and 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-VPC per Region. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can allocate a carrier IP address which is a public IP address from a telecommunication carrier, to a network interface which resides in a subnet in a Wavelength Zone (for example an EC2 instance).
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+ * Allocates an Elastic IP address to your Amazon Web Services account. After you allocate the Elastic IP address you can associate it with an instance or network interface. After you release an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool and can be allocated to a different Amazon Web Services account. You can allocate an Elastic IP address from an address pool owned by Amazon Web Services or from an address pool created from a public IPv4 address range that you have brought to Amazon Web Services for use with your Amazon Web Services resources using bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). For more information, see Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. [EC2-VPC] If you release an Elastic IP address, you might be able to recover it. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address that you released after it is allocated to another Amazon Web Services account. You cannot recover an Elastic IP address for EC2-Classic. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. An Elastic IP address is for use either in the EC2-Classic platform or in a VPC. By default, you can allocate 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-Classic per Region and 5 Elastic IP addresses for EC2-VPC per Region. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can allocate a carrier IP address which is a public IP address from a telecommunication carrier, to a network interface which resides in a subnet in a Wavelength Zone (for example an EC2 instance).
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  */
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  allocateAddress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -229,11 +229,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  attachNetworkInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AttachNetworkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AttachNetworkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Attaches an EBS volume to a running or stopped instance and exposes it to the instance with the specified device name. Encrypted EBS volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. After you attach an EBS volume, you must make it available. For more information, see Make an EBS volume available for use. If a volume has an Marketplace product code: The volume can be attached only to a stopped instance. Marketplace product codes are copied from the volume to the instance. You must be subscribed to the product. The instance type and operating system of the instance must support the product. For example, you can't detach a volume from a Windows instance and attach it to a Linux instance. For more information, see Attach an Amazon EBS volume to an instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Attaches an EBS volume to a running or stopped instance and exposes it to the instance with the specified device name. Encrypted EBS volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. After you attach an EBS volume, you must make it available. For more information, see Make an EBS volume available for use. If a volume has an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code: The volume can be attached only to a stopped instance. Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes are copied from the volume to the instance. You must be subscribed to the product. The instance type and operating system of the instance must support the product. For example, you can't detach a volume from a Windows instance and attach it to a Linux instance. For more information, see Attach an Amazon EBS volume to an instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  */
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  attachVolume(params: EC2.Types.AttachVolumeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment) => void): Request<EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Attaches an EBS volume to a running or stopped instance and exposes it to the instance with the specified device name. Encrypted EBS volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. After you attach an EBS volume, you must make it available. For more information, see Make an EBS volume available for use. If a volume has an Marketplace product code: The volume can be attached only to a stopped instance. Marketplace product codes are copied from the volume to the instance. You must be subscribed to the product. The instance type and operating system of the instance must support the product. For example, you can't detach a volume from a Windows instance and attach it to a Linux instance. For more information, see Attach an Amazon EBS volume to an instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Attaches an EBS volume to a running or stopped instance and exposes it to the instance with the specified device name. Encrypted EBS volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. After you attach an EBS volume, you must make it available. For more information, see Make an EBS volume available for use. If a volume has an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code: The volume can be attached only to a stopped instance. Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes are copied from the volume to the instance. You must be subscribed to the product. The instance type and operating system of the instance must support the product. For example, you can't detach a volume from a Windows instance and attach it to a Linux instance. For more information, see Attach an Amazon EBS volume to an instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  */
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  attachVolume(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment) => void): Request<EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -589,11 +589,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  createNetworkInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Grants an Amazon Web Services-authorized account permission to attach the specified network interface to an instance in their account. You can grant permission to a single account only, and only one account at a time.
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+ * Grants an Amazon Web Services-authorized account permission to attach the specified network interface to an instance in their account. You can grant permission to a single Amazon Web Services account only, and only one account at a time.
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  */
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  createNetworkInterfacePermission(params: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Grants an Amazon Web Services-authorized account permission to attach the specified network interface to an instance in their account. You can grant permission to a single account only, and only one account at a time.
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+ * Grants an Amazon Web Services-authorized account permission to attach the specified network interface to an instance in their account. You can grant permission to a single Amazon Web Services account only, and only one account at a time.
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  */
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  createNetworkInterfacePermission(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfacePermissionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -653,11 +653,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  createSecurityGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSecurityGroupResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSecurityGroupResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can use snapshots for backups, to make copies of EBS volumes, and to save data before shutting down an instance. You can create snapshots of volumes in a Region and volumes on an Outpost. If you create a snapshot of a volume in a Region, the snapshot must be stored in the same Region as the volume. If you create a snapshot of a volume on an Outpost, the snapshot can be stored on the same Outpost as the volume, or in the Region for that Outpost. When a snapshot is created, any Marketplace product codes that are associated with the source volume are propagated to the snapshot. You can take a snapshot of an attached volume that is in use. However, snapshots only capture data that has been written to your Amazon EBS volume at the time the snapshot command is issued; this might exclude any data that has been cached by any applications or the operating system. If you can pause any file systems on the volume long enough to take a snapshot, your snapshot should be complete. However, if you cannot pause all file writes to the volume, you should unmount the volume from within the instance, issue the snapshot command, and then remount the volume to ensure a consistent and complete snapshot. You may remount and use your volume while the snapshot status is pending. To create a snapshot for Amazon EBS volumes that serve as root devices, you should stop the instance before taking the snapshot. Snapshots that are taken from encrypted volumes are automatically encrypted. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. Your encrypted volumes and any associated snapshots always remain protected. You can tag your snapshots during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Amazon Elastic Block Store and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Creates a snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can use snapshots for backups, to make copies of EBS volumes, and to save data before shutting down an instance. You can create snapshots of volumes in a Region and volumes on an Outpost. If you create a snapshot of a volume in a Region, the snapshot must be stored in the same Region as the volume. If you create a snapshot of a volume on an Outpost, the snapshot can be stored on the same Outpost as the volume, or in the Region for that Outpost. When a snapshot is created, any Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes that are associated with the source volume are propagated to the snapshot. You can take a snapshot of an attached volume that is in use. However, snapshots only capture data that has been written to your Amazon EBS volume at the time the snapshot command is issued; this might exclude any data that has been cached by any applications or the operating system. If you can pause any file systems on the volume long enough to take a snapshot, your snapshot should be complete. However, if you cannot pause all file writes to the volume, you should unmount the volume from within the instance, issue the snapshot command, and then remount the volume to ensure a consistent and complete snapshot. You may remount and use your volume while the snapshot status is pending. To create a snapshot for Amazon EBS volumes that serve as root devices, you should stop the instance before taking the snapshot. Snapshots that are taken from encrypted volumes are automatically encrypted. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. Your encrypted volumes and any associated snapshots always remain protected. You can tag your snapshots during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Amazon Elastic Block Store and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  */
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  createSnapshot(params: EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Snapshot) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Snapshot, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can use snapshots for backups, to make copies of EBS volumes, and to save data before shutting down an instance. You can create snapshots of volumes in a Region and volumes on an Outpost. If you create a snapshot of a volume in a Region, the snapshot must be stored in the same Region as the volume. If you create a snapshot of a volume on an Outpost, the snapshot can be stored on the same Outpost as the volume, or in the Region for that Outpost. When a snapshot is created, any Marketplace product codes that are associated with the source volume are propagated to the snapshot. You can take a snapshot of an attached volume that is in use. However, snapshots only capture data that has been written to your Amazon EBS volume at the time the snapshot command is issued; this might exclude any data that has been cached by any applications or the operating system. If you can pause any file systems on the volume long enough to take a snapshot, your snapshot should be complete. However, if you cannot pause all file writes to the volume, you should unmount the volume from within the instance, issue the snapshot command, and then remount the volume to ensure a consistent and complete snapshot. You may remount and use your volume while the snapshot status is pending. To create a snapshot for Amazon EBS volumes that serve as root devices, you should stop the instance before taking the snapshot. Snapshots that are taken from encrypted volumes are automatically encrypted. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. Your encrypted volumes and any associated snapshots always remain protected. You can tag your snapshots during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Amazon Elastic Block Store and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Creates a snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can use snapshots for backups, to make copies of EBS volumes, and to save data before shutting down an instance. You can create snapshots of volumes in a Region and volumes on an Outpost. If you create a snapshot of a volume in a Region, the snapshot must be stored in the same Region as the volume. If you create a snapshot of a volume on an Outpost, the snapshot can be stored on the same Outpost as the volume, or in the Region for that Outpost. When a snapshot is created, any Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes that are associated with the source volume are propagated to the snapshot. You can take a snapshot of an attached volume that is in use. However, snapshots only capture data that has been written to your Amazon EBS volume at the time the snapshot command is issued; this might exclude any data that has been cached by any applications or the operating system. If you can pause any file systems on the volume long enough to take a snapshot, your snapshot should be complete. However, if you cannot pause all file writes to the volume, you should unmount the volume from within the instance, issue the snapshot command, and then remount the volume to ensure a consistent and complete snapshot. You may remount and use your volume while the snapshot status is pending. To create a snapshot for Amazon EBS volumes that serve as root devices, you should stop the instance before taking the snapshot. Snapshots that are taken from encrypted volumes are automatically encrypted. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. Your encrypted volumes and any associated snapshots always remain protected. You can tag your snapshots during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Amazon Elastic Block Store and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  */
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  createSnapshot(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Snapshot) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Snapshot, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -669,11 +669,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  createSnapshots(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotsResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a data feed for Spot Instances, enabling you to view Spot Instance usage logs. You can create one data feed per account. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
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+ * Creates a data feed for Spot Instances, enabling you to view Spot Instance usage logs. You can create one data feed per Amazon Web Services account. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
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  */
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  createSpotDatafeedSubscription(params: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates a data feed for Spot Instances, enabling you to view Spot Instance usage logs. You can create one data feed per account. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
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+ * Creates a data feed for Spot Instances, enabling you to view Spot Instance usage logs. You can create one data feed per Amazon Web Services account. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
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  */
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  createSpotDatafeedSubscription(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -813,11 +813,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  */
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  createTransitGatewayVpcAttachment(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayVpcAttachmentResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an EBS volume that can be attached to an instance in the same Availability Zone. You can create a new empty volume or restore a volume from an EBS snapshot. Any Marketplace product codes from the snapshot are propagated to the volume. You can create encrypted volumes. Encrypted volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Creates an EBS volume that can be attached to an instance in the same Availability Zone. You can create a new empty volume or restore a volume from an EBS snapshot. Any Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes from the snapshot are propagated to the volume. You can create encrypted volumes. Encrypted volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  */
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  createVolume(params: EC2.Types.CreateVolumeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Volume) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Volume, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Creates an EBS volume that can be attached to an instance in the same Availability Zone. You can create a new empty volume or restore a volume from an EBS snapshot. Any Marketplace product codes from the snapshot are propagated to the volume. You can create encrypted volumes. Encrypted volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Creates an EBS volume that can be attached to an instance in the same Availability Zone. You can create a new empty volume or restore a volume from an EBS snapshot. Any Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes from the snapshot are propagated to the volume. You can create encrypted volumes. Encrypted volumes must be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. Volumes that are created from encrypted snapshots are also automatically encrypted. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
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  createVolume(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Volume) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Volume, AWSError>;
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  /**
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  createVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Requests a VPC peering connection between two VPCs: a requester VPC that you own and an accepter VPC with which to create the connection. The accepter VPC can belong to another account and can be in a different Region to the requester VPC. The requester VPC and accepter VPC cannot have overlapping CIDR blocks. Limitations and rules apply to a VPC peering connection. For more information, see the limitations section in the VPC Peering Guide. The owner of the accepter VPC must accept the peering request to activate the peering connection. The VPC peering connection request expires after 7 days, after which it cannot be accepted or rejected. If you create a VPC peering connection request between VPCs with overlapping CIDR blocks, the VPC peering connection has a status of failed.
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+ * Requests a VPC peering connection between two VPCs: a requester VPC that you own and an accepter VPC with which to create the connection. The accepter VPC can belong to another Amazon Web Services account and can be in a different Region to the requester VPC. The requester VPC and accepter VPC cannot have overlapping CIDR blocks. Limitations and rules apply to a VPC peering connection. For more information, see the limitations section in the VPC Peering Guide. The owner of the accepter VPC must accept the peering request to activate the peering connection. The VPC peering connection request expires after 7 days, after which it cannot be accepted or rejected. If you create a VPC peering connection request between VPCs with overlapping CIDR blocks, the VPC peering connection has a status of failed.
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  */
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  createVpcPeeringConnection(params: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Requests a VPC peering connection between two VPCs: a requester VPC that you own and an accepter VPC with which to create the connection. The accepter VPC can belong to another account and can be in a different Region to the requester VPC. The requester VPC and accepter VPC cannot have overlapping CIDR blocks. Limitations and rules apply to a VPC peering connection. For more information, see the limitations section in the VPC Peering Guide. The owner of the accepter VPC must accept the peering request to activate the peering connection. The VPC peering connection request expires after 7 days, after which it cannot be accepted or rejected. If you create a VPC peering connection request between VPCs with overlapping CIDR blocks, the VPC peering connection has a status of failed.
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+ * Requests a VPC peering connection between two VPCs: a requester VPC that you own and an accepter VPC with which to create the connection. The accepter VPC can belong to another Amazon Web Services account and can be in a different Region to the requester VPC. The requester VPC and accepter VPC cannot have overlapping CIDR blocks. Limitations and rules apply to a VPC peering connection. For more information, see the limitations section in the VPC Peering Guide. The owner of the accepter VPC must accept the peering request to activate the peering connection. The VPC peering connection request expires after 7 days, after which it cannot be accepted or rejected. If you create a VPC peering connection request between VPCs with overlapping CIDR blocks, the VPC peering connection has a status of failed.
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  */
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  createVpcPeeringConnection(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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  */
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  describeByoipCidrs(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeByoipCidrsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeByoipCidrsResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Describes one or more of your Capacity Reservations. The results describe only the Capacity Reservations in the Region that you're currently using.
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+ * 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.
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  */
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  describeCapacityReservations(params: EC2.Types.DescribeCapacityReservationsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeCapacityReservationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeCapacityReservationsResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Describes one or more of your Capacity Reservations. The results describe only the Capacity Reservations in the Region that you're currently using.
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+ * 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.
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  */
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  describeCapacityReservations(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeCapacityReservationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeCapacityReservationsResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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  */
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  describeSnapshotAttribute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotAttributeResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotAttributeResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
2056
- * Describes the specified EBS snapshots available to you or all of the EBS snapshots available to you. The snapshots available to you include public snapshots, private snapshots that you own, and private snapshots owned by other accounts for which you have explicit create volume permissions. The create volume permissions fall into the following categories: public: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions for the snapshot to the all group. All accounts have create volume permissions for these snapshots. explicit: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions to a specific account. implicit: An account has implicit create volume permissions for all snapshots it owns. The list of snapshots returned can be filtered by specifying snapshot IDs, snapshot owners, or accounts with create volume permissions. If no options are specified, Amazon EC2 returns all snapshots for which you have create volume permissions. If you specify one or more snapshot IDs, only snapshots that have the specified IDs are returned. If you specify an invalid snapshot ID, an error is returned. If you specify a snapshot ID for which you do not have access, it is not included in the returned results. If you specify one or more snapshot owners using the OwnerIds option, only snapshots from the specified owners and for which you have access are returned. The results can include the account IDs of the specified owners, amazon for snapshots owned by Amazon, or self for snapshots that you own. If you specify a list of restorable users, only snapshots with create snapshot permissions for those users are returned. You can specify account IDs (if you own the snapshots), self for snapshots for which you own or have explicit permissions, or all for public snapshots. If you are describing a long list of snapshots, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more manageable. The MaxResults parameter sets the maximum number of results returned in a single page. If the list of results exceeds your MaxResults value, then that number of results is returned along with a NextToken value that can be passed to a subsequent DescribeSnapshots request to retrieve the remaining results. To get the state of fast snapshot restores for a snapshot, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2056
+ * Describes the specified EBS snapshots available to you or all of the EBS snapshots available to you. The snapshots available to you include public snapshots, private snapshots that you own, and private snapshots owned by other Amazon Web Services accounts for which you have explicit create volume permissions. The create volume permissions fall into the following categories: public: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions for the snapshot to the all group. All Amazon Web Services accounts have create volume permissions for these snapshots. explicit: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions to a specific Amazon Web Services account. implicit: An Amazon Web Services account has implicit create volume permissions for all snapshots it owns. The list of snapshots returned can be filtered by specifying snapshot IDs, snapshot owners, or Amazon Web Services accounts with create volume permissions. If no options are specified, Amazon EC2 returns all snapshots for which you have create volume permissions. If you specify one or more snapshot IDs, only snapshots that have the specified IDs are returned. If you specify an invalid snapshot ID, an error is returned. If you specify a snapshot ID for which you do not have access, it is not included in the returned results. If you specify one or more snapshot owners using the OwnerIds option, only snapshots from the specified owners and for which you have access are returned. The results can include the Amazon Web Services account IDs of the specified owners, amazon for snapshots owned by Amazon, or self for snapshots that you own. If you specify a list of restorable users, only snapshots with create snapshot permissions for those users are returned. You can specify Amazon Web Services account IDs (if you own the snapshots), self for snapshots for which you own or have explicit permissions, or all for public snapshots. If you are describing a long list of snapshots, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more manageable. The MaxResults parameter sets the maximum number of results returned in a single page. If the list of results exceeds your MaxResults value, then that number of results is returned along with a NextToken value that can be passed to a subsequent DescribeSnapshots request to retrieve the remaining results. To get the state of fast snapshot restores for a snapshot, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2057
2057
  */
2058
2058
  describeSnapshots(params: EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult, AWSError>;
2059
2059
  /**
2060
- * Describes the specified EBS snapshots available to you or all of the EBS snapshots available to you. The snapshots available to you include public snapshots, private snapshots that you own, and private snapshots owned by other accounts for which you have explicit create volume permissions. The create volume permissions fall into the following categories: public: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions for the snapshot to the all group. All accounts have create volume permissions for these snapshots. explicit: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions to a specific account. implicit: An account has implicit create volume permissions for all snapshots it owns. The list of snapshots returned can be filtered by specifying snapshot IDs, snapshot owners, or accounts with create volume permissions. If no options are specified, Amazon EC2 returns all snapshots for which you have create volume permissions. If you specify one or more snapshot IDs, only snapshots that have the specified IDs are returned. If you specify an invalid snapshot ID, an error is returned. If you specify a snapshot ID for which you do not have access, it is not included in the returned results. If you specify one or more snapshot owners using the OwnerIds option, only snapshots from the specified owners and for which you have access are returned. The results can include the account IDs of the specified owners, amazon for snapshots owned by Amazon, or self for snapshots that you own. If you specify a list of restorable users, only snapshots with create snapshot permissions for those users are returned. You can specify account IDs (if you own the snapshots), self for snapshots for which you own or have explicit permissions, or all for public snapshots. If you are describing a long list of snapshots, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more manageable. The MaxResults parameter sets the maximum number of results returned in a single page. If the list of results exceeds your MaxResults value, then that number of results is returned along with a NextToken value that can be passed to a subsequent DescribeSnapshots request to retrieve the remaining results. To get the state of fast snapshot restores for a snapshot, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2060
+ * Describes the specified EBS snapshots available to you or all of the EBS snapshots available to you. The snapshots available to you include public snapshots, private snapshots that you own, and private snapshots owned by other Amazon Web Services accounts for which you have explicit create volume permissions. The create volume permissions fall into the following categories: public: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions for the snapshot to the all group. All Amazon Web Services accounts have create volume permissions for these snapshots. explicit: The owner of the snapshot granted create volume permissions to a specific Amazon Web Services account. implicit: An Amazon Web Services account has implicit create volume permissions for all snapshots it owns. The list of snapshots returned can be filtered by specifying snapshot IDs, snapshot owners, or Amazon Web Services accounts with create volume permissions. If no options are specified, Amazon EC2 returns all snapshots for which you have create volume permissions. If you specify one or more snapshot IDs, only snapshots that have the specified IDs are returned. If you specify an invalid snapshot ID, an error is returned. If you specify a snapshot ID for which you do not have access, it is not included in the returned results. If you specify one or more snapshot owners using the OwnerIds option, only snapshots from the specified owners and for which you have access are returned. The results can include the Amazon Web Services account IDs of the specified owners, amazon for snapshots owned by Amazon, or self for snapshots that you own. If you specify a list of restorable users, only snapshots with create snapshot permissions for those users are returned. You can specify Amazon Web Services account IDs (if you own the snapshots), self for snapshots for which you own or have explicit permissions, or all for public snapshots. If you are describing a long list of snapshots, we recommend that you paginate the output to make the list more manageable. The MaxResults parameter sets the maximum number of results returned in a single page. If the list of results exceeds your MaxResults value, then that number of results is returned along with a NextToken value that can be passed to a subsequent DescribeSnapshots request to retrieve the remaining results. To get the state of fast snapshot restores for a snapshot, use DescribeFastSnapshotRestores. For more information about EBS snapshots, see Amazon EBS snapshots in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2061
2061
  */
2062
2062
  describeSnapshots(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult, AWSError>;
2063
2063
  /**
@@ -2397,11 +2397,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2397
2397
  */
2398
2398
  detachNetworkInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
2399
2399
  /**
2400
- * Detaches an EBS volume from an instance. Make sure to unmount any file systems on the device within your operating system before detaching the volume. Failure to do so can result in the volume becoming stuck in the busy state while detaching. If this happens, detachment can be delayed indefinitely until you unmount the volume, force detachment, reboot the instance, or all three. If an EBS volume is the root device of an instance, it can't be detached while the instance is running. To detach the root volume, stop the instance first. When a volume with an Marketplace product code is detached from an instance, the product code is no longer associated with the instance. For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2400
+ * Detaches an EBS volume from an instance. Make sure to unmount any file systems on the device within your operating system before detaching the volume. Failure to do so can result in the volume becoming stuck in the busy state while detaching. If this happens, detachment can be delayed indefinitely until you unmount the volume, force detachment, reboot the instance, or all three. If an EBS volume is the root device of an instance, it can't be detached while the instance is running. To detach the root volume, stop the instance first. When a volume with an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code is detached from an instance, the product code is no longer associated with the instance. For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2401
2401
  */
2402
2402
  detachVolume(params: EC2.Types.DetachVolumeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment) => void): Request<EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment, AWSError>;
2403
2403
  /**
2404
- * Detaches an EBS volume from an instance. Make sure to unmount any file systems on the device within your operating system before detaching the volume. Failure to do so can result in the volume becoming stuck in the busy state while detaching. If this happens, detachment can be delayed indefinitely until you unmount the volume, force detachment, reboot the instance, or all three. If an EBS volume is the root device of an instance, it can't be detached while the instance is running. To detach the root volume, stop the instance first. When a volume with an Marketplace product code is detached from an instance, the product code is no longer associated with the instance. For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2404
+ * Detaches an EBS volume from an instance. Make sure to unmount any file systems on the device within your operating system before detaching the volume. Failure to do so can result in the volume becoming stuck in the busy state while detaching. If this happens, detachment can be delayed indefinitely until you unmount the volume, force detachment, reboot the instance, or all three. If an EBS volume is the root device of an instance, it can't be detached while the instance is running. To detach the root volume, stop the instance first. When a volume with an Amazon Web Services Marketplace product code is detached from an instance, the product code is no longer associated with the instance. For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2405
2405
  */
2406
2406
  detachVolume(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment) => void): Request<EC2.Types.VolumeAttachment, AWSError>;
2407
2407
  /**
@@ -2685,11 +2685,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2685
2685
  */
2686
2686
  getAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrs(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetAssociatedIpv6PoolCidrsResult, AWSError>;
2687
2687
  /**
2688
- * Gets usage information about a Capacity Reservation. If the Capacity Reservation is shared, it shows usage information for the Capacity Reservation owner and each account that is currently using the shared capacity. If the Capacity Reservation is not shared, it shows only the Capacity Reservation owner's usage.
2688
+ * Gets usage information about a Capacity Reservation. If the Capacity Reservation is shared, it shows usage information for the Capacity Reservation owner and each Amazon Web Services account that is currently using the shared capacity. If the Capacity Reservation is not shared, it shows only the Capacity Reservation owner's usage.
2689
2689
  */
2690
2690
  getCapacityReservationUsage(params: EC2.Types.GetCapacityReservationUsageRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetCapacityReservationUsageResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetCapacityReservationUsageResult, AWSError>;
2691
2691
  /**
2692
- * Gets usage information about a Capacity Reservation. If the Capacity Reservation is shared, it shows usage information for the Capacity Reservation owner and each account that is currently using the shared capacity. If the Capacity Reservation is not shared, it shows only the Capacity Reservation owner's usage.
2692
+ * Gets usage information about a Capacity Reservation. If the Capacity Reservation is shared, it shows usage information for the Capacity Reservation owner and each Amazon Web Services account that is currently using the shared capacity. If the Capacity Reservation is not shared, it shows only the Capacity Reservation owner's usage.
2693
2693
  */
2694
2694
  getCapacityReservationUsage(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetCapacityReservationUsageResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetCapacityReservationUsageResult, AWSError>;
2695
2695
  /**
@@ -2941,11 +2941,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2941
2941
  */
2942
2942
  modifyClientVpnEndpoint(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyClientVpnEndpointResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyClientVpnEndpointResult, AWSError>;
2943
2943
  /**
2944
- * Modifies the default credit option for CPU usage of burstable performance instances. The default credit option is set at the account level per Region, and is specified per instance family. All new burstable performance instances in the account launch using the default credit option. ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification is an asynchronous operation, which works at an Region level and modifies the credit option for each Availability Zone. All zones in a Region are updated within five minutes. But if instances are launched during this operation, they might not get the new credit option until the zone is updated. To verify whether the update has occurred, you can call GetDefaultCreditSpecification and check DefaultCreditSpecification for updates. For more information, see Burstable performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2944
+ * Modifies the default credit option for CPU usage of burstable performance instances. The default credit option is set at the account level per Amazon Web Services Region, and is specified per instance family. All new burstable performance instances in the account launch using the default credit option. ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification is an asynchronous operation, which works at an Amazon Web Services Region level and modifies the credit option for each Availability Zone. All zones in a Region are updated within five minutes. But if instances are launched during this operation, they might not get the new credit option until the zone is updated. To verify whether the update has occurred, you can call GetDefaultCreditSpecification and check DefaultCreditSpecification for updates. For more information, see Burstable performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2945
2945
  */
2946
2946
  modifyDefaultCreditSpecification(params: EC2.Types.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationResult, AWSError>;
2947
2947
  /**
2948
- * Modifies the default credit option for CPU usage of burstable performance instances. The default credit option is set at the account level per Region, and is specified per instance family. All new burstable performance instances in the account launch using the default credit option. ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification is an asynchronous operation, which works at an Region level and modifies the credit option for each Availability Zone. All zones in a Region are updated within five minutes. But if instances are launched during this operation, they might not get the new credit option until the zone is updated. To verify whether the update has occurred, you can call GetDefaultCreditSpecification and check DefaultCreditSpecification for updates. For more information, see Burstable performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2948
+ * Modifies the default credit option for CPU usage of burstable performance instances. The default credit option is set at the account level per Amazon Web Services Region, and is specified per instance family. All new burstable performance instances in the account launch using the default credit option. ModifyDefaultCreditSpecification is an asynchronous operation, which works at an Amazon Web Services Region level and modifies the credit option for each Availability Zone. All zones in a Region are updated within five minutes. But if instances are launched during this operation, they might not get the new credit option until the zone is updated. To verify whether the update has occurred, you can call GetDefaultCreditSpecification and check DefaultCreditSpecification for updates. For more information, see Burstable performance instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2949
2949
  */
2950
2950
  modifyDefaultCreditSpecification(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyDefaultCreditSpecificationResult, AWSError>;
2951
2951
  /**
@@ -3101,11 +3101,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3101
3101
  */
3102
3102
  modifySecurityGroupRules(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifySecurityGroupRulesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifySecurityGroupRulesResult, AWSError>;
3103
3103
  /**
3104
- * Adds or removes permission settings for the specified snapshot. You may add or remove specified account IDs from a snapshot's list of create volume permissions, but you cannot do both in a single operation. If you need to both add and remove account IDs for a snapshot, you must use multiple operations. You can make up to 500 modifications to a snapshot in a single operation. Encrypted snapshots and snapshots with Marketplace product codes cannot be made public. Snapshots encrypted with your default KMS key cannot be shared with other accounts. For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
3104
+ * Adds or removes permission settings for the specified snapshot. You may add or remove specified Amazon Web Services account IDs from a snapshot's list of create volume permissions, but you cannot do both in a single operation. If you need to both add and remove account IDs for a snapshot, you must use multiple operations. You can make up to 500 modifications to a snapshot in a single operation. Encrypted snapshots and snapshots with Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes cannot be made public. Snapshots encrypted with your default KMS key cannot be shared with other accounts. For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
3105
3105
  */
3106
3106
  modifySnapshotAttribute(params: EC2.Types.ModifySnapshotAttributeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
3107
3107
  /**
3108
- * Adds or removes permission settings for the specified snapshot. You may add or remove specified account IDs from a snapshot's list of create volume permissions, but you cannot do both in a single operation. If you need to both add and remove account IDs for a snapshot, you must use multiple operations. You can make up to 500 modifications to a snapshot in a single operation. Encrypted snapshots and snapshots with Marketplace product codes cannot be made public. Snapshots encrypted with your default KMS key cannot be shared with other accounts. For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
3108
+ * Adds or removes permission settings for the specified snapshot. You may add or remove specified Amazon Web Services account IDs from a snapshot's list of create volume permissions, but you cannot do both in a single operation. If you need to both add and remove account IDs for a snapshot, you must use multiple operations. You can make up to 500 modifications to a snapshot in a single operation. Encrypted snapshots and snapshots with Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes cannot be made public. Snapshots encrypted with your default KMS key cannot be shared with other accounts. For more information about modifying snapshot permissions, see Share a snapshot in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
3109
3109
  */
3110
3110
  modifySnapshotAttribute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
3111
3111
  /**
@@ -3229,11 +3229,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3229
3229
  */
3230
3230
  modifyVpcEndpointServicePermissions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVpcEndpointServicePermissionsResult, AWSError>;
3231
3231
  /**
3232
- * Modifies the VPC peering connection options on one side of a VPC peering connection. You can do the following: Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to your VPC (using ClassicLink) and instances in the peer VPC. Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between instances in your VPC and an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to the peer VPC. Enable/disable the ability to resolve public DNS hostnames to private IP addresses when queried from instances in the peer VPC. If the peered VPCs are in the same account, you can enable DNS resolution for queries from the local VPC. This ensures that queries from the local VPC resolve to private IP addresses in the peer VPC. This option is not available if the peered VPCs are in different different accounts or different Regions. For peered VPCs in different accounts, each account owner must initiate a separate request to modify the peering connection options. For inter-region peering connections, you must use the Region for the requester VPC to modify the requester VPC peering options and the Region for the accepter VPC to modify the accepter VPC peering options. To verify which VPCs are the accepter and the requester for a VPC peering connection, use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections command.
3232
+ * Modifies the VPC peering connection options on one side of a VPC peering connection. You can do the following: Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to your VPC (using ClassicLink) and instances in the peer VPC. Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between instances in your VPC and an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to the peer VPC. Enable/disable the ability to resolve public DNS hostnames to private IP addresses when queried from instances in the peer VPC. If the peered VPCs are in the same Amazon Web Services account, you can enable DNS resolution for queries from the local VPC. This ensures that queries from the local VPC resolve to private IP addresses in the peer VPC. This option is not available if the peered VPCs are in different different Amazon Web Services accounts or different Regions. For peered VPCs in different Amazon Web Services accounts, each Amazon Web Services account owner must initiate a separate request to modify the peering connection options. For inter-region peering connections, you must use the Region for the requester VPC to modify the requester VPC peering options and the Region for the accepter VPC to modify the accepter VPC peering options. To verify which VPCs are the accepter and the requester for a VPC peering connection, use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections command.
3233
3233
  */
3234
3234
  modifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptions(params: EC2.Types.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsResult, AWSError>;
3235
3235
  /**
3236
- * Modifies the VPC peering connection options on one side of a VPC peering connection. You can do the following: Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to your VPC (using ClassicLink) and instances in the peer VPC. Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between instances in your VPC and an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to the peer VPC. Enable/disable the ability to resolve public DNS hostnames to private IP addresses when queried from instances in the peer VPC. If the peered VPCs are in the same account, you can enable DNS resolution for queries from the local VPC. This ensures that queries from the local VPC resolve to private IP addresses in the peer VPC. This option is not available if the peered VPCs are in different different accounts or different Regions. For peered VPCs in different accounts, each account owner must initiate a separate request to modify the peering connection options. For inter-region peering connections, you must use the Region for the requester VPC to modify the requester VPC peering options and the Region for the accepter VPC to modify the accepter VPC peering options. To verify which VPCs are the accepter and the requester for a VPC peering connection, use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections command.
3236
+ * Modifies the VPC peering connection options on one side of a VPC peering connection. You can do the following: Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to your VPC (using ClassicLink) and instances in the peer VPC. Enable/disable communication over the peering connection between instances in your VPC and an EC2-Classic instance that's linked to the peer VPC. Enable/disable the ability to resolve public DNS hostnames to private IP addresses when queried from instances in the peer VPC. If the peered VPCs are in the same Amazon Web Services account, you can enable DNS resolution for queries from the local VPC. This ensures that queries from the local VPC resolve to private IP addresses in the peer VPC. This option is not available if the peered VPCs are in different different Amazon Web Services accounts or different Regions. For peered VPCs in different Amazon Web Services accounts, each Amazon Web Services account owner must initiate a separate request to modify the peering connection options. For inter-region peering connections, you must use the Region for the requester VPC to modify the requester VPC peering options and the Region for the accepter VPC to modify the accepter VPC peering options. To verify which VPCs are the accepter and the requester for a VPC peering connection, use the DescribeVpcPeeringConnections command.
3237
3237
  */
3238
3238
  modifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVpcPeeringConnectionOptionsResult, AWSError>;
3239
3239
  /**
@@ -3405,11 +3405,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3405
3405
  */
3406
3406
  rejectVpcPeeringConnection(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RejectVpcPeeringConnectionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RejectVpcPeeringConnectionResult, AWSError>;
3407
3407
  /**
3408
- * Releases the specified Elastic IP address. [EC2-Classic, default VPC] Releasing an Elastic IP address automatically disassociates it from any instance that it's associated with. To disassociate an Elastic IP address without releasing it, use DisassociateAddress. [Nondefault VPC] You must use DisassociateAddress to disassociate the Elastic IP address before you can release it. Otherwise, Amazon EC2 returns an error (InvalidIPAddress.InUse). After releasing an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool. Be sure to update your DNS records and any servers or devices that communicate with the address. If you attempt to release an Elastic IP address that you already released, you'll get an AuthFailure error if the address is already allocated to another account. [EC2-VPC] After you release an Elastic IP address for use in a VPC, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see AllocateAddress.
3408
+ * Releases the specified Elastic IP address. [EC2-Classic, default VPC] Releasing an Elastic IP address automatically disassociates it from any instance that it's associated with. To disassociate an Elastic IP address without releasing it, use DisassociateAddress. [Nondefault VPC] You must use DisassociateAddress to disassociate the Elastic IP address before you can release it. Otherwise, Amazon EC2 returns an error (InvalidIPAddress.InUse). After releasing an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool. Be sure to update your DNS records and any servers or devices that communicate with the address. If you attempt to release an Elastic IP address that you already released, you'll get an AuthFailure error if the address is already allocated to another Amazon Web Services account. [EC2-VPC] After you release an Elastic IP address for use in a VPC, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see AllocateAddress.
3409
3409
  */
3410
3410
  releaseAddress(params: EC2.Types.ReleaseAddressRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
3411
3411
  /**
3412
- * Releases the specified Elastic IP address. [EC2-Classic, default VPC] Releasing an Elastic IP address automatically disassociates it from any instance that it's associated with. To disassociate an Elastic IP address without releasing it, use DisassociateAddress. [Nondefault VPC] You must use DisassociateAddress to disassociate the Elastic IP address before you can release it. Otherwise, Amazon EC2 returns an error (InvalidIPAddress.InUse). After releasing an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool. Be sure to update your DNS records and any servers or devices that communicate with the address. If you attempt to release an Elastic IP address that you already released, you'll get an AuthFailure error if the address is already allocated to another account. [EC2-VPC] After you release an Elastic IP address for use in a VPC, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see AllocateAddress.
3412
+ * Releases the specified Elastic IP address. [EC2-Classic, default VPC] Releasing an Elastic IP address automatically disassociates it from any instance that it's associated with. To disassociate an Elastic IP address without releasing it, use DisassociateAddress. [Nondefault VPC] You must use DisassociateAddress to disassociate the Elastic IP address before you can release it. Otherwise, Amazon EC2 returns an error (InvalidIPAddress.InUse). After releasing an Elastic IP address, it is released to the IP address pool. Be sure to update your DNS records and any servers or devices that communicate with the address. If you attempt to release an Elastic IP address that you already released, you'll get an AuthFailure error if the address is already allocated to another Amazon Web Services account. [EC2-VPC] After you release an Elastic IP address for use in a VPC, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see AllocateAddress.
3413
3413
  */
3414
3414
  releaseAddress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
3415
3415
  /**
@@ -4176,7 +4176,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
4176
4176
  */
4177
4177
  NetworkInterfaceId?: String;
4178
4178
  /**
4179
- * The ID of the account that owns the network interface.
4179
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the network interface.
4180
4180
  */
4181
4181
  NetworkInterfaceOwnerId?: String;
4182
4182
  /**
@@ -5694,7 +5694,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5694
5694
  */
5695
5695
  CapacityReservationId?: String;
5696
5696
  /**
5697
- * The ID of the account that owns the Capacity Reservation.
5697
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the Capacity Reservation.
5698
5698
  */
5699
5699
  OwnerId?: String;
5700
5700
  /**
@@ -5718,7 +5718,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5718
5718
  */
5719
5719
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
5720
5720
  /**
5721
- * Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single account.
5721
+ * Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other Amazon Web Services accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single Amazon Web Services account.
5722
5722
  */
5723
5723
  Tenancy?: CapacityReservationTenancy;
5724
5724
  /**
@@ -5776,7 +5776,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5776
5776
  */
5777
5777
  GroupArn?: String;
5778
5778
  /**
5779
- * The ID of the account that owns the resource group.
5779
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource group.
5780
5780
  */
5781
5781
  OwnerId?: String;
5782
5782
  }
@@ -5854,7 +5854,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5854
5854
  */
5855
5855
  State?: CarrierGatewayState;
5856
5856
  /**
5857
- * The account ID of the owner of the carrier gateway.
5857
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the carrier gateway.
5858
5858
  */
5859
5859
  OwnerId?: String;
5860
5860
  /**
@@ -6327,7 +6327,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6327
6327
  }
6328
6328
  export interface ConfirmProductInstanceResult {
6329
6329
  /**
6330
- * The account ID of the instance owner. This is only present if the product code is attached to the instance.
6330
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the instance owner. This is only present if the product code is attached to the instance.
6331
6331
  */
6332
6332
  OwnerId?: String;
6333
6333
  /**
@@ -6606,7 +6606,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6606
6606
  */
6607
6607
  AvailabilityZoneId?: String;
6608
6608
  /**
6609
- * Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single account.
6609
+ * Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other Amazon Web Services accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single Amazon Web Services account.
6610
6610
  */
6611
6611
  Tenancy?: CapacityReservationTenancy;
6612
6612
  /**
@@ -7548,7 +7548,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
7548
7548
  */
7549
7549
  NetworkInterfaceId: NetworkInterfaceId;
7550
7550
  /**
7551
- * The account ID.
7551
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID.
7552
7552
  */
7553
7553
  AwsAccountId?: String;
7554
7554
  /**
@@ -8519,18 +8519,18 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
8519
8519
  */
8520
8520
  Group?: PermissionGroup;
8521
8521
  /**
8522
- * The ID of the account to be added or removed.
8522
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account to be added or removed.
8523
8523
  */
8524
8524
  UserId?: String;
8525
8525
  }
8526
8526
  export type CreateVolumePermissionList = CreateVolumePermission[];
8527
8527
  export interface CreateVolumePermissionModifications {
8528
8528
  /**
8529
- * Adds the specified account ID or group to the list.
8529
+ * Adds the specified Amazon Web Services account ID or group to the list.
8530
8530
  */
8531
8531
  Add?: CreateVolumePermissionList;
8532
8532
  /**
8533
- * Removes the specified account ID or group from the list.
8533
+ * Removes the specified Amazon Web Services account ID or group from the list.
8534
8534
  */
8535
8535
  Remove?: CreateVolumePermissionList;
8536
8536
  }
@@ -8726,7 +8726,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
8726
8726
  */
8727
8727
  DryRun?: Boolean;
8728
8728
  /**
8729
- * The account ID of the owner of the accepter VPC. Default: Your account ID
8729
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the accepter VPC. Default: Your Amazon Web Services account ID
8730
8730
  */
8731
8731
  PeerOwnerId?: String;
8732
8732
  /**
@@ -10022,7 +10022,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10022
10022
  }
10023
10023
  export interface DescribeAddressesRequest {
10024
10024
  /**
10025
- * One or more filters. Filter names and values are case-sensitive. allocation-id - [EC2-VPC] The allocation ID for the address. association-id - [EC2-VPC] The association ID for the address. domain - Indicates whether the address is for use in EC2-Classic (standard) or in a VPC (vpc). instance-id - The ID of the instance the address is associated with, if any. network-border-group - A unique set of Availability Zones, Local Zones, or Wavelength Zones from where Amazon Web Services advertises IP addresses. network-interface-id - [EC2-VPC] The ID of the network interface that the address is associated with, if any. network-interface-owner-id - The account ID of the owner. private-ip-address - [EC2-VPC] The private IP address associated with the Elastic IP address. public-ip - The Elastic IP address, or the carrier IP address. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
10025
+ * One or more filters. Filter names and values are case-sensitive. allocation-id - [EC2-VPC] The allocation ID for the address. association-id - [EC2-VPC] The association ID for the address. domain - Indicates whether the address is for use in EC2-Classic (standard) or in a VPC (vpc). instance-id - The ID of the instance the address is associated with, if any. network-border-group - A unique set of Availability Zones, Local Zones, or Wavelength Zones from where Amazon Web Services advertises IP addresses. network-interface-id - [EC2-VPC] The ID of the network interface that the address is associated with, if any. network-interface-owner-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner. private-ip-address - [EC2-VPC] The private IP address associated with the Elastic IP address. public-ip - The Elastic IP address, or the carrier IP address. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
10026
10026
  */
10027
10027
  Filters?: FilterList;
10028
10028
  /**
@@ -10148,7 +10148,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10148
10148
  */
10149
10149
  MaxResults?: DescribeCapacityReservationsMaxResults;
10150
10150
  /**
10151
- * One or more filters. instance-type - The type of instance for which the Capacity Reservation reserves capacity. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the Capacity Reservation. availability-zone-id - The Availability Zone ID of the Capacity Reservation. instance-platform - The type of operating system for which the Capacity Reservation reserves capacity. availability-zone - The Availability Zone ID of the Capacity Reservation. tenancy - Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single account. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost on which the Capacity Reservation was created. state - The current state of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can be in one of the following states: active- The Capacity Reservation is active and the capacity is available for your use. expired - The Capacity Reservation expired automatically at the date and time specified in your request. The reserved capacity is no longer available for your use. cancelled - The Capacity Reservation was cancelled. The reserved capacity is no longer available for your use. pending - The Capacity Reservation request was successful but the capacity provisioning is still pending. failed - The Capacity Reservation request has failed. A request might fail due to invalid request parameters, capacity constraints, or instance limit constraints. Failed requests are retained for 60 minutes. start-date - The date and time at which the Capacity Reservation was started. end-date - The date and time at which the Capacity Reservation expires. When a Capacity Reservation expires, the reserved capacity is released and you can no longer launch instances into it. The Capacity Reservation's state changes to expired when it reaches its end date and time. end-date-type - Indicates the way in which the Capacity Reservation ends. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following end types: unlimited - The Capacity Reservation remains active until you explicitly cancel it. limited - The Capacity Reservation expires automatically at a specified date and time. instance-match-criteria - Indicates the type of instance launches that the Capacity Reservation accepts. The options include: open - The Capacity Reservation accepts all instances that have matching attributes (instance type, platform, and Availability Zone). Instances that have matching attributes launch into the Capacity Reservation automatically without specifying any additional parameters. targeted - The Capacity Reservation only accepts instances that have matching attributes (instance type, platform, and Availability Zone), and explicitly target the Capacity Reservation. This ensures that only permitted instances can use the reserved capacity.
10151
+ * One or more filters. instance-type - The type of instance for which the Capacity Reservation reserves capacity. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the Capacity Reservation. availability-zone-id - The Availability Zone ID of the Capacity Reservation. instance-platform - The type of operating system for which the Capacity Reservation reserves capacity. availability-zone - The Availability Zone ID of the Capacity Reservation. tenancy - Indicates the tenancy of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following tenancy settings: default - The Capacity Reservation is created on hardware that is shared with other Amazon Web Services accounts. dedicated - The Capacity Reservation is created on single-tenant hardware that is dedicated to a single Amazon Web Services account. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost on which the Capacity Reservation was created. state - The current state of the Capacity Reservation. A Capacity Reservation can be in one of the following states: active- The Capacity Reservation is active and the capacity is available for your use. expired - The Capacity Reservation expired automatically at the date and time specified in your request. The reserved capacity is no longer available for your use. cancelled - The Capacity Reservation was cancelled. The reserved capacity is no longer available for your use. pending - The Capacity Reservation request was successful but the capacity provisioning is still pending. failed - The Capacity Reservation request has failed. A request might fail due to invalid request parameters, capacity constraints, or instance limit constraints. Failed requests are retained for 60 minutes. start-date - The date and time at which the Capacity Reservation was started. end-date - The date and time at which the Capacity Reservation expires. When a Capacity Reservation expires, the reserved capacity is released and you can no longer launch instances into it. The Capacity Reservation's state changes to expired when it reaches its end date and time. end-date-type - Indicates the way in which the Capacity Reservation ends. A Capacity Reservation can have one of the following end types: unlimited - The Capacity Reservation remains active until you explicitly cancel it. limited - The Capacity Reservation expires automatically at a specified date and time. instance-match-criteria - Indicates the type of instance launches that the Capacity Reservation accepts. The options include: open - The Capacity Reservation accepts all instances that have matching attributes (instance type, platform, and Availability Zone). Instances that have matching attributes launch into the Capacity Reservation automatically without specifying any additional parameters. targeted - The Capacity Reservation only accepts instances that have matching attributes (instance type, platform, and Availability Zone), and explicitly target the Capacity Reservation. This ensures that only permitted instances can use the reserved capacity.
10152
10152
  */
10153
10153
  Filters?: FilterList;
10154
10154
  /**
@@ -10172,7 +10172,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10172
10172
  */
10173
10173
  CarrierGatewayIds?: CarrierGatewayIdSet;
10174
10174
  /**
10175
- * One or more filters. carrier-gateway-id - The ID of the carrier gateway. state - The state of the carrier gateway (pending | failed | available | deleting | deleted). owner-id - The account ID of the owner of the carrier gateway. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC associated with the carrier gateway.
10175
+ * One or more filters. carrier-gateway-id - The ID of the carrier gateway. state - The state of the carrier gateway (pending | failed | available | deleting | deleted). owner-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the carrier gateway. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC associated with the carrier gateway.
10176
10176
  */
10177
10177
  Filters?: FilterList;
10178
10178
  /**
@@ -10476,7 +10476,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10476
10476
  */
10477
10477
  DhcpOptionsIds?: DhcpOptionsIdStringList;
10478
10478
  /**
10479
- * One or more filters. dhcp-options-id - The ID of a DHCP options set. key - The key for one of the options (for example, domain-name). value - The value for one of the options. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the DHCP options set. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
10479
+ * One or more filters. dhcp-options-id - The ID of a DHCP options set. key - The key for one of the options (for example, domain-name). value - The value for one of the options. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the DHCP options set. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
10480
10480
  */
10481
10481
  Filters?: FilterList;
10482
10482
  /**
@@ -10639,7 +10639,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10639
10639
  */
10640
10640
  StateTransitionReason?: String;
10641
10641
  /**
10642
- * The ID of the account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
10642
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
10643
10643
  */
10644
10644
  OwnerId?: String;
10645
10645
  /**
@@ -10671,7 +10671,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10671
10671
  export type DescribeFastSnapshotRestoresMaxResults = number;
10672
10672
  export interface DescribeFastSnapshotRestoresRequest {
10673
10673
  /**
10674
- * The filters. The possible values are: availability-zone: The Availability Zone of the snapshot. owner-id: The ID of the account that enabled fast snapshot restore on the snapshot. snapshot-id: The ID of the snapshot. state: The state of fast snapshot restores for the snapshot (enabling | optimizing | enabled | disabling | disabled).
10674
+ * The filters. The possible values are: availability-zone: The Availability Zone of the snapshot. owner-id: The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that enabled fast snapshot restore on the snapshot. snapshot-id: The ID of the snapshot. state: The state of fast snapshot restores for the snapshot (enabling | optimizing | enabled | disabling | disabled).
10675
10675
  */
10676
10676
  Filters?: FilterList;
10677
10677
  /**
@@ -11397,7 +11397,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11397
11397
  }
11398
11398
  export interface DescribeInstancesRequest {
11399
11399
  /**
11400
- * The filters. affinity - The affinity setting for an instance running on a Dedicated Host (default | host). architecture - The instance architecture (i386 | x86_64 | arm64). availability-zone - The Availability Zone of the instance. block-device-mapping.attach-time - The attach time for an EBS volume mapped to the instance, for example, 2010-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. block-device-mapping.delete-on-termination - A Boolean that indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination. block-device-mapping.device-name - The device name specified in the block device mapping (for example, /dev/sdh or xvdh). block-device-mapping.status - The status for the EBS volume (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). block-device-mapping.volume-id - The volume ID of the EBS volume. client-token - The idempotency token you provided when you launched the instance. dns-name - The public DNS name of the instance. group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. EC2-Classic only. group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. EC2-Classic only. hibernation-options.configured - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for hibernation. A value of true means that the instance is enabled for hibernation. host-id - The ID of the Dedicated Host on which the instance is running, if applicable. hypervisor - The hypervisor type of the instance (ovm | xen). The value xen is used for both Xen and Nitro hypervisors. iam-instance-profile.arn - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an ARN. image-id - The ID of the image used to launch the instance. instance-id - The ID of the instance. instance-lifecycle - Indicates whether this is a Spot Instance or a Scheduled Instance (spot | scheduled). instance-state-code - The state of the instance, as a 16-bit unsigned integer. The high byte is used for internal purposes and should be ignored. The low byte is set based on the state represented. The valid values are: 0 (pending), 16 (running), 32 (shutting-down), 48 (terminated), 64 (stopping), and 80 (stopped). instance-state-name - The state of the instance (pending | running | shutting-down | terminated | stopping | stopped). instance-type - The type of instance (for example, t2.micro). instance.group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. instance.group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. ip-address - The public IPv4 address of the instance. kernel-id - The kernel ID. key-name - The name of the key pair used when the instance was launched. launch-index - When launching multiple instances, this is the index for the instance in the launch group (for example, 0, 1, 2, and so on). launch-time - The time when the instance was launched. metadata-options.http-tokens - The metadata request authorization state (optional | required) metadata-options.http-put-response-hop-limit - The http metadata request put response hop limit (integer, possible values 1 to 64) metadata-options.http-endpoint - Enable or disable metadata access on http endpoint (enabled | disabled) monitoring-state - Indicates whether detailed monitoring is enabled (disabled | enabled). network-interface.addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.addresses.primary - Specifies whether the IPv4 address of the network interface is the primary private IPv4 address. network-interface.addresses.association.public-ip - The ID of the association of an Elastic IP address (IPv4) with a network interface. network-interface.addresses.association.ip-owner-id - The owner ID of the private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. network-interface.association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. network-interface.association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. network-interface.attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. network-interface.attachment.instance-id - The ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.instance-owner-id - The owner ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). network-interface.attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. network-interface.attachment.delete-on-termination - Specifies whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. network-interface.availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the network interface. network-interface.description - The description of the network interface. network-interface.group-id - The ID of a security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.group-name - The name of a security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.mac-address - The MAC address of the network interface. network-interface.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface.owner-id - The ID of the owner of the network interface. network-interface.private-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface. network-interface.requester-id - The requester ID for the network interface. network-interface.requester-managed - Indicates whether the network interface is being managed by Amazon Web Services. network-interface.status - The status of the network interface (available) | in-use). network-interface.source-dest-check - Whether the network interface performs source/destination checking. A value of true means that checking is enabled, and false means that checking is disabled. The value must be false for the network interface to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. network-interface.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the network interface. network-interface.vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network interface. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost. owner-id - The account ID of the instance owner. placement-group-name - The name of the placement group for the instance. placement-partition-number - The partition in which the instance is located. platform - The platform. To list only Windows instances, use windows. private-dns-name - The private IPv4 DNS name of the instance. private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address of the instance. product-code - The product code associated with the AMI used to launch the instance. product-code.type - The type of product code (devpay | marketplace). ramdisk-id - The RAM disk ID. reason - The reason for the current state of the instance (for example, shows "User Initiated [date]" when you stop or terminate the instance). Similar to the state-reason-code filter. requester-id - The ID of the entity that launched the instance on your behalf (for example, Management Console, Auto Scaling, and so on). reservation-id - The ID of the instance's reservation. A reservation ID is created any time you launch an instance. A reservation ID has a one-to-one relationship with an instance launch request, but can be associated with more than one instance if you launch multiple instances using the same launch request. For example, if you launch one instance, you get one reservation ID. If you launch ten instances using the same launch request, you also get one reservation ID. root-device-name - The device name of the root device volume (for example, /dev/sda1). root-device-type - The type of the root device volume (ebs | instance-store). source-dest-check - Indicates whether the instance performs source/destination checking. A value of true means that checking is enabled, and false means that checking is disabled. The value must be false for the instance to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. spot-instance-request-id - The ID of the Spot Instance request. state-reason-code - The reason code for the state change. state-reason-message - A message that describes the state change. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the instance. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources that have a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. tenancy - The tenancy of an instance (dedicated | default | host). virtualization-type - The virtualization type of the instance (paravirtual | hvm). vpc-id - The ID of the VPC that the instance is running in.
11400
+ * The filters. affinity - The affinity setting for an instance running on a Dedicated Host (default | host). architecture - The instance architecture (i386 | x86_64 | arm64). availability-zone - The Availability Zone of the instance. block-device-mapping.attach-time - The attach time for an EBS volume mapped to the instance, for example, 2010-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. block-device-mapping.delete-on-termination - A Boolean that indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination. block-device-mapping.device-name - The device name specified in the block device mapping (for example, /dev/sdh or xvdh). block-device-mapping.status - The status for the EBS volume (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). block-device-mapping.volume-id - The volume ID of the EBS volume. client-token - The idempotency token you provided when you launched the instance. dns-name - The public DNS name of the instance. group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. EC2-Classic only. group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. EC2-Classic only. hibernation-options.configured - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for hibernation. A value of true means that the instance is enabled for hibernation. host-id - The ID of the Dedicated Host on which the instance is running, if applicable. hypervisor - The hypervisor type of the instance (ovm | xen). The value xen is used for both Xen and Nitro hypervisors. iam-instance-profile.arn - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an ARN. image-id - The ID of the image used to launch the instance. instance-id - The ID of the instance. instance-lifecycle - Indicates whether this is a Spot Instance or a Scheduled Instance (spot | scheduled). instance-state-code - The state of the instance, as a 16-bit unsigned integer. The high byte is used for internal purposes and should be ignored. The low byte is set based on the state represented. The valid values are: 0 (pending), 16 (running), 32 (shutting-down), 48 (terminated), 64 (stopping), and 80 (stopped). instance-state-name - The state of the instance (pending | running | shutting-down | terminated | stopping | stopped). instance-type - The type of instance (for example, t2.micro). instance.group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. instance.group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. ip-address - The public IPv4 address of the instance. kernel-id - The kernel ID. key-name - The name of the key pair used when the instance was launched. launch-index - When launching multiple instances, this is the index for the instance in the launch group (for example, 0, 1, 2, and so on). launch-time - The time when the instance was launched. metadata-options.http-tokens - The metadata request authorization state (optional | required) metadata-options.http-put-response-hop-limit - The http metadata request put response hop limit (integer, possible values 1 to 64) metadata-options.http-endpoint - Enable or disable metadata access on http endpoint (enabled | disabled) monitoring-state - Indicates whether detailed monitoring is enabled (disabled | enabled). network-interface.addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.addresses.primary - Specifies whether the IPv4 address of the network interface is the primary private IPv4 address. network-interface.addresses.association.public-ip - The ID of the association of an Elastic IP address (IPv4) with a network interface. network-interface.addresses.association.ip-owner-id - The owner ID of the private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. network-interface.association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. network-interface.association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. network-interface.attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. network-interface.attachment.instance-id - The ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.instance-owner-id - The owner ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. network-interface.attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). network-interface.attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. network-interface.attachment.delete-on-termination - Specifies whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. network-interface.availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the network interface. network-interface.description - The description of the network interface. network-interface.group-id - The ID of a security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.group-name - The name of a security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.mac-address - The MAC address of the network interface. network-interface.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface.owner-id - The ID of the owner of the network interface. network-interface.private-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface. network-interface.requester-id - The requester ID for the network interface. network-interface.requester-managed - Indicates whether the network interface is being managed by Amazon Web Services. network-interface.status - The status of the network interface (available) | in-use). network-interface.source-dest-check - Whether the network interface performs source/destination checking. A value of true means that checking is enabled, and false means that checking is disabled. The value must be false for the network interface to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. network-interface.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the network interface. network-interface.vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network interface. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost. owner-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID of the instance owner. placement-group-name - The name of the placement group for the instance. placement-partition-number - The partition in which the instance is located. platform - The platform. To list only Windows instances, use windows. private-dns-name - The private IPv4 DNS name of the instance. private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address of the instance. product-code - The product code associated with the AMI used to launch the instance. product-code.type - The type of product code (devpay | marketplace). ramdisk-id - The RAM disk ID. reason - The reason for the current state of the instance (for example, shows "User Initiated [date]" when you stop or terminate the instance). Similar to the state-reason-code filter. requester-id - The ID of the entity that launched the instance on your behalf (for example, Amazon Web Services Management Console, Auto Scaling, and so on). reservation-id - The ID of the instance's reservation. A reservation ID is created any time you launch an instance. A reservation ID has a one-to-one relationship with an instance launch request, but can be associated with more than one instance if you launch multiple instances using the same launch request. For example, if you launch one instance, you get one reservation ID. If you launch ten instances using the same launch request, you also get one reservation ID. root-device-name - The device name of the root device volume (for example, /dev/sda1). root-device-type - The type of the root device volume (ebs | instance-store). source-dest-check - Indicates whether the instance performs source/destination checking. A value of true means that checking is enabled, and false means that checking is disabled. The value must be false for the instance to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. spot-instance-request-id - The ID of the Spot Instance request. state-reason-code - The reason code for the state change. state-reason-message - A message that describes the state change. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the instance. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources that have a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. tenancy - The tenancy of an instance (dedicated | default | host). virtualization-type - The virtualization type of the instance (paravirtual | hvm). vpc-id - The ID of the VPC that the instance is running in.
11401
11401
  */
11402
11402
  Filters?: FilterList;
11403
11403
  /**
@@ -11430,7 +11430,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11430
11430
  export type DescribeInternetGatewaysMaxResults = number;
11431
11431
  export interface DescribeInternetGatewaysRequest {
11432
11432
  /**
11433
- * One or more filters. attachment.state - The current state of the attachment between the gateway and the VPC (available). Present only if a VPC is attached. attachment.vpc-id - The ID of an attached VPC. internet-gateway-id - The ID of the Internet gateway. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the internet gateway. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
11433
+ * One or more filters. attachment.state - The current state of the attachment between the gateway and the VPC (available). Present only if a VPC is attached. attachment.vpc-id - The ID of an attached VPC. internet-gateway-id - The ID of the Internet gateway. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the internet gateway. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value.
11434
11434
  */
11435
11435
  Filters?: FilterList;
11436
11436
  /**
@@ -11894,7 +11894,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11894
11894
  export type DescribeNetworkAclsMaxResults = number;
11895
11895
  export interface DescribeNetworkAclsRequest {
11896
11896
  /**
11897
- * One or more filters. association.association-id - The ID of an association ID for the ACL. association.network-acl-id - The ID of the network ACL involved in the association. association.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet involved in the association. default - Indicates whether the ACL is the default network ACL for the VPC. entry.cidr - The IPv4 CIDR range specified in the entry. entry.icmp.code - The ICMP code specified in the entry, if any. entry.icmp.type - The ICMP type specified in the entry, if any. entry.ipv6-cidr - The IPv6 CIDR range specified in the entry. entry.port-range.from - The start of the port range specified in the entry. entry.port-range.to - The end of the port range specified in the entry. entry.protocol - The protocol specified in the entry (tcp | udp | icmp or a protocol number). entry.rule-action - Allows or denies the matching traffic (allow | deny). entry.rule-number - The number of an entry (in other words, rule) in the set of ACL entries. network-acl-id - The ID of the network ACL. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the network ACL. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network ACL.
11897
+ * One or more filters. association.association-id - The ID of an association ID for the ACL. association.network-acl-id - The ID of the network ACL involved in the association. association.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet involved in the association. default - Indicates whether the ACL is the default network ACL for the VPC. entry.cidr - The IPv4 CIDR range specified in the entry. entry.icmp.code - The ICMP code specified in the entry, if any. entry.icmp.type - The ICMP type specified in the entry, if any. entry.ipv6-cidr - The IPv6 CIDR range specified in the entry. entry.port-range.from - The start of the port range specified in the entry. entry.port-range.to - The end of the port range specified in the entry. entry.protocol - The protocol specified in the entry (tcp | udp | icmp or a protocol number). entry.rule-action - Allows or denies the matching traffic (allow | deny). entry.rule-number - The number of an entry (in other words, rule) in the set of ACL entries. network-acl-id - The ID of the network ACL. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the network ACL. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network ACL.
11898
11898
  */
11899
11899
  Filters?: FilterList;
11900
11900
  /**
@@ -12043,7 +12043,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12043
12043
  */
12044
12044
  NetworkInterfacePermissionIds?: NetworkInterfacePermissionIdList;
12045
12045
  /**
12046
- * One or more filters. network-interface-permission.network-interface-permission-id - The ID of the permission. network-interface-permission.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface-permission.aws-account-id - The account ID. network-interface-permission.aws-service - The Amazon Web Service. network-interface-permission.permission - The type of permission (INSTANCE-ATTACH | EIP-ASSOCIATE).
12046
+ * One or more filters. network-interface-permission.network-interface-permission-id - The ID of the permission. network-interface-permission.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface-permission.aws-account-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID. network-interface-permission.aws-service - The Amazon Web Service. network-interface-permission.permission - The type of permission (INSTANCE-ATTACH | EIP-ASSOCIATE).
12047
12047
  */
12048
12048
  Filters?: FilterList;
12049
12049
  /**
@@ -12068,7 +12068,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12068
12068
  export type DescribeNetworkInterfacesMaxResults = number;
12069
12069
  export interface DescribeNetworkInterfacesRequest {
12070
12070
  /**
12071
- * One or more filters. addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 addresses associated with the network interface. addresses.primary - Whether the private IPv4 address is the primary IP address associated with the network interface. addresses.association.public-ip - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with the Elastic IP address (IPv4). addresses.association.owner-id - The owner ID of the addresses associated with the network interface. association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name for the network interface (IPv4). attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. attachment.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. attachment.instance-id - The ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. attachment.instance-owner-id - The owner ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). availability-zone - The Availability Zone of the network interface. description - The description of the network interface. group-id - The ID of a security group associated with the network interface. group-name - The name of a security group associated with the network interface. ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - An IPv6 address associated with the network interface. mac-address - The MAC address of the network interface. network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. owner-id - The account ID of the network interface owner. private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address or addresses of the network interface. private-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface (IPv4). requester-id - The alias or account ID of the principal or service that created the network interface. requester-managed - Indicates whether the network interface is being managed by an Amazon Web Service (for example, Management Console, Auto Scaling, and so on). source-dest-check - Indicates whether the network interface performs source/destination checking. A value of true means checking is enabled, and false means checking is disabled. The value must be false for the network interface to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. status - The status of the network interface. If the network interface is not attached to an instance, the status is available; if a network interface is attached to an instance the status is in-use. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the network interface. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network interface.
12071
+ * One or more filters. addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 addresses associated with the network interface. addresses.primary - Whether the private IPv4 address is the primary IP address associated with the network interface. addresses.association.public-ip - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with the Elastic IP address (IPv4). addresses.association.owner-id - The owner ID of the addresses associated with the network interface. association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name for the network interface (IPv4). attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. attachment.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. attachment.instance-id - The ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. attachment.instance-owner-id - The owner ID of the instance to which the network interface is attached. attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). availability-zone - The Availability Zone of the network interface. description - The description of the network interface. group-id - The ID of a security group associated with the network interface. group-name - The name of a security group associated with the network interface. ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - An IPv6 address associated with the network interface. mac-address - The MAC address of the network interface. network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. owner-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID of the network interface owner. private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address or addresses of the network interface. private-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface (IPv4). requester-id - The alias or Amazon Web Services account ID of the principal or service that created the network interface. requester-managed - Indicates whether the network interface is being managed by an Amazon Web Service (for example, Amazon Web Services Management Console, Auto Scaling, and so on). source-dest-check - Indicates whether the network interface performs source/destination checking. A value of true means checking is enabled, and false means checking is disabled. The value must be false for the network interface to perform network address translation (NAT) in your VPC. status - The status of the network interface. If the network interface is not attached to an instance, the status is available; if a network interface is attached to an instance the status is in-use. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the network interface. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the network interface.
12072
12072
  */
12073
12073
  Filters?: FilterList;
12074
12074
  /**
@@ -12415,7 +12415,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12415
12415
  export type DescribeRouteTablesMaxResults = number;
12416
12416
  export interface DescribeRouteTablesRequest {
12417
12417
  /**
12418
- * One or more filters. association.route-table-association-id - The ID of an association ID for the route table. association.route-table-id - The ID of the route table involved in the association. association.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet involved in the association. association.main - Indicates whether the route table is the main route table for the VPC (true | false). Route tables that do not have an association ID are not returned in the response. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the route table. route-table-id - The ID of the route table. route.destination-cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR range specified in a route in the table. route.destination-ipv6-cidr-block - The IPv6 CIDR range specified in a route in the route table. route.destination-prefix-list-id - The ID (prefix) of the Amazon Web Service specified in a route in the table. route.egress-only-internet-gateway-id - The ID of an egress-only Internet gateway specified in a route in the route table. route.gateway-id - The ID of a gateway specified in a route in the table. route.instance-id - The ID of an instance specified in a route in the table. route.nat-gateway-id - The ID of a NAT gateway. route.transit-gateway-id - The ID of a transit gateway. route.origin - Describes how the route was created. CreateRouteTable indicates that the route was automatically created when the route table was created; CreateRoute indicates that the route was manually added to the route table; EnableVgwRoutePropagation indicates that the route was propagated by route propagation. route.state - The state of a route in the route table (active | blackhole). The blackhole state indicates that the route's target isn't available (for example, the specified gateway isn't attached to the VPC, the specified NAT instance has been terminated, and so on). route.vpc-peering-connection-id - The ID of a VPC peering connection specified in a route in the table. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the route table.
12418
+ * One or more filters. association.route-table-association-id - The ID of an association ID for the route table. association.route-table-id - The ID of the route table involved in the association. association.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet involved in the association. association.main - Indicates whether the route table is the main route table for the VPC (true | false). Route tables that do not have an association ID are not returned in the response. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the route table. route-table-id - The ID of the route table. route.destination-cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR range specified in a route in the table. route.destination-ipv6-cidr-block - The IPv6 CIDR range specified in a route in the route table. route.destination-prefix-list-id - The ID (prefix) of the Amazon Web Service specified in a route in the table. route.egress-only-internet-gateway-id - The ID of an egress-only Internet gateway specified in a route in the route table. route.gateway-id - The ID of a gateway specified in a route in the table. route.instance-id - The ID of an instance specified in a route in the table. route.nat-gateway-id - The ID of a NAT gateway. route.transit-gateway-id - The ID of a transit gateway. route.origin - Describes how the route was created. CreateRouteTable indicates that the route was automatically created when the route table was created; CreateRoute indicates that the route was manually added to the route table; EnableVgwRoutePropagation indicates that the route was propagated by route propagation. route.state - The state of a route in the route table (active | blackhole). The blackhole state indicates that the route's target isn't available (for example, the specified gateway isn't attached to the VPC, the specified NAT instance has been terminated, and so on). route.vpc-peering-connection-id - The ID of a VPC peering connection specified in a route in the table. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the route table.
12419
12419
  */
12420
12420
  Filters?: FilterList;
12421
12421
  /**
@@ -12642,7 +12642,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12642
12642
  }
12643
12643
  export interface DescribeSnapshotsRequest {
12644
12644
  /**
12645
- * The filters. description - A description of the snapshot. encrypted - Indicates whether the snapshot is encrypted (true | false) owner-alias - The owner alias, from an Amazon-maintained list (amazon). This is not the user-configured account alias set using the IAM console. We recommend that you use the related parameter instead of this filter. owner-id - The account ID of the owner. We recommend that you use the related parameter instead of this filter. progress - The progress of the snapshot, as a percentage (for example, 80%). snapshot-id - The snapshot ID. start-time - The time stamp when the snapshot was initiated. status - The status of the snapshot (pending | completed | error). tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. volume-id - The ID of the volume the snapshot is for. volume-size - The size of the volume, in GiB.
12645
+ * The filters. description - A description of the snapshot. encrypted - Indicates whether the snapshot is encrypted (true | false) owner-alias - The owner alias, from an Amazon-maintained list (amazon). This is not the user-configured Amazon Web Services account alias set using the IAM console. We recommend that you use the related parameter instead of this filter. owner-id - The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner. We recommend that you use the related parameter instead of this filter. progress - The progress of the snapshot, as a percentage (for example, 80%). snapshot-id - The snapshot ID. start-time - The time stamp when the snapshot was initiated. status - The status of the snapshot (pending | completed | error). tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. volume-id - The ID of the volume the snapshot is for. volume-size - The size of the volume, in GiB.
12646
12646
  */
12647
12647
  Filters?: FilterList;
12648
12648
  /**
@@ -12654,11 +12654,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12654
12654
  */
12655
12655
  NextToken?: String;
12656
12656
  /**
12657
- * Scopes the results to snapshots with the specified owners. You can specify a combination of account IDs, self, and amazon.
12657
+ * Scopes the results to snapshots with the specified owners. You can specify a combination of Amazon Web Services account IDs, self, and amazon.
12658
12658
  */
12659
12659
  OwnerIds?: OwnerStringList;
12660
12660
  /**
12661
- * The IDs of the accounts that can create volumes from the snapshot.
12661
+ * The IDs of the Amazon Web Services accounts that can create volumes from the snapshot.
12662
12662
  */
12663
12663
  RestorableByUserIds?: RestorableByStringList;
12664
12664
  /**
@@ -12948,7 +12948,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12948
12948
  export type DescribeSubnetsMaxResults = number;
12949
12949
  export interface DescribeSubnetsRequest {
12950
12950
  /**
12951
- * One or more filters. availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the subnet. You can also use availabilityZone as the filter name. availability-zone-id - The ID of the Availability Zone for the subnet. You can also use availabilityZoneId as the filter name. available-ip-address-count - The number of IPv4 addresses in the subnet that are available. cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the subnet. The CIDR block you specify must exactly match the subnet's CIDR block for information to be returned for the subnet. You can also use cidr or cidrBlock as the filter names. default-for-az - Indicates whether this is the default subnet for the Availability Zone. You can also use defaultForAz as the filter name. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-cidr-block - An IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. ipv6-cidr-block-association.association-id - An association ID for an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. ipv6-cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the subnet. state - The state of the subnet (pending | available). subnet-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the subnet. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the subnet.
12951
+ * One or more filters. availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the subnet. You can also use availabilityZone as the filter name. availability-zone-id - The ID of the Availability Zone for the subnet. You can also use availabilityZoneId as the filter name. available-ip-address-count - The number of IPv4 addresses in the subnet that are available. cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the subnet. The CIDR block you specify must exactly match the subnet's CIDR block for information to be returned for the subnet. You can also use cidr or cidrBlock as the filter names. default-for-az - Indicates whether this is the default subnet for the Availability Zone. You can also use defaultForAz as the filter name. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-cidr-block - An IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. ipv6-cidr-block-association.association-id - An association ID for an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. ipv6-cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the subnet. outpost-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the subnet. state - The state of the subnet (pending | available). subnet-arn - The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the subnet. subnet-id - The ID of the subnet. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC for the subnet.
12952
12952
  */
12953
12953
  Filters?: FilterList;
12954
12954
  /**
@@ -13784,7 +13784,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13784
13784
  export type DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsMaxResults = number;
13785
13785
  export interface DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest {
13786
13786
  /**
13787
- * One or more filters. accepter-vpc-info.cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the accepter VPC. accepter-vpc-info.owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the accepter VPC. accepter-vpc-info.vpc-id - The ID of the accepter VPC. expiration-time - The expiration date and time for the VPC peering connection. requester-vpc-info.cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the requester's VPC. requester-vpc-info.owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the requester VPC. requester-vpc-info.vpc-id - The ID of the requester VPC. status-code - The status of the VPC peering connection (pending-acceptance | failed | expired | provisioning | active | deleting | deleted | rejected). status-message - A message that provides more information about the status of the VPC peering connection, if applicable. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-peering-connection-id - The ID of the VPC peering connection.
13787
+ * One or more filters. accepter-vpc-info.cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the accepter VPC. accepter-vpc-info.owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the accepter VPC. accepter-vpc-info.vpc-id - The ID of the accepter VPC. expiration-time - The expiration date and time for the VPC peering connection. requester-vpc-info.cidr-block - The IPv4 CIDR block of the requester's VPC. requester-vpc-info.owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the requester VPC. requester-vpc-info.vpc-id - The ID of the requester VPC. status-code - The status of the VPC peering connection (pending-acceptance | failed | expired | provisioning | active | deleting | deleted | rejected). status-message - A message that provides more information about the status of the VPC peering connection, if applicable. tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-peering-connection-id - The ID of the VPC peering connection.
13788
13788
  */
13789
13789
  Filters?: FilterList;
13790
13790
  /**
@@ -13817,7 +13817,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13817
13817
  export type DescribeVpcsMaxResults = number;
13818
13818
  export interface DescribeVpcsRequest {
13819
13819
  /**
13820
- * One or more filters. cidr - The primary IPv4 CIDR block of the VPC. The CIDR block you specify must exactly match the VPC's CIDR block for information to be returned for the VPC. Must contain the slash followed by one or two digits (for example, /28). cidr-block-association.cidr-block - An IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. cidr-block-association.association-id - The association ID for an IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. dhcp-options-id - The ID of a set of DHCP options. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-cidr-block - An IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-pool - The ID of the IPv6 address pool from which the IPv6 CIDR block is allocated. ipv6-cidr-block-association.association-id - The association ID for an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. ipv6-cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. is-default - Indicates whether the VPC is the default VPC. owner-id - The ID of the account that owns the VPC. state - The state of the VPC (pending | available). tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC.
13820
+ * One or more filters. cidr - The primary IPv4 CIDR block of the VPC. The CIDR block you specify must exactly match the VPC's CIDR block for information to be returned for the VPC. Must contain the slash followed by one or two digits (for example, /28). cidr-block-association.cidr-block - An IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. cidr-block-association.association-id - The association ID for an IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv4 CIDR block associated with the VPC. dhcp-options-id - The ID of a set of DHCP options. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-cidr-block - An IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. ipv6-cidr-block-association.ipv6-pool - The ID of the IPv6 address pool from which the IPv6 CIDR block is allocated. ipv6-cidr-block-association.association-id - The association ID for an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. ipv6-cidr-block-association.state - The state of an IPv6 CIDR block associated with the VPC. is-default - Indicates whether the VPC is the default VPC. owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the VPC. state - The state of the VPC (pending | available). tag:&lt;key&gt; - The key/value combination of a tag assigned to the resource. Use the tag key in the filter name and the tag value as the filter value. For example, to find all resources that have a tag with the key Owner and the value TeamA, specify tag:Owner for the filter name and TeamA for the filter value. tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the resource. Use this filter to find all resources assigned a tag with a specific key, regardless of the tag value. vpc-id - The ID of the VPC.
13821
13821
  */
13822
13822
  Filters?: FilterList;
13823
13823
  /**
@@ -13994,7 +13994,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13994
13994
  */
13995
13995
  DhcpOptionsId?: String;
13996
13996
  /**
13997
- * The ID of the account that owns the DHCP options set.
13997
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the DHCP options set.
13998
13998
  */
13999
13999
  OwnerId?: String;
14000
14000
  /**
@@ -14079,7 +14079,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
14079
14079
  */
14080
14080
  StateTransitionReason?: String;
14081
14081
  /**
14082
- * The ID of the account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
14082
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
14083
14083
  */
14084
14084
  OwnerId?: String;
14085
14085
  /**
@@ -14834,7 +14834,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
14834
14834
  */
14835
14835
  StateTransitionReason?: String;
14836
14836
  /**
14837
- * The ID of the account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
14837
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that enabled fast snapshot restores on the snapshot.
14838
14838
  */
14839
14839
  OwnerId?: String;
14840
14840
  /**
@@ -14869,7 +14869,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
14869
14869
  */
14870
14870
  AvailabilityZones: AvailabilityZoneStringList;
14871
14871
  /**
14872
- * The IDs of one or more snapshots. For example, snap-1234567890abcdef0. You can specify a snapshot that was shared with you from another account.
14872
+ * The IDs of one or more snapshots. For example, snap-1234567890abcdef0. You can specify a snapshot that was shared with you from another Amazon Web Services account.
14873
14873
  */
14874
14874
  SourceSnapshotIds: SnapshotIdStringList;
14875
14875
  /**
@@ -16772,7 +16772,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16772
16772
  */
16773
16773
  AllowsMultipleInstanceTypes?: AllowsMultipleInstanceTypes;
16774
16774
  /**
16775
- * The ID of the account that owns the Dedicated Host.
16775
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the Dedicated Host.
16776
16776
  */
16777
16777
  OwnerId?: String;
16778
16778
  /**
@@ -16794,7 +16794,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16794
16794
  */
16795
16795
  InstanceType?: String;
16796
16796
  /**
16797
- * The ID of the account that owns the instance.
16797
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the instance.
16798
16798
  */
16799
16799
  OwnerId?: String;
16800
16800
  }
@@ -18330,7 +18330,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18330
18330
  */
18331
18331
  NetworkInterfaceId?: String;
18332
18332
  /**
18333
- * The ID of the account that created the network interface.
18333
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that created the network interface.
18334
18334
  */
18335
18335
  OwnerId?: String;
18336
18336
  /**
@@ -18662,7 +18662,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18662
18662
  */
18663
18663
  IncludeAllTagsOfInstance?: Boolean;
18664
18664
  }
18665
- export type InstanceType = "t1.micro"|"t2.nano"|"t2.micro"|"t2.small"|"t2.medium"|"t2.large"|"t2.xlarge"|"t2.2xlarge"|"t3.nano"|"t3.micro"|"t3.small"|"t3.medium"|"t3.large"|"t3.xlarge"|"t3.2xlarge"|"t3a.nano"|"t3a.micro"|"t3a.small"|"t3a.medium"|"t3a.large"|"t3a.xlarge"|"t3a.2xlarge"|"t4g.nano"|"t4g.micro"|"t4g.small"|"t4g.medium"|"t4g.large"|"t4g.xlarge"|"t4g.2xlarge"|"m1.small"|"m1.medium"|"m1.large"|"m1.xlarge"|"m3.medium"|"m3.large"|"m3.xlarge"|"m3.2xlarge"|"m4.large"|"m4.xlarge"|"m4.2xlarge"|"m4.4xlarge"|"m4.10xlarge"|"m4.16xlarge"|"m2.xlarge"|"m2.2xlarge"|"m2.4xlarge"|"cr1.8xlarge"|"r3.large"|"r3.xlarge"|"r3.2xlarge"|"r3.4xlarge"|"r3.8xlarge"|"r4.large"|"r4.xlarge"|"r4.2xlarge"|"r4.4xlarge"|"r4.8xlarge"|"r4.16xlarge"|"r5.large"|"r5.xlarge"|"r5.2xlarge"|"r5.4xlarge"|"r5.8xlarge"|"r5.12xlarge"|"r5.16xlarge"|"r5.24xlarge"|"r5.metal"|"r5a.large"|"r5a.xlarge"|"r5a.2xlarge"|"r5a.4xlarge"|"r5a.8xlarge"|"r5a.12xlarge"|"r5a.16xlarge"|"r5a.24xlarge"|"r5b.large"|"r5b.xlarge"|"r5b.2xlarge"|"r5b.4xlarge"|"r5b.8xlarge"|"r5b.12xlarge"|"r5b.16xlarge"|"r5b.24xlarge"|"r5b.metal"|"r5d.large"|"r5d.xlarge"|"r5d.2xlarge"|"r5d.4xlarge"|"r5d.8xlarge"|"r5d.12xlarge"|"r5d.16xlarge"|"r5d.24xlarge"|"r5d.metal"|"r5ad.large"|"r5ad.xlarge"|"r5ad.2xlarge"|"r5ad.4xlarge"|"r5ad.8xlarge"|"r5ad.12xlarge"|"r5ad.16xlarge"|"r5ad.24xlarge"|"r6g.metal"|"r6g.medium"|"r6g.large"|"r6g.xlarge"|"r6g.2xlarge"|"r6g.4xlarge"|"r6g.8xlarge"|"r6g.12xlarge"|"r6g.16xlarge"|"r6gd.metal"|"r6gd.medium"|"r6gd.large"|"r6gd.xlarge"|"r6gd.2xlarge"|"r6gd.4xlarge"|"r6gd.8xlarge"|"r6gd.12xlarge"|"r6gd.16xlarge"|"x1.16xlarge"|"x1.32xlarge"|"x1e.xlarge"|"x1e.2xlarge"|"x1e.4xlarge"|"x1e.8xlarge"|"x1e.16xlarge"|"x1e.32xlarge"|"i2.xlarge"|"i2.2xlarge"|"i2.4xlarge"|"i2.8xlarge"|"i3.large"|"i3.xlarge"|"i3.2xlarge"|"i3.4xlarge"|"i3.8xlarge"|"i3.16xlarge"|"i3.metal"|"i3en.large"|"i3en.xlarge"|"i3en.2xlarge"|"i3en.3xlarge"|"i3en.6xlarge"|"i3en.12xlarge"|"i3en.24xlarge"|"i3en.metal"|"hi1.4xlarge"|"hs1.8xlarge"|"c1.medium"|"c1.xlarge"|"c3.large"|"c3.xlarge"|"c3.2xlarge"|"c3.4xlarge"|"c3.8xlarge"|"c4.large"|"c4.xlarge"|"c4.2xlarge"|"c4.4xlarge"|"c4.8xlarge"|"c5.large"|"c5.xlarge"|"c5.2xlarge"|"c5.4xlarge"|"c5.9xlarge"|"c5.12xlarge"|"c5.18xlarge"|"c5.24xlarge"|"c5.metal"|"c5a.large"|"c5a.xlarge"|"c5a.2xlarge"|"c5a.4xlarge"|"c5a.8xlarge"|"c5a.12xlarge"|"c5a.16xlarge"|"c5a.24xlarge"|"c5ad.large"|"c5ad.xlarge"|"c5ad.2xlarge"|"c5ad.4xlarge"|"c5ad.8xlarge"|"c5ad.12xlarge"|"c5ad.16xlarge"|"c5ad.24xlarge"|"c5d.large"|"c5d.xlarge"|"c5d.2xlarge"|"c5d.4xlarge"|"c5d.9xlarge"|"c5d.12xlarge"|"c5d.18xlarge"|"c5d.24xlarge"|"c5d.metal"|"c5n.large"|"c5n.xlarge"|"c5n.2xlarge"|"c5n.4xlarge"|"c5n.9xlarge"|"c5n.18xlarge"|"c5n.metal"|"c6g.metal"|"c6g.medium"|"c6g.large"|"c6g.xlarge"|"c6g.2xlarge"|"c6g.4xlarge"|"c6g.8xlarge"|"c6g.12xlarge"|"c6g.16xlarge"|"c6gd.metal"|"c6gd.medium"|"c6gd.large"|"c6gd.xlarge"|"c6gd.2xlarge"|"c6gd.4xlarge"|"c6gd.8xlarge"|"c6gd.12xlarge"|"c6gd.16xlarge"|"c6gn.medium"|"c6gn.large"|"c6gn.xlarge"|"c6gn.2xlarge"|"c6gn.4xlarge"|"c6gn.8xlarge"|"c6gn.12xlarge"|"c6gn.16xlarge"|"cc1.4xlarge"|"cc2.8xlarge"|"g2.2xlarge"|"g2.8xlarge"|"g3.4xlarge"|"g3.8xlarge"|"g3.16xlarge"|"g3s.xlarge"|"g4ad.4xlarge"|"g4ad.8xlarge"|"g4ad.16xlarge"|"g4dn.xlarge"|"g4dn.2xlarge"|"g4dn.4xlarge"|"g4dn.8xlarge"|"g4dn.12xlarge"|"g4dn.16xlarge"|"g4dn.metal"|"cg1.4xlarge"|"p2.xlarge"|"p2.8xlarge"|"p2.16xlarge"|"p3.2xlarge"|"p3.8xlarge"|"p3.16xlarge"|"p3dn.24xlarge"|"p4d.24xlarge"|"d2.xlarge"|"d2.2xlarge"|"d2.4xlarge"|"d2.8xlarge"|"d3.xlarge"|"d3.2xlarge"|"d3.4xlarge"|"d3.8xlarge"|"d3en.xlarge"|"d3en.2xlarge"|"d3en.4xlarge"|"d3en.6xlarge"|"d3en.8xlarge"|"d3en.12xlarge"|"f1.2xlarge"|"f1.4xlarge"|"f1.16xlarge"|"m5.large"|"m5.xlarge"|"m5.2xlarge"|"m5.4xlarge"|"m5.8xlarge"|"m5.12xlarge"|"m5.16xlarge"|"m5.24xlarge"|"m5.metal"|"m5a.large"|"m5a.xlarge"|"m5a.2xlarge"|"m5a.4xlarge"|"m5a.8xlarge"|"m5a.12xlarge"|"m5a.16xlarge"|"m5a.24xlarge"|"m5d.large"|"m5d.xlarge"|"m5d.2xlarge"|"m5d.4xlarge"|"m5d.8xlarge"|"m5d.12xlarge"|"m5d.16xlarge"|"m5d.24xlarge"|"m5d.metal"|"m5ad.large"|"m5ad.xlarge"|"m5ad.2xlarge"|"m5ad.4xlarge"|"m5ad.8xlarge"|"m5ad.12xlarge"|"m5ad.16xlarge"|"m5ad.24xlarge"|"m5zn.large"|"m5zn.xlarge"|"m5zn.2xlarge"|"m5zn.3xlarge"|"m5zn.6xlarge"|"m5zn.12xlarge"|"m5zn.metal"|"h1.2xlarge"|"h1.4xlarge"|"h1.8xlarge"|"h1.16xlarge"|"z1d.large"|"z1d.xlarge"|"z1d.2xlarge"|"z1d.3xlarge"|"z1d.6xlarge"|"z1d.12xlarge"|"z1d.metal"|"u-6tb1.56xlarge"|"u-6tb1.112xlarge"|"u-9tb1.112xlarge"|"u-12tb1.112xlarge"|"u-6tb1.metal"|"u-9tb1.metal"|"u-12tb1.metal"|"u-18tb1.metal"|"u-24tb1.metal"|"a1.medium"|"a1.large"|"a1.xlarge"|"a1.2xlarge"|"a1.4xlarge"|"a1.metal"|"m5dn.large"|"m5dn.xlarge"|"m5dn.2xlarge"|"m5dn.4xlarge"|"m5dn.8xlarge"|"m5dn.12xlarge"|"m5dn.16xlarge"|"m5dn.24xlarge"|"m5dn.metal"|"m5n.large"|"m5n.xlarge"|"m5n.2xlarge"|"m5n.4xlarge"|"m5n.8xlarge"|"m5n.12xlarge"|"m5n.16xlarge"|"m5n.24xlarge"|"m5n.metal"|"r5dn.large"|"r5dn.xlarge"|"r5dn.2xlarge"|"r5dn.4xlarge"|"r5dn.8xlarge"|"r5dn.12xlarge"|"r5dn.16xlarge"|"r5dn.24xlarge"|"r5dn.metal"|"r5n.large"|"r5n.xlarge"|"r5n.2xlarge"|"r5n.4xlarge"|"r5n.8xlarge"|"r5n.12xlarge"|"r5n.16xlarge"|"r5n.24xlarge"|"r5n.metal"|"inf1.xlarge"|"inf1.2xlarge"|"inf1.6xlarge"|"inf1.24xlarge"|"m6g.metal"|"m6g.medium"|"m6g.large"|"m6g.xlarge"|"m6g.2xlarge"|"m6g.4xlarge"|"m6g.8xlarge"|"m6g.12xlarge"|"m6g.16xlarge"|"m6gd.metal"|"m6gd.medium"|"m6gd.large"|"m6gd.xlarge"|"m6gd.2xlarge"|"m6gd.4xlarge"|"m6gd.8xlarge"|"m6gd.12xlarge"|"m6gd.16xlarge"|"mac1.metal"|"x2gd.medium"|"x2gd.large"|"x2gd.xlarge"|"x2gd.2xlarge"|"x2gd.4xlarge"|"x2gd.8xlarge"|"x2gd.12xlarge"|"x2gd.16xlarge"|"x2gd.metal"|string;
18665
+ export type InstanceType = "t1.micro"|"t2.nano"|"t2.micro"|"t2.small"|"t2.medium"|"t2.large"|"t2.xlarge"|"t2.2xlarge"|"t3.nano"|"t3.micro"|"t3.small"|"t3.medium"|"t3.large"|"t3.xlarge"|"t3.2xlarge"|"t3a.nano"|"t3a.micro"|"t3a.small"|"t3a.medium"|"t3a.large"|"t3a.xlarge"|"t3a.2xlarge"|"t4g.nano"|"t4g.micro"|"t4g.small"|"t4g.medium"|"t4g.large"|"t4g.xlarge"|"t4g.2xlarge"|"m1.small"|"m1.medium"|"m1.large"|"m1.xlarge"|"m3.medium"|"m3.large"|"m3.xlarge"|"m3.2xlarge"|"m4.large"|"m4.xlarge"|"m4.2xlarge"|"m4.4xlarge"|"m4.10xlarge"|"m4.16xlarge"|"m2.xlarge"|"m2.2xlarge"|"m2.4xlarge"|"cr1.8xlarge"|"r3.large"|"r3.xlarge"|"r3.2xlarge"|"r3.4xlarge"|"r3.8xlarge"|"r4.large"|"r4.xlarge"|"r4.2xlarge"|"r4.4xlarge"|"r4.8xlarge"|"r4.16xlarge"|"r5.large"|"r5.xlarge"|"r5.2xlarge"|"r5.4xlarge"|"r5.8xlarge"|"r5.12xlarge"|"r5.16xlarge"|"r5.24xlarge"|"r5.metal"|"r5a.large"|"r5a.xlarge"|"r5a.2xlarge"|"r5a.4xlarge"|"r5a.8xlarge"|"r5a.12xlarge"|"r5a.16xlarge"|"r5a.24xlarge"|"r5b.large"|"r5b.xlarge"|"r5b.2xlarge"|"r5b.4xlarge"|"r5b.8xlarge"|"r5b.12xlarge"|"r5b.16xlarge"|"r5b.24xlarge"|"r5b.metal"|"r5d.large"|"r5d.xlarge"|"r5d.2xlarge"|"r5d.4xlarge"|"r5d.8xlarge"|"r5d.12xlarge"|"r5d.16xlarge"|"r5d.24xlarge"|"r5d.metal"|"r5ad.large"|"r5ad.xlarge"|"r5ad.2xlarge"|"r5ad.4xlarge"|"r5ad.8xlarge"|"r5ad.12xlarge"|"r5ad.16xlarge"|"r5ad.24xlarge"|"r6g.metal"|"r6g.medium"|"r6g.large"|"r6g.xlarge"|"r6g.2xlarge"|"r6g.4xlarge"|"r6g.8xlarge"|"r6g.12xlarge"|"r6g.16xlarge"|"r6gd.metal"|"r6gd.medium"|"r6gd.large"|"r6gd.xlarge"|"r6gd.2xlarge"|"r6gd.4xlarge"|"r6gd.8xlarge"|"r6gd.12xlarge"|"r6gd.16xlarge"|"x1.16xlarge"|"x1.32xlarge"|"x1e.xlarge"|"x1e.2xlarge"|"x1e.4xlarge"|"x1e.8xlarge"|"x1e.16xlarge"|"x1e.32xlarge"|"i2.xlarge"|"i2.2xlarge"|"i2.4xlarge"|"i2.8xlarge"|"i3.large"|"i3.xlarge"|"i3.2xlarge"|"i3.4xlarge"|"i3.8xlarge"|"i3.16xlarge"|"i3.metal"|"i3en.large"|"i3en.xlarge"|"i3en.2xlarge"|"i3en.3xlarge"|"i3en.6xlarge"|"i3en.12xlarge"|"i3en.24xlarge"|"i3en.metal"|"hi1.4xlarge"|"hs1.8xlarge"|"c1.medium"|"c1.xlarge"|"c3.large"|"c3.xlarge"|"c3.2xlarge"|"c3.4xlarge"|"c3.8xlarge"|"c4.large"|"c4.xlarge"|"c4.2xlarge"|"c4.4xlarge"|"c4.8xlarge"|"c5.large"|"c5.xlarge"|"c5.2xlarge"|"c5.4xlarge"|"c5.9xlarge"|"c5.12xlarge"|"c5.18xlarge"|"c5.24xlarge"|"c5.metal"|"c5a.large"|"c5a.xlarge"|"c5a.2xlarge"|"c5a.4xlarge"|"c5a.8xlarge"|"c5a.12xlarge"|"c5a.16xlarge"|"c5a.24xlarge"|"c5ad.large"|"c5ad.xlarge"|"c5ad.2xlarge"|"c5ad.4xlarge"|"c5ad.8xlarge"|"c5ad.12xlarge"|"c5ad.16xlarge"|"c5ad.24xlarge"|"c5d.large"|"c5d.xlarge"|"c5d.2xlarge"|"c5d.4xlarge"|"c5d.9xlarge"|"c5d.12xlarge"|"c5d.18xlarge"|"c5d.24xlarge"|"c5d.metal"|"c5n.large"|"c5n.xlarge"|"c5n.2xlarge"|"c5n.4xlarge"|"c5n.9xlarge"|"c5n.18xlarge"|"c5n.metal"|"c6g.metal"|"c6g.medium"|"c6g.large"|"c6g.xlarge"|"c6g.2xlarge"|"c6g.4xlarge"|"c6g.8xlarge"|"c6g.12xlarge"|"c6g.16xlarge"|"c6gd.metal"|"c6gd.medium"|"c6gd.large"|"c6gd.xlarge"|"c6gd.2xlarge"|"c6gd.4xlarge"|"c6gd.8xlarge"|"c6gd.12xlarge"|"c6gd.16xlarge"|"c6gn.medium"|"c6gn.large"|"c6gn.xlarge"|"c6gn.2xlarge"|"c6gn.4xlarge"|"c6gn.8xlarge"|"c6gn.12xlarge"|"c6gn.16xlarge"|"cc1.4xlarge"|"cc2.8xlarge"|"g2.2xlarge"|"g2.8xlarge"|"g3.4xlarge"|"g3.8xlarge"|"g3.16xlarge"|"g3s.xlarge"|"g4ad.xlarge"|"g4ad.2xlarge"|"g4ad.4xlarge"|"g4ad.8xlarge"|"g4ad.16xlarge"|"g4dn.xlarge"|"g4dn.2xlarge"|"g4dn.4xlarge"|"g4dn.8xlarge"|"g4dn.12xlarge"|"g4dn.16xlarge"|"g4dn.metal"|"cg1.4xlarge"|"p2.xlarge"|"p2.8xlarge"|"p2.16xlarge"|"p3.2xlarge"|"p3.8xlarge"|"p3.16xlarge"|"p3dn.24xlarge"|"p4d.24xlarge"|"d2.xlarge"|"d2.2xlarge"|"d2.4xlarge"|"d2.8xlarge"|"d3.xlarge"|"d3.2xlarge"|"d3.4xlarge"|"d3.8xlarge"|"d3en.xlarge"|"d3en.2xlarge"|"d3en.4xlarge"|"d3en.6xlarge"|"d3en.8xlarge"|"d3en.12xlarge"|"f1.2xlarge"|"f1.4xlarge"|"f1.16xlarge"|"m5.large"|"m5.xlarge"|"m5.2xlarge"|"m5.4xlarge"|"m5.8xlarge"|"m5.12xlarge"|"m5.16xlarge"|"m5.24xlarge"|"m5.metal"|"m5a.large"|"m5a.xlarge"|"m5a.2xlarge"|"m5a.4xlarge"|"m5a.8xlarge"|"m5a.12xlarge"|"m5a.16xlarge"|"m5a.24xlarge"|"m5d.large"|"m5d.xlarge"|"m5d.2xlarge"|"m5d.4xlarge"|"m5d.8xlarge"|"m5d.12xlarge"|"m5d.16xlarge"|"m5d.24xlarge"|"m5d.metal"|"m5ad.large"|"m5ad.xlarge"|"m5ad.2xlarge"|"m5ad.4xlarge"|"m5ad.8xlarge"|"m5ad.12xlarge"|"m5ad.16xlarge"|"m5ad.24xlarge"|"m5zn.large"|"m5zn.xlarge"|"m5zn.2xlarge"|"m5zn.3xlarge"|"m5zn.6xlarge"|"m5zn.12xlarge"|"m5zn.metal"|"h1.2xlarge"|"h1.4xlarge"|"h1.8xlarge"|"h1.16xlarge"|"z1d.large"|"z1d.xlarge"|"z1d.2xlarge"|"z1d.3xlarge"|"z1d.6xlarge"|"z1d.12xlarge"|"z1d.metal"|"u-6tb1.56xlarge"|"u-6tb1.112xlarge"|"u-9tb1.112xlarge"|"u-12tb1.112xlarge"|"u-6tb1.metal"|"u-9tb1.metal"|"u-12tb1.metal"|"u-18tb1.metal"|"u-24tb1.metal"|"a1.medium"|"a1.large"|"a1.xlarge"|"a1.2xlarge"|"a1.4xlarge"|"a1.metal"|"m5dn.large"|"m5dn.xlarge"|"m5dn.2xlarge"|"m5dn.4xlarge"|"m5dn.8xlarge"|"m5dn.12xlarge"|"m5dn.16xlarge"|"m5dn.24xlarge"|"m5dn.metal"|"m5n.large"|"m5n.xlarge"|"m5n.2xlarge"|"m5n.4xlarge"|"m5n.8xlarge"|"m5n.12xlarge"|"m5n.16xlarge"|"m5n.24xlarge"|"m5n.metal"|"r5dn.large"|"r5dn.xlarge"|"r5dn.2xlarge"|"r5dn.4xlarge"|"r5dn.8xlarge"|"r5dn.12xlarge"|"r5dn.16xlarge"|"r5dn.24xlarge"|"r5dn.metal"|"r5n.large"|"r5n.xlarge"|"r5n.2xlarge"|"r5n.4xlarge"|"r5n.8xlarge"|"r5n.12xlarge"|"r5n.16xlarge"|"r5n.24xlarge"|"r5n.metal"|"inf1.xlarge"|"inf1.2xlarge"|"inf1.6xlarge"|"inf1.24xlarge"|"m6g.metal"|"m6g.medium"|"m6g.large"|"m6g.xlarge"|"m6g.2xlarge"|"m6g.4xlarge"|"m6g.8xlarge"|"m6g.12xlarge"|"m6g.16xlarge"|"m6gd.metal"|"m6gd.medium"|"m6gd.large"|"m6gd.xlarge"|"m6gd.2xlarge"|"m6gd.4xlarge"|"m6gd.8xlarge"|"m6gd.12xlarge"|"m6gd.16xlarge"|"mac1.metal"|"x2gd.medium"|"x2gd.large"|"x2gd.xlarge"|"x2gd.2xlarge"|"x2gd.4xlarge"|"x2gd.8xlarge"|"x2gd.12xlarge"|"x2gd.16xlarge"|"x2gd.metal"|string;
18666
18666
  export type InstanceTypeHypervisor = "nitro"|"xen"|string;
18667
18667
  export interface InstanceTypeInfo {
18668
18668
  /**
@@ -18781,11 +18781,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18781
18781
  export type InstanceTypeOfferingsList = InstanceTypeOffering[];
18782
18782
  export interface InstanceUsage {
18783
18783
  /**
18784
- * The ID of the account that is making use of the Capacity Reservation.
18784
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that is making use of the Capacity Reservation.
18785
18785
  */
18786
18786
  AccountId?: String;
18787
18787
  /**
18788
- * The number of instances the account currently has in the Capacity Reservation.
18788
+ * The number of instances the Amazon Web Services account currently has in the Capacity Reservation.
18789
18789
  */
18790
18790
  UsedInstanceCount?: Integer;
18791
18791
  }
@@ -18809,7 +18809,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18809
18809
  */
18810
18810
  InternetGatewayId?: String;
18811
18811
  /**
18812
- * The ID of the account that owns the internet gateway.
18812
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the internet gateway.
18813
18813
  */
18814
18814
  OwnerId?: String;
18815
18815
  /**
@@ -21798,7 +21798,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21798
21798
  */
21799
21799
  VpcId?: String;
21800
21800
  /**
21801
- * The ID of the account that owns the network ACL.
21801
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the network ACL.
21802
21802
  */
21803
21803
  OwnerId?: String;
21804
21804
  }
@@ -22063,7 +22063,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
22063
22063
  */
22064
22064
  OutpostArn?: String;
22065
22065
  /**
22066
- * The account ID of the owner of the network interface.
22066
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the network interface.
22067
22067
  */
22068
22068
  OwnerId?: String;
22069
22069
  /**
@@ -22087,7 +22087,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
22087
22087
  */
22088
22088
  Ipv6Prefixes?: Ipv6PrefixesList;
22089
22089
  /**
22090
- * The alias or account ID of the principal or service that created the network interface.
22090
+ * The alias or Amazon Web Services account ID of the principal or service that created the network interface.
22091
22091
  */
22092
22092
  RequesterId?: String;
22093
22093
  /**
@@ -22171,7 +22171,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
22171
22171
  */
22172
22172
  InstanceId?: String;
22173
22173
  /**
22174
- * The account ID of the owner of the instance.
22174
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the instance.
22175
22175
  */
22176
22176
  InstanceOwnerId?: String;
22177
22177
  /**
@@ -22212,7 +22212,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
22212
22212
  */
22213
22213
  NetworkInterfaceId?: String;
22214
22214
  /**
22215
- * The account ID.
22215
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID.
22216
22216
  */
22217
22217
  AwsAccountId?: String;
22218
22218
  /**
@@ -23122,7 +23122,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
23122
23122
  */
23123
23123
  PeeringStatus?: String;
23124
23124
  /**
23125
- * The account ID.
23125
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID.
23126
23126
  */
23127
23127
  UserId?: String;
23128
23128
  /**
@@ -23944,11 +23944,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
23944
23944
  */
23945
23945
  Instances?: InstanceList;
23946
23946
  /**
23947
- * The ID of the account that owns the reservation.
23947
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the reservation.
23948
23948
  */
23949
23949
  OwnerId?: String;
23950
23950
  /**
23951
- * The ID of the requester that launched the instances on your behalf (for example, Management Console or Auto Scaling).
23951
+ * The ID of the requester that launched the instances on your behalf (for example, Amazon Web Services Management Console or Auto Scaling).
23952
23952
  */
23953
23953
  RequesterId?: String;
23954
23954
  /**
@@ -24709,7 +24709,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
24709
24709
  */
24710
24710
  InstanceId?: String;
24711
24711
  /**
24712
- * The ID of account that owns the instance.
24712
+ * The ID of Amazon Web Services account that owns the instance.
24713
24713
  */
24714
24714
  InstanceOwnerId?: String;
24715
24715
  /**
@@ -24775,7 +24775,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
24775
24775
  */
24776
24776
  VpcId?: String;
24777
24777
  /**
24778
- * The ID of the account that owns the route table.
24778
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the route table.
24779
24779
  */
24780
24780
  OwnerId?: String;
24781
24781
  }
@@ -25566,7 +25566,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25566
25566
  */
25567
25567
  GroupId?: SecurityGroupId;
25568
25568
  /**
25569
- * The ID of the account that owns the security group.
25569
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the security group.
25570
25570
  */
25571
25571
  GroupOwnerId?: String;
25572
25572
  /**
@@ -25840,7 +25840,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25840
25840
  */
25841
25841
  KmsKeyId?: String;
25842
25842
  /**
25843
- * The ID of the account that owns the EBS snapshot.
25843
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the EBS snapshot.
25844
25844
  */
25845
25845
  OwnerId?: String;
25846
25846
  /**
@@ -25872,7 +25872,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25872
25872
  */
25873
25873
  VolumeSize?: Integer;
25874
25874
  /**
25875
- * The Amazon Web Services owner alias, from an Amazon-maintained list (amazon). This is not the user-configured account alias set using the IAM console.
25875
+ * The Amazon Web Services owner alias, from an Amazon-maintained list (amazon). This is not the user-configured Amazon Web Services account alias set using the IAM console.
25876
25876
  */
25877
25877
  OwnerAlias?: String;
25878
25878
  /**
@@ -26060,7 +26060,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26060
26060
  */
26061
26061
  Fault?: SpotInstanceStateFault;
26062
26062
  /**
26063
- * The account ID of the account.
26063
+ * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the account.
26064
26064
  */
26065
26065
  OwnerId?: String;
26066
26066
  /**
@@ -26787,7 +26787,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26787
26787
  */
26788
26788
  VpcId?: String;
26789
26789
  /**
26790
- * The ID of the account that owns the subnet.
26790
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the subnet.
26791
26791
  */
26792
26792
  OwnerId?: String;
26793
26793
  /**
@@ -26933,7 +26933,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26933
26933
  export type TagList = Tag[];
26934
26934
  export interface TagSpecification {
26935
26935
  /**
26936
- * The type of resource to tag. Currently, the resource types that support tagging on creation are: capacity-reservation | carrier-gateway | client-vpn-endpoint | customer-gateway | dedicated-host | dhcp-options | egress-only-internet-gateway | elastic-ip | elastic-gpu | export-image-task | export-instance-task | fleet | fpga-image | host-reservation | image| import-image-task | import-snapshot-task | instance | instance-event-window | internet-gateway | ipv4pool-ec2 | ipv6pool-ec2 | key-pair | launch-template | local-gateway-route-table-vpc-association | placement-group | prefix-list | natgateway | network-acl | network-interface | reserved-instances |route-table | security-group| snapshot | spot-fleet-request | spot-instances-request | snapshot | subnet | traffic-mirror-filter | traffic-mirror-session | traffic-mirror-target | transit-gateway | transit-gateway-attachment | transit-gateway-multicast-domain | transit-gateway-route-table | volume |vpc | vpc-peering-connection | vpc-endpoint (for interface and gateway endpoints) | vpc-endpoint-service (for PrivateLink) | vpc-flow-log | vpn-connection | vpn-gateway. To tag a resource after it has been created, see CreateTags.
26936
+ * The type of resource to tag. Currently, the resource types that support tagging on creation are: capacity-reservation | carrier-gateway | client-vpn-endpoint | customer-gateway | dedicated-host | dhcp-options | egress-only-internet-gateway | elastic-ip | elastic-gpu | export-image-task | export-instance-task | fleet | fpga-image | host-reservation | image| import-image-task | import-snapshot-task | instance | instance-event-window | internet-gateway | ipv4pool-ec2 | ipv6pool-ec2 | key-pair | launch-template | local-gateway-route-table-vpc-association | placement-group | prefix-list | natgateway | network-acl | network-interface | reserved-instances |route-table | security-group| snapshot | spot-fleet-request | spot-instances-request | snapshot | subnet | traffic-mirror-filter | traffic-mirror-session | traffic-mirror-target | transit-gateway | transit-gateway-attachment | transit-gateway-multicast-domain | transit-gateway-route-table | volume |vpc | vpc-peering-connection | vpc-endpoint (for interface and gateway endpoints) | vpc-endpoint-service (for Amazon Web Services PrivateLink) | vpc-flow-log | vpn-connection | vpn-gateway. To tag a resource after it has been created, see CreateTags.
26937
26937
  */
26938
26938
  ResourceType?: ResourceType;
26939
26939
  /**
@@ -28807,7 +28807,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28807
28807
  */
28808
28808
  VpcId?: String;
28809
28809
  /**
28810
- * The ID of the account that owns the VPC.
28810
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the VPC.
28811
28811
  */
28812
28812
  OwnerId?: String;
28813
28813
  /**
@@ -29095,7 +29095,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29095
29095
  */
29096
29096
  CidrBlockSet?: CidrBlockSet;
29097
29097
  /**
29098
- * The ID of the account that owns the VPC.
29098
+ * The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the VPC.
29099
29099
  */
29100
29100
  OwnerId?: String;
29101
29101
  /**