cdk-docker-image-deployment 0.0.577 → 0.0.579

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.
Files changed (482) hide show
  1. package/.jsii +5 -5
  2. package/lib/destination.js +1 -1
  3. package/lib/docker-image-deployment.js +1 -1
  4. package/lib/source.js +1 -1
  5. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/README.md +2 -2
  6. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/index.d.ts +1 -0
  7. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/package.json +8 -3
  8. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/api-gateway-authorizer.d.ts +3 -1
  9. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/appsync-resolver.d.ts +5 -0
  10. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/cdk-custom-resource.d.ts +133 -42
  11. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/cloudformation-custom-resource.d.ts +196 -30
  12. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/cognito-user-pool-trigger/define-auth-challenge.d.ts +1 -1
  13. package/node_modules/@types/aws-lambda/trigger/transfer-family-authorizer.d.ts +2 -1
  14. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/README.md +1 -1
  15. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/accessanalyzer-2019-11-01.examples.json +196 -0
  16. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/accessanalyzer-2019-11-01.min.json +254 -111
  17. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/accessanalyzer-2019-11-01.paginators.json +6 -0
  18. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/account-2021-02-01.min.json +101 -19
  19. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/acm-2015-12-08.min.json +7 -1
  20. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/acm-pca-2017-08-22.min.json +20 -13
  21. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/acm-pca-2017-08-22.paginators.json +4 -4
  22. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/acm-pca-2017-08-22.waiters2.json +15 -0
  23. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/amplify-2017-07-25.min.json +79 -55
  24. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/apigateway-2015-07-09.min.json +7 -1
  25. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appintegrations-2020-07-29.min.json +121 -11
  26. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/application-autoscaling-2016-02-06.min.json +7 -1
  27. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/application-signals-2024-04-15.min.json +990 -0
  28. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/application-signals-2024-04-15.paginators.json +34 -0
  29. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appstream-2016-12-01.min.json +188 -45
  30. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appsync-2017-07-25.min.json +4 -1
  31. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/appsync-2017-07-25.paginators.json +60 -0
  32. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/apptest-2022-12-06.min.json +1917 -0
  33. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/apptest-2022-12-06.paginators.json +40 -0
  34. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/apptest-2022-12-06.waiters2.json +5 -0
  35. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/arc-zonal-shift-2022-10-30.min.json +62 -10
  36. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/artifact-2018-05-10.examples.json +113 -0
  37. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/artifact-2018-05-10.min.json +47 -41
  38. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/artifact-2018-05-10.waiters2.json +5 -0
  39. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/athena-2017-05-18.min.json +7 -1
  40. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/auditmanager-2017-07-25.min.json +57 -38
  41. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/autoscaling-2011-01-01.min.json +40 -34
  42. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/b2bi-2022-06-23.min.json +8 -1
  43. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/batch-2016-08-10.min.json +115 -60
  44. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-2023-04-20.min.json +326 -88
  45. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-2023-04-20.paginators.json +6 -0
  46. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-agent-2023-06-05.min.json +2122 -231
  47. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-agent-2023-06-05.paginators.json +24 -0
  48. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-agent-runtime-2023-07-26.min.json +894 -243
  49. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-agent-runtime-2023-07-26.paginators.json +6 -0
  50. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/bedrock-runtime-2023-09-30.min.json +921 -45
  51. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/budgets-2016-10-20.min.json +102 -21
  52. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/chatbot-2017-10-11.min.json +138 -24
  53. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/chime-sdk-media-pipelines-2021-07-15.min.json +10 -1
  54. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/chime-sdk-voice-2022-08-03.min.json +6 -2
  55. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanrooms-2022-02-17.min.json +1329 -202
  56. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanrooms-2022-02-17.paginators.json +18 -0
  57. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanroomsml-2023-09-06.min.json +305 -287
  58. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cleanroomsml-2023-09-06.waiters2.json +5 -0
  59. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudformation-2010-05-15.min.json +48 -43
  60. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudfront-2020-05-31.min.json +7 -1
  61. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudhsmv2-2017-04-28.min.json +79 -20
  62. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cloudtrail-2013-11-01.min.json +44 -24
  63. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codeartifact-2018-09-22.min.json +7 -1
  64. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codebuild-2016-10-06.min.json +80 -38
  65. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codecommit-2015-04-13.min.json +7 -1
  66. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codedeploy-2014-10-06.min.json +7 -1
  67. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codeguru-security-2018-05-10.min.json +6 -0
  68. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codepipeline-2015-07-09.min.json +446 -95
  69. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/codepipeline-2015-07-09.paginators.json +6 -0
  70. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cognito-identity-2014-06-30.min.json +23 -5
  71. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cognito-idp-2016-04-18.min.json +292 -187
  72. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/compute-optimizer-2019-11-01.min.json +447 -134
  73. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/config-2014-11-12.min.json +7 -1
  74. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connect-2017-08-08.min.json +1537 -546
  75. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connect-2017-08-08.paginators.json +42 -0
  76. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connect-contact-lens-2020-08-21.min.json +18 -1
  77. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/connectcases-2022-10-03.min.json +205 -63
  78. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/controlcatalog-2018-05-10.min.json +134 -40
  79. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/controlcatalog-2018-05-10.paginators.json +6 -0
  80. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/controlcatalog-2018-05-10.waiters2.json +5 -0
  81. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/controltower-2018-05-10.min.json +150 -5
  82. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/controltower-2018-05-10.paginators.json +12 -0
  83. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cost-optimization-hub-2022-07-26.min.json +320 -262
  84. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cost-optimization-hub-2022-07-26.waiters2.json +5 -0
  85. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/cur-2017-01-06.min.json +7 -1
  86. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/customer-profiles-2020-08-15.min.json +52 -25
  87. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/datasync-2018-11-09.min.json +3 -0
  88. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/datazone-2018-05-10.min.json +2116 -480
  89. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/datazone-2018-05-10.paginators.json +24 -0
  90. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/devicefarm-2015-06-23.min.json +7 -1
  91. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/directconnect-2012-10-25.min.json +7 -1
  92. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/discovery-2015-11-01.min.json +3 -0
  93. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/dms-2016-01-01.min.json +7 -1
  94. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/docdb-2014-10-31.min.json +7 -1
  95. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ds-2015-04-16.min.json +7 -1
  96. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/dynamodb-2011-12-05.min.json +7 -1
  97. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/dynamodb-2012-08-10.min.json +256 -181
  98. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ec2-2016-11-15.min.json +1675 -1320
  99. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecr-2015-09-21.examples.json +186 -0
  100. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecr-2015-09-21.min.json +222 -21
  101. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecr-2015-09-21.paginators.json +9 -0
  102. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ecs-2014-11-13.min.json +290 -256
  103. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/eks-2017-11-01.min.json +169 -84
  104. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticache-2015-02-02.min.json +7 -1
  105. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticbeanstalk-2010-12-01.min.json +7 -1
  106. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticfilesystem-2015-02-01.min.json +7 -1
  107. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticloadbalancing-2012-06-01.min.json +7 -1
  108. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticloadbalancingv2-2015-12-01.examples.json +33 -0
  109. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticloadbalancingv2-2015-12-01.min.json +116 -73
  110. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elasticmapreduce-2009-03-31.min.json +15 -3
  111. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/elastictranscoder-2012-09-25.min.json +7 -1
  112. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/email-2010-12-01.min.json +7 -1
  113. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/emr-serverless-2021-07-13.min.json +172 -14
  114. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/emr-serverless-2021-07-13.paginators.json +6 -0
  115. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/entityresolution-2018-05-10.min.json +162 -94
  116. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/es-2015-01-01.min.json +7 -1
  117. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/eventbridge-2015-10-07.min.json +91 -29
  118. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/firehose-2015-08-04.min.json +361 -167
  119. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/fis-2020-12-01.min.json +19 -5
  120. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/fms-2018-01-01.min.json +63 -59
  121. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/fsx-2018-03-01.min.json +206 -164
  122. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/gamelift-2015-10-01.min.json +7 -1
  123. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/globalaccelerator-2018-08-08.min.json +13 -1
  124. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/glue-2017-03-31.min.json +1227 -583
  125. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/glue-2017-03-31.paginators.json +22 -8
  126. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/grafana-2020-08-18.min.json +317 -15
  127. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/grafana-2020-08-18.paginators.json +12 -0
  128. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/greengrassv2-2020-11-30.min.json +17 -3
  129. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/groundstation-2019-05-23.min.json +7 -1
  130. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/guardduty-2017-11-28.min.json +429 -124
  131. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/iam-2010-05-08.min.json +7 -1
  132. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/imagebuilder-2019-12-02.min.json +3 -0
  133. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/inspector2-2020-06-08.min.json +122 -96
  134. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/iotfleetwise-2021-06-17.min.json +18 -10
  135. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/iotsitewise-2019-12-02.min.json +113 -98
  136. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/iottwinmaker-2021-11-29.min.json +3 -1
  137. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/iotwireless-2020-11-22.min.json +7 -1
  138. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivs-2020-07-14.min.json +159 -154
  139. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivs-realtime-2020-07-14.min.json +396 -242
  140. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivs-realtime-2020-07-14.paginators.json +6 -0
  141. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivs-realtime-2020-07-14.waiters2.json +5 -0
  142. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivschat-2020-07-14.min.json +144 -139
  143. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/ivschat-2020-07-14.waiters2.json +5 -0
  144. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kafka-2018-11-14.min.json +36 -6
  145. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesis-2013-12-02.min.json +7 -1
  146. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesis-video-webrtc-storage-2018-05-10.min.json +17 -0
  147. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesisanalyticsv2-2018-05-23.min.json +266 -110
  148. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kinesisanalyticsv2-2018-05-23.paginators.json +24 -0
  149. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kms-2014-11-01.examples.json +31 -0
  150. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/kms-2014-11-01.min.json +79 -23
  151. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/lakeformation-2017-03-31.min.json +43 -25
  152. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/launch-wizard-2018-05-10.min.json +159 -0
  153. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/license-manager-linux-subscriptions-2018-05-10.min.json +236 -16
  154. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/license-manager-linux-subscriptions-2018-05-10.paginators.json +6 -0
  155. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/lightsail-2016-11-28.min.json +11 -2
  156. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/location-2020-11-19.min.json +1036 -754
  157. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/location-2020-11-19.paginators.json +6 -0
  158. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/logs-2014-03-28.min.json +7 -1
  159. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/macie2-2020-01-01.min.json +254 -143
  160. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/macie2-2020-01-01.paginators.json +6 -0
  161. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mailmanager-2023-10-17.min.json +1836 -0
  162. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mailmanager-2023-10-17.paginators.json +58 -0
  163. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/managedblockchain-2018-09-24.min.json +3 -0
  164. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediaconnect-2018-11-14.min.json +106 -94
  165. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediaconvert-2017-08-29.min.json +208 -131
  166. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediaconvert-2017-08-29.paginators.json +6 -0
  167. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/medialive-2017-10-14.min.json +488 -364
  168. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediapackagev2-2022-12-25.examples.json +1271 -0
  169. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mediapackagev2-2022-12-25.min.json +105 -71
  170. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/medical-imaging-2023-07-19.min.json +80 -37
  171. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/memorydb-2021-01-01.min.json +7 -1
  172. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/metadata.json +24 -12
  173. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/models.lex.v2-2020-08-07.min.json +374 -346
  174. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/monitoring-2010-08-01.min.json +7 -1
  175. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mq-2017-11-27.min.json +4 -4
  176. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/mwaa-2020-07-01.min.json +178 -158
  177. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/network-firewall-2020-11-12.min.json +7 -1
  178. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/networkmanager-2019-07-05.min.json +320 -176
  179. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/omics-2022-11-28.min.json +36 -22
  180. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/opensearch-2021-01-01.min.json +190 -115
  181. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/opsworks-2013-02-18.min.json +3 -0
  182. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/organizations-2016-11-28.min.json +7 -1
  183. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/osis-2022-01-01.min.json +77 -28
  184. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/outposts-2019-12-03.min.json +11 -2
  185. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/payment-cryptography-2021-09-14.min.json +10 -1
  186. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/payment-cryptography-data-2022-02-03.min.json +544 -383
  187. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/payment-cryptography-data-2022-02-03.waiters2.json +5 -0
  188. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-scep-2018-05-10.min.json +456 -0
  189. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-scep-2018-05-10.paginators.json +16 -0
  190. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pca-connector-scep-2018-05-10.waiters2.json +5 -0
  191. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/personalize-2018-05-22.min.json +153 -44
  192. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/personalize-runtime-2018-05-22.min.json +9 -1
  193. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pi-2018-02-27.min.json +28 -18
  194. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pinpoint-2016-12-01.min.json +403 -378
  195. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pinpoint-sms-voice-v2-2022-03-31.min.json +527 -99
  196. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pinpoint-sms-voice-v2-2022-03-31.paginators.json +6 -0
  197. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pipes-2015-10-07.min.json +632 -555
  198. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/pipes-2015-10-07.waiters2.json +5 -0
  199. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/polly-2016-06-10.min.json +7 -1
  200. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qapps-2023-11-27.examples.json +583 -0
  201. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qapps-2023-11-27.min.json +1312 -0
  202. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{mobile-2017-07-01.paginators.json → qapps-2023-11-27.paginators.json} +6 -4
  203. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qapps-2023-11-27.waiters2.json +5 -0
  204. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qbusiness-2023-11-27.examples.json +2 -3
  205. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qbusiness-2023-11-27.min.json +813 -689
  206. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qbusiness-2023-11-27.paginators.json +1 -1
  207. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qbusiness-2023-11-27.waiters2.json +5 -0
  208. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qconnect-2020-10-19.min.json +335 -108
  209. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/qconnect-2020-10-19.paginators.json +6 -0
  210. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/quicksight-2018-04-01.min.json +2113 -1354
  211. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2013-01-10.min.json +4 -1
  212. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2013-02-12.min.json +4 -1
  213. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2013-09-09.min.json +4 -1
  214. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2014-09-01.min.json +4 -1
  215. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rds-2014-10-31.min.json +34 -10
  216. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/redshift-2012-12-01.min.json +7 -1
  217. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/redshift-serverless-2021-04-21.min.json +32 -22
  218. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rekognition-2016-06-27.min.json +15 -3
  219. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/resiliencehub-2020-04-30.min.json +473 -144
  220. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/resiliencehub-2020-04-30.paginators.json +12 -0
  221. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/rolesanywhere-2018-05-10.min.json +16 -1
  222. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/route53-2013-04-01.min.json +7 -1
  223. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/route53domains-2014-05-15.min.json +7 -1
  224. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/route53profiles-2018-05-10.min.json +3 -0
  225. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/route53resolver-2018-04-01.min.json +62 -53
  226. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/s3-2006-03-01.examples.json +76 -76
  227. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/s3-2006-03-01.min.json +46 -5
  228. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sagemaker-2017-07-24.min.json +1993 -1207
  229. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sagemaker-2017-07-24.paginators.json +12 -0
  230. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/secretsmanager-2017-10-17.min.json +11 -1
  231. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/securityhub-2018-10-26.min.json +7 -1
  232. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/securitylake-2018-05-10.min.json +7 -1
  233. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/sesv2-2019-09-27.min.json +148 -136
  234. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/shield-2016-06-02.min.json +7 -1
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  471. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/alexaforbusiness.d.ts +0 -3862
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  478. package/node_modules/aws-sdk/clients/mobile.js +0 -18
  479. /package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{alexaforbusiness-2017-11-09.examples.json → application-signals-2024-04-15.examples.json} +0 -0
  480. /package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{backupstorage-2018-04-10.examples.json → apptest-2022-12-06.examples.json} +0 -0
  481. /package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{honeycode-2020-03-01.examples.json → mailmanager-2023-10-17.examples.json} +0 -0
  482. /package/node_modules/aws-sdk/apis/{mobile-2017-07-01.examples.json → pca-connector-scep-2018-05-10.examples.json} +0 -0
@@ -13,11 +13,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
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  constructor(options?: EC2.Types.ClientConfiguration)
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  /**
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- * Accepts an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Accept a transferred Elastic IP address in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Accepts an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Accept a transferred Elastic IP address in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
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  */
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  acceptAddressTransfer(params: EC2.Types.AcceptAddressTransferRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AcceptAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AcceptAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
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- * Accepts an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Accept a transferred Elastic IP address in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
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+ * Accepts an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Accept a transferred Elastic IP address in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
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  */
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  acceptAddressTransfer(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AcceptAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AcceptAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
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  /**
@@ -77,11 +77,11 @@ 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 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. 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. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. 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 EC2 User Guide. 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. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon EC2 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).
81
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  */
82
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  allocateAddress(params: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult, AWSError>;
83
83
  /**
84
- * 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. 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. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. 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).
84
+ * 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 EC2 User Guide. 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. To attempt to recover an Elastic IP address that you released, specify it in this operation. For more information, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon EC2 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).
85
85
  */
86
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  allocateAddress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AllocateAddressResult, AWSError>;
87
87
  /**
@@ -109,27 +109,27 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
109
109
  */
110
110
  applySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetwork(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ApplySecurityGroupsToClientVpnTargetNetworkResult, AWSError>;
111
111
  /**
112
- * Assigns one or more IPv6 addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific IPv6 addresses, or you can specify the number of IPv6 addresses to be automatically assigned from within the subnet's IPv6 CIDR block range. You can assign as many IPv6 addresses to a network interface as you can assign private IPv4 addresses, and the limit varies per instance type. For information, see IP Addresses Per Network Interface Per Instance Type in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You must specify either the IPv6 addresses or the IPv6 address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPV6 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv6 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
112
+ * Assigns one or more IPv6 addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific IPv6 addresses, or you can specify the number of IPv6 addresses to be automatically assigned from within the subnet's IPv6 CIDR block range. You can assign as many IPv6 addresses to a network interface as you can assign private IPv4 addresses, and the limit varies per instance type. You must specify either the IPv6 addresses or the IPv6 address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPV6 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv6 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
113
113
  */
114
114
  assignIpv6Addresses(params: EC2.Types.AssignIpv6AddressesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignIpv6AddressesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignIpv6AddressesResult, AWSError>;
115
115
  /**
116
- * Assigns one or more IPv6 addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific IPv6 addresses, or you can specify the number of IPv6 addresses to be automatically assigned from within the subnet's IPv6 CIDR block range. You can assign as many IPv6 addresses to a network interface as you can assign private IPv4 addresses, and the limit varies per instance type. For information, see IP Addresses Per Network Interface Per Instance Type in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. You must specify either the IPv6 addresses or the IPv6 address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPV6 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv6 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
116
+ * Assigns one or more IPv6 addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific IPv6 addresses, or you can specify the number of IPv6 addresses to be automatically assigned from within the subnet's IPv6 CIDR block range. You can assign as many IPv6 addresses to a network interface as you can assign private IPv4 addresses, and the limit varies per instance type. You must specify either the IPv6 addresses or the IPv6 address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPV6 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv6 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
117
117
  */
118
118
  assignIpv6Addresses(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignIpv6AddressesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignIpv6AddressesResult, AWSError>;
119
119
  /**
120
- * Assigns one or more secondary private IP addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific secondary IP addresses, or you can specify the number of secondary IP addresses to be automatically assigned within the subnet's CIDR block range. The number of secondary IP addresses that you can assign to an instance varies by instance type. For information about instance types, see Instance Types in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information about Elastic IP addresses, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. When you move a secondary private IP address to another network interface, any Elastic IP address that is associated with the IP address is also moved. Remapping an IP address is an asynchronous operation. When you move an IP address from one network interface to another, check network/interfaces/macs/mac/local-ipv4s in the instance metadata to confirm that the remapping is complete. You must specify either the IP addresses or the IP address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv4 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
120
+ * Assigns one or more secondary private IP addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific secondary IP addresses, or you can specify the number of secondary IP addresses to be automatically assigned within the subnet's CIDR block range. The number of secondary IP addresses that you can assign to an instance varies by instance type. For more information about Elastic IP addresses, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you move a secondary private IP address to another network interface, any Elastic IP address that is associated with the IP address is also moved. Remapping an IP address is an asynchronous operation. When you move an IP address from one network interface to another, check network/interfaces/macs/mac/local-ipv4s in the instance metadata to confirm that the remapping is complete. You must specify either the IP addresses or the IP address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv4 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
121
121
  */
122
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  assignPrivateIpAddresses(params: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateIpAddressesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateIpAddressesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignPrivateIpAddressesResult, AWSError>;
123
123
  /**
124
- * Assigns one or more secondary private IP addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific secondary IP addresses, or you can specify the number of secondary IP addresses to be automatically assigned within the subnet's CIDR block range. The number of secondary IP addresses that you can assign to an instance varies by instance type. For information about instance types, see Instance Types in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. For more information about Elastic IP addresses, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. When you move a secondary private IP address to another network interface, any Elastic IP address that is associated with the IP address is also moved. Remapping an IP address is an asynchronous operation. When you move an IP address from one network interface to another, check network/interfaces/macs/mac/local-ipv4s in the instance metadata to confirm that the remapping is complete. You must specify either the IP addresses or the IP address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv4 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
124
+ * Assigns one or more secondary private IP addresses to the specified network interface. You can specify one or more specific secondary IP addresses, or you can specify the number of secondary IP addresses to be automatically assigned within the subnet's CIDR block range. The number of secondary IP addresses that you can assign to an instance varies by instance type. For more information about Elastic IP addresses, see Elastic IP Addresses in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you move a secondary private IP address to another network interface, any Elastic IP address that is associated with the IP address is also moved. Remapping an IP address is an asynchronous operation. When you move an IP address from one network interface to another, check network/interfaces/macs/mac/local-ipv4s in the instance metadata to confirm that the remapping is complete. You must specify either the IP addresses or the IP address count in the request. You can optionally use Prefix Delegation on the network interface. You must specify either the IPv4 Prefix Delegation prefixes, or the IPv4 Prefix Delegation count. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
125
125
  */
126
126
  assignPrivateIpAddresses(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateIpAddressesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignPrivateIpAddressesResult, AWSError>;
127
127
  /**
128
- * Assigns one or more private IPv4 addresses to a private NAT gateway. For more information, see Work with NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
128
+ * Assigns private IPv4 addresses to a private NAT gateway. For more information, see Work with NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
129
129
  */
130
130
  assignPrivateNatGatewayAddress(params: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult, AWSError>;
131
131
  /**
132
- * Assigns one or more private IPv4 addresses to a private NAT gateway. For more information, see Work with NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
132
+ * Assigns private IPv4 addresses to a private NAT gateway. For more information, see Work with NAT gateways in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
133
133
  */
134
134
  assignPrivateNatGatewayAddress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssignPrivateNatGatewayAddressResult, AWSError>;
135
135
  /**
@@ -149,11 +149,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
149
149
  */
150
150
  associateClientVpnTargetNetwork(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateClientVpnTargetNetworkResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateClientVpnTargetNetworkResult, AWSError>;
151
151
  /**
152
- * Associates a set of DHCP options (that you've previously created) with the specified VPC, or associates no DHCP options with the VPC. After you associate the options with the VPC, any existing instances and all new instances that you launch in that VPC use the options. You don't need to restart or relaunch the instances. They automatically pick up the changes within a few hours, depending on how frequently the instance renews its DHCP lease. You can explicitly renew the lease using the operating system on the instance. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
152
+ * Associates a set of DHCP options (that you've previously created) with the specified VPC, or associates no DHCP options with the VPC. After you associate the options with the VPC, any existing instances and all new instances that you launch in that VPC use the options. You don't need to restart or relaunch the instances. They automatically pick up the changes within a few hours, depending on how frequently the instance renews its DHCP lease. You can explicitly renew the lease using the operating system on the instance. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
153
153
  */
154
154
  associateDhcpOptions(params: EC2.Types.AssociateDhcpOptionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
155
155
  /**
156
- * Associates a set of DHCP options (that you've previously created) with the specified VPC, or associates no DHCP options with the VPC. After you associate the options with the VPC, any existing instances and all new instances that you launch in that VPC use the options. You don't need to restart or relaunch the instances. They automatically pick up the changes within a few hours, depending on how frequently the instance renews its DHCP lease. You can explicitly renew the lease using the operating system on the instance. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
156
+ * Associates a set of DHCP options (that you've previously created) with the specified VPC, or associates no DHCP options with the VPC. After you associate the options with the VPC, any existing instances and all new instances that you launch in that VPC use the options. You don't need to restart or relaunch the instances. They automatically pick up the changes within a few hours, depending on how frequently the instance renews its DHCP lease. You can explicitly renew the lease using the operating system on the instance. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
157
157
  */
158
158
  associateDhcpOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
159
159
  /**
@@ -245,19 +245,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
245
245
  */
246
246
  associateTransitGatewayRouteTable(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTableResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateTransitGatewayRouteTableResult, AWSError>;
247
247
  /**
248
- * Associates a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. Before you create the association, run the create-network-interface command and set --interface-type to trunk. You must also create a network interface for each branch network interface that you want to associate with the trunk network interface.
248
+ * Associates a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. Before you create the association, use CreateNetworkInterface command and set the interface type to trunk. You must also create a network interface for each branch network interface that you want to associate with the trunk network interface.
249
249
  */
250
250
  associateTrunkInterface(params: EC2.Types.AssociateTrunkInterfaceRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateTrunkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateTrunkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
251
251
  /**
252
- * Associates a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. Before you create the association, run the create-network-interface command and set --interface-type to trunk. You must also create a network interface for each branch network interface that you want to associate with the trunk network interface.
252
+ * Associates a branch network interface with a trunk network interface. Before you create the association, use CreateNetworkInterface command and set the interface type to trunk. You must also create a network interface for each branch network interface that you want to associate with the trunk network interface.
253
253
  */
254
254
  associateTrunkInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateTrunkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateTrunkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
255
255
  /**
256
- * Associates a CIDR block with your VPC. You can associate a secondary IPv4 CIDR block, an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). You must specify one of the following in the request: an IPv4 CIDR block, an IPv6 pool, or an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block. For more information about associating CIDR blocks with your VPC and applicable restrictions, see IP addressing for your VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
256
+ * Associates a CIDR block with your VPC. You can associate a secondary IPv4 CIDR block, an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). You must specify one of the following in the request: an IPv4 CIDR block, an IPv6 pool, or an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block. For more information about associating CIDR blocks with your VPC and applicable restrictions, see IP addressing for your VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
257
257
  */
258
258
  associateVpcCidrBlock(params: EC2.Types.AssociateVpcCidrBlockRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateVpcCidrBlockResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateVpcCidrBlockResult, AWSError>;
259
259
  /**
260
- * Associates a CIDR block with your VPC. You can associate a secondary IPv4 CIDR block, an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). You must specify one of the following in the request: an IPv4 CIDR block, an IPv6 pool, or an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block. For more information about associating CIDR blocks with your VPC and applicable restrictions, see IP addressing for your VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
260
+ * Associates a CIDR block with your VPC. You can associate a secondary IPv4 CIDR block, an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block, or an IPv6 CIDR block from an IPv6 address pool that you provisioned through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP). You must specify one of the following in the request: an IPv4 CIDR block, an IPv6 pool, or an Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block. For more information about associating CIDR blocks with your VPC and applicable restrictions, see IP addressing for your VPCs and subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
261
261
  */
262
262
  associateVpcCidrBlock(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.AssociateVpcCidrBlockResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.AssociateVpcCidrBlockResult, AWSError>;
263
263
  /**
@@ -397,11 +397,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
397
397
  */
398
398
  cancelImportTask(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CancelImportTaskResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CancelImportTaskResult, AWSError>;
399
399
  /**
400
- * Cancels the specified Reserved Instance listing in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
400
+ * Cancels the specified Reserved Instance listing in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
401
401
  */
402
402
  cancelReservedInstancesListing(params: EC2.Types.CancelReservedInstancesListingRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CancelReservedInstancesListingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CancelReservedInstancesListingResult, AWSError>;
403
403
  /**
404
- * Cancels the specified Reserved Instance listing in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
404
+ * Cancels the specified Reserved Instance listing in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
405
405
  */
406
406
  cancelReservedInstancesListing(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CancelReservedInstancesListingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CancelReservedInstancesListingResult, AWSError>;
407
407
  /**
@@ -445,11 +445,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
445
445
  */
446
446
  copyImage(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CopyImageResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CopyImageResult, AWSError>;
447
447
  /**
448
- * Copies a point-in-time snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can copy a snapshot within the same Region, from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You can't copy a snapshot from an Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. You can use the snapshot to create EBS volumes or Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). When copying snapshots to a Region, copies of encrypted EBS snapshots remain encrypted. Copies of unencrypted snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you enable encryption for the snapshot copy operation. By default, encrypted snapshot copies use the default Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key; however, you can specify a different KMS key. To copy an encrypted snapshot that has been shared from another account, you must have permissions for the KMS key used to encrypt the snapshot. Snapshots copied to an Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a different key that you specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted snapshots. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EBS User Guide. Snapshots created by copying another snapshot have an arbitrary volume ID that should not be used for any purpose. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
448
+ * Copies a point-in-time snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can copy a snapshot within the same Region, from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You can't copy a snapshot from an Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. You can use the snapshot to create EBS volumes or Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). When copying snapshots to a Region, copies of encrypted EBS snapshots remain encrypted. Copies of unencrypted snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you enable encryption for the snapshot copy operation. By default, encrypted snapshot copies use the default KMS key; however, you can specify a different KMS key. To copy an encrypted snapshot that has been shared from another account, you must have permissions for the KMS key used to encrypt the snapshot. Snapshots copied to an Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a different key that you specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted snapshots. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EBS User Guide. Snapshots created by copying another snapshot have an arbitrary volume ID that should not be used for any purpose. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
449
449
  */
450
450
  copySnapshot(params: EC2.Types.CopySnapshotRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CopySnapshotResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CopySnapshotResult, AWSError>;
451
451
  /**
452
- * Copies a point-in-time snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can copy a snapshot within the same Region, from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You can't copy a snapshot from an Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. You can use the snapshot to create EBS volumes or Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). When copying snapshots to a Region, copies of encrypted EBS snapshots remain encrypted. Copies of unencrypted snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you enable encryption for the snapshot copy operation. By default, encrypted snapshot copies use the default Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key; however, you can specify a different KMS key. To copy an encrypted snapshot that has been shared from another account, you must have permissions for the KMS key used to encrypt the snapshot. Snapshots copied to an Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a different key that you specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted snapshots. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EBS User Guide. Snapshots created by copying another snapshot have an arbitrary volume ID that should not be used for any purpose. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
452
+ * Copies a point-in-time snapshot of an EBS volume and stores it in Amazon S3. You can copy a snapshot within the same Region, from one Region to another, or from a Region to an Outpost. You can't copy a snapshot from an Outpost to a Region, from one Outpost to another, or within the same Outpost. You can use the snapshot to create EBS volumes or Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). When copying snapshots to a Region, copies of encrypted EBS snapshots remain encrypted. Copies of unencrypted snapshots remain unencrypted, unless you enable encryption for the snapshot copy operation. By default, encrypted snapshot copies use the default KMS key; however, you can specify a different KMS key. To copy an encrypted snapshot that has been shared from another account, you must have permissions for the KMS key used to encrypt the snapshot. Snapshots copied to an Outpost are encrypted by default using the default encryption key for the Region, or a different key that you specify in the request using KmsKeyId. Outposts do not support unencrypted snapshots. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EBS User Guide. Snapshots created by copying another snapshot have an arbitrary volume ID that should not be used for any purpose. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
453
453
  */
454
454
  copySnapshot(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CopySnapshotResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CopySnapshotResult, AWSError>;
455
455
  /**
@@ -460,6 +460,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
460
460
  * Creates a new Capacity Reservation with the specified attributes. Capacity Reservations enable you to reserve capacity for your Amazon EC2 instances in a specific Availability Zone for any duration. This gives you the flexibility to selectively add capacity reservations and still get the Regional RI discounts for that usage. By creating Capacity Reservations, you ensure that you always have access to Amazon EC2 capacity when you need it, for as long as you need it. For more information, see Capacity Reservations in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Your request to create a Capacity Reservation could fail if Amazon EC2 does not have sufficient capacity to fulfill the request. If your request fails due to Amazon EC2 capacity constraints, either try again at a later time, try in a different Availability Zone, or request a smaller capacity reservation. If your application is flexible across instance types and sizes, try to create a Capacity Reservation with different instance attributes. Your request could also fail if the requested quantity exceeds your On-Demand Instance limit for the selected instance type. If your request fails due to limit constraints, increase your On-Demand Instance limit for the required instance type and try again. For more information about increasing your instance limits, see Amazon EC2 Service Quotas in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
461
461
  */
462
462
  createCapacityReservation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationResult, AWSError>;
463
+ /**
464
+ * Create a new Capacity Reservation by splitting the available capacity of the source Capacity Reservation. The new Capacity Reservation will have the same attributes as the source Capacity Reservation except for tags. The source Capacity Reservation must be active and owned by your Amazon Web Services account.
465
+ */
466
+ createCapacityReservationBySplitting(params: EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingResult, AWSError>;
467
+ /**
468
+ * Create a new Capacity Reservation by splitting the available capacity of the source Capacity Reservation. The new Capacity Reservation will have the same attributes as the source Capacity Reservation except for tags. The source Capacity Reservation must be active and owned by your Amazon Web Services account.
469
+ */
470
+ createCapacityReservationBySplitting(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingResult, AWSError>;
463
471
  /**
464
472
  * Creates a Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Create a Capacity Reservation Fleet in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
465
473
  */
@@ -533,11 +541,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
533
541
  */
534
542
  createDefaultVpc(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateDefaultVpcResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateDefaultVpcResult, AWSError>;
535
543
  /**
536
- * Creates a custom set of DHCP options. After you create a DHCP option set, you associate it with a VPC. After you associate a DHCP option set with a VPC, all existing and newly launched instances in the VPC use this set of DHCP options. The following are the individual DHCP options you can specify. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. domain-name - If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in us-east-1, specify ec2.internal. If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in any other Region, specify region.compute.internal. Otherwise, specify a custom domain name. This value is used to complete unqualified DNS hostnames. Some Linux operating systems accept multiple domain names separated by spaces. However, Windows and other Linux operating systems treat the value as a single domain, which results in unexpected behavior. If your DHCP option set is associated with a VPC that has instances running operating systems that treat the value as a single domain, specify only one domain name. domain-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four DNS servers, or AmazonProvidedDNS. To specify multiple domain name servers in a single parameter, separate the IP addresses using commas. To have your instances receive custom DNS hostnames as specified in domain-name, you must specify a custom DNS server. ntp-servers - The IP addresses of up to eight Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers (four IPv4 addresses and four IPv6 addresses). netbios-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four NetBIOS name servers. netbios-node-type - The NetBIOS node type (1, 2, 4, or 8). We recommend that you specify 2. Broadcast and multicast are not supported. For more information about NetBIOS node types, see RFC 2132. ipv6-address-preferred-lease-time - A value (in seconds, minutes, hours, or years) for how frequently a running instance with an IPv6 assigned to it goes through DHCPv6 lease renewal. Acceptable values are between 140 and 2147483647 seconds (approximately 68 years). If no value is entered, the default lease time is 140 seconds. If you use long-term addressing for EC2 instances, you can increase the lease time and avoid frequent lease renewal requests. Lease renewal typically occurs when half of the lease time has elapsed.
544
+ * Creates a custom set of DHCP options. After you create a DHCP option set, you associate it with a VPC. After you associate a DHCP option set with a VPC, all existing and newly launched instances in the VPC use this set of DHCP options. The following are the individual DHCP options you can specify. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. domain-name - If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in us-east-1, specify ec2.internal. If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in any other Region, specify region.compute.internal. Otherwise, specify a custom domain name. This value is used to complete unqualified DNS hostnames. Some Linux operating systems accept multiple domain names separated by spaces. However, Windows and other Linux operating systems treat the value as a single domain, which results in unexpected behavior. If your DHCP option set is associated with a VPC that has instances running operating systems that treat the value as a single domain, specify only one domain name. domain-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four DNS servers, or AmazonProvidedDNS. To specify multiple domain name servers in a single parameter, separate the IP addresses using commas. To have your instances receive custom DNS hostnames as specified in domain-name, you must specify a custom DNS server. ntp-servers - The IP addresses of up to eight Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers (four IPv4 addresses and four IPv6 addresses). netbios-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four NetBIOS name servers. netbios-node-type - The NetBIOS node type (1, 2, 4, or 8). We recommend that you specify 2. Broadcast and multicast are not supported. For more information about NetBIOS node types, see RFC 2132. ipv6-address-preferred-lease-time - A value (in seconds, minutes, hours, or years) for how frequently a running instance with an IPv6 assigned to it goes through DHCPv6 lease renewal. Acceptable values are between 140 and 2147483647 seconds (approximately 68 years). If no value is entered, the default lease time is 140 seconds. If you use long-term addressing for EC2 instances, you can increase the lease time and avoid frequent lease renewal requests. Lease renewal typically occurs when half of the lease time has elapsed.
537
545
  */
538
546
  createDhcpOptions(params: EC2.Types.CreateDhcpOptionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateDhcpOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateDhcpOptionsResult, AWSError>;
539
547
  /**
540
- * Creates a custom set of DHCP options. After you create a DHCP option set, you associate it with a VPC. After you associate a DHCP option set with a VPC, all existing and newly launched instances in the VPC use this set of DHCP options. The following are the individual DHCP options you can specify. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. domain-name - If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in us-east-1, specify ec2.internal. If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in any other Region, specify region.compute.internal. Otherwise, specify a custom domain name. This value is used to complete unqualified DNS hostnames. Some Linux operating systems accept multiple domain names separated by spaces. However, Windows and other Linux operating systems treat the value as a single domain, which results in unexpected behavior. If your DHCP option set is associated with a VPC that has instances running operating systems that treat the value as a single domain, specify only one domain name. domain-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four DNS servers, or AmazonProvidedDNS. To specify multiple domain name servers in a single parameter, separate the IP addresses using commas. To have your instances receive custom DNS hostnames as specified in domain-name, you must specify a custom DNS server. ntp-servers - The IP addresses of up to eight Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers (four IPv4 addresses and four IPv6 addresses). netbios-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four NetBIOS name servers. netbios-node-type - The NetBIOS node type (1, 2, 4, or 8). We recommend that you specify 2. Broadcast and multicast are not supported. For more information about NetBIOS node types, see RFC 2132. ipv6-address-preferred-lease-time - A value (in seconds, minutes, hours, or years) for how frequently a running instance with an IPv6 assigned to it goes through DHCPv6 lease renewal. Acceptable values are between 140 and 2147483647 seconds (approximately 68 years). If no value is entered, the default lease time is 140 seconds. If you use long-term addressing for EC2 instances, you can increase the lease time and avoid frequent lease renewal requests. Lease renewal typically occurs when half of the lease time has elapsed.
548
+ * Creates a custom set of DHCP options. After you create a DHCP option set, you associate it with a VPC. After you associate a DHCP option set with a VPC, all existing and newly launched instances in the VPC use this set of DHCP options. The following are the individual DHCP options you can specify. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide. domain-name - If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in us-east-1, specify ec2.internal. If you're using AmazonProvidedDNS in any other Region, specify region.compute.internal. Otherwise, specify a custom domain name. This value is used to complete unqualified DNS hostnames. Some Linux operating systems accept multiple domain names separated by spaces. However, Windows and other Linux operating systems treat the value as a single domain, which results in unexpected behavior. If your DHCP option set is associated with a VPC that has instances running operating systems that treat the value as a single domain, specify only one domain name. domain-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four DNS servers, or AmazonProvidedDNS. To specify multiple domain name servers in a single parameter, separate the IP addresses using commas. To have your instances receive custom DNS hostnames as specified in domain-name, you must specify a custom DNS server. ntp-servers - The IP addresses of up to eight Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers (four IPv4 addresses and four IPv6 addresses). netbios-name-servers - The IP addresses of up to four NetBIOS name servers. netbios-node-type - The NetBIOS node type (1, 2, 4, or 8). We recommend that you specify 2. Broadcast and multicast are not supported. For more information about NetBIOS node types, see RFC 2132. ipv6-address-preferred-lease-time - A value (in seconds, minutes, hours, or years) for how frequently a running instance with an IPv6 assigned to it goes through DHCPv6 lease renewal. Acceptable values are between 140 and 2147483647 seconds (approximately 68 years). If no value is entered, the default lease time is 140 seconds. If you use long-term addressing for EC2 instances, you can increase the lease time and avoid frequent lease renewal requests. Lease renewal typically occurs when half of the lease time has elapsed.
541
549
  */
542
550
  createDhcpOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateDhcpOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateDhcpOptionsResult, AWSError>;
543
551
  /**
@@ -557,11 +565,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
557
565
  */
558
566
  createFleet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateFleetResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateFleetResult, AWSError>;
559
567
  /**
560
- * Creates one or more flow logs to capture information about IP traffic for a specific network interface, subnet, or VPC. Flow log data for a monitored network interface is recorded as flow log records, which are log events consisting of fields that describe the traffic flow. For more information, see Flow log records in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. When publishing to CloudWatch Logs, flow log records are published to a log group, and each network interface has a unique log stream in the log group. When publishing to Amazon S3, flow log records for all of the monitored network interfaces are published to a single log file object that is stored in the specified bucket. For more information, see VPC Flow Logs in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
568
+ * Creates one or more flow logs to capture information about IP traffic for a specific network interface, subnet, or VPC. Flow log data for a monitored network interface is recorded as flow log records, which are log events consisting of fields that describe the traffic flow. For more information, see Flow log records in the Amazon VPC User Guide. When publishing to CloudWatch Logs, flow log records are published to a log group, and each network interface has a unique log stream in the log group. When publishing to Amazon S3, flow log records for all of the monitored network interfaces are published to a single log file object that is stored in the specified bucket. For more information, see VPC Flow Logs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
561
569
  */
562
570
  createFlowLogs(params: EC2.Types.CreateFlowLogsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateFlowLogsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateFlowLogsResult, AWSError>;
563
571
  /**
564
- * Creates one or more flow logs to capture information about IP traffic for a specific network interface, subnet, or VPC. Flow log data for a monitored network interface is recorded as flow log records, which are log events consisting of fields that describe the traffic flow. For more information, see Flow log records in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. When publishing to CloudWatch Logs, flow log records are published to a log group, and each network interface has a unique log stream in the log group. When publishing to Amazon S3, flow log records for all of the monitored network interfaces are published to a single log file object that is stored in the specified bucket. For more information, see VPC Flow Logs in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
572
+ * Creates one or more flow logs to capture information about IP traffic for a specific network interface, subnet, or VPC. Flow log data for a monitored network interface is recorded as flow log records, which are log events consisting of fields that describe the traffic flow. For more information, see Flow log records in the Amazon VPC User Guide. When publishing to CloudWatch Logs, flow log records are published to a log group, and each network interface has a unique log stream in the log group. When publishing to Amazon S3, flow log records for all of the monitored network interfaces are published to a single log file object that is stored in the specified bucket. For more information, see VPC Flow Logs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
565
573
  */
566
574
  createFlowLogs(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateFlowLogsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateFlowLogsResult, AWSError>;
567
575
  /**
@@ -620,6 +628,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
620
628
  * Create an IPAM. Amazon VPC IP Address Manager (IPAM) is a VPC feature that you can use to automate your IP address management workflows including assigning, tracking, troubleshooting, and auditing IP addresses across Amazon Web Services Regions and accounts throughout your Amazon Web Services Organization. For more information, see Create an IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
621
629
  */
622
630
  createIpam(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateIpamResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateIpamResult, AWSError>;
631
+ /**
632
+ * Create a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
633
+ */
634
+ createIpamExternalResourceVerificationToken(params: EC2.Types.CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult, AWSError>;
635
+ /**
636
+ * Create a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
637
+ */
638
+ createIpamExternalResourceVerificationToken(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult, AWSError>;
623
639
  /**
624
640
  * Create an IP address pool for Amazon VPC IP Address Manager (IPAM). In IPAM, a pool is a collection of contiguous IP addresses CIDRs. Pools enable you to organize your IP addresses according to your routing and security needs. For example, if you have separate routing and security needs for development and production applications, you can create a pool for each. For more information, see Create a top-level pool in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
625
641
  */
@@ -653,19 +669,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
653
669
  */
654
670
  createKeyPair(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.KeyPair) => void): Request<EC2.Types.KeyPair, AWSError>;
655
671
  /**
656
- * Creates a launch template. A launch template contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify a launch template instead of providing the launch parameters in the request. For more information, see Launch an instance from a launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. To clone an existing launch template as the basis for a new launch template, use the Amazon EC2 console. The API, SDKs, and CLI do not support cloning a template. For more information, see Create a launch template from an existing launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
672
+ * Creates a launch template. A launch template contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify a launch template instead of providing the launch parameters in the request. For more information, see Launch an instance from a launch template in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. To clone an existing launch template as the basis for a new launch template, use the Amazon EC2 console. The API, SDKs, and CLI do not support cloning a template. For more information, see Create a launch template from an existing launch template in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
657
673
  */
658
674
  createLaunchTemplate(params: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateResult, AWSError>;
659
675
  /**
660
- * Creates a launch template. A launch template contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify a launch template instead of providing the launch parameters in the request. For more information, see Launch an instance from a launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. To clone an existing launch template as the basis for a new launch template, use the Amazon EC2 console. The API, SDKs, and CLI do not support cloning a template. For more information, see Create a launch template from an existing launch template in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
676
+ * Creates a launch template. A launch template contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify a launch template instead of providing the launch parameters in the request. For more information, see Launch an instance from a launch template in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. To clone an existing launch template as the basis for a new launch template, use the Amazon EC2 console. The API, SDKs, and CLI do not support cloning a template. For more information, see Create a launch template from an existing launch template in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
661
677
  */
662
678
  createLaunchTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateResult, AWSError>;
663
679
  /**
664
- * Creates a new version of a launch template. You must specify an existing launch template, either by name or ID. You can determine whether the new version inherits parameters from a source version, and add or overwrite parameters as needed. Launch template versions are numbered in the order in which they are created. You can't specify, change, or replace the numbering of launch template versions. Launch templates are immutable; after you create a launch template, you can't modify it. Instead, you can create a new version of the launch template that includes the changes that you require. For more information, see Modify a launch template (manage launch template versions) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
680
+ * Creates a new version of a launch template. You must specify an existing launch template, either by name or ID. You can determine whether the new version inherits parameters from a source version, and add or overwrite parameters as needed. Launch template versions are numbered in the order in which they are created. You can't specify, change, or replace the numbering of launch template versions. Launch templates are immutable; after you create a launch template, you can't modify it. Instead, you can create a new version of the launch template that includes the changes that you require. For more information, see Modify a launch template (manage launch template versions) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
665
681
  */
666
682
  createLaunchTemplateVersion(params: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateVersionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateVersionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateVersionResult, AWSError>;
667
683
  /**
668
- * Creates a new version of a launch template. You must specify an existing launch template, either by name or ID. You can determine whether the new version inherits parameters from a source version, and add or overwrite parameters as needed. Launch template versions are numbered in the order in which they are created. You can't specify, change, or replace the numbering of launch template versions. Launch templates are immutable; after you create a launch template, you can't modify it. Instead, you can create a new version of the launch template that includes the changes that you require. For more information, see Modify a launch template (manage launch template versions) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
684
+ * Creates a new version of a launch template. You must specify an existing launch template, either by name or ID. You can determine whether the new version inherits parameters from a source version, and add or overwrite parameters as needed. Launch template versions are numbered in the order in which they are created. You can't specify, change, or replace the numbering of launch template versions. Launch templates are immutable; after you create a launch template, you can't modify it. Instead, you can create a new version of the launch template that includes the changes that you require. For more information, see Modify a launch template (manage launch template versions) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
669
685
  */
670
686
  createLaunchTemplateVersion(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateVersionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateLaunchTemplateVersionResult, AWSError>;
671
687
  /**
@@ -749,11 +765,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
749
765
  */
750
766
  createNetworkInsightsPath(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInsightsPathResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInsightsPathResult, AWSError>;
751
767
  /**
752
- * Creates a network interface in the specified subnet. The number of IP addresses you can assign to a network interface varies by instance type. For more information, see IP Addresses Per ENI Per Instance Type in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. For more information about network interfaces, see Elastic network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
768
+ * Creates a network interface in the specified subnet. The number of IP addresses you can assign to a network interface varies by instance type. For more information about network interfaces, see Elastic network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
753
769
  */
754
770
  createNetworkInterface(params: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
755
771
  /**
756
- * Creates a network interface in the specified subnet. The number of IP addresses you can assign to a network interface varies by instance type. For more information, see IP Addresses Per ENI Per Instance Type in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. For more information about network interfaces, see Elastic network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
772
+ * Creates a network interface in the specified subnet. The number of IP addresses you can assign to a network interface varies by instance type. For more information about network interfaces, see Elastic network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
757
773
  */
758
774
  createNetworkInterface(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateNetworkInterfaceResult, AWSError>;
759
775
  /**
@@ -781,19 +797,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
781
797
  */
782
798
  createPublicIpv4Pool(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreatePublicIpv4PoolResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreatePublicIpv4PoolResult, AWSError>;
783
799
  /**
784
- * Replaces the EBS-backed root volume for a running instance with a new volume that is restored to the original root volume's launch state, that is restored to a specific snapshot taken from the original root volume, or that is restored from an AMI that has the same key characteristics as that of the instance. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
800
+ * Replaces the EBS-backed root volume for a running instance with a new volume that is restored to the original root volume's launch state, that is restored to a specific snapshot taken from the original root volume, or that is restored from an AMI that has the same key characteristics as that of the instance. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
785
801
  */
786
802
  createReplaceRootVolumeTask(params: EC2.Types.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskResult, AWSError>;
787
803
  /**
788
- * Replaces the EBS-backed root volume for a running instance with a new volume that is restored to the original root volume's launch state, that is restored to a specific snapshot taken from the original root volume, or that is restored from an AMI that has the same key characteristics as that of the instance. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
804
+ * Replaces the EBS-backed root volume for a running instance with a new volume that is restored to the original root volume's launch state, that is restored to a specific snapshot taken from the original root volume, or that is restored from an AMI that has the same key characteristics as that of the instance. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
789
805
  */
790
806
  createReplaceRootVolumeTask(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateReplaceRootVolumeTaskResult, AWSError>;
791
807
  /**
792
- * Creates a listing for Amazon EC2 Standard Reserved Instances to be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. You can submit one Standard Reserved Instance listing at a time. To get a list of your Standard Reserved Instances, you can use the DescribeReservedInstances operation. Only Standard Reserved Instances can be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible Reserved Instances cannot be sold. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Standard Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. To sell your Standard Reserved Instances, you must first register as a seller in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. After completing the registration process, you can create a Reserved Instance Marketplace listing of some or all of your Standard Reserved Instances, and specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Standard Reserved Instance listings then become available for purchase. To view the details of your Standard Reserved Instance listing, you can use the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
808
+ * Creates a listing for Amazon EC2 Standard Reserved Instances to be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. You can submit one Standard Reserved Instance listing at a time. To get a list of your Standard Reserved Instances, you can use the DescribeReservedInstances operation. Only Standard Reserved Instances can be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible Reserved Instances cannot be sold. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Standard Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. To sell your Standard Reserved Instances, you must first register as a seller in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. After completing the registration process, you can create a Reserved Instance Marketplace listing of some or all of your Standard Reserved Instances, and specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Standard Reserved Instance listings then become available for purchase. To view the details of your Standard Reserved Instance listing, you can use the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
793
809
  */
794
810
  createReservedInstancesListing(params: EC2.Types.CreateReservedInstancesListingRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateReservedInstancesListingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateReservedInstancesListingResult, AWSError>;
795
811
  /**
796
- * Creates a listing for Amazon EC2 Standard Reserved Instances to be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. You can submit one Standard Reserved Instance listing at a time. To get a list of your Standard Reserved Instances, you can use the DescribeReservedInstances operation. Only Standard Reserved Instances can be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible Reserved Instances cannot be sold. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Standard Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. To sell your Standard Reserved Instances, you must first register as a seller in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. After completing the registration process, you can create a Reserved Instance Marketplace listing of some or all of your Standard Reserved Instances, and specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Standard Reserved Instance listings then become available for purchase. To view the details of your Standard Reserved Instance listing, you can use the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
812
+ * Creates a listing for Amazon EC2 Standard Reserved Instances to be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. You can submit one Standard Reserved Instance listing at a time. To get a list of your Standard Reserved Instances, you can use the DescribeReservedInstances operation. Only Standard Reserved Instances can be sold in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible Reserved Instances cannot be sold. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Standard Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. To sell your Standard Reserved Instances, you must first register as a seller in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. After completing the registration process, you can create a Reserved Instance Marketplace listing of some or all of your Standard Reserved Instances, and specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Standard Reserved Instance listings then become available for purchase. To view the details of your Standard Reserved Instance listing, you can use the DescribeReservedInstancesListings operation. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
797
813
  */
798
814
  createReservedInstancesListing(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateReservedInstancesListingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateReservedInstancesListingResult, AWSError>;
799
815
  /**
@@ -829,11 +845,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
829
845
  */
830
846
  createSecurityGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSecurityGroupResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSecurityGroupResult, AWSError>;
831
847
  /**
832
- * 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. When you create a snapshot for an EBS volume that serves as a root device, we recommend that you 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 EBS User Guide.
848
+ * 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. When you create a snapshot for an EBS volume that serves as a root device, we recommend that you 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 EC2 User Guide. For more information, see Amazon EBS and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
833
849
  */
834
850
  createSnapshot(params: EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Snapshot) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Snapshot, AWSError>;
835
851
  /**
836
- * 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. When you create a snapshot for an EBS volume that serves as a root device, we recommend that you 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 EBS User Guide.
852
+ * 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. When you create a snapshot for an EBS volume that serves as a root device, we recommend that you 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 EC2 User Guide. For more information, see Amazon EBS and Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
837
853
  */
838
854
  createSnapshot(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Snapshot) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Snapshot, AWSError>;
839
855
  /**
@@ -845,11 +861,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
845
861
  */
846
862
  createSnapshots(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSnapshotsResult, AWSError>;
847
863
  /**
848
- * 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.
864
+ * 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.
849
865
  */
850
866
  createSpotDatafeedSubscription(params: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
851
867
  /**
852
- * 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.
868
+ * 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.
853
869
  */
854
870
  createSpotDatafeedSubscription(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
855
871
  /**
@@ -869,11 +885,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
869
885
  */
870
886
  createSubnet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSubnetResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSubnetResult, AWSError>;
871
887
  /**
872
- * Creates a subnet CIDR reservation. For more information, see Subnet CIDR reservations in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide and Assign prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
888
+ * Creates a subnet CIDR reservation. For more information, see Subnet CIDR reservations in the Amazon VPC User Guide and Assign prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
873
889
  */
874
890
  createSubnetCidrReservation(params: EC2.Types.CreateSubnetCidrReservationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSubnetCidrReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSubnetCidrReservationResult, AWSError>;
875
891
  /**
876
- * Creates a subnet CIDR reservation. For more information, see Subnet CIDR reservations in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide and Assign prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
892
+ * Creates a subnet CIDR reservation. For more information, see Subnet CIDR reservations in the Amazon VPC User Guide and Assign prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
877
893
  */
878
894
  createSubnetCidrReservation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateSubnetCidrReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateSubnetCidrReservationResult, AWSError>;
879
895
  /**
@@ -933,11 +949,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
933
949
  */
934
950
  createTransitGatewayConnect(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectResult, AWSError>;
935
951
  /**
936
- * Creates a Connect peer for a specified transit gateway Connect attachment between a transit gateway and an appliance. The peer address and transit gateway address must be the same IP address family (IPv4 or IPv6). For more information, see Connect peers in the Transit Gateways Guide.
952
+ * Creates a Connect peer for a specified transit gateway Connect attachment between a transit gateway and an appliance. The peer address and transit gateway address must be the same IP address family (IPv4 or IPv6). For more information, see Connect peers in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide.
937
953
  */
938
954
  createTransitGatewayConnectPeer(params: EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult, AWSError>;
939
955
  /**
940
- * Creates a Connect peer for a specified transit gateway Connect attachment between a transit gateway and an appliance. The peer address and transit gateway address must be the same IP address family (IPv4 or IPv6). For more information, see Connect peers in the Transit Gateways Guide.
956
+ * Creates a Connect peer for a specified transit gateway Connect attachment between a transit gateway and an appliance. The peer address and transit gateway address must be the same IP address family (IPv4 or IPv6). For more information, see Connect peers in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide.
941
957
  */
942
958
  createTransitGatewayConnectPeer(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateTransitGatewayConnectPeerResult, AWSError>;
943
959
  /**
@@ -1037,11 +1053,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1037
1053
  */
1038
1054
  createVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult, AWSError>;
1039
1055
  /**
1040
- * 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 EBS 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 EBS User Guide.
1056
+ * 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 EBS User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
1041
1057
  */
1042
1058
  createVolume(params: EC2.Types.CreateVolumeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Volume) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Volume, AWSError>;
1043
1059
  /**
1044
- * 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 EBS 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 EBS User Guide.
1060
+ * 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 EBS User Guide. You can tag your volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. For more information, see Create an Amazon EBS volume in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
1045
1061
  */
1046
1062
  createVolume(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Volume) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Volume, AWSError>;
1047
1063
  /**
@@ -1061,11 +1077,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1061
1077
  */
1062
1078
  createVpcEndpoint(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointResult, AWSError>;
1063
1079
  /**
1064
- * Creates a connection notification for a specified VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. A connection notification notifies you of specific endpoint events. You must create an SNS topic to receive notifications. For more information, see Create a Topic in the Amazon Simple Notification Service Developer Guide. You can create a connection notification for interface endpoints only.
1080
+ * Creates a connection notification for a specified VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. A connection notification notifies you of specific endpoint events. You must create an SNS topic to receive notifications. For more information, see Creating an Amazon SNS topic in the Amazon SNS Developer Guide. You can create a connection notification for interface endpoints only.
1065
1081
  */
1066
1082
  createVpcEndpointConnectionNotification(params: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult, AWSError>;
1067
1083
  /**
1068
- * Creates a connection notification for a specified VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. A connection notification notifies you of specific endpoint events. You must create an SNS topic to receive notifications. For more information, see Create a Topic in the Amazon Simple Notification Service Developer Guide. You can create a connection notification for interface endpoints only.
1084
+ * Creates a connection notification for a specified VPC endpoint or VPC endpoint service. A connection notification notifies you of specific endpoint events. You must create an SNS topic to receive notifications. For more information, see Creating an Amazon SNS topic in the Amazon SNS Developer Guide. You can create a connection notification for interface endpoints only.
1069
1085
  */
1070
1086
  createVpcEndpointConnectionNotification(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointConnectionNotificationResult, AWSError>;
1071
1087
  /**
@@ -1077,11 +1093,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1077
1093
  */
1078
1094
  createVpcEndpointServiceConfiguration(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcEndpointServiceConfigurationResult, AWSError>;
1079
1095
  /**
1080
- * 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.
1096
+ * 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 VPC peering limitations 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.
1081
1097
  */
1082
1098
  createVpcPeeringConnection(params: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult, AWSError>;
1083
1099
  /**
1084
- * 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.
1100
+ * 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 VPC peering limitations 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.
1085
1101
  */
1086
1102
  createVpcPeeringConnection(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.CreateVpcPeeringConnectionResult, AWSError>;
1087
1103
  /**
@@ -1228,6 +1244,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1228
1244
  * Delete an IPAM. Deleting an IPAM removes all monitored data associated with the IPAM including the historical data for CIDRs. For more information, see Delete an IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
1229
1245
  */
1230
1246
  deleteIpam(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteIpamResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteIpamResult, AWSError>;
1247
+ /**
1248
+ * Delete a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
1249
+ */
1250
+ deleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationToken(params: EC2.Types.DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult, AWSError>;
1251
+ /**
1252
+ * Delete a verification token. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
1253
+ */
1254
+ deleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationToken(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult, AWSError>;
1231
1255
  /**
1232
1256
  * Delete an IPAM pool. You cannot delete an IPAM pool if there are allocations in it or CIDRs provisioned to it. To release allocations, see ReleaseIpamPoolAllocation. To deprovision pool CIDRs, see DeprovisionIpamPoolCidr. For more information, see Delete a pool in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
1233
1257
  */
@@ -1269,11 +1293,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1269
1293
  */
1270
1294
  deleteLaunchTemplate(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateResult, AWSError>;
1271
1295
  /**
1272
- * Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't delete the default version of a launch template; you must first assign a different version as the default. If the default version is the only version for the launch template, you must delete the entire launch template using DeleteLaunchTemplate. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the EC2 User Guide.
1296
+ * Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't delete the default version of a launch template; you must first assign a different version as the default. If the default version is the only version for the launch template, you must delete the entire launch template using DeleteLaunchTemplate. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
1273
1297
  */
1274
1298
  deleteLaunchTemplateVersions(params: EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsResult, AWSError>;
1275
1299
  /**
1276
- * Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't delete the default version of a launch template; you must first assign a different version as the default. If the default version is the only version for the launch template, you must delete the entire launch template using DeleteLaunchTemplate. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the EC2 User Guide.
1300
+ * Deletes one or more versions of a launch template. You can't delete the default version of a launch template; you must first assign a different version as the default. If the default version is the only version for the launch template, you must delete the entire launch template using DeleteLaunchTemplate. You can delete up to 200 launch template versions in a single request. To delete more than 200 versions in a single request, use DeleteLaunchTemplate, which deletes the launch template and all of its versions. For more information, see Delete a launch template version in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
1277
1301
  */
1278
1302
  deleteLaunchTemplateVersions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteLaunchTemplateVersionsResult, AWSError>;
1279
1303
  /**
@@ -1573,11 +1597,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1573
1597
  */
1574
1598
  deleteTransitGatewayRoute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteResult, AWSError>;
1575
1599
  /**
1576
- * Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. You must disassociate the route table from any transit gateway route tables before you can delete it.
1600
+ * Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. If there are any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table, you must first run DisassociateRouteTable before you can delete the transit gateway route table. This removes any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table.
1577
1601
  */
1578
1602
  deleteTransitGatewayRouteTable(params: EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableResult, AWSError>;
1579
1603
  /**
1580
- * Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. You must disassociate the route table from any transit gateway route tables before you can delete it.
1604
+ * Deletes the specified transit gateway route table. If there are any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table, you must first run DisassociateRouteTable before you can delete the transit gateway route table. This removes any route tables associated with the transit gateway route table.
1581
1605
  */
1582
1606
  deleteTransitGatewayRouteTable(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DeleteTransitGatewayRouteTableResult, AWSError>;
1583
1607
  /**
@@ -1773,11 +1797,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1773
1797
  */
1774
1798
  describeAccountAttributes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAccountAttributesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAccountAttributesResult, AWSError>;
1775
1799
  /**
1776
- * Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. When you transfer an Elastic IP address, there is a two-step handshake between the source and transfer Amazon Web Services accounts. When the source account starts the transfer, the transfer account has seven days to accept the Elastic IP address transfer. During those seven days, the source account can view the pending transfer by using this action. After seven days, the transfer expires and ownership of the Elastic IP address returns to the source account. Accepted transfers are visible to the source account for three days after the transfers have been accepted.
1800
+ * Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide. When you transfer an Elastic IP address, there is a two-step handshake between the source and transfer Amazon Web Services accounts. When the source account starts the transfer, the transfer account has seven days to accept the Elastic IP address transfer. During those seven days, the source account can view the pending transfer by using this action. After seven days, the transfer expires and ownership of the Elastic IP address returns to the source account. Accepted transfers are visible to the source account for 14 days after the transfers have been accepted.
1777
1801
  */
1778
1802
  describeAddressTransfers(params: EC2.Types.DescribeAddressTransfersRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAddressTransfersResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAddressTransfersResult, AWSError>;
1779
1803
  /**
1780
- * Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide. When you transfer an Elastic IP address, there is a two-step handshake between the source and transfer Amazon Web Services accounts. When the source account starts the transfer, the transfer account has seven days to accept the Elastic IP address transfer. During those seven days, the source account can view the pending transfer by using this action. After seven days, the transfer expires and ownership of the Elastic IP address returns to the source account. Accepted transfers are visible to the source account for three days after the transfers have been accepted.
1804
+ * Describes an Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide. When you transfer an Elastic IP address, there is a two-step handshake between the source and transfer Amazon Web Services accounts. When the source account starts the transfer, the transfer account has seven days to accept the Elastic IP address transfer. During those seven days, the source account can view the pending transfer by using this action. After seven days, the transfer expires and ownership of the Elastic IP address returns to the source account. Accepted transfers are visible to the source account for 14 days after the transfers have been accepted.
1781
1805
  */
1782
1806
  describeAddressTransfers(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAddressTransfersResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAddressTransfersResult, AWSError>;
1783
1807
  /**
@@ -1805,11 +1829,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1805
1829
  */
1806
1830
  describeAggregateIdFormat(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAggregateIdFormatResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAggregateIdFormatResult, AWSError>;
1807
1831
  /**
1808
- * Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. If there is an event impacting a zone, you can use this request to view the state and any provided messages for that zone. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
1832
+ * Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. If there is an event impacting a zone, you can use this request to view the state and any provided messages for that zone. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
1809
1833
  */
1810
1834
  describeAvailabilityZones(params: EC2.Types.DescribeAvailabilityZonesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult, AWSError>;
1811
1835
  /**
1812
- * Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. If there is an event impacting a zone, you can use this request to view the state and any provided messages for that zone. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
1836
+ * Describes the Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones that are available to you. If there is an event impacting a zone, you can use this request to view the state and any provided messages for that zone. For more information about Availability Zones, Local Zones, and Wavelength Zones, see Regions and zones in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
1813
1837
  */
1814
1838
  describeAvailabilityZones(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeAvailabilityZonesResult, AWSError>;
1815
1839
  /**
@@ -1869,11 +1893,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1869
1893
  */
1870
1894
  describeCarrierGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeCarrierGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeCarrierGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
1871
1895
  /**
1872
- * This action is deprecated. Describes one or more of your linked EC2-Classic instances. This request only returns information about EC2-Classic instances linked to a VPC through ClassicLink. You cannot use this request to return information about other instances.
1896
+ * This action is deprecated. Describes your linked EC2-Classic instances. This request only returns information about EC2-Classic instances linked to a VPC through ClassicLink. You cannot use this request to return information about other instances.
1873
1897
  */
1874
1898
  describeClassicLinkInstances(params: EC2.Types.DescribeClassicLinkInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult, AWSError>;
1875
1899
  /**
1876
- * This action is deprecated. Describes one or more of your linked EC2-Classic instances. This request only returns information about EC2-Classic instances linked to a VPC through ClassicLink. You cannot use this request to return information about other instances.
1900
+ * This action is deprecated. Describes your linked EC2-Classic instances. This request only returns information about EC2-Classic instances linked to a VPC through ClassicLink. You cannot use this request to return information about other instances.
1877
1901
  */
1878
1902
  describeClassicLinkInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeClassicLinkInstancesResult, AWSError>;
1879
1903
  /**
@@ -1941,27 +1965,27 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
1941
1965
  */
1942
1966
  describeCustomerGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeCustomerGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeCustomerGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
1943
1967
  /**
1944
- * Describes one or more of your DHCP options sets. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
1968
+ * Describes your DHCP option sets. The default is to describe all your DHCP option sets. Alternatively, you can specify specific DHCP option set IDs or filter the results to include only the DHCP option sets that match specific criteria. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
1945
1969
  */
1946
1970
  describeDhcpOptions(params: EC2.Types.DescribeDhcpOptionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeDhcpOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeDhcpOptionsResult, AWSError>;
1947
1971
  /**
1948
- * Describes one or more of your DHCP options sets. For more information, see DHCP options sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
1972
+ * Describes your DHCP option sets. The default is to describe all your DHCP option sets. Alternatively, you can specify specific DHCP option set IDs or filter the results to include only the DHCP option sets that match specific criteria. For more information, see DHCP option sets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
1949
1973
  */
1950
1974
  describeDhcpOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeDhcpOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeDhcpOptionsResult, AWSError>;
1951
1975
  /**
1952
- * Describes one or more of your egress-only internet gateways.
1976
+ * Describes your egress-only internet gateways. The default is to describe all your egress-only internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific egress-only internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the egress-only internet gateways that match specific criteria.
1953
1977
  */
1954
1978
  describeEgressOnlyInternetGateways(params: EC2.Types.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
1955
1979
  /**
1956
- * Describes one or more of your egress-only internet gateways.
1980
+ * Describes your egress-only internet gateways. The default is to describe all your egress-only internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific egress-only internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the egress-only internet gateways that match specific criteria.
1957
1981
  */
1958
1982
  describeEgressOnlyInternetGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeEgressOnlyInternetGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
1959
1983
  /**
1960
- * Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. For workloads that require graphics acceleration, we recommend that you use Amazon EC2 G4ad, G4dn, or G5 instances. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances. For more information about Elastic Graphics, see Amazon Elastic Graphics.
1984
+ * Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. For workloads that require graphics acceleration, we recommend that you use Amazon EC2 G4, G5, or G6 instances. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances.
1961
1985
  */
1962
1986
  describeElasticGpus(params: EC2.Types.DescribeElasticGpusRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeElasticGpusResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeElasticGpusResult, AWSError>;
1963
1987
  /**
1964
- * Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. For workloads that require graphics acceleration, we recommend that you use Amazon EC2 G4ad, G4dn, or G5 instances. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances. For more information about Elastic Graphics, see Amazon Elastic Graphics.
1988
+ * Amazon Elastic Graphics reached end of life on January 8, 2024. For workloads that require graphics acceleration, we recommend that you use Amazon EC2 G4, G5, or G6 instances. Describes the Elastic Graphics accelerator associated with your instances.
1965
1989
  */
1966
1990
  describeElasticGpus(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeElasticGpusResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeElasticGpusResult, AWSError>;
1967
1991
  /**
@@ -2205,11 +2229,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2205
2229
  */
2206
2230
  describeInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeInstancesResult, AWSError>;
2207
2231
  /**
2208
- * Describes one or more of your internet gateways.
2232
+ * Describes your internet gateways. The default is to describe all your internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the internet gateways that match specific criteria.
2209
2233
  */
2210
2234
  describeInternetGateways(params: EC2.Types.DescribeInternetGatewaysRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeInternetGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeInternetGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
2211
2235
  /**
2212
- * Describes one or more of your internet gateways.
2236
+ * Describes your internet gateways. The default is to describe all your internet gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific internet gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the internet gateways that match specific criteria.
2213
2237
  */
2214
2238
  describeInternetGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeInternetGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeInternetGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
2215
2239
  /**
@@ -2220,6 +2244,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2220
2244
  * Describes your Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs), their provisioning statuses, and the BYOIP CIDRs with which they are associated. For more information, see Tutorial: Bring your ASN to IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM guide.
2221
2245
  */
2222
2246
  describeIpamByoasn(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeIpamByoasnResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeIpamByoasnResult, AWSError>;
2247
+ /**
2248
+ * Describe verification tokens. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
2249
+ */
2250
+ describeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokens(params: EC2.Types.DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensResult, AWSError>;
2251
+ /**
2252
+ * Describe verification tokens. A verification token is an Amazon Web Services-generated random value that you can use to prove ownership of an external resource. For example, you can use a verification token to validate that you control a public IP address range when you bring an IP address range to Amazon Web Services (BYOIP).
2253
+ */
2254
+ describeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokens(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensResult, AWSError>;
2223
2255
  /**
2224
2256
  * Get information about your IPAM pools.
2225
2257
  */
@@ -2373,19 +2405,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2373
2405
  */
2374
2406
  describeMovingAddresses(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeMovingAddressesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeMovingAddressesResult, AWSError>;
2375
2407
  /**
2376
- * Describes one or more of your NAT gateways.
2408
+ * Describes your NAT gateways. The default is to describe all your NAT gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific NAT gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the NAT gateways that match specific criteria.
2377
2409
  */
2378
2410
  describeNatGateways(params: EC2.Types.DescribeNatGatewaysRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeNatGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeNatGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
2379
2411
  /**
2380
- * Describes one or more of your NAT gateways.
2412
+ * Describes your NAT gateways. The default is to describe all your NAT gateways. Alternatively, you can specify specific NAT gateway IDs or filter the results to include only the NAT gateways that match specific criteria.
2381
2413
  */
2382
2414
  describeNatGateways(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeNatGatewaysResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeNatGatewaysResult, AWSError>;
2383
2415
  /**
2384
- * Describes one or more of your network ACLs. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2416
+ * Describes your network ACLs. The default is to describe all your network ACLs. Alternatively, you can specify specific network ACL IDs or filter the results to include only the network ACLs that match specific criteria. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2385
2417
  */
2386
2418
  describeNetworkAcls(params: EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkAclsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkAclsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkAclsResult, AWSError>;
2387
2419
  /**
2388
- * Describes one or more of your network ACLs. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2420
+ * Describes your network ACLs. The default is to describe all your network ACLs. Alternatively, you can specify specific network ACL IDs or filter the results to include only the network ACLs that match specific criteria. For more information, see Network ACLs in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2389
2421
  */
2390
2422
  describeNetworkAcls(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkAclsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkAclsResult, AWSError>;
2391
2423
  /**
@@ -2445,11 +2477,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2445
2477
  */
2446
2478
  describeNetworkInterfaces(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkInterfacesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeNetworkInterfacesResult, AWSError>;
2447
2479
  /**
2448
- * Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2480
+ * Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. To describe a specific placement group that is shared with your account, you must specify the ID of the placement group using the GroupId parameter. Specifying the name of a shared placement group using the GroupNames parameter will result in an error. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2449
2481
  */
2450
2482
  describePlacementGroups(params: EC2.Types.DescribePlacementGroupsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribePlacementGroupsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribePlacementGroupsResult, AWSError>;
2451
2483
  /**
2452
- * Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2484
+ * Describes the specified placement groups or all of your placement groups. To describe a specific placement group that is shared with your account, you must specify the ID of the placement group using the GroupId parameter. Specifying the name of a shared placement group using the GroupNames parameter will result in an error. For more information, see Placement groups in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2453
2485
  */
2454
2486
  describePlacementGroups(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribePlacementGroupsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribePlacementGroupsResult, AWSError>;
2455
2487
  /**
@@ -2477,19 +2509,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2477
2509
  */
2478
2510
  describePublicIpv4Pools(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribePublicIpv4PoolsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribePublicIpv4PoolsResult, AWSError>;
2479
2511
  /**
2480
- * Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud endpoints and quotas. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Managing Amazon Web Services Regions in the Amazon Web Services General Reference. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2512
+ * Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon EC2 service endpoints. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Specify which Amazon Web Services Regions your account can use in the Amazon Web Services Account Management Reference Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2481
2513
  */
2482
2514
  describeRegions(params: EC2.Types.DescribeRegionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeRegionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeRegionsResult, AWSError>;
2483
2515
  /**
2484
- * Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud endpoints and quotas. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Managing Amazon Web Services Regions in the Amazon Web Services General Reference. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2516
+ * Describes the Regions that are enabled for your account, or all Regions. For a list of the Regions supported by Amazon EC2, see Amazon EC2 service endpoints. For information about enabling and disabling Regions for your account, see Specify which Amazon Web Services Regions your account can use in the Amazon Web Services Account Management Reference Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2485
2517
  */
2486
2518
  describeRegions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeRegionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeRegionsResult, AWSError>;
2487
2519
  /**
2488
- * Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2520
+ * Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2489
2521
  */
2490
2522
  describeReplaceRootVolumeTasks(params: EC2.Types.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksResult, AWSError>;
2491
2523
  /**
2492
- * Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
2524
+ * Describes a root volume replacement task. For more information, see Replace a root volume in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2493
2525
  */
2494
2526
  describeReplaceRootVolumeTasks(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReplaceRootVolumeTasksResult, AWSError>;
2495
2527
  /**
@@ -2501,35 +2533,35 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2501
2533
  */
2502
2534
  describeReservedInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesResult, AWSError>;
2503
2535
  /**
2504
- * Describes your account's Reserved Instance listings in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. As a seller, you choose to list some or all of your Reserved Instances, and you specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Reserved Instances are then listed in the Reserved Instance Marketplace and are available for purchase. As a buyer, you specify the configuration of the Reserved Instance to purchase, and the Marketplace matches what you're searching for with what's available. The Marketplace first sells the lowest priced Reserved Instances to you, and continues to sell available Reserved Instance listings to you until your demand is met. You are charged based on the total price of all of the listings that you purchase. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2536
+ * Describes your account's Reserved Instance listings in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. As a seller, you choose to list some or all of your Reserved Instances, and you specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Reserved Instances are then listed in the Reserved Instance Marketplace and are available for purchase. As a buyer, you specify the configuration of the Reserved Instance to purchase, and the Marketplace matches what you're searching for with what's available. The Marketplace first sells the lowest priced Reserved Instances to you, and continues to sell available Reserved Instance listings to you until your demand is met. You are charged based on the total price of all of the listings that you purchase. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2505
2537
  */
2506
2538
  describeReservedInstancesListings(params: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesListingsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult, AWSError>;
2507
2539
  /**
2508
- * Describes your account's Reserved Instance listings in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. As a seller, you choose to list some or all of your Reserved Instances, and you specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Reserved Instances are then listed in the Reserved Instance Marketplace and are available for purchase. As a buyer, you specify the configuration of the Reserved Instance to purchase, and the Marketplace matches what you're searching for with what's available. The Marketplace first sells the lowest priced Reserved Instances to you, and continues to sell available Reserved Instance listings to you until your demand is met. You are charged based on the total price of all of the listings that you purchase. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2540
+ * Describes your account's Reserved Instance listings in the Reserved Instance Marketplace. The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who want to resell Reserved Instance capacity that they no longer need with buyers who want to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances. As a seller, you choose to list some or all of your Reserved Instances, and you specify the upfront price to receive for them. Your Reserved Instances are then listed in the Reserved Instance Marketplace and are available for purchase. As a buyer, you specify the configuration of the Reserved Instance to purchase, and the Marketplace matches what you're searching for with what's available. The Marketplace first sells the lowest priced Reserved Instances to you, and continues to sell available Reserved Instance listings to you until your demand is met. You are charged based on the total price of all of the listings that you purchase. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2509
2541
  */
2510
2542
  describeReservedInstancesListings(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesListingsResult, AWSError>;
2511
2543
  /**
2512
- * Describes the modifications made to your Reserved Instances. If no parameter is specified, information about all your Reserved Instances modification requests is returned. If a modification ID is specified, only information about the specific modification is returned. For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2544
+ * Describes the modifications made to your Reserved Instances. If no parameter is specified, information about all your Reserved Instances modification requests is returned. If a modification ID is specified, only information about the specific modification is returned. For more information, see Modify Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2513
2545
  */
2514
2546
  describeReservedInstancesModifications(params: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult, AWSError>;
2515
2547
  /**
2516
- * Describes the modifications made to your Reserved Instances. If no parameter is specified, information about all your Reserved Instances modification requests is returned. If a modification ID is specified, only information about the specific modification is returned. For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2548
+ * Describes the modifications made to your Reserved Instances. If no parameter is specified, information about all your Reserved Instances modification requests is returned. If a modification ID is specified, only information about the specific modification is returned. For more information, see Modify Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2517
2549
  */
2518
2550
  describeReservedInstancesModifications(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesModificationsResult, AWSError>;
2519
2551
  /**
2520
- * Describes Reserved Instance offerings that are available for purchase. With Reserved Instances, you purchase the right to launch instances for a period of time. During that time period, you do not receive insufficient capacity errors, and you pay a lower usage rate than the rate charged for On-Demand instances for the actual time used. If you have listed your own Reserved Instances for sale in the Reserved Instance Marketplace, they will be excluded from these results. This is to ensure that you do not purchase your own Reserved Instances. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2552
+ * Describes Reserved Instance offerings that are available for purchase. With Reserved Instances, you purchase the right to launch instances for a period of time. During that time period, you do not receive insufficient capacity errors, and you pay a lower usage rate than the rate charged for On-Demand instances for the actual time used. If you have listed your own Reserved Instances for sale in the Reserved Instance Marketplace, they will be excluded from these results. This is to ensure that you do not purchase your own Reserved Instances. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2521
2553
  */
2522
2554
  describeReservedInstancesOfferings(params: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult, AWSError>;
2523
2555
  /**
2524
- * Describes Reserved Instance offerings that are available for purchase. With Reserved Instances, you purchase the right to launch instances for a period of time. During that time period, you do not receive insufficient capacity errors, and you pay a lower usage rate than the rate charged for On-Demand instances for the actual time used. If you have listed your own Reserved Instances for sale in the Reserved Instance Marketplace, they will be excluded from these results. This is to ensure that you do not purchase your own Reserved Instances. For more information, see Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2556
+ * Describes Reserved Instance offerings that are available for purchase. With Reserved Instances, you purchase the right to launch instances for a period of time. During that time period, you do not receive insufficient capacity errors, and you pay a lower usage rate than the rate charged for On-Demand instances for the actual time used. If you have listed your own Reserved Instances for sale in the Reserved Instance Marketplace, they will be excluded from these results. This is to ensure that you do not purchase your own Reserved Instances. For more information, see Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2525
2557
  */
2526
2558
  describeReservedInstancesOfferings(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeReservedInstancesOfferingsResult, AWSError>;
2527
2559
  /**
2528
- * Describes one or more of your route tables. Each subnet in your VPC must be associated with a route table. If a subnet is not explicitly associated with any route table, it is implicitly associated with the main route table. This command does not return the subnet ID for implicit associations. For more information, see Route tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2560
+ * Describes your route tables. The default is to describe all your route tables. Alternatively, you can specify specific route table IDs or filter the results to include only the route tables that match specific criteria. Each subnet in your VPC must be associated with a route table. If a subnet is not explicitly associated with any route table, it is implicitly associated with the main route table. This command does not return the subnet ID for implicit associations. For more information, see Route tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2529
2561
  */
2530
2562
  describeRouteTables(params: EC2.Types.DescribeRouteTablesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeRouteTablesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeRouteTablesResult, AWSError>;
2531
2563
  /**
2532
- * Describes one or more of your route tables. Each subnet in your VPC must be associated with a route table. If a subnet is not explicitly associated with any route table, it is implicitly associated with the main route table. This command does not return the subnet ID for implicit associations. For more information, see Route tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2564
+ * Describes your route tables. The default is to describe all your route tables. Alternatively, you can specify specific route table IDs or filter the results to include only the route tables that match specific criteria. Each subnet in your VPC must be associated with a route table. If a subnet is not explicitly associated with any route table, it is implicitly associated with the main route table. This command does not return the subnet ID for implicit associations. For more information, see Route tables in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2533
2565
  */
2534
2566
  describeRouteTables(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeRouteTablesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeRouteTablesResult, AWSError>;
2535
2567
  /**
@@ -2597,11 +2629,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2597
2629
  */
2598
2630
  describeSnapshots(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSnapshotsResult, AWSError>;
2599
2631
  /**
2600
- * Describes the data feed for Spot Instances. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
2632
+ * Describes the data feed for Spot Instances. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2601
2633
  */
2602
2634
  describeSpotDatafeedSubscription(params: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
2603
2635
  /**
2604
- * Describes the data feed for Spot Instances. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
2636
+ * Describes the data feed for Spot Instances. For more information, see Spot Instance data feed in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
2605
2637
  */
2606
2638
  describeSpotDatafeedSubscription(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSpotDatafeedSubscriptionResult, AWSError>;
2607
2639
  /**
@@ -2637,11 +2669,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2637
2669
  */
2638
2670
  describeSpotInstanceRequests(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsResult, AWSError>;
2639
2671
  /**
2640
- * Describes the Spot price history. For more information, see Spot Instance pricing history in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. When you specify a start and end time, the operation returns the prices of the instance types within that time range. It also returns the last price change before the start time, which is the effective price as of the start time.
2672
+ * Describes the Spot price history. For more information, see Spot Instance pricing history in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you specify a start and end time, the operation returns the prices of the instance types within that time range. It also returns the last price change before the start time, which is the effective price as of the start time.
2641
2673
  */
2642
2674
  describeSpotPriceHistory(params: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotPriceHistoryRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult, AWSError>;
2643
2675
  /**
2644
- * Describes the Spot price history. For more information, see Spot Instance pricing history in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. When you specify a start and end time, the operation returns the prices of the instance types within that time range. It also returns the last price change before the start time, which is the effective price as of the start time.
2676
+ * Describes the Spot price history. For more information, see Spot Instance pricing history in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you specify a start and end time, the operation returns the prices of the instance types within that time range. It also returns the last price change before the start time, which is the effective price as of the start time.
2645
2677
  */
2646
2678
  describeSpotPriceHistory(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSpotPriceHistoryResult, AWSError>;
2647
2679
  /**
@@ -2661,11 +2693,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2661
2693
  */
2662
2694
  describeStoreImageTasks(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeStoreImageTasksResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeStoreImageTasksResult, AWSError>;
2663
2695
  /**
2664
- * Describes one or more of your subnets. For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2696
+ * Describes your subnets. The default is to describe all your subnets. Alternatively, you can specify specific subnet IDs or filter the results to include only the subnets that match specific criteria. For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2665
2697
  */
2666
2698
  describeSubnets(params: EC2.Types.DescribeSubnetsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSubnetsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSubnetsResult, AWSError>;
2667
2699
  /**
2668
- * Describes one or more of your subnets. For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2700
+ * Describes your subnets. The default is to describe all your subnets. Alternatively, you can specify specific subnet IDs or filter the results to include only the subnets that match specific criteria. For more information, see Subnets in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
2669
2701
  */
2670
2702
  describeSubnets(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeSubnetsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeSubnetsResult, AWSError>;
2671
2703
  /**
@@ -2676,6 +2708,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2676
2708
  * Describes the specified tags for your EC2 resources. For more information about tags, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. We strongly recommend using only paginated requests. Unpaginated requests are susceptible to throttling and timeouts. The order of the elements in the response, including those within nested structures, might vary. Applications should not assume the elements appear in a particular order.
2677
2709
  */
2678
2710
  describeTags(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeTagsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeTagsResult, AWSError>;
2711
+ /**
2712
+ * Describe traffic mirror filters that determine the traffic that is mirrored.
2713
+ */
2714
+ describeTrafficMirrorFilterRules(params: EC2.Types.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesResult, AWSError>;
2715
+ /**
2716
+ * Describe traffic mirror filters that determine the traffic that is mirrored.
2717
+ */
2718
+ describeTrafficMirrorFilterRules(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesResult, AWSError>;
2679
2719
  /**
2680
2720
  * Describes one or more Traffic Mirror filters.
2681
2721
  */
@@ -2853,11 +2893,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2853
2893
  */
2854
2894
  describeVolumes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesResult, AWSError>;
2855
2895
  /**
2856
- * Describes the most recent volume modification request for the specified EBS volumes. If a volume has never been modified, some information in the output will be null. If a volume has been modified more than once, the output includes only the most recent modification request. You can also use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon CloudWatch Events User Guide. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
2896
+ * Describes the most recent volume modification request for the specified EBS volumes. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
2857
2897
  */
2858
2898
  describeVolumesModifications(params: EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesModificationsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesModificationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesModificationsResult, AWSError>;
2859
2899
  /**
2860
- * Describes the most recent volume modification request for the specified EBS volumes. If a volume has never been modified, some information in the output will be null. If a volume has been modified more than once, the output includes only the most recent modification request. You can also use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon CloudWatch Events User Guide. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
2900
+ * Describes the most recent volume modification request for the specified EBS volumes. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
2861
2901
  */
2862
2902
  describeVolumesModifications(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesModificationsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVolumesModificationsResult, AWSError>;
2863
2903
  /**
@@ -2925,27 +2965,27 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
2925
2965
  */
2926
2966
  describeVpcEndpointServices(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointServicesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointServicesResult, AWSError>;
2927
2967
  /**
2928
- * Describes your VPC endpoints.
2968
+ * Describes your VPC endpoints. The default is to describe all your VPC endpoints. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC endpoint IDs or filter the results to include only the VPC endpoints that match specific criteria.
2929
2969
  */
2930
2970
  describeVpcEndpoints(params: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointsResult, AWSError>;
2931
2971
  /**
2932
- * Describes your VPC endpoints.
2972
+ * Describes your VPC endpoints. The default is to describe all your VPC endpoints. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC endpoint IDs or filter the results to include only the VPC endpoints that match specific criteria.
2933
2973
  */
2934
2974
  describeVpcEndpoints(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcEndpointsResult, AWSError>;
2935
2975
  /**
2936
- * Describes one or more of your VPC peering connections.
2976
+ * Describes your VPC peering connections. The default is to describe all your VPC peering connections. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC peering connection IDs or filter the results to include only the VPC peering connections that match specific criteria.
2937
2977
  */
2938
2978
  describeVpcPeeringConnections(params: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult, AWSError>;
2939
2979
  /**
2940
- * Describes one or more of your VPC peering connections.
2980
+ * Describes your VPC peering connections. The default is to describe all your VPC peering connections. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC peering connection IDs or filter the results to include only the VPC peering connections that match specific criteria.
2941
2981
  */
2942
2982
  describeVpcPeeringConnections(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcPeeringConnectionsResult, AWSError>;
2943
2983
  /**
2944
- * Describes one or more of your VPCs.
2984
+ * Describes your VPCs. The default is to describe all your VPCs. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC IDs or filter the results to include only the VPCs that match specific criteria.
2945
2985
  */
2946
2986
  describeVpcs(params: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcsRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcsResult, AWSError>;
2947
2987
  /**
2948
- * Describes one or more of your VPCs.
2988
+ * Describes your VPCs. The default is to describe all your VPCs. Alternatively, you can specify specific VPC IDs or filter the results to include only the VPCs that match specific criteria.
2949
2989
  */
2950
2990
  describeVpcs(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DescribeVpcsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DescribeVpcsResult, AWSError>;
2951
2991
  /**
@@ -3013,11 +3053,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3013
3053
  */
3014
3054
  detachVpnGateway(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
3015
3055
  /**
3016
- * Disables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
3056
+ * Disables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
3017
3057
  */
3018
3058
  disableAddressTransfer(params: EC2.Types.DisableAddressTransferRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DisableAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DisableAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
3019
3059
  /**
3020
- * Disables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
3060
+ * Disables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
3021
3061
  */
3022
3062
  disableAddressTransfer(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DisableAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DisableAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
3023
3063
  /**
@@ -3261,11 +3301,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3261
3301
  */
3262
3302
  disassociateVpcCidrBlock(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.DisassociateVpcCidrBlockResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.DisassociateVpcCidrBlockResult, AWSError>;
3263
3303
  /**
3264
- * Enables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
3304
+ * Enables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
3265
3305
  */
3266
3306
  enableAddressTransfer(params: EC2.Types.EnableAddressTransferRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.EnableAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.EnableAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
3267
3307
  /**
3268
- * Enables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.
3308
+ * Enables Elastic IP address transfer. For more information, see Transfer Elastic IP addresses in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
3269
3309
  */
3270
3310
  enableAddressTransfer(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.EnableAddressTransferResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.EnableAddressTransferResult, AWSError>;
3271
3311
  /**
@@ -3429,11 +3469,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3429
3469
  */
3430
3470
  exportImage(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ExportImageResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ExportImageResult, AWSError>;
3431
3471
  /**
3432
- * Exports routes from the specified transit gateway route table to the specified S3 bucket. By default, all routes are exported. Alternatively, you can filter by CIDR range. The routes are saved to the specified bucket in a JSON file. For more information, see Export Route Tables to Amazon S3 in Transit Gateways.
3472
+ * Exports routes from the specified transit gateway route table to the specified S3 bucket. By default, all routes are exported. Alternatively, you can filter by CIDR range. The routes are saved to the specified bucket in a JSON file. For more information, see Export route tables to Amazon S3 in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide.
3433
3473
  */
3434
3474
  exportTransitGatewayRoutes(params: EC2.Types.ExportTransitGatewayRoutesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ExportTransitGatewayRoutesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ExportTransitGatewayRoutesResult, AWSError>;
3435
3475
  /**
3436
- * Exports routes from the specified transit gateway route table to the specified S3 bucket. By default, all routes are exported. Alternatively, you can filter by CIDR range. The routes are saved to the specified bucket in a JSON file. For more information, see Export Route Tables to Amazon S3 in Transit Gateways.
3476
+ * Exports routes from the specified transit gateway route table to the specified S3 bucket. By default, all routes are exported. Alternatively, you can filter by CIDR range. The routes are saved to the specified bucket in a JSON file. For more information, see Export route tables to Amazon S3 in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide.
3437
3477
  */
3438
3478
  exportTransitGatewayRoutes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ExportTransitGatewayRoutesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ExportTransitGatewayRoutesResult, AWSError>;
3439
3479
  /**
@@ -3477,11 +3517,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3477
3517
  */
3478
3518
  getCoipPoolUsage(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetCoipPoolUsageResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetCoipPoolUsageResult, AWSError>;
3479
3519
  /**
3480
- * Gets the console output for the specified instance. For Linux instances, the instance console output displays the exact console output that would normally be displayed on a physical monitor attached to a computer. For Windows instances, the instance console output includes the last three system event log errors. By default, the console output returns buffered information that was posted shortly after an instance transition state (start, stop, reboot, or terminate). This information is available for at least one hour after the most recent post. Only the most recent 64 KB of console output is available. You can optionally retrieve the latest serial console output at any time during the instance lifecycle. This option is supported on instance types that use the Nitro hypervisor. For more information, see Instance console output in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
3520
+ * Gets the console output for the specified instance. For Linux instances, the instance console output displays the exact console output that would normally be displayed on a physical monitor attached to a computer. For Windows instances, the instance console output includes the last three system event log errors. For more information, see Instance console output in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
3481
3521
  */
3482
3522
  getConsoleOutput(params: EC2.Types.GetConsoleOutputRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetConsoleOutputResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetConsoleOutputResult, AWSError>;
3483
3523
  /**
3484
- * Gets the console output for the specified instance. For Linux instances, the instance console output displays the exact console output that would normally be displayed on a physical monitor attached to a computer. For Windows instances, the instance console output includes the last three system event log errors. By default, the console output returns buffered information that was posted shortly after an instance transition state (start, stop, reboot, or terminate). This information is available for at least one hour after the most recent post. Only the most recent 64 KB of console output is available. You can optionally retrieve the latest serial console output at any time during the instance lifecycle. This option is supported on instance types that use the Nitro hypervisor. For more information, see Instance console output in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
3524
+ * Gets the console output for the specified instance. For Linux instances, the instance console output displays the exact console output that would normally be displayed on a physical monitor attached to a computer. For Windows instances, the instance console output includes the last three system event log errors. For more information, see Instance console output in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
3485
3525
  */
3486
3526
  getConsoleOutput(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetConsoleOutputResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetConsoleOutputResult, AWSError>;
3487
3527
  /**
@@ -3556,6 +3596,14 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3556
3596
  * Gets the default instance metadata service (IMDS) settings that are set at the account level in the specified Amazon Web Services&#x2028; Region. For more information, see Order of precedence for instance metadata options in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
3557
3597
  */
3558
3598
  getInstanceMetadataDefaults(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetInstanceMetadataDefaultsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetInstanceMetadataDefaultsResult, AWSError>;
3599
+ /**
3600
+ * Gets the public endorsement key associated with the Nitro Trusted Platform Module (NitroTPM) for the specified instance.
3601
+ */
3602
+ getInstanceTpmEkPub(params: EC2.Types.GetInstanceTpmEkPubRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetInstanceTpmEkPubResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetInstanceTpmEkPubResult, AWSError>;
3603
+ /**
3604
+ * Gets the public endorsement key associated with the Nitro Trusted Platform Module (NitroTPM) for the specified instance.
3605
+ */
3606
+ getInstanceTpmEkPub(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.GetInstanceTpmEkPubResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.GetInstanceTpmEkPubResult, AWSError>;
3559
3607
  /**
3560
3608
  * Returns a list of instance types with the specified instance attributes. You can use the response to preview the instance types without launching instances. Note that the response does not consider capacity. When you specify multiple parameters, you get instance types that satisfy all of the specified parameters. If you specify multiple values for a parameter, you get instance types that satisfy any of the specified values. For more information, see Preview instance types with specified attributes, Attribute-based instance type selection for EC2 Fleet, Attribute-based instance type selection for Spot Fleet, and Spot placement score in the Amazon EC2 User Guide, and Creating an Auto Scaling group using attribute-based instance type selection in the Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling User Guide.
3561
3609
  */
@@ -3901,19 +3949,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
3901
3949
  */
3902
3950
  modifyAddressAttribute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyAddressAttributeResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyAddressAttributeResult, AWSError>;
3903
3951
  /**
3904
- * Changes the opt-in status of the Local Zone and Wavelength Zone group for your account. Use DescribeAvailabilityZones to view the value for GroupName.
3952
+ * Changes the opt-in status of the specified zone group for your account.
3905
3953
  */
3906
3954
  modifyAvailabilityZoneGroup(params: EC2.Types.ModifyAvailabilityZoneGroupRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyAvailabilityZoneGroupResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyAvailabilityZoneGroupResult, AWSError>;
3907
3955
  /**
3908
- * Changes the opt-in status of the Local Zone and Wavelength Zone group for your account. Use DescribeAvailabilityZones to view the value for GroupName.
3956
+ * Changes the opt-in status of the specified zone group for your account.
3909
3957
  */
3910
3958
  modifyAvailabilityZoneGroup(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyAvailabilityZoneGroupResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyAvailabilityZoneGroupResult, AWSError>;
3911
3959
  /**
3912
- * Modifies a Capacity Reservation's capacity and the conditions under which it is to be released. You cannot change a Capacity Reservation's instance type, EBS optimization, instance store settings, platform, Availability Zone, or instance eligibility. If you need to modify any of these attributes, we recommend that you cancel the Capacity Reservation, and then create a new one with the required attributes.
3960
+ * Modifies a Capacity Reservation's capacity, instance eligibility, and the conditions under which it is to be released. You can't modify a Capacity Reservation's instance type, EBS optimization, platform, instance store settings, Availability Zone, or tenancy. If you need to modify any of these attributes, we recommend that you cancel the Capacity Reservation, and then create a new one with the required attributes. For more information, see Modify an active Capacity Reservation.
3913
3961
  */
3914
3962
  modifyCapacityReservation(params: EC2.Types.ModifyCapacityReservationRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyCapacityReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyCapacityReservationResult, AWSError>;
3915
3963
  /**
3916
- * Modifies a Capacity Reservation's capacity and the conditions under which it is to be released. You cannot change a Capacity Reservation's instance type, EBS optimization, instance store settings, platform, Availability Zone, or instance eligibility. If you need to modify any of these attributes, we recommend that you cancel the Capacity Reservation, and then create a new one with the required attributes.
3964
+ * Modifies a Capacity Reservation's capacity, instance eligibility, and the conditions under which it is to be released. You can't modify a Capacity Reservation's instance type, EBS optimization, platform, instance store settings, Availability Zone, or tenancy. If you need to modify any of these attributes, we recommend that you cancel the Capacity Reservation, and then create a new one with the required attributes. For more information, see Modify an active Capacity Reservation.
3917
3965
  */
3918
3966
  modifyCapacityReservation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyCapacityReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyCapacityReservationResult, AWSError>;
3919
3967
  /**
@@ -4149,11 +4197,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4149
4197
  */
4150
4198
  modifyPrivateDnsNameOptions(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyPrivateDnsNameOptionsResult, AWSError>;
4151
4199
  /**
4152
- * Modifies the configuration of your Reserved Instances, such as the Availability Zone, instance count, or instance type. The Reserved Instances to be modified must be identical, except for Availability Zone, network platform, and instance type. For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4200
+ * Modifies the configuration of your Reserved Instances, such as the Availability Zone, instance count, or instance type. The Reserved Instances to be modified must be identical, except for Availability Zone, network platform, and instance type. For more information, see Modify Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4153
4201
  */
4154
4202
  modifyReservedInstances(params: EC2.Types.ModifyReservedInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyReservedInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyReservedInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4155
4203
  /**
4156
- * Modifies the configuration of your Reserved Instances, such as the Availability Zone, instance count, or instance type. The Reserved Instances to be modified must be identical, except for Availability Zone, network platform, and instance type. For more information, see Modifying Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4204
+ * Modifies the configuration of your Reserved Instances, such as the Availability Zone, instance count, or instance type. The Reserved Instances to be modified must be identical, except for Availability Zone, network platform, and instance type. For more information, see Modify Reserved Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4157
4205
  */
4158
4206
  modifyReservedInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyReservedInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyReservedInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4159
4207
  /**
@@ -4301,11 +4349,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4301
4349
  */
4302
4350
  modifyVerifiedAccessTrustProvider(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVerifiedAccessTrustProviderResult, AWSError>;
4303
4351
  /**
4304
- * You can modify several parameters of an existing EBS volume, including volume size, volume type, and IOPS capacity. If your EBS volume is attached to a current-generation EC2 instance type, you might be able to apply these changes without stopping the instance or detaching the volume from it. For more information about modifying EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS Elastic Volumes in the Amazon EBS User Guide. When you complete a resize operation on your volume, you need to extend the volume's file-system size to take advantage of the new storage capacity. For more information, see Extend the file system. You can use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon CloudWatch Events User Guide. You can also track the status of a modification using DescribeVolumesModifications. For information about tracking status changes using either method, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications. With previous-generation instance types, resizing an EBS volume might require detaching and reattaching the volume or stopping and restarting the instance. After modifying a volume, you must wait at least six hours and ensure that the volume is in the in-use or available state before you can modify the same volume. This is sometimes referred to as a cooldown period.
4352
+ * You can modify several parameters of an existing EBS volume, including volume size, volume type, and IOPS capacity. If your EBS volume is attached to a current-generation EC2 instance type, you might be able to apply these changes without stopping the instance or detaching the volume from it. For more information about modifying EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS Elastic Volumes in the Amazon EBS User Guide. When you complete a resize operation on your volume, you need to extend the volume's file-system size to take advantage of the new storage capacity. For more information, see Extend the file system. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide. With previous-generation instance types, resizing an EBS volume might require detaching and reattaching the volume or stopping and restarting the instance. After modifying a volume, you must wait at least six hours and ensure that the volume is in the in-use or available state before you can modify the same volume. This is sometimes referred to as a cooldown period.
4305
4353
  */
4306
4354
  modifyVolume(params: EC2.Types.ModifyVolumeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVolumeResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVolumeResult, AWSError>;
4307
4355
  /**
4308
- * You can modify several parameters of an existing EBS volume, including volume size, volume type, and IOPS capacity. If your EBS volume is attached to a current-generation EC2 instance type, you might be able to apply these changes without stopping the instance or detaching the volume from it. For more information about modifying EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS Elastic Volumes in the Amazon EBS User Guide. When you complete a resize operation on your volume, you need to extend the volume's file-system size to take advantage of the new storage capacity. For more information, see Extend the file system. You can use CloudWatch Events to check the status of a modification to an EBS volume. For information about CloudWatch Events, see the Amazon CloudWatch Events User Guide. You can also track the status of a modification using DescribeVolumesModifications. For information about tracking status changes using either method, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications. With previous-generation instance types, resizing an EBS volume might require detaching and reattaching the volume or stopping and restarting the instance. After modifying a volume, you must wait at least six hours and ensure that the volume is in the in-use or available state before you can modify the same volume. This is sometimes referred to as a cooldown period.
4356
+ * You can modify several parameters of an existing EBS volume, including volume size, volume type, and IOPS capacity. If your EBS volume is attached to a current-generation EC2 instance type, you might be able to apply these changes without stopping the instance or detaching the volume from it. For more information about modifying EBS volumes, see Amazon EBS Elastic Volumes in the Amazon EBS User Guide. When you complete a resize operation on your volume, you need to extend the volume's file-system size to take advantage of the new storage capacity. For more information, see Extend the file system. For more information, see Monitor the progress of volume modifications in the Amazon EBS User Guide. With previous-generation instance types, resizing an EBS volume might require detaching and reattaching the volume or stopping and restarting the instance. After modifying a volume, you must wait at least six hours and ensure that the volume is in the in-use or available state before you can modify the same volume. This is sometimes referred to as a cooldown period.
4309
4357
  */
4310
4358
  modifyVolume(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ModifyVolumeResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ModifyVolumeResult, AWSError>;
4311
4359
  /**
@@ -4437,11 +4485,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4437
4485
  */
4438
4486
  moveByoipCidrToIpam(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.MoveByoipCidrToIpamResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.MoveByoipCidrToIpamResult, AWSError>;
4439
4487
  /**
4440
- * Provisions an IPv4 or IPv6 address range for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) and creates a corresponding address pool. After the address range is provisioned, it is ready to be advertised using AdvertiseByoipCidr. Amazon Web Services verifies that you own the address range and are authorized to advertise it. You must ensure that the address range is registered to you and that you created an RPKI ROA to authorize Amazon ASNs 16509 and 14618 to advertise the address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. Provisioning an address range is an asynchronous operation, so the call returns immediately, but the address range is not ready to use until its status changes from pending-provision to provisioned. To monitor the status of an address range, use DescribeByoipCidrs. To allocate an Elastic IP address from your IPv4 address pool, use AllocateAddress with either the specific address from the address pool or the ID of the address pool.
4488
+ * Move available capacity from a source Capacity Reservation to a destination Capacity Reservation. The source Capacity Reservation and the destination Capacity Reservation must be active, owned by your Amazon Web Services account, and share the following: Instance type Platform Availability Zone Tenancy Placement group Capacity Reservation end time - At specific time or Manually.
4489
+ */
4490
+ moveCapacityReservationInstances(params: EC2.Types.MoveCapacityReservationInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.MoveCapacityReservationInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.MoveCapacityReservationInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4491
+ /**
4492
+ * Move available capacity from a source Capacity Reservation to a destination Capacity Reservation. The source Capacity Reservation and the destination Capacity Reservation must be active, owned by your Amazon Web Services account, and share the following: Instance type Platform Availability Zone Tenancy Placement group Capacity Reservation end time - At specific time or Manually.
4493
+ */
4494
+ moveCapacityReservationInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.MoveCapacityReservationInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.MoveCapacityReservationInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4495
+ /**
4496
+ * Provisions an IPv4 or IPv6 address range for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) and creates a corresponding address pool. After the address range is provisioned, it is ready to be advertised using AdvertiseByoipCidr. Amazon Web Services verifies that you own the address range and are authorized to advertise it. You must ensure that the address range is registered to you and that you created an RPKI ROA to authorize Amazon ASNs 16509 and 14618 to advertise the address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Provisioning an address range is an asynchronous operation, so the call returns immediately, but the address range is not ready to use until its status changes from pending-provision to provisioned. To monitor the status of an address range, use DescribeByoipCidrs. To allocate an Elastic IP address from your IPv4 address pool, use AllocateAddress with either the specific address from the address pool or the ID of the address pool.
4441
4497
  */
4442
4498
  provisionByoipCidr(params: EC2.Types.ProvisionByoipCidrRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ProvisionByoipCidrResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ProvisionByoipCidrResult, AWSError>;
4443
4499
  /**
4444
- * Provisions an IPv4 or IPv6 address range for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) and creates a corresponding address pool. After the address range is provisioned, it is ready to be advertised using AdvertiseByoipCidr. Amazon Web Services verifies that you own the address range and are authorized to advertise it. You must ensure that the address range is registered to you and that you created an RPKI ROA to authorize Amazon ASNs 16509 and 14618 to advertise the address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. Provisioning an address range is an asynchronous operation, so the call returns immediately, but the address range is not ready to use until its status changes from pending-provision to provisioned. To monitor the status of an address range, use DescribeByoipCidrs. To allocate an Elastic IP address from your IPv4 address pool, use AllocateAddress with either the specific address from the address pool or the ID of the address pool.
4500
+ * Provisions an IPv4 or IPv6 address range for use with your Amazon Web Services resources through bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) and creates a corresponding address pool. After the address range is provisioned, it is ready to be advertised using AdvertiseByoipCidr. Amazon Web Services verifies that you own the address range and are authorized to advertise it. You must ensure that the address range is registered to you and that you created an RPKI ROA to authorize Amazon ASNs 16509 and 14618 to advertise the address range. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Provisioning an address range is an asynchronous operation, so the call returns immediately, but the address range is not ready to use until its status changes from pending-provision to provisioned. To monitor the status of an address range, use DescribeByoipCidrs. To allocate an Elastic IP address from your IPv4 address pool, use AllocateAddress with either the specific address from the address pool or the ID of the address pool.
4445
4501
  */
4446
4502
  provisionByoipCidr(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.ProvisionByoipCidrResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.ProvisionByoipCidrResult, AWSError>;
4447
4503
  /**
@@ -4485,11 +4541,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4485
4541
  */
4486
4542
  purchaseHostReservation(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.PurchaseHostReservationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.PurchaseHostReservationResult, AWSError>;
4487
4543
  /**
4488
- * Purchases a Reserved Instance for use with your account. With Reserved Instances, you pay a lower hourly rate compared to On-Demand instance pricing. Use DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings to get a list of Reserved Instance offerings that match your specifications. After you've purchased a Reserved Instance, you can check for your new Reserved Instance with DescribeReservedInstances. To queue a purchase for a future date and time, specify a purchase time. If you do not specify a purchase time, the default is the current time. For more information, see Reserved Instances and Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4544
+ * Purchases a Reserved Instance for use with your account. With Reserved Instances, you pay a lower hourly rate compared to On-Demand instance pricing. Use DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings to get a list of Reserved Instance offerings that match your specifications. After you've purchased a Reserved Instance, you can check for your new Reserved Instance with DescribeReservedInstances. To queue a purchase for a future date and time, specify a purchase time. If you do not specify a purchase time, the default is the current time. For more information, see Reserved Instances and Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4489
4545
  */
4490
4546
  purchaseReservedInstancesOffering(params: EC2.Types.PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult, AWSError>;
4491
4547
  /**
4492
- * Purchases a Reserved Instance for use with your account. With Reserved Instances, you pay a lower hourly rate compared to On-Demand instance pricing. Use DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings to get a list of Reserved Instance offerings that match your specifications. After you've purchased a Reserved Instance, you can check for your new Reserved Instance with DescribeReservedInstances. To queue a purchase for a future date and time, specify a purchase time. If you do not specify a purchase time, the default is the current time. For more information, see Reserved Instances and Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4548
+ * Purchases a Reserved Instance for use with your account. With Reserved Instances, you pay a lower hourly rate compared to On-Demand instance pricing. Use DescribeReservedInstancesOfferings to get a list of Reserved Instance offerings that match your specifications. After you've purchased a Reserved Instance, you can check for your new Reserved Instance with DescribeReservedInstances. To queue a purchase for a future date and time, specify a purchase time. If you do not specify a purchase time, the default is the current time. For more information, see Reserved Instances and Sell in the Reserved Instance Marketplace in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4493
4549
  */
4494
4550
  purchaseReservedInstancesOffering(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult, AWSError>;
4495
4551
  /**
@@ -4525,19 +4581,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4525
4581
  */
4526
4582
  registerInstanceEventNotificationAttributes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RegisterInstanceEventNotificationAttributesResult, AWSError>;
4527
4583
  /**
4528
- * Registers members (network interfaces) with the transit gateway multicast group. A member is a network interface associated with a supported EC2 instance that receives multicast traffic. For information about supported instances, see Multicast Consideration in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. After you add the members, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the members were added to the transit gateway multicast group.
4584
+ * Registers members (network interfaces) with the transit gateway multicast group. A member is a network interface associated with a supported EC2 instance that receives multicast traffic. For more information, see Multicast on transit gateways in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide. After you add the members, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the members were added to the transit gateway multicast group.
4529
4585
  */
4530
4586
  registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers(params: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult, AWSError>;
4531
4587
  /**
4532
- * Registers members (network interfaces) with the transit gateway multicast group. A member is a network interface associated with a supported EC2 instance that receives multicast traffic. For information about supported instances, see Multicast Consideration in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. After you add the members, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the members were added to the transit gateway multicast group.
4588
+ * Registers members (network interfaces) with the transit gateway multicast group. A member is a network interface associated with a supported EC2 instance that receives multicast traffic. For more information, see Multicast on transit gateways in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide. After you add the members, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the members were added to the transit gateway multicast group.
4533
4589
  */
4534
4590
  registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembers(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupMembersResult, AWSError>;
4535
4591
  /**
4536
- * Registers sources (network interfaces) with the specified transit gateway multicast group. A multicast source is a network interface attached to a supported instance that sends multicast traffic. For information about supported instances, see Multicast Considerations in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. After you add the source, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the source was added to the multicast group.
4592
+ * Registers sources (network interfaces) with the specified transit gateway multicast group. A multicast source is a network interface attached to a supported instance that sends multicast traffic. For more information about supported instances, see Multicast on transit gateways in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide. After you add the source, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the source was added to the multicast group.
4537
4593
  */
4538
4594
  registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources(params: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult, AWSError>;
4539
4595
  /**
4540
- * Registers sources (network interfaces) with the specified transit gateway multicast group. A multicast source is a network interface attached to a supported instance that sends multicast traffic. For information about supported instances, see Multicast Considerations in Amazon VPC Transit Gateways. After you add the source, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the source was added to the multicast group.
4596
+ * Registers sources (network interfaces) with the specified transit gateway multicast group. A multicast source is a network interface attached to a supported instance that sends multicast traffic. For more information about supported instances, see Multicast on transit gateways in the Amazon Web Services Transit Gateways Guide. After you add the source, use SearchTransitGatewayMulticastGroups to verify that the source was added to the multicast group.
4541
4597
  */
4542
4598
  registerTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSources(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RegisterTransitGatewayMulticastGroupSourcesResult, AWSError>;
4543
4599
  /**
@@ -4677,11 +4733,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4677
4733
  */
4678
4734
  requestSpotFleet(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RequestSpotFleetResponse) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RequestSpotFleetResponse, AWSError>;
4679
4735
  /**
4680
- * Creates a Spot Instance request. For more information, see Spot Instance requests in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotInstances API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. For options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
4736
+ * Creates a Spot Instance request. For more information, see Work with Spot Instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotInstances API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. For options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4681
4737
  */
4682
4738
  requestSpotInstances(params: EC2.Types.RequestSpotInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RequestSpotInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RequestSpotInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4683
4739
  /**
4684
- * Creates a Spot Instance request. For more information, see Spot Instance requests in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotInstances API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. For options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
4740
+ * Creates a Spot Instance request. For more information, see Work with Spot Instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We strongly discourage using the RequestSpotInstances API because it is a legacy API with no planned investment. For options for requesting Spot Instances, see Which is the best Spot request method to use? in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4685
4741
  */
4686
4742
  requestSpotInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RequestSpotInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RequestSpotInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4687
4743
  /**
@@ -4717,11 +4773,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4717
4773
  */
4718
4774
  resetImageAttribute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
4719
4775
  /**
4720
- * Resets an attribute of an instance to its default value. To reset the kernel or ramdisk, the instance must be in a stopped state. To reset the sourceDestCheck, the instance can be either running or stopped. The sourceDestCheck attribute controls whether source/destination checking is enabled. The default value is true, which means checking is enabled. This value must be false for a NAT instance to perform NAT. For more information, see NAT Instances in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
4776
+ * Resets an attribute of an instance to its default value. To reset the kernel or ramdisk, the instance must be in a stopped state. To reset the sourceDestCheck, the instance can be either running or stopped. The sourceDestCheck attribute controls whether source/destination checking is enabled. The default value is true, which means checking is enabled. This value must be false for a NAT instance to perform NAT. For more information, see NAT instances in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
4721
4777
  */
4722
4778
  resetInstanceAttribute(params: EC2.Types.ResetInstanceAttributeRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
4723
4779
  /**
4724
- * Resets an attribute of an instance to its default value. To reset the kernel or ramdisk, the instance must be in a stopped state. To reset the sourceDestCheck, the instance can be either running or stopped. The sourceDestCheck attribute controls whether source/destination checking is enabled. The default value is true, which means checking is enabled. This value must be false for a NAT instance to perform NAT. For more information, see NAT Instances in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
4780
+ * Resets an attribute of an instance to its default value. To reset the kernel or ramdisk, the instance must be in a stopped state. To reset the sourceDestCheck, the instance can be either running or stopped. The sourceDestCheck attribute controls whether source/destination checking is enabled. The default value is true, which means checking is enabled. This value must be false for a NAT instance to perform NAT. For more information, see NAT instances in the Amazon VPC User Guide.
4725
4781
  */
4726
4782
  resetInstanceAttribute(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
4727
4783
  /**
@@ -4805,19 +4861,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4805
4861
  */
4806
4862
  revokeSecurityGroupIngress(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RevokeSecurityGroupIngressResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RevokeSecurityGroupIngressResult, AWSError>;
4807
4863
  /**
4808
- * Launches the specified number of instances using an AMI for which you have permissions. You can specify a number of options, or leave the default options. The following rules apply: If you don't specify a subnet ID, we choose a default subnet from your default VPC for you. If you don't have a default VPC, you must specify a subnet ID in the request. All instances have a network interface with a primary private IPv4 address. If you don't specify this address, we choose one from the IPv4 range of your subnet. Not all instance types support IPv6 addresses. For more information, see Instance types. If you don't specify a security group ID, we use the default security group. For more information, see Security groups. If any of the AMIs have a product code attached for which the user has not subscribed, the request fails. You can create a launch template, which is a resource that contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify the launch template instead of specifying the launch parameters. To ensure faster instance launches, break up large requests into smaller batches. For example, create five separate launch requests for 100 instances each instead of one launch request for 500 instances. An instance is ready for you to use when it's in the running state. You can check the state of your instance using DescribeInstances. You can tag instances and EBS volumes during launch, after launch, or both. For more information, see CreateTags and Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources. Linux instances have access to the public key of the key pair at boot. You can use this key to provide secure access to the instance. Amazon EC2 public images use this feature to provide secure access without passwords. For more information, see Key pairs. For troubleshooting, see What to do if an instance immediately terminates, and Troubleshooting connecting to your instance.
4864
+ * Launches the specified number of instances using an AMI for which you have permissions. You can specify a number of options, or leave the default options. The following rules apply: If you don't specify a subnet ID, we choose a default subnet from your default VPC for you. If you don't have a default VPC, you must specify a subnet ID in the request. All instances have a network interface with a primary private IPv4 address. If you don't specify this address, we choose one from the IPv4 range of your subnet. Not all instance types support IPv6 addresses. For more information, see Instance types. If you don't specify a security group ID, we use the default security group for the VPC. For more information, see Security groups. If any of the AMIs have a product code attached for which the user has not subscribed, the request fails. You can create a launch template, which is a resource that contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify the launch template instead of specifying the launch parameters. To ensure faster instance launches, break up large requests into smaller batches. For example, create five separate launch requests for 100 instances each instead of one launch request for 500 instances. RunInstances is subject to both request rate limiting and resource rate limiting. For more information, see Request throttling. An instance is ready for you to use when it's in the running state. You can check the state of your instance using DescribeInstances. You can tag instances and EBS volumes during launch, after launch, or both. For more information, see CreateTags and Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources. Linux instances have access to the public key of the key pair at boot. You can use this key to provide secure access to the instance. Amazon EC2 public images use this feature to provide secure access without passwords. For more information, see Key pairs. For troubleshooting, see What to do if an instance immediately terminates, and Troubleshooting connecting to your instance.
4809
4865
  */
4810
4866
  runInstances(params: EC2.Types.RunInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Reservation) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Reservation, AWSError>;
4811
4867
  /**
4812
- * Launches the specified number of instances using an AMI for which you have permissions. You can specify a number of options, or leave the default options. The following rules apply: If you don't specify a subnet ID, we choose a default subnet from your default VPC for you. If you don't have a default VPC, you must specify a subnet ID in the request. All instances have a network interface with a primary private IPv4 address. If you don't specify this address, we choose one from the IPv4 range of your subnet. Not all instance types support IPv6 addresses. For more information, see Instance types. If you don't specify a security group ID, we use the default security group. For more information, see Security groups. If any of the AMIs have a product code attached for which the user has not subscribed, the request fails. You can create a launch template, which is a resource that contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify the launch template instead of specifying the launch parameters. To ensure faster instance launches, break up large requests into smaller batches. For example, create five separate launch requests for 100 instances each instead of one launch request for 500 instances. An instance is ready for you to use when it's in the running state. You can check the state of your instance using DescribeInstances. You can tag instances and EBS volumes during launch, after launch, or both. For more information, see CreateTags and Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources. Linux instances have access to the public key of the key pair at boot. You can use this key to provide secure access to the instance. Amazon EC2 public images use this feature to provide secure access without passwords. For more information, see Key pairs. For troubleshooting, see What to do if an instance immediately terminates, and Troubleshooting connecting to your instance.
4868
+ * Launches the specified number of instances using an AMI for which you have permissions. You can specify a number of options, or leave the default options. The following rules apply: If you don't specify a subnet ID, we choose a default subnet from your default VPC for you. If you don't have a default VPC, you must specify a subnet ID in the request. All instances have a network interface with a primary private IPv4 address. If you don't specify this address, we choose one from the IPv4 range of your subnet. Not all instance types support IPv6 addresses. For more information, see Instance types. If you don't specify a security group ID, we use the default security group for the VPC. For more information, see Security groups. If any of the AMIs have a product code attached for which the user has not subscribed, the request fails. You can create a launch template, which is a resource that contains the parameters to launch an instance. When you launch an instance using RunInstances, you can specify the launch template instead of specifying the launch parameters. To ensure faster instance launches, break up large requests into smaller batches. For example, create five separate launch requests for 100 instances each instead of one launch request for 500 instances. RunInstances is subject to both request rate limiting and resource rate limiting. For more information, see Request throttling. An instance is ready for you to use when it's in the running state. You can check the state of your instance using DescribeInstances. You can tag instances and EBS volumes during launch, after launch, or both. For more information, see CreateTags and Tagging your Amazon EC2 resources. Linux instances have access to the public key of the key pair at boot. You can use this key to provide secure access to the instance. Amazon EC2 public images use this feature to provide secure access without passwords. For more information, see Key pairs. For troubleshooting, see What to do if an instance immediately terminates, and Troubleshooting connecting to your instance.
4813
4869
  */
4814
4870
  runInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.Reservation) => void): Request<EC2.Types.Reservation, AWSError>;
4815
4871
  /**
4816
- * Launches the specified Scheduled Instances. Before you can launch a Scheduled Instance, you must purchase it and obtain an identifier using PurchaseScheduledInstances. You must launch a Scheduled Instance during its scheduled time period. You can't stop or reboot a Scheduled Instance, but you can terminate it as needed. If you terminate a Scheduled Instance before the current scheduled time period ends, you can launch it again after a few minutes. For more information, see Scheduled Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4872
+ * Launches the specified Scheduled Instances. Before you can launch a Scheduled Instance, you must purchase it and obtain an identifier using PurchaseScheduledInstances. You must launch a Scheduled Instance during its scheduled time period. You can't stop or reboot a Scheduled Instance, but you can terminate it as needed. If you terminate a Scheduled Instance before the current scheduled time period ends, you can launch it again after a few minutes.
4817
4873
  */
4818
4874
  runScheduledInstances(params: EC2.Types.RunScheduledInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RunScheduledInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RunScheduledInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4819
4875
  /**
4820
- * Launches the specified Scheduled Instances. Before you can launch a Scheduled Instance, you must purchase it and obtain an identifier using PurchaseScheduledInstances. You must launch a Scheduled Instance during its scheduled time period. You can't stop or reboot a Scheduled Instance, but you can terminate it as needed. If you terminate a Scheduled Instance before the current scheduled time period ends, you can launch it again after a few minutes. For more information, see Scheduled Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4876
+ * Launches the specified Scheduled Instances. Before you can launch a Scheduled Instance, you must purchase it and obtain an identifier using PurchaseScheduledInstances. You must launch a Scheduled Instance during its scheduled time period. You can't stop or reboot a Scheduled Instance, but you can terminate it as needed. If you terminate a Scheduled Instance before the current scheduled time period ends, you can launch it again after a few minutes.
4821
4877
  */
4822
4878
  runScheduledInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.RunScheduledInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.RunScheduledInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4823
4879
  /**
@@ -4845,19 +4901,19 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4845
4901
  */
4846
4902
  searchTransitGatewayRoutes(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.SearchTransitGatewayRoutesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.SearchTransitGatewayRoutesResult, AWSError>;
4847
4903
  /**
4848
- * Sends a diagnostic interrupt to the specified Amazon EC2 instance to trigger a kernel panic (on Linux instances), or a blue screen/stop error (on Windows instances). For instances based on Intel and AMD processors, the interrupt is received as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). In general, the operating system crashes and reboots when a kernel panic or stop error is triggered. The operating system can also be configured to perform diagnostic tasks, such as generating a memory dump file, loading a secondary kernel, or obtaining a call trace. Before sending a diagnostic interrupt to your instance, ensure that its operating system is configured to perform the required diagnostic tasks. For more information about configuring your operating system to generate a crash dump when a kernel panic or stop error occurs, see Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) (Linux instances) or Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) (Windows instances).
4904
+ * Sends a diagnostic interrupt to the specified Amazon EC2 instance to trigger a kernel panic (on Linux instances), or a blue screen/stop error (on Windows instances). For instances based on Intel and AMD processors, the interrupt is received as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). In general, the operating system crashes and reboots when a kernel panic or stop error is triggered. The operating system can also be configured to perform diagnostic tasks, such as generating a memory dump file, loading a secondary kernel, or obtaining a call trace. Before sending a diagnostic interrupt to your instance, ensure that its operating system is configured to perform the required diagnostic tasks. For more information about configuring your operating system to generate a crash dump when a kernel panic or stop error occurs, see Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4849
4905
  */
4850
4906
  sendDiagnosticInterrupt(params: EC2.Types.SendDiagnosticInterruptRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
4851
4907
  /**
4852
- * Sends a diagnostic interrupt to the specified Amazon EC2 instance to trigger a kernel panic (on Linux instances), or a blue screen/stop error (on Windows instances). For instances based on Intel and AMD processors, the interrupt is received as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). In general, the operating system crashes and reboots when a kernel panic or stop error is triggered. The operating system can also be configured to perform diagnostic tasks, such as generating a memory dump file, loading a secondary kernel, or obtaining a call trace. Before sending a diagnostic interrupt to your instance, ensure that its operating system is configured to perform the required diagnostic tasks. For more information about configuring your operating system to generate a crash dump when a kernel panic or stop error occurs, see Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) (Linux instances) or Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) (Windows instances).
4908
+ * Sends a diagnostic interrupt to the specified Amazon EC2 instance to trigger a kernel panic (on Linux instances), or a blue screen/stop error (on Windows instances). For instances based on Intel and AMD processors, the interrupt is received as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). In general, the operating system crashes and reboots when a kernel panic or stop error is triggered. The operating system can also be configured to perform diagnostic tasks, such as generating a memory dump file, loading a secondary kernel, or obtaining a call trace. Before sending a diagnostic interrupt to your instance, ensure that its operating system is configured to perform the required diagnostic tasks. For more information about configuring your operating system to generate a crash dump when a kernel panic or stop error occurs, see Send a diagnostic interrupt (for advanced users) in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4853
4909
  */
4854
4910
  sendDiagnosticInterrupt(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: {}) => void): Request<{}, AWSError>;
4855
4911
  /**
4856
- * Starts an Amazon EBS-backed instance that you've previously stopped. Instances that use Amazon EBS volumes as their root devices can be quickly stopped and started. When an instance is stopped, the compute resources are released and you are not billed for instance usage. However, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. You can restart your instance at any time. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. Before stopping an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM. Performing this operation on an instance that uses an instance store as its root device returns an error. If you attempt to start a T3 instance with host tenancy and the unlimited CPU credit option, the request fails. The unlimited CPU credit option is not supported on Dedicated Hosts. Before you start the instance, either change its CPU credit option to standard, or change its tenancy to default or dedicated. For more information, see Stop and start your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4912
+ * Starts an Amazon EBS-backed instance that you've previously stopped. Instances that use Amazon EBS volumes as their root devices can be quickly stopped and started. When an instance is stopped, the compute resources are released and you are not billed for instance usage. However, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. You can restart your instance at any time. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. Before stopping an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM. Performing this operation on an instance that uses an instance store as its root device returns an error. If you attempt to start a T3 instance with host tenancy and the unlimited CPU credit option, the request fails. The unlimited CPU credit option is not supported on Dedicated Hosts. Before you start the instance, either change its CPU credit option to standard, or change its tenancy to default or dedicated. For more information, see Stop and start Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4857
4913
  */
4858
4914
  startInstances(params: EC2.Types.StartInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.StartInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.StartInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4859
4915
  /**
4860
- * Starts an Amazon EBS-backed instance that you've previously stopped. Instances that use Amazon EBS volumes as their root devices can be quickly stopped and started. When an instance is stopped, the compute resources are released and you are not billed for instance usage. However, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. You can restart your instance at any time. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. Before stopping an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM. Performing this operation on an instance that uses an instance store as its root device returns an error. If you attempt to start a T3 instance with host tenancy and the unlimited CPU credit option, the request fails. The unlimited CPU credit option is not supported on Dedicated Hosts. Before you start the instance, either change its CPU credit option to standard, or change its tenancy to default or dedicated. For more information, see Stop and start your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4916
+ * Starts an Amazon EBS-backed instance that you've previously stopped. Instances that use Amazon EBS volumes as their root devices can be quickly stopped and started. When an instance is stopped, the compute resources are released and you are not billed for instance usage. However, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. You can restart your instance at any time. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. Before stopping an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM. Performing this operation on an instance that uses an instance store as its root device returns an error. If you attempt to start a T3 instance with host tenancy and the unlimited CPU credit option, the request fails. The unlimited CPU credit option is not supported on Dedicated Hosts. Before you start the instance, either change its CPU credit option to standard, or change its tenancy to default or dedicated. For more information, see Stop and start Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4861
4917
  */
4862
4918
  startInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.StartInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.StartInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4863
4919
  /**
@@ -4885,11 +4941,11 @@ declare class EC2 extends Service {
4885
4941
  */
4886
4942
  startVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerification(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.StartVpcEndpointServicePrivateDnsVerificationResult, AWSError>;
4887
4943
  /**
4888
- * Stops an Amazon EBS-backed instance. For more information, see Stop and start your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can use the Stop action to hibernate an instance if the instance is enabled for hibernation and it meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We don't charge usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees; however, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. You can't stop or hibernate instance store-backed instances. You can't use the Stop action to hibernate Spot Instances, but you can specify that Amazon EC2 should hibernate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For more information, see Hibernating interrupted Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop or hibernate an instance, we shut it down. You can restart your instance at any time. Before stopping or hibernating an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM, but hibernating an instance does preserve data stored in RAM. If an instance cannot hibernate successfully, a normal shutdown occurs. Stopping and hibernating an instance is different to rebooting or terminating it. For example, when you stop or hibernate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached during the instance launch are automatically deleted. For more information about the differences between rebooting, stopping, hibernating, and terminating instances, see Instance lifecycle in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop an instance, we attempt to shut it down forcibly after a short while. If your instance appears stuck in the stopping state after a period of time, there may be an issue with the underlying host computer. For more information, see Troubleshoot stopping your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4944
+ * Stops an Amazon EBS-backed instance. For more information, see Stop and start Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can use the Stop action to hibernate an instance if the instance is enabled for hibernation and it meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your Amazon EC2 instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We don't charge usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees; however, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. You can't stop or hibernate instance store-backed instances. You can't use the Stop action to hibernate Spot Instances, but you can specify that Amazon EC2 should hibernate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For more information, see Hibernating interrupted Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop or hibernate an instance, we shut it down. You can restart your instance at any time. Before stopping or hibernating an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM, but hibernating an instance does preserve data stored in RAM. If an instance cannot hibernate successfully, a normal shutdown occurs. Stopping and hibernating an instance is different to rebooting or terminating it. For example, when you stop or hibernate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached during the instance launch are automatically deleted. For more information about the differences between rebooting, stopping, hibernating, and terminating instances, see Instance lifecycle in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop an instance, we attempt to shut it down forcibly after a short while. If your instance appears stuck in the stopping state after a period of time, there may be an issue with the underlying host computer. For more information, see Troubleshoot stopping your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4889
4945
  */
4890
4946
  stopInstances(params: EC2.Types.StopInstancesRequest, callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.StopInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.StopInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4891
4947
  /**
4892
- * Stops an Amazon EBS-backed instance. For more information, see Stop and start your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can use the Stop action to hibernate an instance if the instance is enabled for hibernation and it meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We don't charge usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees; however, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. You can't stop or hibernate instance store-backed instances. You can't use the Stop action to hibernate Spot Instances, but you can specify that Amazon EC2 should hibernate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For more information, see Hibernating interrupted Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop or hibernate an instance, we shut it down. You can restart your instance at any time. Before stopping or hibernating an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM, but hibernating an instance does preserve data stored in RAM. If an instance cannot hibernate successfully, a normal shutdown occurs. Stopping and hibernating an instance is different to rebooting or terminating it. For example, when you stop or hibernate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached during the instance launch are automatically deleted. For more information about the differences between rebooting, stopping, hibernating, and terminating instances, see Instance lifecycle in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop an instance, we attempt to shut it down forcibly after a short while. If your instance appears stuck in the stopping state after a period of time, there may be an issue with the underlying host computer. For more information, see Troubleshoot stopping your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4948
+ * Stops an Amazon EBS-backed instance. For more information, see Stop and start Amazon EC2 instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can use the Stop action to hibernate an instance if the instance is enabled for hibernation and it meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your Amazon EC2 instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. We don't charge usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees; however, your root partition Amazon EBS volume remains and continues to persist your data, and you are charged for Amazon EBS volume usage. Every time you start your instance, Amazon EC2 charges a one-minute minimum for instance usage, and thereafter charges per second for instance usage. You can't stop or hibernate instance store-backed instances. You can't use the Stop action to hibernate Spot Instances, but you can specify that Amazon EC2 should hibernate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For more information, see Hibernating interrupted Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop or hibernate an instance, we shut it down. You can restart your instance at any time. Before stopping or hibernating an instance, make sure it is in a state from which it can be restarted. Stopping an instance does not preserve data stored in RAM, but hibernating an instance does preserve data stored in RAM. If an instance cannot hibernate successfully, a normal shutdown occurs. Stopping and hibernating an instance is different to rebooting or terminating it. For example, when you stop or hibernate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached to the instance persist. When you terminate an instance, the root device and any other devices attached during the instance launch are automatically deleted. For more information about the differences between rebooting, stopping, hibernating, and terminating instances, see Instance lifecycle in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. When you stop an instance, we attempt to shut it down forcibly after a short while. If your instance appears stuck in the stopping state after a period of time, there may be an issue with the underlying host computer. For more information, see Troubleshoot stopping your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
4893
4949
  */
4894
4950
  stopInstances(callback?: (err: AWSError, data: EC2.Types.StopInstancesResult) => void): Request<EC2.Types.StopInstancesResult, AWSError>;
4895
4951
  /**
@@ -5749,7 +5805,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5749
5805
  */
5750
5806
  PublicIpv4Pool?: Ipv4PoolEc2Id;
5751
5807
  /**
5752
- * A unique set of Availability Zones, Local Zones, or Wavelength Zones from which Amazon Web Services advertises IP addresses. Use this parameter to limit the IP address to this location. IP addresses cannot move between network border groups. Use DescribeAvailabilityZones to view the network border groups.
5808
+ * A unique set of Availability Zones, Local Zones, or Wavelength Zones from which Amazon Web Services advertises IP addresses. Use this parameter to limit the IP address to this location. IP addresses cannot move between network border groups.
5753
5809
  */
5754
5810
  NetworkBorderGroup?: String;
5755
5811
  /**
@@ -5801,7 +5857,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5801
5857
  }
5802
5858
  export interface AllocateHostsRequest {
5803
5859
  /**
5804
- * Indicates whether the host accepts any untargeted instance launches that match its instance type configuration, or if it only accepts Host tenancy instance launches that specify its unique host ID. For more information, see Understanding auto-placement and affinity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Default: on
5860
+ * Indicates whether the host accepts any untargeted instance launches that match its instance type configuration, or if it only accepts Host tenancy instance launches that specify its unique host ID. For more information, see Understanding auto-placement and affinity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Default: off
5805
5861
  */
5806
5862
  AutoPlacement?: AutoPlacement;
5807
5863
  /**
@@ -5869,7 +5925,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
5869
5925
  */
5870
5926
  NetmaskLength?: Integer;
5871
5927
  /**
5872
- * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
5928
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
5873
5929
  */
5874
5930
  ClientToken?: String;
5875
5931
  /**
@@ -6036,7 +6092,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6036
6092
  */
6037
6093
  DestinationCidr?: String;
6038
6094
  /**
6039
- * The prefix of the Amazon Web Service.
6095
+ * The prefix of the Amazon Web Services service.
6040
6096
  */
6041
6097
  DestinationPrefixListId?: String;
6042
6098
  /**
@@ -6335,7 +6391,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6335
6391
  */
6336
6392
  SubnetId: SubnetId;
6337
6393
  /**
6338
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to ensure idempotency.
6394
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
6339
6395
  */
6340
6396
  ClientToken?: String;
6341
6397
  /**
@@ -6645,7 +6701,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6645
6701
  */
6646
6702
  GreKey?: Integer;
6647
6703
  /**
6648
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to Ensure Idempotency.
6704
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
6649
6705
  */
6650
6706
  ClientToken?: String;
6651
6707
  /**
@@ -6659,7 +6715,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6659
6715
  */
6660
6716
  InterfaceAssociation?: TrunkInterfaceAssociation;
6661
6717
  /**
6662
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to Ensure Idempotency.
6718
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
6663
6719
  */
6664
6720
  ClientToken?: String;
6665
6721
  }
@@ -6865,7 +6921,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6865
6921
  */
6866
6922
  VerifiedAccessTrustProviderId: VerifiedAccessTrustProviderId;
6867
6923
  /**
6868
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
6924
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
6869
6925
  */
6870
6926
  ClientToken?: String;
6871
6927
  /**
@@ -6999,7 +7055,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
6999
7055
  */
7000
7056
  Description?: String;
7001
7057
  /**
7002
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to ensure idempotency.
7058
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
7003
7059
  */
7004
7060
  ClientToken?: String;
7005
7061
  /**
@@ -7361,7 +7417,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
7361
7417
  */
7362
7418
  StatusMessage?: String;
7363
7419
  /**
7364
- * The state of the address pool.
7420
+ * The state of the address range. advertised: The address range is being advertised to the internet by Amazon Web Services. deprovisioned: The address range is deprovisioned. failed-deprovision: The request to deprovision the address range was unsuccessful. Ensure that all EIPs from the range have been deallocated and try again. failed-provision: The request to provision the address range was unsuccessful. pending-deprovision: You’ve submitted a request to deprovision an address range and it's pending. pending-provision: You’ve submitted a request to provision an address range and it's pending. provisioned: The address range is provisioned and can be advertised. The range is not currently advertised. provisioned-not-publicly-advertisable: The address range is provisioned and cannot be advertised.
7365
7421
  */
7366
7422
  State?: ByoipCidrState;
7367
7423
  /**
@@ -7790,7 +7846,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
7790
7846
  */
7791
7847
  InstanceMatchCriteria?: FleetInstanceMatchCriteria;
7792
7848
  /**
7793
- * The strategy used by the Capacity Reservation Fleet to determine which of the specified instance types to use. For more information, see For more information, see Allocation strategy in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
7849
+ * The strategy used by the Capacity Reservation Fleet to determine which of the specified instance types to use. For more information, see For more information, see Allocation strategy in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
7794
7850
  */
7795
7851
  AllocationStrategy?: String;
7796
7852
  /**
@@ -8720,11 +8776,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
8720
8776
  */
8721
8777
  Encrypted?: Boolean;
8722
8778
  /**
8723
- * The identifier of the Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails.
8779
+ * The identifier of the KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails.
8724
8780
  */
8725
8781
  KmsKeyId?: KmsKeyId;
8726
8782
  /**
8727
- * When you copy an encrypted source snapshot using the Amazon EC2 Query API, you must supply a pre-signed URL. This parameter is optional for unencrypted snapshots. For more information, see Query requests. The PresignedUrl should use the snapshot source endpoint, the CopySnapshot action, and include the SourceRegion, SourceSnapshotId, and DestinationRegion parameters. The PresignedUrl must be signed using Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4. Because EBS snapshots are stored in Amazon S3, the signing algorithm for this parameter uses the same logic that is described in Authenticating Requests: Using Query Parameters (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) in the Amazon Simple Storage Service API Reference. An invalid or improperly signed PresignedUrl will cause the copy operation to fail asynchronously, and the snapshot will move to an error state.
8783
+ * When you copy an encrypted source snapshot using the Amazon EC2 Query API, you must supply a pre-signed URL. This parameter is optional for unencrypted snapshots. For more information, see Query requests. The PresignedUrl should use the snapshot source endpoint, the CopySnapshot action, and include the SourceRegion, SourceSnapshotId, and DestinationRegion parameters. The PresignedUrl must be signed using Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4. Because EBS snapshots are stored in Amazon S3, the signing algorithm for this parameter uses the same logic that is described in Authenticating Requests: Using Query Parameters (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) in the Amazon S3 API Reference. An invalid or improperly signed PresignedUrl will cause the copy operation to fail asynchronously, and the snapshot will move to an error state.
8728
8784
  */
8729
8785
  PresignedUrl?: CopySnapshotRequestPSU;
8730
8786
  /**
@@ -8790,6 +8846,42 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
8790
8846
  */
8791
8847
  AmdSevSnp?: AmdSevSnpSpecification;
8792
8848
  }
8849
+ export interface CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingRequest {
8850
+ /**
8851
+ * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
8852
+ */
8853
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
8854
+ /**
8855
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensure Idempotency.
8856
+ */
8857
+ ClientToken?: String;
8858
+ /**
8859
+ * The ID of the Capacity Reservation from which you want to split the available capacity.
8860
+ */
8861
+ SourceCapacityReservationId: CapacityReservationId;
8862
+ /**
8863
+ * The number of instances to split from the source Capacity Reservation.
8864
+ */
8865
+ InstanceCount: Integer;
8866
+ /**
8867
+ * The tags to apply to the new Capacity Reservation.
8868
+ */
8869
+ TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
8870
+ }
8871
+ export interface CreateCapacityReservationBySplittingResult {
8872
+ /**
8873
+ * Information about the source Capacity Reservation.
8874
+ */
8875
+ SourceCapacityReservation?: CapacityReservation;
8876
+ /**
8877
+ * Information about the destination Capacity Reservation.
8878
+ */
8879
+ DestinationCapacityReservation?: CapacityReservation;
8880
+ /**
8881
+ * The number of instances in the new Capacity Reservation. The number of instances in the source Capacity Reservation was reduced by this amount.
8882
+ */
8883
+ InstanceCount?: Integer;
8884
+ }
8793
8885
  export interface CreateCapacityReservationFleetRequest {
8794
8886
  /**
8795
8887
  * The strategy used by the Capacity Reservation Fleet to determine which of the specified instance types to use. Currently, only the prioritized allocation strategy is supported. For more information, see Allocation strategy in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Valid values: prioritized
@@ -8808,7 +8900,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
8808
8900
  */
8809
8901
  Tenancy?: FleetCapacityReservationTenancy;
8810
8902
  /**
8811
- * The total number of capacity units to be reserved by the Capacity Reservation Fleet. This value, together with the instance type weights that you assign to each instance type used by the Fleet determine the number of instances for which the Fleet reserves capacity. Both values are based on units that make sense for your workload. For more information, see Total target capacity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
8903
+ * The total number of capacity units to be reserved by the Capacity Reservation Fleet. This value, together with the instance type weights that you assign to each instance type used by the Fleet determine the number of instances for which the Fleet reserves capacity. Both values are based on units that make sense for your workload. For more information, see Total target capacity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
8812
8904
  */
8813
8905
  TotalTargetCapacity: Integer;
8814
8906
  /**
@@ -9012,7 +9104,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9012
9104
  */
9013
9105
  DryRun?: Boolean;
9014
9106
  /**
9015
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to ensure idempotency.
9107
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9016
9108
  */
9017
9109
  ClientToken?: String;
9018
9110
  /**
@@ -9076,7 +9168,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9076
9168
  */
9077
9169
  Description?: String;
9078
9170
  /**
9079
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to ensure idempotency.
9171
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9080
9172
  */
9081
9173
  ClientToken?: String;
9082
9174
  /**
@@ -9132,7 +9224,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9132
9224
  }
9133
9225
  export interface CreateCustomerGatewayRequest {
9134
9226
  /**
9135
- * For devices that support BGP, the customer gateway's BGP ASN. Default: 65000
9227
+ * For customer gateway devices that support BGP, specify the device's ASN. You must specify either BgpAsn or BgpAsnExtended when creating the customer gateway. If the ASN is larger than 2,147,483,647, you must use BgpAsnExtended. Default: 65000 Valid values: 1 to 2,147,483,647
9136
9228
  */
9137
9229
  BgpAsn?: Integer;
9138
9230
  /**
@@ -9156,13 +9248,17 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9156
9248
  */
9157
9249
  DeviceName?: String;
9158
9250
  /**
9159
- * IPv4 address for the customer gateway device's outside interface. The address must be static.
9251
+ * IPv4 address for the customer gateway device's outside interface. The address must be static. If OutsideIpAddressType in your VPN connection options is set to PrivateIpv4, you can use an RFC6598 or RFC1918 private IPv4 address. If OutsideIpAddressType is set to PublicIpv4, you can use a public IPv4 address.
9160
9252
  */
9161
9253
  IpAddress?: String;
9162
9254
  /**
9163
9255
  * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
9164
9256
  */
9165
9257
  DryRun?: Boolean;
9258
+ /**
9259
+ * For customer gateway devices that support BGP, specify the device's ASN. You must specify either BgpAsn or BgpAsnExtended when creating the customer gateway. If the ASN is larger than 2,147,483,647, you must use BgpAsnExtended. Valid values: 2,147,483,648 to 4,294,967,295
9260
+ */
9261
+ BgpAsnExtended?: Long;
9166
9262
  }
9167
9263
  export interface CreateCustomerGatewayResult {
9168
9264
  /**
@@ -9526,7 +9622,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9526
9622
  */
9527
9623
  SecurityGroupIds?: SecurityGroupIdStringListRequest;
9528
9624
  /**
9529
- * Indicates whether your client's IP address is preserved as the source. The value is true or false. If true, your client's IP address is used when you connect to a resource. If false, the elastic network interface IP address is used when you connect to a resource. Default: true
9625
+ * Indicates whether the client IP address is preserved as the source. The following are the possible values. true - Use the client IP address as the source. false - Use the network interface IP address as the source. Default: false
9530
9626
  */
9531
9627
  PreserveClientIp?: Boolean;
9532
9628
  /**
@@ -9620,6 +9716,30 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9620
9716
  */
9621
9717
  InternetGateway?: InternetGateway;
9622
9718
  }
9719
+ export interface CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenRequest {
9720
+ /**
9721
+ * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
9722
+ */
9723
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
9724
+ /**
9725
+ * The ID of the IPAM that will create the token.
9726
+ */
9727
+ IpamId: IpamId;
9728
+ /**
9729
+ * Token tags.
9730
+ */
9731
+ TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
9732
+ /**
9733
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9734
+ */
9735
+ ClientToken?: String;
9736
+ }
9737
+ export interface CreateIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult {
9738
+ /**
9739
+ * The verification token.
9740
+ */
9741
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken;
9742
+ }
9623
9743
  export interface CreateIpamPoolRequest {
9624
9744
  /**
9625
9745
  * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
@@ -9630,7 +9750,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9630
9750
  */
9631
9751
  IpamScopeId: IpamScopeId;
9632
9752
  /**
9633
- * In IPAM, the locale is the Amazon Web Services Region where you want to make an IPAM pool available for allocations. Only resources in the same Region as the locale of the pool can get IP address allocations from the pool. You can only allocate a CIDR for a VPC, for example, from an IPAM pool that shares a locale with the VPC’s Region. Note that once you choose a Locale for a pool, you cannot modify it. If you do not choose a locale, resources in Regions others than the IPAM's home region cannot use CIDRs from this pool. Possible values: Any Amazon Web Services Region, such as us-east-1.
9753
+ * The locale for the pool should be one of the following: An Amazon Web Services Region where you want this IPAM pool to be available for allocations. The network border group for an Amazon Web Services Local Zone where you want this IPAM pool to be available for allocations (supported Local Zones). This option is only available for IPAM IPv4 pools in the public scope. If you do not choose a locale, resources in Regions others than the IPAM's home region cannot use CIDRs from this pool. Possible values: Any Amazon Web Services Region or supported Amazon Web Services Local Zone.
9634
9754
  */
9635
9755
  Locale?: String;
9636
9756
  /**
@@ -9674,7 +9794,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9674
9794
  */
9675
9795
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
9676
9796
  /**
9677
- * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
9797
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9678
9798
  */
9679
9799
  ClientToken?: String;
9680
9800
  /**
@@ -9714,13 +9834,17 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9714
9834
  */
9715
9835
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
9716
9836
  /**
9717
- * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
9837
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9718
9838
  */
9719
9839
  ClientToken?: String;
9720
9840
  /**
9721
9841
  * IPAM is offered in a Free Tier and an Advanced Tier. For more information about the features available in each tier and the costs associated with the tiers, see Amazon VPC pricing &gt; IPAM tab.
9722
9842
  */
9723
9843
  Tier?: IpamTier;
9844
+ /**
9845
+ * Enable this option to use your own GUA ranges as private IPv6 addresses. This option is disabled by default.
9846
+ */
9847
+ EnablePrivateGua?: Boolean;
9724
9848
  }
9725
9849
  export interface CreateIpamResourceDiscoveryRequest {
9726
9850
  /**
@@ -9774,7 +9898,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9774
9898
  */
9775
9899
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
9776
9900
  /**
9777
- * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
9901
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
9778
9902
  */
9779
9903
  ClientToken?: String;
9780
9904
  }
@@ -9872,7 +9996,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
9872
9996
  */
9873
9997
  LaunchTemplateData: RequestLaunchTemplateData;
9874
9998
  /**
9875
- * If true, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the AMI ID is displayed in the response for imageID. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. Default: false
9999
+ * If true, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the AMI ID is displayed in the response for imageID. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Default: false
9876
10000
  */
9877
10001
  ResolveAlias?: Boolean;
9878
10002
  }
@@ -10016,7 +10140,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10016
10140
  */
10017
10141
  AddressFamily: String;
10018
10142
  /**
10019
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency. Constraints: Up to 255 UTF-8 characters in length.
10143
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency. Constraints: Up to 255 UTF-8 characters in length.
10020
10144
  */
10021
10145
  ClientToken?: String;
10022
10146
  }
@@ -10242,7 +10366,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10242
10366
  */
10243
10367
  AwsAccountId?: String;
10244
10368
  /**
10245
- * The Amazon Web Service. Currently not supported.
10369
+ * The Amazon Web Services service. Currently not supported.
10246
10370
  */
10247
10371
  AwsService?: String;
10248
10372
  /**
@@ -10322,7 +10446,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10322
10446
  */
10323
10447
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
10324
10448
  /**
10325
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
10449
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
10326
10450
  */
10327
10451
  ClientToken?: String;
10328
10452
  /**
@@ -10385,6 +10509,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10385
10509
  * 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.
10386
10510
  */
10387
10511
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
10512
+ /**
10513
+ * The Availability Zone (AZ) or Local Zone (LZ) network border group that the resource that the IP address is assigned to is in. Defaults to an AZ network border group. For more information on available Local Zones, see Local Zone availability in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
10514
+ */
10515
+ NetworkBorderGroup?: String;
10388
10516
  }
10389
10517
  export interface CreatePublicIpv4PoolResult {
10390
10518
  /**
@@ -10748,7 +10876,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10748
10876
  */
10749
10877
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
10750
10878
  /**
10751
- * The Availability Zone or Local Zone for the subnet. Default: Amazon Web Services selects one for you. If you create more than one subnet in your VPC, we do not necessarily select a different zone for each subnet. To create a subnet in a Local Zone, set this value to the Local Zone ID, for example us-west-2-lax-1a. For information about the Regions that support Local Zones, see Local Zones locations. To create a subnet in an Outpost, set this value to the Availability Zone for the Outpost and specify the Outpost ARN.
10879
+ * The Availability Zone or Local Zone for the subnet. Default: Amazon Web Services selects one for you. If you create more than one subnet in your VPC, we do not necessarily select a different zone for each subnet. To create a subnet in a Local Zone, set this value to the Local Zone ID, for example us-west-2-lax-1a. For information about the Regions that support Local Zones, see Available Local Zones. To create a subnet in an Outpost, set this value to the Availability Zone for the Outpost and specify the Outpost ARN.
10752
10880
  */
10753
10881
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
10754
10882
  /**
@@ -10893,6 +11021,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10893
11021
  * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to ensure idempotency.
10894
11022
  */
10895
11023
  ClientToken?: String;
11024
+ /**
11025
+ * Traffic Mirroring tags specifications.
11026
+ */
11027
+ TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
10896
11028
  }
10897
11029
  export interface CreateTrafficMirrorFilterRuleResult {
10898
11030
  /**
@@ -10926,7 +11058,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
10926
11058
  */
10927
11059
  SessionNumber: Integer;
10928
11060
  /**
10929
- * The VXLAN ID for the Traffic Mirror session. For more information about the VXLAN protocol, see RFC 7348. If you do not specify a VirtualNetworkId, an account-wide unique id is chosen at random.
11061
+ * The VXLAN ID for the Traffic Mirror session. For more information about the VXLAN protocol, see RFC 7348. If you do not specify a VirtualNetworkId, an account-wide unique ID is chosen at random.
10930
11062
  */
10931
11063
  VirtualNetworkId?: Integer;
10932
11064
  /**
@@ -11418,7 +11550,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11418
11550
  */
11419
11551
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
11420
11552
  /**
11421
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
11553
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
11422
11554
  */
11423
11555
  ClientToken?: String;
11424
11556
  /**
@@ -11455,7 +11587,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11455
11587
  */
11456
11588
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
11457
11589
  /**
11458
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
11590
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
11459
11591
  */
11460
11592
  ClientToken?: String;
11461
11593
  /**
@@ -11483,7 +11615,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11483
11615
  */
11484
11616
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
11485
11617
  /**
11486
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
11618
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
11487
11619
  */
11488
11620
  ClientToken?: String;
11489
11621
  /**
@@ -11575,7 +11707,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11575
11707
  */
11576
11708
  TagSpecifications?: TagSpecificationList;
11577
11709
  /**
11578
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
11710
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
11579
11711
  */
11580
11712
  ClientToken?: String;
11581
11713
  /**
@@ -11628,11 +11760,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11628
11760
  */
11629
11761
  Iops?: Integer;
11630
11762
  /**
11631
- * The identifier of the Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails.
11763
+ * The identifier of the KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails.
11632
11764
  */
11633
11765
  KmsKeyId?: KmsKeyId;
11634
11766
  /**
11635
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost.
11767
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Outpost on which to create the volume. If you intend to use a volume with an instance running on an outpost, then you must create the volume on the same outpost as the instance. You can't use a volume created in an Amazon Web Services Region with an instance on an Amazon Web Services outpost, or the other way around.
11636
11768
  */
11637
11769
  OutpostArn?: String;
11638
11770
  /**
@@ -11994,7 +12126,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
11994
12126
  export type CurrentGenerationFlag = boolean;
11995
12127
  export interface CustomerGateway {
11996
12128
  /**
11997
- * The customer gateway's Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Autonomous System Number (ASN).
12129
+ * The customer gateway device's Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Autonomous System Number (ASN). Valid values: 1 to 2,147,483,647
11998
12130
  */
11999
12131
  BgpAsn?: String;
12000
12132
  /**
@@ -12002,7 +12134,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12002
12134
  */
12003
12135
  CustomerGatewayId?: String;
12004
12136
  /**
12005
- * The IP address of the customer gateway device's outside interface.
12137
+ * IPv4 address for the customer gateway device's outside interface. The address must be static. If OutsideIpAddressType in your VPN connection options is set to PrivateIpv4, you can use an RFC6598 or RFC1918 private IPv4 address. If OutsideIpAddressType is set to PublicIpv4, you can use a public IPv4 address.
12006
12138
  */
12007
12139
  IpAddress?: String;
12008
12140
  /**
@@ -12025,6 +12157,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12025
12157
  * Any tags assigned to the customer gateway.
12026
12158
  */
12027
12159
  Tags?: TagList;
12160
+ /**
12161
+ * The customer gateway device's Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Autonomous System Number (ASN). Valid values: 2,147,483,648 to 4,294,967,295
12162
+ */
12163
+ BgpAsnExtended?: String;
12028
12164
  }
12029
12165
  export type CustomerGatewayId = string;
12030
12166
  export type CustomerGatewayIdStringList = CustomerGatewayId[];
@@ -12368,6 +12504,22 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12368
12504
  */
12369
12505
  InternetGatewayId: InternetGatewayId;
12370
12506
  }
12507
+ export interface DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenRequest {
12508
+ /**
12509
+ * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
12510
+ */
12511
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
12512
+ /**
12513
+ * The token ID.
12514
+ */
12515
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId: IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId;
12516
+ }
12517
+ export interface DeleteIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenResult {
12518
+ /**
12519
+ * The verification token.
12520
+ */
12521
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken;
12522
+ }
12371
12523
  export interface DeleteIpamPoolRequest {
12372
12524
  /**
12373
12525
  * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
@@ -12791,6 +12943,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
12791
12943
  * The ID of the public IPv4 pool you want to delete.
12792
12944
  */
12793
12945
  PoolId: Ipv4PoolEc2Id;
12946
+ /**
12947
+ * The Availability Zone (AZ) or Local Zone (LZ) network border group that the resource that the IP address is assigned to is in. Defaults to an AZ network border group. For more information on available Local Zones, see Local Zone availability in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
12948
+ */
12949
+ NetworkBorderGroup?: String;
12794
12950
  }
12795
12951
  export interface DeletePublicIpv4PoolResult {
12796
12952
  /**
@@ -13186,7 +13342,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13186
13342
  */
13187
13343
  VerifiedAccessEndpointId: VerifiedAccessEndpointId;
13188
13344
  /**
13189
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
13345
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
13190
13346
  */
13191
13347
  ClientToken?: String;
13192
13348
  /**
@@ -13206,7 +13362,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13206
13362
  */
13207
13363
  VerifiedAccessGroupId: VerifiedAccessGroupId;
13208
13364
  /**
13209
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
13365
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
13210
13366
  */
13211
13367
  ClientToken?: String;
13212
13368
  /**
@@ -13230,7 +13386,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13230
13386
  */
13231
13387
  DryRun?: Boolean;
13232
13388
  /**
13233
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
13389
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
13234
13390
  */
13235
13391
  ClientToken?: String;
13236
13392
  }
@@ -13250,7 +13406,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
13250
13406
  */
13251
13407
  DryRun?: Boolean;
13252
13408
  /**
13253
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
13409
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
13254
13410
  */
13255
13411
  ClientToken?: String;
13256
13412
  }
@@ -14174,7 +14330,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
14174
14330
  export type DescribeDhcpOptionsMaxResults = number;
14175
14331
  export interface DescribeDhcpOptionsRequest {
14176
14332
  /**
14177
- * The IDs of one or more DHCP options sets. Default: Describes all your DHCP options sets.
14333
+ * The IDs of DHCP option sets.
14178
14334
  */
14179
14335
  DhcpOptionsIds?: DhcpOptionsIdStringList;
14180
14336
  /**
@@ -14196,7 +14352,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
14196
14352
  }
14197
14353
  export interface DescribeDhcpOptionsResult {
14198
14354
  /**
14199
- * Information about one or more DHCP options sets.
14355
+ * Information about the DHCP options sets.
14200
14356
  */
14201
14357
  DhcpOptions?: DhcpOptionsList;
14202
14358
  /**
@@ -15258,7 +15414,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
15258
15414
  }
15259
15415
  export interface DescribeInstancesRequest {
15260
15416
  /**
15261
- * 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, 2022-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. 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. boot-mode - The boot mode that was specified by the AMI (legacy-bios | uefi | uefi-preferred). capacity-reservation-id - The ID of the Capacity Reservation into which the instance was launched. capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-preference - The instance's Capacity Reservation preference (open | none). capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-target.capacity-reservation-id - The ID of the targeted Capacity Reservation. capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-target.capacity-reservation-resource-group-arn - The ARN of the targeted Capacity Reservation group. client-token - The idempotency token you provided when you launched the instance. current-instance-boot-mode - The boot mode that is used to launch the instance at launch or start (legacy-bios | uefi). dns-name - The public DNS name of the instance. ebs-optimized - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is optimized for Amazon EBS I/O. ena-support - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for enhanced networking with ENA. enclave-options.enabled - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves. 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. iam-instance-profile.id - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an ID. iam-instance-profile.name - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an name. 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, a Scheduled Instance, or a Capacity Block (spot | scheduled | capacity-block). 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. ipv6-address - The IPv6 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, in the ISO 8601 format in the UTC time zone (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ), for example, 2021-09-29T11:04:43.305Z. You can use a wildcard (*), for example, 2021-09-29T*, which matches an entire day. maintenance-options.auto-recovery - The current automatic recovery behavior of the instance (disabled | default). metadata-options.http-endpoint - The status of access to the HTTP metadata endpoint on your instance (enabled | disabled) metadata-options.http-protocol-ipv4 - Indicates whether the IPv4 endpoint is enabled (disabled | enabled). metadata-options.http-protocol-ipv6 - Indicates whether the IPv6 endpoint is enabled (disabled | enabled). metadata-options.http-put-response-hop-limit - The HTTP metadata request put response hop limit (integer, possible values 1 to 64) metadata-options.http-tokens - The metadata request authorization state (optional | required) metadata-options.instance-metadata-tags - The status of access to instance tags from the instance metadata (enabled | disabled) metadata-options.state - The state of the metadata option changes (pending | applied). monitoring-state - Indicates whether detailed monitoring is enabled (disabled | enabled). network-interface.addresses.association.allocation-id - The allocation ID. network-interface.addresses.association.association-id - The association ID. network-interface.addresses.association.carrier-ip - The carrier IP address. network-interface.addresses.association.customer-owned-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.addresses.association.ip-owner-id - The owner ID of the private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.addresses.association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. network-interface.addresses.association.public-ip - The ID of the association of an Elastic IP address (IPv4) with a network interface. network-interface.addresses.primary - Specifies whether the IPv4 address of the network interface is the primary private IPv4 address. network-interface.addresses.private-dns-name - The private DNS name. network-interface.addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address 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.association.carrier-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.association.customer-owned-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. network-interface.association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. network-interface.attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. network-interface.attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. network-interface.attachment.delete-on-termination - Specifies whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. network-interface.attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. 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.network-card-index - The index of the network card. network-interface.attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). network-interface.availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the network interface. network-interface.deny-all-igw-traffic - A Boolean that indicates whether a network interface with an IPv6 address is unreachable from the public internet. 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.ipv4-prefixes.ipv4-prefix - The IPv4 prefixes that are assigned to the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.is-primary-ipv6 - A Boolean that indicates whether this is the primary IPv6 address. network-interface.ipv6-native - A Boolean that indicates whether this is an IPv6 only network interface. network-interface.ipv6-prefixes.ipv6-prefix - The IPv6 prefix assigned to 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.outpost-arn - The ARN of the Outpost. 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.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address. network-interface.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. 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.tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the network interface. network-interface.tag-value - The value of a tag assigned to 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. platform-details - The platform (Linux/UNIX | Red Hat BYOL Linux | Red Hat Enterprise Linux | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Standard and HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Enterprise and HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Standard | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Web | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Enterprise | SQL Server Enterprise | SQL Server Standard | SQL Server Web | SUSE Linux | Ubuntu Pro | Windows | Windows BYOL | Windows with SQL Server Enterprise | Windows with SQL Server Standard | Windows with SQL Server Web). private-dns-name - The private IPv4 DNS name of the instance. private-dns-name-options.enable-resource-name-dns-a-record - A Boolean that indicates whether to respond to DNS queries for instance hostnames with DNS A records. private-dns-name-options.enable-resource-name-dns-aaaa-record - A Boolean that indicates whether to respond to DNS queries for instance hostnames with DNS AAAA records. private-dns-name-options.hostname-type - The type of hostname (ip-name | resource-name). 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). tpm-support - Indicates if the instance is configured for NitroTPM support (v2.0). usage-operation - The usage operation value for the instance (RunInstances | RunInstances:00g0 | RunInstances:0010 | RunInstances:1010 | RunInstances:1014 | RunInstances:1110 | RunInstances:0014 | RunInstances:0210 | RunInstances:0110 | RunInstances:0100 | RunInstances:0004 | RunInstances:0200 | RunInstances:000g | RunInstances:0g00 | RunInstances:0002 | RunInstances:0800 | RunInstances:0102 | RunInstances:0006 | RunInstances:0202). usage-operation-update-time - The time that the usage operation was last updated, for example, 2022-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. virtualization-type - The virtualization type of the instance (paravirtual | hvm). vpc-id - The ID of the VPC that the instance is running in.
15417
+ * 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, 2022-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. 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. boot-mode - The boot mode that was specified by the AMI (legacy-bios | uefi | uefi-preferred). capacity-reservation-id - The ID of the Capacity Reservation into which the instance was launched. capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-preference - The instance's Capacity Reservation preference (open | none). capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-target.capacity-reservation-id - The ID of the targeted Capacity Reservation. capacity-reservation-specification.capacity-reservation-target.capacity-reservation-resource-group-arn - The ARN of the targeted Capacity Reservation group. client-token - The idempotency token you provided when you launched the instance. current-instance-boot-mode - The boot mode that is used to launch the instance at launch or start (legacy-bios | uefi). dns-name - The public DNS name of the instance. ebs-optimized - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is optimized for Amazon EBS I/O. ena-support - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for enhanced networking with ENA. enclave-options.enabled - A Boolean that indicates whether the instance is enabled for Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves. 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. iam-instance-profile.id - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an ID. iam-instance-profile.name - The instance profile associated with the instance. Specified as an name. 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, a Scheduled Instance, or a Capacity Block (spot | scheduled | capacity-block). 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. ipv6-address - The IPv6 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, in the ISO 8601 format in the UTC time zone (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ), for example, 2021-09-29T11:04:43.305Z. You can use a wildcard (*), for example, 2021-09-29T*, which matches an entire day. maintenance-options.auto-recovery - The current automatic recovery behavior of the instance (disabled | default). metadata-options.http-endpoint - The status of access to the HTTP metadata endpoint on your instance (enabled | disabled) metadata-options.http-protocol-ipv4 - Indicates whether the IPv4 endpoint is enabled (disabled | enabled). metadata-options.http-protocol-ipv6 - Indicates whether the IPv6 endpoint is enabled (disabled | enabled). metadata-options.http-put-response-hop-limit - The HTTP metadata request put response hop limit (integer, possible values 1 to 64) metadata-options.http-tokens - The metadata request authorization state (optional | required) metadata-options.instance-metadata-tags - The status of access to instance tags from the instance metadata (enabled | disabled) metadata-options.state - The state of the metadata option changes (pending | applied). monitoring-state - Indicates whether detailed monitoring is enabled (disabled | enabled). network-interface.addresses.association.allocation-id - The allocation ID. network-interface.addresses.association.association-id - The association ID. network-interface.addresses.association.carrier-ip - The carrier IP address. network-interface.addresses.association.customer-owned-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.addresses.association.ip-owner-id - The owner ID of the private IPv4 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.addresses.association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. network-interface.addresses.association.public-ip - The ID of the association of an Elastic IP address (IPv4) with a network interface. network-interface.addresses.primary - Specifies whether the IPv4 address of the network interface is the primary private IPv4 address. network-interface.addresses.private-dns-name - The private DNS name. network-interface.addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address 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.association.carrier-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.association.customer-owned-ip - The customer-owned IP address. network-interface.association.ip-owner-id - The owner of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) associated with the network interface. network-interface.association.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. network-interface.association.public-ip - The address of the Elastic IP address (IPv4) bound to the network interface. network-interface.attachment.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. network-interface.attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. network-interface.attachment.delete-on-termination - Specifies whether the attachment is deleted when an instance is terminated. network-interface.attachment.device-index - The device index to which the network interface is attached. 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.network-card-index - The index of the network card. network-interface.attachment.status - The status of the attachment (attaching | attached | detaching | detached). network-interface.availability-zone - The Availability Zone for the network interface. network-interface.deny-all-igw-traffic - A Boolean that indicates whether a network interface with an IPv6 address is unreachable from the public internet. 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.ipv4-prefixes.ipv4-prefix - The IPv4 prefixes that are assigned to the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - The IPv6 address associated with the network interface. network-interface.ipv6-addresses.is-primary-ipv6 - A Boolean that indicates whether this is the primary IPv6 address. network-interface.ipv6-native - A Boolean that indicates whether this is an IPv6 only network interface. network-interface.ipv6-prefixes.ipv6-prefix - The IPv6 prefix assigned to 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.outpost-arn - The ARN of the Outpost. 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.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address. network-interface.public-dns-name - The public DNS name. 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.tag-key - The key of a tag assigned to the network interface. network-interface.tag-value - The value of a tag assigned to 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. platform-details - The platform (Linux/UNIX | Red Hat BYOL Linux | Red Hat Enterprise Linux | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Standard and HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Enterprise and HA | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Standard | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Web | Red Hat Enterprise Linux with SQL Server Enterprise | SQL Server Enterprise | SQL Server Standard | SQL Server Web | SUSE Linux | Ubuntu Pro | Windows | Windows BYOL | Windows with SQL Server Enterprise | Windows with SQL Server Standard | Windows with SQL Server Web). private-dns-name - The private IPv4 DNS name of the instance. private-dns-name-options.enable-resource-name-dns-a-record - A Boolean that indicates whether to respond to DNS queries for instance hostnames with DNS A records. private-dns-name-options.enable-resource-name-dns-aaaa-record - A Boolean that indicates whether to respond to DNS queries for instance hostnames with DNS AAAA records. private-dns-name-options.hostname-type - The type of hostname (ip-name | resource-name). private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address of the instance. This can only be used to filter by the primary IP address of the network interface attached to the instance. To filter by additional IP addresses assigned to the network interface, use the filter network-interface.addresses.private-ip-address. 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). tpm-support - Indicates if the instance is configured for NitroTPM support (v2.0). usage-operation - The usage operation value for the instance (RunInstances | RunInstances:00g0 | RunInstances:0010 | RunInstances:1010 | RunInstances:1014 | RunInstances:1110 | RunInstances:0014 | RunInstances:0210 | RunInstances:0110 | RunInstances:0100 | RunInstances:0004 | RunInstances:0200 | RunInstances:000g | RunInstances:0g00 | RunInstances:0002 | RunInstances:0800 | RunInstances:0102 | RunInstances:0006 | RunInstances:0202). usage-operation-update-time - The time that the usage operation was last updated, for example, 2022-09-15T17:15:20.000Z. virtualization-type - The virtualization type of the instance (paravirtual | hvm). vpc-id - The ID of the VPC that the instance is running in.
15262
15418
  */
15263
15419
  Filters?: FilterList;
15264
15420
  /**
@@ -15313,7 +15469,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
15313
15469
  }
15314
15470
  export interface DescribeInternetGatewaysResult {
15315
15471
  /**
15316
- * Information about one or more internet gateways.
15472
+ * Information about the internet gateways.
15317
15473
  */
15318
15474
  InternetGateways?: InternetGatewayList;
15319
15475
  /**
@@ -15346,6 +15502,38 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
15346
15502
  */
15347
15503
  NextToken?: String;
15348
15504
  }
15505
+ export interface DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensRequest {
15506
+ /**
15507
+ * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
15508
+ */
15509
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
15510
+ /**
15511
+ * One or more filters for the request. For more information about filtering, see Filtering CLI output. Available filters: ipam-arn ipam-external-resource-verification-token-arn ipam-external-resource-verification-token-id ipam-id ipam-region state status token-name token-value
15512
+ */
15513
+ Filters?: FilterList;
15514
+ /**
15515
+ * The token for the next page of results.
15516
+ */
15517
+ NextToken?: NextToken;
15518
+ /**
15519
+ * The maximum number of tokens to return in one page of results.
15520
+ */
15521
+ MaxResults?: IpamMaxResults;
15522
+ /**
15523
+ * Verification token IDs.
15524
+ */
15525
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenIds?: ValueStringList;
15526
+ }
15527
+ export interface DescribeIpamExternalResourceVerificationTokensResult {
15528
+ /**
15529
+ * The token to use to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null when there are no more results to return.
15530
+ */
15531
+ NextToken?: NextToken;
15532
+ /**
15533
+ * Verification tokens.
15534
+ */
15535
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokens?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenSet;
15536
+ }
15349
15537
  export interface DescribeIpamPoolsRequest {
15350
15538
  /**
15351
15539
  * A check for whether you have the required permissions for the action without actually making the request and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
@@ -15604,7 +15792,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
15604
15792
  */
15605
15793
  Filters?: FilterList;
15606
15794
  /**
15607
- * If true, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the AMI ID is displayed in the response for imageId. If false, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the parameter is displayed in the response for imageId. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. Default: false
15795
+ * If true, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the AMI ID is displayed in the response for imageId. If false, and if a Systems Manager parameter is specified for ImageId, the parameter is displayed in the response for imageId. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. Default: false
15608
15796
  */
15609
15797
  ResolveAlias?: Boolean;
15610
15798
  }
@@ -16018,7 +16206,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16018
16206
  */
16019
16207
  DryRun?: Boolean;
16020
16208
  /**
16021
- * The IDs of the network ACLs. Default: Describes all your network ACLs.
16209
+ * The IDs of the network ACLs.
16022
16210
  */
16023
16211
  NetworkAclIds?: NetworkAclIdStringList;
16024
16212
  /**
@@ -16032,7 +16220,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16032
16220
  }
16033
16221
  export interface DescribeNetworkAclsResult {
16034
16222
  /**
16035
- * Information about one or more network ACLs.
16223
+ * Information about the network ACLs.
16036
16224
  */
16037
16225
  NetworkAcls?: NetworkAclList;
16038
16226
  /**
@@ -16239,7 +16427,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16239
16427
  */
16240
16428
  NetworkInterfacePermissionIds?: NetworkInterfacePermissionIdList;
16241
16429
  /**
16242
- * 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).
16430
+ * 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 Services service. network-interface-permission.permission - The type of permission (INSTANCE-ATTACH | EIP-ASSOCIATE).
16243
16431
  */
16244
16432
  Filters?: FilterList;
16245
16433
  /**
@@ -16264,7 +16452,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16264
16452
  export type DescribeNetworkInterfacesMaxResults = number;
16265
16453
  export interface DescribeNetworkInterfacesRequest {
16266
16454
  /**
16267
- * One or more filters. association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. addresses.association.owner-id - The owner ID of the addresses 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.primary - Whether the private IPv4 address is the primary IP address associated with the network interface. addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 addresses associated with the 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.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. 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. ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - An IPv6 address associated with the network interface. interface-type - The type of network interface (api_gateway_managed | aws_codestar_connections_managed | branch | ec2_instance_connect_endpoint | efa | efs | gateway_load_balancer | gateway_load_balancer_endpoint | global_accelerator_managed | interface | iot_rules_managed | lambda | load_balancer | nat_gateway | network_load_balancer | quicksight | transit_gateway | trunk | vpc_endpoint). 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-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface (IPv4). private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address or addresses of the network interface. 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.
16455
+ * One or more filters. association.allocation-id - The allocation ID returned when you allocated the Elastic IP address (IPv4) for your network interface. association.association-id - The association ID returned when the network interface was associated with an IPv4 address. addresses.association.owner-id - The owner ID of the addresses 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.primary - Whether the private IPv4 address is the primary IP address associated with the network interface. addresses.private-ip-address - The private IPv4 addresses associated with the 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.attach-time - The time that the network interface was attached to an instance. attachment.attachment-id - The ID of the interface attachment. 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. ipv6-addresses.ipv6-address - An IPv6 address associated with the network interface. interface-type - The type of network interface (api_gateway_managed | aws_codestar_connections_managed | branch | ec2_instance_connect_endpoint | efa | efs | gateway_load_balancer | gateway_load_balancer_endpoint | global_accelerator_managed | interface | iot_rules_managed | lambda | load_balancer | nat_gateway | network_load_balancer | quicksight | transit_gateway | trunk | vpc_endpoint). 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-dns-name - The private DNS name of the network interface (IPv4). private-ip-address - The private IPv4 address or addresses of the network interface. 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 Services 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.
16268
16456
  */
16269
16457
  Filters?: FilterList;
16270
16458
  /**
@@ -16304,7 +16492,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16304
16492
  */
16305
16493
  DryRun?: Boolean;
16306
16494
  /**
16307
- * The names of the placement groups. Default: Describes all your placement groups, or only those otherwise specified.
16495
+ * The names of the placement groups. Constraints: You can specify a name only if the placement group is owned by your account. If a placement group is shared with your account, specifying the name results in an error. You must use the GroupId parameter instead.
16308
16496
  */
16309
16497
  GroupNames?: PlacementGroupStringList;
16310
16498
  /**
@@ -16522,7 +16710,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16522
16710
  */
16523
16711
  IncludeMarketplace?: Boolean;
16524
16712
  /**
16525
- * The instance type that the reservation will cover (for example, m1.small). For more information, see Instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
16713
+ * The instance type that the reservation will cover (for example, m1.small). For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
16526
16714
  */
16527
16715
  InstanceType?: InstanceType;
16528
16716
  /**
@@ -16611,7 +16799,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16611
16799
  export type DescribeRouteTablesMaxResults = number;
16612
16800
  export interface DescribeRouteTablesRequest {
16613
16801
  /**
16614
- * The filters. association.gateway-id - The ID of the gateway involved in the association. 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.
16802
+ * The filters. association.gateway-id - The ID of the gateway involved in the association. 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 Services 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.
16615
16803
  */
16616
16804
  Filters?: FilterList;
16617
16805
  /**
@@ -16619,7 +16807,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16619
16807
  */
16620
16808
  DryRun?: Boolean;
16621
16809
  /**
16622
- * The IDs of the route tables. Default: Describes all your route tables.
16810
+ * The IDs of the route tables.
16623
16811
  */
16624
16812
  RouteTableIds?: RouteTableIdStringList;
16625
16813
  /**
@@ -16633,7 +16821,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16633
16821
  }
16634
16822
  export interface DescribeRouteTablesResult {
16635
16823
  /**
16636
- * Information about one or more route tables.
16824
+ * Information about the route tables.
16637
16825
  */
16638
16826
  RouteTables?: RouteTableList;
16639
16827
  /**
@@ -16871,7 +17059,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16871
17059
  */
16872
17060
  Filters?: FilterList;
16873
17061
  /**
16874
- * The maximum number of snapshots to return for this request. This value can be between 5 and 1,000; if this value is larger than 1,000, only 1,000 results are returned. If this parameter is not used, then the request returns all snapshots. You cannot specify this parameter and the snapshot IDs parameter in the same request. For more information, see Pagination.
17062
+ * The maximum number of items to return for this request. To get the next page of items, make another request with the token returned in the output. For more information, see Pagination.
16875
17063
  */
16876
17064
  MaxResults?: Integer;
16877
17065
  /**
@@ -16901,7 +17089,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
16901
17089
  */
16902
17090
  Snapshots?: SnapshotList;
16903
17091
  /**
16904
- * The token to include in another request to return the next page of snapshots. This value is null when there are no more snapshots to return.
17092
+ * The token to include in another request to get the next page of items. This value is null when there are no more items to return.
16905
17093
  */
16906
17094
  NextToken?: String;
16907
17095
  }
@@ -17029,7 +17217,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17029
17217
  }
17030
17218
  export interface DescribeSpotInstanceRequestsRequest {
17031
17219
  /**
17032
- * The filters. availability-zone-group - The Availability Zone group. create-time - The time stamp when the Spot Instance request was created. fault-code - The fault code related to the request. fault-message - The fault message related to the request. instance-id - The ID of the instance that fulfilled the request. launch-group - The Spot Instance launch group. launch.block-device-mapping.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination. launch.block-device-mapping.device-name - The device name for the volume in the block device mapping (for example, /dev/sdh or xvdh). launch.block-device-mapping.snapshot-id - The ID of the snapshot for the EBS volume. launch.block-device-mapping.volume-size - The size of the EBS volume, in GiB. launch.block-device-mapping.volume-type - The type of EBS volume: gp2 or gp3 for General Purpose SSD, io1 or io2 for Provisioned IOPS SSD, st1 for Throughput Optimized HDD, sc1 for Cold HDD, or standard for Magnetic. launch.group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. launch.group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. launch.image-id - The ID of the AMI. launch.instance-type - The type of instance (for example, m3.medium). launch.kernel-id - The kernel ID. launch.key-name - The name of the key pair the instance launched with. launch.monitoring-enabled - Whether detailed monitoring is enabled for the Spot Instance. launch.ramdisk-id - The RAM disk ID. launched-availability-zone - The Availability Zone in which the request is launched. network-interface.addresses.primary - Indicates whether the IP address is the primary private IP address. network-interface.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the network interface is deleted when the instance is terminated. network-interface.description - A description of the network interface. network-interface.device-index - The index of the device for the network interface attachment on the instance. network-interface.group-id - The ID of the security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface.private-ip-address - The primary private IP address of the network interface. network-interface.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the instance. product-description - The product description associated with the instance (Linux/UNIX | Windows). spot-instance-request-id - The Spot Instance request ID. spot-price - The maximum hourly price for any Spot Instance launched to fulfill the request. state - The state of the Spot Instance request (open | active | closed | cancelled | failed). Spot request status information can help you track your Amazon EC2 Spot Instance requests. For more information, see Spot request status in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances. status-code - The short code describing the most recent evaluation of your Spot Instance request. status-message - The message explaining the status of the Spot Instance request. 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. type - The type of Spot Instance request (one-time | persistent). valid-from - The start date of the request. valid-until - The end date of the request.
17220
+ * The filters. availability-zone-group - The Availability Zone group. create-time - The time stamp when the Spot Instance request was created. fault-code - The fault code related to the request. fault-message - The fault message related to the request. instance-id - The ID of the instance that fulfilled the request. launch-group - The Spot Instance launch group. launch.block-device-mapping.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination. launch.block-device-mapping.device-name - The device name for the volume in the block device mapping (for example, /dev/sdh or xvdh). launch.block-device-mapping.snapshot-id - The ID of the snapshot for the EBS volume. launch.block-device-mapping.volume-size - The size of the EBS volume, in GiB. launch.block-device-mapping.volume-type - The type of EBS volume: gp2 or gp3 for General Purpose SSD, io1 or io2 for Provisioned IOPS SSD, st1 for Throughput Optimized HDD, sc1 for Cold HDD, or standard for Magnetic. launch.group-id - The ID of the security group for the instance. launch.group-name - The name of the security group for the instance. launch.image-id - The ID of the AMI. launch.instance-type - The type of instance (for example, m3.medium). launch.kernel-id - The kernel ID. launch.key-name - The name of the key pair the instance launched with. launch.monitoring-enabled - Whether detailed monitoring is enabled for the Spot Instance. launch.ramdisk-id - The RAM disk ID. launched-availability-zone - The Availability Zone in which the request is launched. network-interface.addresses.primary - Indicates whether the IP address is the primary private IP address. network-interface.delete-on-termination - Indicates whether the network interface is deleted when the instance is terminated. network-interface.description - A description of the network interface. network-interface.device-index - The index of the device for the network interface attachment on the instance. network-interface.group-id - The ID of the security group associated with the network interface. network-interface.network-interface-id - The ID of the network interface. network-interface.private-ip-address - The primary private IP address of the network interface. network-interface.subnet-id - The ID of the subnet for the instance. product-description - The product description associated with the instance (Linux/UNIX | Windows). spot-instance-request-id - The Spot Instance request ID. spot-price - The maximum hourly price for any Spot Instance launched to fulfill the request. state - The state of the Spot Instance request (open | active | closed | cancelled | failed). Spot request status information can help you track your Amazon EC2 Spot Instance requests. For more information, see Spot request status in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. status-code - The short code describing the most recent evaluation of your Spot Instance request. status-message - The message explaining the status of the Spot Instance request. 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. type - The type of Spot Instance request (one-time | persistent). valid-from - The start date of the request. valid-until - The end date of the request.
17033
17221
  */
17034
17222
  Filters?: FilterList;
17035
17223
  /**
@@ -17195,7 +17383,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17195
17383
  }
17196
17384
  export interface DescribeSubnetsResult {
17197
17385
  /**
17198
- * Information about one or more subnets.
17386
+ * Information about the subnets.
17199
17387
  */
17200
17388
  Subnets?: SubnetList;
17201
17389
  /**
@@ -17231,6 +17419,42 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17231
17419
  */
17232
17420
  Tags?: TagDescriptionList;
17233
17421
  }
17422
+ export interface DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesRequest {
17423
+ /**
17424
+ * Traffic filter rule IDs.
17425
+ */
17426
+ TrafficMirrorFilterRuleIds?: TrafficMirrorFilterRuleIdList;
17427
+ /**
17428
+ * Traffic filter ID.
17429
+ */
17430
+ TrafficMirrorFilterId?: TrafficMirrorFilterId;
17431
+ /**
17432
+ * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
17433
+ */
17434
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
17435
+ /**
17436
+ * Traffic mirror filters. traffic-mirror-filter-rule-id: The ID of the Traffic Mirror rule. traffic-mirror-filter-id: The ID of the filter that this rule is associated with. rule-number: The number of the Traffic Mirror rule. rule-action: The action taken on the filtered traffic. Possible actions are accept and reject. traffic-direction: The traffic direction. Possible directions are ingress and egress. protocol: The protocol, for example UDP, assigned to the Traffic Mirror rule. source-cidr-block: The source CIDR block assigned to the Traffic Mirror rule. destination-cidr-block: The destination CIDR block assigned to the Traffic Mirror rule. description: The description of the Traffic Mirror rule.
17437
+ */
17438
+ Filters?: FilterList;
17439
+ /**
17440
+ * The maximum number of results to return with a single call. To retrieve the remaining results, make another call with the returned nextToken value.
17441
+ */
17442
+ MaxResults?: TrafficMirroringMaxResults;
17443
+ /**
17444
+ * The token for the next page of results.
17445
+ */
17446
+ NextToken?: NextToken;
17447
+ }
17448
+ export interface DescribeTrafficMirrorFilterRulesResult {
17449
+ /**
17450
+ * Traffic mirror rules.
17451
+ */
17452
+ TrafficMirrorFilterRules?: TrafficMirrorFilterRuleSet;
17453
+ /**
17454
+ * The token to use to retrieve the next page of results. The value is null when there are no more results to return.
17455
+ */
17456
+ NextToken?: String;
17457
+ }
17234
17458
  export interface DescribeTrafficMirrorFiltersRequest {
17235
17459
  /**
17236
17460
  * The ID of the Traffic Mirror filter.
@@ -17621,7 +17845,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17621
17845
  */
17622
17846
  TransitGatewayIds?: TransitGatewayIdStringList;
17623
17847
  /**
17624
- * One or more filters. The possible values are: options.propagation-default-route-table-id - The ID of the default propagation route table. options.amazon-side-asn - The private ASN for the Amazon side of a BGP session. options.association-default-route-table-id - The ID of the default association route table. options.auto-accept-shared-attachments - Indicates whether there is automatic acceptance of attachment requests (enable | disable). options.default-route-table-association - Indicates whether resource attachments are automatically associated with the default association route table (enable | disable). options.default-route-table-propagation - Indicates whether resource attachments automatically propagate routes to the default propagation route table (enable | disable). options.dns-support - Indicates whether DNS support is enabled (enable | disable). options.vpn-ecmp-support - Indicates whether Equal Cost Multipath Protocol support is enabled (enable | disable). owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the transit gateway. state - The state of the transit gateway (available | deleted | deleting | modifying | pending). transit-gateway-id - The ID of the transit gateway.
17848
+ * One or more filters. The possible values are: options.propagation-default-route-table-id - The ID of the default propagation route table. options.amazon-side-asn - The private ASN for the Amazon side of a BGP session. options.association-default-route-table-id - The ID of the default association route table. options.auto-accept-shared-attachments - Indicates whether there is automatic acceptance of attachment requests (enable | disable). options.default-route-table-association - Indicates whether resource attachments are automatically associated with the default association route table (enable | disable). options.default-route-table-propagation - Indicates whether resource attachments automatically propagate routes to the default propagation route table (enable | disable). options.dns-support - Indicates whether DNS support is enabled (enable | disable). options.vpn-ecmp-support - Indicates whether Equal Cost Multipath Protocol support is enabled (enable | disable). owner-id - The ID of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the transit gateway. state - The state of the transit gateway (available | deleted | deleting | modifying | pending). transit-gateway-id - The ID of the transit gateway. tag-key - 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.
17625
17849
  */
17626
17850
  Filters?: FilterList;
17627
17851
  /**
@@ -17891,7 +18115,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17891
18115
  */
17892
18116
  Filters?: FilterList;
17893
18117
  /**
17894
- * The maximum number of items to return for this request. To get the next page of items, make another request with the token returned in the output. This value can be between 5 and 1,000; if the value is larger than 1,000, only 1,000 results are returned. If this parameter is not used, then all items are returned. You cannot specify this parameter and the volume IDs parameter in the same request. For more information, see Pagination.
18118
+ * The maximum number of items to return for this request. To get the next page of items, make another request with the token returned in the output. For more information, see Pagination.
17895
18119
  */
17896
18120
  MaxResults?: Integer;
17897
18121
  /**
@@ -17931,7 +18155,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17931
18155
  */
17932
18156
  Filters?: FilterList;
17933
18157
  /**
17934
- * The token returned by a previous paginated request. Pagination continues from the end of the items returned by the previous request.
18158
+ * The token returned from a previous paginated request. Pagination continues from the end of the items returned by the previous request.
17935
18159
  */
17936
18160
  NextToken?: String;
17937
18161
  /**
@@ -17945,7 +18169,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17945
18169
  */
17946
18170
  VolumesModifications?: VolumeModificationList;
17947
18171
  /**
17948
- * The token to include in another request to get the next page of items. This value is null if there are no more items to return.
18172
+ * The token to include in another request to get the next page of items. This value is null when there are no more items to return.
17949
18173
  */
17950
18174
  NextToken?: String;
17951
18175
  }
@@ -17955,7 +18179,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17955
18179
  */
17956
18180
  Filters?: FilterList;
17957
18181
  /**
17958
- * The volume IDs.
18182
+ * The volume IDs. If not specified, then all volumes are included in the response.
17959
18183
  */
17960
18184
  VolumeIds?: VolumeIdStringList;
17961
18185
  /**
@@ -17963,11 +18187,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
17963
18187
  */
17964
18188
  DryRun?: Boolean;
17965
18189
  /**
17966
- * The maximum number of volumes to return for this request. This value can be between 5 and 500; if you specify a value larger than 500, only 500 items are returned. If this parameter is not used, then all items are returned. You cannot specify this parameter and the volume IDs parameter in the same request. For more information, see Pagination.
18190
+ * The maximum number of items to return for this request. To get the next page of items, make another request with the token returned in the output. For more information, see Pagination.
17967
18191
  */
17968
18192
  MaxResults?: Integer;
17969
18193
  /**
17970
- * The token returned from a previous paginated request. Pagination continues from the end of the items returned from the previous request.
18194
+ * The token returned from a previous paginated request. Pagination continues from the end of the items returned by the previous request.
17971
18195
  */
17972
18196
  NextToken?: String;
17973
18197
  }
@@ -18243,7 +18467,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18243
18467
  }
18244
18468
  export interface DescribeVpcEndpointsResult {
18245
18469
  /**
18246
- * Information about the endpoints.
18470
+ * Information about the VPC endpoints.
18247
18471
  */
18248
18472
  VpcEndpoints?: VpcEndpointSet;
18249
18473
  /**
@@ -18291,7 +18515,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18291
18515
  */
18292
18516
  Filters?: FilterList;
18293
18517
  /**
18294
- * The IDs of the VPCs. Default: Describes all your VPCs.
18518
+ * The IDs of the VPCs.
18295
18519
  */
18296
18520
  VpcIds?: VpcIdStringList;
18297
18521
  /**
@@ -18309,7 +18533,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18309
18533
  }
18310
18534
  export interface DescribeVpcsResult {
18311
18535
  /**
18312
- * Information about one or more VPCs.
18536
+ * Information about the VPCs.
18313
18537
  */
18314
18538
  Vpcs?: VpcList;
18315
18539
  /**
@@ -18444,7 +18668,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
18444
18668
  */
18445
18669
  VerifiedAccessTrustProviderId: VerifiedAccessTrustProviderId;
18446
18670
  /**
18447
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
18671
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
18448
18672
  */
18449
18673
  ClientToken?: String;
18450
18674
  /**
@@ -19182,7 +19406,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
19182
19406
  */
19183
19407
  AssociationId: TrunkInterfaceAssociationId;
19184
19408
  /**
19185
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to Ensure Idempotency.
19409
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
19186
19410
  */
19187
19411
  ClientToken?: String;
19188
19412
  /**
@@ -19196,7 +19420,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
19196
19420
  */
19197
19421
  Return?: Boolean;
19198
19422
  /**
19199
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to Ensure Idempotency.
19423
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
19200
19424
  */
19201
19425
  ClientToken?: String;
19202
19426
  }
@@ -19555,6 +19779,9 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
19555
19779
  export type EgressOnlyInternetGatewayList = EgressOnlyInternetGateway[];
19556
19780
  export type EipAllocationPublicIp = string;
19557
19781
  export type EipAssociationIdList = ElasticIpAssociationId[];
19782
+ export type EkPubKeyFormat = "der"|"tpmt"|string;
19783
+ export type EkPubKeyType = "rsa-2048"|"ecc-sec-p384"|string;
19784
+ export type EkPubKeyValue = string;
19558
19785
  export interface ElasticGpuAssociation {
19559
19786
  /**
19560
19787
  * The ID of the Elastic Graphics accelerator.
@@ -19585,7 +19812,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
19585
19812
  export type ElasticGpuSet = ElasticGpus[];
19586
19813
  export interface ElasticGpuSpecification {
19587
19814
  /**
19588
- * The type of Elastic Graphics accelerator. For more information about the values to specify for Type, see Elastic Graphics Basics, specifically the Elastic Graphics accelerator column, in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances.
19815
+ * The type of Elastic Graphics accelerator.
19589
19816
  */
19590
19817
  Type: String;
19591
19818
  }
@@ -20847,7 +21074,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
20847
21074
  */
20848
21075
  TotalInstanceCount?: Integer;
20849
21076
  /**
20850
- * The number of capacity units fulfilled by the Capacity Reservation. For more information, see Total target capacity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
21077
+ * The number of capacity units fulfilled by the Capacity Reservation. For more information, see Total target capacity in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
20851
21078
  */
20852
21079
  FulfilledCapacity?: Double;
20853
21080
  /**
@@ -20859,11 +21086,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
20859
21086
  */
20860
21087
  CreateDate?: MillisecondDateTime;
20861
21088
  /**
20862
- * The weight of the instance type in the Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Instance type weight in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
21089
+ * The weight of the instance type in the Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Instance type weight in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
20863
21090
  */
20864
21091
  Weight?: DoubleWithConstraints;
20865
21092
  /**
20866
- * The priority of the instance type in the Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Instance type priority in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
21093
+ * The priority of the instance type in the Capacity Reservation Fleet. For more information, see Instance type priority in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
20867
21094
  */
20868
21095
  Priority?: IntegerWithConstraints;
20869
21096
  }
@@ -21001,7 +21228,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21001
21228
  */
21002
21229
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
21003
21230
  /**
21004
- * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowest-price and price-capacity-optimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
21231
+ * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. These are the same units that you chose to set the target capacity in terms of instances, or a performance characteristic such as vCPUs, memory, or I/O. If the target capacity divided by this value is not a whole number, Amazon EC2 rounds the number of instances to the next whole number. If this value is not specified, the default is 1. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowest-price and price-capacity-optimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
21005
21232
  */
21006
21233
  WeightedCapacity?: Double;
21007
21234
  /**
@@ -21017,7 +21244,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21017
21244
  */
21018
21245
  InstanceRequirements?: InstanceRequirements;
21019
21246
  /**
21020
- * The ID of the AMI. An AMI is required to launch an instance. This parameter is only available for fleets of type instant. For fleets of type maintain and request, you must specify the AMI ID in the launch template.
21247
+ * The ID of the AMI in the format ami-17characters00000. Alternatively, you can specify a Systems Manager parameter, using one of the following formats. The Systems Manager parameter will resolve to an AMI ID on launch. To reference a public parameter: resolve:ssm:public-parameter To reference a parameter stored in the same account: resolve:ssm:parameter-name resolve:ssm:parameter-name:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-name:label To reference a parameter shared from another Amazon Web Services account: resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:label For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. This parameter is only available for fleets of type instant. For fleets of type maintain and request, you must specify the AMI ID in the launch template.
21021
21248
  */
21022
21249
  ImageId?: ImageId;
21023
21250
  }
@@ -21041,7 +21268,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21041
21268
  */
21042
21269
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
21043
21270
  /**
21044
- * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowest-price and price-capacity-optimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
21271
+ * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. These are the same units that you chose to set the target capacity in terms of instances, or a performance characteristic such as vCPUs, memory, or I/O. If the target capacity divided by this value is not a whole number, Amazon EC2 rounds the number of instances to the next whole number. If this value is not specified, the default is 1. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowest-price and price-capacity-optimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
21045
21272
  */
21046
21273
  WeightedCapacity?: Double;
21047
21274
  /**
@@ -21057,7 +21284,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21057
21284
  */
21058
21285
  InstanceRequirements?: InstanceRequirementsRequest;
21059
21286
  /**
21060
- * The ID of the AMI. An AMI is required to launch an instance. This parameter is only available for fleets of type instant. For fleets of type maintain and request, you must specify the AMI ID in the launch template.
21287
+ * The ID of the AMI in the format ami-17characters00000. Alternatively, you can specify a Systems Manager parameter, using one of the following formats. The Systems Manager parameter will resolve to an AMI ID on launch. To reference a public parameter: resolve:ssm:public-parameter To reference a parameter stored in the same account: resolve:ssm:parameter-name resolve:ssm:parameter-name:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-name:label To reference a parameter shared from another Amazon Web Services account: resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:label For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. This parameter is only available for fleets of type instant. For fleets of type maintain and request, you must specify the AMI ID in the launch template.
21061
21288
  */
21062
21289
  ImageId?: ImageId;
21063
21290
  }
@@ -21714,6 +21941,42 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
21714
21941
  */
21715
21942
  AccountLevel?: InstanceMetadataDefaultsResponse;
21716
21943
  }
21944
+ export interface GetInstanceTpmEkPubRequest {
21945
+ /**
21946
+ * The ID of the instance for which to get the public endorsement key.
21947
+ */
21948
+ InstanceId: InstanceId;
21949
+ /**
21950
+ * The required public endorsement key type.
21951
+ */
21952
+ KeyType: EkPubKeyType;
21953
+ /**
21954
+ * The required public endorsement key format. Specify der for a DER-encoded public key that is compatible with OpenSSL. Specify tpmt for a TPM 2.0 format that is compatible with tpm2-tools. The returned key is base64 encoded.
21955
+ */
21956
+ KeyFormat: EkPubKeyFormat;
21957
+ /**
21958
+ * Specify this parameter to verify whether the request will succeed, without actually making the request. If the request will succeed, the response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, the response is UnauthorizedOperation.
21959
+ */
21960
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
21961
+ }
21962
+ export interface GetInstanceTpmEkPubResult {
21963
+ /**
21964
+ * The ID of the instance.
21965
+ */
21966
+ InstanceId?: InstanceId;
21967
+ /**
21968
+ * The public endorsement key type.
21969
+ */
21970
+ KeyType?: EkPubKeyType;
21971
+ /**
21972
+ * The public endorsement key format.
21973
+ */
21974
+ KeyFormat?: EkPubKeyFormat;
21975
+ /**
21976
+ * The public endorsement key material.
21977
+ */
21978
+ KeyValue?: EkPubKeyValue;
21979
+ }
21717
21980
  export interface GetInstanceTypesFromInstanceRequirementsRequest {
21718
21981
  /**
21719
21982
  * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
@@ -23054,7 +23317,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
23054
23317
  export type HostReservationId = string;
23055
23318
  export type HostReservationIdSet = HostReservationId[];
23056
23319
  export type HostReservationSet = HostReservation[];
23057
- export type HostTenancy = "dedicated"|"host"|string;
23320
+ export type HostTenancy = "default"|"dedicated"|"host"|string;
23058
23321
  export type HostnameType = "ip-name"|"resource-name"|string;
23059
23322
  export type Hour = number;
23060
23323
  export type HttpTokensState = "optional"|"required"|string;
@@ -24732,7 +24995,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
24732
24995
  */
24733
24996
  Ipv6Prefixes?: InstanceIpv6PrefixList;
24734
24997
  /**
24735
- * A security group connection tracking configuration that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
24998
+ * A security group connection tracking configuration that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
24736
24999
  */
24737
25000
  ConnectionTrackingConfiguration?: ConnectionTrackingSpecificationResponse;
24738
25001
  }
@@ -24875,7 +25138,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
24875
25138
  */
24876
25139
  EnaSrdSpecification?: EnaSrdSpecificationRequest;
24877
25140
  /**
24878
- * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
25141
+ * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
24879
25142
  */
24880
25143
  ConnectionTrackingSpecification?: ConnectionTrackingSpecificationRequest;
24881
25144
  }
@@ -24993,7 +25256,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
24993
25256
  */
24994
25257
  AllowedInstanceTypes?: AllowedInstanceTypeSet;
24995
25258
  /**
24996
- * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set DesiredCapacityType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25259
+ * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set TargetCapacityUnitType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
24997
25260
  */
24998
25261
  MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice?: Integer;
24999
25262
  }
@@ -25091,7 +25354,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25091
25354
  */
25092
25355
  AllowedInstanceTypes?: AllowedInstanceTypeSet;
25093
25356
  /**
25094
- * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set DesiredCapacityType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25357
+ * [Price protection] The price protection threshold for Spot Instances, as a percentage of an identified On-Demand price. The identified On-Demand price is the price of the lowest priced current generation C, M, or R instance type with your specified attributes. If no current generation C, M, or R instance type matches your attributes, then the identified price is from the lowest priced current generation instance types, and failing that, from the lowest priced previous generation instance types that match your attributes. When Amazon EC2 selects instance types with your attributes, it will exclude instance types whose price exceeds your specified threshold. The parameter accepts an integer, which Amazon EC2 interprets as a percentage. If you set TargetCapacityUnitType to vcpu or memory-mib, the price protection threshold is based on the per vCPU or per memory price instead of the per instance price. Only one of SpotMaxPricePercentageOverLowestPrice or MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice can be specified. If you don't specify either, Amazon EC2 will automatically apply optimal price protection to consistently select from a wide range of instance types. To indicate no price protection threshold for Spot Instances, meaning you want to consider all instance types that match your attributes, include one of these parameters and specify a high value, such as 999999.
25095
25358
  */
25096
25359
  MaxSpotPriceAsPercentageOfOptimalOnDemandPrice?: Integer;
25097
25360
  }
@@ -25290,7 +25553,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25290
25553
  */
25291
25554
  ZoneId?: String;
25292
25555
  }
25293
- export type InstanceType = "a1.medium"|"a1.large"|"a1.xlarge"|"a1.2xlarge"|"a1.4xlarge"|"a1.metal"|"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.medium"|"c6g.large"|"c6g.xlarge"|"c6g.2xlarge"|"c6g.4xlarge"|"c6g.8xlarge"|"c6g.12xlarge"|"c6g.16xlarge"|"c6g.metal"|"c6gd.medium"|"c6gd.large"|"c6gd.xlarge"|"c6gd.2xlarge"|"c6gd.4xlarge"|"c6gd.8xlarge"|"c6gd.12xlarge"|"c6gd.16xlarge"|"c6gd.metal"|"c6gn.medium"|"c6gn.large"|"c6gn.xlarge"|"c6gn.2xlarge"|"c6gn.4xlarge"|"c6gn.8xlarge"|"c6gn.12xlarge"|"c6gn.16xlarge"|"c6i.large"|"c6i.xlarge"|"c6i.2xlarge"|"c6i.4xlarge"|"c6i.8xlarge"|"c6i.12xlarge"|"c6i.16xlarge"|"c6i.24xlarge"|"c6i.32xlarge"|"c6i.metal"|"cc1.4xlarge"|"cc2.8xlarge"|"cg1.4xlarge"|"cr1.8xlarge"|"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"|"dl1.24xlarge"|"f1.2xlarge"|"f1.4xlarge"|"f1.16xlarge"|"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"|"g5.xlarge"|"g5.2xlarge"|"g5.4xlarge"|"g5.8xlarge"|"g5.12xlarge"|"g5.16xlarge"|"g5.24xlarge"|"g5.48xlarge"|"g5g.xlarge"|"g5g.2xlarge"|"g5g.4xlarge"|"g5g.8xlarge"|"g5g.16xlarge"|"g5g.metal"|"hi1.4xlarge"|"hpc6a.48xlarge"|"hs1.8xlarge"|"h1.2xlarge"|"h1.4xlarge"|"h1.8xlarge"|"h1.16xlarge"|"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"|"im4gn.large"|"im4gn.xlarge"|"im4gn.2xlarge"|"im4gn.4xlarge"|"im4gn.8xlarge"|"im4gn.16xlarge"|"inf1.xlarge"|"inf1.2xlarge"|"inf1.6xlarge"|"inf1.24xlarge"|"is4gen.medium"|"is4gen.large"|"is4gen.xlarge"|"is4gen.2xlarge"|"is4gen.4xlarge"|"is4gen.8xlarge"|"m1.small"|"m1.medium"|"m1.large"|"m1.xlarge"|"m2.xlarge"|"m2.2xlarge"|"m2.4xlarge"|"m3.medium"|"m3.large"|"m3.xlarge"|"m3.2xlarge"|"m4.large"|"m4.xlarge"|"m4.2xlarge"|"m4.4xlarge"|"m4.10xlarge"|"m4.16xlarge"|"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"|"m5ad.large"|"m5ad.xlarge"|"m5ad.2xlarge"|"m5ad.4xlarge"|"m5ad.8xlarge"|"m5ad.12xlarge"|"m5ad.16xlarge"|"m5ad.24xlarge"|"m5d.large"|"m5d.xlarge"|"m5d.2xlarge"|"m5d.4xlarge"|"m5d.8xlarge"|"m5d.12xlarge"|"m5d.16xlarge"|"m5d.24xlarge"|"m5d.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"|"m5zn.large"|"m5zn.xlarge"|"m5zn.2xlarge"|"m5zn.3xlarge"|"m5zn.6xlarge"|"m5zn.12xlarge"|"m5zn.metal"|"m6a.large"|"m6a.xlarge"|"m6a.2xlarge"|"m6a.4xlarge"|"m6a.8xlarge"|"m6a.12xlarge"|"m6a.16xlarge"|"m6a.24xlarge"|"m6a.32xlarge"|"m6a.48xlarge"|"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"|"m6i.large"|"m6i.xlarge"|"m6i.2xlarge"|"m6i.4xlarge"|"m6i.8xlarge"|"m6i.12xlarge"|"m6i.16xlarge"|"m6i.24xlarge"|"m6i.32xlarge"|"m6i.metal"|"mac1.metal"|"p2.xlarge"|"p2.8xlarge"|"p2.16xlarge"|"p3.2xlarge"|"p3.8xlarge"|"p3.16xlarge"|"p3dn.24xlarge"|"p4d.24xlarge"|"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"|"r5ad.large"|"r5ad.xlarge"|"r5ad.2xlarge"|"r5ad.4xlarge"|"r5ad.8xlarge"|"r5ad.12xlarge"|"r5ad.16xlarge"|"r5ad.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"|"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"|"r6g.medium"|"r6g.large"|"r6g.xlarge"|"r6g.2xlarge"|"r6g.4xlarge"|"r6g.8xlarge"|"r6g.12xlarge"|"r6g.16xlarge"|"r6g.metal"|"r6gd.medium"|"r6gd.large"|"r6gd.xlarge"|"r6gd.2xlarge"|"r6gd.4xlarge"|"r6gd.8xlarge"|"r6gd.12xlarge"|"r6gd.16xlarge"|"r6gd.metal"|"r6i.large"|"r6i.xlarge"|"r6i.2xlarge"|"r6i.4xlarge"|"r6i.8xlarge"|"r6i.12xlarge"|"r6i.16xlarge"|"r6i.24xlarge"|"r6i.32xlarge"|"r6i.metal"|"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"|"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"|"vt1.3xlarge"|"vt1.6xlarge"|"vt1.24xlarge"|"x1.16xlarge"|"x1.32xlarge"|"x1e.xlarge"|"x1e.2xlarge"|"x1e.4xlarge"|"x1e.8xlarge"|"x1e.16xlarge"|"x1e.32xlarge"|"x2iezn.2xlarge"|"x2iezn.4xlarge"|"x2iezn.6xlarge"|"x2iezn.8xlarge"|"x2iezn.12xlarge"|"x2iezn.metal"|"x2gd.medium"|"x2gd.large"|"x2gd.xlarge"|"x2gd.2xlarge"|"x2gd.4xlarge"|"x2gd.8xlarge"|"x2gd.12xlarge"|"x2gd.16xlarge"|"x2gd.metal"|"z1d.large"|"z1d.xlarge"|"z1d.2xlarge"|"z1d.3xlarge"|"z1d.6xlarge"|"z1d.12xlarge"|"z1d.metal"|"x2idn.16xlarge"|"x2idn.24xlarge"|"x2idn.32xlarge"|"x2iedn.xlarge"|"x2iedn.2xlarge"|"x2iedn.4xlarge"|"x2iedn.8xlarge"|"x2iedn.16xlarge"|"x2iedn.24xlarge"|"x2iedn.32xlarge"|"c6a.large"|"c6a.xlarge"|"c6a.2xlarge"|"c6a.4xlarge"|"c6a.8xlarge"|"c6a.12xlarge"|"c6a.16xlarge"|"c6a.24xlarge"|"c6a.32xlarge"|"c6a.48xlarge"|"c6a.metal"|"m6a.metal"|"i4i.large"|"i4i.xlarge"|"i4i.2xlarge"|"i4i.4xlarge"|"i4i.8xlarge"|"i4i.16xlarge"|"i4i.32xlarge"|"i4i.metal"|"x2idn.metal"|"x2iedn.metal"|"c7g.medium"|"c7g.large"|"c7g.xlarge"|"c7g.2xlarge"|"c7g.4xlarge"|"c7g.8xlarge"|"c7g.12xlarge"|"c7g.16xlarge"|"mac2.metal"|"c6id.large"|"c6id.xlarge"|"c6id.2xlarge"|"c6id.4xlarge"|"c6id.8xlarge"|"c6id.12xlarge"|"c6id.16xlarge"|"c6id.24xlarge"|"c6id.32xlarge"|"c6id.metal"|"m6id.large"|"m6id.xlarge"|"m6id.2xlarge"|"m6id.4xlarge"|"m6id.8xlarge"|"m6id.12xlarge"|"m6id.16xlarge"|"m6id.24xlarge"|"m6id.32xlarge"|"m6id.metal"|"r6id.large"|"r6id.xlarge"|"r6id.2xlarge"|"r6id.4xlarge"|"r6id.8xlarge"|"r6id.12xlarge"|"r6id.16xlarge"|"r6id.24xlarge"|"r6id.32xlarge"|"r6id.metal"|"r6a.large"|"r6a.xlarge"|"r6a.2xlarge"|"r6a.4xlarge"|"r6a.8xlarge"|"r6a.12xlarge"|"r6a.16xlarge"|"r6a.24xlarge"|"r6a.32xlarge"|"r6a.48xlarge"|"r6a.metal"|"p4de.24xlarge"|"u-3tb1.56xlarge"|"u-18tb1.112xlarge"|"u-24tb1.112xlarge"|"trn1.2xlarge"|"trn1.32xlarge"|"hpc6id.32xlarge"|"c6in.large"|"c6in.xlarge"|"c6in.2xlarge"|"c6in.4xlarge"|"c6in.8xlarge"|"c6in.12xlarge"|"c6in.16xlarge"|"c6in.24xlarge"|"c6in.32xlarge"|"m6in.large"|"m6in.xlarge"|"m6in.2xlarge"|"m6in.4xlarge"|"m6in.8xlarge"|"m6in.12xlarge"|"m6in.16xlarge"|"m6in.24xlarge"|"m6in.32xlarge"|"m6idn.large"|"m6idn.xlarge"|"m6idn.2xlarge"|"m6idn.4xlarge"|"m6idn.8xlarge"|"m6idn.12xlarge"|"m6idn.16xlarge"|"m6idn.24xlarge"|"m6idn.32xlarge"|"r6in.large"|"r6in.xlarge"|"r6in.2xlarge"|"r6in.4xlarge"|"r6in.8xlarge"|"r6in.12xlarge"|"r6in.16xlarge"|"r6in.24xlarge"|"r6in.32xlarge"|"r6idn.large"|"r6idn.xlarge"|"r6idn.2xlarge"|"r6idn.4xlarge"|"r6idn.8xlarge"|"r6idn.12xlarge"|"r6idn.16xlarge"|"r6idn.24xlarge"|"r6idn.32xlarge"|"c7g.metal"|"m7g.medium"|"m7g.large"|"m7g.xlarge"|"m7g.2xlarge"|"m7g.4xlarge"|"m7g.8xlarge"|"m7g.12xlarge"|"m7g.16xlarge"|"m7g.metal"|"r7g.medium"|"r7g.large"|"r7g.xlarge"|"r7g.2xlarge"|"r7g.4xlarge"|"r7g.8xlarge"|"r7g.12xlarge"|"r7g.16xlarge"|"r7g.metal"|"c6in.metal"|"m6in.metal"|"m6idn.metal"|"r6in.metal"|"r6idn.metal"|"inf2.xlarge"|"inf2.8xlarge"|"inf2.24xlarge"|"inf2.48xlarge"|"trn1n.32xlarge"|"i4g.large"|"i4g.xlarge"|"i4g.2xlarge"|"i4g.4xlarge"|"i4g.8xlarge"|"i4g.16xlarge"|"hpc7g.4xlarge"|"hpc7g.8xlarge"|"hpc7g.16xlarge"|"c7gn.medium"|"c7gn.large"|"c7gn.xlarge"|"c7gn.2xlarge"|"c7gn.4xlarge"|"c7gn.8xlarge"|"c7gn.12xlarge"|"c7gn.16xlarge"|"p5.48xlarge"|"m7i.large"|"m7i.xlarge"|"m7i.2xlarge"|"m7i.4xlarge"|"m7i.8xlarge"|"m7i.12xlarge"|"m7i.16xlarge"|"m7i.24xlarge"|"m7i.48xlarge"|"m7i-flex.large"|"m7i-flex.xlarge"|"m7i-flex.2xlarge"|"m7i-flex.4xlarge"|"m7i-flex.8xlarge"|"m7a.medium"|"m7a.large"|"m7a.xlarge"|"m7a.2xlarge"|"m7a.4xlarge"|"m7a.8xlarge"|"m7a.12xlarge"|"m7a.16xlarge"|"m7a.24xlarge"|"m7a.32xlarge"|"m7a.48xlarge"|"m7a.metal-48xl"|"hpc7a.12xlarge"|"hpc7a.24xlarge"|"hpc7a.48xlarge"|"hpc7a.96xlarge"|"c7gd.medium"|"c7gd.large"|"c7gd.xlarge"|"c7gd.2xlarge"|"c7gd.4xlarge"|"c7gd.8xlarge"|"c7gd.12xlarge"|"c7gd.16xlarge"|"m7gd.medium"|"m7gd.large"|"m7gd.xlarge"|"m7gd.2xlarge"|"m7gd.4xlarge"|"m7gd.8xlarge"|"m7gd.12xlarge"|"m7gd.16xlarge"|"r7gd.medium"|"r7gd.large"|"r7gd.xlarge"|"r7gd.2xlarge"|"r7gd.4xlarge"|"r7gd.8xlarge"|"r7gd.12xlarge"|"r7gd.16xlarge"|"r7a.medium"|"r7a.large"|"r7a.xlarge"|"r7a.2xlarge"|"r7a.4xlarge"|"r7a.8xlarge"|"r7a.12xlarge"|"r7a.16xlarge"|"r7a.24xlarge"|"r7a.32xlarge"|"r7a.48xlarge"|"c7i.large"|"c7i.xlarge"|"c7i.2xlarge"|"c7i.4xlarge"|"c7i.8xlarge"|"c7i.12xlarge"|"c7i.16xlarge"|"c7i.24xlarge"|"c7i.48xlarge"|"mac2-m2pro.metal"|"r7iz.large"|"r7iz.xlarge"|"r7iz.2xlarge"|"r7iz.4xlarge"|"r7iz.8xlarge"|"r7iz.12xlarge"|"r7iz.16xlarge"|"r7iz.32xlarge"|"c7a.medium"|"c7a.large"|"c7a.xlarge"|"c7a.2xlarge"|"c7a.4xlarge"|"c7a.8xlarge"|"c7a.12xlarge"|"c7a.16xlarge"|"c7a.24xlarge"|"c7a.32xlarge"|"c7a.48xlarge"|"c7a.metal-48xl"|"r7a.metal-48xl"|"r7i.large"|"r7i.xlarge"|"r7i.2xlarge"|"r7i.4xlarge"|"r7i.8xlarge"|"r7i.12xlarge"|"r7i.16xlarge"|"r7i.24xlarge"|"r7i.48xlarge"|"dl2q.24xlarge"|"mac2-m2.metal"|"i4i.12xlarge"|"i4i.24xlarge"|"c7i.metal-24xl"|"c7i.metal-48xl"|"m7i.metal-24xl"|"m7i.metal-48xl"|"r7i.metal-24xl"|"r7i.metal-48xl"|"r7iz.metal-16xl"|"r7iz.metal-32xl"|"c7gd.metal"|"m7gd.metal"|"r7gd.metal"|"g6.xlarge"|"g6.2xlarge"|"g6.4xlarge"|"g6.8xlarge"|"g6.12xlarge"|"g6.16xlarge"|"g6.24xlarge"|"g6.48xlarge"|"gr6.4xlarge"|"gr6.8xlarge"|string;
25556
+ export type InstanceType = "a1.medium"|"a1.large"|"a1.xlarge"|"a1.2xlarge"|"a1.4xlarge"|"a1.metal"|"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.medium"|"c6g.large"|"c6g.xlarge"|"c6g.2xlarge"|"c6g.4xlarge"|"c6g.8xlarge"|"c6g.12xlarge"|"c6g.16xlarge"|"c6g.metal"|"c6gd.medium"|"c6gd.large"|"c6gd.xlarge"|"c6gd.2xlarge"|"c6gd.4xlarge"|"c6gd.8xlarge"|"c6gd.12xlarge"|"c6gd.16xlarge"|"c6gd.metal"|"c6gn.medium"|"c6gn.large"|"c6gn.xlarge"|"c6gn.2xlarge"|"c6gn.4xlarge"|"c6gn.8xlarge"|"c6gn.12xlarge"|"c6gn.16xlarge"|"c6i.large"|"c6i.xlarge"|"c6i.2xlarge"|"c6i.4xlarge"|"c6i.8xlarge"|"c6i.12xlarge"|"c6i.16xlarge"|"c6i.24xlarge"|"c6i.32xlarge"|"c6i.metal"|"cc1.4xlarge"|"cc2.8xlarge"|"cg1.4xlarge"|"cr1.8xlarge"|"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"|"dl1.24xlarge"|"f1.2xlarge"|"f1.4xlarge"|"f1.16xlarge"|"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"|"g5.xlarge"|"g5.2xlarge"|"g5.4xlarge"|"g5.8xlarge"|"g5.12xlarge"|"g5.16xlarge"|"g5.24xlarge"|"g5.48xlarge"|"g5g.xlarge"|"g5g.2xlarge"|"g5g.4xlarge"|"g5g.8xlarge"|"g5g.16xlarge"|"g5g.metal"|"hi1.4xlarge"|"hpc6a.48xlarge"|"hs1.8xlarge"|"h1.2xlarge"|"h1.4xlarge"|"h1.8xlarge"|"h1.16xlarge"|"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"|"im4gn.large"|"im4gn.xlarge"|"im4gn.2xlarge"|"im4gn.4xlarge"|"im4gn.8xlarge"|"im4gn.16xlarge"|"inf1.xlarge"|"inf1.2xlarge"|"inf1.6xlarge"|"inf1.24xlarge"|"is4gen.medium"|"is4gen.large"|"is4gen.xlarge"|"is4gen.2xlarge"|"is4gen.4xlarge"|"is4gen.8xlarge"|"m1.small"|"m1.medium"|"m1.large"|"m1.xlarge"|"m2.xlarge"|"m2.2xlarge"|"m2.4xlarge"|"m3.medium"|"m3.large"|"m3.xlarge"|"m3.2xlarge"|"m4.large"|"m4.xlarge"|"m4.2xlarge"|"m4.4xlarge"|"m4.10xlarge"|"m4.16xlarge"|"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"|"m5ad.large"|"m5ad.xlarge"|"m5ad.2xlarge"|"m5ad.4xlarge"|"m5ad.8xlarge"|"m5ad.12xlarge"|"m5ad.16xlarge"|"m5ad.24xlarge"|"m5d.large"|"m5d.xlarge"|"m5d.2xlarge"|"m5d.4xlarge"|"m5d.8xlarge"|"m5d.12xlarge"|"m5d.16xlarge"|"m5d.24xlarge"|"m5d.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"|"m5zn.large"|"m5zn.xlarge"|"m5zn.2xlarge"|"m5zn.3xlarge"|"m5zn.6xlarge"|"m5zn.12xlarge"|"m5zn.metal"|"m6a.large"|"m6a.xlarge"|"m6a.2xlarge"|"m6a.4xlarge"|"m6a.8xlarge"|"m6a.12xlarge"|"m6a.16xlarge"|"m6a.24xlarge"|"m6a.32xlarge"|"m6a.48xlarge"|"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"|"m6i.large"|"m6i.xlarge"|"m6i.2xlarge"|"m6i.4xlarge"|"m6i.8xlarge"|"m6i.12xlarge"|"m6i.16xlarge"|"m6i.24xlarge"|"m6i.32xlarge"|"m6i.metal"|"mac1.metal"|"p2.xlarge"|"p2.8xlarge"|"p2.16xlarge"|"p3.2xlarge"|"p3.8xlarge"|"p3.16xlarge"|"p3dn.24xlarge"|"p4d.24xlarge"|"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"|"r5ad.large"|"r5ad.xlarge"|"r5ad.2xlarge"|"r5ad.4xlarge"|"r5ad.8xlarge"|"r5ad.12xlarge"|"r5ad.16xlarge"|"r5ad.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"|"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"|"r6g.medium"|"r6g.large"|"r6g.xlarge"|"r6g.2xlarge"|"r6g.4xlarge"|"r6g.8xlarge"|"r6g.12xlarge"|"r6g.16xlarge"|"r6g.metal"|"r6gd.medium"|"r6gd.large"|"r6gd.xlarge"|"r6gd.2xlarge"|"r6gd.4xlarge"|"r6gd.8xlarge"|"r6gd.12xlarge"|"r6gd.16xlarge"|"r6gd.metal"|"r6i.large"|"r6i.xlarge"|"r6i.2xlarge"|"r6i.4xlarge"|"r6i.8xlarge"|"r6i.12xlarge"|"r6i.16xlarge"|"r6i.24xlarge"|"r6i.32xlarge"|"r6i.metal"|"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"|"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"|"vt1.3xlarge"|"vt1.6xlarge"|"vt1.24xlarge"|"x1.16xlarge"|"x1.32xlarge"|"x1e.xlarge"|"x1e.2xlarge"|"x1e.4xlarge"|"x1e.8xlarge"|"x1e.16xlarge"|"x1e.32xlarge"|"x2iezn.2xlarge"|"x2iezn.4xlarge"|"x2iezn.6xlarge"|"x2iezn.8xlarge"|"x2iezn.12xlarge"|"x2iezn.metal"|"x2gd.medium"|"x2gd.large"|"x2gd.xlarge"|"x2gd.2xlarge"|"x2gd.4xlarge"|"x2gd.8xlarge"|"x2gd.12xlarge"|"x2gd.16xlarge"|"x2gd.metal"|"z1d.large"|"z1d.xlarge"|"z1d.2xlarge"|"z1d.3xlarge"|"z1d.6xlarge"|"z1d.12xlarge"|"z1d.metal"|"x2idn.16xlarge"|"x2idn.24xlarge"|"x2idn.32xlarge"|"x2iedn.xlarge"|"x2iedn.2xlarge"|"x2iedn.4xlarge"|"x2iedn.8xlarge"|"x2iedn.16xlarge"|"x2iedn.24xlarge"|"x2iedn.32xlarge"|"c6a.large"|"c6a.xlarge"|"c6a.2xlarge"|"c6a.4xlarge"|"c6a.8xlarge"|"c6a.12xlarge"|"c6a.16xlarge"|"c6a.24xlarge"|"c6a.32xlarge"|"c6a.48xlarge"|"c6a.metal"|"m6a.metal"|"i4i.large"|"i4i.xlarge"|"i4i.2xlarge"|"i4i.4xlarge"|"i4i.8xlarge"|"i4i.16xlarge"|"i4i.32xlarge"|"i4i.metal"|"x2idn.metal"|"x2iedn.metal"|"c7g.medium"|"c7g.large"|"c7g.xlarge"|"c7g.2xlarge"|"c7g.4xlarge"|"c7g.8xlarge"|"c7g.12xlarge"|"c7g.16xlarge"|"mac2.metal"|"c6id.large"|"c6id.xlarge"|"c6id.2xlarge"|"c6id.4xlarge"|"c6id.8xlarge"|"c6id.12xlarge"|"c6id.16xlarge"|"c6id.24xlarge"|"c6id.32xlarge"|"c6id.metal"|"m6id.large"|"m6id.xlarge"|"m6id.2xlarge"|"m6id.4xlarge"|"m6id.8xlarge"|"m6id.12xlarge"|"m6id.16xlarge"|"m6id.24xlarge"|"m6id.32xlarge"|"m6id.metal"|"r6id.large"|"r6id.xlarge"|"r6id.2xlarge"|"r6id.4xlarge"|"r6id.8xlarge"|"r6id.12xlarge"|"r6id.16xlarge"|"r6id.24xlarge"|"r6id.32xlarge"|"r6id.metal"|"r6a.large"|"r6a.xlarge"|"r6a.2xlarge"|"r6a.4xlarge"|"r6a.8xlarge"|"r6a.12xlarge"|"r6a.16xlarge"|"r6a.24xlarge"|"r6a.32xlarge"|"r6a.48xlarge"|"r6a.metal"|"p4de.24xlarge"|"u-3tb1.56xlarge"|"u-18tb1.112xlarge"|"u-24tb1.112xlarge"|"trn1.2xlarge"|"trn1.32xlarge"|"hpc6id.32xlarge"|"c6in.large"|"c6in.xlarge"|"c6in.2xlarge"|"c6in.4xlarge"|"c6in.8xlarge"|"c6in.12xlarge"|"c6in.16xlarge"|"c6in.24xlarge"|"c6in.32xlarge"|"m6in.large"|"m6in.xlarge"|"m6in.2xlarge"|"m6in.4xlarge"|"m6in.8xlarge"|"m6in.12xlarge"|"m6in.16xlarge"|"m6in.24xlarge"|"m6in.32xlarge"|"m6idn.large"|"m6idn.xlarge"|"m6idn.2xlarge"|"m6idn.4xlarge"|"m6idn.8xlarge"|"m6idn.12xlarge"|"m6idn.16xlarge"|"m6idn.24xlarge"|"m6idn.32xlarge"|"r6in.large"|"r6in.xlarge"|"r6in.2xlarge"|"r6in.4xlarge"|"r6in.8xlarge"|"r6in.12xlarge"|"r6in.16xlarge"|"r6in.24xlarge"|"r6in.32xlarge"|"r6idn.large"|"r6idn.xlarge"|"r6idn.2xlarge"|"r6idn.4xlarge"|"r6idn.8xlarge"|"r6idn.12xlarge"|"r6idn.16xlarge"|"r6idn.24xlarge"|"r6idn.32xlarge"|"c7g.metal"|"m7g.medium"|"m7g.large"|"m7g.xlarge"|"m7g.2xlarge"|"m7g.4xlarge"|"m7g.8xlarge"|"m7g.12xlarge"|"m7g.16xlarge"|"m7g.metal"|"r7g.medium"|"r7g.large"|"r7g.xlarge"|"r7g.2xlarge"|"r7g.4xlarge"|"r7g.8xlarge"|"r7g.12xlarge"|"r7g.16xlarge"|"r7g.metal"|"c6in.metal"|"m6in.metal"|"m6idn.metal"|"r6in.metal"|"r6idn.metal"|"inf2.xlarge"|"inf2.8xlarge"|"inf2.24xlarge"|"inf2.48xlarge"|"trn1n.32xlarge"|"i4g.large"|"i4g.xlarge"|"i4g.2xlarge"|"i4g.4xlarge"|"i4g.8xlarge"|"i4g.16xlarge"|"hpc7g.4xlarge"|"hpc7g.8xlarge"|"hpc7g.16xlarge"|"c7gn.medium"|"c7gn.large"|"c7gn.xlarge"|"c7gn.2xlarge"|"c7gn.4xlarge"|"c7gn.8xlarge"|"c7gn.12xlarge"|"c7gn.16xlarge"|"p5.48xlarge"|"m7i.large"|"m7i.xlarge"|"m7i.2xlarge"|"m7i.4xlarge"|"m7i.8xlarge"|"m7i.12xlarge"|"m7i.16xlarge"|"m7i.24xlarge"|"m7i.48xlarge"|"m7i-flex.large"|"m7i-flex.xlarge"|"m7i-flex.2xlarge"|"m7i-flex.4xlarge"|"m7i-flex.8xlarge"|"m7a.medium"|"m7a.large"|"m7a.xlarge"|"m7a.2xlarge"|"m7a.4xlarge"|"m7a.8xlarge"|"m7a.12xlarge"|"m7a.16xlarge"|"m7a.24xlarge"|"m7a.32xlarge"|"m7a.48xlarge"|"m7a.metal-48xl"|"hpc7a.12xlarge"|"hpc7a.24xlarge"|"hpc7a.48xlarge"|"hpc7a.96xlarge"|"c7gd.medium"|"c7gd.large"|"c7gd.xlarge"|"c7gd.2xlarge"|"c7gd.4xlarge"|"c7gd.8xlarge"|"c7gd.12xlarge"|"c7gd.16xlarge"|"m7gd.medium"|"m7gd.large"|"m7gd.xlarge"|"m7gd.2xlarge"|"m7gd.4xlarge"|"m7gd.8xlarge"|"m7gd.12xlarge"|"m7gd.16xlarge"|"r7gd.medium"|"r7gd.large"|"r7gd.xlarge"|"r7gd.2xlarge"|"r7gd.4xlarge"|"r7gd.8xlarge"|"r7gd.12xlarge"|"r7gd.16xlarge"|"r7a.medium"|"r7a.large"|"r7a.xlarge"|"r7a.2xlarge"|"r7a.4xlarge"|"r7a.8xlarge"|"r7a.12xlarge"|"r7a.16xlarge"|"r7a.24xlarge"|"r7a.32xlarge"|"r7a.48xlarge"|"c7i.large"|"c7i.xlarge"|"c7i.2xlarge"|"c7i.4xlarge"|"c7i.8xlarge"|"c7i.12xlarge"|"c7i.16xlarge"|"c7i.24xlarge"|"c7i.48xlarge"|"mac2-m2pro.metal"|"r7iz.large"|"r7iz.xlarge"|"r7iz.2xlarge"|"r7iz.4xlarge"|"r7iz.8xlarge"|"r7iz.12xlarge"|"r7iz.16xlarge"|"r7iz.32xlarge"|"c7a.medium"|"c7a.large"|"c7a.xlarge"|"c7a.2xlarge"|"c7a.4xlarge"|"c7a.8xlarge"|"c7a.12xlarge"|"c7a.16xlarge"|"c7a.24xlarge"|"c7a.32xlarge"|"c7a.48xlarge"|"c7a.metal-48xl"|"r7a.metal-48xl"|"r7i.large"|"r7i.xlarge"|"r7i.2xlarge"|"r7i.4xlarge"|"r7i.8xlarge"|"r7i.12xlarge"|"r7i.16xlarge"|"r7i.24xlarge"|"r7i.48xlarge"|"dl2q.24xlarge"|"mac2-m2.metal"|"i4i.12xlarge"|"i4i.24xlarge"|"c7i.metal-24xl"|"c7i.metal-48xl"|"m7i.metal-24xl"|"m7i.metal-48xl"|"r7i.metal-24xl"|"r7i.metal-48xl"|"r7iz.metal-16xl"|"r7iz.metal-32xl"|"c7gd.metal"|"m7gd.metal"|"r7gd.metal"|"g6.xlarge"|"g6.2xlarge"|"g6.4xlarge"|"g6.8xlarge"|"g6.12xlarge"|"g6.16xlarge"|"g6.24xlarge"|"g6.48xlarge"|"gr6.4xlarge"|"gr6.8xlarge"|"c7i-flex.large"|"c7i-flex.xlarge"|"c7i-flex.2xlarge"|"c7i-flex.4xlarge"|"c7i-flex.8xlarge"|"u7i-12tb.224xlarge"|"u7in-16tb.224xlarge"|"u7in-24tb.224xlarge"|"u7in-32tb.224xlarge"|"u7ib-12tb.224xlarge"|"c7gn.metal"|"r8g.medium"|"r8g.large"|"r8g.xlarge"|"r8g.2xlarge"|"r8g.4xlarge"|"r8g.8xlarge"|"r8g.12xlarge"|"r8g.16xlarge"|"r8g.24xlarge"|"r8g.48xlarge"|"r8g.metal-24xl"|"r8g.metal-48xl"|"mac2-m1ultra.metal"|string;
25294
25557
  export type InstanceTypeHypervisor = "nitro"|"xen"|string;
25295
25558
  export interface InstanceTypeInfo {
25296
25559
  /**
@@ -25409,6 +25672,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25409
25672
  * Describes the Neuron accelerator settings for the instance type.
25410
25673
  */
25411
25674
  NeuronInfo?: NeuronInfo;
25675
+ /**
25676
+ * Indicates whether a local Precision Time Protocol (PTP) hardware clock (PHC) is supported.
25677
+ */
25678
+ PhcSupport?: PhcSupport;
25412
25679
  }
25413
25680
  export interface InstanceTypeInfoFromInstanceRequirements {
25414
25681
  /**
@@ -25537,6 +25804,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25537
25804
  }
25538
25805
  export type IpRangeList = IpRange[];
25539
25806
  export type IpRanges = String[];
25807
+ export type IpSource = "amazon"|"byoip"|"none"|string;
25540
25808
  export interface Ipam {
25541
25809
  /**
25542
25810
  * The Amazon Web Services account ID of the owner of the IPAM.
@@ -25602,6 +25870,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25602
25870
  * IPAM is offered in a Free Tier and an Advanced Tier. For more information about the features available in each tier and the costs associated with the tiers, see Amazon VPC pricing &gt; IPAM tab.
25603
25871
  */
25604
25872
  Tier?: IpamTier;
25873
+ /**
25874
+ * Enable this option to use your own GUA ranges as private IPv6 addresses. This option is disabled by default.
25875
+ */
25876
+ EnablePrivateGua?: Boolean;
25605
25877
  }
25606
25878
  export type IpamAddressHistoryMaxResults = number;
25607
25879
  export interface IpamAddressHistoryRecord {
@@ -25753,7 +26025,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25753
26025
  */
25754
26026
  Tags?: IpamPublicAddressTags;
25755
26027
  /**
25756
- * The network border group that the resource that the IP address is assigned to is in.
26028
+ * The Availability Zone (AZ) or Local Zone (LZ) network border group that the resource that the IP address is assigned to is in. Defaults to an AZ network border group. For more information on available Local Zones, see Local Zone availability in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
25757
26029
  */
25758
26030
  NetworkBorderGroup?: String;
25759
26031
  /**
@@ -25787,6 +26059,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25787
26059
  * The resource CIDR.
25788
26060
  */
25789
26061
  ResourceCidr?: String;
26062
+ /**
26063
+ * The source that allocated the IP address space. byoip or amazon indicates public IP address space allocated by Amazon or space that you have allocated with Bring your own IP (BYOIP). none indicates private space.
26064
+ */
26065
+ IpSource?: IpamResourceCidrIpSource;
25790
26066
  /**
25791
26067
  * The resource type.
25792
26068
  */
@@ -25803,10 +26079,18 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25803
26079
  * The VPC ID.
25804
26080
  */
25805
26081
  VpcId?: String;
26082
+ /**
26083
+ * For elastic network interfaces, this is the status of whether or not the elastic network interface is attached.
26084
+ */
26085
+ NetworkInterfaceAttachmentStatus?: IpamNetworkInterfaceAttachmentStatus;
25806
26086
  /**
25807
26087
  * The last successful resource discovery time.
25808
26088
  */
25809
26089
  SampleTime?: MillisecondDateTime;
26090
+ /**
26091
+ * The Availability Zone ID.
26092
+ */
26093
+ AvailabilityZoneId?: String;
25810
26094
  }
25811
26095
  export type IpamDiscoveredResourceCidrSet = IpamDiscoveredResourceCidr[];
25812
26096
  export type IpamDiscoveryFailureCode = "assume-role-failure"|"throttling-failure"|"unauthorized-failure"|string;
@@ -25820,10 +26104,60 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25820
26104
  */
25821
26105
  Message?: String;
25822
26106
  }
26107
+ export interface IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken {
26108
+ /**
26109
+ * The ID of the token.
26110
+ */
26111
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId;
26112
+ /**
26113
+ * Token ARN.
26114
+ */
26115
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenArn?: ResourceArn;
26116
+ /**
26117
+ * The ID of the IPAM that created the token.
26118
+ */
26119
+ IpamId?: IpamId;
26120
+ /**
26121
+ * ARN of the IPAM that created the token.
26122
+ */
26123
+ IpamArn?: ResourceArn;
26124
+ /**
26125
+ * Region of the IPAM that created the token.
26126
+ */
26127
+ IpamRegion?: String;
26128
+ /**
26129
+ * Token value.
26130
+ */
26131
+ TokenValue?: String;
26132
+ /**
26133
+ * Token name.
26134
+ */
26135
+ TokenName?: String;
26136
+ /**
26137
+ * Token expiration.
26138
+ */
26139
+ NotAfter?: MillisecondDateTime;
26140
+ /**
26141
+ * Token status.
26142
+ */
26143
+ Status?: TokenState;
26144
+ /**
26145
+ * Token tags.
26146
+ */
26147
+ Tags?: TagList;
26148
+ /**
26149
+ * Token state.
26150
+ */
26151
+ State?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenState;
26152
+ }
26153
+ export type IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId = string;
26154
+ export type IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenSet = IpamExternalResourceVerificationToken[];
26155
+ export type IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenState = "create-in-progress"|"create-complete"|"create-failed"|"delete-in-progress"|"delete-complete"|"delete-failed"|string;
25823
26156
  export type IpamId = string;
25824
26157
  export type IpamManagementState = "managed"|"unmanaged"|"ignored"|string;
25825
26158
  export type IpamMaxResults = number;
25826
26159
  export type IpamNetmaskLength = number;
26160
+ export type IpamNetworkInterfaceAttachmentStatus = "available"|"in-use"|string;
25827
26161
  export interface IpamOperatingRegion {
25828
26162
  /**
25829
26163
  * The name of the operating Region.
@@ -25866,7 +26200,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25866
26200
  */
25867
26201
  IpamRegion?: String;
25868
26202
  /**
25869
- * The locale of the IPAM pool. In IPAM, the locale is the Amazon Web Services Region where you want to make an IPAM pool available for allocations. Only resources in the same Region as the locale of the pool can get IP address allocations from the pool. You can only allocate a CIDR for a VPC, for example, from an IPAM pool that shares a locale with the VPC’s Region. Note that once you choose a Locale for a pool, you cannot modify it. If you choose an Amazon Web Services Region for locale that has not been configured as an operating Region for the IPAM, you'll get an error.
26203
+ * The locale of the IPAM pool. The locale for the pool should be one of the following: An Amazon Web Services Region where you want this IPAM pool to be available for allocations. The network border group for an Amazon Web Services Local Zone where you want this IPAM pool to be available for allocations (supported Local Zones). This option is only available for IPAM IPv4 pools in the public scope. If you choose an Amazon Web Services Region for locale that has not been configured as an operating Region for the IPAM, you'll get an error.
25870
26204
  */
25871
26205
  Locale?: String;
25872
26206
  /**
@@ -25922,7 +26256,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
25922
26256
  */
25923
26257
  AwsService?: IpamPoolAwsService;
25924
26258
  /**
25925
- * The IP address source for pools in the public scope. Only used for provisioning IP address CIDRs to pools in the public scope. Default is BYOIP. For more information, see Create IPv6 pools in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. By default, you can add only one Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block to a top-level IPv6 pool. For information on increasing the default limit, see Quotas for your IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
26259
+ * The IP address source for pools in the public scope. Only used for provisioning IP address CIDRs to pools in the public scope. Default is BYOIP. For more information, see Create IPv6 pools in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide. By default, you can add only one Amazon-provided IPv6 CIDR block to a top-level IPv6 pool. For information on increasing the default limit, see Quotas for your IPAM in the Amazon VPC IPAM User Guide.
25926
26260
  */
25927
26261
  PublicIpSource?: IpamPoolPublicIpSource;
25928
26262
  /**
@@ -26135,7 +26469,12 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26135
26469
  * The ID of a VPC.
26136
26470
  */
26137
26471
  VpcId?: String;
26472
+ /**
26473
+ * The Availability Zone ID.
26474
+ */
26475
+ AvailabilityZoneId?: String;
26138
26476
  }
26477
+ export type IpamResourceCidrIpSource = "amazon"|"byoip"|"none"|string;
26139
26478
  export type IpamResourceCidrSet = IpamResourceCidr[];
26140
26479
  export interface IpamResourceDiscovery {
26141
26480
  /**
@@ -26298,13 +26637,13 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26298
26637
  export type Ipv4PrefixListResponse = Ipv4PrefixSpecificationResponse[];
26299
26638
  export interface Ipv4PrefixSpecification {
26300
26639
  /**
26301
- * The IPv4 prefix. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
26640
+ * The IPv4 prefix. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
26302
26641
  */
26303
26642
  Ipv4Prefix?: String;
26304
26643
  }
26305
26644
  export interface Ipv4PrefixSpecificationRequest {
26306
26645
  /**
26307
- * The IPv4 prefix. For information, see Assigning prefixes to Amazon EC2 network interfaces in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
26646
+ * The IPv4 prefix. For information, see Assigning prefixes to network interfaces in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
26308
26647
  */
26309
26648
  Ipv4Prefix?: String;
26310
26649
  }
@@ -26316,6 +26655,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
26316
26655
  }
26317
26656
  export type Ipv4PrefixesList = Ipv4PrefixSpecification[];
26318
26657
  export type Ipv6Address = string;
26658
+ export type Ipv6AddressAttribute = "public"|"private"|string;
26319
26659
  export type Ipv6AddressList = String[];
26320
26660
  export interface Ipv6CidrAssociation {
26321
26661
  /**
@@ -27015,7 +27355,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
27015
27355
  */
27016
27356
  EnaSrdSpecification?: LaunchTemplateEnaSrdSpecification;
27017
27357
  /**
27018
- * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
27358
+ * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Idle connection tracking timeout in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
27019
27359
  */
27020
27360
  ConnectionTrackingSpecification?: ConnectionTrackingSpecification;
27021
27361
  }
@@ -27038,7 +27378,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
27038
27378
  */
27039
27379
  Description?: String;
27040
27380
  /**
27041
- * The device index for the network interface attachment.
27381
+ * The device index for the network interface attachment. Each network interface requires a device index. If you create a launch template that includes secondary network interfaces but not a primary network interface, then you must add a primary network interface as a launch parameter when you launch an instance from the template.
27042
27382
  */
27043
27383
  DeviceIndex?: Integer;
27044
27384
  /**
@@ -27046,7 +27386,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
27046
27386
  */
27047
27387
  Groups?: SecurityGroupIdStringList;
27048
27388
  /**
27049
- * The type of network interface. To create an Elastic Fabric Adapter (EFA), specify efa. For more information, see Elastic Fabric Adapter in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. If you are not creating an EFA, specify interface or omit this parameter. Valid values: interface | efa
27389
+ * The type of network interface. To create an Elastic Fabric Adapter (EFA), specify efa. For more information, see Elastic Fabric Adapter in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. If you are not creating an EFA, specify interface or omit this parameter. Valid values: interface | efa
27050
27390
  */
27051
27391
  InterfaceType?: String;
27052
27392
  /**
@@ -27106,7 +27446,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
27106
27446
  */
27107
27447
  EnaSrdSpecification?: EnaSrdSpecificationRequest;
27108
27448
  /**
27109
- * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
27449
+ * A security group connection tracking specification that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Idle connection tracking timeout in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
27110
27450
  */
27111
27451
  ConnectionTrackingSpecification?: ConnectionTrackingSpecificationRequest;
27112
27452
  }
@@ -27145,7 +27485,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
27145
27485
  */
27146
27486
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
27147
27487
  /**
27148
- * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowest-price and price-capacity-optimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
27488
+ * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. These are the same units that you chose to set the target capacity in terms of instances, or a performance characteristic such as vCPUs, memory, or I/O. If the target capacity divided by this value is not a whole number, Amazon EC2 rounds the number of instances to the next whole number. If this value is not specified, the default is 1. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowestPrice and priceCapacityOptimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
27149
27489
  */
27150
27490
  WeightedCapacity?: Double;
27151
27491
  /**
@@ -28084,7 +28424,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28084
28424
  */
28085
28425
  GroupName: String;
28086
28426
  /**
28087
- * Indicates whether you are opted in to the Local Zone group or Wavelength Zone group. The only valid value is opted-in. You must contact Amazon Web Services Support to opt out of a Local Zone or Wavelength Zone group.
28427
+ * Indicates whether to opt in to the zone group. The only valid value is opted-in. You must contact Amazon Web Services Support to opt out of a Local Zone or Wavelength Zone group.
28088
28428
  */
28089
28429
  OptInStatus: ModifyAvailabilityZoneOptInStatus;
28090
28430
  /**
@@ -28156,6 +28496,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28156
28496
  * Reserved for future use.
28157
28497
  */
28158
28498
  AdditionalInfo?: String;
28499
+ /**
28500
+ * The matching criteria (instance eligibility) that you want to use in the modified Capacity Reservation. If you change the instance eligibility of an existing Capacity Reservation from targeted to open, any running instances that match the attributes of the Capacity Reservation, have the CapacityReservationPreference set to open, and are not yet running in the Capacity Reservation, will automatically use the modified Capacity Reservation. To modify the instance eligibility, the Capacity Reservation must be completely idle (zero usage).
28501
+ */
28502
+ InstanceMatchCriteria?: InstanceMatchCriteria;
28159
28503
  }
28160
28504
  export interface ModifyCapacityReservationResult {
28161
28505
  /**
@@ -28249,7 +28593,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28249
28593
  }
28250
28594
  export interface ModifyEbsDefaultKmsKeyIdRequest {
28251
28595
  /**
28252
- * The identifier of the Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails. Amazon EBS does not support asymmetric KMS keys.
28596
+ * The identifier of the KMS key to use for Amazon EBS encryption. If this parameter is not specified, your KMS key for Amazon EBS is used. If KmsKeyId is specified, the encrypted state must be true. You can specify the KMS key using any of the following: Key ID. For example, 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Key alias. For example, alias/ExampleAlias. Key ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab. Alias ARN. For example, arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:012345678910:alias/ExampleAlias. Amazon Web Services authenticates the KMS key asynchronously. Therefore, if you specify an ID, alias, or ARN that is not valid, the action can appear to complete, but eventually fails. Amazon EBS does not support asymmetric KMS keys.
28253
28597
  */
28254
28598
  KmsKeyId: KmsKeyId;
28255
28599
  /**
@@ -28353,7 +28697,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28353
28697
  */
28354
28698
  HostIds: RequestHostIdList;
28355
28699
  /**
28356
- * Indicates whether to enable or disable host recovery for the Dedicated Host. For more information, see Host recovery in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
28700
+ * Indicates whether to enable or disable host recovery for the Dedicated Host. For more information, see Host recovery in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
28357
28701
  */
28358
28702
  HostRecovery?: HostRecovery;
28359
28703
  /**
@@ -28365,7 +28709,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28365
28709
  */
28366
28710
  InstanceFamily?: String;
28367
28711
  /**
28368
- * Indicates whether to enable or disable host maintenance for the Dedicated Host. For more information, see Host maintenance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
28712
+ * Indicates whether to enable or disable host maintenance for the Dedicated Host. For more information, see Host maintenance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
28369
28713
  */
28370
28714
  HostMaintenance?: HostMaintenance;
28371
28715
  }
@@ -28515,7 +28859,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28515
28859
  */
28516
28860
  SriovNetSupport?: AttributeValue;
28517
28861
  /**
28518
- * Changes the instance's user data to the specified value. If you are using an Amazon Web Services SDK or command line tool, base64-encoding is performed for you, and you can load the text from a file. Otherwise, you must provide base64-encoded text.
28862
+ * Changes the instance's user data to the specified value. User data must be base64-encoded. Depending on the tool or SDK that you're using, the base64-encoding might be performed for you. For more information, see Work with instance user data.
28519
28863
  */
28520
28864
  UserData?: BlobAttributeValue;
28521
28865
  /**
@@ -28523,7 +28867,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28523
28867
  */
28524
28868
  Value?: String;
28525
28869
  /**
28526
- * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for stop protection. For more information, see Stop Protection.
28870
+ * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for stop protection. For more information, see Enable stop protection for your instance.
28527
28871
  */
28528
28872
  DisableApiStop?: AttributeBooleanValue;
28529
28873
  }
@@ -28828,6 +29172,10 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
28828
29172
  * IPAM is offered in a Free Tier and an Advanced Tier. For more information about the features available in each tier and the costs associated with the tiers, see Amazon VPC pricing &gt; IPAM tab.
28829
29173
  */
28830
29174
  Tier?: IpamTier;
29175
+ /**
29176
+ * Enable this option to use your own GUA ranges as private IPv6 addresses. This option is disabled by default.
29177
+ */
29178
+ EnablePrivateGua?: Boolean;
28831
29179
  }
28832
29180
  export interface ModifyIpamResourceCidrRequest {
28833
29181
  /**
@@ -29333,7 +29681,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29333
29681
  }
29334
29682
  export interface ModifyTrafficMirrorFilterRuleResult {
29335
29683
  /**
29336
- * Modifies a Traffic Mirror rule.
29684
+ * Tags are not returned for ModifyTrafficMirrorFilterRule. A Traffic Mirror rule.
29337
29685
  */
29338
29686
  TrafficMirrorFilterRule?: TrafficMirrorFilterRule;
29339
29687
  }
@@ -29563,7 +29911,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29563
29911
  */
29564
29912
  PolicyDocument?: String;
29565
29913
  /**
29566
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
29914
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29567
29915
  */
29568
29916
  ClientToken?: String;
29569
29917
  /**
@@ -29611,7 +29959,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29611
29959
  */
29612
29960
  Description?: String;
29613
29961
  /**
29614
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
29962
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29615
29963
  */
29616
29964
  ClientToken?: String;
29617
29965
  /**
@@ -29640,7 +29988,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29640
29988
  */
29641
29989
  PolicyDocument?: String;
29642
29990
  /**
29643
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
29991
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29644
29992
  */
29645
29993
  ClientToken?: String;
29646
29994
  /**
@@ -29680,7 +30028,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29680
30028
  */
29681
30029
  Description?: String;
29682
30030
  /**
29683
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
30031
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29684
30032
  */
29685
30033
  ClientToken?: String;
29686
30034
  /**
@@ -29708,7 +30056,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29708
30056
  */
29709
30057
  DryRun?: Boolean;
29710
30058
  /**
29711
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
30059
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29712
30060
  */
29713
30061
  ClientToken?: String;
29714
30062
  }
@@ -29732,7 +30080,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29732
30080
  */
29733
30081
  DryRun?: Boolean;
29734
30082
  /**
29735
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
30083
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29736
30084
  */
29737
30085
  ClientToken?: String;
29738
30086
  }
@@ -29800,7 +30148,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
29800
30148
  */
29801
30149
  DryRun?: Boolean;
29802
30150
  /**
29803
- * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
30151
+ * A unique, case-sensitive token that you provide to ensure idempotency of your modification request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
29804
30152
  */
29805
30153
  ClientToken?: String;
29806
30154
  /**
@@ -30375,6 +30723,42 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
30375
30723
  */
30376
30724
  ByoipCidr?: ByoipCidr;
30377
30725
  }
30726
+ export interface MoveCapacityReservationInstancesRequest {
30727
+ /**
30728
+ * Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation.
30729
+ */
30730
+ DryRun?: Boolean;
30731
+ /**
30732
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensure Idempotency.
30733
+ */
30734
+ ClientToken?: String;
30735
+ /**
30736
+ * The ID of the Capacity Reservation from which you want to move capacity.
30737
+ */
30738
+ SourceCapacityReservationId: CapacityReservationId;
30739
+ /**
30740
+ * The ID of the Capacity Reservation that you want to move capacity into.
30741
+ */
30742
+ DestinationCapacityReservationId: CapacityReservationId;
30743
+ /**
30744
+ * The number of instances that you want to move from the source Capacity Reservation.
30745
+ */
30746
+ InstanceCount: Integer;
30747
+ }
30748
+ export interface MoveCapacityReservationInstancesResult {
30749
+ /**
30750
+ * Information about the source Capacity Reservation.
30751
+ */
30752
+ SourceCapacityReservation?: CapacityReservation;
30753
+ /**
30754
+ * Information about the destination Capacity Reservation.
30755
+ */
30756
+ DestinationCapacityReservation?: CapacityReservation;
30757
+ /**
30758
+ * The number of instances that were moved from the source Capacity Reservation to the destination Capacity Reservation.
30759
+ */
30760
+ InstanceCount?: Integer;
30761
+ }
30378
30762
  export type MoveStatus = "movingToVpc"|"restoringToClassic"|string;
30379
30763
  export interface MovingAddressStatus {
30380
30764
  /**
@@ -30414,7 +30798,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
30414
30798
  */
30415
30799
  NatGatewayId?: String;
30416
30800
  /**
30417
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
30801
+ * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact Amazon Web Services Support.
30418
30802
  */
30419
30803
  ProvisionedBandwidth?: ProvisionedBandwidth;
30420
30804
  /**
@@ -30481,7 +30865,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
30481
30865
  export type NetmaskLength = number;
30482
30866
  export interface NetworkAcl {
30483
30867
  /**
30484
- * Any associations between the network ACL and one or more subnets
30868
+ * Any associations between the network ACL and your subnets
30485
30869
  */
30486
30870
  Associations?: NetworkAclAssociationList;
30487
30871
  /**
@@ -30895,7 +31279,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
30895
31279
  */
30896
31280
  AvailabilityZone?: String;
30897
31281
  /**
30898
- * A security group connection tracking configuration that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
31282
+ * A security group connection tracking configuration that enables you to set the timeout for connection tracking on an Elastic network interface. For more information, see Connection tracking timeouts in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
30899
31283
  */
30900
31284
  ConnectionTrackingConfiguration?: ConnectionTrackingConfiguration;
30901
31285
  /**
@@ -31121,7 +31505,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
31121
31505
  */
31122
31506
  AwsAccountId?: String;
31123
31507
  /**
31124
- * The Amazon Web Service.
31508
+ * The Amazon Web Services service.
31125
31509
  */
31126
31510
  AwsService?: String;
31127
31511
  /**
@@ -31296,11 +31680,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
31296
31680
  */
31297
31681
  SingleAvailabilityZone?: Boolean;
31298
31682
  /**
31299
- * The minimum target capacity for On-Demand Instances in the fleet. If the minimum target capacity is not reached, the fleet launches no instances. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
31683
+ * The minimum target capacity for On-Demand Instances in the fleet. If this minimum capacity isn't reached, no instances are launched. Constraints: Maximum value of 1000. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
31300
31684
  */
31301
31685
  MinTargetCapacity?: Integer;
31302
31686
  /**
31303
- * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The maxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for maxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
31687
+ * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The maxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for maxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
31304
31688
  */
31305
31689
  MaxTotalPrice?: String;
31306
31690
  }
@@ -31322,11 +31706,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
31322
31706
  */
31323
31707
  SingleAvailabilityZone?: Boolean;
31324
31708
  /**
31325
- * The minimum target capacity for On-Demand Instances in the fleet. If the minimum target capacity is not reached, the fleet launches no instances. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
31709
+ * The minimum target capacity for On-Demand Instances in the fleet. If this minimum capacity isn't reached, no instances are launched. Constraints: Maximum value of 1000. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
31326
31710
  */
31327
31711
  MinTargetCapacity?: Integer;
31328
31712
  /**
31329
- * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The MaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for MaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
31713
+ * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The MaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for MaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
31330
31714
  */
31331
31715
  MaxTotalPrice?: String;
31332
31716
  }
@@ -31699,6 +32083,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
31699
32083
  */
31700
32084
  Value?: String;
31701
32085
  }
32086
+ export type PhcSupport = "unsupported"|"supported"|string;
31702
32087
  export interface Placement {
31703
32088
  /**
31704
32089
  * The Availability Zone of the instance. If not specified, an Availability Zone will be automatically chosen for you based on the load balancing criteria for the Region. This parameter is not supported for CreateFleet.
@@ -31816,7 +32201,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
31816
32201
  export type PortRangeList = PortRange[];
31817
32202
  export interface PrefixList {
31818
32203
  /**
31819
- * The IP address range of the Amazon Web Service.
32204
+ * The IP address range of the Amazon Web Services service.
31820
32205
  */
31821
32206
  Cidrs?: ValueStringList;
31822
32207
  /**
@@ -32129,7 +32514,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
32129
32514
  */
32130
32515
  Cidr?: String;
32131
32516
  /**
32132
- * A signed document that proves that you are authorized to bring a specified IP address range to Amazon using BYOIP. This option applies to public pools only.
32517
+ * A signed document that proves that you are authorized to bring a specified IP address range to Amazon using BYOIP. This option only applies to IPv4 and IPv6 pools in the public scope.
32133
32518
  */
32134
32519
  CidrAuthorizationContext?: IpamCidrAuthorizationContext;
32135
32520
  /**
@@ -32137,9 +32522,17 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
32137
32522
  */
32138
32523
  NetmaskLength?: Integer;
32139
32524
  /**
32140
- * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring Idempotency.
32525
+ * A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency.
32141
32526
  */
32142
32527
  ClientToken?: String;
32528
+ /**
32529
+ * The method for verifying control of a public IP address range. Defaults to remarks-x509 if not specified. This option only applies to IPv4 and IPv6 pools in the public scope.
32530
+ */
32531
+ VerificationMethod?: VerificationMethod;
32532
+ /**
32533
+ * Verification token ID. This option only applies to IPv4 and IPv6 pools in the public scope.
32534
+ */
32535
+ IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId?: IpamExternalResourceVerificationTokenId;
32143
32536
  }
32144
32537
  export interface ProvisionIpamPoolCidrResult {
32145
32538
  /**
@@ -32161,9 +32554,13 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
32161
32554
  */
32162
32555
  PoolId: Ipv4PoolEc2Id;
32163
32556
  /**
32164
- * The netmask length of the CIDR you would like to allocate to the public IPv4 pool.
32557
+ * The netmask length of the CIDR you would like to allocate to the public IPv4 pool. The least specific netmask length you can define is 24.
32165
32558
  */
32166
32559
  NetmaskLength: Integer;
32560
+ /**
32561
+ * The Availability Zone (AZ) or Local Zone (LZ) network border group that the resource that the IP address is assigned to is in. Defaults to an AZ network border group. For more information on available Local Zones, see Local Zone availability in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
32562
+ */
32563
+ NetworkBorderGroup?: String;
32167
32564
  }
32168
32565
  export interface ProvisionPublicIpv4PoolCidrResult {
32169
32566
  /**
@@ -32177,23 +32574,23 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
32177
32574
  }
32178
32575
  export interface ProvisionedBandwidth {
32179
32576
  /**
32180
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
32577
+ * Reserved.
32181
32578
  */
32182
32579
  ProvisionTime?: DateTime;
32183
32580
  /**
32184
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
32581
+ * Reserved.
32185
32582
  */
32186
32583
  Provisioned?: String;
32187
32584
  /**
32188
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
32585
+ * Reserved.
32189
32586
  */
32190
32587
  RequestTime?: DateTime;
32191
32588
  /**
32192
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
32589
+ * Reserved.
32193
32590
  */
32194
32591
  Requested?: String;
32195
32592
  /**
32196
- * Reserved. If you need to sustain traffic greater than the documented limits, contact us through the Support Center.
32593
+ * Reserved.
32197
32594
  */
32198
32595
  Status?: String;
32199
32596
  }
@@ -32405,7 +32802,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
32405
32802
  }
32406
32803
  export interface PurchaseReservedInstancesOfferingResult {
32407
32804
  /**
32408
- * The IDs of the purchased Reserved Instances. If your purchase crosses into a discounted pricing tier, the final Reserved Instances IDs might change. For more information, see Crossing pricing tiers in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
32805
+ * The IDs of the purchased Reserved Instances. If your purchase crosses into a discounted pricing tier, the final Reserved Instances IDs might change. For more information, see Crossing pricing tiers in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
32409
32806
  */
32410
32807
  ReservedInstancesId?: String;
32411
32808
  }
@@ -33138,7 +33535,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33138
33535
  export type RequestIpamResourceTagList = RequestIpamResourceTag[];
33139
33536
  export interface RequestLaunchTemplateData {
33140
33537
  /**
33141
- * The ID of the kernel. We recommend that you use PV-GRUB instead of kernels and RAM disks. For more information, see User provided kernels in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33538
+ * The ID of the kernel. We recommend that you use PV-GRUB instead of kernels and RAM disks. For more information, see User provided kernels in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33142
33539
  */
33143
33540
  KernelId?: KernelId;
33144
33541
  /**
@@ -33158,11 +33555,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33158
33555
  */
33159
33556
  NetworkInterfaces?: LaunchTemplateInstanceNetworkInterfaceSpecificationRequestList;
33160
33557
  /**
33161
- * The ID of the AMI. Alternatively, you can specify a Systems Manager parameter, which will resolve to an AMI ID on launch. Valid formats: ami-17characters00000 resolve:ssm:parameter-name resolve:ssm:parameter-name:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-name:label resolve:ssm:public-parameter Currently, EC2 Fleet and Spot Fleet do not support specifying a Systems Manager parameter. If the launch template will be used by an EC2 Fleet or Spot Fleet, you must specify the AMI ID. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33558
+ * The ID of the AMI in the format ami-17characters00000. Alternatively, you can specify a Systems Manager parameter, using one of the following formats. The Systems Manager parameter will resolve to an AMI ID on launch. To reference a public parameter: resolve:ssm:public-parameter To reference a parameter stored in the same account: resolve:ssm:parameter-name resolve:ssm:parameter-name:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-name:label To reference a parameter shared from another Amazon Web Services account: resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:version-number resolve:ssm:parameter-ARN:label For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. If the launch template will be used for an EC2 Fleet or Spot Fleet, note the following: Only EC2 Fleets of type instant support specifying a Systems Manager parameter. For EC2 Fleets of type maintain or request, or for Spot Fleets, you must specify the AMI ID.
33162
33559
  */
33163
33560
  ImageId?: ImageId;
33164
33561
  /**
33165
- * The instance type. For more information, see Instance types in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. If you specify InstanceType, you can't specify InstanceRequirements.
33562
+ * The instance type. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. If you specify InstanceType, you can't specify InstanceRequirements.
33166
33563
  */
33167
33564
  InstanceType?: InstanceType;
33168
33565
  /**
@@ -33178,7 +33575,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33178
33575
  */
33179
33576
  Placement?: LaunchTemplatePlacementRequest;
33180
33577
  /**
33181
- * The ID of the RAM disk. We recommend that you use PV-GRUB instead of kernels and RAM disks. For more information, see User provided kernels in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33578
+ * The ID of the RAM disk. We recommend that you use PV-GRUB instead of kernels and RAM disks. For more information, see User provided kernels in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33182
33579
  */
33183
33580
  RamDiskId?: RamdiskId;
33184
33581
  /**
@@ -33190,7 +33587,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33190
33587
  */
33191
33588
  InstanceInitiatedShutdownBehavior?: ShutdownBehavior;
33192
33589
  /**
33193
- * The user data to make available to the instance. You must provide base64-encoded text. User data is limited to 16 KB. For more information, see Run commands on your Linux instance at launch (Linux) or Work with instance user data (Windows) in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide. If you are creating the launch template for use with Batch, the user data must be provided in the MIME multi-part archive format. For more information, see Amazon EC2 user data in launch templates in the Batch User Guide.
33590
+ * The user data to make available to the instance. You must provide base64-encoded text. User data is limited to 16 KB. For more information, see Run commands on your Amazon EC2 instance at launch in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. If you are creating the launch template for use with Batch, the user data must be provided in the MIME multi-part archive format. For more information, see Amazon EC2 user data in launch templates in the Batch User Guide.
33194
33591
  */
33195
33592
  UserData?: SensitiveUserData;
33196
33593
  /**
@@ -33222,7 +33619,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33222
33619
  */
33223
33620
  CreditSpecification?: CreditSpecificationRequest;
33224
33621
  /**
33225
- * The CPU options for the instance. For more information, see Optimizing CPU Options in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33622
+ * The CPU options for the instance. For more information, see Optimize CPU options in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33226
33623
  */
33227
33624
  CpuOptions?: LaunchTemplateCpuOptionsRequest;
33228
33625
  /**
@@ -33234,15 +33631,15 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33234
33631
  */
33235
33632
  LicenseSpecifications?: LaunchTemplateLicenseSpecificationListRequest;
33236
33633
  /**
33237
- * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for hibernation. This parameter is valid only if the instance meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33634
+ * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for hibernation. This parameter is valid only if the instance meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your Amazon EC2 instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33238
33635
  */
33239
33636
  HibernationOptions?: LaunchTemplateHibernationOptionsRequest;
33240
33637
  /**
33241
- * The metadata options for the instance. For more information, see Instance metadata and user data in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33638
+ * The metadata options for the instance. For more information, see Instance metadata and user data in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33242
33639
  */
33243
33640
  MetadataOptions?: LaunchTemplateInstanceMetadataOptionsRequest;
33244
33641
  /**
33245
- * Indicates whether the instance is enabled for Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves. For more information, see What is Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves? in the Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves User Guide. You can't enable Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves and hibernation on the same instance.
33642
+ * Indicates whether the instance is enabled for Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves. For more information, see What is Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves? in the Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves User Guide. You can't enable Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves and hibernation on the same instance.
33246
33643
  */
33247
33644
  EnclaveOptions?: LaunchTemplateEnclaveOptionsRequest;
33248
33645
  /**
@@ -33258,7 +33655,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33258
33655
  */
33259
33656
  MaintenanceOptions?: LaunchTemplateInstanceMaintenanceOptionsRequest;
33260
33657
  /**
33261
- * Indicates whether to enable the instance for stop protection. For more information, see Stop protection in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
33658
+ * Indicates whether to enable the instance for stop protection. For more information, see Enable stop protection for your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33262
33659
  */
33263
33660
  DisableApiStop?: Boolean;
33264
33661
  }
@@ -33288,7 +33685,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33288
33685
  */
33289
33686
  BlockDurationMinutes?: Integer;
33290
33687
  /**
33291
- * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see How to Ensure Idempotency in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
33688
+ * Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request. For more information, see Ensuring idempotency in Amazon EC2 API requests in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33292
33689
  */
33293
33690
  ClientToken?: String;
33294
33691
  /**
@@ -33899,7 +34296,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33899
34296
  */
33900
34297
  ResourceTypes?: ValueStringList;
33901
34298
  }
33902
- export type ResourceType = "capacity-reservation"|"client-vpn-endpoint"|"customer-gateway"|"carrier-gateway"|"coip-pool"|"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"|"ipam"|"ipam-pool"|"ipam-scope"|"ipv4pool-ec2"|"ipv6pool-ec2"|"key-pair"|"launch-template"|"local-gateway"|"local-gateway-route-table"|"local-gateway-virtual-interface"|"local-gateway-virtual-interface-group"|"local-gateway-route-table-vpc-association"|"local-gateway-route-table-virtual-interface-group-association"|"natgateway"|"network-acl"|"network-interface"|"network-insights-analysis"|"network-insights-path"|"network-insights-access-scope"|"network-insights-access-scope-analysis"|"placement-group"|"prefix-list"|"replace-root-volume-task"|"reserved-instances"|"route-table"|"security-group"|"security-group-rule"|"snapshot"|"spot-fleet-request"|"spot-instances-request"|"subnet"|"subnet-cidr-reservation"|"traffic-mirror-filter"|"traffic-mirror-session"|"traffic-mirror-target"|"transit-gateway"|"transit-gateway-attachment"|"transit-gateway-connect-peer"|"transit-gateway-multicast-domain"|"transit-gateway-policy-table"|"transit-gateway-route-table"|"transit-gateway-route-table-announcement"|"volume"|"vpc"|"vpc-endpoint"|"vpc-endpoint-connection"|"vpc-endpoint-service"|"vpc-endpoint-service-permission"|"vpc-peering-connection"|"vpn-connection"|"vpn-gateway"|"vpc-flow-log"|"capacity-reservation-fleet"|"traffic-mirror-filter-rule"|"vpc-endpoint-connection-device-type"|"verified-access-instance"|"verified-access-group"|"verified-access-endpoint"|"verified-access-policy"|"verified-access-trust-provider"|"vpn-connection-device-type"|"vpc-block-public-access-exclusion"|"ipam-resource-discovery"|"ipam-resource-discovery-association"|"instance-connect-endpoint"|string;
34299
+ export type ResourceType = "capacity-reservation"|"client-vpn-endpoint"|"customer-gateway"|"carrier-gateway"|"coip-pool"|"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"|"ipam"|"ipam-pool"|"ipam-scope"|"ipv4pool-ec2"|"ipv6pool-ec2"|"key-pair"|"launch-template"|"local-gateway"|"local-gateway-route-table"|"local-gateway-virtual-interface"|"local-gateway-virtual-interface-group"|"local-gateway-route-table-vpc-association"|"local-gateway-route-table-virtual-interface-group-association"|"natgateway"|"network-acl"|"network-interface"|"network-insights-analysis"|"network-insights-path"|"network-insights-access-scope"|"network-insights-access-scope-analysis"|"placement-group"|"prefix-list"|"replace-root-volume-task"|"reserved-instances"|"route-table"|"security-group"|"security-group-rule"|"snapshot"|"spot-fleet-request"|"spot-instances-request"|"subnet"|"subnet-cidr-reservation"|"traffic-mirror-filter"|"traffic-mirror-session"|"traffic-mirror-target"|"transit-gateway"|"transit-gateway-attachment"|"transit-gateway-connect-peer"|"transit-gateway-multicast-domain"|"transit-gateway-policy-table"|"transit-gateway-route-table"|"transit-gateway-route-table-announcement"|"volume"|"vpc"|"vpc-endpoint"|"vpc-endpoint-connection"|"vpc-endpoint-service"|"vpc-endpoint-service-permission"|"vpc-peering-connection"|"vpn-connection"|"vpn-gateway"|"vpc-flow-log"|"capacity-reservation-fleet"|"traffic-mirror-filter-rule"|"vpc-endpoint-connection-device-type"|"verified-access-instance"|"verified-access-group"|"verified-access-endpoint"|"verified-access-policy"|"verified-access-trust-provider"|"vpn-connection-device-type"|"vpc-block-public-access-exclusion"|"ipam-resource-discovery"|"ipam-resource-discovery-association"|"instance-connect-endpoint"|"ipam-external-resource-verification-token"|string;
33903
34300
  export interface ResponseError {
33904
34301
  /**
33905
34302
  * The error code.
@@ -33934,7 +34331,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33934
34331
  */
33935
34332
  NetworkInterfaces?: LaunchTemplateInstanceNetworkInterfaceSpecificationList;
33936
34333
  /**
33937
- * The ID of the AMI or a Systems Manager parameter. The Systems Manager parameter will resolve to the ID of the AMI at instance launch. The value depends on what you specified in the request. The possible values are: If an AMI ID was specified in the request, then this is the AMI ID. If a Systems Manager parameter was specified in the request, and ResolveAlias was configured as true, then this is the AMI ID that the parameter is mapped to in the Parameter Store. If a Systems Manager parameter was specified in the request, and ResolveAlias was configured as false, then this is the parameter value. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
34334
+ * The ID of the AMI or a Systems Manager parameter. The Systems Manager parameter will resolve to the ID of the AMI at instance launch. The value depends on what you specified in the request. The possible values are: If an AMI ID was specified in the request, then this is the AMI ID. If a Systems Manager parameter was specified in the request, and ResolveAlias was configured as true, then this is the AMI ID that the parameter is mapped to in the Parameter Store. If a Systems Manager parameter was specified in the request, and ResolveAlias was configured as false, then this is the parameter value. For more information, see Use a Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI ID in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
33938
34335
  */
33939
34336
  ImageId?: String;
33940
34337
  /**
@@ -33998,7 +34395,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
33998
34395
  */
33999
34396
  CreditSpecification?: CreditSpecification;
34000
34397
  /**
34001
- * The CPU options for the instance. For more information, see Optimizing CPU options in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
34398
+ * The CPU options for the instance. For more information, see Optimize CPU options in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34002
34399
  */
34003
34400
  CpuOptions?: LaunchTemplateCpuOptions;
34004
34401
  /**
@@ -34010,11 +34407,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34010
34407
  */
34011
34408
  LicenseSpecifications?: LaunchTemplateLicenseList;
34012
34409
  /**
34013
- * Indicates whether an instance is configured for hibernation. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
34410
+ * Indicates whether an instance is configured for hibernation. For more information, see Hibernate your Amazon EC2 instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34014
34411
  */
34015
34412
  HibernationOptions?: LaunchTemplateHibernationOptions;
34016
34413
  /**
34017
- * The metadata options for the instance. For more information, see Instance metadata and user data in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
34414
+ * The metadata options for the instance. For more information, see Instance metadata and user data in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34018
34415
  */
34019
34416
  MetadataOptions?: LaunchTemplateInstanceMetadataOptions;
34020
34417
  /**
@@ -34034,7 +34431,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34034
34431
  */
34035
34432
  MaintenanceOptions?: LaunchTemplateInstanceMaintenanceOptions;
34036
34433
  /**
34037
- * Indicates whether the instance is enabled for stop protection. For more information, see Stop protection in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide.
34434
+ * Indicates whether the instance is enabled for stop protection. For more information, see Enable stop protection for your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34038
34435
  */
34039
34436
  DisableApiStop?: Boolean;
34040
34437
  }
@@ -34344,7 +34741,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34344
34741
  */
34345
34742
  DestinationIpv6CidrBlock?: String;
34346
34743
  /**
34347
- * The prefix of the Amazon Web Service.
34744
+ * The prefix of the Amazon Web Services service.
34348
34745
  */
34349
34746
  DestinationPrefixListId?: String;
34350
34747
  /**
@@ -34406,7 +34803,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34406
34803
  export type RouteState = "active"|"blackhole"|string;
34407
34804
  export interface RouteTable {
34408
34805
  /**
34409
- * The associations between the route table and one or more subnets or a gateway.
34806
+ * The associations between the route table and your subnets or gateways.
34410
34807
  */
34411
34808
  Associations?: RouteTableAssociationList;
34412
34809
  /**
@@ -34526,7 +34923,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34526
34923
  */
34527
34924
  ImageId?: ImageId;
34528
34925
  /**
34529
- * The instance type. For more information, see Instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34926
+ * The instance type. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
34530
34927
  */
34531
34928
  InstanceType?: InstanceType;
34532
34929
  /**
@@ -34546,11 +34943,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34546
34943
  */
34547
34944
  KeyName?: KeyPairName;
34548
34945
  /**
34549
- * The maximum number of instances to launch. If you specify more instances than Amazon EC2 can launch in the target Availability Zone, Amazon EC2 launches the largest possible number of instances above MinCount. Constraints: Between 1 and the maximum number you're allowed for the specified instance type. For more information about the default limits, and how to request an increase, see How many instances can I run in Amazon EC2 in the Amazon EC2 FAQ.
34946
+ * The maximum number of instances to launch. If you specify a value that is more capacity than Amazon EC2 can launch in the target Availability Zone, Amazon EC2 launches the largest possible number of instances above the specified minimum count. Constraints: Between 1 and the quota for the specified instance type for your account for this Region. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance type quotas.
34550
34947
  */
34551
34948
  MaxCount: Integer;
34552
34949
  /**
34553
- * The minimum number of instances to launch. If you specify a minimum that is more instances than Amazon EC2 can launch in the target Availability Zone, Amazon EC2 launches no instances. Constraints: Between 1 and the maximum number you're allowed for the specified instance type. For more information about the default limits, and how to request an increase, see How many instances can I run in Amazon EC2 in the Amazon EC2 General FAQ.
34950
+ * The minimum number of instances to launch. If you specify a value that is more capacity than Amazon EC2 can provide in the target Availability Zone, Amazon EC2 does not launch any instances. Constraints: Between 1 and the quota for the specified instance type for your account for this Region. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance type quotas.
34554
34951
  */
34555
34952
  MinCount: Integer;
34556
34953
  /**
@@ -34578,7 +34975,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34578
34975
  */
34579
34976
  SubnetId?: SubnetId;
34580
34977
  /**
34581
- * The user data script to make available to the instance. For more information, see Run commands on your Linux instance at launch and Run commands on your Windows instance at launch. If you are using a command line tool, base64-encoding is performed for you, and you can load the text from a file. Otherwise, you must provide base64-encoded text. User data is limited to 16 KB.
34978
+ * The user data to make available to the instance. User data must be base64-encoded. Depending on the tool or SDK that you're using, the base64-encoding might be performed for you. For more information, see Work with instance user data.
34582
34979
  */
34583
34980
  UserData?: RunInstancesUserData;
34584
34981
  /**
@@ -34650,7 +35047,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
34650
35047
  */
34651
35048
  CapacityReservationSpecification?: CapacityReservationSpecification;
34652
35049
  /**
34653
- * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for hibernation. This parameter is valid only if the instance meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can't enable hibernation and Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves on the same instance.
35050
+ * Indicates whether an instance is enabled for hibernation. This parameter is valid only if the instance meets the hibernation prerequisites. For more information, see Hibernate your Amazon EC2 instance in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. You can't enable hibernation and Amazon Web Services Nitro Enclaves on the same instance.
34654
35051
  */
34655
35052
  HibernationOptions?: HibernationOptionsRequest;
34656
35053
  /**
@@ -35596,7 +35993,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
35596
35993
  */
35597
35994
  Encrypted?: Boolean;
35598
35995
  /**
35599
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key that was used to protect the volume encryption key for the parent volume.
35996
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the KMS key that was used to protect the volume encryption key for the parent volume.
35600
35997
  */
35601
35998
  KmsKeyId?: String;
35602
35999
  /**
@@ -35620,7 +36017,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
35620
36017
  */
35621
36018
  State?: SnapshotState;
35622
36019
  /**
35623
- * Encrypted Amazon EBS snapshots are copied asynchronously. If a snapshot copy operation fails (for example, if the proper Key Management Service (KMS) permissions are not obtained) this field displays error state details to help you diagnose why the error occurred. This parameter is only returned by DescribeSnapshots.
36020
+ * Encrypted Amazon EBS snapshots are copied asynchronously. If a snapshot copy operation fails (for example, if the proper KMS permissions are not obtained) this field displays error state details to help you diagnose why the error occurred. This parameter is only returned by DescribeSnapshots.
35624
36021
  */
35625
36022
  StateMessage?: String;
35626
36023
  /**
@@ -35992,7 +36389,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
35992
36389
  */
35993
36390
  UserData?: SensitiveUserData;
35994
36391
  /**
35995
- * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. These are the same units that you chose to set the target capacity in terms of instances, or a performance characteristic such as vCPUs, memory, or I/O. If the target capacity divided by this value is not a whole number, Amazon EC2 rounds the number of instances to the next whole number. If this value is not specified, the default is 1.
36392
+ * The number of units provided by the specified instance type. These are the same units that you chose to set the target capacity in terms of instances, or a performance characteristic such as vCPUs, memory, or I/O. If the target capacity divided by this value is not a whole number, Amazon EC2 rounds the number of instances to the next whole number. If this value is not specified, the default is 1. When specifying weights, the price used in the lowestPrice and priceCapacityOptimized allocation strategies is per unit hour (where the instance price is divided by the specified weight). However, if all the specified weights are above the requested TargetCapacity, resulting in only 1 instance being launched, the price used is per instance hour.
35996
36393
  */
35997
36394
  WeightedCapacity?: Double;
35998
36395
  /**
@@ -36038,7 +36435,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36038
36435
  }
36039
36436
  export interface SpotFleetRequestConfigData {
36040
36437
  /**
36041
- * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the Spot Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. priceCapacityOptimized (recommended) Spot Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. Spot Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacityOptimized Spot Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacityOptimizedPrioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacityOptimizedPrioritized is supported only if your Spot Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the OnDemandAllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified Spot Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowestPrice Spot Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, Spot Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowestPrice
36438
+ * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the Spot Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. priceCapacityOptimized (recommended) Spot Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. Spot Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacityOptimized Spot Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacityOptimizedPrioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacityOptimizedPrioritized is supported only if your Spot Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the OnDemandAllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified Spot Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowestPrice (not recommended) We don't recommend the lowestPrice allocation strategy because it has the highest risk of interruption for your Spot Instances. Spot Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, Spot Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowestPrice
36042
36439
  */
36043
36440
  AllocationStrategy?: AllocationStrategy;
36044
36441
  /**
@@ -36090,11 +36487,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36090
36487
  */
36091
36488
  OnDemandTargetCapacity?: Integer;
36092
36489
  /**
36093
- * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. You can use the onDemandMaxTotalPrice parameter, the spotMaxTotalPrice parameter, or both parameters to ensure that your fleet cost does not exceed your budget. If you set a maximum price per hour for the On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances in your request, Spot Fleet will launch instances until it reaches the maximum amount you're willing to pay. When the maximum amount you're willing to pay is reached, the fleet stops launching instances even if it hasn’t met the target capacity. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The onDemandMaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for onDemandMaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
36490
+ * The maximum amount per hour for On-Demand Instances that you're willing to pay. You can use the onDemandMaxTotalPrice parameter, the spotMaxTotalPrice parameter, or both parameters to ensure that your fleet cost does not exceed your budget. If you set a maximum price per hour for the On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances in your request, Spot Fleet will launch instances until it reaches the maximum amount you're willing to pay. When the maximum amount you're willing to pay is reached, the fleet stops launching instances even if it hasn’t met the target capacity. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The onDemandMaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for onDemandMaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36094
36491
  */
36095
36492
  OnDemandMaxTotalPrice?: String;
36096
36493
  /**
36097
- * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. You can use the spotMaxTotalPrice parameter, the onDemandMaxTotalPrice parameter, or both parameters to ensure that your fleet cost does not exceed your budget. If you set a maximum price per hour for the On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances in your request, Spot Fleet will launch instances until it reaches the maximum amount you're willing to pay. When the maximum amount you're willing to pay is reached, the fleet stops launching instances even if it hasn’t met the target capacity. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The spotMaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for spotMaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
36494
+ * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. You can use the spotMaxTotalPrice parameter, the onDemandMaxTotalPrice parameter, or both parameters to ensure that your fleet cost does not exceed your budget. If you set a maximum price per hour for the On-Demand Instances and Spot Instances in your request, Spot Fleet will launch instances until it reaches the maximum amount you're willing to pay. When the maximum amount you're willing to pay is reached, the fleet stops launching instances even if it hasn’t met the target capacity. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The spotMaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for spotMaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36098
36495
  */
36099
36496
  SpotMaxTotalPrice?: String;
36100
36497
  /**
@@ -36207,7 +36604,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36207
36604
  */
36208
36605
  SpotPrice?: String;
36209
36606
  /**
36210
- * The state of the Spot Instance request. Spot request status information helps track your Spot Instance requests. For more information, see Spot request status in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
36607
+ * The state of the Spot Instance request. Spot request status information helps track your Spot Instance requests. For more information, see Spot request status in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36211
36608
  */
36212
36609
  State?: SpotInstanceState;
36213
36610
  /**
@@ -36251,7 +36648,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36251
36648
  }
36252
36649
  export interface SpotInstanceStatus {
36253
36650
  /**
36254
- * The status code. For a list of status codes, see Spot request status codes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
36651
+ * The status code. For a list of status codes, see Spot request status codes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36255
36652
  */
36256
36653
  Code?: String;
36257
36654
  /**
@@ -36266,7 +36663,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36266
36663
  export type SpotInstanceType = "one-time"|"persistent"|string;
36267
36664
  export interface SpotMaintenanceStrategies {
36268
36665
  /**
36269
- * The Spot Instance replacement strategy to use when Amazon EC2 emits a signal that your Spot Instance is at an elevated risk of being interrupted. For more information, see Capacity rebalancing in the Amazon EC2 User Guide for Linux Instances.
36666
+ * The Spot Instance replacement strategy to use when Amazon EC2 emits a signal that your Spot Instance is at an elevated risk of being interrupted. For more information, see Capacity rebalancing in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36270
36667
  */
36271
36668
  CapacityRebalance?: SpotCapacityRebalance;
36272
36669
  }
@@ -36294,7 +36691,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36294
36691
  }
36295
36692
  export interface SpotOptions {
36296
36693
  /**
36297
- * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the EC2 Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. price-capacity-optimized (recommended) EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. EC2 Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacity-optimized EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacity-optimized-prioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacity-optimized-prioritized is supported only if your EC2 Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the On-Demand AllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified EC2 Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowest-price EC2 Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, EC2 Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowest-price
36694
+ * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the EC2 Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. price-capacity-optimized (recommended) EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. EC2 Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacity-optimized EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacity-optimized-prioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacity-optimized-prioritized is supported only if your EC2 Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the On-Demand AllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified EC2 Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowest-price (not recommended) We don't recommend the lowest-price allocation strategy because it has the highest risk of interruption for your Spot Instances. EC2 Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, EC2 Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowest-price
36298
36695
  */
36299
36696
  AllocationStrategy?: SpotAllocationStrategy;
36300
36697
  /**
@@ -36318,17 +36715,17 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36318
36715
  */
36319
36716
  SingleAvailabilityZone?: Boolean;
36320
36717
  /**
36321
- * The minimum target capacity for Spot Instances in the fleet. If the minimum target capacity is not reached, the fleet launches no instances. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
36718
+ * The minimum target capacity for Spot Instances in the fleet. If this minimum capacity isn't reached, no instances are launched. Constraints: Maximum value of 1000. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
36322
36719
  */
36323
36720
  MinTargetCapacity?: Integer;
36324
36721
  /**
36325
- * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. We do not recommend using this parameter because it can lead to increased interruptions. If you do not specify this parameter, you will pay the current Spot price. If you specify a maximum price, your Spot Instances will be interrupted more frequently than if you do not specify this parameter. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The maxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for maxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
36722
+ * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. We do not recommend using this parameter because it can lead to increased interruptions. If you do not specify this parameter, you will pay the current Spot price. If you specify a maximum price, your Spot Instances will be interrupted more frequently than if you do not specify this parameter. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The maxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for maxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36326
36723
  */
36327
36724
  MaxTotalPrice?: String;
36328
36725
  }
36329
36726
  export interface SpotOptionsRequest {
36330
36727
  /**
36331
- * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the EC2 Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. price-capacity-optimized (recommended) EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. EC2 Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacity-optimized EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacity-optimized-prioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacity-optimized-prioritized is supported only if your EC2 Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the On-Demand AllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified EC2 Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowest-price EC2 Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, EC2 Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowest-price
36728
+ * The strategy that determines how to allocate the target Spot Instance capacity across the Spot Instance pools specified by the EC2 Fleet launch configuration. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. price-capacity-optimized (recommended) EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. EC2 Fleet then requests Spot Instances from the lowest priced of these pools. capacity-optimized EC2 Fleet identifies the pools with the highest capacity availability for the number of instances that are launching. This means that we will request Spot Instances from the pools that we believe have the lowest chance of interruption in the near term. To give certain instance types a higher chance of launching first, use capacity-optimized-prioritized. Set a priority for each instance type by using the Priority parameter for LaunchTemplateOverrides. You can assign the same priority to different LaunchTemplateOverrides. EC2 implements the priorities on a best-effort basis, but optimizes for capacity first. capacity-optimized-prioritized is supported only if your EC2 Fleet uses a launch template. Note that if the On-Demand AllocationStrategy is set to prioritized, the same priority is applied when fulfilling On-Demand capacity. diversified EC2 Fleet requests instances from all of the Spot Instance pools that you specify. lowest-price (not recommended) We don't recommend the lowest-price allocation strategy because it has the highest risk of interruption for your Spot Instances. EC2 Fleet requests instances from the lowest priced Spot Instance pool that has available capacity. If the lowest priced pool doesn't have available capacity, the Spot Instances come from the next lowest priced pool that has available capacity. If a pool runs out of capacity before fulfilling your desired capacity, EC2 Fleet will continue to fulfill your request by drawing from the next lowest priced pool. To ensure that your desired capacity is met, you might receive Spot Instances from several pools. Because this strategy only considers instance price and not capacity availability, it might lead to high interruption rates. Default: lowest-price
36332
36729
  */
36333
36730
  AllocationStrategy?: SpotAllocationStrategy;
36334
36731
  /**
@@ -36352,11 +36749,11 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36352
36749
  */
36353
36750
  SingleAvailabilityZone?: Boolean;
36354
36751
  /**
36355
- * The minimum target capacity for Spot Instances in the fleet. If the minimum target capacity is not reached, the fleet launches no instances. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
36752
+ * The minimum target capacity for Spot Instances in the fleet. If this minimum capacity isn't reached, no instances are launched. Constraints: Maximum value of 1000. Supported only for fleets of type instant. At least one of the following must be specified: SingleAvailabilityZone | SingleInstanceType
36356
36753
  */
36357
36754
  MinTargetCapacity?: Integer;
36358
36755
  /**
36359
- * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. We do not recommend using this parameter because it can lead to increased interruptions. If you do not specify this parameter, you will pay the current Spot price. If you specify a maximum price, your Spot Instances will be interrupted more frequently than if you do not specify this parameter. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The MaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for MaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the EC2 User Guide.
36756
+ * The maximum amount per hour for Spot Instances that you're willing to pay. We do not recommend using this parameter because it can lead to increased interruptions. If you do not specify this parameter, you will pay the current Spot price. If you specify a maximum price, your Spot Instances will be interrupted more frequently than if you do not specify this parameter. If your fleet includes T instances that are configured as unlimited, and if their average CPU usage exceeds the baseline utilization, you will incur a charge for surplus credits. The MaxTotalPrice does not account for surplus credits, and, if you use surplus credits, your final cost might be higher than what you specified for MaxTotalPrice. For more information, see Surplus credits can incur charges in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
36360
36757
  */
36361
36758
  MaxTotalPrice?: String;
36362
36759
  }
@@ -36824,6 +37221,14 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
36824
37221
  * The state of the CIDR block.
36825
37222
  */
36826
37223
  Ipv6CidrBlockState?: SubnetCidrBlockState;
37224
+ /**
37225
+ * Public IPv6 addresses are those advertised on the internet from Amazon Web Services. Private IP addresses are not and cannot be advertised on the internet from Amazon Web Services.
37226
+ */
37227
+ Ipv6AddressAttribute?: Ipv6AddressAttribute;
37228
+ /**
37229
+ * The source that allocated the IP address space. byoip or amazon indicates public IP address space allocated by Amazon or space that you have allocated with Bring your own IP (BYOIP). none indicates private space.
37230
+ */
37231
+ IpSource?: IpSource;
36827
37232
  }
36828
37233
  export type SubnetIpv6CidrBlockAssociationSet = SubnetIpv6CidrBlockAssociation[];
36829
37234
  export type SubnetList = Subnet[];
@@ -37111,6 +37516,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
37111
37516
  }
37112
37517
  export type ThroughResourcesStatementRequestList = ThroughResourcesStatementRequest[];
37113
37518
  export type TieringOperationStatus = "archival-in-progress"|"archival-completed"|"archival-failed"|"temporary-restore-in-progress"|"temporary-restore-completed"|"temporary-restore-failed"|"permanent-restore-in-progress"|"permanent-restore-completed"|"permanent-restore-failed"|string;
37519
+ export type TokenState = "valid"|"expired"|string;
37114
37520
  export interface TotalLocalStorageGB {
37115
37521
  /**
37116
37522
  * The minimum amount of total local storage, in GB. If this parameter is not specified, there is no minimum limit.
@@ -37208,11 +37614,17 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
37208
37614
  * The description of the Traffic Mirror rule.
37209
37615
  */
37210
37616
  Description?: String;
37617
+ /**
37618
+ * Tags on Traffic Mirroring filter rules.
37619
+ */
37620
+ Tags?: TagList;
37211
37621
  }
37212
37622
  export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleField = "destination-port-range"|"source-port-range"|"protocol"|"description"|string;
37213
37623
  export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleFieldList = TrafficMirrorFilterRuleField[];
37624
+ export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleIdList = TrafficMirrorFilterRuleIdWithResolver[];
37214
37625
  export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleIdWithResolver = string;
37215
37626
  export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleList = TrafficMirrorFilterRule[];
37627
+ export type TrafficMirrorFilterRuleSet = TrafficMirrorFilterRule[];
37216
37628
  export type TrafficMirrorFilterSet = TrafficMirrorFilter[];
37217
37629
  export type TrafficMirrorNetworkService = "amazon-dns"|string;
37218
37630
  export type TrafficMirrorNetworkServiceList = TrafficMirrorNetworkService[];
@@ -38786,6 +39198,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
38786
39198
  Errors?: ErrorSet;
38787
39199
  }
38788
39200
  export type ValueStringList = String[];
39201
+ export type VerificationMethod = "remarks-x509"|"dns-token"|string;
38789
39202
  export interface VerifiedAccessEndpoint {
38790
39203
  /**
38791
39204
  * The ID of the Amazon Web Services Verified Access instance.
@@ -39277,7 +39690,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39277
39690
  export type VirtualizationTypeSet = VirtualizationType[];
39278
39691
  export interface Volume {
39279
39692
  /**
39280
- * Information about the volume attachments.
39693
+ * This parameter is not returned by CreateVolume. Information about the volume attachments.
39281
39694
  */
39282
39695
  Attachments?: VolumeAttachmentList;
39283
39696
  /**
@@ -39293,7 +39706,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39293
39706
  */
39294
39707
  Encrypted?: Boolean;
39295
39708
  /**
39296
- * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key that was used to protect the volume encryption key for the volume.
39709
+ * The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the KMS key that was used to protect the volume encryption key for the volume.
39297
39710
  */
39298
39711
  KmsKeyId?: String;
39299
39712
  /**
@@ -39329,7 +39742,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39329
39742
  */
39330
39743
  VolumeType?: VolumeType;
39331
39744
  /**
39332
- * Indicates whether the volume was created using fast snapshot restore.
39745
+ * This parameter is not returned by CreateVolume. Indicates whether the volume was created using fast snapshot restore.
39333
39746
  */
39334
39747
  FastRestored?: Boolean;
39335
39748
  /**
@@ -39341,7 +39754,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39341
39754
  */
39342
39755
  Throughput?: Integer;
39343
39756
  /**
39344
- * Reserved for future use.
39757
+ * This parameter is not returned by CreateVolume. Reserved for future use.
39345
39758
  */
39346
39759
  SseType?: SSEType;
39347
39760
  }
@@ -39398,7 +39811,7 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39398
39811
  */
39399
39812
  VolumeId?: String;
39400
39813
  /**
39401
- * The current modification state. The modification state is null for unmodified volumes.
39814
+ * The current modification state.
39402
39815
  */
39403
39816
  ModificationState?: VolumeModificationState;
39404
39817
  /**
@@ -39828,6 +40241,14 @@ declare namespace EC2 {
39828
40241
  * The ID of the IPv6 address pool from which the IPv6 CIDR block is allocated.
39829
40242
  */
39830
40243
  Ipv6Pool?: String;
40244
+ /**
40245
+ * Public IPv6 addresses are those advertised on the internet from Amazon Web Services. Private IP addresses are not and cannot be advertised on the internet from Amazon Web Services.
40246
+ */
40247
+ Ipv6AddressAttribute?: Ipv6AddressAttribute;
40248
+ /**
40249
+ * The source that allocated the IP address space. byoip or amazon indicates public IP address space allocated by Amazon or space that you have allocated with Bring your own IP (BYOIP). none indicates private space.
40250
+ */
40251
+ IpSource?: IpSource;
39831
40252
  }
39832
40253
  export type VpcIpv6CidrBlockAssociationSet = VpcIpv6CidrBlockAssociation[];
39833
40254
  export type VpcList = Vpc[];