You are viewing documentation for version 2 of the AWS SDK for Ruby. Version 3 documentation can be found here.
Class: Aws::Lightsail::Types::InstanceEntryWhen passing InstanceEntry as input to an Aws::Client method, you can use a vanilla Hash:
{
source_name: "ResourceName", instance_type: "NonEmptyString", port_info_source: "DEFAULT", user_data: "string",
availability_zone: "string", }
Describes the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instance and related resources to be created using the create cloud formation stack
operation.
The Availability Zone for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
The instance type (e.g., t2.micro
) to use for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
The port configuration to use for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
The name of the export snapshot record, which contains the exported Lightsail instance snapshot that will be used as the source of the new Amazon EC2 instance.
A launch script you can create that configures a server with additional user data.
The Availability Zone for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
#instance_type ⇒ StringThe instance type (e.g., t2.micro
) to use for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
The port configuration to use for the new Amazon EC2 instance.
The following configuration options are available:
DEFAULT
- Use the default firewall settings from the Lightsail instance blueprint.
INSTANCE
- Use the configured firewall settings from the source Lightsail instance.
NONE
- Use the default Amazon EC2 security group.
CLOSED
- All ports closed.
If you configured lightsail-connect
as a cidrListAliases
on your instance, or if you chose to allow the Lightsail browser-based SSH or RDP clients to connect to your instance, that configuration is not carried over to your new Amazon EC2 instance.
Possible values:
The name of the export snapshot record, which contains the exported Lightsail instance snapshot that will be used as the source of the new Amazon EC2 instance.
Use the get export snapshot records
operation to get a list of export snapshot records that you can use to create a CloudFormation stack.
A launch script you can create that configures a server with additional user data. For example, you might want to run apt-get -y update
.
Depending on the machine image you choose, the command to get software on your instance varies. Amazon Linux and CentOS use yum
, Debian and Ubuntu use apt-get
, and FreeBSD uses pkg
.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4