Work with Capacity Blocks - Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud

Work with Capacity Blocks

To start using Capacity Blocks, you first find and purchase an available Capacity Block that matches your reservation size, duration, and timing needs. Then, when the reservation begins, you can use the Capacity Block by launching instances that target the reservation ID. Thirty minutes before the reservation expires, we begin to terminate any instances that are still running in the Capacity Block.

Capacity Blocks are delivered as targeted Capacity Reservations in a single Availability Zone. To run instances in a Capacity Block, you must specify the reservation ID when launching your instances. If you stop instances on your own and the Capacity Block expires, you can't restart them until you target another Capacity Block in the active state.

By default, Capacity Blocks deliver low-latency, high-throughput network connectivity between the instances inside the Capacity Block, so there is no need to use a cluster placement group with a Capacity Block.

Prerequisites

You must use the corresponding AWS Region for the instance type that you want to use. For more information, see Regions.

Capacity Blocks with p5.48xlarge instances are available in following AWS Regions.

Region name Region code

US East (Ohio)

us-east-2

US East (N. Virginia)

us-east-1

Capacity Blocks with p4d.24xlarge instances are available in following AWS Regions.

Region name Region code

US East (Ohio)

us-east-2

US West (Oregon)

us-west-2

Note

Capacity Block sizes of 64 instances are not supported for all instance types in all AWS Regions.