@Generated(value="com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk-code-generator") public class AbstractAmazonRoute53Async extends AbstractAmazonRoute53 implements AmazonRoute53Async
AmazonRoute53Async
. Convenient method forms pass through to the corresponding
overload that takes a request object and an AsyncHandler
, which throws an
UnsupportedOperationException
.ENDPOINT_PREFIX
activateKeySigningKey, associateVPCWithHostedZone, changeCidrCollection, changeResourceRecordSets, changeTagsForResource, createCidrCollection, createHealthCheck, createHostedZone, createKeySigningKey, createQueryLoggingConfig, createReusableDelegationSet, createTrafficPolicy, createTrafficPolicyInstance, createTrafficPolicyVersion, createVPCAssociationAuthorization, deactivateKeySigningKey, deleteCidrCollection, deleteHealthCheck, deleteHostedZone, deleteKeySigningKey, deleteQueryLoggingConfig, deleteReusableDelegationSet, deleteTrafficPolicy, deleteTrafficPolicyInstance, deleteVPCAssociationAuthorization, disableHostedZoneDNSSEC, disassociateVPCFromHostedZone, enableHostedZoneDNSSEC, getAccountLimit, getCachedResponseMetadata, getChange, getCheckerIpRanges, getCheckerIpRanges, getDNSSEC, getGeoLocation, getGeoLocation, getHealthCheck, getHealthCheckCount, getHealthCheckCount, getHealthCheckLastFailureReason, getHealthCheckStatus, getHostedZone, getHostedZoneCount, getHostedZoneCount, getHostedZoneLimit, getQueryLoggingConfig, getReusableDelegationSet, getReusableDelegationSetLimit, getTrafficPolicy, getTrafficPolicyInstance, getTrafficPolicyInstanceCount, getTrafficPolicyInstanceCount, listCidrBlocks, listCidrCollections, listCidrLocations, listGeoLocations, listGeoLocations, listHealthChecks, listHealthChecks, listHostedZones, listHostedZones, listHostedZonesByName, listHostedZonesByName, listHostedZonesByVPC, listQueryLoggingConfigs, listResourceRecordSets, listReusableDelegationSets, listReusableDelegationSets, listTagsForResource, listTagsForResources, listTrafficPolicies, listTrafficPolicies, listTrafficPolicyInstances, listTrafficPolicyInstances, listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZone, listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicy, listTrafficPolicyVersions, listVPCAssociationAuthorizations, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, testDNSAnswer, updateHealthCheck, updateHostedZoneComment, updateTrafficPolicyComment, updateTrafficPolicyInstance, waiters
equals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
activateKeySigningKey, associateVPCWithHostedZone, changeCidrCollection, changeResourceRecordSets, changeTagsForResource, createCidrCollection, createHealthCheck, createHostedZone, createKeySigningKey, createQueryLoggingConfig, createReusableDelegationSet, createTrafficPolicy, createTrafficPolicyInstance, createTrafficPolicyVersion, createVPCAssociationAuthorization, deactivateKeySigningKey, deleteCidrCollection, deleteHealthCheck, deleteHostedZone, deleteKeySigningKey, deleteQueryLoggingConfig, deleteReusableDelegationSet, deleteTrafficPolicy, deleteTrafficPolicyInstance, deleteVPCAssociationAuthorization, disableHostedZoneDNSSEC, disassociateVPCFromHostedZone, enableHostedZoneDNSSEC, getAccountLimit, getCachedResponseMetadata, getChange, getCheckerIpRanges, getCheckerIpRanges, getDNSSEC, getGeoLocation, getGeoLocation, getHealthCheck, getHealthCheckCount, getHealthCheckCount, getHealthCheckLastFailureReason, getHealthCheckStatus, getHostedZone, getHostedZoneCount, getHostedZoneCount, getHostedZoneLimit, getQueryLoggingConfig, getReusableDelegationSet, getReusableDelegationSetLimit, getTrafficPolicy, getTrafficPolicyInstance, getTrafficPolicyInstanceCount, getTrafficPolicyInstanceCount, listCidrBlocks, listCidrCollections, listCidrLocations, listGeoLocations, listGeoLocations, listHealthChecks, listHealthChecks, listHostedZones, listHostedZones, listHostedZonesByName, listHostedZonesByName, listHostedZonesByVPC, listQueryLoggingConfigs, listResourceRecordSets, listReusableDelegationSets, listReusableDelegationSets, listTagsForResource, listTagsForResources, listTrafficPolicies, listTrafficPolicies, listTrafficPolicyInstances, listTrafficPolicyInstances, listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZone, listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicy, listTrafficPolicyVersions, listVPCAssociationAuthorizations, setEndpoint, setRegion, shutdown, testDNSAnswer, updateHealthCheck, updateHostedZoneComment, updateTrafficPolicyComment, updateTrafficPolicyInstance, waiters
public Future<ActivateKeySigningKeyResult> activateKeySigningKeyAsync(ActivateKeySigningKeyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Activates a key-signing key (KSK) so that it can be used for signing by DNSSEC. This operation changes the KSK
status to ACTIVE
.
activateKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ActivateKeySigningKeyResult> activateKeySigningKeyAsync(ActivateKeySigningKeyRequest request, AsyncHandler<ActivateKeySigningKeyRequest,ActivateKeySigningKeyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Activates a key-signing key (KSK) so that it can be used for signing by DNSSEC. This operation changes the KSK
status to ACTIVE
.
activateKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneResult> associateVPCWithHostedZoneAsync(AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Associates an Amazon VPC with a private hosted zone.
To perform the association, the VPC and the private hosted zone must already exist. You can't convert a public hosted zone into a private hosted zone.
If you want to associate a VPC that was created by using one Amazon Web Services account with a private hosted
zone that was created by using a different account, the Amazon Web Services account that created the private
hosted zone must first submit a CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
request. Then the account that
created the VPC must submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request.
When granting access, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
associateVPCWithHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to associate a VPC with a private hosted zone.public Future<AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneResult> associateVPCWithHostedZoneAsync(AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest,AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Associates an Amazon VPC with a private hosted zone.
To perform the association, the VPC and the private hosted zone must already exist. You can't convert a public hosted zone into a private hosted zone.
If you want to associate a VPC that was created by using one Amazon Web Services account with a private hosted
zone that was created by using a different account, the Amazon Web Services account that created the private
hosted zone must first submit a CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
request. Then the account that
created the VPC must submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request.
When granting access, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
associateVPCWithHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to associate a VPC with a private hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ChangeCidrCollectionResult> changeCidrCollectionAsync(ChangeCidrCollectionRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates, changes, or deletes CIDR blocks within a collection. Contains authoritative IP information mapping blocks to one or multiple locations.
A change request can update multiple locations in a collection at a time, which is helpful if you want to move one or more CIDR blocks from one location to another in one transaction, without downtime.
Limits
The max number of CIDR blocks included in the request is 1000. As a result, big updates require multiple API calls.
PUT and DELETE_IF_EXISTS
Use ChangeCidrCollection
to perform the following actions:
PUT
: Create a CIDR block within the specified collection.
DELETE_IF_EXISTS
: Delete an existing CIDR block from the collection.
changeCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ChangeCidrCollectionResult> changeCidrCollectionAsync(ChangeCidrCollectionRequest request, AsyncHandler<ChangeCidrCollectionRequest,ChangeCidrCollectionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates, changes, or deletes CIDR blocks within a collection. Contains authoritative IP information mapping blocks to one or multiple locations.
A change request can update multiple locations in a collection at a time, which is helpful if you want to move one or more CIDR blocks from one location to another in one transaction, without downtime.
Limits
The max number of CIDR blocks included in the request is 1000. As a result, big updates require multiple API calls.
PUT and DELETE_IF_EXISTS
Use ChangeCidrCollection
to perform the following actions:
PUT
: Create a CIDR block within the specified collection.
DELETE_IF_EXISTS
: Delete an existing CIDR block from the collection.
changeCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ChangeResourceRecordSetsResult> changeResourceRecordSetsAsync(ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates, changes, or deletes a resource record set, which contains authoritative DNS information for a specified
domain name or subdomain name. For example, you can use ChangeResourceRecordSets
to create a
resource record set that routes traffic for test.example.com to a web server that has an IP address of
192.0.2.44.
Deleting Resource Record Sets
To delete a resource record set, you must specify all the same values that you specified when you created it.
Change Batches and Transactional Changes
The request body must include a document with a ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest
element. The request
body contains a list of change items, known as a change batch. Change batches are considered transactional
changes. Route 53 validates the changes in the request and then either makes all or none of the changes in the
change batch request. This ensures that DNS routing isn't adversely affected by partial changes to the resource
record sets in a hosted zone.
For example, suppose a change batch request contains two changes: it deletes the CNAME
resource
record set for www.example.com and creates an alias resource record set for www.example.com. If validation for
both records succeeds, Route 53 deletes the first resource record set and creates the second resource record set
in a single operation. If validation for either the DELETE
or the CREATE
action fails,
then the request is canceled, and the original CNAME
record continues to exist.
If you try to delete the same resource record set more than once in a single change batch, Route 53 returns an
InvalidChangeBatch
error.
Traffic Flow
To create resource record sets for complex routing configurations, use either the traffic flow visual editor in the Route 53 console or the API actions for traffic policies and traffic policy instances. Save the configuration as a traffic policy, then associate the traffic policy with one or more domain names (such as example.com) or subdomain names (such as www.example.com), in the same hosted zone or in multiple hosted zones. You can roll back the updates if the new configuration isn't performing as expected. For more information, see Using Traffic Flow to Route DNS Traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Create, Delete, and Upsert
Use ChangeResourceRecordsSetsRequest
to perform the following actions:
CREATE
: Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE
: Deletes an existing resource record set that has the specified values.
UPSERT
: If a resource set doesn't exist, Route 53 creates it. If a resource set exists Route 53
updates it with the values in the request.
Syntaxes for Creating, Updating, and Deleting Resource Record Sets
The syntax for a request depends on the type of resource record set that you want to create, delete, or update, such as weighted, alias, or failover. The XML elements in your request must appear in the order listed in the syntax.
For an example for each type of resource record set, see "Examples."
Don't refer to the syntax in the "Parameter Syntax" section, which includes all of the elements for every kind of
resource record set that you can create, delete, or update by using ChangeResourceRecordSets
.
Change Propagation to Route 53 DNS Servers
When you submit a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request, Route 53 propagates your changes to all of the
Route 53 authoritative DNS servers managing the hosted zone. While your changes are propagating,
GetChange
returns a status of PENDING
. When propagation is complete,
GetChange
returns a status of INSYNC
. Changes generally propagate to all Route 53 name
servers managing the hosted zone within 60 seconds. For more information, see GetChange.
Limits on ChangeResourceRecordSets Requests
For information about the limits on a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request, see Limits in the Amazon
Route 53 Developer Guide.
changeResourceRecordSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains change information for the resource record set.public Future<ChangeResourceRecordSetsResult> changeResourceRecordSetsAsync(ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest,ChangeResourceRecordSetsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates, changes, or deletes a resource record set, which contains authoritative DNS information for a specified
domain name or subdomain name. For example, you can use ChangeResourceRecordSets
to create a
resource record set that routes traffic for test.example.com to a web server that has an IP address of
192.0.2.44.
Deleting Resource Record Sets
To delete a resource record set, you must specify all the same values that you specified when you created it.
Change Batches and Transactional Changes
The request body must include a document with a ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest
element. The request
body contains a list of change items, known as a change batch. Change batches are considered transactional
changes. Route 53 validates the changes in the request and then either makes all or none of the changes in the
change batch request. This ensures that DNS routing isn't adversely affected by partial changes to the resource
record sets in a hosted zone.
For example, suppose a change batch request contains two changes: it deletes the CNAME
resource
record set for www.example.com and creates an alias resource record set for www.example.com. If validation for
both records succeeds, Route 53 deletes the first resource record set and creates the second resource record set
in a single operation. If validation for either the DELETE
or the CREATE
action fails,
then the request is canceled, and the original CNAME
record continues to exist.
If you try to delete the same resource record set more than once in a single change batch, Route 53 returns an
InvalidChangeBatch
error.
Traffic Flow
To create resource record sets for complex routing configurations, use either the traffic flow visual editor in the Route 53 console or the API actions for traffic policies and traffic policy instances. Save the configuration as a traffic policy, then associate the traffic policy with one or more domain names (such as example.com) or subdomain names (such as www.example.com), in the same hosted zone or in multiple hosted zones. You can roll back the updates if the new configuration isn't performing as expected. For more information, see Using Traffic Flow to Route DNS Traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Create, Delete, and Upsert
Use ChangeResourceRecordsSetsRequest
to perform the following actions:
CREATE
: Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE
: Deletes an existing resource record set that has the specified values.
UPSERT
: If a resource set doesn't exist, Route 53 creates it. If a resource set exists Route 53
updates it with the values in the request.
Syntaxes for Creating, Updating, and Deleting Resource Record Sets
The syntax for a request depends on the type of resource record set that you want to create, delete, or update, such as weighted, alias, or failover. The XML elements in your request must appear in the order listed in the syntax.
For an example for each type of resource record set, see "Examples."
Don't refer to the syntax in the "Parameter Syntax" section, which includes all of the elements for every kind of
resource record set that you can create, delete, or update by using ChangeResourceRecordSets
.
Change Propagation to Route 53 DNS Servers
When you submit a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request, Route 53 propagates your changes to all of the
Route 53 authoritative DNS servers managing the hosted zone. While your changes are propagating,
GetChange
returns a status of PENDING
. When propagation is complete,
GetChange
returns a status of INSYNC
. Changes generally propagate to all Route 53 name
servers managing the hosted zone within 60 seconds. For more information, see GetChange.
Limits on ChangeResourceRecordSets Requests
For information about the limits on a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request, see Limits in the Amazon
Route 53 Developer Guide.
changeResourceRecordSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains change information for the resource record set.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ChangeTagsForResourceResult> changeTagsForResourceAsync(ChangeTagsForResourceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Adds, edits, or deletes tags for a health check or a hosted zone.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
changeTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the tags that you want to add, edit, or delete.public Future<ChangeTagsForResourceResult> changeTagsForResourceAsync(ChangeTagsForResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<ChangeTagsForResourceRequest,ChangeTagsForResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Adds, edits, or deletes tags for a health check or a hosted zone.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
changeTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the tags that you want to add, edit, or delete.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateCidrCollectionResult> createCidrCollectionAsync(CreateCidrCollectionRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a CIDR collection in the current Amazon Web Services account.
createCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<CreateCidrCollectionResult> createCidrCollectionAsync(CreateCidrCollectionRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateCidrCollectionRequest,CreateCidrCollectionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a CIDR collection in the current Amazon Web Services account.
createCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateHealthCheckResult> createHealthCheckAsync(CreateHealthCheckRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new health check.
For information about adding health checks to resource record sets, see HealthCheckId in ChangeResourceRecordSets.
ELB Load Balancers
If you're registering EC2 instances with an Elastic Load Balancing (ELB) load balancer, do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the EC2 instances. When you register an EC2 instance with a load balancer, you configure settings for an ELB health check, which performs a similar function to a Route 53 health check.
Private Hosted Zones
You can associate health checks with failover resource record sets in a private hosted zone. Note the following:
Route 53 health checkers are outside the VPC. To check the health of an endpoint within a VPC by IP address, you must assign a public IP address to the instance in the VPC.
You can configure a health checker to check the health of an external resource that the instance relies on, such as a database server.
You can create a CloudWatch metric, associate an alarm with the metric, and then create a health check that is
based on the state of the alarm. For example, you might create a CloudWatch metric that checks the status of the
Amazon EC2 StatusCheckFailed
metric, add an alarm to the metric, and then create a health check that
is based on the state of the alarm. For information about creating CloudWatch metrics and alarms by using the
CloudWatch console, see the Amazon CloudWatch
User Guide.
createHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the health check request information.public Future<CreateHealthCheckResult> createHealthCheckAsync(CreateHealthCheckRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateHealthCheckRequest,CreateHealthCheckResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new health check.
For information about adding health checks to resource record sets, see HealthCheckId in ChangeResourceRecordSets.
ELB Load Balancers
If you're registering EC2 instances with an Elastic Load Balancing (ELB) load balancer, do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the EC2 instances. When you register an EC2 instance with a load balancer, you configure settings for an ELB health check, which performs a similar function to a Route 53 health check.
Private Hosted Zones
You can associate health checks with failover resource record sets in a private hosted zone. Note the following:
Route 53 health checkers are outside the VPC. To check the health of an endpoint within a VPC by IP address, you must assign a public IP address to the instance in the VPC.
You can configure a health checker to check the health of an external resource that the instance relies on, such as a database server.
You can create a CloudWatch metric, associate an alarm with the metric, and then create a health check that is
based on the state of the alarm. For example, you might create a CloudWatch metric that checks the status of the
Amazon EC2 StatusCheckFailed
metric, add an alarm to the metric, and then create a health check that
is based on the state of the alarm. For information about creating CloudWatch metrics and alarms by using the
CloudWatch console, see the Amazon CloudWatch
User Guide.
createHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the health check request information.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateHostedZoneResult> createHostedZoneAsync(CreateHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new public or private hosted zone. You create records in a public hosted zone to define how you want to route traffic on the internet for a domain, such as example.com, and its subdomains (apex.example.com, acme.example.com). You create records in a private hosted zone to define how you want to route traffic for a domain and its subdomains within one or more Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (Amazon VPCs).
You can't convert a public hosted zone to a private hosted zone or vice versa. Instead, you must create a new hosted zone with the same name and create new resource record sets.
For more information about charges for hosted zones, see Amazon RouteĀ 53 Pricing.
Note the following:
You can't create a hosted zone for a top-level domain (TLD) such as .com.
For public hosted zones, Route 53 automatically creates a default SOA record and four NS records for the zone. For more information about SOA and NS records, see NS and SOA Records that RouteĀ 53 Creates for a Hosted Zone in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
If you want to use the same name servers for multiple public hosted zones, you can optionally associate a
reusable delegation set with the hosted zone. See the DelegationSetId
element.
If your domain is registered with a registrar other than RouteĀ 53, you must update the name servers with your registrar to make Route 53 the DNS service for the domain. For more information, see Migrating DNS Service for an Existing Domain to Amazon RouteĀ 53 in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
When you submit a CreateHostedZone
request, the initial status of the hosted zone is
PENDING
. For public hosted zones, this means that the NS and SOA records are not yet available on
all RouteĀ 53 DNS servers. When the NS and SOA records are available, the status of the zone changes to
INSYNC
.
The CreateHostedZone
request requires the caller to have an ec2:DescribeVpcs
permission.
When creating private hosted zones, the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition where the hosted zone is created. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
createHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a public or private hosted zone.public Future<CreateHostedZoneResult> createHostedZoneAsync(CreateHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateHostedZoneRequest,CreateHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new public or private hosted zone. You create records in a public hosted zone to define how you want to route traffic on the internet for a domain, such as example.com, and its subdomains (apex.example.com, acme.example.com). You create records in a private hosted zone to define how you want to route traffic for a domain and its subdomains within one or more Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (Amazon VPCs).
You can't convert a public hosted zone to a private hosted zone or vice versa. Instead, you must create a new hosted zone with the same name and create new resource record sets.
For more information about charges for hosted zones, see Amazon RouteĀ 53 Pricing.
Note the following:
You can't create a hosted zone for a top-level domain (TLD) such as .com.
For public hosted zones, Route 53 automatically creates a default SOA record and four NS records for the zone. For more information about SOA and NS records, see NS and SOA Records that RouteĀ 53 Creates for a Hosted Zone in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
If you want to use the same name servers for multiple public hosted zones, you can optionally associate a
reusable delegation set with the hosted zone. See the DelegationSetId
element.
If your domain is registered with a registrar other than RouteĀ 53, you must update the name servers with your registrar to make Route 53 the DNS service for the domain. For more information, see Migrating DNS Service for an Existing Domain to Amazon RouteĀ 53 in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
When you submit a CreateHostedZone
request, the initial status of the hosted zone is
PENDING
. For public hosted zones, this means that the NS and SOA records are not yet available on
all RouteĀ 53 DNS servers. When the NS and SOA records are available, the status of the zone changes to
INSYNC
.
The CreateHostedZone
request requires the caller to have an ec2:DescribeVpcs
permission.
When creating private hosted zones, the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition where the hosted zone is created. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
createHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a public or private hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateKeySigningKeyResult> createKeySigningKeyAsync(CreateKeySigningKeyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new key-signing key (KSK) associated with a hosted zone. You can only have two KSKs per hosted zone.
createKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<CreateKeySigningKeyResult> createKeySigningKeyAsync(CreateKeySigningKeyRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateKeySigningKeyRequest,CreateKeySigningKeyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new key-signing key (KSK) associated with a hosted zone. You can only have two KSKs per hosted zone.
createKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateQueryLoggingConfigResult> createQueryLoggingConfigAsync(CreateQueryLoggingConfigRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a configuration for DNS query logging. After you create a query logging configuration, Amazon Route 53 begins to publish log data to an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group.
DNS query logs contain information about the queries that Route 53 receives for a specified public hosted zone, such as the following:
Route 53 edge location that responded to the DNS query
Domain or subdomain that was requested
DNS record type, such as A or AAAA
DNS response code, such as NoError
or ServFail
Before you create a query logging configuration, perform the following operations.
If you create a query logging configuration using the Route 53 console, Route 53 performs these operations automatically.
Create a CloudWatch Logs log group, and make note of the ARN, which you specify when you create a query logging configuration. Note the following:
You must create the log group in the us-east-1 region.
You must use the same Amazon Web Services account to create the log group and the hosted zone that you want to configure query logging for.
When you create log groups for query logging, we recommend that you use a consistent prefix, for example:
/aws/route53/hosted zone name
In the next step, you'll create a resource policy, which controls access to one or more log groups and the associated Amazon Web Services resources, such as Route 53 hosted zones. There's a limit on the number of resource policies that you can create, so we recommend that you use a consistent prefix so you can use the same resource policy for all the log groups that you create for query logging.
Create a CloudWatch Logs resource policy, and give it the permissions that Route 53 needs to create log streams
and to send query logs to log streams. For the value of Resource
, specify the ARN for the log group
that you created in the previous step. To use the same resource policy for all the CloudWatch Logs log groups
that you created for query logging configurations, replace the hosted zone name with *
, for example:
arn:aws:logs:us-east-1:123412341234:log-group:/aws/route53/*
To avoid the confused deputy problem, a security issue where an entity without a permission for an action can coerce a more-privileged entity to perform it, you can optionally limit the permissions that a service has to a resource in a resource-based policy by supplying the following values:
For aws:SourceArn
, supply the hosted zone ARN used in creating the query logging configuration. For
example, aws:SourceArn: arn:aws:route53:::hostedzone/hosted zone ID
.
For aws:SourceAccount
, supply the account ID for the account that creates the query logging
configuration. For example, aws:SourceAccount:111111111111
.
For more information, see The confused deputy problem in the Amazon Web Services IAM User Guide.
You can't use the CloudWatch console to create or edit a resource policy. You must use the CloudWatch API, one of the Amazon Web Services SDKs, or the CLI.
When Route 53 finishes creating the configuration for DNS query logging, it does the following:
Creates a log stream for an edge location the first time that the edge location responds to DNS queries for the specified hosted zone. That log stream is used to log all queries that Route 53 responds to for that edge location.
Begins to send query logs to the applicable log stream.
The name of each log stream is in the following format:
hosted zone ID/edge location code
The edge location code is a three-letter code and an arbitrarily assigned number, for example, DFW3. The three-letter code typically corresponds with the International Air Transport Association airport code for an airport near the edge location. (These abbreviations might change in the future.) For a list of edge locations, see "The Route 53 Global Network" on the Route 53 Product Details page.
Query logs contain only the queries that DNS resolvers forward to Route 53. If a DNS resolver has already cached the response to a query (such as the IP address for a load balancer for example.com), the resolver will continue to return the cached response. It doesn't forward another query to Route 53 until the TTL for the corresponding resource record set expires. Depending on how many DNS queries are submitted for a resource record set, and depending on the TTL for that resource record set, query logs might contain information about only one query out of every several thousand queries that are submitted to DNS. For more information about how DNS works, see Routing Internet Traffic to Your Website or Web Application in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
For a list of the values in each query log and the format of each value, see Logging DNS Queries in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
For information about charges for query logs, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
If you want Route 53 to stop sending query logs to CloudWatch Logs, delete the query logging configuration. For more information, see DeleteQueryLoggingConfig.
createQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<CreateQueryLoggingConfigResult> createQueryLoggingConfigAsync(CreateQueryLoggingConfigRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateQueryLoggingConfigRequest,CreateQueryLoggingConfigResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a configuration for DNS query logging. After you create a query logging configuration, Amazon Route 53 begins to publish log data to an Amazon CloudWatch Logs log group.
DNS query logs contain information about the queries that Route 53 receives for a specified public hosted zone, such as the following:
Route 53 edge location that responded to the DNS query
Domain or subdomain that was requested
DNS record type, such as A or AAAA
DNS response code, such as NoError
or ServFail
Before you create a query logging configuration, perform the following operations.
If you create a query logging configuration using the Route 53 console, Route 53 performs these operations automatically.
Create a CloudWatch Logs log group, and make note of the ARN, which you specify when you create a query logging configuration. Note the following:
You must create the log group in the us-east-1 region.
You must use the same Amazon Web Services account to create the log group and the hosted zone that you want to configure query logging for.
When you create log groups for query logging, we recommend that you use a consistent prefix, for example:
/aws/route53/hosted zone name
In the next step, you'll create a resource policy, which controls access to one or more log groups and the associated Amazon Web Services resources, such as Route 53 hosted zones. There's a limit on the number of resource policies that you can create, so we recommend that you use a consistent prefix so you can use the same resource policy for all the log groups that you create for query logging.
Create a CloudWatch Logs resource policy, and give it the permissions that Route 53 needs to create log streams
and to send query logs to log streams. For the value of Resource
, specify the ARN for the log group
that you created in the previous step. To use the same resource policy for all the CloudWatch Logs log groups
that you created for query logging configurations, replace the hosted zone name with *
, for example:
arn:aws:logs:us-east-1:123412341234:log-group:/aws/route53/*
To avoid the confused deputy problem, a security issue where an entity without a permission for an action can coerce a more-privileged entity to perform it, you can optionally limit the permissions that a service has to a resource in a resource-based policy by supplying the following values:
For aws:SourceArn
, supply the hosted zone ARN used in creating the query logging configuration. For
example, aws:SourceArn: arn:aws:route53:::hostedzone/hosted zone ID
.
For aws:SourceAccount
, supply the account ID for the account that creates the query logging
configuration. For example, aws:SourceAccount:111111111111
.
For more information, see The confused deputy problem in the Amazon Web Services IAM User Guide.
You can't use the CloudWatch console to create or edit a resource policy. You must use the CloudWatch API, one of the Amazon Web Services SDKs, or the CLI.
When Route 53 finishes creating the configuration for DNS query logging, it does the following:
Creates a log stream for an edge location the first time that the edge location responds to DNS queries for the specified hosted zone. That log stream is used to log all queries that Route 53 responds to for that edge location.
Begins to send query logs to the applicable log stream.
The name of each log stream is in the following format:
hosted zone ID/edge location code
The edge location code is a three-letter code and an arbitrarily assigned number, for example, DFW3. The three-letter code typically corresponds with the International Air Transport Association airport code for an airport near the edge location. (These abbreviations might change in the future.) For a list of edge locations, see "The Route 53 Global Network" on the Route 53 Product Details page.
Query logs contain only the queries that DNS resolvers forward to Route 53. If a DNS resolver has already cached the response to a query (such as the IP address for a load balancer for example.com), the resolver will continue to return the cached response. It doesn't forward another query to Route 53 until the TTL for the corresponding resource record set expires. Depending on how many DNS queries are submitted for a resource record set, and depending on the TTL for that resource record set, query logs might contain information about only one query out of every several thousand queries that are submitted to DNS. For more information about how DNS works, see Routing Internet Traffic to Your Website or Web Application in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
For a list of the values in each query log and the format of each value, see Logging DNS Queries in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
For information about charges for query logs, see Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
If you want Route 53 to stop sending query logs to CloudWatch Logs, delete the query logging configuration. For more information, see DeleteQueryLoggingConfig.
createQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateReusableDelegationSetResult> createReusableDelegationSetAsync(CreateReusableDelegationSetRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a delegation set (a group of four name servers) that can be reused by multiple hosted zones that were created by the same Amazon Web Services account.
You can also create a reusable delegation set that uses the four name servers that are associated with an
existing hosted zone. Specify the hosted zone ID in the CreateReusableDelegationSet
request.
You can't associate a reusable delegation set with a private hosted zone.
For information about using a reusable delegation set to configure white label name servers, see Configuring White Label Name Servers.
The process for migrating existing hosted zones to use a reusable delegation set is comparable to the process for configuring white label name servers. You need to perform the following steps:
Create a reusable delegation set.
Recreate hosted zones, and reduce the TTL to 60 seconds or less.
Recreate resource record sets in the new hosted zones.
Change the registrar's name servers to use the name servers for the new hosted zones.
Monitor traffic for the website or application.
Change TTLs back to their original values.
If you want to migrate existing hosted zones to use a reusable delegation set, the existing hosted zones can't use any of the name servers that are assigned to the reusable delegation set. If one or more hosted zones do use one or more name servers that are assigned to the reusable delegation set, you can do one of the following:
For small numbers of hosted zonesāup to a few hundredāit's relatively easy to create reusable delegation sets until you get one that has four name servers that don't overlap with any of the name servers in your hosted zones.
For larger numbers of hosted zones, the easiest solution is to use more than one reusable delegation set.
For larger numbers of hosted zones, you can also migrate hosted zones that have overlapping name servers to hosted zones that don't have overlapping name servers, then migrate the hosted zones again to use the reusable delegation set.
createReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<CreateReusableDelegationSetResult> createReusableDelegationSetAsync(CreateReusableDelegationSetRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateReusableDelegationSetRequest,CreateReusableDelegationSetResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a delegation set (a group of four name servers) that can be reused by multiple hosted zones that were created by the same Amazon Web Services account.
You can also create a reusable delegation set that uses the four name servers that are associated with an
existing hosted zone. Specify the hosted zone ID in the CreateReusableDelegationSet
request.
You can't associate a reusable delegation set with a private hosted zone.
For information about using a reusable delegation set to configure white label name servers, see Configuring White Label Name Servers.
The process for migrating existing hosted zones to use a reusable delegation set is comparable to the process for configuring white label name servers. You need to perform the following steps:
Create a reusable delegation set.
Recreate hosted zones, and reduce the TTL to 60 seconds or less.
Recreate resource record sets in the new hosted zones.
Change the registrar's name servers to use the name servers for the new hosted zones.
Monitor traffic for the website or application.
Change TTLs back to their original values.
If you want to migrate existing hosted zones to use a reusable delegation set, the existing hosted zones can't use any of the name servers that are assigned to the reusable delegation set. If one or more hosted zones do use one or more name servers that are assigned to the reusable delegation set, you can do one of the following:
For small numbers of hosted zonesāup to a few hundredāit's relatively easy to create reusable delegation sets until you get one that has four name servers that don't overlap with any of the name servers in your hosted zones.
For larger numbers of hosted zones, the easiest solution is to use more than one reusable delegation set.
For larger numbers of hosted zones, you can also migrate hosted zones that have overlapping name servers to hosted zones that don't have overlapping name servers, then migrate the hosted zones again to use the reusable delegation set.
createReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyResult> createTrafficPolicyAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a traffic policy, which you use to create multiple DNS resource record sets for one domain name (such as example.com) or one subdomain name (such as www.example.com).
createTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to create.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyResult> createTrafficPolicyAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateTrafficPolicyRequest,CreateTrafficPolicyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a traffic policy, which you use to create multiple DNS resource record sets for one domain name (such as example.com) or one subdomain name (such as www.example.com).
createTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to create.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> createTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates resource record sets in a specified hosted zone based on the settings in a specified traffic policy
version. In addition, CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
associates the resource record sets with a
specified domain name (such as example.com) or subdomain name (such as www.example.com). Amazon Route 53 responds
to DNS queries for the domain or subdomain name by using the resource record sets that
CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
created.
After you submit an CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53
creates the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. Use
GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of new traffic policy instance to confirm that the
CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed successfully. For more information, see the
State
response element.
createTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that you want to create based on a
specified traffic policy.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> createTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest,CreateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates resource record sets in a specified hosted zone based on the settings in a specified traffic policy
version. In addition, CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
associates the resource record sets with a
specified domain name (such as example.com) or subdomain name (such as www.example.com). Amazon Route 53 responds
to DNS queries for the domain or subdomain name by using the resource record sets that
CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
created.
After you submit an CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53
creates the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. Use
GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of new traffic policy instance to confirm that the
CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed successfully. For more information, see the
State
response element.
createTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that you want to create based on a
specified traffic policy.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyVersionResult> createTrafficPolicyVersionAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyVersionRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new version of an existing traffic policy. When you create a new version of a traffic policy, you specify the ID of the traffic policy that you want to update and a JSON-formatted document that describes the new version. You use traffic policies to create multiple DNS resource record sets for one domain name (such as example.com) or one subdomain name (such as www.example.com). You can create a maximum of 1000 versions of a traffic policy. If you reach the limit and need to create another version, you'll need to start a new traffic policy.
createTrafficPolicyVersionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to create a new version
for.public Future<CreateTrafficPolicyVersionResult> createTrafficPolicyVersionAsync(CreateTrafficPolicyVersionRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateTrafficPolicyVersionRequest,CreateTrafficPolicyVersionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Creates a new version of an existing traffic policy. When you create a new version of a traffic policy, you specify the ID of the traffic policy that you want to update and a JSON-formatted document that describes the new version. You use traffic policies to create multiple DNS resource record sets for one domain name (such as example.com) or one subdomain name (such as www.example.com). You can create a maximum of 1000 versions of a traffic policy. If you reach the limit and need to create another version, you'll need to start a new traffic policy.
createTrafficPolicyVersionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to create a new version
for.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> createVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync(CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Authorizes the Amazon Web Services account that created a specified VPC to submit an
AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request to associate the VPC with a specified hosted zone that was
created by a different account. To submit a CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
request, you must use
the account that created the hosted zone. After you authorize the association, use the account that created the
VPC to submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request.
If you want to associate multiple VPCs that you created by using one account with a hosted zone that you created by using a different account, you must submit one authorization request for each VPC.
createVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to authorize associating a VPC with your
private hosted zone. Authorization is only required when a private hosted zone and a VPC were created by
using different accounts.public Future<CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> createVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync(CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest request, AsyncHandler<CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest,CreateVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Authorizes the Amazon Web Services account that created a specified VPC to submit an
AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request to associate the VPC with a specified hosted zone that was
created by a different account. To submit a CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
request, you must use
the account that created the hosted zone. After you authorize the association, use the account that created the
VPC to submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request.
If you want to associate multiple VPCs that you created by using one account with a hosted zone that you created by using a different account, you must submit one authorization request for each VPC.
createVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to authorize associating a VPC with your
private hosted zone. Authorization is only required when a private hosted zone and a VPC were created by
using different accounts.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeactivateKeySigningKeyResult> deactivateKeySigningKeyAsync(DeactivateKeySigningKeyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deactivates a key-signing key (KSK) so that it will not be used for signing by DNSSEC. This operation changes the
KSK status to INACTIVE
.
deactivateKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<DeactivateKeySigningKeyResult> deactivateKeySigningKeyAsync(DeactivateKeySigningKeyRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeactivateKeySigningKeyRequest,DeactivateKeySigningKeyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deactivates a key-signing key (KSK) so that it will not be used for signing by DNSSEC. This operation changes the
KSK status to INACTIVE
.
deactivateKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteCidrCollectionResult> deleteCidrCollectionAsync(DeleteCidrCollectionRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a CIDR collection in the current Amazon Web Services account. The collection must be empty before it can be deleted.
deleteCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<DeleteCidrCollectionResult> deleteCidrCollectionAsync(DeleteCidrCollectionRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteCidrCollectionRequest,DeleteCidrCollectionResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a CIDR collection in the current Amazon Web Services account. The collection must be empty before it can be deleted.
deleteCidrCollectionAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteHealthCheckResult> deleteHealthCheckAsync(DeleteHealthCheckRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a health check.
Amazon Route 53 does not prevent you from deleting a health check even if the health check is associated with one or more resource record sets. If you delete a health check and you don't update the associated resource record sets, the future status of the health check can't be predicted and may change. This will affect the routing of DNS queries for your DNS failover configuration. For more information, see Replacing and Deleting Health Checks in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
If you're using Cloud Map and you configured Cloud Map to create a Route 53 health check when you register an
instance, you can't use the Route 53 DeleteHealthCheck
command to delete the health check. The
health check is deleted automatically when you deregister the instance; there can be a delay of several hours
before the health check is deleted from Route 53.
deleteHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- This action deletes a health check.public Future<DeleteHealthCheckResult> deleteHealthCheckAsync(DeleteHealthCheckRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteHealthCheckRequest,DeleteHealthCheckResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a health check.
Amazon Route 53 does not prevent you from deleting a health check even if the health check is associated with one or more resource record sets. If you delete a health check and you don't update the associated resource record sets, the future status of the health check can't be predicted and may change. This will affect the routing of DNS queries for your DNS failover configuration. For more information, see Replacing and Deleting Health Checks in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
If you're using Cloud Map and you configured Cloud Map to create a Route 53 health check when you register an
instance, you can't use the Route 53 DeleteHealthCheck
command to delete the health check. The
health check is deleted automatically when you deregister the instance; there can be a delay of several hours
before the health check is deleted from Route 53.
deleteHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- This action deletes a health check.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteHostedZoneResult> deleteHostedZoneAsync(DeleteHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a hosted zone.
If the hosted zone was created by another service, such as Cloud Map, see Deleting Public Hosted Zones That Were Created by Another Service in the Amazon RouteĀ 53 Developer Guide for information about how to delete it. (The process is the same for public and private hosted zones that were created by another service.)
If you want to keep your domain registration but you want to stop routing internet traffic to your website or web application, we recommend that you delete resource record sets in the hosted zone instead of deleting the hosted zone.
If you delete a hosted zone, you can't undelete it. You must create a new hosted zone and update the name servers for your domain registration, which can require up to 48 hours to take effect. (If you delegated responsibility for a subdomain to a hosted zone and you delete the child hosted zone, you must update the name servers in the parent hosted zone.) In addition, if you delete a hosted zone, someone could hijack the domain and route traffic to their own resources using your domain name.
If you want to avoid the monthly charge for the hosted zone, you can transfer DNS service for the domain to a free DNS service. When you transfer DNS service, you have to update the name servers for the domain registration. If the domain is registered with RouteĀ 53, see UpdateDomainNameservers for information about how to replace RouteĀ 53 name servers with name servers for the new DNS service. If the domain is registered with another registrar, use the method provided by the registrar to update name servers for the domain registration. For more information, perform an internet search on "free DNS service."
You can delete a hosted zone only if it contains only the default SOA record and NS resource record sets. If the
hosted zone contains other resource record sets, you must delete them before you can delete the hosted zone. If
you try to delete a hosted zone that contains other resource record sets, the request fails, and RouteĀ 53 returns
a HostedZoneNotEmpty
error. For information about deleting records from your hosted zone, see
ChangeResourceRecordSets.
To verify that the hosted zone has been deleted, do one of the following:
Use the GetHostedZone
action to request information about the hosted zone.
Use the ListHostedZones
action to get a list of the hosted zones associated with the current Amazon
Web Services account.
deleteHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a hosted zone.public Future<DeleteHostedZoneResult> deleteHostedZoneAsync(DeleteHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteHostedZoneRequest,DeleteHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a hosted zone.
If the hosted zone was created by another service, such as Cloud Map, see Deleting Public Hosted Zones That Were Created by Another Service in the Amazon RouteĀ 53 Developer Guide for information about how to delete it. (The process is the same for public and private hosted zones that were created by another service.)
If you want to keep your domain registration but you want to stop routing internet traffic to your website or web application, we recommend that you delete resource record sets in the hosted zone instead of deleting the hosted zone.
If you delete a hosted zone, you can't undelete it. You must create a new hosted zone and update the name servers for your domain registration, which can require up to 48 hours to take effect. (If you delegated responsibility for a subdomain to a hosted zone and you delete the child hosted zone, you must update the name servers in the parent hosted zone.) In addition, if you delete a hosted zone, someone could hijack the domain and route traffic to their own resources using your domain name.
If you want to avoid the monthly charge for the hosted zone, you can transfer DNS service for the domain to a free DNS service. When you transfer DNS service, you have to update the name servers for the domain registration. If the domain is registered with RouteĀ 53, see UpdateDomainNameservers for information about how to replace RouteĀ 53 name servers with name servers for the new DNS service. If the domain is registered with another registrar, use the method provided by the registrar to update name servers for the domain registration. For more information, perform an internet search on "free DNS service."
You can delete a hosted zone only if it contains only the default SOA record and NS resource record sets. If the
hosted zone contains other resource record sets, you must delete them before you can delete the hosted zone. If
you try to delete a hosted zone that contains other resource record sets, the request fails, and RouteĀ 53 returns
a HostedZoneNotEmpty
error. For information about deleting records from your hosted zone, see
ChangeResourceRecordSets.
To verify that the hosted zone has been deleted, do one of the following:
Use the GetHostedZone
action to request information about the hosted zone.
Use the ListHostedZones
action to get a list of the hosted zones associated with the current Amazon
Web Services account.
deleteHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteKeySigningKeyResult> deleteKeySigningKeyAsync(DeleteKeySigningKeyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a key-signing key (KSK). Before you can delete a KSK, you must deactivate it. The KSK must be deactivated before you can delete it regardless of whether the hosted zone is enabled for DNSSEC signing.
You can use DeactivateKeySigningKey to deactivate the key before you delete it.
Use GetDNSSEC to verify
that the KSK is in an INACTIVE
status.
deleteKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<DeleteKeySigningKeyResult> deleteKeySigningKeyAsync(DeleteKeySigningKeyRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteKeySigningKeyRequest,DeleteKeySigningKeyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a key-signing key (KSK). Before you can delete a KSK, you must deactivate it. The KSK must be deactivated before you can delete it regardless of whether the hosted zone is enabled for DNSSEC signing.
You can use DeactivateKeySigningKey to deactivate the key before you delete it.
Use GetDNSSEC to verify
that the KSK is in an INACTIVE
status.
deleteKeySigningKeyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteQueryLoggingConfigResult> deleteQueryLoggingConfigAsync(DeleteQueryLoggingConfigRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a configuration for DNS query logging. If you delete a configuration, Amazon Route 53 stops sending query logs to CloudWatch Logs. Route 53 doesn't delete any logs that are already in CloudWatch Logs.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig.
deleteQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<DeleteQueryLoggingConfigResult> deleteQueryLoggingConfigAsync(DeleteQueryLoggingConfigRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteQueryLoggingConfigRequest,DeleteQueryLoggingConfigResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a configuration for DNS query logging. If you delete a configuration, Amazon Route 53 stops sending query logs to CloudWatch Logs. Route 53 doesn't delete any logs that are already in CloudWatch Logs.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig.
deleteQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteReusableDelegationSetResult> deleteReusableDelegationSetAsync(DeleteReusableDelegationSetRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a reusable delegation set.
You can delete a reusable delegation set only if it isn't associated with any hosted zones.
To verify that the reusable delegation set is not associated with any hosted zones, submit a GetReusableDelegationSet request and specify the ID of the reusable delegation set that you want to delete.
deleteReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a reusable delegation set.public Future<DeleteReusableDelegationSetResult> deleteReusableDelegationSetAsync(DeleteReusableDelegationSetRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteReusableDelegationSetRequest,DeleteReusableDelegationSetResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a reusable delegation set.
You can delete a reusable delegation set only if it isn't associated with any hosted zones.
To verify that the reusable delegation set is not associated with any hosted zones, submit a GetReusableDelegationSet request and specify the ID of the reusable delegation set that you want to delete.
deleteReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a reusable delegation set.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteTrafficPolicyResult> deleteTrafficPolicyAsync(DeleteTrafficPolicyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a traffic policy.
When you delete a traffic policy, Route 53 sets a flag on the policy to indicate that it has been deleted. However, Route 53 never fully deletes the traffic policy. Note the following:
Deleted traffic policies aren't listed if you run ListTrafficPolicies.
There's no way to get a list of deleted policies.
If you retain the ID of the policy, you can get information about the policy, including the traffic policy document, by running GetTrafficPolicy.
deleteTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a specified traffic policy version.public Future<DeleteTrafficPolicyResult> deleteTrafficPolicyAsync(DeleteTrafficPolicyRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteTrafficPolicyRequest,DeleteTrafficPolicyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a traffic policy.
When you delete a traffic policy, Route 53 sets a flag on the policy to indicate that it has been deleted. However, Route 53 never fully deletes the traffic policy. Note the following:
Deleted traffic policies aren't listed if you run ListTrafficPolicies.
There's no way to get a list of deleted policies.
If you retain the ID of the policy, you can get information about the policy, including the traffic policy document, by running GetTrafficPolicy.
deleteTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a specified traffic policy version.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> deleteTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a traffic policy instance and all of the resource record sets that Amazon Route 53 created when you created the instance.
In the Route 53 console, traffic policy instances are known as policy records.
deleteTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a specified traffic policy instance.public Future<DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> deleteTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest,DeleteTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Deletes a traffic policy instance and all of the resource record sets that Amazon Route 53 created when you created the instance.
In the Route 53 console, traffic policy instances are known as policy records.
deleteTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to delete a specified traffic policy instance.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> deleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync(DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Removes authorization to submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request to associate a specified VPC
with a hosted zone that was created by a different account. You must use the account that created the hosted zone
to submit a DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorization
request.
Sending this request only prevents the Amazon Web Services account that created the VPC from associating the VPC
with the Amazon Route 53 hosted zone in the future. If the VPC is already associated with the hosted zone,
DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorization
won't disassociate the VPC from the hosted zone. If you want to
delete an existing association, use DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
.
deleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to remove authorization to associate a VPC that
was created by one Amazon Web Services account with a hosted zone that was created with a different Amazon
Web Services account.public Future<DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> deleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync(DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest request, AsyncHandler<DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationRequest,DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Removes authorization to submit an AssociateVPCWithHostedZone
request to associate a specified VPC
with a hosted zone that was created by a different account. You must use the account that created the hosted zone
to submit a DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorization
request.
Sending this request only prevents the Amazon Web Services account that created the VPC from associating the VPC
with the Amazon Route 53 hosted zone in the future. If the VPC is already associated with the hosted zone,
DeleteVPCAssociationAuthorization
won't disassociate the VPC from the hosted zone. If you want to
delete an existing association, use DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
.
deleteVPCAssociationAuthorizationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to remove authorization to associate a VPC that
was created by one Amazon Web Services account with a hosted zone that was created with a different Amazon
Web Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DisableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> disableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync(DisableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Disables DNSSEC signing in a specific hosted zone. This action does not deactivate any key-signing keys (KSKs) that are active in the hosted zone.
disableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<DisableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> disableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync(DisableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest request, AsyncHandler<DisableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest,DisableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Disables DNSSEC signing in a specific hosted zone. This action does not deactivate any key-signing keys (KSKs) that are active in the hosted zone.
disableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneResult> disassociateVPCFromHostedZoneAsync(DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Disassociates an Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) from an Amazon Route 53 private hosted zone. Note the following:
You can't disassociate the last Amazon VPC from a private hosted zone.
You can't convert a private hosted zone into a public hosted zone.
You can submit a DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
request using either the account that created the
hosted zone or the account that created the Amazon VPC.
Some services, such as Cloud Map and Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) automatically create hosted zones and associate VPCs with the hosted zones. A service can create a hosted zone using your account or using its own account. You can disassociate a VPC from a hosted zone only if the service created the hosted zone using your account.
When you run
DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone, if the hosted zone has a value for OwningAccount
, you can use
DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
. If the hosted zone has a value for OwningService
, you
can't use DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
.
When revoking access, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
disassociateVPCFromHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the VPC that you want to disassociate from a specified
private hosted zone.public Future<DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneResult> disassociateVPCFromHostedZoneAsync(DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest,DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Disassociates an Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) from an Amazon Route 53 private hosted zone. Note the following:
You can't disassociate the last Amazon VPC from a private hosted zone.
You can't convert a private hosted zone into a public hosted zone.
You can submit a DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
request using either the account that created the
hosted zone or the account that created the Amazon VPC.
Some services, such as Cloud Map and Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) automatically create hosted zones and associate VPCs with the hosted zones. A service can create a hosted zone using your account or using its own account. You can disassociate a VPC from a hosted zone only if the service created the hosted zone using your account.
When you run
DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone, if the hosted zone has a value for OwningAccount
, you can use
DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
. If the hosted zone has a value for OwningService
, you
can't use DisassociateVPCFromHostedZone
.
When revoking access, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
disassociateVPCFromHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the VPC that you want to disassociate from a specified
private hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<EnableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> enableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync(EnableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Enables DNSSEC signing in a specific hosted zone.
enableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<EnableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> enableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync(EnableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest request, AsyncHandler<EnableHostedZoneDNSSECRequest,EnableHostedZoneDNSSECResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Enables DNSSEC signing in a specific hosted zone.
enableHostedZoneDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetAccountLimitResult> getAccountLimitAsync(GetAccountLimitRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the specified limit for the current account, for example, the maximum number of health checks that you can create using the account.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
You can also view account limits in Amazon Web Services Trusted Advisor. Sign in to the Amazon Web Services Management Console and open the Trusted Advisor console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/trustedadvisor/. Then choose Service limits in the navigation pane.
getAccountLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.public Future<GetAccountLimitResult> getAccountLimitAsync(GetAccountLimitRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetAccountLimitRequest,GetAccountLimitResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the specified limit for the current account, for example, the maximum number of health checks that you can create using the account.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
You can also view account limits in Amazon Web Services Trusted Advisor. Sign in to the Amazon Web Services Management Console and open the Trusted Advisor console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/trustedadvisor/. Then choose Service limits in the navigation pane.
getAccountLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetChangeResult> getChangeAsync(GetChangeRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns the current status of a change batch request. The status is one of the following values:
PENDING
indicates that the changes in this request have not propagated to all Amazon Route 53 DNS
servers managing the hosted zone. This is the initial status of all change batch requests.
INSYNC
indicates that the changes have propagated to all Route 53 DNS servers managing the hosted
zone.
getChangeAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- The input for a GetChange request.public Future<GetChangeResult> getChangeAsync(GetChangeRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetChangeRequest,GetChangeResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns the current status of a change batch request. The status is one of the following values:
PENDING
indicates that the changes in this request have not propagated to all Amazon Route 53 DNS
servers managing the hosted zone. This is the initial status of all change batch requests.
INSYNC
indicates that the changes have propagated to all Route 53 DNS servers managing the hosted
zone.
getChangeAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- The input for a GetChange request.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetCheckerIpRangesResult> getCheckerIpRangesAsync(GetCheckerIpRangesRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
GetCheckerIpRanges
still works, but we recommend that you download ip-ranges.json, which includes IP
address ranges for all Amazon Web Services services. For more information, see IP Address Ranges of
Amazon Route 53 Servers in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
getCheckerIpRangesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Empty request.public Future<GetCheckerIpRangesResult> getCheckerIpRangesAsync(GetCheckerIpRangesRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetCheckerIpRangesRequest,GetCheckerIpRangesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
GetCheckerIpRanges
still works, but we recommend that you download ip-ranges.json, which includes IP
address ranges for all Amazon Web Services services. For more information, see IP Address Ranges of
Amazon Route 53 Servers in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
getCheckerIpRangesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Empty request.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetCheckerIpRangesResult> getCheckerIpRangesAsync()
getCheckerIpRangesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getCheckerIpRangesAsync(GetCheckerIpRangesRequest)
public Future<GetCheckerIpRangesResult> getCheckerIpRangesAsync(AsyncHandler<GetCheckerIpRangesRequest,GetCheckerIpRangesResult> asyncHandler)
getCheckerIpRangesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getCheckerIpRangesAsync(GetCheckerIpRangesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<GetDNSSECResult> getDNSSECAsync(GetDNSSECRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns information about DNSSEC for a specific hosted zone, including the key-signing keys (KSKs) in the hosted zone.
getDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<GetDNSSECResult> getDNSSECAsync(GetDNSSECRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetDNSSECRequest,GetDNSSECResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns information about DNSSEC for a specific hosted zone, including the key-signing keys (KSKs) in the hosted zone.
getDNSSECAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetGeoLocationResult> getGeoLocationAsync(GetGeoLocationRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about whether a specified geographic location is supported for Amazon Route 53 geolocation resource record sets.
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
Use the following syntax to determine whether a continent is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?continentcode=two-letter abbreviation for a continent
Use the following syntax to determine whether a country is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?countrycode=two-character country code
Use the following syntax to determine whether a subdivision of a country is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?countrycode=two-character country code&subdivisioncode=subdivision code
getGeoLocationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for information about whether a specified geographic location is supported for Amazon Route 53
geolocation resource record sets.public Future<GetGeoLocationResult> getGeoLocationAsync(GetGeoLocationRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetGeoLocationRequest,GetGeoLocationResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about whether a specified geographic location is supported for Amazon Route 53 geolocation resource record sets.
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
Use the following syntax to determine whether a continent is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?continentcode=two-letter abbreviation for a continent
Use the following syntax to determine whether a country is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?countrycode=two-character country code
Use the following syntax to determine whether a subdivision of a country is supported for geolocation:
GET /2013-04-01/geolocation?countrycode=two-character country code&subdivisioncode=subdivision code
getGeoLocationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for information about whether a specified geographic location is supported for Amazon Route 53
geolocation resource record sets.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetGeoLocationResult> getGeoLocationAsync()
getGeoLocationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getGeoLocationAsync(GetGeoLocationRequest)
public Future<GetGeoLocationResult> getGeoLocationAsync(AsyncHandler<GetGeoLocationRequest,GetGeoLocationResult> asyncHandler)
getGeoLocationAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getGeoLocationAsync(GetGeoLocationRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<GetHealthCheckResult> getHealthCheckAsync(GetHealthCheckRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified health check.
getHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified health check.public Future<GetHealthCheckResult> getHealthCheckAsync(GetHealthCheckRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHealthCheckRequest,GetHealthCheckResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified health check.
getHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified health check.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHealthCheckCountResult> getHealthCheckCountAsync(GetHealthCheckCountRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves the number of health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getHealthCheckCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the number of health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account.public Future<GetHealthCheckCountResult> getHealthCheckCountAsync(GetHealthCheckCountRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHealthCheckCountRequest,GetHealthCheckCountResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves the number of health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getHealthCheckCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the number of health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHealthCheckCountResult> getHealthCheckCountAsync()
getHealthCheckCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getHealthCheckCountAsync(GetHealthCheckCountRequest)
public Future<GetHealthCheckCountResult> getHealthCheckCountAsync(AsyncHandler<GetHealthCheckCountRequest,GetHealthCheckCountResult> asyncHandler)
getHealthCheckCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getHealthCheckCountAsync(GetHealthCheckCountRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonResult> getHealthCheckLastFailureReasonAsync(GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the reason that a specified health check failed most recently.
getHealthCheckLastFailureReasonAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the reason that a health check failed most recently.public Future<GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonResult> getHealthCheckLastFailureReasonAsync(GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonRequest,GetHealthCheckLastFailureReasonResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the reason that a specified health check failed most recently.
getHealthCheckLastFailureReasonAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the reason that a health check failed most recently.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHealthCheckStatusResult> getHealthCheckStatusAsync(GetHealthCheckStatusRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets status of a specified health check.
This API is intended for use during development to diagnose behavior. It doesnāt support production use-cases with high query rates that require immediate and actionable responses.
getHealthCheckStatusAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get the status for a health check.public Future<GetHealthCheckStatusResult> getHealthCheckStatusAsync(GetHealthCheckStatusRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHealthCheckStatusRequest,GetHealthCheckStatusResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets status of a specified health check.
This API is intended for use during development to diagnose behavior. It doesnāt support production use-cases with high query rates that require immediate and actionable responses.
getHealthCheckStatusAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get the status for a health check.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHostedZoneResult> getHostedZoneAsync(GetHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified hosted zone including the four name servers assigned to the hosted zone.
getHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified hosted zone.public Future<GetHostedZoneResult> getHostedZoneAsync(GetHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHostedZoneRequest,GetHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified hosted zone including the four name servers assigned to the hosted zone.
getHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHostedZoneCountResult> getHostedZoneCountAsync(GetHostedZoneCountRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves the number of hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getHostedZoneCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a count of all the hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.public Future<GetHostedZoneCountResult> getHostedZoneCountAsync(GetHostedZoneCountRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHostedZoneCountRequest,GetHostedZoneCountResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves the number of hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getHostedZoneCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a count of all the hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetHostedZoneCountResult> getHostedZoneCountAsync()
getHostedZoneCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getHostedZoneCountAsync(GetHostedZoneCountRequest)
public Future<GetHostedZoneCountResult> getHostedZoneCountAsync(AsyncHandler<GetHostedZoneCountRequest,GetHostedZoneCountResult> asyncHandler)
getHostedZoneCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getHostedZoneCountAsync(GetHostedZoneCountRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<GetHostedZoneLimitResult> getHostedZoneLimitAsync(GetHostedZoneLimitRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the specified limit for a specified hosted zone, for example, the maximum number of records that you can create in the hosted zone.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
getHostedZoneLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.public Future<GetHostedZoneLimitResult> getHostedZoneLimitAsync(GetHostedZoneLimitRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetHostedZoneLimitRequest,GetHostedZoneLimitResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the specified limit for a specified hosted zone, for example, the maximum number of records that you can create in the hosted zone.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
getHostedZoneLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetQueryLoggingConfigResult> getQueryLoggingConfigAsync(GetQueryLoggingConfigRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified configuration for DNS query logging.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig and Logging DNS Queries.
getQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<GetQueryLoggingConfigResult> getQueryLoggingConfigAsync(GetQueryLoggingConfigRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetQueryLoggingConfigRequest,GetQueryLoggingConfigResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified configuration for DNS query logging.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig and Logging DNS Queries.
getQueryLoggingConfigAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetReusableDelegationSetResult> getReusableDelegationSetAsync(GetReusableDelegationSetRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves information about a specified reusable delegation set, including the four name servers that are assigned to the delegation set.
getReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified reusable delegation set.public Future<GetReusableDelegationSetResult> getReusableDelegationSetAsync(GetReusableDelegationSetRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetReusableDelegationSetRequest,GetReusableDelegationSetResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves information about a specified reusable delegation set, including the four name servers that are assigned to the delegation set.
getReusableDelegationSetAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about a specified reusable delegation set.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetReusableDelegationSetLimitResult> getReusableDelegationSetLimitAsync(GetReusableDelegationSetLimitRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the maximum number of hosted zones that you can associate with the specified reusable delegation set.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
getReusableDelegationSetLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.public Future<GetReusableDelegationSetLimitResult> getReusableDelegationSetLimitAsync(GetReusableDelegationSetLimitRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetReusableDelegationSetLimitRequest,GetReusableDelegationSetLimitResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the maximum number of hosted zones that you can associate with the specified reusable delegation set.
For the default limit, see Limits in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide. To request a higher limit, open a case.
getReusableDelegationSetLimitAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyResult> getTrafficPolicyAsync(GetTrafficPolicyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specific traffic policy version.
For information about how of deleting a traffic policy affects the response from GetTrafficPolicy
,
see DeleteTrafficPolicy
.
getTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets information about a specific traffic policy version.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyResult> getTrafficPolicyAsync(GetTrafficPolicyRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetTrafficPolicyRequest,GetTrafficPolicyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specific traffic policy version.
For information about how of deleting a traffic policy affects the response from GetTrafficPolicy
,
see DeleteTrafficPolicy
.
getTrafficPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets information about a specific traffic policy version.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(GetTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified traffic policy instance.
Use GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of new traffic policy instance to confirm that
the CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed
successfully. For more information, see the State
response element.
In the Route 53 console, traffic policy instances are known as policy records.
getTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets information about a specified traffic policy instance.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(GetTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest,GetTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about a specified traffic policy instance.
Use GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of new traffic policy instance to confirm that
the CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed
successfully. For more information, see the State
response element.
In the Route 53 console, traffic policy instances are known as policy records.
getTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets information about a specified traffic policy instance.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync(GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the number of traffic policy instances that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Request to get the number of traffic policy instances that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync(GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountRequest request, AsyncHandler<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountRequest,GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the number of traffic policy instances that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Request to get the number of traffic policy instances that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync()
getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync(GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountRequest)
public Future<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> getTrafficPolicyInstanceCountAsync(AsyncHandler<GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountRequest,GetTrafficPolicyInstanceCountResult> asyncHandler)
public Future<ListCidrBlocksResult> listCidrBlocksAsync(ListCidrBlocksRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of location objects and their CIDR blocks.
listCidrBlocksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ListCidrBlocksResult> listCidrBlocksAsync(ListCidrBlocksRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListCidrBlocksRequest,ListCidrBlocksResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of location objects and their CIDR blocks.
listCidrBlocksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListCidrCollectionsResult> listCidrCollectionsAsync(ListCidrCollectionsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of CIDR collections in the Amazon Web Services account (metadata only).
listCidrCollectionsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ListCidrCollectionsResult> listCidrCollectionsAsync(ListCidrCollectionsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListCidrCollectionsRequest,ListCidrCollectionsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of CIDR collections in the Amazon Web Services account (metadata only).
listCidrCollectionsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListCidrLocationsResult> listCidrLocationsAsync(ListCidrLocationsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of CIDR locations for the given collection (metadata only, does not include CIDR blocks).
listCidrLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ListCidrLocationsResult> listCidrLocationsAsync(ListCidrLocationsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListCidrLocationsRequest,ListCidrLocationsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Returns a paginated list of CIDR locations for the given collection (metadata only, does not include CIDR blocks).
listCidrLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListGeoLocationsResult> listGeoLocationsAsync(ListGeoLocationsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of supported geographic locations.
Countries are listed first, and continents are listed last. If Amazon Route 53 supports subdivisions for a country (for example, states or provinces), the subdivisions for that country are listed in alphabetical order immediately after the corresponding country.
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
For a list of supported geolocation codes, see the GeoLocation data type.
listGeoLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get a list of geographic locations that Amazon Route 53 supports for geolocation resource
record sets.public Future<ListGeoLocationsResult> listGeoLocationsAsync(ListGeoLocationsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListGeoLocationsRequest,ListGeoLocationsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of supported geographic locations.
Countries are listed first, and continents are listed last. If Amazon Route 53 supports subdivisions for a country (for example, states or provinces), the subdivisions for that country are listed in alphabetical order immediately after the corresponding country.
Route 53 does not perform authorization for this API because it retrieves information that is already available to the public.
For a list of supported geolocation codes, see the GeoLocation data type.
listGeoLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get a list of geographic locations that Amazon Route 53 supports for geolocation resource
record sets.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListGeoLocationsResult> listGeoLocationsAsync()
listGeoLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listGeoLocationsAsync(ListGeoLocationsRequest)
public Future<ListGeoLocationsResult> listGeoLocationsAsync(AsyncHandler<ListGeoLocationsRequest,ListGeoLocationsResult> asyncHandler)
listGeoLocationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listGeoLocationsAsync(ListGeoLocationsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListHealthChecksResult> listHealthChecksAsync(ListHealthChecksRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieve a list of the health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
listHealthChecksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a list of the health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account.public Future<ListHealthChecksResult> listHealthChecksAsync(ListHealthChecksRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListHealthChecksRequest,ListHealthChecksResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieve a list of the health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
listHealthChecksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a list of the health checks that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListHealthChecksResult> listHealthChecksAsync()
listHealthChecksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHealthChecksAsync(ListHealthChecksRequest)
public Future<ListHealthChecksResult> listHealthChecksAsync(AsyncHandler<ListHealthChecksRequest,ListHealthChecksResult> asyncHandler)
listHealthChecksAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHealthChecksAsync(ListHealthChecksRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListHostedZonesResult> listHostedZonesAsync(ListHostedZonesRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account. The response includes a HostedZones
child element for each hosted zone.
Amazon Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of hosted zones, you can use
the maxitems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listHostedZonesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current
Amazon Web Services account.public Future<ListHostedZonesResult> listHostedZonesAsync(ListHostedZonesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListHostedZonesRequest,ListHostedZonesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services
account. The response includes a HostedZones
child element for each hosted zone.
Amazon Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of hosted zones, you can use
the maxitems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listHostedZonesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to retrieve a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current
Amazon Web Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListHostedZonesResult> listHostedZonesAsync()
listHostedZonesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHostedZonesAsync(ListHostedZonesRequest)
public Future<ListHostedZonesResult> listHostedZonesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListHostedZonesRequest,ListHostedZonesResult> asyncHandler)
listHostedZonesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHostedZonesAsync(ListHostedZonesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListHostedZonesByNameResult> listHostedZonesByNameAsync(ListHostedZonesByNameRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of your hosted zones in lexicographic order. The response includes a HostedZones
child element for each hosted zone created by the current Amazon Web Services account.
ListHostedZonesByName
sorts hosted zones by name with the labels reversed. For example:
com.example.www.
Note the trailing dot, which can change the sort order in some circumstances.
If the domain name includes escape characters or Punycode, ListHostedZonesByName
alphabetizes the
domain name using the escaped or Punycoded value, which is the format that Amazon Route 53 saves in its database.
For example, to create a hosted zone for exƤmple.com, you specify ex\344mple.com for the domain name.
ListHostedZonesByName
alphabetizes it as:
com.ex\344mple.
The labels are reversed and alphabetized using the escaped value. For more information about valid domain name formats, including internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Route 53 returns up to 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of hosted zones, use the
MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100. The response includes values that help
navigate from one group of MaxItems
hosted zones to the next:
The DNSName
and HostedZoneId
elements in the response contain the values, if any,
specified for the dnsname
and hostedzoneid
parameters in the request that produced the
current response.
The MaxItems
element in the response contains the value, if any, that you specified for the
maxitems
parameter in the request that produced the current response.
If the value of IsTruncated
in the response is true, there are more hosted zones associated with the
current Amazon Web Services account.
If IsTruncated
is false, this response includes the last hosted zone that is associated with the
current account. The NextDNSName
element and NextHostedZoneId
elements are omitted from
the response.
The NextDNSName
and NextHostedZoneId
elements in the response contain the domain name
and the hosted zone ID of the next hosted zone that is associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
If you want to list more hosted zones, make another call to ListHostedZonesByName
, and specify the
value of NextDNSName
and NextHostedZoneId
in the dnsname
and
hostedzoneid
parameters, respectively.
listHostedZonesByNameAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Retrieves a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account in ASCII order by domain name.public Future<ListHostedZonesByNameResult> listHostedZonesByNameAsync(ListHostedZonesByNameRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListHostedZonesByNameRequest,ListHostedZonesByNameResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of your hosted zones in lexicographic order. The response includes a HostedZones
child element for each hosted zone created by the current Amazon Web Services account.
ListHostedZonesByName
sorts hosted zones by name with the labels reversed. For example:
com.example.www.
Note the trailing dot, which can change the sort order in some circumstances.
If the domain name includes escape characters or Punycode, ListHostedZonesByName
alphabetizes the
domain name using the escaped or Punycoded value, which is the format that Amazon Route 53 saves in its database.
For example, to create a hosted zone for exƤmple.com, you specify ex\344mple.com for the domain name.
ListHostedZonesByName
alphabetizes it as:
com.ex\344mple.
The labels are reversed and alphabetized using the escaped value. For more information about valid domain name formats, including internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Route 53 returns up to 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of hosted zones, use the
MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100. The response includes values that help
navigate from one group of MaxItems
hosted zones to the next:
The DNSName
and HostedZoneId
elements in the response contain the values, if any,
specified for the dnsname
and hostedzoneid
parameters in the request that produced the
current response.
The MaxItems
element in the response contains the value, if any, that you specified for the
maxitems
parameter in the request that produced the current response.
If the value of IsTruncated
in the response is true, there are more hosted zones associated with the
current Amazon Web Services account.
If IsTruncated
is false, this response includes the last hosted zone that is associated with the
current account. The NextDNSName
element and NextHostedZoneId
elements are omitted from
the response.
The NextDNSName
and NextHostedZoneId
elements in the response contain the domain name
and the hosted zone ID of the next hosted zone that is associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
If you want to list more hosted zones, make another call to ListHostedZonesByName
, and specify the
value of NextDNSName
and NextHostedZoneId
in the dnsname
and
hostedzoneid
parameters, respectively.
listHostedZonesByNameAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Retrieves a list of the public and private hosted zones that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account in ASCII order by domain name.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListHostedZonesByNameResult> listHostedZonesByNameAsync()
listHostedZonesByNameAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHostedZonesByNameAsync(ListHostedZonesByNameRequest)
public Future<ListHostedZonesByNameResult> listHostedZonesByNameAsync(AsyncHandler<ListHostedZonesByNameRequest,ListHostedZonesByNameResult> asyncHandler)
listHostedZonesByNameAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listHostedZonesByNameAsync(ListHostedZonesByNameRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListHostedZonesByVPCResult> listHostedZonesByVPCAsync(ListHostedZonesByVPCRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists all the private hosted zones that a specified VPC is associated with, regardless of which Amazon Web
Services account or Amazon Web Services service owns the hosted zones. The HostedZoneOwner
structure
in the response contains one of the following values:
An OwningAccount
element, which contains the account number of either the current Amazon Web
Services account or another Amazon Web Services account. Some services, such as Cloud Map, create hosted zones
using the current account.
An OwningService
element, which identifies the Amazon Web Services service that created and owns the
hosted zone. For example, if a hosted zone was created by Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS), the value of
Owner
is efs.amazonaws.com
.
When listing private hosted zones, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition where the hosted zones were created. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
listHostedZonesByVPCAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Lists all the private hosted zones that a specified VPC is associated with, regardless of which Amazon Web
Services account created the hosted zones.public Future<ListHostedZonesByVPCResult> listHostedZonesByVPCAsync(ListHostedZonesByVPCRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListHostedZonesByVPCRequest,ListHostedZonesByVPCResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists all the private hosted zones that a specified VPC is associated with, regardless of which Amazon Web
Services account or Amazon Web Services service owns the hosted zones. The HostedZoneOwner
structure
in the response contains one of the following values:
An OwningAccount
element, which contains the account number of either the current Amazon Web
Services account or another Amazon Web Services account. Some services, such as Cloud Map, create hosted zones
using the current account.
An OwningService
element, which identifies the Amazon Web Services service that created and owns the
hosted zone. For example, if a hosted zone was created by Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS), the value of
Owner
is efs.amazonaws.com
.
When listing private hosted zones, the hosted zone and the Amazon VPC must belong to the same partition where the hosted zones were created. A partition is a group of Amazon Web Services Regions. Each Amazon Web Services account is scoped to one partition.
The following are the supported partitions:
aws
- Amazon Web Services Regions
aws-cn
- China Regions
aws-us-gov
- Amazon Web Services GovCloud (US) Region
For more information, see Access Management in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
listHostedZonesByVPCAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Lists all the private hosted zones that a specified VPC is associated with, regardless of which Amazon Web
Services account created the hosted zones.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListQueryLoggingConfigsResult> listQueryLoggingConfigsAsync(ListQueryLoggingConfigsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists the configurations for DNS query logging that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account or the configuration that is associated with a specified hosted zone.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig. Additional information, including the format of DNS query logs, appears in Logging DNS Queries in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
listQueryLoggingConfigsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
public Future<ListQueryLoggingConfigsResult> listQueryLoggingConfigsAsync(ListQueryLoggingConfigsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListQueryLoggingConfigsRequest,ListQueryLoggingConfigsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists the configurations for DNS query logging that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account or the configuration that is associated with a specified hosted zone.
For more information about DNS query logs, see CreateQueryLoggingConfig. Additional information, including the format of DNS query logs, appears in Logging DNS Queries in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
listQueryLoggingConfigsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListResourceRecordSetsResult> listResourceRecordSetsAsync(ListResourceRecordSetsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists the resource record sets in a specified hosted zone.
ListResourceRecordSets
returns up to 300 resource record sets at a time in ASCII order, beginning at
a position specified by the name
and type
elements.
Sort order
ListResourceRecordSets
sorts results first by DNS name with the labels reversed, for example:
com.example.www.
Note the trailing dot, which can change the sort order when the record name contains characters that appear
before .
(decimal 46) in the ASCII table. These characters include the following:
! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , -
When multiple records have the same DNS name, ListResourceRecordSets
sorts results by the record
type.
Specifying where to start listing records
You can use the name and type elements to specify the resource record set that the list begins with:
The results begin with the first resource record set that the hosted zone contains.
The results begin with the first resource record set in the list whose name is greater than or equal to
Name
.
Amazon Route 53 returns the InvalidInput
error.
The results begin with the first resource record set in the list whose name is greater than or equal to
Name
, and whose type is greater than or equal to Type
.
Resource record sets that are PENDING
This action returns the most current version of the records. This includes records that are PENDING
,
and that are not yet available on all Route 53 DNS servers.
Changing resource record sets
To ensure that you get an accurate listing of the resource record sets for a hosted zone at a point in time, do
not submit a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request while you're paging through the results of a
ListResourceRecordSets
request. If you do, some pages may display results without the latest changes
while other pages display results with the latest changes.
Displaying the next page of results
If a ListResourceRecordSets
command returns more than one page of results, the value of
IsTruncated
is true
. To display the next page of results, get the values of
NextRecordName
, NextRecordType
, and NextRecordIdentifier
(if any) from the
response. Then submit another ListResourceRecordSets
request, and specify those values for
StartRecordName
, StartRecordType
, and StartRecordIdentifier
.
listResourceRecordSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the resource record sets that are associated with a specified hosted zone.public Future<ListResourceRecordSetsResult> listResourceRecordSetsAsync(ListResourceRecordSetsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListResourceRecordSetsRequest,ListResourceRecordSetsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists the resource record sets in a specified hosted zone.
ListResourceRecordSets
returns up to 300 resource record sets at a time in ASCII order, beginning at
a position specified by the name
and type
elements.
Sort order
ListResourceRecordSets
sorts results first by DNS name with the labels reversed, for example:
com.example.www.
Note the trailing dot, which can change the sort order when the record name contains characters that appear
before .
(decimal 46) in the ASCII table. These characters include the following:
! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , -
When multiple records have the same DNS name, ListResourceRecordSets
sorts results by the record
type.
Specifying where to start listing records
You can use the name and type elements to specify the resource record set that the list begins with:
The results begin with the first resource record set that the hosted zone contains.
The results begin with the first resource record set in the list whose name is greater than or equal to
Name
.
Amazon Route 53 returns the InvalidInput
error.
The results begin with the first resource record set in the list whose name is greater than or equal to
Name
, and whose type is greater than or equal to Type
.
Resource record sets that are PENDING
This action returns the most current version of the records. This includes records that are PENDING
,
and that are not yet available on all Route 53 DNS servers.
Changing resource record sets
To ensure that you get an accurate listing of the resource record sets for a hosted zone at a point in time, do
not submit a ChangeResourceRecordSets
request while you're paging through the results of a
ListResourceRecordSets
request. If you do, some pages may display results without the latest changes
while other pages display results with the latest changes.
Displaying the next page of results
If a ListResourceRecordSets
command returns more than one page of results, the value of
IsTruncated
is true
. To display the next page of results, get the values of
NextRecordName
, NextRecordType
, and NextRecordIdentifier
(if any) from the
response. Then submit another ListResourceRecordSets
request, and specify those values for
StartRecordName
, StartRecordType
, and StartRecordIdentifier
.
listResourceRecordSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the resource record sets that are associated with a specified hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> listReusableDelegationSetsAsync(ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of the reusable delegation sets that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get a list of the reusable delegation sets that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.public Future<ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> listReusableDelegationSetsAsync(ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest,ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Retrieves a list of the reusable delegation sets that are associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get a list of the reusable delegation sets that are associated with the current Amazon Web
Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> listReusableDelegationSetsAsync()
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync(ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest)
public Future<ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> listReusableDelegationSetsAsync(AsyncHandler<ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest,ListReusableDelegationSetsResult> asyncHandler)
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listReusableDelegationSetsAsync(ListReusableDelegationSetsRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists tags for one health check or hosted zone.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
listTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type containing information about a request for a list of the tags that are associated with an
individual resource.public Future<ListTagsForResourceResult> listTagsForResourceAsync(ListTagsForResourceRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTagsForResourceRequest,ListTagsForResourceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists tags for one health check or hosted zone.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
listTagsForResourceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type containing information about a request for a list of the tags that are associated with an
individual resource.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTagsForResourcesResult> listTagsForResourcesAsync(ListTagsForResourcesRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists tags for up to 10 health checks or hosted zones.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
listTagsForResourcesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the health checks or hosted zones for which you want to
list tags.public Future<ListTagsForResourcesResult> listTagsForResourcesAsync(ListTagsForResourcesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTagsForResourcesRequest,ListTagsForResourcesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Lists tags for up to 10 health checks or hosted zones.
For information about using tags for cost allocation, see Using Cost Allocation Tags in the Billing and Cost Management User Guide.
listTagsForResourcesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the health checks or hosted zones for which you want to
list tags.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTrafficPoliciesResult> listTrafficPoliciesAsync(ListTrafficPoliciesRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the latest version for every traffic policy that is associated with the current Amazon Web Services account. Policies are listed in the order that they were created in.
For information about how of deleting a traffic policy affects the response from ListTrafficPolicies
, see DeleteTrafficPolicy
.
listTrafficPoliciesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list the traffic policies that are
associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.public Future<ListTrafficPoliciesResult> listTrafficPoliciesAsync(ListTrafficPoliciesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPoliciesRequest,ListTrafficPoliciesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the latest version for every traffic policy that is associated with the current Amazon Web Services account. Policies are listed in the order that they were created in.
For information about how of deleting a traffic policy affects the response from ListTrafficPolicies
, see DeleteTrafficPolicy
.
listTrafficPoliciesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list the traffic policies that are
associated with the current Amazon Web Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTrafficPoliciesResult> listTrafficPoliciesAsync()
listTrafficPoliciesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listTrafficPoliciesAsync(ListTrafficPoliciesRequest)
public Future<ListTrafficPoliciesResult> listTrafficPoliciesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPoliciesRequest,ListTrafficPoliciesResult> asyncHandler)
listTrafficPoliciesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listTrafficPoliciesAsync(ListTrafficPoliciesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using the current Amazon Web Services account.
After you submit an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53
creates the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. For more information, see
the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using the current
Amazon Web Services account.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest,ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using the current Amazon Web Services account.
After you submit an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53
creates the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. For more information, see
the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to get information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using the current
Amazon Web Services account.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync()
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest)
public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync(AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest,ListTrafficPolicyInstancesResult> asyncHandler)
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
listTrafficPolicyInstancesAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesRequest, com.amazonaws.handlers.AsyncHandler)
public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created in a specified hosted zone.
After you submit a CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53 creates the resource record sets that are specified in the
traffic policy definition. For more information, see the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the traffic policy instances that you created in a specified hosted zone.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneRequest,ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created in a specified hosted zone.
After you submit a CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53 creates the resource record sets that are specified in the
traffic policy definition. For more information, see the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesByHostedZoneAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request for the traffic policy instances that you created in a specified hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using a specify traffic policy version.
After you submit a CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53 creates the resource record sets that are specified in the
traffic policy definition. For more information, see the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list your traffic policy instances.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyResult> listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyAsync(ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyRequest,ListTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about the traffic policy instances that you created by using a specify traffic policy version.
After you submit a CreateTrafficPolicyInstance
or an UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while Amazon Route 53 creates the resource record sets that are specified in the
traffic policy definition. For more information, see the State
response element.
Route 53 returns a maximum of 100 items in each response. If you have a lot of traffic policy instances, you can
use the MaxItems
parameter to list them in groups of up to 100.
listTrafficPolicyInstancesByPolicyAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list your traffic policy instances.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyVersionsResult> listTrafficPolicyVersionsAsync(ListTrafficPolicyVersionsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about all of the versions for a specified traffic policy.
Traffic policy versions are listed in numerical order by VersionNumber
.
listTrafficPolicyVersionsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list your traffic policies.public Future<ListTrafficPolicyVersionsResult> listTrafficPolicyVersionsAsync(ListTrafficPolicyVersionsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListTrafficPolicyVersionsRequest,ListTrafficPolicyVersionsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets information about all of the versions for a specified traffic policy.
Traffic policy versions are listed in numerical order by VersionNumber
.
listTrafficPolicyVersionsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains the information about the request to list your traffic policies.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsResult> listVPCAssociationAuthorizationsAsync(ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets a list of the VPCs that were created by other accounts and that can be associated with a specified hosted
zone because you've submitted one or more CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
requests.
The response includes a VPCs
element with a VPC
child element for each VPC that can be
associated with the hosted zone.
listVPCAssociationAuthorizationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about that can be associated with your hosted zone.public Future<ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsResult> listVPCAssociationAuthorizationsAsync(ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsRequest request, AsyncHandler<ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsRequest,ListVPCAssociationAuthorizationsResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets a list of the VPCs that were created by other accounts and that can be associated with a specified hosted
zone because you've submitted one or more CreateVPCAssociationAuthorization
requests.
The response includes a VPCs
element with a VPC
child element for each VPC that can be
associated with the hosted zone.
listVPCAssociationAuthorizationsAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about that can be associated with your hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<TestDNSAnswerResult> testDNSAnswerAsync(TestDNSAnswerRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the value that Amazon Route 53 returns in response to a DNS request for a specified record name and type. You can optionally specify the IP address of a DNS resolver, an EDNS0 client subnet IP address, and a subnet mask.
This call only supports querying public hosted zones.
The TestDnsAnswer
returns information similar to what you would expect from the answer section of
the dig
command. Therefore, if you query for the name servers of a subdomain that point to the
parent name servers, those will not be returned.
testDNSAnswerAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets the value that Amazon Route 53 returns in response to a DNS request for a specified record name and
type. You can optionally specify the IP address of a DNS resolver, an EDNS0 client subnet IP address, and
a subnet mask.public Future<TestDNSAnswerResult> testDNSAnswerAsync(TestDNSAnswerRequest request, AsyncHandler<TestDNSAnswerRequest,TestDNSAnswerResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Gets the value that Amazon Route 53 returns in response to a DNS request for a specified record name and type. You can optionally specify the IP address of a DNS resolver, an EDNS0 client subnet IP address, and a subnet mask.
This call only supports querying public hosted zones.
The TestDnsAnswer
returns information similar to what you would expect from the answer section of
the dig
command. Therefore, if you query for the name servers of a subdomain that point to the
parent name servers, those will not be returned.
testDNSAnswerAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- Gets the value that Amazon Route 53 returns in response to a DNS request for a specified record name and
type. You can optionally specify the IP address of a DNS resolver, an EDNS0 client subnet IP address, and
a subnet mask.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<UpdateHealthCheckResult> updateHealthCheckAsync(UpdateHealthCheckRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates an existing health check. Note that some values can't be updated.
For more information about updating health checks, see Creating, Updating, and Deleting Health Checks in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
updateHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about a request to update a health check.public Future<UpdateHealthCheckResult> updateHealthCheckAsync(UpdateHealthCheckRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateHealthCheckRequest,UpdateHealthCheckResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates an existing health check. Note that some values can't be updated.
For more information about updating health checks, see Creating, Updating, and Deleting Health Checks in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
updateHealthCheckAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about a request to update a health check.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<UpdateHostedZoneCommentResult> updateHostedZoneCommentAsync(UpdateHostedZoneCommentRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates the comment for a specified hosted zone.
updateHostedZoneCommentAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to update the comment for a hosted zone.public Future<UpdateHostedZoneCommentResult> updateHostedZoneCommentAsync(UpdateHostedZoneCommentRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateHostedZoneCommentRequest,UpdateHostedZoneCommentResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates the comment for a specified hosted zone.
updateHostedZoneCommentAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A request to update the comment for a hosted zone.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentResult> updateTrafficPolicyCommentAsync(UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates the comment for a specified traffic policy version.
updateTrafficPolicyCommentAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to update the comment for.public Future<UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentResult> updateTrafficPolicyCommentAsync(UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentRequest,UpdateTrafficPolicyCommentResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
Updates the comment for a specified traffic policy version.
updateTrafficPolicyCommentAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the traffic policy that you want to update the comment for.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.public Future<UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> updateTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request)
AmazonRoute53Async
After you submit a UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while RouteĀ 53 creates
the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. Use
GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of updated traffic policy instance confirm that
the UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed successfully. For more information, see the
State
response element.
Updates the resource record sets in a specified hosted zone that were created based on the settings in a specified traffic policy version.
When you update a traffic policy instance, Amazon Route 53 continues to respond to DNS queries for the root resource record set name (such as example.com) while it replaces one group of resource record sets with another. Route 53 performs the following operations:
Route 53 creates a new group of resource record sets based on the specified traffic policy. This is true regardless of how significant the differences are between the existing resource record sets and the new resource record sets.
When all of the new resource record sets have been created, Route 53 starts to respond to DNS queries for the root resource record set name (such as example.com) by using the new resource record sets.
Route 53 deletes the old group of resource record sets that are associated with the root resource record set name.
updateTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that you want to update based on a
specified traffic policy instance.public Future<UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> updateTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync(UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest request, AsyncHandler<UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceRequest,UpdateTrafficPolicyInstanceResult> asyncHandler)
AmazonRoute53Async
After you submit a UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request, there's a brief delay while RouteĀ 53 creates
the resource record sets that are specified in the traffic policy definition. Use
GetTrafficPolicyInstance
with the id
of updated traffic policy instance confirm that
the UpdateTrafficPolicyInstance
request completed successfully. For more information, see the
State
response element.
Updates the resource record sets in a specified hosted zone that were created based on the settings in a specified traffic policy version.
When you update a traffic policy instance, Amazon Route 53 continues to respond to DNS queries for the root resource record set name (such as example.com) while it replaces one group of resource record sets with another. Route 53 performs the following operations:
Route 53 creates a new group of resource record sets based on the specified traffic policy. This is true regardless of how significant the differences are between the existing resource record sets and the new resource record sets.
When all of the new resource record sets have been created, Route 53 starts to respond to DNS queries for the root resource record set name (such as example.com) by using the new resource record sets.
Route 53 deletes the old group of resource record sets that are associated with the root resource record set name.
updateTrafficPolicyInstanceAsync
in interface AmazonRoute53Async
request
- A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that you want to update based on a
specified traffic policy instance.asyncHandler
- Asynchronous callback handler for events in the lifecycle of the request. Users can provide an
implementation of the callback methods in this interface to receive notification of successful or
unsuccessful completion of the operation.