Service endpoints for EBS direct APIs
An endpoint is a URL that serves as an entry point for an AWS web service. EBS direct APIs supports the following endpoint types:
-
IPv4 endpoints
-
Dual-stack endpoints that support both IPv4 and IPv6
-
FIPS endpoints
When you make a request, you can specify the endpoint and Region to use. If you do not specify an endpoint, the IPv4 endpoint is used by default. To use a different endpoint type, you must specify it in your request. For examples of how to do this, see Specifying endpoints.
For more information about Regions, see Regions and Availability Zones in the Amazon EC2 User Guide. For a list of endpoints for EBS direct APIs, see Endpoints for the EBS direct APIs in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
IPv4 endpoints
IPv4 endpoints support IPv4 traffic only. IPv4 endpoints are available for all Regions.
EBS direct APIs supports only Regional IPv4 endpoints that you can use to make your requests. You must specify the Region as part of the endpoint name. The endpoint names use the following naming convention:
-
ebs.
region
.amazonaws.com
For example, to direct your requests to the us-east-2
IPv4
endpoint, you must specify ebs.us-east-2.amazonaws.com
as the endpoint. For a
list of endpoints for EBS direct APIs, see
Endpoints for the EBS direct APIs in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
Pricing
You are not charged for data transferred directly between EBS direct APIs and Amazon EC2 instances using an IPv4 endpoint in the same Region. However, if there are intermediate services, such as AWS PrivateLink endpoints, NAT Gateway, or Amazon VPC Transit Gateways, you are charged their associated costs.
Dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) endpoints
Dual-stack endpoints support both IPv4 and IPv6 traffic. Dual-stack endpoints are available for all Regions.
To use IPv6, you must use a dual-stack endpoint. When you make a request to a dual-stack endpoint, the endpoint URL resolves to an IPv6 or an IPv4 address, depending on the protocol used by your network and client.
EBS direct APIs supports only regional dual-stack endpoints, which means that you must specify the Region as part of the endpoint name. Dual-stack endpoint names use the following naming convention:
-
ebs.
region
.api.aws
For example, the dual-stack endpoint name for the eu-west-1
Region is
ebs.eu-west-1.api.aws
. For a list of endpoints for EBS direct APIs, see
Endpoints
for the EBS direct APIs in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
Pricing
You are not charged for data transferred directly between EBS direct APIs and Amazon EC2 instances using a dual-stack endpoint in the same Region. However, if there are intermediate services, such as AWS PrivateLink endpoints, NAT Gateway, or Amazon VPC Transit Gateways, you are charged their associated costs.
FIPS endpoints
EBS direct APIs provides FIPS-validated IPv4 and dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) endpoints for the following Regions:
-
us-east-1
— US East (N. Virginia) -
us-east-2
— US East (Ohio) -
us-west-1
— US West (N. California) -
us-west-2
— US West (Oregon) -
ca-central-1
— Canada (Central)
FIPS IPv4 endpoints use the following naming convention:
ebs-fips.
. For example, the FIPS IPv4
endpoint for region
.amazonaws.comus-east-1
is ebs-fips.us-east-1.amazonaws.com
.
FIPS dual-stack endpoints use the following naming convention:
ebs-fips.
. For example, the FIPS dual-stack
endpoint for region
.api.awsus-east-1
is ebs-fips.us-east-1.api.aws
.
For more information about FIPS endpoints see, FIPS endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
Specifying endpoints
This section provides some examples of how to specify an endpoint when making a request.