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Class: AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster

Inherits:
AWS.Service show all
Identifier:
route53recoverycluster
API Version:
2019-12-02
Defined in:
(unknown)

Overview

Constructs a service interface object. Each API operation is exposed as a function on service.

Service Description

Welcome to the Routing Control (Recovery Cluster) API Reference Guide for Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller.

With Route 53 ARC, you can use routing control with extreme reliability to recover applications by rerouting traffic across Availability Zones or Amazon Web Services Regions. Routing controls are simple on/off switches hosted on a highly available cluster in Route 53 ARC. A cluster provides a set of five redundant Regional endpoints against which you can run API calls to get or update the state of routing controls. To implement failover, you set one routing control to ON and another one to OFF, to reroute traffic from one Availability Zone or Amazon Web Services Region to another.

Be aware that you must specify a Regional endpoint for a cluster when you work with API cluster operations to get or update routing control states in Route 53 ARC. In addition, you must specify the US West (Oregon) Region for Route 53 ARC API calls. For example, use the parameter --region us-west-2 with AWS CLI commands. For more information, see Get and update routing control states using the API in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

This API guide includes information about the API operations for how to get and update routing control states in Route 53 ARC. To work with routing control in Route 53 ARC, you must first create the required components (clusters, control panels, and routing controls) using the recovery cluster configuration API.

For more information about working with routing control in Route 53 ARC, see the following:

Sending a Request Using Route53RecoveryCluster

var route53recoverycluster = new AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster();
route53recoverycluster.getRoutingControlState(params, function (err, data) {
  if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
  else     console.log(data);           // successful response
});

Locking the API Version

In order to ensure that the Route53RecoveryCluster object uses this specific API, you can construct the object by passing the apiVersion option to the constructor:

var route53recoverycluster = new AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster({apiVersion: '2019-12-02'});

You can also set the API version globally in AWS.config.apiVersions using the route53recoverycluster service identifier:

AWS.config.apiVersions = {
  route53recoverycluster: '2019-12-02',
  // other service API versions
};

var route53recoverycluster = new AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster();

Version:

  • 2019-12-02

Constructor Summary collapse

Property Summary collapse

Properties inherited from AWS.Service

apiVersions

Method Summary collapse

Methods inherited from AWS.Service

makeRequest, makeUnauthenticatedRequest, waitFor, setupRequestListeners, defineService

Constructor Details

new AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster(options = {}) ⇒ Object

Constructs a service object. This object has one method for each API operation.

Examples:

Constructing a Route53RecoveryCluster object

var route53recoverycluster = new AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster({apiVersion: '2019-12-02'});

Options Hash (options):

  • params (map)

    An optional map of parameters to bind to every request sent by this service object. For more information on bound parameters, see "Working with Services" in the Getting Started Guide.

  • endpoint (String|AWS.Endpoint)

    The endpoint URI to send requests to. The default endpoint is built from the configured region. The endpoint should be a string like 'https://{service}.{region}.amazonaws.com' or an Endpoint object.

  • accessKeyId (String)

    your AWS access key ID.

  • secretAccessKey (String)

    your AWS secret access key.

  • sessionToken (AWS.Credentials)

    the optional AWS session token to sign requests with.

  • credentials (AWS.Credentials)

    the AWS credentials to sign requests with. You can either specify this object, or specify the accessKeyId and secretAccessKey options directly.

  • credentialProvider (AWS.CredentialProviderChain)

    the provider chain used to resolve credentials if no static credentials property is set.

  • region (String)

    the region to send service requests to. See AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster.region for more information.

  • maxRetries (Integer)

    the maximum amount of retries to attempt with a request. See AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster.maxRetries for more information.

  • maxRedirects (Integer)

    the maximum amount of redirects to follow with a request. See AWS.Route53RecoveryCluster.maxRedirects for more information.

  • sslEnabled (Boolean)

    whether to enable SSL for requests.

  • paramValidation (Boolean|map)

    whether input parameters should be validated against the operation description before sending the request. Defaults to true. Pass a map to enable any of the following specific validation features:

    • min [Boolean] — Validates that a value meets the min constraint. This is enabled by default when paramValidation is set to true.
    • max [Boolean] — Validates that a value meets the max constraint.
    • pattern [Boolean] — Validates that a string value matches a regular expression.
    • enum [Boolean] — Validates that a string value matches one of the allowable enum values.
  • computeChecksums (Boolean)

    whether to compute checksums for payload bodies when the service accepts it (currently supported in S3 only)

  • convertResponseTypes (Boolean)

    whether types are converted when parsing response data. Currently only supported for JSON based services. Turning this off may improve performance on large response payloads. Defaults to true.

  • correctClockSkew (Boolean)

    whether to apply a clock skew correction and retry requests that fail because of an skewed client clock. Defaults to false.

  • s3ForcePathStyle (Boolean)

    whether to force path style URLs for S3 objects.

  • s3BucketEndpoint (Boolean)

    whether the provided endpoint addresses an individual bucket (false if it addresses the root API endpoint). Note that setting this configuration option requires an endpoint to be provided explicitly to the service constructor.

  • s3DisableBodySigning (Boolean)

    whether S3 body signing should be disabled when using signature version v4. Body signing can only be disabled when using https. Defaults to true.

  • s3UsEast1RegionalEndpoint ('legacy'|'regional')

    when region is set to 'us-east-1', whether to send s3 request to global endpoints or 'us-east-1' regional endpoints. This config is only applicable to S3 client. Defaults to legacy

  • s3UseArnRegion (Boolean)

    whether to override the request region with the region inferred from requested resource's ARN. Only available for S3 buckets Defaults to true

  • retryDelayOptions (map)

    A set of options to configure the retry delay on retryable errors. Currently supported options are:

    • base [Integer] — The base number of milliseconds to use in the exponential backoff for operation retries. Defaults to 100 ms for all services except DynamoDB, where it defaults to 50ms.
    • customBackoff [function] — A custom function that accepts a retry count and error and returns the amount of time to delay in milliseconds. If the result is a non-zero negative value, no further retry attempts will be made. The base option will be ignored if this option is supplied. The function is only called for retryable errors.
  • httpOptions (map)

    A set of options to pass to the low-level HTTP request. Currently supported options are:

    • proxy [String] — the URL to proxy requests through
    • agent [http.Agent, https.Agent] — the Agent object to perform HTTP requests with. Used for connection pooling. Defaults to the global agent (http.globalAgent) for non-SSL connections. Note that for SSL connections, a special Agent object is used in order to enable peer certificate verification. This feature is only available in the Node.js environment.
    • connectTimeout [Integer] — Sets the socket to timeout after failing to establish a connection with the server after connectTimeout milliseconds. This timeout has no effect once a socket connection has been established.
    • timeout [Integer] — Sets the socket to timeout after timeout milliseconds of inactivity on the socket. Defaults to two minutes (120000).
    • xhrAsync [Boolean] — Whether the SDK will send asynchronous HTTP requests. Used in the browser environment only. Set to false to send requests synchronously. Defaults to true (async on).
    • xhrWithCredentials [Boolean] — Sets the "withCredentials" property of an XMLHttpRequest object. Used in the browser environment only. Defaults to false.
  • apiVersion (String, Date)

    a String in YYYY-MM-DD format (or a date) that represents the latest possible API version that can be used in all services (unless overridden by apiVersions). Specify 'latest' to use the latest possible version.

  • apiVersions (map<String, String|Date>)

    a map of service identifiers (the lowercase service class name) with the API version to use when instantiating a service. Specify 'latest' for each individual that can use the latest available version.

  • logger (#write, #log)

    an object that responds to .write() (like a stream) or .log() (like the console object) in order to log information about requests

  • systemClockOffset (Number)

    an offset value in milliseconds to apply to all signing times. Use this to compensate for clock skew when your system may be out of sync with the service time. Note that this configuration option can only be applied to the global AWS.config object and cannot be overridden in service-specific configuration. Defaults to 0 milliseconds.

  • signatureVersion (String)

    the signature version to sign requests with (overriding the API configuration). Possible values are: 'v2', 'v3', 'v4'.

  • signatureCache (Boolean)

    whether the signature to sign requests with (overriding the API configuration) is cached. Only applies to the signature version 'v4'. Defaults to true.

  • dynamoDbCrc32 (Boolean)

    whether to validate the CRC32 checksum of HTTP response bodies returned by DynamoDB. Default: true.

  • useAccelerateEndpoint (Boolean)

    Whether to use the S3 Transfer Acceleration endpoint with the S3 service. Default: false.

  • clientSideMonitoring (Boolean)

    whether to collect and publish this client's performance metrics of all its API requests.

  • endpointDiscoveryEnabled (Boolean|undefined)

    whether to call operations with endpoints given by service dynamically. Setting this

  • endpointCacheSize (Number)

    the size of the global cache storing endpoints from endpoint discovery operations. Once endpoint cache is created, updating this setting cannot change existing cache size. Defaults to 1000

  • hostPrefixEnabled (Boolean)

    whether to marshal request parameters to the prefix of hostname. Defaults to true.

  • stsRegionalEndpoints ('legacy'|'regional')

    whether to send sts request to global endpoints or regional endpoints. Defaults to 'legacy'.

  • useFipsEndpoint (Boolean)

    Enables FIPS compatible endpoints. Defaults to false.

  • useDualstackEndpoint (Boolean)

    Enables IPv6 dualstack endpoint. Defaults to false.

Property Details

endpointAWS.Endpoint (readwrite)

Returns an Endpoint object representing the endpoint URL for service requests.

Returns:

  • (AWS.Endpoint)

    an Endpoint object representing the endpoint URL for service requests.

Method Details

getRoutingControlState(params = {}, callback) ⇒ AWS.Request

Get the state for a routing control. A routing control is a simple on/off switch that you can use to route traffic to cells. When a routing control state is set to ON, traffic flows to a cell. When the state is set to OFF, traffic does not flow.

Before you can create a routing control, you must first create a cluster, and then host the control in a control panel on the cluster. For more information, see Create routing control structures in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide. You access one of the endpoints for the cluster to get or update the routing control state to redirect traffic for your application.

You must specify Regional endpoints when you work with API cluster operations to get or update routing control states in Route 53 ARC.

To see a code example for getting a routing control state, including accessing Regional cluster endpoints in sequence, see API examples in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

Learn more about working with routing controls in the following topics in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide:

Service Reference:

Examples:

Calling the getRoutingControlState operation

var params = {
  RoutingControlArn: 'STRING_VALUE' /* required */
};
route53recoverycluster.getRoutingControlState(params, function(err, data) {
  if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
  else     console.log(data);           // successful response
});

Parameters:

  • params (Object) (defaults to: {})
    • RoutingControlArn — (String)

      The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the routing control that you want to get the state for.

Callback (callback):

  • function(err, data) { ... }

    Called when a response from the service is returned. If a callback is not supplied, you must call AWS.Request.send() on the returned request object to initiate the request.

    Context (this):

    • (AWS.Response)

      the response object containing error, data properties, and the original request object.

    Parameters:

    • err (Error)

      the error object returned from the request. Set to null if the request is successful.

    • data (Object)

      the de-serialized data returned from the request. Set to null if a request error occurs. The data object has the following properties:

      • RoutingControlArn — (String)

        The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the response.

      • RoutingControlState — (String)

        The state of the routing control.

        Possible values include:
        • "On"
        • "Off"
      • RoutingControlName — (String)

        The routing control name.

Returns:

  • (AWS.Request)

    a handle to the operation request for subsequent event callback registration.

listRoutingControls(params = {}, callback) ⇒ AWS.Request

List routing control names and Amazon Resource Names (ARNs), as well as the routing control state for each routing control, along with the control panel name and control panel ARN for the routing controls. If you specify a control panel ARN, this call lists the routing controls in the control panel. Otherwise, it lists all the routing controls in the cluster.

A routing control is a simple on/off switch in Route 53 ARC that you can use to route traffic to cells. When a routing control state is set to ON, traffic flows to a cell. When the state is set to OFF, traffic does not flow.

Before you can create a routing control, you must first create a cluster, and then host the control in a control panel on the cluster. For more information, see Create routing control structures in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide. You access one of the endpoints for the cluster to get or update the routing control state to redirect traffic for your application.

You must specify Regional endpoints when you work with API cluster operations to use this API operation to list routing controls in Route 53 ARC.

Learn more about working with routing controls in the following topics in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide:

Service Reference:

Examples:

Calling the listRoutingControls operation

var params = {
  ControlPanelArn: 'STRING_VALUE',
  MaxResults: 'NUMBER_VALUE',
  NextToken: 'STRING_VALUE'
};
route53recoverycluster.listRoutingControls(params, function(err, data) {
  if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
  else     console.log(data);           // successful response
});

Parameters:

  • params (Object) (defaults to: {})
    • ControlPanelArn — (String)

      The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the control panel of the routing controls to list.

    • NextToken — (String)

      The token for the next set of results. You receive this token from a previous call.

    • MaxResults — (Integer)

      The number of routing controls objects that you want to return with this call. The default value is 500.

Callback (callback):

  • function(err, data) { ... }

    Called when a response from the service is returned. If a callback is not supplied, you must call AWS.Request.send() on the returned request object to initiate the request.

    Context (this):

    • (AWS.Response)

      the response object containing error, data properties, and the original request object.

    Parameters:

    • err (Error)

      the error object returned from the request. Set to null if the request is successful.

    • data (Object)

      the de-serialized data returned from the request. Set to null if a request error occurs. The data object has the following properties:

      • RoutingControls — (Array<map>)

        The list of routing controls.

        • ControlPanelArn — (String)

          The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the control panel where the routing control is located.

        • ControlPanelName — (String)

          The name of the control panel where the routing control is located. Only ASCII characters are supported for control panel names.

        • RoutingControlArn — (String)

          The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the routing control.

        • RoutingControlName — (String)

          The name of the routing control.

        • RoutingControlState — (String)

          The current state of the routing control. When a routing control state is set to ON, traffic flows to a cell. When the state is set to OFF, traffic does not flow.

          Possible values include:
          • "On"
          • "Off"
        • Owner — (String)

          The Amazon Web Services account ID of the routing control owner.

      • NextToken — (String)

        The token for the next set of results. You receive this token from a previous call.

Returns:

  • (AWS.Request)

    a handle to the operation request for subsequent event callback registration.

updateRoutingControlState(params = {}, callback) ⇒ AWS.Request

Set the state of the routing control to reroute traffic. You can set the value to ON or OFF. When the state is ON, traffic flows to a cell. When the state is OFF, traffic does not flow.

With Route 53 ARC, you can add safety rules for routing controls, which are safeguards for routing control state updates that help prevent unexpected outcomes, like fail open traffic routing. However, there are scenarios when you might want to bypass the routing control safeguards that are enforced with safety rules that you've configured. For example, you might want to fail over quickly for disaster recovery, and one or more safety rules might be unexpectedly preventing you from updating a routing control state to reroute traffic. In a "break glass" scenario like this, you can override one or more safety rules to change a routing control state and fail over your application.

The SafetyRulesToOverride property enables you override one or more safety rules and update routing control states. For more information, see Override safety rules to reroute traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

You must specify Regional endpoints when you work with API cluster operations to get or update routing control states in Route 53 ARC.

To see a code example for getting a routing control state, including accessing Regional cluster endpoints in sequence, see API examples in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

Service Reference:

Examples:

Calling the updateRoutingControlState operation

var params = {
  RoutingControlArn: 'STRING_VALUE', /* required */
  RoutingControlState: On | Off, /* required */
  SafetyRulesToOverride: [
    'STRING_VALUE',
    /* more items */
  ]
};
route53recoverycluster.updateRoutingControlState(params, function(err, data) {
  if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
  else     console.log(data);           // successful response
});

Parameters:

  • params (Object) (defaults to: {})
    • RoutingControlArn — (String)

      The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the routing control that you want to update the state for.

    • RoutingControlState — (String)

      The state of the routing control. You can set the value to ON or OFF.

      Possible values include:
      • "On"
      • "Off"
    • SafetyRulesToOverride — (Array<String>)

      The Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) for the safety rules that you want to override when you're updating the state of a routing control. You can override one safety rule or multiple safety rules by including one or more ARNs, separated by commas.

      For more information, see Override safety rules to reroute traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

Callback (callback):

  • function(err, data) { ... }

    Called when a response from the service is returned. If a callback is not supplied, you must call AWS.Request.send() on the returned request object to initiate the request.

    Context (this):

    • (AWS.Response)

      the response object containing error, data properties, and the original request object.

    Parameters:

    • err (Error)

      the error object returned from the request. Set to null if the request is successful.

    • data (Object)

      the de-serialized data returned from the request. Set to null if a request error occurs.

Returns:

  • (AWS.Request)

    a handle to the operation request for subsequent event callback registration.

updateRoutingControlStates(params = {}, callback) ⇒ AWS.Request

Set multiple routing control states. You can set the value for each state to be ON or OFF. When the state is ON, traffic flows to a cell. When it's OFF, traffic does not flow.

With Route 53 ARC, you can add safety rules for routing controls, which are safeguards for routing control state updates that help prevent unexpected outcomes, like fail open traffic routing. However, there are scenarios when you might want to bypass the routing control safeguards that are enforced with safety rules that you've configured. For example, you might want to fail over quickly for disaster recovery, and one or more safety rules might be unexpectedly preventing you from updating a routing control state to reroute traffic. In a "break glass" scenario like this, you can override one or more safety rules to change a routing control state and fail over your application.

The SafetyRulesToOverride property enables you override one or more safety rules and update routing control states. For more information, see Override safety rules to reroute traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

You must specify Regional endpoints when you work with API cluster operations to get or update routing control states in Route 53 ARC.

To see a code example for getting a routing control state, including accessing Regional cluster endpoints in sequence, see API examples in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

Service Reference:

Examples:

Calling the updateRoutingControlStates operation

var params = {
  UpdateRoutingControlStateEntries: [ /* required */
    {
      RoutingControlArn: 'STRING_VALUE', /* required */
      RoutingControlState: On | Off /* required */
    },
    /* more items */
  ],
  SafetyRulesToOverride: [
    'STRING_VALUE',
    /* more items */
  ]
};
route53recoverycluster.updateRoutingControlStates(params, function(err, data) {
  if (err) console.log(err, err.stack); // an error occurred
  else     console.log(data);           // successful response
});

Parameters:

  • params (Object) (defaults to: {})
    • UpdateRoutingControlStateEntries — (Array<map>)

      A set of routing control entries that you want to update.

      • RoutingControlArnrequired — (String)

        The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for a routing control state entry.

      • RoutingControlStaterequired — (String)

        The routing control state in a set of routing control state entries.

        Possible values include:
        • "On"
        • "Off"
    • SafetyRulesToOverride — (Array<String>)

      The Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) for the safety rules that you want to override when you're updating routing control states. You can override one safety rule or multiple safety rules by including one or more ARNs, separated by commas.

      For more information, see Override safety rules to reroute traffic in the Amazon Route 53 Application Recovery Controller Developer Guide.

Callback (callback):

  • function(err, data) { ... }

    Called when a response from the service is returned. If a callback is not supplied, you must call AWS.Request.send() on the returned request object to initiate the request.

    Context (this):

    • (AWS.Response)

      the response object containing error, data properties, and the original request object.

    Parameters:

    • err (Error)

      the error object returned from the request. Set to null if the request is successful.

    • data (Object)

      the de-serialized data returned from the request. Set to null if a request error occurs.

Returns:

  • (AWS.Request)

    a handle to the operation request for subsequent event callback registration.