2016/06/28 - Amazon Route 53 - 9 updated api methods
{'VPC': {'VPCRegion': ['ap-south-1']}}
This action associates a VPC with an hosted zone.
To associate a VPC with an hosted zone, send a POST request to the /*Route 53 API version* /hostedzone/*hosted zone ID* /associatevpc resource. The request body must include a document with a AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest element. The response returns the AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneResponse element that contains ChangeInfo for you to track the progress of the AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest you made. See GetChange operation for how to track the progress of your change.
Request Syntax
client.associate_vpc_with_hosted_zone( HostedZoneId='string', VPC={ 'VPCRegion': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1', 'VPCId': 'string' }, Comment='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone you want to associate your VPC with.
Note that you cannot associate a VPC with a hosted zone that doesn't have an existing VPC association.
dict
[REQUIRED]
The VPC that you want your hosted zone to be associated with.
VPCRegion (string) --
VPCId (string) --
A VPC ID
string
Optional: Any comments you want to include about a AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest .
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'ChangeInfo': { 'Id': 'string', 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Comment': 'string' } }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type containing the response information for the request.
ChangeInfo (dict) --
A complex type that contains the ID, the status, and the date and time of your AssociateVPCWithHostedZoneRequest .
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
{'ChangeBatch': {'Changes': {'ResourceRecordSet': {'Region': ['ap-south-1']}}}}
Use this action to create or change your authoritative DNS information. To use this action, send a POST request to the /*Route 53 API version* /hostedzone/*hosted Zone ID* /rrset resource. The request body must include a document with a ChangeResourceRecordSetsRequest element.
Changes are a list of change items and are considered transactional. For more information on transactional changes, also known as change batches, see POST ChangeResourceRecordSets in the Amazon Route 53 API Reference .
Warning
Due to the nature of transactional changes, you cannot delete the same resource record set more than once in a single change batch. If you attempt to delete the same change batch more than once, Amazon Route 53 returns an InvalidChangeBatch error.
In response to a ChangeResourceRecordSets request, your DNS data is changed on all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers. Initially, the status of a change is PENDING . This means the change has not yet propagated to all the authoritative Amazon Route 53 DNS servers. When the change is propagated to all hosts, the change returns a status of INSYNC .
Note the following limitations on a ChangeResourceRecordSets request:
A request cannot contain more than 100 Change elements.
A request cannot contain more than 1000 ResourceRecord elements.
The sum of the number of characters (including spaces) in all Value elements in a request cannot exceed 32,000 characters.
Request Syntax
client.change_resource_record_sets( HostedZoneId='string', ChangeBatch={ 'Comment': 'string', 'Changes': [ { 'Action': 'CREATE'|'DELETE'|'UPSERT', 'ResourceRecordSet': { 'Name': 'string', 'Type': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'SetIdentifier': 'string', 'Weight': 123, 'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1'|'ap-south-1', 'GeoLocation': { 'ContinentCode': 'string', 'CountryCode': 'string', 'SubdivisionCode': 'string' }, 'Failover': 'PRIMARY'|'SECONDARY', 'TTL': 123, 'ResourceRecords': [ { 'Value': 'string' }, ], 'AliasTarget': { 'HostedZoneId': 'string', 'DNSName': 'string', 'EvaluateTargetHealth': True|False }, 'HealthCheckId': 'string', 'TrafficPolicyInstanceId': 'string' } }, ] } )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone that contains the resource record sets that you want to change.
dict
[REQUIRED]
A complex type that contains an optional comment and the Changes element.
Comment (string) --
Optional: Any comments you want to include about a change batch request.
Changes (list) -- [REQUIRED]
A complex type that contains one Change element for each resource record set that you want to create or delete.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the information for each change in a change batch request.
Action (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The action to perform:
CREATE : Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE : Deletes a existing resource record set that has the specified values for Name , Type , SetIdentifier (for latency, weighted, geolocation, and failover resource record sets), and TTL (except alias resource record sets, for which the TTL is determined by the AWS resource that you're routing DNS queries to).
UPSERT : If a resource record set does not already exist, Amazon Route 53 creates it. If a resource record set does exist, Amazon Route 53 updates it with the values in the request. Amazon Route 53 can update an existing resource record set only when all of the following values match: Name , Type , and SetIdentifier (for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets).
ResourceRecordSet (dict) -- [REQUIRED]
Information about the resource record set to create or delete.
Name (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The name of the domain you want to perform the action on.
Enter a fully qualified domain name, for example, www.example.com . You can optionally include a trailing dot. If you omit the trailing dot, Amazon Route 53 still assumes that the domain name that you specify is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
For information about how to specify characters other than a-z, 0-9, and - (hyphen) and how to specify internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can use an asterisk (*) character in the name. DNS treats the * character either as a wildcard or as the * character (ASCII 42), depending on where it appears in the name. For more information, see Using an Asterisk (*) in the Names of Hosted Zones and Resource Record Sets in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
Warning
You can't use the * wildcard for resource records sets that have a type of NS.
Type (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The DNS record type. For information about different record types and how data is encoded for them, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values for basic resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | PTR | SPF | SRV | TXT . When creating a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets, specify the same value for all of the resource record sets in the group.
Note
SPF records were formerly used to verify the identity of the sender of email messages. However, we no longer recommend that you create resource record sets for which the value of Type is SPF . RFC 7208, Sender Policy Framework (SPF) for Authorizing Use of Domains in Email, Version 1 , has been updated to say, "...[I]ts existence and mechanism defined in [RFC4408] have led to some interoperability issues. Accordingly, its use is no longer appropriate for SPF version 1; implementations are not to use it." In RFC 7208, see section 14.1, The SPF DNS Record Type .
Values for alias resource record sets:
CloudFront distributions: A
ELB load balancers: A | AAAA
Amazon S3 buckets: A
Another resource record set in this hosted zone: Specify the type of the resource record set for which you're creating the alias. Specify any value except NS or SOA .
SetIdentifier (string) --
Weighted, Latency, Geo, and Failover resource record sets only: An identifier that differentiates among multiple resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. The value of SetIdentifier must be unique for each resource record set that has the same combination of DNS name and type.
Weight (integer) --
Weighted resource record sets only: Among resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, a value that determines the proportion of DNS queries that Amazon Route 53 responds to using the current resource record set. Amazon Route 53 calculates the sum of the weights for the resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. Amazon Route 53 then responds to queries based on the ratio of a resource's weight to the total. Note the following:
You must specify a value for the Weight element for every weighted resource record set.
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per weighted resource record set.
You cannot create latency, failover, or geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as weighted resource record sets.
You can create a maximum of 100 weighted resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
For weighted (but not weighted alias) resource record sets, if you set Weight to 0 for a resource record set, Amazon Route 53 never responds to queries with the applicable value for that resource record set. However, if you set Weight to 0 for all resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, traffic is routed to all resources with equal probability. The effect of setting Weight to 0 is different when you associate health checks with weighted resource record sets. For more information, see Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Region (string) --
Latency-based resource record sets only: The Amazon EC2 region where the resource that is specified in this resource record set resides. The resource typically is an AWS resource, such as an Amazon EC2 instance or an ELB load balancer, and is referred to by an IP address or a DNS domain name, depending on the record type.
Note
You can create latency and latency alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
When Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for a domain name and type for which you have created latency resource record sets, Amazon Route 53 selects the latency resource record set that has the lowest latency between the end user and the associated Amazon EC2 region. Amazon Route 53 then returns the value that is associated with the selected resource record set.
Note the following:
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per latency resource record set.
You can only create one latency resource record set for each Amazon EC2 region.
You are not required to create latency resource record sets for all Amazon EC2 regions. Amazon Route 53 will choose the region with the best latency from among the regions for which you create latency resource record sets.
You cannot create non-latency resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as latency resource record sets.
GeoLocation (dict) --
Geo location resource record sets only: A complex type that lets you control how Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries based on the geographic origin of the query. For example, if you want all queries from Africa to be routed to a web server with an IP address of 192.0.2.111 , create a resource record set with a Type of A and a ContinentCode of AF .
Note
You can create geolocation and geolocation alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
If you create separate resource record sets for overlapping geographic regions (for example, one resource record set for a continent and one for a country on the same continent), priority goes to the smallest geographic region. This allows you to route most queries for a continent to one resource and to route queries for a country on that continent to a different resource.
You cannot create two geolocation resource record sets that specify the same geographic location.
The value * in the CountryCode element matches all geographic locations that aren't specified in other geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
Warning
Geolocation works by mapping IP addresses to locations. However, some IP addresses aren't mapped to geographic locations, so even if you create geolocation resource record sets that cover all seven continents, Amazon Route 53 will receive some DNS queries from locations that it can't identify. We recommend that you create a resource record set for which the value of CountryCode is * , which handles both queries that come from locations for which you haven't created geolocation resource record sets and queries from IP addresses that aren't mapped to a location. If you don't create a * resource record set, Amazon Route 53 returns a "no answer" response for queries from those locations.
You cannot create non-geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as geolocation resource record sets.
ContinentCode (string) --
The code for a continent geo location. Note: only continent locations have a continent code.
Valid values: AF | AN | AS | EU | OC | NA | SA
Constraint: Specifying ContinentCode with either CountryCode or SubdivisionCode returns an InvalidInput error.
CountryCode (string) --
The code for a country geo location. The default location uses '*' for the country code and will match all locations that are not matched by a geo location.
The default geo location uses a * for the country code. All other country codes follow the ISO 3166 two-character code.
SubdivisionCode (string) --
The code for a country's subdivision (e.g., a province of Canada). A subdivision code is only valid with the appropriate country code.
Constraint: Specifying SubdivisionCode without CountryCode returns an InvalidInput error.
Failover (string) --
Failover resource record sets only: To configure failover, you add the Failover element to two resource record sets. For one resource record set, you specify PRIMARY as the value for Failover ; for the other resource record set, you specify SECONDARY . In addition, you include the HealthCheckId element and specify the health check that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform for each resource record set.
Note
You can create failover and failover alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
Except where noted, the following failover behaviors assume that you have included the HealthCheckId element in both resource record sets:
When the primary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the secondary resource record set.
When the primary resource record set is unhealthy and the secondary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set.
When the secondary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the primary resource record set.
If you omit the HealthCheckId element for the secondary resource record set, and if the primary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 always responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set. This is true regardless of the health of the associated endpoint.
You cannot create non-failover resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as failover resource record sets.
For failover alias resource record sets, you must also include the EvaluateTargetHealth element and set the value to true.
For more information about configuring failover for Amazon Route 53, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values: PRIMARY | SECONDARY
TTL (integer) --
The cache time to live for the current resource record set. Note the following:
If you're creating a non-alias resource record set, TTL is required.
If you're creating an alias resource record set, omit TTL . Amazon Route 53 uses the value of TTL for the alias target.
If you're associating this resource record set with a health check (if you're adding a HealthCheckId element), we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds or less so clients respond quickly to changes in health status.
All of the resource record sets in a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets must have the same value for TTL .
If a group of weighted resource record sets includes one or more weighted alias resource record sets for which the alias target is an ELB load balancer, we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds for all of the non-alias weighted resource record sets that have the same name and type. Values other than 60 seconds (the TTL for load balancers) will change the effect of the values that you specify for Weight .
ResourceRecords (list) --
A complex type that contains the resource records for the current resource record set.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the value of the Value element for the current resource record set.
Value (string) -- [REQUIRED]
The current or new DNS record value, not to exceed 4,000 characters. In the case of a DELETE action, if the current value does not match the actual value, an error is returned. For descriptions about how to format Value for different record types, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can specify more than one value for all record types except CNAME and SOA .
AliasTarget (dict) --
Alias resource record sets only: Information about the AWS resource to which you are redirecting traffic.
HostedZoneId (string) -- [REQUIRED]
Alias resource record sets only: The value you use depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify Z2FDTNDATAQYW2 .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the value of the hosted zone ID for the load balancer. You can get the hosted zone ID by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the hosted zone ID for the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket. For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set in your hosted zone: Specify the hosted zone ID of your hosted zone. (An alias resource record set cannot reference a resource record set in a different hosted zone.)
DNSName (string) -- [REQUIRED]
Alias resource record sets only: The external DNS name associated with the AWS Resource. The value that you specify depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify the domain name that CloudFront assigned when you created your distribution. Your CloudFront distribution must include an alternate domain name that matches the name of the resource record set. For example, if the name of the resource record set is acme.example.com , your CloudFront distribution must include acme.example.com as one of the alternate domain names. For more information, see Using Alternate Domain Names (CNAMEs) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the DNS name associated with the load balancer. You can get the DNS name by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Elastic Beanstalk environment: Specify the CNAME attribute for the environment. (The environment must have a regionalized domain name.)
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the domain name of the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket; for example, s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com . For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference . For more information about using Amazon S3 buckets for websites, see Hosting a Static Website on Amazon S3 in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set: Specify the value of the Name element for a resource record set in the current hosted zone.
EvaluateTargetHealth (boolean) -- [REQUIRED]
Alias resource record sets only: If you set the value of EvaluateTargetHealth to true for the resource record set or sets in an alias, weighted alias, latency alias, or failover alias resource record set, and if you specify a value for HealthCheckId for every resource record set that is referenced by these alias resource record sets, the alias resource record sets inherit the health of the referenced resource record sets.
In this configuration, when Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for an alias resource record set:
Amazon Route 53 looks at the resource record sets that are referenced by the alias resource record sets to determine which health checks they're using.
Amazon Route 53 checks the current status of each health check. (Amazon Route 53 periodically checks the health of the endpoint that is specified in a health check; it doesn't perform the health check when the DNS query arrives.)
Based on the status of the health checks, Amazon Route 53 determines which resource record sets are healthy. Unhealthy resource record sets are immediately removed from consideration. In addition, if all of the resource record sets that are referenced by an alias resource record set are unhealthy, that alias resource record set also is immediately removed from consideration.
Based on the configuration of the alias resource record sets (weighted alias or latency alias, for example) and the configuration of the resource record sets that they reference, Amazon Route 53 chooses a resource record set from the healthy resource record sets, and responds to the query.
Note the following:
You cannot set EvaluateTargetHealth to true when the alias target is a CloudFront distribution.
If the AWS resource that you specify in AliasTarget is a resource record set or a group of resource record sets (for example, a group of weighted resource record sets), but it is not another alias resource record set, we recommend that you associate a health check with all of the resource record sets in the alias target.
If you specify an ELB load balancer in AliasTarget , Elastic Load Balancing routes queries only to the healthy Amazon EC2 instances that are registered with the load balancer. If no Amazon EC2 instances are healthy or if the load balancer itself is unhealthy, and if EvaluateTargetHealth is true for the corresponding alias resource record set, Amazon Route 53 routes queries to other resources.
When you create a load balancer, you configure settings for Elastic Load Balancing health checks; they're not Amazon Route 53 health checks, but they perform a similar function. Do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the Amazon EC2 instances that you register with an ELB load balancer. For more information, see How Health Checks Work in More Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
We recommend that you set EvaluateTargetHealth to true only when you have enough idle capacity to handle the failure of one or more endpoints.
For more information and examples, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
HealthCheckId (string) --
Health Check resource record sets only, not required for alias resource record sets: An identifier that is used to identify health check associated with the resource record set.
TrafficPolicyInstanceId (string) --
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'ChangeInfo': { 'Id': 'string', 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Comment': 'string' } }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type containing the response for the request.
ChangeInfo (dict) --
A complex type that contains information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
{'VPC': {'VPCRegion': ['ap-south-1']}}
This action creates a new hosted zone.
To create a new hosted zone, send a POST request to the /*Route 53 API version* /hostedzone resource. The request body must include a document with a CreateHostedZoneRequest element. The response returns the CreateHostedZoneResponse element that contains metadata about the hosted zone.
Amazon Route 53 automatically creates a default SOA record and four NS records for the zone. The NS records in the hosted zone are the name servers you give your registrar to delegate your domain to. For more information about SOA and NS records, see NS and SOA Records that Amazon Route 53 Creates for a Hosted Zone in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
When you create a zone, its initial status is PENDING . This means that it is not yet available on all DNS servers. The status of the zone changes to INSYNC when the NS and SOA records are available on all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
When trying to create a hosted zone using a reusable delegation set, you could specify an optional DelegationSetId, and Route53 would assign those 4 NS records for the zone, instead of alloting a new one.
Request Syntax
client.create_hosted_zone( Name='string', VPC={ 'VPCRegion': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1', 'VPCId': 'string' }, CallerReference='string', HostedZoneConfig={ 'Comment': 'string', 'PrivateZone': True|False }, DelegationSetId='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the domain. This must be a fully-specified domain, for example, www.example.com. The trailing dot is optional; Amazon Route 53 assumes that the domain name is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
This is the name you have registered with your DNS registrar. You should ask your registrar to change the authoritative name servers for your domain to the set of NameServers elements returned in DelegationSet .
dict
The VPC that you want your hosted zone to be associated with. By providing this parameter, your newly created hosted cannot be resolved anywhere other than the given VPC.
VPCRegion (string) --
VPCId (string) --
A VPC ID
string
[REQUIRED]
A unique string that identifies the request and that allows failed CreateHostedZone requests to be retried without the risk of executing the operation twice. You must use a unique CallerReference string every time you create a hosted zone. CallerReference can be any unique string; you might choose to use a string that identifies your project, such as DNSMigration_01 .
Valid characters are any Unicode code points that are legal in an XML 1.0 document. The UTF-8 encoding of the value must be less than 128 bytes.
dict
A complex type that contains an optional comment about your hosted zone.
Comment (string) --
An optional comment about your hosted zone. If you don't want to specify a comment, you can omit the HostedZoneConfig and Comment elements from the XML document.
PrivateZone (boolean) --
GetHostedZone and ListHostedZone responses: A Boolean value that indicates whether a hosted zone is private.
CreateHostedZone requests: When you're creating a private hosted zone (when you specify values for VPCId and VPCRegion), you can optionally specify true for PrivateZone.
string
The delegation set id of the reusable delgation set whose NS records you want to assign to the new hosted zone.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'HostedZone': { 'Id': 'string', 'Name': 'string', 'CallerReference': 'string', 'Config': { 'Comment': 'string', 'PrivateZone': True|False }, 'ResourceRecordSetCount': 123 }, 'ChangeInfo': { 'Id': 'string', 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Comment': 'string' }, 'DelegationSet': { 'Id': 'string', 'CallerReference': 'string', 'NameServers': [ 'string', ] }, 'VPC': { 'VPCRegion': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1', 'VPCId': 'string' }, 'Location': 'string' }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type containing the response information for the new hosted zone.
HostedZone (dict) --
A complex type that contains identifying information about the hosted zone.
Id (string) --
The ID of the specified hosted zone.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain. This must be a fully-specified domain, for example, www.example.com. The trailing dot is optional; Amazon Route 53 assumes that the domain name is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
This is the name you have registered with your DNS registrar. You should ask your registrar to change the authoritative name servers for your domain to the set of NameServers elements returned in DelegationSet .
CallerReference (string) --
A unique string that identifies the request to create the hosted zone.
Config (dict) --
A complex type that contains the Comment element.
Comment (string) --
An optional comment about your hosted zone. If you don't want to specify a comment, you can omit the HostedZoneConfig and Comment elements from the XML document.
PrivateZone (boolean) --
GetHostedZone and ListHostedZone responses: A Boolean value that indicates whether a hosted zone is private.
CreateHostedZone requests: When you're creating a private hosted zone (when you specify values for VPCId and VPCRegion), you can optionally specify true for PrivateZone.
ResourceRecordSetCount (integer) --
Total number of resource record sets in the hosted zone.
ChangeInfo (dict) --
A complex type that contains information about the request to create a hosted zone. This includes an ID that you use when you call the GetChange action to get the current status of the change request.
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
DelegationSet (dict) --
A complex type that contains name server information.
Id (string) --
CallerReference (string) --
NameServers (list) --
A complex type that contains the authoritative name servers for the hosted zone. Use the method provided by your domain registrar to add an NS record to your domain for each NameServer that is assigned to your hosted zone.
(string) --
VPC (dict) --
VPCRegion (string) --
VPCId (string) --
A VPC ID
Location (string) --
The unique URL representing the new hosted zone.
{'VPC': {'VPCRegion': ['ap-south-1']}}
This action disassociates a VPC from an hosted zone.
To disassociate a VPC to a hosted zone, send a POST request to the /*Route 53 API version* /hostedzone/*hosted zone ID* /disassociatevpc resource. The request body must include a document with a DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest element. The response returns the DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneResponse element that contains ChangeInfo for you to track the progress of the DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest you made. See GetChange operation for how to track the progress of your change.
Request Syntax
client.disassociate_vpc_from_hosted_zone( HostedZoneId='string', VPC={ 'VPCRegion': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1', 'VPCId': 'string' }, Comment='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone you want to disassociate your VPC from.
Note that you cannot disassociate the last VPC from a hosted zone.
dict
[REQUIRED]
The VPC that you want your hosted zone to be disassociated from.
VPCRegion (string) --
VPCId (string) --
A VPC ID
string
Optional: Any comments you want to include about a DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest .
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'ChangeInfo': { 'Id': 'string', 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Comment': 'string' } }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type containing the response information for the request.
ChangeInfo (dict) --
A complex type that contains the ID, the status, and the date and time of your DisassociateVPCFromHostedZoneRequest .
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
{'ChangeBatchRecord': {'Changes': {'ResourceRecordSet': {'Region': ['ap-south-1']}}}}
This action returns the status and changes of a change batch request.
!DANGER!
This operation is deprecated and may not function as expected. This operation should not be used going forward and is only kept for the purpose of backwards compatiblity.
Request Syntax
client.get_change_details( Id='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the change batch request. The value that you specify here is the value that ChangeResourceRecordSets returned in the Id element when you submitted the request.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'ChangeBatchRecord': { 'Id': 'string', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'Comment': 'string', 'Submitter': 'string', 'Changes': [ { 'Action': 'CREATE'|'DELETE'|'UPSERT', 'ResourceRecordSet': { 'Name': 'string', 'Type': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'SetIdentifier': 'string', 'Weight': 123, 'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1'|'ap-south-1', 'GeoLocation': { 'ContinentCode': 'string', 'CountryCode': 'string', 'SubdivisionCode': 'string' }, 'Failover': 'PRIMARY'|'SECONDARY', 'TTL': 123, 'ResourceRecords': [ { 'Value': 'string' }, ], 'AliasTarget': { 'HostedZoneId': 'string', 'DNSName': 'string', 'EvaluateTargetHealth': True|False }, 'HealthCheckId': 'string', 'TrafficPolicyInstanceId': 'string' } }, ] } }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the ChangeBatchRecord element.
ChangeBatchRecord (dict) --
A complex type that contains information about the specified change batch, including the change batch ID, the status of the change, and the contained changes.
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
Submitter (string) --
The AWS account ID attached to the changes.
Changes (list) --
A list of changes made in the ChangeBatch.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the information for each change in a change batch request.
Action (string) --
The action to perform:
CREATE : Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE : Deletes a existing resource record set that has the specified values for Name , Type , SetIdentifier (for latency, weighted, geolocation, and failover resource record sets), and TTL (except alias resource record sets, for which the TTL is determined by the AWS resource that you're routing DNS queries to).
UPSERT : If a resource record set does not already exist, Amazon Route 53 creates it. If a resource record set does exist, Amazon Route 53 updates it with the values in the request. Amazon Route 53 can update an existing resource record set only when all of the following values match: Name , Type , and SetIdentifier (for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets).
ResourceRecordSet (dict) --
Information about the resource record set to create or delete.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain you want to perform the action on.
Enter a fully qualified domain name, for example, www.example.com . You can optionally include a trailing dot. If you omit the trailing dot, Amazon Route 53 still assumes that the domain name that you specify is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
For information about how to specify characters other than a-z, 0-9, and - (hyphen) and how to specify internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can use an asterisk (*) character in the name. DNS treats the * character either as a wildcard or as the * character (ASCII 42), depending on where it appears in the name. For more information, see Using an Asterisk (*) in the Names of Hosted Zones and Resource Record Sets in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
Warning
You can't use the * wildcard for resource records sets that have a type of NS.
Type (string) --
The DNS record type. For information about different record types and how data is encoded for them, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values for basic resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | PTR | SPF | SRV | TXT . When creating a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets, specify the same value for all of the resource record sets in the group.
Note
SPF records were formerly used to verify the identity of the sender of email messages. However, we no longer recommend that you create resource record sets for which the value of Type is SPF . RFC 7208, Sender Policy Framework (SPF) for Authorizing Use of Domains in Email, Version 1 , has been updated to say, "...[I]ts existence and mechanism defined in [RFC4408] have led to some interoperability issues. Accordingly, its use is no longer appropriate for SPF version 1; implementations are not to use it." In RFC 7208, see section 14.1, The SPF DNS Record Type .
Values for alias resource record sets:
CloudFront distributions: A
ELB load balancers: A | AAAA
Amazon S3 buckets: A
Another resource record set in this hosted zone: Specify the type of the resource record set for which you're creating the alias. Specify any value except NS or SOA .
SetIdentifier (string) --
Weighted, Latency, Geo, and Failover resource record sets only: An identifier that differentiates among multiple resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. The value of SetIdentifier must be unique for each resource record set that has the same combination of DNS name and type.
Weight (integer) --
Weighted resource record sets only: Among resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, a value that determines the proportion of DNS queries that Amazon Route 53 responds to using the current resource record set. Amazon Route 53 calculates the sum of the weights for the resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. Amazon Route 53 then responds to queries based on the ratio of a resource's weight to the total. Note the following:
You must specify a value for the Weight element for every weighted resource record set.
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per weighted resource record set.
You cannot create latency, failover, or geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as weighted resource record sets.
You can create a maximum of 100 weighted resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
For weighted (but not weighted alias) resource record sets, if you set Weight to 0 for a resource record set, Amazon Route 53 never responds to queries with the applicable value for that resource record set. However, if you set Weight to 0 for all resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, traffic is routed to all resources with equal probability. The effect of setting Weight to 0 is different when you associate health checks with weighted resource record sets. For more information, see Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Region (string) --
Latency-based resource record sets only: The Amazon EC2 region where the resource that is specified in this resource record set resides. The resource typically is an AWS resource, such as an Amazon EC2 instance or an ELB load balancer, and is referred to by an IP address or a DNS domain name, depending on the record type.
Note
You can create latency and latency alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
When Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for a domain name and type for which you have created latency resource record sets, Amazon Route 53 selects the latency resource record set that has the lowest latency between the end user and the associated Amazon EC2 region. Amazon Route 53 then returns the value that is associated with the selected resource record set.
Note the following:
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per latency resource record set.
You can only create one latency resource record set for each Amazon EC2 region.
You are not required to create latency resource record sets for all Amazon EC2 regions. Amazon Route 53 will choose the region with the best latency from among the regions for which you create latency resource record sets.
You cannot create non-latency resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as latency resource record sets.
GeoLocation (dict) --
Geo location resource record sets only: A complex type that lets you control how Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries based on the geographic origin of the query. For example, if you want all queries from Africa to be routed to a web server with an IP address of 192.0.2.111 , create a resource record set with a Type of A and a ContinentCode of AF .
Note
You can create geolocation and geolocation alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
If you create separate resource record sets for overlapping geographic regions (for example, one resource record set for a continent and one for a country on the same continent), priority goes to the smallest geographic region. This allows you to route most queries for a continent to one resource and to route queries for a country on that continent to a different resource.
You cannot create two geolocation resource record sets that specify the same geographic location.
The value * in the CountryCode element matches all geographic locations that aren't specified in other geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
Warning
Geolocation works by mapping IP addresses to locations. However, some IP addresses aren't mapped to geographic locations, so even if you create geolocation resource record sets that cover all seven continents, Amazon Route 53 will receive some DNS queries from locations that it can't identify. We recommend that you create a resource record set for which the value of CountryCode is * , which handles both queries that come from locations for which you haven't created geolocation resource record sets and queries from IP addresses that aren't mapped to a location. If you don't create a * resource record set, Amazon Route 53 returns a "no answer" response for queries from those locations.
You cannot create non-geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as geolocation resource record sets.
ContinentCode (string) --
The code for a continent geo location. Note: only continent locations have a continent code.
Valid values: AF | AN | AS | EU | OC | NA | SA
Constraint: Specifying ContinentCode with either CountryCode or SubdivisionCode returns an InvalidInput error.
CountryCode (string) --
The code for a country geo location. The default location uses '*' for the country code and will match all locations that are not matched by a geo location.
The default geo location uses a * for the country code. All other country codes follow the ISO 3166 two-character code.
SubdivisionCode (string) --
The code for a country's subdivision (e.g., a province of Canada). A subdivision code is only valid with the appropriate country code.
Constraint: Specifying SubdivisionCode without CountryCode returns an InvalidInput error.
Failover (string) --
Failover resource record sets only: To configure failover, you add the Failover element to two resource record sets. For one resource record set, you specify PRIMARY as the value for Failover ; for the other resource record set, you specify SECONDARY . In addition, you include the HealthCheckId element and specify the health check that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform for each resource record set.
Note
You can create failover and failover alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
Except where noted, the following failover behaviors assume that you have included the HealthCheckId element in both resource record sets:
When the primary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the secondary resource record set.
When the primary resource record set is unhealthy and the secondary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set.
When the secondary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the primary resource record set.
If you omit the HealthCheckId element for the secondary resource record set, and if the primary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 always responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set. This is true regardless of the health of the associated endpoint.
You cannot create non-failover resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as failover resource record sets.
For failover alias resource record sets, you must also include the EvaluateTargetHealth element and set the value to true.
For more information about configuring failover for Amazon Route 53, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values: PRIMARY | SECONDARY
TTL (integer) --
The cache time to live for the current resource record set. Note the following:
If you're creating a non-alias resource record set, TTL is required.
If you're creating an alias resource record set, omit TTL . Amazon Route 53 uses the value of TTL for the alias target.
If you're associating this resource record set with a health check (if you're adding a HealthCheckId element), we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds or less so clients respond quickly to changes in health status.
All of the resource record sets in a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets must have the same value for TTL .
If a group of weighted resource record sets includes one or more weighted alias resource record sets for which the alias target is an ELB load balancer, we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds for all of the non-alias weighted resource record sets that have the same name and type. Values other than 60 seconds (the TTL for load balancers) will change the effect of the values that you specify for Weight .
ResourceRecords (list) --
A complex type that contains the resource records for the current resource record set.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the value of the Value element for the current resource record set.
Value (string) --
The current or new DNS record value, not to exceed 4,000 characters. In the case of a DELETE action, if the current value does not match the actual value, an error is returned. For descriptions about how to format Value for different record types, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can specify more than one value for all record types except CNAME and SOA .
AliasTarget (dict) --
Alias resource record sets only: Information about the AWS resource to which you are redirecting traffic.
HostedZoneId (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The value you use depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify Z2FDTNDATAQYW2 .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the value of the hosted zone ID for the load balancer. You can get the hosted zone ID by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the hosted zone ID for the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket. For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set in your hosted zone: Specify the hosted zone ID of your hosted zone. (An alias resource record set cannot reference a resource record set in a different hosted zone.)
DNSName (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The external DNS name associated with the AWS Resource. The value that you specify depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify the domain name that CloudFront assigned when you created your distribution. Your CloudFront distribution must include an alternate domain name that matches the name of the resource record set. For example, if the name of the resource record set is acme.example.com , your CloudFront distribution must include acme.example.com as one of the alternate domain names. For more information, see Using Alternate Domain Names (CNAMEs) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the DNS name associated with the load balancer. You can get the DNS name by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Elastic Beanstalk environment: Specify the CNAME attribute for the environment. (The environment must have a regionalized domain name.)
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the domain name of the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket; for example, s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com . For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference . For more information about using Amazon S3 buckets for websites, see Hosting a Static Website on Amazon S3 in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set: Specify the value of the Name element for a resource record set in the current hosted zone.
EvaluateTargetHealth (boolean) --
Alias resource record sets only: If you set the value of EvaluateTargetHealth to true for the resource record set or sets in an alias, weighted alias, latency alias, or failover alias resource record set, and if you specify a value for HealthCheckId for every resource record set that is referenced by these alias resource record sets, the alias resource record sets inherit the health of the referenced resource record sets.
In this configuration, when Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for an alias resource record set:
Amazon Route 53 looks at the resource record sets that are referenced by the alias resource record sets to determine which health checks they're using.
Amazon Route 53 checks the current status of each health check. (Amazon Route 53 periodically checks the health of the endpoint that is specified in a health check; it doesn't perform the health check when the DNS query arrives.)
Based on the status of the health checks, Amazon Route 53 determines which resource record sets are healthy. Unhealthy resource record sets are immediately removed from consideration. In addition, if all of the resource record sets that are referenced by an alias resource record set are unhealthy, that alias resource record set also is immediately removed from consideration.
Based on the configuration of the alias resource record sets (weighted alias or latency alias, for example) and the configuration of the resource record sets that they reference, Amazon Route 53 chooses a resource record set from the healthy resource record sets, and responds to the query.
Note the following:
You cannot set EvaluateTargetHealth to true when the alias target is a CloudFront distribution.
If the AWS resource that you specify in AliasTarget is a resource record set or a group of resource record sets (for example, a group of weighted resource record sets), but it is not another alias resource record set, we recommend that you associate a health check with all of the resource record sets in the alias target.
If you specify an ELB load balancer in AliasTarget , Elastic Load Balancing routes queries only to the healthy Amazon EC2 instances that are registered with the load balancer. If no Amazon EC2 instances are healthy or if the load balancer itself is unhealthy, and if EvaluateTargetHealth is true for the corresponding alias resource record set, Amazon Route 53 routes queries to other resources.
When you create a load balancer, you configure settings for Elastic Load Balancing health checks; they're not Amazon Route 53 health checks, but they perform a similar function. Do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the Amazon EC2 instances that you register with an ELB load balancer. For more information, see How Health Checks Work in More Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
We recommend that you set EvaluateTargetHealth to true only when you have enough idle capacity to handle the failure of one or more endpoints.
For more information and examples, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
HealthCheckId (string) --
Health Check resource record sets only, not required for alias resource record sets: An identifier that is used to identify health check associated with the resource record set.
TrafficPolicyInstanceId (string) --
{'VPCs': {'VPCRegion': ['ap-south-1']}}
To retrieve the delegation set for a hosted zone, send a GET request to the /*Route 53 API version* /hostedzone/*hosted zone ID* resource. The delegation set is the four Amazon Route 53 name servers that were assigned to the hosted zone when you created it.
Request Syntax
client.get_hosted_zone( Id='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone for which you want to get a list of the name servers in the delegation set.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'HostedZone': { 'Id': 'string', 'Name': 'string', 'CallerReference': 'string', 'Config': { 'Comment': 'string', 'PrivateZone': True|False }, 'ResourceRecordSetCount': 123 }, 'DelegationSet': { 'Id': 'string', 'CallerReference': 'string', 'NameServers': [ 'string', ] }, 'VPCs': [ { 'VPCRegion': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-south-1'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1', 'VPCId': 'string' }, ] }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type containing information about the specified hosted zone.
HostedZone (dict) --
A complex type that contains the information about the specified hosted zone.
Id (string) --
The ID of the specified hosted zone.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain. This must be a fully-specified domain, for example, www.example.com. The trailing dot is optional; Amazon Route 53 assumes that the domain name is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
This is the name you have registered with your DNS registrar. You should ask your registrar to change the authoritative name servers for your domain to the set of NameServers elements returned in DelegationSet .
CallerReference (string) --
A unique string that identifies the request to create the hosted zone.
Config (dict) --
A complex type that contains the Comment element.
Comment (string) --
An optional comment about your hosted zone. If you don't want to specify a comment, you can omit the HostedZoneConfig and Comment elements from the XML document.
PrivateZone (boolean) --
GetHostedZone and ListHostedZone responses: A Boolean value that indicates whether a hosted zone is private.
CreateHostedZone requests: When you're creating a private hosted zone (when you specify values for VPCId and VPCRegion), you can optionally specify true for PrivateZone.
ResourceRecordSetCount (integer) --
Total number of resource record sets in the hosted zone.
DelegationSet (dict) --
A complex type that contains information about the name servers for the specified hosted zone.
Id (string) --
CallerReference (string) --
NameServers (list) --
A complex type that contains the authoritative name servers for the hosted zone. Use the method provided by your domain registrar to add an NS record to your domain for each NameServer that is assigned to your hosted zone.
(string) --
VPCs (list) --
A complex type that contains information about VPCs associated with the specified hosted zone.
(dict) --
VPCRegion (string) --
VPCId (string) --
A VPC ID
{'ChangeBatchRecords': {'Changes': {'ResourceRecordSet': {'Region': ['ap-south-1']}}}}
This action gets the list of ChangeBatches in a given time period for a given hosted zone.
!DANGER!
This operation is deprecated and may not function as expected. This operation should not be used going forward and is only kept for the purpose of backwards compatiblity.
Request Syntax
client.list_change_batches_by_hosted_zone( HostedZoneId='string', StartDate='string', EndDate='string', MaxItems='string', Marker='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone that you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The start of the time period you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The end of the time period you want to see changes for.
string
The maximum number of items on a page.
string
The page marker.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'MaxItems': 'string', 'Marker': 'string', 'IsTruncated': True|False, 'ChangeBatchRecords': [ { 'Id': 'string', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'Comment': 'string', 'Submitter': 'string', 'Changes': [ { 'Action': 'CREATE'|'DELETE'|'UPSERT', 'ResourceRecordSet': { 'Name': 'string', 'Type': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'SetIdentifier': 'string', 'Weight': 123, 'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1'|'ap-south-1', 'GeoLocation': { 'ContinentCode': 'string', 'CountryCode': 'string', 'SubdivisionCode': 'string' }, 'Failover': 'PRIMARY'|'SECONDARY', 'TTL': 123, 'ResourceRecords': [ { 'Value': 'string' }, ], 'AliasTarget': { 'HostedZoneId': 'string', 'DNSName': 'string', 'EvaluateTargetHealth': True|False }, 'HealthCheckId': 'string', 'TrafficPolicyInstanceId': 'string' } }, ] }, ], 'NextMarker': 'string' }
Response Structure
(dict) --
The input for a ListChangeBatchesByHostedZone request.
MaxItems (string) --
The maximum number of items on a page.
Marker (string) --
The page marker.
IsTruncated (boolean) --
A flag that indicates if there are more change batches to list.
ChangeBatchRecords (list) --
The change batches within the given hosted zone and time period.
(dict) --
A complex type that lists the changes and information for a ChangeBatch.
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
Submitter (string) --
The AWS account ID attached to the changes.
Changes (list) --
A list of changes made in the ChangeBatch.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the information for each change in a change batch request.
Action (string) --
The action to perform:
CREATE : Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE : Deletes a existing resource record set that has the specified values for Name , Type , SetIdentifier (for latency, weighted, geolocation, and failover resource record sets), and TTL (except alias resource record sets, for which the TTL is determined by the AWS resource that you're routing DNS queries to).
UPSERT : If a resource record set does not already exist, Amazon Route 53 creates it. If a resource record set does exist, Amazon Route 53 updates it with the values in the request. Amazon Route 53 can update an existing resource record set only when all of the following values match: Name , Type , and SetIdentifier (for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets).
ResourceRecordSet (dict) --
Information about the resource record set to create or delete.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain you want to perform the action on.
Enter a fully qualified domain name, for example, www.example.com . You can optionally include a trailing dot. If you omit the trailing dot, Amazon Route 53 still assumes that the domain name that you specify is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
For information about how to specify characters other than a-z, 0-9, and - (hyphen) and how to specify internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can use an asterisk (*) character in the name. DNS treats the * character either as a wildcard or as the * character (ASCII 42), depending on where it appears in the name. For more information, see Using an Asterisk (*) in the Names of Hosted Zones and Resource Record Sets in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
Warning
You can't use the * wildcard for resource records sets that have a type of NS.
Type (string) --
The DNS record type. For information about different record types and how data is encoded for them, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values for basic resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | PTR | SPF | SRV | TXT . When creating a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets, specify the same value for all of the resource record sets in the group.
Note
SPF records were formerly used to verify the identity of the sender of email messages. However, we no longer recommend that you create resource record sets for which the value of Type is SPF . RFC 7208, Sender Policy Framework (SPF) for Authorizing Use of Domains in Email, Version 1 , has been updated to say, "...[I]ts existence and mechanism defined in [RFC4408] have led to some interoperability issues. Accordingly, its use is no longer appropriate for SPF version 1; implementations are not to use it." In RFC 7208, see section 14.1, The SPF DNS Record Type .
Values for alias resource record sets:
CloudFront distributions: A
ELB load balancers: A | AAAA
Amazon S3 buckets: A
Another resource record set in this hosted zone: Specify the type of the resource record set for which you're creating the alias. Specify any value except NS or SOA .
SetIdentifier (string) --
Weighted, Latency, Geo, and Failover resource record sets only: An identifier that differentiates among multiple resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. The value of SetIdentifier must be unique for each resource record set that has the same combination of DNS name and type.
Weight (integer) --
Weighted resource record sets only: Among resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, a value that determines the proportion of DNS queries that Amazon Route 53 responds to using the current resource record set. Amazon Route 53 calculates the sum of the weights for the resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. Amazon Route 53 then responds to queries based on the ratio of a resource's weight to the total. Note the following:
You must specify a value for the Weight element for every weighted resource record set.
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per weighted resource record set.
You cannot create latency, failover, or geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as weighted resource record sets.
You can create a maximum of 100 weighted resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
For weighted (but not weighted alias) resource record sets, if you set Weight to 0 for a resource record set, Amazon Route 53 never responds to queries with the applicable value for that resource record set. However, if you set Weight to 0 for all resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, traffic is routed to all resources with equal probability. The effect of setting Weight to 0 is different when you associate health checks with weighted resource record sets. For more information, see Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Region (string) --
Latency-based resource record sets only: The Amazon EC2 region where the resource that is specified in this resource record set resides. The resource typically is an AWS resource, such as an Amazon EC2 instance or an ELB load balancer, and is referred to by an IP address or a DNS domain name, depending on the record type.
Note
You can create latency and latency alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
When Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for a domain name and type for which you have created latency resource record sets, Amazon Route 53 selects the latency resource record set that has the lowest latency between the end user and the associated Amazon EC2 region. Amazon Route 53 then returns the value that is associated with the selected resource record set.
Note the following:
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per latency resource record set.
You can only create one latency resource record set for each Amazon EC2 region.
You are not required to create latency resource record sets for all Amazon EC2 regions. Amazon Route 53 will choose the region with the best latency from among the regions for which you create latency resource record sets.
You cannot create non-latency resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as latency resource record sets.
GeoLocation (dict) --
Geo location resource record sets only: A complex type that lets you control how Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries based on the geographic origin of the query. For example, if you want all queries from Africa to be routed to a web server with an IP address of 192.0.2.111 , create a resource record set with a Type of A and a ContinentCode of AF .
Note
You can create geolocation and geolocation alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
If you create separate resource record sets for overlapping geographic regions (for example, one resource record set for a continent and one for a country on the same continent), priority goes to the smallest geographic region. This allows you to route most queries for a continent to one resource and to route queries for a country on that continent to a different resource.
You cannot create two geolocation resource record sets that specify the same geographic location.
The value * in the CountryCode element matches all geographic locations that aren't specified in other geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
Warning
Geolocation works by mapping IP addresses to locations. However, some IP addresses aren't mapped to geographic locations, so even if you create geolocation resource record sets that cover all seven continents, Amazon Route 53 will receive some DNS queries from locations that it can't identify. We recommend that you create a resource record set for which the value of CountryCode is * , which handles both queries that come from locations for which you haven't created geolocation resource record sets and queries from IP addresses that aren't mapped to a location. If you don't create a * resource record set, Amazon Route 53 returns a "no answer" response for queries from those locations.
You cannot create non-geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as geolocation resource record sets.
ContinentCode (string) --
The code for a continent geo location. Note: only continent locations have a continent code.
Valid values: AF | AN | AS | EU | OC | NA | SA
Constraint: Specifying ContinentCode with either CountryCode or SubdivisionCode returns an InvalidInput error.
CountryCode (string) --
The code for a country geo location. The default location uses '*' for the country code and will match all locations that are not matched by a geo location.
The default geo location uses a * for the country code. All other country codes follow the ISO 3166 two-character code.
SubdivisionCode (string) --
The code for a country's subdivision (e.g., a province of Canada). A subdivision code is only valid with the appropriate country code.
Constraint: Specifying SubdivisionCode without CountryCode returns an InvalidInput error.
Failover (string) --
Failover resource record sets only: To configure failover, you add the Failover element to two resource record sets. For one resource record set, you specify PRIMARY as the value for Failover ; for the other resource record set, you specify SECONDARY . In addition, you include the HealthCheckId element and specify the health check that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform for each resource record set.
Note
You can create failover and failover alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
Except where noted, the following failover behaviors assume that you have included the HealthCheckId element in both resource record sets:
When the primary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the secondary resource record set.
When the primary resource record set is unhealthy and the secondary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set.
When the secondary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the primary resource record set.
If you omit the HealthCheckId element for the secondary resource record set, and if the primary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 always responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set. This is true regardless of the health of the associated endpoint.
You cannot create non-failover resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as failover resource record sets.
For failover alias resource record sets, you must also include the EvaluateTargetHealth element and set the value to true.
For more information about configuring failover for Amazon Route 53, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values: PRIMARY | SECONDARY
TTL (integer) --
The cache time to live for the current resource record set. Note the following:
If you're creating a non-alias resource record set, TTL is required.
If you're creating an alias resource record set, omit TTL . Amazon Route 53 uses the value of TTL for the alias target.
If you're associating this resource record set with a health check (if you're adding a HealthCheckId element), we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds or less so clients respond quickly to changes in health status.
All of the resource record sets in a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets must have the same value for TTL .
If a group of weighted resource record sets includes one or more weighted alias resource record sets for which the alias target is an ELB load balancer, we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds for all of the non-alias weighted resource record sets that have the same name and type. Values other than 60 seconds (the TTL for load balancers) will change the effect of the values that you specify for Weight .
ResourceRecords (list) --
A complex type that contains the resource records for the current resource record set.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the value of the Value element for the current resource record set.
Value (string) --
The current or new DNS record value, not to exceed 4,000 characters. In the case of a DELETE action, if the current value does not match the actual value, an error is returned. For descriptions about how to format Value for different record types, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can specify more than one value for all record types except CNAME and SOA .
AliasTarget (dict) --
Alias resource record sets only: Information about the AWS resource to which you are redirecting traffic.
HostedZoneId (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The value you use depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify Z2FDTNDATAQYW2 .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the value of the hosted zone ID for the load balancer. You can get the hosted zone ID by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the hosted zone ID for the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket. For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set in your hosted zone: Specify the hosted zone ID of your hosted zone. (An alias resource record set cannot reference a resource record set in a different hosted zone.)
DNSName (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The external DNS name associated with the AWS Resource. The value that you specify depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify the domain name that CloudFront assigned when you created your distribution. Your CloudFront distribution must include an alternate domain name that matches the name of the resource record set. For example, if the name of the resource record set is acme.example.com , your CloudFront distribution must include acme.example.com as one of the alternate domain names. For more information, see Using Alternate Domain Names (CNAMEs) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the DNS name associated with the load balancer. You can get the DNS name by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Elastic Beanstalk environment: Specify the CNAME attribute for the environment. (The environment must have a regionalized domain name.)
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the domain name of the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket; for example, s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com . For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference . For more information about using Amazon S3 buckets for websites, see Hosting a Static Website on Amazon S3 in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set: Specify the value of the Name element for a resource record set in the current hosted zone.
EvaluateTargetHealth (boolean) --
Alias resource record sets only: If you set the value of EvaluateTargetHealth to true for the resource record set or sets in an alias, weighted alias, latency alias, or failover alias resource record set, and if you specify a value for HealthCheckId for every resource record set that is referenced by these alias resource record sets, the alias resource record sets inherit the health of the referenced resource record sets.
In this configuration, when Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for an alias resource record set:
Amazon Route 53 looks at the resource record sets that are referenced by the alias resource record sets to determine which health checks they're using.
Amazon Route 53 checks the current status of each health check. (Amazon Route 53 periodically checks the health of the endpoint that is specified in a health check; it doesn't perform the health check when the DNS query arrives.)
Based on the status of the health checks, Amazon Route 53 determines which resource record sets are healthy. Unhealthy resource record sets are immediately removed from consideration. In addition, if all of the resource record sets that are referenced by an alias resource record set are unhealthy, that alias resource record set also is immediately removed from consideration.
Based on the configuration of the alias resource record sets (weighted alias or latency alias, for example) and the configuration of the resource record sets that they reference, Amazon Route 53 chooses a resource record set from the healthy resource record sets, and responds to the query.
Note the following:
You cannot set EvaluateTargetHealth to true when the alias target is a CloudFront distribution.
If the AWS resource that you specify in AliasTarget is a resource record set or a group of resource record sets (for example, a group of weighted resource record sets), but it is not another alias resource record set, we recommend that you associate a health check with all of the resource record sets in the alias target.
If you specify an ELB load balancer in AliasTarget , Elastic Load Balancing routes queries only to the healthy Amazon EC2 instances that are registered with the load balancer. If no Amazon EC2 instances are healthy or if the load balancer itself is unhealthy, and if EvaluateTargetHealth is true for the corresponding alias resource record set, Amazon Route 53 routes queries to other resources.
When you create a load balancer, you configure settings for Elastic Load Balancing health checks; they're not Amazon Route 53 health checks, but they perform a similar function. Do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the Amazon EC2 instances that you register with an ELB load balancer. For more information, see How Health Checks Work in More Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
We recommend that you set EvaluateTargetHealth to true only when you have enough idle capacity to handle the failure of one or more endpoints.
For more information and examples, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
HealthCheckId (string) --
Health Check resource record sets only, not required for alias resource record sets: An identifier that is used to identify health check associated with the resource record set.
TrafficPolicyInstanceId (string) --
NextMarker (string) --
The next page marker.
{'ChangeBatchRecords': {'Changes': {'ResourceRecordSet': {'Region': ['ap-south-1']}}}}
This action gets the list of ChangeBatches in a given time period for a given hosted zone and RRSet.
!DANGER!
This operation is deprecated and may not function as expected. This operation should not be used going forward and is only kept for the purpose of backwards compatiblity.
Request Syntax
client.list_change_batches_by_rr_set( HostedZoneId='string', Name='string', Type='SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', SetIdentifier='string', StartDate='string', EndDate='string', MaxItems='string', Marker='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone that you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The name of the RRSet that you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The type of the RRSet that you want to see changes for.
string
The identifier of the RRSet that you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The start of the time period you want to see changes for.
string
[REQUIRED]
The end of the time period you want to see changes for.
string
The maximum number of items on a page.
string
The page marker.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'MaxItems': 'string', 'Marker': 'string', 'IsTruncated': True|False, 'ChangeBatchRecords': [ { 'Id': 'string', 'SubmittedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1), 'Status': 'PENDING'|'INSYNC', 'Comment': 'string', 'Submitter': 'string', 'Changes': [ { 'Action': 'CREATE'|'DELETE'|'UPSERT', 'ResourceRecordSet': { 'Name': 'string', 'Type': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'SetIdentifier': 'string', 'Weight': 123, 'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1'|'ap-south-1', 'GeoLocation': { 'ContinentCode': 'string', 'CountryCode': 'string', 'SubdivisionCode': 'string' }, 'Failover': 'PRIMARY'|'SECONDARY', 'TTL': 123, 'ResourceRecords': [ { 'Value': 'string' }, ], 'AliasTarget': { 'HostedZoneId': 'string', 'DNSName': 'string', 'EvaluateTargetHealth': True|False }, 'HealthCheckId': 'string', 'TrafficPolicyInstanceId': 'string' } }, ] }, ], 'NextMarker': 'string' }
Response Structure
(dict) --
The input for a ListChangeBatchesByRRSet request.
MaxItems (string) --
The maximum number of items on a page.
Marker (string) --
The page marker.
IsTruncated (boolean) --
A flag that indicates if there are more change batches to list.
ChangeBatchRecords (list) --
The change batches within the given hosted zone and time period.
(dict) --
A complex type that lists the changes and information for a ChangeBatch.
Id (string) --
The ID of the request. Use this ID to track when the change has completed across all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
SubmittedAt (datetime) --
The date and time the change was submitted, in the format YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ , as specified in the ISO 8601 standard (for example, 2009-11-19T19:37:58Z). The Z after the time indicates that the time is listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Status (string) --
The current state of the request. PENDING indicates that this request has not yet been applied to all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
Valid Values: PENDING | INSYNC
Comment (string) --
A complex type that describes change information about changes made to your hosted zone.
This element contains an ID that you use when performing a GetChange action to get detailed information about the change.
Submitter (string) --
The AWS account ID attached to the changes.
Changes (list) --
A list of changes made in the ChangeBatch.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the information for each change in a change batch request.
Action (string) --
The action to perform:
CREATE : Creates a resource record set that has the specified values.
DELETE : Deletes a existing resource record set that has the specified values for Name , Type , SetIdentifier (for latency, weighted, geolocation, and failover resource record sets), and TTL (except alias resource record sets, for which the TTL is determined by the AWS resource that you're routing DNS queries to).
UPSERT : If a resource record set does not already exist, Amazon Route 53 creates it. If a resource record set does exist, Amazon Route 53 updates it with the values in the request. Amazon Route 53 can update an existing resource record set only when all of the following values match: Name , Type , and SetIdentifier (for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets).
ResourceRecordSet (dict) --
Information about the resource record set to create or delete.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain you want to perform the action on.
Enter a fully qualified domain name, for example, www.example.com . You can optionally include a trailing dot. If you omit the trailing dot, Amazon Route 53 still assumes that the domain name that you specify is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
For information about how to specify characters other than a-z, 0-9, and - (hyphen) and how to specify internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can use an asterisk (*) character in the name. DNS treats the * character either as a wildcard or as the * character (ASCII 42), depending on where it appears in the name. For more information, see Using an Asterisk (*) in the Names of Hosted Zones and Resource Record Sets in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
Warning
You can't use the * wildcard for resource records sets that have a type of NS.
Type (string) --
The DNS record type. For information about different record types and how data is encoded for them, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values for basic resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | PTR | SPF | SRV | TXT . When creating a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets, specify the same value for all of the resource record sets in the group.
Note
SPF records were formerly used to verify the identity of the sender of email messages. However, we no longer recommend that you create resource record sets for which the value of Type is SPF . RFC 7208, Sender Policy Framework (SPF) for Authorizing Use of Domains in Email, Version 1 , has been updated to say, "...[I]ts existence and mechanism defined in [RFC4408] have led to some interoperability issues. Accordingly, its use is no longer appropriate for SPF version 1; implementations are not to use it." In RFC 7208, see section 14.1, The SPF DNS Record Type .
Values for alias resource record sets:
CloudFront distributions: A
ELB load balancers: A | AAAA
Amazon S3 buckets: A
Another resource record set in this hosted zone: Specify the type of the resource record set for which you're creating the alias. Specify any value except NS or SOA .
SetIdentifier (string) --
Weighted, Latency, Geo, and Failover resource record sets only: An identifier that differentiates among multiple resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. The value of SetIdentifier must be unique for each resource record set that has the same combination of DNS name and type.
Weight (integer) --
Weighted resource record sets only: Among resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, a value that determines the proportion of DNS queries that Amazon Route 53 responds to using the current resource record set. Amazon Route 53 calculates the sum of the weights for the resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. Amazon Route 53 then responds to queries based on the ratio of a resource's weight to the total. Note the following:
You must specify a value for the Weight element for every weighted resource record set.
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per weighted resource record set.
You cannot create latency, failover, or geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as weighted resource record sets.
You can create a maximum of 100 weighted resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
For weighted (but not weighted alias) resource record sets, if you set Weight to 0 for a resource record set, Amazon Route 53 never responds to queries with the applicable value for that resource record set. However, if you set Weight to 0 for all resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, traffic is routed to all resources with equal probability. The effect of setting Weight to 0 is different when you associate health checks with weighted resource record sets. For more information, see Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Region (string) --
Latency-based resource record sets only: The Amazon EC2 region where the resource that is specified in this resource record set resides. The resource typically is an AWS resource, such as an Amazon EC2 instance or an ELB load balancer, and is referred to by an IP address or a DNS domain name, depending on the record type.
Note
You can create latency and latency alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
When Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for a domain name and type for which you have created latency resource record sets, Amazon Route 53 selects the latency resource record set that has the lowest latency between the end user and the associated Amazon EC2 region. Amazon Route 53 then returns the value that is associated with the selected resource record set.
Note the following:
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per latency resource record set.
You can only create one latency resource record set for each Amazon EC2 region.
You are not required to create latency resource record sets for all Amazon EC2 regions. Amazon Route 53 will choose the region with the best latency from among the regions for which you create latency resource record sets.
You cannot create non-latency resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as latency resource record sets.
GeoLocation (dict) --
Geo location resource record sets only: A complex type that lets you control how Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries based on the geographic origin of the query. For example, if you want all queries from Africa to be routed to a web server with an IP address of 192.0.2.111 , create a resource record set with a Type of A and a ContinentCode of AF .
Note
You can create geolocation and geolocation alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
If you create separate resource record sets for overlapping geographic regions (for example, one resource record set for a continent and one for a country on the same continent), priority goes to the smallest geographic region. This allows you to route most queries for a continent to one resource and to route queries for a country on that continent to a different resource.
You cannot create two geolocation resource record sets that specify the same geographic location.
The value * in the CountryCode element matches all geographic locations that aren't specified in other geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
Warning
Geolocation works by mapping IP addresses to locations. However, some IP addresses aren't mapped to geographic locations, so even if you create geolocation resource record sets that cover all seven continents, Amazon Route 53 will receive some DNS queries from locations that it can't identify. We recommend that you create a resource record set for which the value of CountryCode is * , which handles both queries that come from locations for which you haven't created geolocation resource record sets and queries from IP addresses that aren't mapped to a location. If you don't create a * resource record set, Amazon Route 53 returns a "no answer" response for queries from those locations.
You cannot create non-geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as geolocation resource record sets.
ContinentCode (string) --
The code for a continent geo location. Note: only continent locations have a continent code.
Valid values: AF | AN | AS | EU | OC | NA | SA
Constraint: Specifying ContinentCode with either CountryCode or SubdivisionCode returns an InvalidInput error.
CountryCode (string) --
The code for a country geo location. The default location uses '*' for the country code and will match all locations that are not matched by a geo location.
The default geo location uses a * for the country code. All other country codes follow the ISO 3166 two-character code.
SubdivisionCode (string) --
The code for a country's subdivision (e.g., a province of Canada). A subdivision code is only valid with the appropriate country code.
Constraint: Specifying SubdivisionCode without CountryCode returns an InvalidInput error.
Failover (string) --
Failover resource record sets only: To configure failover, you add the Failover element to two resource record sets. For one resource record set, you specify PRIMARY as the value for Failover ; for the other resource record set, you specify SECONDARY . In addition, you include the HealthCheckId element and specify the health check that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform for each resource record set.
Note
You can create failover and failover alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
Except where noted, the following failover behaviors assume that you have included the HealthCheckId element in both resource record sets:
When the primary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the secondary resource record set.
When the primary resource record set is unhealthy and the secondary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set.
When the secondary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the primary resource record set.
If you omit the HealthCheckId element for the secondary resource record set, and if the primary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 always responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set. This is true regardless of the health of the associated endpoint.
You cannot create non-failover resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as failover resource record sets.
For failover alias resource record sets, you must also include the EvaluateTargetHealth element and set the value to true.
For more information about configuring failover for Amazon Route 53, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values: PRIMARY | SECONDARY
TTL (integer) --
The cache time to live for the current resource record set. Note the following:
If you're creating a non-alias resource record set, TTL is required.
If you're creating an alias resource record set, omit TTL . Amazon Route 53 uses the value of TTL for the alias target.
If you're associating this resource record set with a health check (if you're adding a HealthCheckId element), we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds or less so clients respond quickly to changes in health status.
All of the resource record sets in a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets must have the same value for TTL .
If a group of weighted resource record sets includes one or more weighted alias resource record sets for which the alias target is an ELB load balancer, we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds for all of the non-alias weighted resource record sets that have the same name and type. Values other than 60 seconds (the TTL for load balancers) will change the effect of the values that you specify for Weight .
ResourceRecords (list) --
A complex type that contains the resource records for the current resource record set.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the value of the Value element for the current resource record set.
Value (string) --
The current or new DNS record value, not to exceed 4,000 characters. In the case of a DELETE action, if the current value does not match the actual value, an error is returned. For descriptions about how to format Value for different record types, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can specify more than one value for all record types except CNAME and SOA .
AliasTarget (dict) --
Alias resource record sets only: Information about the AWS resource to which you are redirecting traffic.
HostedZoneId (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The value you use depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify Z2FDTNDATAQYW2 .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the value of the hosted zone ID for the load balancer. You can get the hosted zone ID by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the hosted zone ID for the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket. For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set in your hosted zone: Specify the hosted zone ID of your hosted zone. (An alias resource record set cannot reference a resource record set in a different hosted zone.)
DNSName (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The external DNS name associated with the AWS Resource. The value that you specify depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify the domain name that CloudFront assigned when you created your distribution. Your CloudFront distribution must include an alternate domain name that matches the name of the resource record set. For example, if the name of the resource record set is acme.example.com , your CloudFront distribution must include acme.example.com as one of the alternate domain names. For more information, see Using Alternate Domain Names (CNAMEs) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the DNS name associated with the load balancer. You can get the DNS name by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Elastic Beanstalk environment: Specify the CNAME attribute for the environment. (The environment must have a regionalized domain name.)
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the domain name of the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket; for example, s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com . For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference . For more information about using Amazon S3 buckets for websites, see Hosting a Static Website on Amazon S3 in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set: Specify the value of the Name element for a resource record set in the current hosted zone.
EvaluateTargetHealth (boolean) --
Alias resource record sets only: If you set the value of EvaluateTargetHealth to true for the resource record set or sets in an alias, weighted alias, latency alias, or failover alias resource record set, and if you specify a value for HealthCheckId for every resource record set that is referenced by these alias resource record sets, the alias resource record sets inherit the health of the referenced resource record sets.
In this configuration, when Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for an alias resource record set:
Amazon Route 53 looks at the resource record sets that are referenced by the alias resource record sets to determine which health checks they're using.
Amazon Route 53 checks the current status of each health check. (Amazon Route 53 periodically checks the health of the endpoint that is specified in a health check; it doesn't perform the health check when the DNS query arrives.)
Based on the status of the health checks, Amazon Route 53 determines which resource record sets are healthy. Unhealthy resource record sets are immediately removed from consideration. In addition, if all of the resource record sets that are referenced by an alias resource record set are unhealthy, that alias resource record set also is immediately removed from consideration.
Based on the configuration of the alias resource record sets (weighted alias or latency alias, for example) and the configuration of the resource record sets that they reference, Amazon Route 53 chooses a resource record set from the healthy resource record sets, and responds to the query.
Note the following:
You cannot set EvaluateTargetHealth to true when the alias target is a CloudFront distribution.
If the AWS resource that you specify in AliasTarget is a resource record set or a group of resource record sets (for example, a group of weighted resource record sets), but it is not another alias resource record set, we recommend that you associate a health check with all of the resource record sets in the alias target.
If you specify an ELB load balancer in AliasTarget , Elastic Load Balancing routes queries only to the healthy Amazon EC2 instances that are registered with the load balancer. If no Amazon EC2 instances are healthy or if the load balancer itself is unhealthy, and if EvaluateTargetHealth is true for the corresponding alias resource record set, Amazon Route 53 routes queries to other resources.
When you create a load balancer, you configure settings for Elastic Load Balancing health checks; they're not Amazon Route 53 health checks, but they perform a similar function. Do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the Amazon EC2 instances that you register with an ELB load balancer. For more information, see How Health Checks Work in More Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
We recommend that you set EvaluateTargetHealth to true only when you have enough idle capacity to handle the failure of one or more endpoints.
For more information and examples, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
HealthCheckId (string) --
Health Check resource record sets only, not required for alias resource record sets: An identifier that is used to identify health check associated with the resource record set.
TrafficPolicyInstanceId (string) --
NextMarker (string) --
The next page marker.
{'ResourceRecordSets': {'Region': ['ap-south-1']}}
List the resource record sets in a specified hosted zone. Send a GET request to the 2013-04-01/hostedzone/*hosted zone ID* /rrset resource.
ListResourceRecordSets returns up to 100 resource record sets at a time in ASCII order, beginning at a position specified by the name and type elements. The action 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 in some circumstances. When multiple records have the same DNS name, the action sorts results by the record type.
You can use the name and type elements to adjust the beginning position of the list of resource record sets returned:
If you do not specify ``Name`` or ``Type`` : The results begin with the first resource record set that the hosted zone contains.
If you specify ``Name`` but not ``Type`` : The results begin with the first resource record set in the list whose name is greater than or equal to Name.
If you specify ``Type`` but not ``Name`` : Amazon Route 53 returns the InvalidInput error.
If you specify both ``Name`` and ``Type`` : 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 .
This action returns the most current version of the records. This includes records that are PENDING , and that are not yet available on all Amazon Route 53 DNS servers.
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 are 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.
Request Syntax
client.list_resource_record_sets( HostedZoneId='string', StartRecordName='string', StartRecordType='SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', StartRecordIdentifier='string', MaxItems='string' )
string
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the hosted zone that contains the resource record sets that you want to get.
string
The first name in the lexicographic ordering of domain names that you want the ListResourceRecordSets request to list.
string
The DNS type at which to begin the listing of resource record sets.
Valid values: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for Weighted Resource Record Sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | TXT
Values for Regional Resource Record Sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | TXT
Values for Alias Resource Record Sets: A | AAAA
Constraint: Specifying type without specifying name returns an InvalidInput error.
string
Weighted resource record sets only: If results were truncated for a given DNS name and type, specify the value of NextRecordIdentifier from the previous response to get the next resource record set that has the current DNS name and type.
string
The maximum number of records you want in the response body.
dict
Response Syntax
{ 'ResourceRecordSets': [ { 'Name': 'string', 'Type': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'SetIdentifier': 'string', 'Weight': 123, 'Region': 'us-east-1'|'us-west-1'|'us-west-2'|'eu-west-1'|'eu-central-1'|'ap-southeast-1'|'ap-southeast-2'|'ap-northeast-1'|'ap-northeast-2'|'sa-east-1'|'cn-north-1'|'ap-south-1', 'GeoLocation': { 'ContinentCode': 'string', 'CountryCode': 'string', 'SubdivisionCode': 'string' }, 'Failover': 'PRIMARY'|'SECONDARY', 'TTL': 123, 'ResourceRecords': [ { 'Value': 'string' }, ], 'AliasTarget': { 'HostedZoneId': 'string', 'DNSName': 'string', 'EvaluateTargetHealth': True|False }, 'HealthCheckId': 'string', 'TrafficPolicyInstanceId': 'string' }, ], 'IsTruncated': True|False, 'NextRecordName': 'string', 'NextRecordType': 'SOA'|'A'|'TXT'|'NS'|'CNAME'|'MX'|'PTR'|'SRV'|'SPF'|'AAAA', 'NextRecordIdentifier': 'string', 'MaxItems': 'string' }
Response Structure
(dict) --
A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that are returned by the request and information about the response.
ResourceRecordSets (list) --
A complex type that contains information about the resource record sets that are returned by the request.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains information about the current resource record set.
Name (string) --
The name of the domain you want to perform the action on.
Enter a fully qualified domain name, for example, www.example.com . You can optionally include a trailing dot. If you omit the trailing dot, Amazon Route 53 still assumes that the domain name that you specify is fully qualified. This means that Amazon Route 53 treats www.example.com (without a trailing dot) and www.example.com. (with a trailing dot) as identical.
For information about how to specify characters other than a-z, 0-9, and - (hyphen) and how to specify internationalized domain names, see DNS Domain Name Format in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can use an asterisk (*) character in the name. DNS treats the * character either as a wildcard or as the * character (ASCII 42), depending on where it appears in the name. For more information, see Using an Asterisk (*) in the Names of Hosted Zones and Resource Record Sets in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
Warning
You can't use the * wildcard for resource records sets that have a type of NS.
Type (string) --
The DNS record type. For information about different record types and how data is encoded for them, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values for basic resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | NS | PTR | SOA | SPF | SRV | TXT
Values for weighted, latency, geolocation, and failover resource record sets: A | AAAA | CNAME | MX | PTR | SPF | SRV | TXT . When creating a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets, specify the same value for all of the resource record sets in the group.
Note
SPF records were formerly used to verify the identity of the sender of email messages. However, we no longer recommend that you create resource record sets for which the value of Type is SPF . RFC 7208, Sender Policy Framework (SPF) for Authorizing Use of Domains in Email, Version 1 , has been updated to say, "...[I]ts existence and mechanism defined in [RFC4408] have led to some interoperability issues. Accordingly, its use is no longer appropriate for SPF version 1; implementations are not to use it." In RFC 7208, see section 14.1, The SPF DNS Record Type .
Values for alias resource record sets:
CloudFront distributions: A
ELB load balancers: A | AAAA
Amazon S3 buckets: A
Another resource record set in this hosted zone: Specify the type of the resource record set for which you're creating the alias. Specify any value except NS or SOA .
SetIdentifier (string) --
Weighted, Latency, Geo, and Failover resource record sets only: An identifier that differentiates among multiple resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. The value of SetIdentifier must be unique for each resource record set that has the same combination of DNS name and type.
Weight (integer) --
Weighted resource record sets only: Among resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, a value that determines the proportion of DNS queries that Amazon Route 53 responds to using the current resource record set. Amazon Route 53 calculates the sum of the weights for the resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type. Amazon Route 53 then responds to queries based on the ratio of a resource's weight to the total. Note the following:
You must specify a value for the Weight element for every weighted resource record set.
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per weighted resource record set.
You cannot create latency, failover, or geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as weighted resource record sets.
You can create a maximum of 100 weighted resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
For weighted (but not weighted alias) resource record sets, if you set Weight to 0 for a resource record set, Amazon Route 53 never responds to queries with the applicable value for that resource record set. However, if you set Weight to 0 for all resource record sets that have the same combination of DNS name and type, traffic is routed to all resources with equal probability. The effect of setting Weight to 0 is different when you associate health checks with weighted resource record sets. For more information, see Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Region (string) --
Latency-based resource record sets only: The Amazon EC2 region where the resource that is specified in this resource record set resides. The resource typically is an AWS resource, such as an Amazon EC2 instance or an ELB load balancer, and is referred to by an IP address or a DNS domain name, depending on the record type.
Note
You can create latency and latency alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
When Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for a domain name and type for which you have created latency resource record sets, Amazon Route 53 selects the latency resource record set that has the lowest latency between the end user and the associated Amazon EC2 region. Amazon Route 53 then returns the value that is associated with the selected resource record set.
Note the following:
You can only specify one ResourceRecord per latency resource record set.
You can only create one latency resource record set for each Amazon EC2 region.
You are not required to create latency resource record sets for all Amazon EC2 regions. Amazon Route 53 will choose the region with the best latency from among the regions for which you create latency resource record sets.
You cannot create non-latency resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as latency resource record sets.
GeoLocation (dict) --
Geo location resource record sets only: A complex type that lets you control how Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries based on the geographic origin of the query. For example, if you want all queries from Africa to be routed to a web server with an IP address of 192.0.2.111 , create a resource record set with a Type of A and a ContinentCode of AF .
Note
You can create geolocation and geolocation alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
If you create separate resource record sets for overlapping geographic regions (for example, one resource record set for a continent and one for a country on the same continent), priority goes to the smallest geographic region. This allows you to route most queries for a continent to one resource and to route queries for a country on that continent to a different resource.
You cannot create two geolocation resource record sets that specify the same geographic location.
The value * in the CountryCode element matches all geographic locations that aren't specified in other geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements.
Warning
Geolocation works by mapping IP addresses to locations. However, some IP addresses aren't mapped to geographic locations, so even if you create geolocation resource record sets that cover all seven continents, Amazon Route 53 will receive some DNS queries from locations that it can't identify. We recommend that you create a resource record set for which the value of CountryCode is * , which handles both queries that come from locations for which you haven't created geolocation resource record sets and queries from IP addresses that aren't mapped to a location. If you don't create a * resource record set, Amazon Route 53 returns a "no answer" response for queries from those locations.
You cannot create non-geolocation resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as geolocation resource record sets.
ContinentCode (string) --
The code for a continent geo location. Note: only continent locations have a continent code.
Valid values: AF | AN | AS | EU | OC | NA | SA
Constraint: Specifying ContinentCode with either CountryCode or SubdivisionCode returns an InvalidInput error.
CountryCode (string) --
The code for a country geo location. The default location uses '*' for the country code and will match all locations that are not matched by a geo location.
The default geo location uses a * for the country code. All other country codes follow the ISO 3166 two-character code.
SubdivisionCode (string) --
The code for a country's subdivision (e.g., a province of Canada). A subdivision code is only valid with the appropriate country code.
Constraint: Specifying SubdivisionCode without CountryCode returns an InvalidInput error.
Failover (string) --
Failover resource record sets only: To configure failover, you add the Failover element to two resource record sets. For one resource record set, you specify PRIMARY as the value for Failover ; for the other resource record set, you specify SECONDARY . In addition, you include the HealthCheckId element and specify the health check that you want Amazon Route 53 to perform for each resource record set.
Note
You can create failover and failover alias resource record sets only in public hosted zones.
Except where noted, the following failover behaviors assume that you have included the HealthCheckId element in both resource record sets:
When the primary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the secondary resource record set.
When the primary resource record set is unhealthy and the secondary resource record set is healthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set.
When the secondary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the primary resource record set regardless of the health of the primary resource record set.
If you omit the HealthCheckId element for the secondary resource record set, and if the primary resource record set is unhealthy, Amazon Route 53 always responds to DNS queries with the applicable value from the secondary resource record set. This is true regardless of the health of the associated endpoint.
You cannot create non-failover resource record sets that have the same values for the Name and Type elements as failover resource record sets.
For failover alias resource record sets, you must also include the EvaluateTargetHealth element and set the value to true.
For more information about configuring failover for Amazon Route 53, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
Valid values: PRIMARY | SECONDARY
TTL (integer) --
The cache time to live for the current resource record set. Note the following:
If you're creating a non-alias resource record set, TTL is required.
If you're creating an alias resource record set, omit TTL . Amazon Route 53 uses the value of TTL for the alias target.
If you're associating this resource record set with a health check (if you're adding a HealthCheckId element), we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds or less so clients respond quickly to changes in health status.
All of the resource record sets in a group of weighted, latency, geolocation, or failover resource record sets must have the same value for TTL .
If a group of weighted resource record sets includes one or more weighted alias resource record sets for which the alias target is an ELB load balancer, we recommend that you specify a TTL of 60 seconds for all of the non-alias weighted resource record sets that have the same name and type. Values other than 60 seconds (the TTL for load balancers) will change the effect of the values that you specify for Weight .
ResourceRecords (list) --
A complex type that contains the resource records for the current resource record set.
(dict) --
A complex type that contains the value of the Value element for the current resource record set.
Value (string) --
The current or new DNS record value, not to exceed 4,000 characters. In the case of a DELETE action, if the current value does not match the actual value, an error is returned. For descriptions about how to format Value for different record types, see Supported DNS Resource Record Types in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
You can specify more than one value for all record types except CNAME and SOA .
AliasTarget (dict) --
Alias resource record sets only: Information about the AWS resource to which you are redirecting traffic.
HostedZoneId (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The value you use depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify Z2FDTNDATAQYW2 .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the value of the hosted zone ID for the load balancer. You can get the hosted zone ID by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the hosted zone ID for the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket. For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set in your hosted zone: Specify the hosted zone ID of your hosted zone. (An alias resource record set cannot reference a resource record set in a different hosted zone.)
DNSName (string) --
Alias resource record sets only: The external DNS name associated with the AWS Resource. The value that you specify depends on where you want to route queries:
A CloudFront distribution: Specify the domain name that CloudFront assigned when you created your distribution. Your CloudFront distribution must include an alternate domain name that matches the name of the resource record set. For example, if the name of the resource record set is acme.example.com , your CloudFront distribution must include acme.example.com as one of the alternate domain names. For more information, see Using Alternate Domain Names (CNAMEs) in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide .
An ELB load balancer: Specify the DNS name associated with the load balancer. You can get the DNS name by using the AWS Management Console, the ELB API, or the AWS CLI. Use the same method to get values for HostedZoneId and DNSName . If you get one value from the console and the other value from the API or the CLI, creating the resource record set will fail.
An Elastic Beanstalk environment: Specify the CNAME attribute for the environment. (The environment must have a regionalized domain name.)
An Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website: Specify the domain name of the Amazon S3 website endpoint in which you created the bucket; for example, s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com . For more information about valid values, see the table Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) Website Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference . For more information about using Amazon S3 buckets for websites, see Hosting a Static Website on Amazon S3 in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide .
Another Amazon Route 53 resource record set: Specify the value of the Name element for a resource record set in the current hosted zone.
EvaluateTargetHealth (boolean) --
Alias resource record sets only: If you set the value of EvaluateTargetHealth to true for the resource record set or sets in an alias, weighted alias, latency alias, or failover alias resource record set, and if you specify a value for HealthCheckId for every resource record set that is referenced by these alias resource record sets, the alias resource record sets inherit the health of the referenced resource record sets.
In this configuration, when Amazon Route 53 receives a DNS query for an alias resource record set:
Amazon Route 53 looks at the resource record sets that are referenced by the alias resource record sets to determine which health checks they're using.
Amazon Route 53 checks the current status of each health check. (Amazon Route 53 periodically checks the health of the endpoint that is specified in a health check; it doesn't perform the health check when the DNS query arrives.)
Based on the status of the health checks, Amazon Route 53 determines which resource record sets are healthy. Unhealthy resource record sets are immediately removed from consideration. In addition, if all of the resource record sets that are referenced by an alias resource record set are unhealthy, that alias resource record set also is immediately removed from consideration.
Based on the configuration of the alias resource record sets (weighted alias or latency alias, for example) and the configuration of the resource record sets that they reference, Amazon Route 53 chooses a resource record set from the healthy resource record sets, and responds to the query.
Note the following:
You cannot set EvaluateTargetHealth to true when the alias target is a CloudFront distribution.
If the AWS resource that you specify in AliasTarget is a resource record set or a group of resource record sets (for example, a group of weighted resource record sets), but it is not another alias resource record set, we recommend that you associate a health check with all of the resource record sets in the alias target.
If you specify an ELB load balancer in AliasTarget , Elastic Load Balancing routes queries only to the healthy Amazon EC2 instances that are registered with the load balancer. If no Amazon EC2 instances are healthy or if the load balancer itself is unhealthy, and if EvaluateTargetHealth is true for the corresponding alias resource record set, Amazon Route 53 routes queries to other resources.
When you create a load balancer, you configure settings for Elastic Load Balancing health checks; they're not Amazon Route 53 health checks, but they perform a similar function. Do not create Amazon Route 53 health checks for the Amazon EC2 instances that you register with an ELB load balancer. For more information, see How Health Checks Work in More Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
We recommend that you set EvaluateTargetHealth to true only when you have enough idle capacity to handle the failure of one or more endpoints.
For more information and examples, see Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide .
HealthCheckId (string) --
Health Check resource record sets only, not required for alias resource record sets: An identifier that is used to identify health check associated with the resource record set.
TrafficPolicyInstanceId (string) --
IsTruncated (boolean) --
A flag that indicates whether there are more resource record sets to be listed. If your results were truncated, you can make a follow-up request for the next page of results by using the NextRecordName element.
Valid Values: true | false
NextRecordName (string) --
If the results were truncated, the name of the next record in the list. This element is present only if IsTruncated is true.
NextRecordType (string) --
If the results were truncated, the type of the next record in the list. This element is present only if IsTruncated is true.
NextRecordIdentifier (string) --
Weighted resource record sets only: If results were truncated for a given DNS name and type, the value of SetIdentifier for the next resource record set that has the current DNS name and type.
MaxItems (string) --
The maximum number of records you requested. The maximum value of MaxItems is 100.