View Source aws_route53resolver (aws v1.0.4)
When you create a VPC using Amazon VPC, you automatically get DNS resolution within the VPC from Route 53 Resolver.
By default, Resolver answers DNS queries for VPC domain names such as domain names for EC2 instances or Elastic Load Balancing load balancers. Resolver performs recursive lookups against public name servers for all other domain names.
You can also configure DNS resolution between your VPC and your network over a Direct Connect or VPN connection:
Forward DNS queries from resolvers on your network to Route 53 Resolver
DNS resolvers on your network can forward DNS queries to Resolver in a specified VPC. This allows your DNS resolvers to easily resolve domain names for Amazon Web Services resources such as EC2 instances or records in a Route 53 private hosted zone. For more information, see How DNS Resolvers on Your Network Forward DNS Queries to Route 53 Resolver: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/resolver.html#resolver-overview-forward-network-to-vpc in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Conditionally forward queries from a VPC to resolvers on your network
You can configure Resolver to forward queries that it receives from EC2 instances in your VPCs to DNS resolvers on your network. To forward selected queries, you create Resolver rules that specify the domain names for the DNS queries that you want to forward (such as example.com), and the IP addresses of the DNS resolvers on your network that you want to forward the queries to. If a query matches multiple rules (example.com, acme.example.com), Resolver chooses the rule with the most specific match (acme.example.com) and forwards the query to the IP addresses that you specified in that rule. For more information, see How Route 53 Resolver Forwards DNS Queries from Your VPCs to Your Network: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/resolver.html#resolver-overview-forward-vpc-to-network in the Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide.
Like Amazon VPC, Resolver is Regional. In each Region where you have VPCs, you can choose whether to forward queries from your VPCs to your network (outbound queries), from your network to your VPCs (inbound queries), or both.Summary
Functions
FirewallRuleGroup
with a VPC, to provide DNS filtering for the VPC.Adds IP addresses to an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
Associates an Amazon VPC with a specified query logging configuration.
Associates a Resolver rule with a VPC.
Creates an empty firewall domain list for use in DNS Firewall rules.
Creates an empty DNS Firewall rule group for filtering DNS network traffic in a VPC.
Creates a Resolver endpoint.
Creates a Resolver query logging configuration, which defines where you want Resolver to save DNS query logs that originate in your VPCs.
Deletes a Resolver endpoint.
Deletes a query logging configuration.
Deletes a Resolver rule.
FirewallRuleGroup
from a VPC, to remove DNS filtering from the VPC.Removes IP addresses from an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
Disassociates a VPC from a query logging configuration.
Removes the association between a specified Resolver rule and a specified VPC.
Retrieves a firewall rule group association, which enables DNS filtering for a VPC with one rule group.
Returns the Identity and Access Management (Amazon Web Services IAM) policy for sharing the specified rule group.
Gets information about a specified association between a Resolver query logging configuration and an Amazon VPC.
Gets information about a query logging policy.
Gets information about an association between a specified Resolver rule and a VPC.
Gets information about the Resolver rule policy for a specified rule.
Imports domain names from a file into a domain list, for use in a DNS firewall rule group.
Retrieves the firewall configurations that you have defined.
Retrieves the firewall domain lists that you have defined.
Retrieves the domains that you have defined for the specified firewall domain list.
Retrieves the firewall rule group associations that you have defined.
Retrieves the minimal high-level information for the rule groups that you have defined.
Retrieves the firewall rules that you have defined for the specified firewall rule group.
Retrieves the Resolver configurations that you have defined.
Lists information about the specified query logging configurations.
Attaches an Identity and Access Management (Amazon Web Services IAM) policy for sharing the rule group.
Changes the association of a FirewallRuleGroup
with a VPC.
UpdateOutpostResolver
to update the instance count, type, or name of a Resolver on an Outpost.Updates an existing DNSSEC validation configuration.
Updates the name, or endpoint type for an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
Updates settings for a specified Resolver rule.
Functions
FirewallRuleGroup
with a VPC, to provide DNS filtering for the VPC.
Adds IP addresses to an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
If you want to add more than one IP address, submit one AssociateResolverEndpointIpAddress
request for each IP address.
Associates an Amazon VPC with a specified query logging configuration.
Route 53 Resolver logs DNS queries that originate in all of the Amazon VPCs that are associated with a specified query logging configuration. To associate more than one VPC with a configuration, submit one AssociateResolverQueryLogConfig
request for each VPC.
The VPCs that you associate with a query logging configuration must be in the same Region as the configuration.
To remove a VPC from a query logging configuration, see DisassociateResolverQueryLogConfig: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_DisassociateResolverQueryLogConfig.html.Associates a Resolver rule with a VPC.
When you associate a rule with a VPC, Resolver forwards all DNS queries for the domain name that is specified in the rule and that originate in the VPC. The queries are forwarded to the IP addresses for the DNS resolvers that are specified in the rule. For more information about rules, see CreateResolverRule: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_CreateResolverRule.html.Creates an empty firewall domain list for use in DNS Firewall rules.
You can populate the domains for the new list with a file, usingImportFirewallDomains
, or with domain strings, using UpdateFirewallDomains
.
Creates an empty DNS Firewall rule group for filtering DNS network traffic in a VPC.
You can add rules to the new rule group by callingCreateFirewallRule
.
Creates a Resolver endpoint.
There are two types of Resolver endpoints, inbound and outbound:
An inbound Resolver endpoint forwards DNS queries to the DNS service for a VPC from your network.
An outbound Resolver endpoint forwards DNS queries from the DNS service for a VPC to your network.
Creates a Resolver query logging configuration, which defines where you want Resolver to save DNS query logs that originate in your VPCs.
Resolver can log queries only for VPCs that are in the same Region as the query logging configuration.
To specify which VPCs you want to log queries for, you use AssociateResolverQueryLogConfig
. For more information, see AssociateResolverQueryLogConfig: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_AssociateResolverQueryLogConfig.html.
Deletes a Resolver endpoint.
The effect of deleting a Resolver endpoint depends on whether it's an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint:
Inbound: DNS queries from your network are no longer routed to the DNS service for the specified VPC.
Outbound: DNS queries from a VPC are no longer routed to your network.
Deletes a query logging configuration.
When you delete a configuration, Resolver stops logging DNS queries for all of the Amazon VPCs that are associated with the configuration. This also applies if the query logging configuration is shared with other Amazon Web Services accounts, and the other accounts have associated VPCs with the shared configuration.
Before you can delete a query logging configuration, you must first disassociate all VPCs from the configuration. See DisassociateResolverQueryLogConfig: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_DisassociateResolverQueryLogConfig.html.
If you used Resource Access Manager (RAM) to share a query logging configuration with other accounts, you must stop sharing the configuration before you can delete a configuration. The accounts that you shared the configuration with can first disassociate VPCs that they associated with the configuration, but that's not necessary. If you stop sharing the configuration, those VPCs are automatically disassociated from the configuration.Deletes a Resolver rule.
Before you can delete a Resolver rule, you must disassociate it from all the VPCs that you associated the Resolver rule with. For more information, see DisassociateResolverRule: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_DisassociateResolverRule.html.FirewallRuleGroup
from a VPC, to remove DNS filtering from the VPC.
Removes IP addresses from an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
If you want to remove more than one IP address, submit one DisassociateResolverEndpointIpAddress
request for each IP address.
Disassociates a VPC from a query logging configuration.
Before you can delete a query logging configuration, you must first disassociate all VPCs from the configuration. If you used Resource Access Manager (RAM) to share a query logging configuration with other accounts, VPCs can be disassociated from the configuration in the following ways:
The accounts that you shared the configuration with can disassociate VPCs from the configuration.
You can stop sharing the configuration.Removes the association between a specified Resolver rule and a specified VPC.
If you disassociate a Resolver rule from a VPC, Resolver stops forwarding DNS queries for the domain name that you specified in the Resolver rule.Retrieves a firewall rule group association, which enables DNS filtering for a VPC with one rule group.
A VPC can have more than one firewall rule group association, and a rule group can be associated with more than one VPC.Returns the Identity and Access Management (Amazon Web Services IAM) policy for sharing the specified rule group.
You can use the policy to share the rule group using Resource Access Manager (RAM).Gets information about a specified association between a Resolver query logging configuration and an Amazon VPC.
When you associate a VPC with a query logging configuration, Resolver logs DNS queries that originate in that VPC.Gets information about a query logging policy.
A query logging policy specifies the Resolver query logging operations and resources that you want to allow another Amazon Web Services account to be able to use.Gets information about an association between a specified Resolver rule and a VPC.
You associate a Resolver rule and a VPC using AssociateResolverRule: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/APIReference/API_route53resolver_AssociateResolverRule.html.Gets information about the Resolver rule policy for a specified rule.
A Resolver rule policy includes the rule that you want to share with another account, the account that you want to share the rule with, and the Resolver operations that you want to allow the account to use.Imports domain names from a file into a domain list, for use in a DNS firewall rule group.
Each domain specification in your domain list must satisfy the following requirements:
It can optionally start with
*
(asterisk).With the exception of the optional starting asterisk, it must only contain the following characters:
A-Z
,a-z
,0-9
,-
(hyphen).It must be from 1-255 characters in length.
Retrieves the firewall configurations that you have defined.
DNS Firewall uses the configurations to manage firewall behavior for your VPCs.
A single call might return only a partial list of the configurations. For information, seeMaxResults
.
Retrieves the firewall domain lists that you have defined.
For each firewall domain list, you can retrieve the domains that are defined for a list by calling ListFirewallDomains
.
MaxResults
.
Retrieves the domains that you have defined for the specified firewall domain list.
A single call might return only a partial list of the domains. For information, seeMaxResults
.
Retrieves the firewall rule group associations that you have defined.
Each association enables DNS filtering for a VPC with one rule group.
A single call might return only a partial list of the associations. For information, seeMaxResults
.
Retrieves the minimal high-level information for the rule groups that you have defined.
A single call might return only a partial list of the rule groups. For information, seeMaxResults
.
Retrieves the firewall rules that you have defined for the specified firewall rule group.
DNS Firewall uses the rules in a rule group to filter DNS network traffic for a VPC.
A single call might return only a partial list of the rules. For information, seeMaxResults
.
Retrieves the Resolver configurations that you have defined.
Route 53 Resolver uses the configurations to manage DNS resolution behavior for your VPCs.list_resolver_query_log_config_associations(Client, Input, Options)
View SourceLists information about the specified query logging configurations.
Each configuration defines where you want Resolver to save DNS query logs and specifies the VPCs that you want to log queries for.Attaches an Identity and Access Management (Amazon Web Services IAM) policy for sharing the rule group.
You can use the policy to share the rule group using Resource Access Manager (RAM).Changes the association of a FirewallRuleGroup
with a VPC.
UpdateOutpostResolver
to update the instance count, type, or name of a Resolver on an Outpost.
Updates an existing DNSSEC validation configuration.
If there is no existing DNSSEC validation configuration, one is created.Updates the name, or endpoint type for an inbound or an outbound Resolver endpoint.
You can only update between IPV4 and DUALSTACK, IPV6 endpoint type can't be updated to other type.Updates settings for a specified Resolver rule.
ResolverRuleId
is required, and all other parameters are optional. If you don't specify a parameter, it retains its current value.