Registers an AMI. When you're creating an instance-store backed AMI, registering the AMI is the final step in the creation process. For more information about creating AMIs, see Create an AMI from a snapshot and Create an instance-store backed AMI in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/ec2_register_image/ for full documentation.
ec2_register_image(
ImageLocation = NULL,
Architecture = NULL,
BlockDeviceMappings = NULL,
Description = NULL,
DryRun = NULL,
EnaSupport = NULL,
KernelId = NULL,
Name,
BillingProducts = NULL,
RamdiskId = NULL,
RootDeviceName = NULL,
SriovNetSupport = NULL,
VirtualizationType = NULL,
BootMode = NULL,
TpmSupport = NULL,
UefiData = NULL,
ImdsSupport = NULL,
TagSpecifications = NULL
)
The full path to your AMI manifest in Amazon S3 storage. The specified
bucket must have the aws-exec-read
canned access control list (ACL) to
ensure that it can be accessed by Amazon EC2. For more information, see
Canned ACLs
in the Amazon S3 Service Developer Guide.
The architecture of the AMI.
Default: For Amazon EBS-backed AMIs, i386
. For instance store-backed
AMIs, the architecture specified in the manifest file.
The block device mapping entries.
If you specify an Amazon EBS volume using the ID of an Amazon EBS snapshot, you can't specify the encryption state of the volume.
If you create an AMI on an Outpost, then all backing snapshots must be on the same Outpost or in the Region of that Outpost. AMIs on an Outpost that include local snapshots can be used to launch instances on the same Outpost only. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EBS User Guide.
A description for your AMI.
Checks whether you have the required permissions for the action, without
actually making the request, and provides an error response. If you have
the required permissions, the error response is DryRunOperation
.
Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation
.
Set to true
to enable enhanced networking with ENA for the AMI and any
instances that you launch from the AMI.
This option is supported only for HVM AMIs. Specifying this option with a PV AMI can make instances launched from the AMI unreachable.
The ID of the kernel.
[required] A name for your AMI.
Constraints: 3-128 alphanumeric characters, parentheses (()), square brackets ([]), spaces ( ), periods (.), slashes (/), dashes (-), single quotes ('), at-signs (@), or underscores(_)
The billing product codes. Your account must be authorized to specify billing product codes.
If your account is not authorized to specify billing product codes, you can publish AMIs that include billable software and list them on the Amazon Web Services Marketplace. You must first register as a seller on the Amazon Web Services Marketplace. For more information, see Getting started as a seller and AMI-based products in the Amazon Web Services Marketplace Seller Guide.
The ID of the RAM disk.
The device name of the root device volume (for example, /dev/sda1
).
Set to simple
to enable enhanced networking with the Intel 82599
Virtual Function interface for the AMI and any instances that you launch
from the AMI.
There is no way to disable sriovNetSupport
at this time.
This option is supported only for HVM AMIs. Specifying this option with a PV AMI can make instances launched from the AMI unreachable.
The type of virtualization (hvm
| paravirtual
).
Default: paravirtual
The boot mode of the AMI. A value of uefi-preferred
indicates that the
AMI supports both UEFI and Legacy BIOS.
The operating system contained in the AMI must be configured to support the specified boot mode.
For more information, see Boot modes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Set to v2.0
to enable Trusted Platform Module (TPM) support. For more
information, see
NitroTPM
in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Base64 representation of the non-volatile UEFI variable store. To
retrieve the UEFI data, use the
get_instance_uefi_data
command. You can
inspect and modify the UEFI data by using the python-uefivars tool on GitHub. For more
information, see UEFI Secure Boot
in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
Set to v2.0
to indicate that IMDSv2 is specified in the AMI. Instances
launched from this AMI will have HttpTokens
automatically set to
required
so that, by default, the instance requires that IMDSv2 is
used when requesting instance metadata. In addition,
HttpPutResponseHopLimit
is set to 2
. For more information, see
Configure the AMI
in the Amazon EC2 User Guide.
If you set the value to v2.0
, make sure that your AMI software can
support IMDSv2.
The tags to apply to the AMI.
To tag the AMI, the value for ResourceType
must be image
. If you
specify another value for ResourceType
, the request fails.
To tag an AMI after it has been registered, see
create_tags
.