Amazon Route 53 Developer Guide
User Manual:
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- Amazon Route 53
- Table of Contents
- What Is Amazon Route 53?
- Getting Started with Amazon Route 53
- Registering Domain Names Using Amazon Route 53
- Registering and Updating Domains
- Registering a New Domain
- Values that You Specify When You Register a Domain or Edit Domain Settings
- Values that Amazon Route 53 Returns When You Register or Update a Domain
- Viewing the Status of a Domain Registration
- Adding Resource Record Sets for a New Domain
- Editing Contact Information and Other Settings for a Domain
- Adding or Changing Name Servers and Adding or Changing Glue Records
- Privacy Protection for Contact Information
- Renewing Registration for a Domain
- Extending the Registration Period for a Domain
- Transferring Domains
- Transferring Registration for a Domain to Amazon Route 53
- Viewing the Status of a Domain Transfer
- How Transferring a Domain to Amazon Route 53 Affects the Expiration Date for Your Domain Registration
- Transferring a Domain to a Different AWS Account
- Transferring a Domain from Amazon Route 53 to Another Registrar
- Configuring DNSSEC for a Domain
- Getting a Domain Name Unsuspended
- Deleting a Domain Name Registration
- Downloading a Domain Billing Report
- Domains that You Can Register with Amazon Route 53
- Registering and Updating Domains
- Configuring Amazon Route 53 as Your DNS Service
- Routing Traffic to AWS Resources
- Routing Traffic to an Amazon CloudFront Distribution (Public Hosted Zones Only)
- Routing Traffic to an AWS Elastic Beanstalk Environment
- Routing Traffic to an Elastic Load Balancing Load Balancer
- Routing Traffic to an Amazon EC2 Instance
- Routing Traffic to a Website That Is Hosted in an Amazon S3 Bucket
- Opening Connections to an Amazon RDS Database Instance Using Your Domain Name
- Routing Traffic to Amazon WorkMail (Public Hosted Zones Only)
- Working with Public Hosted Zones
- Working with Private Hosted Zones
- Working with Resource Record Sets
- Choosing a Routing Policy
- Choosing Between Alias and Non-Alias Resource Record Sets
- Creating Resource Record Sets by Using the Amazon Route 53 Console
- Values that You Specify When You Create or Edit Amazon Route 53 Resource Record Sets
- Values for Basic Resource Record Sets
- Values for Weighted Resource Record Sets
- Values for Alias Resource Record Sets
- Values for Weighted Alias Resource Record Sets
- Values for Latency Resource Record Sets
- Values for Latency Alias Resource Record Sets
- Values for Failover Resource Record Sets
- Values for Failover Alias Resource Record Sets
- Values for Geolocation Resource Record Sets
- Values for Geolocation Alias Resource Record Sets
- Creating Resource Record Sets By Importing a Zone File
- Editing Resource Record Sets
- Deleting Resource Record Sets
- Listing Resource Record Sets
- Using Traffic Flow to Route DNS Traffic
- Creating and Managing Traffic Policies
- Creating a Traffic Policy
- Values that You Specify When You Create a Traffic Policy
- Creating Additional Versions of a Traffic Policy
- Creating a Traffic Policy by Importing a JSON Document
- Viewing Traffic Policy Versions and the Associated Policy Records
- Deleting Traffic Policy Versions and Traffic Policies
- Creating and Managing Policy Records
- Creating and Managing Traffic Policies
- Amazon Route 53 Health Checks and DNS Failover
- Creating, Updating, and Deleting Health Checks
- Monitoring Health Check Status and Getting Notifications
- Configuring DNS Failover
- How Health Checks Work in Simple Amazon Route 53 Configurations
- How Health Checks Work in Complex Amazon Route 53 Configurations
- Task List for Configuring DNS Failover
- Configuring Failover in a Private Hosted Zone
- Options for Configuring Amazon Route 53 Active-Active and Active-Passive Failover
- Configuring Active-Active or Active-Passive Failover by Using Amazon Route 53 Weighted and Weighted Alias Resource Record Sets
- Configuring Active-Active Failover by Using Amazon Route 53 Latency and Latency Alias Resource Record Sets
- Configuring Active-Passive Failover by Using Amazon Route 53 Failover and Failover Alias Resource Record Sets
- How Amazon Route 53 Averts Failover Problems
- Naming and Tagging Health Checks
- Using Health Checks with Amazon Route 53 API Versions Earlier than 2012-12-12
- Authentication and Access Control for Amazon Route 53
- Authentication
- Access Control
- Overview of Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon Route 53 Resources
- Using Identity-Based Policies (IAM Policies) for Amazon Route 53
- Amazon Route 53 API Permissions: Actions, Resources, and Conditions Reference
- Required Permissions for Actions on Public Hosted Zones
- Required Permissions for Actions on Private Hosted Zones
- Required Permissions for Actions on Reusable Delegation Sets
- Required Permissions for Actions on Resource Record Sets
- Required Permissions for Actions on Traffic Policies
- Required Permissions for Actions on Traffic Policy Instances
- Required Permissions for Actions on Health Checks
- Required Permissions for Actions on Domain Registrations
- Required Permissions for Actions on Tags for Hosted Zones and Health Checks
- Required Permissions for Actions on Tags for Domains
- Using AWS CloudTrail to Capture Requests Sent to the Amazon Route 53 API
- Tagging Amazon Route 53 Resources
- Tutorials
- Transitioning to Latency-Based Routing in Amazon Route 53
- Adding Another Region to Your Latency-Based Routing in Amazon Route 53
- Using Latency and Weighted Resource Record Sets in Amazon Route 53 to Route Traffic to Multiple Amazon EC2 Instances in a Region
- Managing Over 100 Weighted Resource Record Sets in Amazon Route 53
- Weighting Fault-Tolerant Multi-Record Answers in Amazon Route 53
- Limits
- Resources for Amazon Route 53
- Document History
- AWS Glossary