PNG  IHDR;IDATxܻn0K )(pA 7LeG{ §㻢|ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lom$^yذag5bÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa{ 6lذaÆ `}HFkm,mӪôô! x|'ܢ˟;E:9&ᶒ}{v]n&6 h_tڠ͵-ҫZ;Z$.Pkž)!o>}leQfJTu іچ\X=8Rن4`Vwl>nG^is"ms$ui?wbs[m6K4O.4%/bC%t Mז -lG6mrz2s%9s@-k9=)kB5\+͂Zsٲ Rn~GRC wIcIn7jJhۛNCS|j08yiHKֶۛkɈ+;SzL/F*\Ԕ#"5m2[S=gnaPeғL lذaÆ 6l^ḵaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa; _ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ RIENDB` package Paws::ELB; use Moose; sub service { 'elasticloadbalancing' } sub signing_name { 'elasticloadbalancing' } sub version { '2012-06-01' } sub flattened_arrays { 0 } has max_attempts => (is => 'ro', isa => 'Int', default => 5); has retry => (is => 'ro', isa => 'HashRef', default => sub { { base => 'rand', type => 'exponential', growth_factor => 2 } }); has retriables => (is => 'ro', isa => 'ArrayRef', default => sub { [ ] }); with 'Paws::API::Caller', 'Paws::API::EndpointResolver', 'Paws::Net::V4Signature', 'Paws::Net::QueryCaller'; sub AddTags { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::AddTags', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub ApplySecurityGroupsToLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::ApplySecurityGroupsToLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub ConfigureHealthCheck { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::ConfigureHealthCheck', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub CreateAppCookieStickinessPolicy { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::CreateAppCookieStickinessPolicy', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub CreateLBCookieStickinessPolicy { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::CreateLBCookieStickinessPolicy', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub CreateLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::CreateLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub CreateLoadBalancerListeners { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::CreateLoadBalancerListeners', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub CreateLoadBalancerPolicy { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::CreateLoadBalancerPolicy', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DeleteLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DeleteLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DeleteLoadBalancerListeners { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DeleteLoadBalancerListeners', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DeleteLoadBalancerPolicy { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DeleteLoadBalancerPolicy', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DeregisterInstancesFromLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DeregisterInstancesFromLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeAccountLimits { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeAccountLimits', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeInstanceHealth { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeInstanceHealth', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeLoadBalancerAttributes { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeLoadBalancerAttributes', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeLoadBalancerPolicies { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeLoadBalancerPolicies', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeLoadBalancerPolicyTypes { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeLoadBalancerPolicyTypes', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeLoadBalancers { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeLoadBalancers', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeTags { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DescribeTags', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DetachLoadBalancerFromSubnets { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DetachLoadBalancerFromSubnets', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DisableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::DisableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub EnableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::EnableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub ModifyLoadBalancerAttributes { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::ModifyLoadBalancerAttributes', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub RemoveTags { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::RemoveTags', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub SetLoadBalancerListenerSSLCertificate { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::SetLoadBalancerListenerSSLCertificate', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub SetLoadBalancerPoliciesOfListener { my $self = shift; my $call_object = $self->new_with_coercions('Paws::ELB::SetLoadBalancerPoliciesOfListener', @_); return $self->caller->do_call($self, $call_object); } sub DescribeAllAccountLimits { my $self = shift; my $callback = shift @_ if (ref($_[0]) eq 'CODE'); my $result = $self->DescribeAccountLimits(@_); my $next_result = $result; if (not defined $callback) { while ($next_result->NextMarker) { $next_result = $self->DescribeAccountLimits(@_, Marker => $next_result->NextMarker); push @{ $result->Limits }, @{ $next_result->Limits }; } return $result; } else { while ($result->NextMarker) { $callback->($_ => 'Limits') foreach (@{ $result->Limits }); $result = $self->DescribeAccountLimits(@_, Marker => $result->NextMarker); } $callback->($_ => 'Limits') foreach (@{ $result->Limits }); } return undef } sub DescribeAllLoadBalancers { my $self = shift; my $callback = shift @_ if (ref($_[0]) eq 'CODE'); my $result = $self->DescribeLoadBalancers(@_); my $next_result = $result; if (not defined $callback) { while ($next_result->NextMarker) { $next_result = $self->DescribeLoadBalancers(@_, Marker => $next_result->NextMarker); push @{ $result->LoadBalancerDescriptions }, @{ $next_result->LoadBalancerDescriptions }; } return $result; } else { while ($result->NextMarker) { $callback->($_ => 'LoadBalancerDescriptions') foreach (@{ $result->LoadBalancerDescriptions }); $result = $self->DescribeLoadBalancers(@_, Marker => $result->NextMarker); } $callback->($_ => 'LoadBalancerDescriptions') foreach (@{ $result->LoadBalancerDescriptions }); } return undef } sub operations { qw/AddTags ApplySecurityGroupsToLoadBalancer AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets ConfigureHealthCheck CreateAppCookieStickinessPolicy CreateLBCookieStickinessPolicy CreateLoadBalancer CreateLoadBalancerListeners CreateLoadBalancerPolicy DeleteLoadBalancer DeleteLoadBalancerListeners DeleteLoadBalancerPolicy DeregisterInstancesFromLoadBalancer DescribeAccountLimits DescribeInstanceHealth DescribeLoadBalancerAttributes DescribeLoadBalancerPolicies DescribeLoadBalancerPolicyTypes DescribeLoadBalancers DescribeTags DetachLoadBalancerFromSubnets DisableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer EnableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer ModifyLoadBalancerAttributes RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer RemoveTags SetLoadBalancerListenerSSLCertificate SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer SetLoadBalancerPoliciesOfListener / } 1; ### main pod documentation begin ### =head1 NAME Paws::ELB - Perl Interface to AWS Elastic Load Balancing =head1 SYNOPSIS use Paws; my $obj = Paws->service('ELB'); my $res = $obj->Method( Arg1 => $val1, Arg2 => [ 'V1', 'V2' ], # if Arg3 is an object, the HashRef will be used as arguments to the constructor # of the arguments type Arg3 => { Att1 => 'Val1' }, # if Arg4 is an array of objects, the HashRefs will be passed as arguments to # the constructor of the arguments type Arg4 => [ { Att1 => 'Val1' }, { Att1 => 'Val2' } ], ); =head1 DESCRIPTION Elastic Load Balancing A load balancer can distribute incoming traffic across your EC2 instances. This enables you to increase the availability of your application. The load balancer also monitors the health of its registered instances and ensures that it routes traffic only to healthy instances. You configure your load balancer to accept incoming traffic by specifying one or more listeners, which are configured with a protocol and port number for connections from clients to the load balancer and a protocol and port number for connections from the load balancer to the instances. Elastic Load Balancing supports three types of load balancers: Application Load Balancers, Network Load Balancers, and Classic Load Balancers. You can select a load balancer based on your application needs. For more information, see the Elastic Load Balancing User Guide (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/userguide/). This reference covers the 2012-06-01 API, which supports Classic Load Balancers. The 2015-12-01 API supports Application Load Balancers and Network Load Balancers. To get started, create a load balancer with one or more listeners using CreateLoadBalancer. Register your instances with the load balancer using RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer. All Elastic Load Balancing operations are I, which means that they complete at most one time. If you repeat an operation, it succeeds with a 200 OK response code. For the AWS API documentation, see L =head1 METHODS =head2 AddTags =over =item LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =item Tags => ArrayRef[L] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Adds the specified tags to the specified load balancer. Each load balancer can have a maximum of 10 tags. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. If a tag with the same key is already associated with the load balancer, C updates its value. For more information, see Tag Your Classic Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/add-remove-tags.html) in the I. =head2 ApplySecurityGroupsToLoadBalancer =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item SecurityGroups => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Associates one or more security groups with your load balancer in a virtual private cloud (VPC). The specified security groups override the previously associated security groups. For more information, see Security Groups for Load Balancers in a VPC (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-security-groups.html#elb-vpc-security-groups) in the I. =head2 AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item Subnets => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Adds one or more subnets to the set of configured subnets for the specified load balancer. The load balancer evenly distributes requests across all registered subnets. For more information, see Add or Remove Subnets for Your Load Balancer in a VPC (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-manage-subnets.html) in the I. =head2 ConfigureHealthCheck =over =item HealthCheck => L =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Specifies the health check settings to use when evaluating the health state of your EC2 instances. For more information, see Configure Health Checks for Your Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-healthchecks.html) in the I. =head2 CreateAppCookieStickinessPolicy =over =item CookieName => Str =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item PolicyName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Generates a stickiness policy with sticky session lifetimes that follow that of an application-generated cookie. This policy can be associated only with HTTP/HTTPS listeners. This policy is similar to the policy created by CreateLBCookieStickinessPolicy, except that the lifetime of the special Elastic Load Balancing cookie, C, follows the lifetime of the application-generated cookie specified in the policy configuration. The load balancer only inserts a new stickiness cookie when the application response includes a new application cookie. If the application cookie is explicitly removed or expires, the session stops being sticky until a new application cookie is issued. For more information, see Application-Controlled Session Stickiness (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-sticky-sessions.html#enable-sticky-sessions-application) in the I. =head2 CreateLBCookieStickinessPolicy =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item PolicyName => Str =item [CookieExpirationPeriod => Int] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Generates a stickiness policy with sticky session lifetimes controlled by the lifetime of the browser (user-agent) or a specified expiration period. This policy can be associated only with HTTP/HTTPS listeners. When a load balancer implements this policy, the load balancer uses a special cookie to track the instance for each request. When the load balancer receives a request, it first checks to see if this cookie is present in the request. If so, the load balancer sends the request to the application server specified in the cookie. If not, the load balancer sends the request to a server that is chosen based on the existing load-balancing algorithm. A cookie is inserted into the response for binding subsequent requests from the same user to that server. The validity of the cookie is based on the cookie expiration time, which is specified in the policy configuration. For more information, see Duration-Based Session Stickiness (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-sticky-sessions.html#enable-sticky-sessions-duration) in the I. =head2 CreateLoadBalancer =over =item Listeners => ArrayRef[L] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item [AvailabilityZones => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =item [Scheme => Str] =item [SecurityGroups => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =item [Subnets => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =item [Tags => ArrayRef[L]] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Creates a Classic Load Balancer. You can add listeners, security groups, subnets, and tags when you create your load balancer, or you can add them later using CreateLoadBalancerListeners, ApplySecurityGroupsToLoadBalancer, AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets, and AddTags. To describe your current load balancers, see DescribeLoadBalancers. When you are finished with a load balancer, you can delete it using DeleteLoadBalancer. You can create up to 20 load balancers per region per account. You can request an increase for the number of load balancers for your account. For more information, see Limits for Your Classic Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-limits.html) in the I. =head2 CreateLoadBalancerListeners =over =item Listeners => ArrayRef[L] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Creates one or more listeners for the specified load balancer. If a listener with the specified port does not already exist, it is created; otherwise, the properties of the new listener must match the properties of the existing listener. For more information, see Listeners for Your Classic Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-listener-config.html) in the I. =head2 CreateLoadBalancerPolicy =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item PolicyName => Str =item PolicyTypeName => Str =item [PolicyAttributes => ArrayRef[L]] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Creates a policy with the specified attributes for the specified load balancer. Policies are settings that are saved for your load balancer and that can be applied to the listener or the application server, depending on the policy type. =head2 DeleteLoadBalancer =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Deletes the specified load balancer. If you are attempting to recreate a load balancer, you must reconfigure all settings. The DNS name associated with a deleted load balancer are no longer usable. The name and associated DNS record of the deleted load balancer no longer exist and traffic sent to any of its IP addresses is no longer delivered to your instances. If the load balancer does not exist or has already been deleted, the call to C still succeeds. =head2 DeleteLoadBalancerListeners =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item LoadBalancerPorts => ArrayRef[Int] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Deletes the specified listeners from the specified load balancer. =head2 DeleteLoadBalancerPolicy =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item PolicyName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Deletes the specified policy from the specified load balancer. This policy must not be enabled for any listeners. =head2 DeregisterInstancesFromLoadBalancer =over =item Instances => ArrayRef[L] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Deregisters the specified instances from the specified load balancer. After the instance is deregistered, it no longer receives traffic from the load balancer. You can use DescribeLoadBalancers to verify that the instance is deregistered from the load balancer. For more information, see Register or De-Register EC2 Instances (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-deregister-register-instances.html) in the I. =head2 DescribeAccountLimits =over =item [Marker => Str] =item [PageSize => Int] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the current Elastic Load Balancing resource limits for your AWS account. For more information, see Limits for Your Classic Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-limits.html) in the I. =head2 DescribeInstanceHealth =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item [Instances => ArrayRef[L]] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the state of the specified instances with respect to the specified load balancer. If no instances are specified, the call describes the state of all instances that are currently registered with the load balancer. If instances are specified, their state is returned even if they are no longer registered with the load balancer. The state of terminated instances is not returned. =head2 DescribeLoadBalancerAttributes =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the attributes for the specified load balancer. =head2 DescribeLoadBalancerPolicies =over =item [LoadBalancerName => Str] =item [PolicyNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the specified policies. If you specify a load balancer name, the action returns the descriptions of all policies created for the load balancer. If you specify a policy name associated with your load balancer, the action returns the description of that policy. If you don't specify a load balancer name, the action returns descriptions of the specified sample policies, or descriptions of all sample policies. The names of the sample policies have the C prefix. =head2 DescribeLoadBalancerPolicyTypes =over =item [PolicyTypeNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the specified load balancer policy types or all load balancer policy types. The description of each type indicates how it can be used. For example, some policies can be used only with layer 7 listeners, some policies can be used only with layer 4 listeners, and some policies can be used only with your EC2 instances. You can use CreateLoadBalancerPolicy to create a policy configuration for any of these policy types. Then, depending on the policy type, use either SetLoadBalancerPoliciesOfListener or SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer to set the policy. =head2 DescribeLoadBalancers =over =item [LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef]] =item [Marker => Str] =item [PageSize => Int] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the specified the load balancers. If no load balancers are specified, the call describes all of your load balancers. =head2 DescribeTags =over =item LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Describes the tags associated with the specified load balancers. =head2 DetachLoadBalancerFromSubnets =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item Subnets => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Removes the specified subnets from the set of configured subnets for the load balancer. After a subnet is removed, all EC2 instances registered with the load balancer in the removed subnet go into the C state. Then, the load balancer balances the traffic among the remaining routable subnets. =head2 DisableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer =over =item AvailabilityZones => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Removes the specified Availability Zones from the set of Availability Zones for the specified load balancer in EC2-Classic or a default VPC. For load balancers in a non-default VPC, use DetachLoadBalancerFromSubnets. There must be at least one Availability Zone registered with a load balancer at all times. After an Availability Zone is removed, all instances registered with the load balancer that are in the removed Availability Zone go into the C state. Then, the load balancer attempts to equally balance the traffic among its remaining Availability Zones. For more information, see Add or Remove Availability Zones (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/enable-disable-az.html) in the I. =head2 EnableAvailabilityZonesForLoadBalancer =over =item AvailabilityZones => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Adds the specified Availability Zones to the set of Availability Zones for the specified load balancer in EC2-Classic or a default VPC. For load balancers in a non-default VPC, use AttachLoadBalancerToSubnets. The load balancer evenly distributes requests across all its registered Availability Zones that contain instances. For more information, see Add or Remove Availability Zones (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/enable-disable-az.html) in the I. =head2 ModifyLoadBalancerAttributes =over =item LoadBalancerAttributes => L =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Modifies the attributes of the specified load balancer. You can modify the load balancer attributes, such as C, C, and C by either enabling or disabling them. Or, you can modify the load balancer attribute C by specifying an idle connection timeout value for your load balancer. For more information, see the following in the I: =over =item * Cross-Zone Load Balancing (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/enable-disable-crosszone-lb.html) =item * Connection Draining (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/config-conn-drain.html) =item * Access Logs (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/access-log-collection.html) =item * Idle Connection Timeout (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/config-idle-timeout.html) =back =head2 RegisterInstancesWithLoadBalancer =over =item Instances => ArrayRef[L] =item LoadBalancerName => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Adds the specified instances to the specified load balancer. The instance must be a running instance in the same network as the load balancer (EC2-Classic or the same VPC). If you have EC2-Classic instances and a load balancer in a VPC with ClassicLink enabled, you can link the EC2-Classic instances to that VPC and then register the linked EC2-Classic instances with the load balancer in the VPC. Note that C completes when the request has been registered. Instance registration takes a little time to complete. To check the state of the registered instances, use DescribeLoadBalancers or DescribeInstanceHealth. After the instance is registered, it starts receiving traffic and requests from the load balancer. Any instance that is not in one of the Availability Zones registered for the load balancer is moved to the C state. If an Availability Zone is added to the load balancer later, any instances registered with the load balancer move to the C state. To deregister instances from a load balancer, use DeregisterInstancesFromLoadBalancer. For more information, see Register or De-Register EC2 Instances (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-deregister-register-instances.html) in the I. =head2 RemoveTags =over =item LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =item Tags => ArrayRef[L] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Removes one or more tags from the specified load balancer. =head2 SetLoadBalancerListenerSSLCertificate =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item LoadBalancerPort => Int =item SSLCertificateId => Str =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Sets the certificate that terminates the specified listener's SSL connections. The specified certificate replaces any prior certificate that was used on the same load balancer and port. For more information about updating your SSL certificate, see Replace the SSL Certificate for Your Load Balancer (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-update-ssl-cert.html) in the I. =head2 SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer =over =item InstancePort => Int =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item PolicyNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Replaces the set of policies associated with the specified port on which the EC2 instance is listening with a new set of policies. At this time, only the back-end server authentication policy type can be applied to the instance ports; this policy type is composed of multiple public key policies. Each time you use C to enable the policies, use the C parameter to list the policies that you want to enable. You can use DescribeLoadBalancers or DescribeLoadBalancerPolicies to verify that the policy is associated with the EC2 instance. For more information about enabling back-end instance authentication, see Configure Back-end Instance Authentication (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-create-https-ssl-load-balancer.html#configure_backendauth_clt) in the I. For more information about Proxy Protocol, see Configure Proxy Protocol Support (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/enable-proxy-protocol.html) in the I. =head2 SetLoadBalancerPoliciesOfListener =over =item LoadBalancerName => Str =item LoadBalancerPort => Int =item PolicyNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef] =back Each argument is described in detail in: L Returns: a L instance Replaces the current set of policies for the specified load balancer port with the specified set of policies. To enable back-end server authentication, use SetLoadBalancerPoliciesForBackendServer. For more information about setting policies, see Update the SSL Negotiation Configuration (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/ssl-config-update.html), Duration-Based Session Stickiness (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-sticky-sessions.html#enable-sticky-sessions-duration), and Application-Controlled Session Stickiness (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/classic/elb-sticky-sessions.html#enable-sticky-sessions-application) in the I. =head1 PAGINATORS Paginator methods are helpers that repetively call methods that return partial results =head2 DescribeAllAccountLimits(sub { },[Marker => Str, PageSize => Int]) =head2 DescribeAllAccountLimits([Marker => Str, PageSize => Int]) If passed a sub as first parameter, it will call the sub for each element found in : - Limits, passing the object as the first parameter, and the string 'Limits' as the second parameter If not, it will return a a L instance with all the Cs; from all the responses. Please take into account that this mode can potentially consume vasts ammounts of memory. =head2 DescribeAllLoadBalancers(sub { },[LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef], Marker => Str, PageSize => Int]) =head2 DescribeAllLoadBalancers([LoadBalancerNames => ArrayRef[Str|Undef], Marker => Str, PageSize => Int]) If passed a sub as first parameter, it will call the sub for each element found in : - LoadBalancerDescriptions, passing the object as the first parameter, and the string 'LoadBalancerDescriptions' as the second parameter If not, it will return a a L instance with all the Cs; from all the responses. Please take into account that this mode can potentially consume vasts ammounts of memory. =head1 SEE ALSO This service class forms part of L =head1 BUGS and CONTRIBUTIONS The source code is located here: L Please report bugs to: L =cut