Table of Contents
EKS.
Client
¶A low-level client representing Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) is a managed service that makes it easy for you to run Kubernetes on Amazon Web Services without needing to stand up or maintain your own Kubernetes control plane. Kubernetes is an open-source system for automating the deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications.
Amazon EKS runs up-to-date versions of the open-source Kubernetes software, so you can use all the existing plugins and tooling from the Kubernetes community. Applications running on Amazon EKS are fully compatible with applications running on any standard Kubernetes environment, whether running in on-premises data centers or public clouds. This means that you can easily migrate any standard Kubernetes application to Amazon EKS without any code modification required.
import boto3
client = boto3.client('eks')
These are the available methods:
associate_encryption_config()
associate_identity_provider_config()
can_paginate()
close()
create_addon()
create_cluster()
create_fargate_profile()
create_nodegroup()
delete_addon()
delete_cluster()
delete_fargate_profile()
delete_nodegroup()
deregister_cluster()
describe_addon()
describe_addon_configuration()
describe_addon_versions()
describe_cluster()
describe_fargate_profile()
describe_identity_provider_config()
describe_nodegroup()
describe_update()
disassociate_identity_provider_config()
get_paginator()
get_waiter()
list_addons()
list_clusters()
list_fargate_profiles()
list_identity_provider_configs()
list_nodegroups()
list_tags_for_resource()
list_updates()
register_cluster()
tag_resource()
untag_resource()
update_addon()
update_cluster_config()
update_cluster_version()
update_nodegroup_config()
update_nodegroup_version()
associate_encryption_config
(**kwargs)¶Associate encryption configuration to an existing cluster.
You can use this API to enable encryption on existing clusters which do not have encryption already enabled. This allows you to implement a defense-in-depth security strategy without migrating applications to new Amazon EKS clusters.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.associate_encryption_config(
clusterName='string',
encryptionConfig=[
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster that you are associating with encryption configuration.
[REQUIRED]
The configuration you are using for encryption.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
The client request token you are using with the encryption configuration.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
associate_identity_provider_config
(**kwargs)¶Associate an identity provider configuration to a cluster.
If you want to authenticate identities using an identity provider, you can create an identity provider configuration and associate it to your cluster. After configuring authentication to your cluster you can create Kubernetes roles
and clusterroles
to assign permissions to the roles, and then bind the roles to the identities using Kubernetes rolebindings
and clusterrolebindings
. For more information see Using RBAC Authorization in the Kubernetes documentation.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.associate_identity_provider_config(
clusterName='string',
oidc={
'identityProviderConfigName': 'string',
'issuerUrl': 'string',
'clientId': 'string',
'usernameClaim': 'string',
'usernamePrefix': 'string',
'groupsClaim': 'string',
'groupsPrefix': 'string',
'requiredClaims': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
tags={
'string': 'string'
},
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to associate the configuration to.
[REQUIRED]
An object representing an OpenID Connect (OIDC) identity provider configuration.
The name of the OIDC provider configuration.
The URL of the OpenID identity provider that allows the API server to discover public signing keys for verifying tokens. The URL must begin with https://
and should correspond to the iss
claim in the provider's OIDC ID tokens. Per the OIDC standard, path components are allowed but query parameters are not. Typically the URL consists of only a hostname, like https://server.example.org
or https://example.com
. This URL should point to the level below .well-known/openid-configuration
and must be publicly accessible over the internet.
This is also known as audience . The ID for the client application that makes authentication requests to the OpenID identity provider.
The JSON Web Token (JWT) claim to use as the username. The default is sub
, which is expected to be a unique identifier of the end user. You can choose other claims, such as email
or name
, depending on the OpenID identity provider. Claims other than email
are prefixed with the issuer URL to prevent naming clashes with other plug-ins.
The prefix that is prepended to username claims to prevent clashes with existing names. If you do not provide this field, and username
is a value other than email
, the prefix defaults to issuerurl#
. You can use the value -
to disable all prefixing.
The JWT claim that the provider uses to return your groups.
The prefix that is prepended to group claims to prevent clashes with existing names (such as system:
groups). For example, the value oidc:
will create group names like oidc:engineering
and oidc:infra
.
The key value pairs that describe required claims in the identity token. If set, each claim is verified to be present in the token with a matching value. For the maximum number of claims that you can require, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The metadata to apply to the configuration to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
tags (dict) --
The tags for the resource.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
can_paginate
(operation_name)¶Check if an operation can be paginated.
create_foo
, and you'd normally invoke the
operation as client.create_foo(**kwargs)
, if the
create_foo
operation can be paginated, you can use the
call client.get_paginator("create_foo")
.True
if the operation can be paginated,
False
otherwise.close
()¶Closes underlying endpoint connections.
create_addon
(**kwargs)¶Creates an Amazon EKS add-on.
Amazon EKS add-ons help to automate the provisioning and lifecycle management of common operational software for Amazon EKS clusters. For more information, see Amazon EKS add-ons in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_addon(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string',
addonVersion='string',
serviceAccountRoleArn='string',
resolveConflicts='OVERWRITE'|'NONE'|'PRESERVE',
clientRequestToken='string',
tags={
'string': 'string'
},
configurationValues='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to create the add-on for.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names that DescribeAddonVersions returns.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an existing IAM role to bind to the add-on's service account. The role must be assigned the IAM permissions required by the add-on. If you don't specify an existing IAM role, then the add-on uses the permissions assigned to the node IAM role. For more information, see Amazon EKS node IAM role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
To specify an existing IAM role, you must have an IAM OpenID Connect (OIDC) provider created for your cluster. For more information, see Enabling IAM roles for service accounts on your cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
How to resolve field value conflicts for an Amazon EKS add-on. Conflicts are handled based on the value you choose:
If you don't currently have the self-managed version of the add-on installed on your cluster, the Amazon EKS add-on is installed. Amazon EKS sets all values to default values, regardless of the option that you specify.
A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
The metadata to apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addon': {
'addonName': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED'|'UPDATE_FAILED',
'addonVersion': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'addonArn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'serviceAccountRoleArn': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'publisher': 'string',
'owner': 'string',
'marketplaceInformation': {
'productId': 'string',
'productUrl': 'string'
},
'configurationValues': 'string'
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addon (dict) --
An Amazon EKS add-on. For more information, see Amazon EKS add-ons in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster.
status (string) --
The status of the add-on.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on.
health (dict) --
An object that represents the health of the add-on.
issues (list) --
An object representing the health issues for an add-on.
(dict) --
An issue related to an add-on.
code (string) --
A code that describes the type of issue.
message (string) --
A message that provides details about the issue and what might cause it.
resourceIds (list) --
The resource IDs of the issue.
addonArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the add-on.
createdAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was last modified.
serviceAccountRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that's bound to the Kubernetes service account that the add-on uses.
tags (dict) --
The metadata that you apply to the add-on to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Add-on tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
publisher (string) --
The publisher of the add-on.
owner (string) --
The owner of the add-on.
marketplaceInformation (dict) --
Information about an Amazon EKS add-on from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productId (string) --
The product ID from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productUrl (string) --
The product URL from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
configurationValues (string) --
The configuration values that you provided.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
create_cluster
(**kwargs)¶Creates an Amazon EKS control plane.
The Amazon EKS control plane consists of control plane instances that run the Kubernetes software, such as etcd
and the API server. The control plane runs in an account managed by Amazon Web Services, and the Kubernetes API is exposed by the Amazon EKS API server endpoint. Each Amazon EKS cluster control plane is single tenant and unique. It runs on its own set of Amazon EC2 instances.
The cluster control plane is provisioned across multiple Availability Zones and fronted by an Elastic Load Balancing Network Load Balancer. Amazon EKS also provisions elastic network interfaces in your VPC subnets to provide connectivity from the control plane instances to the nodes (for example, to support kubectl exec
, logs
, and proxy
data flows).
Amazon EKS nodes run in your Amazon Web Services account and connect to your cluster's control plane over the Kubernetes API server endpoint and a certificate file that is created for your cluster.
In most cases, it takes several minutes to create a cluster. After you create an Amazon EKS cluster, you must configure your Kubernetes tooling to communicate with the API server and launch nodes into your cluster. For more information, see Managing Cluster Authentication and Launching Amazon EKS nodes in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_cluster(
name='string',
version='string',
roleArn='string',
resourcesVpcConfig={
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
kubernetesNetworkConfig={
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
logging={
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
clientRequestToken='string',
tags={
'string': 'string'
},
encryptionConfig=[
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
outpostConfig={
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The unique name to give to your cluster.
The desired Kubernetes version for your cluster. If you don't specify a value here, the default version available in Amazon EKS is used.
Note
The default version might not be the latest version available.
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf. For more information, see Amazon EKS Service IAM Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
[REQUIRED]
The VPC configuration that's used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide . You must specify at least two subnets. You can specify up to five security groups. However, we recommend that you use a dedicated security group for your cluster control plane.
Specify subnets for your Amazon EKS nodes. Amazon EKS creates cross-account elastic network interfaces in these subnets to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
Specify one or more security groups for the cross-account elastic network interfaces that Amazon EKS creates to use that allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane. If you don't specify any security groups, then familiarize yourself with the difference between Amazon EKS defaults for clusters deployed with Kubernetes. For more information, see Amazon EKS security group considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Set this value to false
to disable public access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. If you disable public access, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests from within the cluster VPC. The default value for this parameter is true
, which enables public access for your Kubernetes API server. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Set this value to true
to enable private access for your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. If you enable private access, Kubernetes API requests from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint. The default value for this parameter is false
, which disables private access for your Kubernetes API server. If you disable private access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the CIDR blocks that you specify is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that you specify the necessary CIDR blocks. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
Don't specify a value if you select ipv6
for ipFamily . The CIDR block to assign Kubernetes service IP addresses from. If you don't specify a block, Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. We recommend that you specify a block that does not overlap with resources in other networks that are peered or connected to your VPC. The block must meet the following requirements:
10.0.0.0/8
, 172.16.0.0/12
, or 192.168.0.0/16
.Warning
You can only specify a custom CIDR block when you create a cluster and can't change this value once the cluster is created.
Specify which IP family is used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. If you don't specify a value, ipv4
is used by default. You can only specify an IP family when you create a cluster and can't change this value once the cluster is created. If you specify ipv6
, the VPC and subnets that you specify for cluster creation must have both IPv4
and IPv6
CIDR blocks assigned to them. You can't specify ipv6
for clusters in China Regions.
You can only specify ipv6
for 1.21
and later clusters that use version 1.10.1
or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on. If you specify ipv6
, then ensure that your VPC meets the requirements listed in the considerations listed in Assigning IPv6 addresses to pods and services in the Amazon EKS User Guide. Kubernetes assigns services IPv6
addresses from the unique local address range (fc00::/7)
. You can't specify a custom IPv6
CIDR block. Pod addresses are assigned from the subnet's IPv6
CIDR.
Enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster control plane logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see CloudWatch Pricing.
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
The available cluster control plane log types.
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
The metadata to apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. Before creating a local cluster on an Outpost, review Local clusters for Amazon EKS on Amazon Web Services Outposts in the Amazon EKS User Guide . This object isn't available for creating Amazon EKS clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The ARN of the Outpost that you want to use for your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts. Only a single Outpost ARN is supported.
The Amazon EC2 instance type that you want to use for your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts. Choose an instance type based on the number of nodes that your cluster will have. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The instance type that you specify is used for all Kubernetes control plane instances. The instance type can't be changed after cluster creation. The control plane is not automatically scaled by Amazon EKS.
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances. This setting can't be changed after cluster creation.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'cluster': {
'name': 'string',
'arn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'version': 'string',
'endpoint': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'clusterSecurityGroupId': 'string',
'vpcId': 'string',
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
'kubernetesNetworkConfig': {
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'serviceIpv6Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
'logging': {
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
'identity': {
'oidc': {
'issuer': 'string'
}
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'PENDING',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': 'string'
},
'clientRequestToken': 'string',
'platformVersion': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'encryptionConfig': [
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
'connectorConfig': {
'activationId': 'string',
'activationCode': 'string',
'activationExpiry': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'provider': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string'
},
'id': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'InternalFailure'|'ResourceLimitExceeded'|'ResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'outpostConfig': {
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
cluster (dict) --
The full description of your new cluster.
name (string) --
The name of the cluster.
arn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the cluster was created.
version (string) --
The Kubernetes server version for the cluster.
endpoint (string) --
The endpoint for your Kubernetes API server.
roleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf.
resourcesVpcConfig (dict) --
The VPC configuration used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
subnetIds (list) --
The subnets associated with your cluster.
securityGroupIds (list) --
The security groups associated with the cross-account elastic network interfaces that are used to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
clusterSecurityGroupId (string) --
The cluster security group that was created by Amazon EKS for the cluster. Managed node groups use this security group for control-plane-to-data-plane communication.
vpcId (string) --
The VPC associated with your cluster.
endpointPublicAccess (boolean) --
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is disabled, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests that originate from within the cluster VPC.
endpointPrivateAccess (boolean) --
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled, Kubernetes API requests that originate from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint instead of traversing the internet. If this value is disabled and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
publicAccessCidrs (list) --
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the listed CIDR blocks is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that the necessary CIDR blocks are listed. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
kubernetesNetworkConfig (dict) --
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
serviceIpv4Cidr (string) --
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.
serviceIpv6Cidr (string) --
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range ( fc00::/7
) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.
ipFamily (string) --
The IP family used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4
, unless you have a 1.21
or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
when you created the cluster.
logging (dict) --
The logging configuration for your cluster.
clusterLogging (list) --
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
(dict) --
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
types (list) --
The available cluster control plane log types.
enabled (boolean) --
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
identity (dict) --
The identity provider information for the cluster.
oidc (dict) --
An object representing the OpenID Connect identity provider information.
issuer (string) --
The issuer URL for the OIDC identity provider.
status (string) --
The current status of the cluster.
certificateAuthority (dict) --
The certificate-authority-data
for your cluster.
data (string) --
The Base64-encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster. Add this to the certificate-authority-data
section of the kubeconfig
file for your cluster.
clientRequestToken (string) --
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
platformVersion (string) --
The platform version of your Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Platform Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
tags (dict) --
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
encryptionConfig (list) --
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
(dict) --
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
resources (list) --
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
provider (dict) --
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
keyArn (string) --
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
connectorConfig (dict) --
The configuration used to connect to a cluster for registration.
activationId (string) --
A unique ID associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
activationCode (string) --
A unique code associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
activationExpiry (datetime) --
The expiration time of the connected cluster. The cluster's YAML file must be applied through the native provider.
provider (string) --
The cluster's cloud service provider.
roleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role to communicate with services from the connected Kubernetes cluster.
id (string) --
The ID of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This property isn't available for an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
health (dict) --
An object representing the health of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
issues (list) --
An object representing the health issues of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost.
(dict) --
An issue with your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. You can't use this API with an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
code (string) --
The error code of the issue.
message (string) --
A description of the issue.
resourceIds (list) --
The resource IDs that the issue relates to.
outpostConfig (dict) --
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
outpostArns (list) --
The ARN of the Outpost that you specified for use with your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts.
controlPlaneInstanceType (string) --
The Amazon EC2 instance type used for the control plane. The instance type is the same for all control plane instances.
controlPlanePlacement (dict) --
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
groupName (string) --
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceLimitExceededException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
EKS.Client.exceptions.UnsupportedAvailabilityZoneException
Examples
The following example creates an Amazon EKS cluster called prod.
response = client.create_cluster(
version='1.10',
name='prod',
clientRequestToken='1d2129a1-3d38-460a-9756-e5b91fddb951',
resourcesVpcConfig={
'securityGroupIds': [
'sg-6979fe18',
],
'subnetIds': [
'subnet-6782e71e',
'subnet-e7e761ac',
],
},
roleArn='arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/eks-service-role-AWSServiceRoleForAmazonEKS-J7ONKE3BQ4PI',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
create_fargate_profile
(**kwargs)¶Creates an Fargate profile for your Amazon EKS cluster. You must have at least one Fargate profile in a cluster to be able to run pods on Fargate.
The Fargate profile allows an administrator to declare which pods run on Fargate and specify which pods run on which Fargate profile. This declaration is done through the profile’s selectors. Each profile can have up to five selectors that contain a namespace and labels. A namespace is required for every selector. The label field consists of multiple optional key-value pairs. Pods that match the selectors are scheduled on Fargate. If a to-be-scheduled pod matches any of the selectors in the Fargate profile, then that pod is run on Fargate.
When you create a Fargate profile, you must specify a pod execution role to use with the pods that are scheduled with the profile. This role is added to the cluster's Kubernetes Role Based Access Control (RBAC) for authorization so that the kubelet
that is running on the Fargate infrastructure can register with your Amazon EKS cluster so that it can appear in your cluster as a node. The pod execution role also provides IAM permissions to the Fargate infrastructure to allow read access to Amazon ECR image repositories. For more information, see Pod Execution Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Fargate profiles are immutable. However, you can create a new updated profile to replace an existing profile and then delete the original after the updated profile has finished creating.
If any Fargate profiles in a cluster are in the DELETING
status, you must wait for that Fargate profile to finish deleting before you can create any other profiles in that cluster.
For more information, see Fargate Profile in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_fargate_profile(
fargateProfileName='string',
clusterName='string',
podExecutionRoleArn='string',
subnets=[
'string',
],
selectors=[
{
'namespace': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
],
clientRequestToken='string',
tags={
'string': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Fargate profile.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster to apply the Fargate profile to.
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the Fargate profile. The pod execution role allows Fargate infrastructure to register with your cluster as a node, and it provides read access to Amazon ECR image repositories. For more information, see Pod Execution Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The IDs of subnets to launch your pods into. At this time, pods running on Fargate are not assigned public IP addresses, so only private subnets (with no direct route to an Internet Gateway) are accepted for this parameter.
The selectors to match for pods to use this Fargate profile. Each selector must have an associated namespace. Optionally, you can also specify labels for a namespace. You may specify up to five selectors in a Fargate profile.
An object representing an Fargate profile selector.
The Kubernetes namespace that the selector should match.
The Kubernetes labels that the selector should match. A pod must contain all of the labels that are specified in the selector for it to be considered a match.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
The metadata to apply to the Fargate profile to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Fargate profile tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the Fargate profile, such as the pods that are scheduled with it.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'fargateProfile': {
'fargateProfileName': 'string',
'fargateProfileArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'podExecutionRoleArn': 'string',
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'selectors': [
{
'namespace': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
],
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
fargateProfile (dict) --
The full description of your new Fargate profile.
fargateProfileName (string) --
The name of the Fargate profile.
fargateProfileArn (string) --
The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Fargate profile.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that the Fargate profile belongs to.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the Fargate profile was created.
podExecutionRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the Fargate profile. For more information, see Pod Execution Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
subnets (list) --
The IDs of subnets to launch pods into.
selectors (list) --
The selectors to match for pods to use this Fargate profile.
(dict) --
An object representing an Fargate profile selector.
namespace (string) --
The Kubernetes namespace that the selector should match.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels that the selector should match. A pod must contain all of the labels that are specified in the selector for it to be considered a match.
status (string) --
The current status of the Fargate profile.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the Fargate profile to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Fargate profile tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the Fargate profile, such as the pods that are scheduled with it.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceLimitExceededException
EKS.Client.exceptions.UnsupportedAvailabilityZoneException
create_nodegroup
(**kwargs)¶Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster. You can only create a node group for your cluster that is equal to the current Kubernetes version for the cluster. All node groups are created with the latest AMI release version for the respective minor Kubernetes version of the cluster, unless you deploy a custom AMI using a launch template. For more information about using launch templates, see Launch template support.
An Amazon EKS managed node group is an Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling group and associated Amazon EC2 instances that are managed by Amazon Web Services for an Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Managed node groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
Windows AMI types are only supported for commercial Regions that support Windows Amazon EKS.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_nodegroup(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string',
scalingConfig={
'minSize': 123,
'maxSize': 123,
'desiredSize': 123
},
diskSize=123,
subnets=[
'string',
],
instanceTypes=[
'string',
],
amiType='AL2_x86_64'|'AL2_x86_64_GPU'|'AL2_ARM_64'|'CUSTOM'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64_NVIDIA'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64_NVIDIA'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2022_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2022_x86_64',
remoteAccess={
'ec2SshKey': 'string',
'sourceSecurityGroups': [
'string',
]
},
nodeRole='string',
labels={
'string': 'string'
},
taints=[
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
],
tags={
'string': 'string'
},
clientRequestToken='string',
launchTemplate={
'name': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'id': 'string'
},
updateConfig={
'maxUnavailable': 123,
'maxUnavailablePercentage': 123
},
capacityType='ON_DEMAND'|'SPOT',
version='string',
releaseVersion='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to create the node group in.
[REQUIRED]
The unique name to give your node group.
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is created for your node group.
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use Cluster Autoscaler, you shouldn't change the desiredSize value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.
Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from minSize in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When Cluster Autoscaler is used, the desiredSize parameter is altered by Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). Cluster Autoscaler doesn't scale a managed node group lower than minSize or higher than maxSize.
launchTemplate
, then don't specify diskSize
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .[REQUIRED]
The subnets to use for the Auto Scaling group that is created for your node group. If you specify launchTemplate
, then don't specify SubnetId in your launch template, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Specify the instance types for a node group. If you specify a GPU instance type, make sure to also specify an applicable GPU AMI type with the amiType
parameter. If you specify launchTemplate
, then you can specify zero or one instance type in your launch template or you can specify 0-20 instance types for instanceTypes
. If however, you specify an instance type in your launch template and specify any instanceTypes
, the node group deployment will fail. If you don't specify an instance type in a launch template or for instanceTypes
, then t3.medium
is used, by default. If you specify Spot
for capacityType
, then we recommend specifying multiple values for instanceTypes
. For more information, see Managed node group capacity types and Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don't specify amiType
, or the node group deployment will fail. If your launch template uses a Windows custom AMI, then add eks:kube-proxy-windows
to your Windows nodes rolearn
in the aws-auth
ConfigMap
. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .The remote access configuration to use with your node group. For Linux, the protocol is SSH. For Windows, the protocol is RDP. If you specify launchTemplate
, then don't specify remoteAccess
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don't specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet ( 0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role to associate with your node group. The Amazon EKS worker node kubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies. Before you can launch nodes and register them into a cluster, you must create an IAM role for those nodes to use when they are launched. For more information, see Amazon EKS node IAM role in the Amazon EKS User Guide . If you specify launchTemplate
, then don't specify IamInstanceProfile in your launch template, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Kubernetes labels to be applied to the nodes in the node group when they are created.
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
The key of the taint.
The value of the taint.
The effect of the taint.
The metadata to apply to the node group to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Node group tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the node group, such as the Amazon EC2 instances or subnets.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
An object representing a node group's launch template specification. If specified, then do not specify instanceTypes
, diskSize
, or remoteAccess
and make sure that the launch template meets the requirements in launchTemplateSpecification
.
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template's default version is used.
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
The node group update configuration.
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes will be updated in parallel. This value or maxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes will be updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value or maxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don't specify version
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .The AMI version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI to use with your node group. By default, the latest available AMI version for the node group's current Kubernetes version is used. For information about Linux versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Amazon Linux AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide . Amazon EKS managed node groups support the November 2022 and later releases of the Windows AMIs. For information about Windows versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Windows AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
If you specify launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don't specify releaseVersion
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
dict
Response Syntax
{
'nodegroup': {
'nodegroupName': 'string',
'nodegroupArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'releaseVersion': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED',
'capacityType': 'ON_DEMAND'|'SPOT',
'scalingConfig': {
'minSize': 123,
'maxSize': 123,
'desiredSize': 123
},
'instanceTypes': [
'string',
],
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'remoteAccess': {
'ec2SshKey': 'string',
'sourceSecurityGroups': [
'string',
]
},
'amiType': 'AL2_x86_64'|'AL2_x86_64_GPU'|'AL2_ARM_64'|'CUSTOM'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64_NVIDIA'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64_NVIDIA'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2022_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2022_x86_64',
'nodeRole': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
},
'taints': [
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
],
'resources': {
'autoScalingGroups': [
{
'name': 'string'
},
],
'remoteAccessSecurityGroup': 'string'
},
'diskSize': 123,
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AutoScalingGroupNotFound'|'AutoScalingGroupInvalidConfiguration'|'Ec2SecurityGroupNotFound'|'Ec2SecurityGroupDeletionFailure'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateNotFound'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateVersionMismatch'|'Ec2SubnetNotFound'|'Ec2SubnetInvalidConfiguration'|'IamInstanceProfileNotFound'|'IamLimitExceeded'|'IamNodeRoleNotFound'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'AsgInstanceLaunchFailures'|'InstanceLimitExceeded'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'Ec2SubnetMissingIpv6Assignment',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'updateConfig': {
'maxUnavailable': 123,
'maxUnavailablePercentage': 123
},
'launchTemplate': {
'name': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'id': 'string'
},
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
nodegroup (dict) --
The full description of your new node group.
nodegroupName (string) --
The name associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
nodegroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) associated with the managed node group.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster that the managed node group resides in.
version (string) --
The Kubernetes version of the managed node group.
releaseVersion (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is the AMI ID that was specified in the launch template. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI that the node group was deployed with.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was last modified.
status (string) --
The current status of the managed node group.
capacityType (string) --
The capacity type of your managed node group.
scalingConfig (dict) --
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
minSize (integer) --
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.
maxSize (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
desiredSize (integer) --
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use Cluster Autoscaler, you shouldn't change the desiredSize value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.
Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from minSize in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When Cluster Autoscaler is used, the desiredSize parameter is altered by Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). Cluster Autoscaler doesn't scale a managed node group lower than minSize or higher than maxSize.
instanceTypes (list) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the instance type that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
subnets (list) --
The subnets that were specified for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
remoteAccess (dict) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the remote access configuration that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
ec2SshKey (string) --
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .
sourceSecurityGroups (list) --
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don't specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet ( 0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .
amiType (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is CUSTOM
. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the AMI type that was specified in the node group configuration.
nodeRole (string) --
The IAM role associated with your node group. The Amazon EKS node kubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in the node group.
Note
Only labels that are applied with the Amazon EKS API are shown here. There may be other Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in this group.
taints (list) --
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group when they are created. Effect is one of No_Schedule
, Prefer_No_Schedule
, or No_Execute
. Kubernetes taints can be used together with tolerations to control how workloads are scheduled to your nodes. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
(dict) --
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
key (string) --
The key of the taint.
value (string) --
The value of the taint.
effect (string) --
The effect of the taint.
resources (dict) --
The resources associated with the node group, such as Auto Scaling groups and security groups for remote access.
autoScalingGroups (list) --
The Auto Scaling groups associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An Auto Scaling group that is associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
name (string) --
The name of the Auto Scaling group associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
remoteAccessSecurityGroup (string) --
The remote access security group associated with the node group. This security group controls SSH access to the nodes.
diskSize (integer) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the disk size in the node group configuration. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
health (dict) --
The health status of the node group. If there are issues with your node group's health, they are listed here.
issues (list) --
Any issues that are associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An object representing an issue with an Amazon EKS resource.
code (string) --
A brief description of the error.
auto-assign public IP address
setting for the subnet. See Modifying the public IPv4 addressing attribute for your subnet in the Amazon VPC User Guide .message (string) --
The error message associated with the issue.
resourceIds (list) --
The Amazon Web Services resources that are afflicted by this issue.
updateConfig (dict) --
The node group update configuration.
maxUnavailable (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes will be updated in parallel. This value or maxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.
maxUnavailablePercentage (integer) --
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes will be updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value or maxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
launchTemplate (dict) --
If a launch template was used to create the node group, then this is the launch template that was used.
name (string) --
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
version (string) --
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template's default version is used.
id (string) --
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the node group to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Node group tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the node group, such as the Amazon EC2 instances or subnets.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceLimitExceededException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
delete_addon
(**kwargs)¶Delete an Amazon EKS add-on.
When you remove the add-on, it will also be deleted from the cluster. You can always manually start an add-on on the cluster using the Kubernetes API.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_addon(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string',
preserve=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to delete the add-on from.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names returned by ListAddons.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addon': {
'addonName': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED'|'UPDATE_FAILED',
'addonVersion': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'addonArn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'serviceAccountRoleArn': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'publisher': 'string',
'owner': 'string',
'marketplaceInformation': {
'productId': 'string',
'productUrl': 'string'
},
'configurationValues': 'string'
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addon (dict) --
An Amazon EKS add-on. For more information, see Amazon EKS add-ons in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster.
status (string) --
The status of the add-on.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on.
health (dict) --
An object that represents the health of the add-on.
issues (list) --
An object representing the health issues for an add-on.
(dict) --
An issue related to an add-on.
code (string) --
A code that describes the type of issue.
message (string) --
A message that provides details about the issue and what might cause it.
resourceIds (list) --
The resource IDs of the issue.
addonArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the add-on.
createdAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was last modified.
serviceAccountRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that's bound to the Kubernetes service account that the add-on uses.
tags (dict) --
The metadata that you apply to the add-on to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Add-on tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
publisher (string) --
The publisher of the add-on.
owner (string) --
The owner of the add-on.
marketplaceInformation (dict) --
Information about an Amazon EKS add-on from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productId (string) --
The product ID from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productUrl (string) --
The product URL from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
configurationValues (string) --
The configuration values that you provided.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
delete_cluster
(**kwargs)¶Deletes the Amazon EKS cluster control plane.
If you have active services in your cluster that are associated with a load balancer, you must delete those services before deleting the cluster so that the load balancers are deleted properly. Otherwise, you can have orphaned resources in your VPC that prevent you from being able to delete the VPC. For more information, see Deleting a Cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
If you have managed node groups or Fargate profiles attached to the cluster, you must delete them first. For more information, see DeleteNodegroup and DeleteFargateProfile.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_cluster(
name='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to delete.
{
'cluster': {
'name': 'string',
'arn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'version': 'string',
'endpoint': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'clusterSecurityGroupId': 'string',
'vpcId': 'string',
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
'kubernetesNetworkConfig': {
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'serviceIpv6Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
'logging': {
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
'identity': {
'oidc': {
'issuer': 'string'
}
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'PENDING',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': 'string'
},
'clientRequestToken': 'string',
'platformVersion': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'encryptionConfig': [
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
'connectorConfig': {
'activationId': 'string',
'activationCode': 'string',
'activationExpiry': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'provider': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string'
},
'id': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'InternalFailure'|'ResourceLimitExceeded'|'ResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'outpostConfig': {
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
The full description of the cluster to delete.
The name of the cluster.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the cluster was created.
The Kubernetes server version for the cluster.
The endpoint for your Kubernetes API server.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf.
The VPC configuration used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The subnets associated with your cluster.
The security groups associated with the cross-account elastic network interfaces that are used to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
The cluster security group that was created by Amazon EKS for the cluster. Managed node groups use this security group for control-plane-to-data-plane communication.
The VPC associated with your cluster.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is disabled, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests that originate from within the cluster VPC.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled, Kubernetes API requests that originate from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint instead of traversing the internet. If this value is disabled and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the listed CIDR blocks is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that the necessary CIDR blocks are listed. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range ( fc00::/7
) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.
The IP family used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4
, unless you have a 1.21
or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
when you created the cluster.
The logging configuration for your cluster.
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
The available cluster control plane log types.
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
The identity provider information for the cluster.
An object representing the OpenID Connect identity provider information.
The issuer URL for the OIDC identity provider.
The current status of the cluster.
The certificate-authority-data
for your cluster.
The Base64-encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster. Add this to the certificate-authority-data
section of the kubeconfig
file for your cluster.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
The platform version of your Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Platform Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
The configuration used to connect to a cluster for registration.
A unique ID associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
A unique code associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
The expiration time of the connected cluster. The cluster's YAML file must be applied through the native provider.
The cluster's cloud service provider.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role to communicate with services from the connected Kubernetes cluster.
The ID of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This property isn't available for an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health issues of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost.
An issue with your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. You can't use this API with an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The error code of the issue.
A description of the issue.
The resource IDs that the issue relates to.
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The ARN of the Outpost that you specified for use with your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts.
The Amazon EC2 instance type used for the control plane. The instance type is the same for all control plane instances.
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
Examples
This example command deletes a cluster named devel in your default region.
response = client.delete_cluster(
name='devel',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
delete_fargate_profile
(**kwargs)¶Deletes an Fargate profile.
When you delete a Fargate profile, any pods running on Fargate that were created with the profile are deleted. If those pods match another Fargate profile, then they are scheduled on Fargate with that profile. If they no longer match any Fargate profiles, then they are not scheduled on Fargate and they may remain in a pending state.
Only one Fargate profile in a cluster can be in the DELETING
status at a time. You must wait for a Fargate profile to finish deleting before you can delete any other profiles in that cluster.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_fargate_profile(
clusterName='string',
fargateProfileName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the Fargate profile to delete.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Fargate profile to delete.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'fargateProfile': {
'fargateProfileName': 'string',
'fargateProfileArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'podExecutionRoleArn': 'string',
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'selectors': [
{
'namespace': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
],
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
fargateProfile (dict) --
The deleted Fargate profile.
fargateProfileName (string) --
The name of the Fargate profile.
fargateProfileArn (string) --
The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Fargate profile.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that the Fargate profile belongs to.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the Fargate profile was created.
podExecutionRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the Fargate profile. For more information, see Pod Execution Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
subnets (list) --
The IDs of subnets to launch pods into.
selectors (list) --
The selectors to match for pods to use this Fargate profile.
(dict) --
An object representing an Fargate profile selector.
namespace (string) --
The Kubernetes namespace that the selector should match.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels that the selector should match. A pod must contain all of the labels that are specified in the selector for it to be considered a match.
status (string) --
The current status of the Fargate profile.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the Fargate profile to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Fargate profile tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the Fargate profile, such as the pods that are scheduled with it.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
delete_nodegroup
(**kwargs)¶Deletes an Amazon EKS node group for a cluster.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_nodegroup(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that is associated with your node group.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the node group to delete.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'nodegroup': {
'nodegroupName': 'string',
'nodegroupArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'releaseVersion': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED',
'capacityType': 'ON_DEMAND'|'SPOT',
'scalingConfig': {
'minSize': 123,
'maxSize': 123,
'desiredSize': 123
},
'instanceTypes': [
'string',
],
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'remoteAccess': {
'ec2SshKey': 'string',
'sourceSecurityGroups': [
'string',
]
},
'amiType': 'AL2_x86_64'|'AL2_x86_64_GPU'|'AL2_ARM_64'|'CUSTOM'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64_NVIDIA'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64_NVIDIA'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2022_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2022_x86_64',
'nodeRole': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
},
'taints': [
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
],
'resources': {
'autoScalingGroups': [
{
'name': 'string'
},
],
'remoteAccessSecurityGroup': 'string'
},
'diskSize': 123,
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AutoScalingGroupNotFound'|'AutoScalingGroupInvalidConfiguration'|'Ec2SecurityGroupNotFound'|'Ec2SecurityGroupDeletionFailure'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateNotFound'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateVersionMismatch'|'Ec2SubnetNotFound'|'Ec2SubnetInvalidConfiguration'|'IamInstanceProfileNotFound'|'IamLimitExceeded'|'IamNodeRoleNotFound'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'AsgInstanceLaunchFailures'|'InstanceLimitExceeded'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'Ec2SubnetMissingIpv6Assignment',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'updateConfig': {
'maxUnavailable': 123,
'maxUnavailablePercentage': 123
},
'launchTemplate': {
'name': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'id': 'string'
},
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
nodegroup (dict) --
The full description of your deleted node group.
nodegroupName (string) --
The name associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
nodegroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) associated with the managed node group.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster that the managed node group resides in.
version (string) --
The Kubernetes version of the managed node group.
releaseVersion (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is the AMI ID that was specified in the launch template. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI that the node group was deployed with.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was last modified.
status (string) --
The current status of the managed node group.
capacityType (string) --
The capacity type of your managed node group.
scalingConfig (dict) --
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
minSize (integer) --
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.
maxSize (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
desiredSize (integer) --
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use Cluster Autoscaler, you shouldn't change the desiredSize value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.
Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from minSize in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When Cluster Autoscaler is used, the desiredSize parameter is altered by Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). Cluster Autoscaler doesn't scale a managed node group lower than minSize or higher than maxSize.
instanceTypes (list) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the instance type that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
subnets (list) --
The subnets that were specified for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
remoteAccess (dict) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the remote access configuration that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
ec2SshKey (string) --
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .
sourceSecurityGroups (list) --
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don't specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet ( 0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .
amiType (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is CUSTOM
. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the AMI type that was specified in the node group configuration.
nodeRole (string) --
The IAM role associated with your node group. The Amazon EKS node kubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in the node group.
Note
Only labels that are applied with the Amazon EKS API are shown here. There may be other Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in this group.
taints (list) --
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group when they are created. Effect is one of No_Schedule
, Prefer_No_Schedule
, or No_Execute
. Kubernetes taints can be used together with tolerations to control how workloads are scheduled to your nodes. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
(dict) --
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
key (string) --
The key of the taint.
value (string) --
The value of the taint.
effect (string) --
The effect of the taint.
resources (dict) --
The resources associated with the node group, such as Auto Scaling groups and security groups for remote access.
autoScalingGroups (list) --
The Auto Scaling groups associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An Auto Scaling group that is associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
name (string) --
The name of the Auto Scaling group associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
remoteAccessSecurityGroup (string) --
The remote access security group associated with the node group. This security group controls SSH access to the nodes.
diskSize (integer) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the disk size in the node group configuration. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
health (dict) --
The health status of the node group. If there are issues with your node group's health, they are listed here.
issues (list) --
Any issues that are associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An object representing an issue with an Amazon EKS resource.
code (string) --
A brief description of the error.
auto-assign public IP address
setting for the subnet. See Modifying the public IPv4 addressing attribute for your subnet in the Amazon VPC User Guide .message (string) --
The error message associated with the issue.
resourceIds (list) --
The Amazon Web Services resources that are afflicted by this issue.
updateConfig (dict) --
The node group update configuration.
maxUnavailable (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes will be updated in parallel. This value or maxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.
maxUnavailablePercentage (integer) --
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes will be updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value or maxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
launchTemplate (dict) --
If a launch template was used to create the node group, then this is the launch template that was used.
name (string) --
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
version (string) --
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template's default version is used.
id (string) --
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the node group to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Node group tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the node group, such as the Amazon EC2 instances or subnets.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
deregister_cluster
(**kwargs)¶Deregisters a connected cluster to remove it from the Amazon EKS control plane.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.deregister_cluster(
name='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the connected cluster to deregister.
{
'cluster': {
'name': 'string',
'arn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'version': 'string',
'endpoint': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'clusterSecurityGroupId': 'string',
'vpcId': 'string',
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
'kubernetesNetworkConfig': {
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'serviceIpv6Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
'logging': {
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
'identity': {
'oidc': {
'issuer': 'string'
}
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'PENDING',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': 'string'
},
'clientRequestToken': 'string',
'platformVersion': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'encryptionConfig': [
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
'connectorConfig': {
'activationId': 'string',
'activationCode': 'string',
'activationExpiry': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'provider': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string'
},
'id': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'InternalFailure'|'ResourceLimitExceeded'|'ResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'outpostConfig': {
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
An object representing an Amazon EKS cluster.
The name of the cluster.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the cluster was created.
The Kubernetes server version for the cluster.
The endpoint for your Kubernetes API server.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf.
The VPC configuration used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The subnets associated with your cluster.
The security groups associated with the cross-account elastic network interfaces that are used to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
The cluster security group that was created by Amazon EKS for the cluster. Managed node groups use this security group for control-plane-to-data-plane communication.
The VPC associated with your cluster.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is disabled, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests that originate from within the cluster VPC.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled, Kubernetes API requests that originate from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint instead of traversing the internet. If this value is disabled and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the listed CIDR blocks is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that the necessary CIDR blocks are listed. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range ( fc00::/7
) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.
The IP family used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4
, unless you have a 1.21
or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
when you created the cluster.
The logging configuration for your cluster.
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
The available cluster control plane log types.
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
The identity provider information for the cluster.
An object representing the OpenID Connect identity provider information.
The issuer URL for the OIDC identity provider.
The current status of the cluster.
The certificate-authority-data
for your cluster.
The Base64-encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster. Add this to the certificate-authority-data
section of the kubeconfig
file for your cluster.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
The platform version of your Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Platform Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
The configuration used to connect to a cluster for registration.
A unique ID associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
A unique code associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
The expiration time of the connected cluster. The cluster's YAML file must be applied through the native provider.
The cluster's cloud service provider.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role to communicate with services from the connected Kubernetes cluster.
The ID of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This property isn't available for an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health issues of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost.
An issue with your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. You can't use this API with an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The error code of the issue.
A description of the issue.
The resource IDs that the issue relates to.
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The ARN of the Outpost that you specified for use with your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts.
The Amazon EC2 instance type used for the control plane. The instance type is the same for all control plane instances.
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
EKS.Client.exceptions.AccessDeniedException
describe_addon
(**kwargs)¶Describes an Amazon EKS add-on.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_addon(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names returned by ListAddons.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addon': {
'addonName': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED'|'UPDATE_FAILED',
'addonVersion': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'addonArn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'serviceAccountRoleArn': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'publisher': 'string',
'owner': 'string',
'marketplaceInformation': {
'productId': 'string',
'productUrl': 'string'
},
'configurationValues': 'string'
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addon (dict) --
An Amazon EKS add-on. For more information, see Amazon EKS add-ons in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster.
status (string) --
The status of the add-on.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on.
health (dict) --
An object that represents the health of the add-on.
issues (list) --
An object representing the health issues for an add-on.
(dict) --
An issue related to an add-on.
code (string) --
A code that describes the type of issue.
message (string) --
A message that provides details about the issue and what might cause it.
resourceIds (list) --
The resource IDs of the issue.
addonArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the add-on.
createdAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The date and time that the add-on was last modified.
serviceAccountRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that's bound to the Kubernetes service account that the add-on uses.
tags (dict) --
The metadata that you apply to the add-on to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Add-on tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
publisher (string) --
The publisher of the add-on.
owner (string) --
The owner of the add-on.
marketplaceInformation (dict) --
Information about an Amazon EKS add-on from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productId (string) --
The product ID from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productUrl (string) --
The product URL from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
configurationValues (string) --
The configuration values that you provided.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
describe_addon_configuration
(**kwargs)¶Returns configuration options.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_addon_configuration(
addonName='string',
addonVersion='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names that DescribeAddonVersions returns.
[REQUIRED]
The version of the add-on. The version must match one of the versions returned by DescribeAddonVersions.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addonName': 'string',
'addonVersion': 'string',
'configurationSchema': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on. The version must match one of the versions returned by DescribeAddonVersions.
configurationSchema (string) --
A JSON schema that's used to validate the configuration values that you provide when an addon is created or updated.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
describe_addon_versions
(**kwargs)¶Describes the versions for an add-on. Information such as the Kubernetes versions that you can use the add-on with, the owner
, publisher
, and the type
of the add-on are returned.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_addon_versions(
kubernetesVersion='string',
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string',
addonName='string',
types=[
'string',
],
publishers=[
'string',
],
owners=[
'string',
]
)
The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated DescribeAddonVersionsRequest
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Note
This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is used only to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.
The type of the add-on. For valid types
, don't specify a value for this property.
The publisher of the add-on. For valid publishers
, don't specify a value for this property.
The owner of the add-on. For valid owners
, don't specify a value for this property.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addons': [
{
'addonName': 'string',
'type': 'string',
'addonVersions': [
{
'addonVersion': 'string',
'architecture': [
'string',
],
'compatibilities': [
{
'clusterVersion': 'string',
'platformVersions': [
'string',
],
'defaultVersion': True|False
},
],
'requiresConfiguration': True|False
},
],
'publisher': 'string',
'owner': 'string',
'marketplaceInformation': {
'productId': 'string',
'productUrl': 'string'
}
},
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addons (list) --
The list of available versions with Kubernetes version compatibility and other properties.
(dict) --
Information about an add-on.
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
type (string) --
The type of the add-on.
addonVersions (list) --
An object representing information about available add-on versions and compatible Kubernetes versions.
(dict) --
Information about an add-on version.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on.
architecture (list) --
The architectures that the version supports.
compatibilities (list) --
An object representing the compatibilities of a version.
(dict) --
Compatibility information.
clusterVersion (string) --
The supported Kubernetes version of the cluster.
platformVersions (list) --
The supported compute platform.
defaultVersion (boolean) --
The supported default version.
requiresConfiguration (boolean) --
Whether the add-on requires configuration.
publisher (string) --
The publisher of the add-on.
owner (string) --
The owner of the add-on.
marketplaceInformation (dict) --
Information about the add-on from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productId (string) --
The product ID from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productUrl (string) --
The product URL from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated DescribeAddonVersionsResponse
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Note
This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is used only to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
describe_cluster
(**kwargs)¶Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS cluster.
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data returned by this operation are required for kubelet
and kubectl
to communicate with your Kubernetes API server. For more information, see Create a kubeconfig for Amazon EKS.
Note
The API server endpoint and certificate authority data aren't available until the cluster reaches the ACTIVE
state.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_cluster(
name='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to describe.
{
'cluster': {
'name': 'string',
'arn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'version': 'string',
'endpoint': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'clusterSecurityGroupId': 'string',
'vpcId': 'string',
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
'kubernetesNetworkConfig': {
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'serviceIpv6Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
'logging': {
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
'identity': {
'oidc': {
'issuer': 'string'
}
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'PENDING',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': 'string'
},
'clientRequestToken': 'string',
'platformVersion': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'encryptionConfig': [
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
'connectorConfig': {
'activationId': 'string',
'activationCode': 'string',
'activationExpiry': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'provider': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string'
},
'id': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'InternalFailure'|'ResourceLimitExceeded'|'ResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'outpostConfig': {
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
The full description of your specified cluster.
The name of the cluster.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the cluster was created.
The Kubernetes server version for the cluster.
The endpoint for your Kubernetes API server.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf.
The VPC configuration used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The subnets associated with your cluster.
The security groups associated with the cross-account elastic network interfaces that are used to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
The cluster security group that was created by Amazon EKS for the cluster. Managed node groups use this security group for control-plane-to-data-plane communication.
The VPC associated with your cluster.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is disabled, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests that originate from within the cluster VPC.
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled, Kubernetes API requests that originate from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint instead of traversing the internet. If this value is disabled and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the listed CIDR blocks is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that the necessary CIDR blocks are listed. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range ( fc00::/7
) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.
The IP family used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4
, unless you have a 1.21
or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
when you created the cluster.
The logging configuration for your cluster.
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
The available cluster control plane log types.
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
The identity provider information for the cluster.
An object representing the OpenID Connect identity provider information.
The issuer URL for the OIDC identity provider.
The current status of the cluster.
The certificate-authority-data
for your cluster.
The Base64-encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster. Add this to the certificate-authority-data
section of the kubeconfig
file for your cluster.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
The platform version of your Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Platform Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
The configuration used to connect to a cluster for registration.
A unique ID associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
A unique code associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
The expiration time of the connected cluster. The cluster's YAML file must be applied through the native provider.
The cluster's cloud service provider.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role to communicate with services from the connected Kubernetes cluster.
The ID of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This property isn't available for an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
An object representing the health issues of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost.
An issue with your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. You can't use this API with an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The error code of the issue.
A description of the issue.
The resource IDs that the issue relates to.
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
The ARN of the Outpost that you specified for use with your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts.
The Amazon EC2 instance type used for the control plane. The instance type is the same for all control plane instances.
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
Examples
This example command provides a description of the specified cluster in your default region.
response = client.describe_cluster(
name='devel',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'cluster': {
'version': '1.10',
'name': 'devel',
'arn': 'arn:aws:eks:us-west-2:012345678910:cluster/devel',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': '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',
},
'createdAt': 1527807879.988,
'endpoint': 'https://A0DCCD80A04F01705DD065655C30CC3D.yl4.us-west-2.eks.amazonaws.com',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'securityGroupIds': [
'sg-6979fe18',
],
'subnetIds': [
'subnet-6782e71e',
'subnet-e7e761ac',
],
'vpcId': 'vpc-950809ec',
},
'roleArn': 'arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/eks-service-role-AWSServiceRoleForAmazonEKS-J7ONKE3BQ4PI',
'status': 'ACTIVE',
},
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
describe_fargate_profile
(**kwargs)¶Returns descriptive information about an Fargate profile.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_fargate_profile(
clusterName='string',
fargateProfileName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the Fargate profile.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Fargate profile to describe.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'fargateProfile': {
'fargateProfileName': 'string',
'fargateProfileArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'podExecutionRoleArn': 'string',
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'selectors': [
{
'namespace': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
}
},
],
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
fargateProfile (dict) --
The full description of your Fargate profile.
fargateProfileName (string) --
The name of the Fargate profile.
fargateProfileArn (string) --
The full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Fargate profile.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that the Fargate profile belongs to.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the Fargate profile was created.
podExecutionRoleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the pod execution role to use for pods that match the selectors in the Fargate profile. For more information, see Pod Execution Role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
subnets (list) --
The IDs of subnets to launch pods into.
selectors (list) --
The selectors to match for pods to use this Fargate profile.
(dict) --
An object representing an Fargate profile selector.
namespace (string) --
The Kubernetes namespace that the selector should match.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels that the selector should match. A pod must contain all of the labels that are specified in the selector for it to be considered a match.
status (string) --
The current status of the Fargate profile.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the Fargate profile to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Fargate profile tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the Fargate profile, such as the pods that are scheduled with it.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
describe_identity_provider_config
(**kwargs)¶Returns descriptive information about an identity provider configuration.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_identity_provider_config(
clusterName='string',
identityProviderConfig={
'type': 'string',
'name': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The cluster name that the identity provider configuration is associated to.
[REQUIRED]
An object representing an identity provider configuration.
The type of the identity provider configuration. The only type available is oidc
.
The name of the identity provider configuration.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'identityProviderConfig': {
'oidc': {
'identityProviderConfigName': 'string',
'identityProviderConfigArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'issuerUrl': 'string',
'clientId': 'string',
'usernameClaim': 'string',
'usernamePrefix': 'string',
'groupsClaim': 'string',
'groupsPrefix': 'string',
'requiredClaims': {
'string': 'string'
},
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'DELETING'|'ACTIVE'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
identityProviderConfig (dict) --
The object that represents an OpenID Connect (OIDC) identity provider configuration.
oidc (dict) --
An object representing an OpenID Connect (OIDC) identity provider configuration.
identityProviderConfigName (string) --
The name of the configuration.
identityProviderConfigArn (string) --
The ARN of the configuration.
clusterName (string) --
The cluster that the configuration is associated to.
issuerUrl (string) --
The URL of the OIDC identity provider that allows the API server to discover public signing keys for verifying tokens.
clientId (string) --
This is also known as audience . The ID of the client application that makes authentication requests to the OIDC identity provider.
usernameClaim (string) --
The JSON Web token (JWT) claim that is used as the username.
usernamePrefix (string) --
The prefix that is prepended to username claims to prevent clashes with existing names. The prefix can't contain system:
groupsClaim (string) --
The JSON web token (JWT) claim that the provider uses to return your groups.
groupsPrefix (string) --
The prefix that is prepended to group claims to prevent clashes with existing names (such as system:
groups). For example, the value oidc:
creates group names like oidc:engineering
and oidc:infra
. The prefix can't contain system:
requiredClaims (dict) --
The key-value pairs that describe required claims in the identity token. If set, each claim is verified to be present in the token with a matching value.
tags (dict) --
The metadata to apply to the provider configuration to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both.
status (string) --
The status of the OIDC identity provider.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
describe_nodegroup
(**kwargs)¶Returns descriptive information about an Amazon EKS node group.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_nodegroup(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the node group.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the node group to describe.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'nodegroup': {
'nodegroupName': 'string',
'nodegroupArn': 'string',
'clusterName': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'releaseVersion': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'modifiedAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'UPDATING'|'DELETING'|'CREATE_FAILED'|'DELETE_FAILED'|'DEGRADED',
'capacityType': 'ON_DEMAND'|'SPOT',
'scalingConfig': {
'minSize': 123,
'maxSize': 123,
'desiredSize': 123
},
'instanceTypes': [
'string',
],
'subnets': [
'string',
],
'remoteAccess': {
'ec2SshKey': 'string',
'sourceSecurityGroups': [
'string',
]
},
'amiType': 'AL2_x86_64'|'AL2_x86_64_GPU'|'AL2_ARM_64'|'CUSTOM'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64'|'BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64_NVIDIA'|'BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64_NVIDIA'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2019_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_CORE_2022_x86_64'|'WINDOWS_FULL_2022_x86_64',
'nodeRole': 'string',
'labels': {
'string': 'string'
},
'taints': [
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
],
'resources': {
'autoScalingGroups': [
{
'name': 'string'
},
],
'remoteAccessSecurityGroup': 'string'
},
'diskSize': 123,
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AutoScalingGroupNotFound'|'AutoScalingGroupInvalidConfiguration'|'Ec2SecurityGroupNotFound'|'Ec2SecurityGroupDeletionFailure'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateNotFound'|'Ec2LaunchTemplateVersionMismatch'|'Ec2SubnetNotFound'|'Ec2SubnetInvalidConfiguration'|'IamInstanceProfileNotFound'|'IamLimitExceeded'|'IamNodeRoleNotFound'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'AsgInstanceLaunchFailures'|'InstanceLimitExceeded'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'AccessDenied'|'InternalFailure'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'Ec2SubnetMissingIpv6Assignment',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'updateConfig': {
'maxUnavailable': 123,
'maxUnavailablePercentage': 123
},
'launchTemplate': {
'name': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'id': 'string'
},
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
nodegroup (dict) --
The full description of your node group.
nodegroupName (string) --
The name associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
nodegroupArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) associated with the managed node group.
clusterName (string) --
The name of the cluster that the managed node group resides in.
version (string) --
The Kubernetes version of the managed node group.
releaseVersion (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is the AMI ID that was specified in the launch template. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI that the node group was deployed with.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was created.
modifiedAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the managed node group was last modified.
status (string) --
The current status of the managed node group.
capacityType (string) --
The capacity type of your managed node group.
scalingConfig (dict) --
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
minSize (integer) --
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.
maxSize (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
desiredSize (integer) --
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use Cluster Autoscaler, you shouldn't change the desiredSize value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.
Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from minSize in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When Cluster Autoscaler is used, the desiredSize parameter is altered by Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). Cluster Autoscaler doesn't scale a managed node group lower than minSize or higher than maxSize.
instanceTypes (list) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the instance type that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
subnets (list) --
The subnets that were specified for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
remoteAccess (dict) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the remote access configuration that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
ec2SshKey (string) --
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .
sourceSecurityGroups (list) --
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don't specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet ( 0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .
amiType (string) --
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is CUSTOM
. For node groups that weren't deployed using a launch template, this is the AMI type that was specified in the node group configuration.
nodeRole (string) --
The IAM role associated with your node group. The Amazon EKS node kubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies.
labels (dict) --
The Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in the node group.
Note
Only labels that are applied with the Amazon EKS API are shown here. There may be other Kubernetes labels applied to the nodes in this group.
taints (list) --
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group when they are created. Effect is one of No_Schedule
, Prefer_No_Schedule
, or No_Execute
. Kubernetes taints can be used together with tolerations to control how workloads are scheduled to your nodes. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
(dict) --
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
key (string) --
The key of the taint.
value (string) --
The value of the taint.
effect (string) --
The effect of the taint.
resources (dict) --
The resources associated with the node group, such as Auto Scaling groups and security groups for remote access.
autoScalingGroups (list) --
The Auto Scaling groups associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An Auto Scaling group that is associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
name (string) --
The name of the Auto Scaling group associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
remoteAccessSecurityGroup (string) --
The remote access security group associated with the node group. This security group controls SSH access to the nodes.
diskSize (integer) --
If the node group wasn't deployed with a launch template, then this is the disk size in the node group configuration. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is null
.
health (dict) --
The health status of the node group. If there are issues with your node group's health, they are listed here.
issues (list) --
Any issues that are associated with the node group.
(dict) --
An object representing an issue with an Amazon EKS resource.
code (string) --
A brief description of the error.
auto-assign public IP address
setting for the subnet. See Modifying the public IPv4 addressing attribute for your subnet in the Amazon VPC User Guide .message (string) --
The error message associated with the issue.
resourceIds (list) --
The Amazon Web Services resources that are afflicted by this issue.
updateConfig (dict) --
The node group update configuration.
maxUnavailable (integer) --
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes will be updated in parallel. This value or maxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.
maxUnavailablePercentage (integer) --
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes will be updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value or maxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
launchTemplate (dict) --
If a launch template was used to create the node group, then this is the launch template that was used.
name (string) --
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
version (string) --
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template's default version is used.
id (string) --
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
tags (dict) --
The metadata applied to the node group to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Node group tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the node group, such as the Amazon EC2 instances or subnets.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
describe_update
(**kwargs)¶Returns descriptive information about an update against your Amazon EKS cluster or associated managed node group or Amazon EKS add-on.
When the status of the update is Succeeded
, the update is complete. If an update fails, the status is Failed
, and an error detail explains the reason for the failure.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.describe_update(
name='string',
updateId='string',
nodegroupName='string',
addonName='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the update.
[REQUIRED]
The ID of the update to describe.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
The full description of the specified update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
disassociate_identity_provider_config
(**kwargs)¶Disassociates an identity provider configuration from a cluster. If you disassociate an identity provider from your cluster, users included in the provider can no longer access the cluster. However, you can still access the cluster with Amazon Web Services IAM users.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.disassociate_identity_provider_config(
clusterName='string',
identityProviderConfig={
'type': 'string',
'name': 'string'
},
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to disassociate an identity provider from.
[REQUIRED]
An object representing an identity provider configuration.
The type of the identity provider configuration. The only type available is oidc
.
The name of the identity provider configuration.
A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
get_paginator
(operation_name)¶Create a paginator for an operation.
create_foo
, and you'd normally invoke the
operation as client.create_foo(**kwargs)
, if the
create_foo
operation can be paginated, you can use the
call client.get_paginator("create_foo")
.client.can_paginate
method to
check if an operation is pageable.get_waiter
(waiter_name)¶Returns an object that can wait for some condition.
list_addons
(**kwargs)¶Lists the available add-ons.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_addons(
clusterName='string',
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
ListAddonsRequest
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListAddonsRequest
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListAddonsRequest
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListAddonsRequest
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value, if applicable.The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListAddonsRequest
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Note
This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is used only to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addons': [
'string',
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addons (list) --
A list of available add-ons.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListAddonsResponse
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Note
This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is used only to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
list_clusters
(**kwargs)¶Lists the Amazon EKS clusters in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Region.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_clusters(
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string',
include=[
'string',
]
)
ListClusters
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListClusters
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListClusters
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListClusters
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value if applicable.The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListClusters
request where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Note
This token should be treated as an opaque identifier that is used only to retrieve the next items in a list and not for other programmatic purposes.
Indicates whether external clusters are included in the returned list. Use ' all
' to return connected clusters, or blank to return only Amazon EKS clusters. ' all
' must be in lowercase otherwise an error occurs.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'clusters': [
'string',
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
clusters (list) --
A list of all of the clusters for your account in the specified Region.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value to include in a future ListClusters
request. When the results of a ListClusters
request exceed maxResults
, you can use this value to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null
when there are no more results to return.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
Examples
This example command lists all of your available clusters in your default region.
response = client.list_clusters(
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'clusters': [
'devel',
'prod',
],
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
list_fargate_profiles
(**kwargs)¶Lists the Fargate profiles associated with the specified cluster in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Region.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_fargate_profiles(
clusterName='string',
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that you would like to list Fargate profiles in.
ListFargateProfiles
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListFargateProfiles
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListFargateProfiles
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListFargateProfiles
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value if applicable.nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListFargateProfiles
request where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.dict
Response Syntax
{
'fargateProfileNames': [
'string',
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
fargateProfileNames (list) --
A list of all of the Fargate profiles associated with the specified cluster.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value to include in a future ListFargateProfiles
request. When the results of a ListFargateProfiles
request exceed maxResults
, you can use this value to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null
when there are no more results to return.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
list_identity_provider_configs
(**kwargs)¶A list of identity provider configurations.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_identity_provider_configs(
clusterName='string',
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The cluster name that you want to list identity provider configurations for.
ListIdentityProviderConfigs
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListIdentityProviderConfigs
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListIdentityProviderConfigs
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListIdentityProviderConfigs
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value, if applicable.nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated IdentityProviderConfigsRequest
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.dict
Response Syntax
{
'identityProviderConfigs': [
{
'type': 'string',
'name': 'string'
},
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
identityProviderConfigs (list) --
The identity provider configurations for the cluster.
(dict) --
An object representing an identity provider configuration.
type (string) --
The type of the identity provider configuration. The only type available is oidc
.
name (string) --
The name of the identity provider configuration.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListIdentityProviderConfigsResponse
where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
list_nodegroups
(**kwargs)¶Lists the Amazon EKS managed node groups associated with the specified cluster in your Amazon Web Services account in the specified Region. Self-managed node groups are not listed.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_nodegroups(
clusterName='string',
maxResults=123,
nextToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that you would like to list node groups in.
ListNodegroups
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListNodegroups
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListNodegroups
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListNodegroups
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value if applicable.nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListNodegroups
request where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.dict
Response Syntax
{
'nodegroups': [
'string',
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
nodegroups (list) --
A list of all of the node groups associated with the specified cluster.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value to include in a future ListNodegroups
request. When the results of a ListNodegroups
request exceed maxResults
, you can use this value to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null
when there are no more results to return.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
List the tags for an Amazon EKS resource.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_tags_for_resource(
resourceArn='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that identifies the resource for which to list the tags. Currently, the supported resources are Amazon EKS clusters and managed node groups.
{
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
}
}
Response Structure
The tags for the resource.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.BadRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.NotFoundException
Examples
This example lists all of the tags for the beta cluster.
response = client.list_tags_for_resource(
resourceArn='arn:aws:eks:us-west-2:012345678910:cluster/beta',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'tags': {
'aws:tag:domain': 'beta',
},
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}
list_updates
(**kwargs)¶Lists the updates associated with an Amazon EKS cluster or managed node group in your Amazon Web Services account, in the specified Region.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.list_updates(
name='string',
nodegroupName='string',
addonName='string',
nextToken='string',
maxResults=123
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster to list updates for.
nextToken
value returned from a previous paginated ListUpdates
request where maxResults
was used and the results exceeded the value of that parameter. Pagination continues from the end of the previous results that returned the nextToken
value.ListUpdates
in paginated output. When you use this parameter, ListUpdates
returns only maxResults
results in a single page along with a nextToken
response element. You can see the remaining results of the initial request by sending another ListUpdates
request with the returned nextToken
value. This value can be between 1 and 100. If you don't use this parameter, ListUpdates
returns up to 100 results and a nextToken
value if applicable.dict
Response Syntax
{
'updateIds': [
'string',
],
'nextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
updateIds (list) --
A list of all the updates for the specified cluster and Region.
nextToken (string) --
The nextToken
value to include in a future ListUpdates
request. When the results of a ListUpdates
request exceed maxResults
, you can use this value to retrieve the next page of results. This value is null
when there are no more results to return.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
register_cluster
(**kwargs)¶Connects a Kubernetes cluster to the Amazon EKS control plane.
Any Kubernetes cluster can be connected to the Amazon EKS control plane to view current information about the cluster and its nodes.
Cluster connection requires two steps. First, send a RegisterClusterRequest
to add it to the Amazon EKS control plane.
Second, a Manifest containing the activationID
and activationCode
must be applied to the Kubernetes cluster through it's native provider to provide visibility.
After the Manifest is updated and applied, then the connected cluster is visible to the Amazon EKS control plane. If the Manifest is not applied within three days, then the connected cluster will no longer be visible and must be deregistered. See DeregisterCluster.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.register_cluster(
name='string',
connectorConfig={
'roleArn': 'string',
'provider': 'EKS_ANYWHERE'|'ANTHOS'|'GKE'|'AKS'|'OPENSHIFT'|'TANZU'|'RANCHER'|'EC2'|'OTHER'
},
clientRequestToken='string',
tags={
'string': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
Define a unique name for this cluster for your Region.
[REQUIRED]
The configuration settings required to connect the Kubernetes cluster to the Amazon EKS control plane.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role that is authorized to request the connector configuration.
The cloud provider for the target cluster to connect.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value, both of which you define. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'cluster': {
'name': 'string',
'arn': 'string',
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'version': 'string',
'endpoint': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string',
'resourcesVpcConfig': {
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'clusterSecurityGroupId': 'string',
'vpcId': 'string',
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
'kubernetesNetworkConfig': {
'serviceIpv4Cidr': 'string',
'serviceIpv6Cidr': 'string',
'ipFamily': 'ipv4'|'ipv6'
},
'logging': {
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
'identity': {
'oidc': {
'issuer': 'string'
}
},
'status': 'CREATING'|'ACTIVE'|'DELETING'|'FAILED'|'UPDATING'|'PENDING',
'certificateAuthority': {
'data': 'string'
},
'clientRequestToken': 'string',
'platformVersion': 'string',
'tags': {
'string': 'string'
},
'encryptionConfig': [
{
'resources': [
'string',
],
'provider': {
'keyArn': 'string'
}
},
],
'connectorConfig': {
'activationId': 'string',
'activationCode': 'string',
'activationExpiry': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'provider': 'string',
'roleArn': 'string'
},
'id': 'string',
'health': {
'issues': [
{
'code': 'AccessDenied'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'InternalFailure'|'ResourceLimitExceeded'|'ResourceNotFound',
'message': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
},
'outpostConfig': {
'outpostArns': [
'string',
],
'controlPlaneInstanceType': 'string',
'controlPlanePlacement': {
'groupName': 'string'
}
}
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
cluster (dict) --
An object representing an Amazon EKS cluster.
name (string) --
The name of the cluster.
arn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the cluster was created.
version (string) --
The Kubernetes server version for the cluster.
endpoint (string) --
The endpoint for your Kubernetes API server.
roleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role that provides permissions for the Kubernetes control plane to make calls to Amazon Web Services API operations on your behalf.
resourcesVpcConfig (dict) --
The VPC configuration used by the cluster control plane. Amazon EKS VPC resources have specific requirements to work properly with Kubernetes. For more information, see Cluster VPC Considerations and Cluster Security Group Considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
subnetIds (list) --
The subnets associated with your cluster.
securityGroupIds (list) --
The security groups associated with the cross-account elastic network interfaces that are used to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
clusterSecurityGroupId (string) --
The cluster security group that was created by Amazon EKS for the cluster. Managed node groups use this security group for control-plane-to-data-plane communication.
vpcId (string) --
The VPC associated with your cluster.
endpointPublicAccess (boolean) --
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS public API server endpoint is disabled, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests that originate from within the cluster VPC.
endpointPrivateAccess (boolean) --
This parameter indicates whether the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled. If the Amazon EKS private API server endpoint is enabled, Kubernetes API requests that originate from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint instead of traversing the internet. If this value is disabled and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
publicAccessCidrs (list) --
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the listed CIDR blocks is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that the necessary CIDR blocks are listed. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
kubernetesNetworkConfig (dict) --
The Kubernetes network configuration for the cluster.
serviceIpv4Cidr (string) --
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16
or 172.20.0.0/16
CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.
serviceIpv6Cidr (string) --
The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range ( fc00::/7
) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.
ipFamily (string) --
The IP family used to assign Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4
, unless you have a 1.21
or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6
when you created the cluster.
logging (dict) --
The logging configuration for your cluster.
clusterLogging (list) --
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
(dict) --
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
types (list) --
The available cluster control plane log types.
enabled (boolean) --
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
identity (dict) --
The identity provider information for the cluster.
oidc (dict) --
An object representing the OpenID Connect identity provider information.
issuer (string) --
The issuer URL for the OIDC identity provider.
status (string) --
The current status of the cluster.
certificateAuthority (dict) --
The certificate-authority-data
for your cluster.
data (string) --
The Base64-encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster. Add this to the certificate-authority-data
section of the kubeconfig
file for your cluster.
clientRequestToken (string) --
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
platformVersion (string) --
The platform version of your Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Platform Versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
tags (dict) --
The metadata that you apply to the cluster to assist with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Cluster tags do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster.
encryptionConfig (list) --
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
(dict) --
The encryption configuration for the cluster.
resources (list) --
Specifies the resources to be encrypted. The only supported value is "secrets".
provider (dict) --
Key Management Service (KMS) key. Either the ARN or the alias can be used.
keyArn (string) --
Amazon Resource Name (ARN) or alias of the KMS key. The KMS key must be symmetric, created in the same region as the cluster, and if the KMS key was created in a different account, the user must have access to the KMS key. For more information, see Allowing Users in Other Accounts to Use a KMS key in the Key Management Service Developer Guide .
connectorConfig (dict) --
The configuration used to connect to a cluster for registration.
activationId (string) --
A unique ID associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
activationCode (string) --
A unique code associated with the cluster for registration purposes.
activationExpiry (datetime) --
The expiration time of the connected cluster. The cluster's YAML file must be applied through the native provider.
provider (string) --
The cluster's cloud service provider.
roleArn (string) --
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the role to communicate with services from the connected Kubernetes cluster.
id (string) --
The ID of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This property isn't available for an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
health (dict) --
An object representing the health of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
issues (list) --
An object representing the health issues of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost.
(dict) --
An issue with your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. You can't use this API with an Amazon EKS cluster on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
code (string) --
The error code of the issue.
message (string) --
A description of the issue.
resourceIds (list) --
The resource IDs that the issue relates to.
outpostConfig (dict) --
An object representing the configuration of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. This object isn't available for clusters on the Amazon Web Services cloud.
outpostArns (list) --
The ARN of the Outpost that you specified for use with your local Amazon EKS cluster on Outposts.
controlPlaneInstanceType (string) --
The Amazon EC2 instance type used for the control plane. The instance type is the same for all control plane instances.
controlPlanePlacement (dict) --
An object representing the placement configuration for all the control plane instances of your local Amazon EKS cluster on an Amazon Web Services Outpost. For more information, see Capacity considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
groupName (string) --
The name of the placement group for the Kubernetes control plane instances.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceLimitExceededException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
EKS.Client.exceptions.AccessDeniedException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourcePropagationDelayException
tag_resource
(**kwargs)¶Associates the specified tags to a resource with the specified resourceArn
. If existing tags on a resource are not specified in the request parameters, they are not changed. When a resource is deleted, the tags associated with that resource are deleted as well. Tags that you create for Amazon EKS resources do not propagate to any other resources associated with the cluster. For example, if you tag a cluster with this operation, that tag does not automatically propagate to the subnets and nodes associated with the cluster.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.tag_resource(
resourceArn='string',
tags={
'string': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource to which to add tags. Currently, the supported resources are Amazon EKS clusters and managed node groups.
[REQUIRED]
The tags to add to the resource. A tag is an array of key-value pairs.
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.BadRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.NotFoundException
untag_resource
(**kwargs)¶Deletes specified tags from a resource.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.untag_resource(
resourceArn='string',
tagKeys=[
'string',
]
)
[REQUIRED]
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the resource from which to delete tags. Currently, the supported resources are Amazon EKS clusters and managed node groups.
[REQUIRED]
The keys of the tags to be removed.
dict
Response Syntax
{}
Response Structure
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.BadRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.NotFoundException
update_addon
(**kwargs)¶Updates an Amazon EKS add-on.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_addon(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string',
addonVersion='string',
serviceAccountRoleArn='string',
resolveConflicts='OVERWRITE'|'NONE'|'PRESERVE',
clientRequestToken='string',
configurationValues='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names returned by ListAddons.
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of an existing IAM role to bind to the add-on's service account. The role must be assigned the IAM permissions required by the add-on. If you don't specify an existing IAM role, then the add-on uses the permissions assigned to the node IAM role. For more information, see Amazon EKS node IAM role in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
To specify an existing IAM role, you must have an IAM OpenID Connect (OIDC) provider created for your cluster. For more information, see Enabling IAM roles for service accounts on your cluster in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
How to resolve field value conflicts for an Amazon EKS add-on if you've changed a value from the Amazon EKS default value. Conflicts are handled based on the option you choose:
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
update_cluster_config
(**kwargs)¶Updates an Amazon EKS cluster configuration. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
You can use this API operation to enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS Cluster Control Plane Logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see CloudWatch Pricing.
You can also use this API operation to enable or disable public and private access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. By default, public access is enabled, and private access is disabled. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Warning
You can't update the subnets or security group IDs for an existing cluster.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_cluster_config(
name='string',
resourcesVpcConfig={
'subnetIds': [
'string',
],
'securityGroupIds': [
'string',
],
'endpointPublicAccess': True|False,
'endpointPrivateAccess': True|False,
'publicAccessCidrs': [
'string',
]
},
logging={
'clusterLogging': [
{
'types': [
'api'|'audit'|'authenticator'|'controllerManager'|'scheduler',
],
'enabled': True|False
},
]
},
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster to update.
An object representing the VPC configuration to use for an Amazon EKS cluster.
Specify subnets for your Amazon EKS nodes. Amazon EKS creates cross-account elastic network interfaces in these subnets to allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane.
Specify one or more security groups for the cross-account elastic network interfaces that Amazon EKS creates to use that allow communication between your nodes and the Kubernetes control plane. If you don't specify any security groups, then familiarize yourself with the difference between Amazon EKS defaults for clusters deployed with Kubernetes. For more information, see Amazon EKS security group considerations in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Set this value to false
to disable public access to your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. If you disable public access, your cluster's Kubernetes API server can only receive requests from within the cluster VPC. The default value for this parameter is true
, which enables public access for your Kubernetes API server. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Set this value to true
to enable private access for your cluster's Kubernetes API server endpoint. If you enable private access, Kubernetes API requests from within your cluster's VPC use the private VPC endpoint. The default value for this parameter is false
, which disables private access for your Kubernetes API server. If you disable private access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that publicAccessCidrs
includes the necessary CIDR blocks for communication with the nodes or Fargate pods. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The CIDR blocks that are allowed access to your cluster's public Kubernetes API server endpoint. Communication to the endpoint from addresses outside of the CIDR blocks that you specify is denied. The default value is 0.0.0.0/0
. If you've disabled private endpoint access and you have nodes or Fargate pods in the cluster, then ensure that you specify the necessary CIDR blocks. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster endpoint access control in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Enable or disable exporting the Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster to CloudWatch Logs. By default, cluster control plane logs aren't exported to CloudWatch Logs. For more information, see Amazon EKS cluster control plane logs in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
Note
CloudWatch Logs ingestion, archive storage, and data scanning rates apply to exported control plane logs. For more information, see CloudWatch Pricing.
The cluster control plane logging configuration for your cluster.
An object representing the enabled or disabled Kubernetes control plane logs for your cluster.
The available cluster control plane log types.
If a log type is enabled, that log type exports its control plane logs to CloudWatch Logs. If a log type isn't enabled, that log type doesn't export its control plane logs. Each individual log type can be enabled or disabled independently.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
update_cluster_version
(**kwargs)¶Updates an Amazon EKS cluster to the specified Kubernetes version. Your cluster continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your cluster update with the DescribeUpdate API operation.
Cluster updates are asynchronous, and they should finish within a few minutes. During an update, the cluster status moves to UPDATING
(this status transition is eventually consistent). When the update is complete (either Failed
or Successful
), the cluster status moves to Active
.
If your cluster has managed node groups attached to it, all of your node groups’ Kubernetes versions must match the cluster’s Kubernetes version in order to update the cluster to a new Kubernetes version.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_cluster_version(
name='string',
version='string',
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster to update.
[REQUIRED]
The desired Kubernetes version following a successful update.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
The full description of the specified update
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
update_nodegroup_config
(**kwargs)¶Updates an Amazon EKS managed node group configuration. Your node group continues to function during the update. The response output includes an update ID that you can use to track the status of your node group update with the DescribeUpdate API operation. Currently you can update the Kubernetes labels for a node group or the scaling configuration.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_nodegroup_config(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string',
labels={
'addOrUpdateLabels': {
'string': 'string'
},
'removeLabels': [
'string',
]
},
taints={
'addOrUpdateTaints': [
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
],
'removeTaints': [
{
'key': 'string',
'value': 'string',
'effect': 'NO_SCHEDULE'|'NO_EXECUTE'|'PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE'
},
]
},
scalingConfig={
'minSize': 123,
'maxSize': 123,
'desiredSize': 123
},
updateConfig={
'maxUnavailable': 123,
'maxUnavailablePercentage': 123
},
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that the managed node group resides in.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the managed node group to update.
The Kubernetes labels to be applied to the nodes in the node group after the update.
Kubernetes labels to be added or updated.
Kubernetes labels to be removed.
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group after the update. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
Kubernetes taints to be added or updated.
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
The key of the taint.
The value of the taint.
The effect of the taint.
Kubernetes taints to remove.
A property that allows a node to repel a set of pods. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups.
The key of the taint.
The value of the taint.
The effect of the taint.
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group after the update.
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use Cluster Autoscaler, you shouldn't change the desiredSize value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.
Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from minSize in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When Cluster Autoscaler is used, the desiredSize parameter is altered by Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). Cluster Autoscaler doesn't scale a managed node group lower than minSize or higher than maxSize.
The node group update configuration.
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes will be updated in parallel. This value or maxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes will be updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value or maxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
update_nodegroup_version
(**kwargs)¶Updates the Kubernetes version or AMI version of an Amazon EKS managed node group.
You can update a node group using a launch template only if the node group was originally deployed with a launch template. If you need to update a custom AMI in a node group that was deployed with a launch template, then update your custom AMI, specify the new ID in a new version of the launch template, and then update the node group to the new version of the launch template.
If you update without a launch template, then you can update to the latest available AMI version of a node group's current Kubernetes version by not specifying a Kubernetes version in the request. You can update to the latest AMI version of your cluster's current Kubernetes version by specifying your cluster's Kubernetes version in the request. For information about Linux versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Amazon Linux AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide . For information about Windows versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Windows AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
You cannot roll back a node group to an earlier Kubernetes version or AMI version.
When a node in a managed node group is terminated due to a scaling action or update, the pods in that node are drained first. Amazon EKS attempts to drain the nodes gracefully and will fail if it is unable to do so. You can force
the update if Amazon EKS is unable to drain the nodes as a result of a pod disruption budget issue.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_nodegroup_version(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string',
version='string',
releaseVersion='string',
launchTemplate={
'name': 'string',
'version': 'string',
'id': 'string'
},
force=True|False,
clientRequestToken='string'
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that is associated with the managed node group to update.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the managed node group to update.
launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don't specify version
, or the node group update will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .The AMI version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI to use for the update. By default, the latest available AMI version for the node group's Kubernetes version is used. For information about Linux versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Amazon Linux AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide . Amazon EKS managed node groups support the November 2022 and later releases of the Windows AMIs. For information about Windows versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Windows AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
If you specify launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don't specify releaseVersion
, or the node group update will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Launch template support in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
An object representing a node group's launch template specification. You can only update a node group using a launch template if the node group was originally deployed with a launch template.
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template's default version is used.
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
Unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
This field is autopopulated if not provided.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'update': {
'id': 'string',
'status': 'InProgress'|'Failed'|'Cancelled'|'Successful',
'type': 'VersionUpdate'|'EndpointAccessUpdate'|'LoggingUpdate'|'ConfigUpdate'|'AssociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'DisassociateIdentityProviderConfig'|'AssociateEncryptionConfig'|'AddonUpdate',
'params': [
{
'type': 'Version'|'PlatformVersion'|'EndpointPrivateAccess'|'EndpointPublicAccess'|'ClusterLogging'|'DesiredSize'|'LabelsToAdd'|'LabelsToRemove'|'TaintsToAdd'|'TaintsToRemove'|'MaxSize'|'MinSize'|'ReleaseVersion'|'PublicAccessCidrs'|'LaunchTemplateName'|'LaunchTemplateVersion'|'IdentityProviderConfig'|'EncryptionConfig'|'AddonVersion'|'ServiceAccountRoleArn'|'ResolveConflicts'|'MaxUnavailable'|'MaxUnavailablePercentage',
'value': 'string'
},
],
'createdAt': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
'errors': [
{
'errorCode': 'SubnetNotFound'|'SecurityGroupNotFound'|'EniLimitReached'|'IpNotAvailable'|'AccessDenied'|'OperationNotPermitted'|'VpcIdNotFound'|'Unknown'|'NodeCreationFailure'|'PodEvictionFailure'|'InsufficientFreeAddresses'|'ClusterUnreachable'|'InsufficientNumberOfReplicas'|'ConfigurationConflict'|'AdmissionRequestDenied'|'UnsupportedAddonModification'|'K8sResourceNotFound',
'errorMessage': 'string',
'resourceIds': [
'string',
]
},
]
}
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
update (dict) --
An object representing an asynchronous update.
id (string) --
A UUID that is used to track the update.
status (string) --
The current status of the update.
type (string) --
The type of the update.
params (list) --
A key-value map that contains the parameters associated with the update.
(dict) --
An object representing the details of an update request.
type (string) --
The keys associated with an update request.
value (string) --
The value of the keys submitted as part of an update request.
createdAt (datetime) --
The Unix epoch timestamp in seconds for when the update was created.
errors (list) --
Any errors associated with a Failed
update.
(dict) --
An object representing an error when an asynchronous operation fails.
errorCode (string) --
A brief description of the error.
errorMessage (string) --
A more complete description of the error.
resourceIds (list) --
An optional field that contains the resource IDs associated with the error.
Exceptions
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ClientException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ServerException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceInUseException
EKS.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
EKS.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
The available paginators are:
EKS.Paginator.DescribeAddonVersions
EKS.Paginator.ListAddons
EKS.Paginator.ListClusters
EKS.Paginator.ListFargateProfiles
EKS.Paginator.ListIdentityProviderConfigs
EKS.Paginator.ListNodegroups
EKS.Paginator.ListUpdates
EKS.Paginator.
DescribeAddonVersions
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('describe_addon_versions')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.describe_addon_versions()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
kubernetesVersion='string',
addonName='string',
types=[
'string',
],
publishers=[
'string',
],
owners=[
'string',
],
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
The type of the add-on. For valid types
, don't specify a value for this property.
The publisher of the add-on. For valid publishers
, don't specify a value for this property.
The owner of the add-on. For valid owners
, don't specify a value for this property.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addons': [
{
'addonName': 'string',
'type': 'string',
'addonVersions': [
{
'addonVersion': 'string',
'architecture': [
'string',
],
'compatibilities': [
{
'clusterVersion': 'string',
'platformVersions': [
'string',
],
'defaultVersion': True|False
},
],
'requiresConfiguration': True|False
},
],
'publisher': 'string',
'owner': 'string',
'marketplaceInformation': {
'productId': 'string',
'productUrl': 'string'
}
},
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addons (list) --
The list of available versions with Kubernetes version compatibility and other properties.
(dict) --
Information about an add-on.
addonName (string) --
The name of the add-on.
type (string) --
The type of the add-on.
addonVersions (list) --
An object representing information about available add-on versions and compatible Kubernetes versions.
(dict) --
Information about an add-on version.
addonVersion (string) --
The version of the add-on.
architecture (list) --
The architectures that the version supports.
compatibilities (list) --
An object representing the compatibilities of a version.
(dict) --
Compatibility information.
clusterVersion (string) --
The supported Kubernetes version of the cluster.
platformVersions (list) --
The supported compute platform.
defaultVersion (boolean) --
The supported default version.
requiresConfiguration (boolean) --
Whether the add-on requires configuration.
publisher (string) --
The publisher of the add-on.
owner (string) --
The owner of the add-on.
marketplaceInformation (dict) --
Information about the add-on from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productId (string) --
The product ID from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
productUrl (string) --
The product URL from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListAddons
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_addons')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_addons()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
clusterName='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'addons': [
'string',
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
addons (list) --
A list of available add-ons.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListClusters
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_clusters')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_clusters()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
include=[
'string',
],
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
Indicates whether external clusters are included in the returned list. Use ' all
' to return connected clusters, or blank to return only Amazon EKS clusters. ' all
' must be in lowercase otherwise an error occurs.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'clusters': [
'string',
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
clusters (list) --
A list of all of the clusters for your account in the specified Region.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListFargateProfiles
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_fargate_profiles')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_fargate_profiles()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
clusterName='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that you would like to list Fargate profiles in.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'fargateProfileNames': [
'string',
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
fargateProfileNames (list) --
A list of all of the Fargate profiles associated with the specified cluster.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListIdentityProviderConfigs
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_identity_provider_configs')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_identity_provider_configs()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
clusterName='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The cluster name that you want to list identity provider configurations for.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'identityProviderConfigs': [
{
'type': 'string',
'name': 'string'
},
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
identityProviderConfigs (list) --
The identity provider configurations for the cluster.
(dict) --
An object representing an identity provider configuration.
type (string) --
The type of the identity provider configuration. The only type available is oidc
.
name (string) --
The name of the identity provider configuration.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListNodegroups
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_nodegroups')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_nodegroups()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
clusterName='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster that you would like to list node groups in.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'nodegroups': [
'string',
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
nodegroups (list) --
A list of all of the node groups associated with the specified cluster.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
EKS.Paginator.
ListUpdates
¶paginator = client.get_paginator('list_updates')
paginate
(**kwargs)¶Creates an iterator that will paginate through responses from EKS.Client.list_updates()
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response_iterator = paginator.paginate(
name='string',
nodegroupName='string',
addonName='string',
PaginationConfig={
'MaxItems': 123,
'PageSize': 123,
'StartingToken': 'string'
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster to list updates for.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control pagination.
The total number of items to return. If the total number of items available is more than the value specified in max-items then a NextToken
will be provided in the output that you can use to resume pagination.
The size of each page.
A token to specify where to start paginating. This is the NextToken
from a previous response.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'updateIds': [
'string',
],
'NextToken': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
updateIds (list) --
A list of all the updates for the specified cluster and Region.
NextToken (string) --
A token to resume pagination.
The available waiters are:
EKS.Waiter.AddonActive
EKS.Waiter.AddonDeleted
EKS.Waiter.ClusterActive
EKS.Waiter.ClusterDeleted
EKS.Waiter.FargateProfileActive
EKS.Waiter.FargateProfileDeleted
EKS.Waiter.NodegroupActive
EKS.Waiter.NodegroupDeleted
EKS.Waiter.
AddonActive
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('addon_active')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_addon()
every 10 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 60 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names returned by ListAddons.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 10
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 60
None
EKS.Waiter.
AddonDeleted
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('addon_deleted')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_addon()
every 10 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 60 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
addonName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the add-on. The name must match one of the names returned by ListAddons.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 10
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 60
None
EKS.Waiter.
ClusterActive
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('cluster_active')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_cluster()
every 30 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 40 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
name='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 30
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 40
None
EKS.Waiter.
ClusterDeleted
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('cluster_deleted')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_cluster()
every 30 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 40 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
name='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the cluster to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 30
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 40
None
EKS.Waiter.
FargateProfileActive
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('fargate_profile_active')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_fargate_profile()
every 10 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 60 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
fargateProfileName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the Fargate profile.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Fargate profile to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 10
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 60
None
EKS.Waiter.
FargateProfileDeleted
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('fargate_profile_deleted')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_fargate_profile()
every 30 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 60 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
fargateProfileName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the Fargate profile.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Fargate profile to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 30
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 60
None
EKS.Waiter.
NodegroupActive
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('nodegroup_active')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_nodegroup()
every 30 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 80 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the node group.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the node group to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 30
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 80
None
EKS.Waiter.
NodegroupDeleted
¶waiter = client.get_waiter('nodegroup_deleted')
wait
(**kwargs)¶Polls EKS.Client.describe_nodegroup()
every 30 seconds until a successful state is reached. An error is returned after 40 failed checks.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
waiter.wait(
clusterName='string',
nodegroupName='string',
WaiterConfig={
'Delay': 123,
'MaxAttempts': 123
}
)
[REQUIRED]
The name of the Amazon EKS cluster associated with the node group.
[REQUIRED]
The name of the node group to describe.
A dictionary that provides parameters to control waiting behavior.
The amount of time in seconds to wait between attempts. Default: 30
The maximum number of attempts to be made. Default: 40
None