update_server
(**kwargs)¶Updates the file transfer protocol-enabled server's properties after that server has been created.
The UpdateServer
call returns the ServerId
of the server you updated.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.update_server(
Certificate='string',
ProtocolDetails={
'PassiveIp': 'string',
'TlsSessionResumptionMode': 'DISABLED'|'ENABLED'|'ENFORCED',
'SetStatOption': 'DEFAULT'|'ENABLE_NO_OP',
'As2Transports': [
'HTTP',
]
},
EndpointDetails={
'AddressAllocationIds': [
'string',
],
'SubnetIds': [
'string',
],
'VpcEndpointId': 'string',
'VpcId': 'string',
'SecurityGroupIds': [
'string',
]
},
EndpointType='PUBLIC'|'VPC'|'VPC_ENDPOINT',
HostKey='string',
IdentityProviderDetails={
'Url': 'string',
'InvocationRole': 'string',
'DirectoryId': 'string',
'Function': 'string'
},
LoggingRole='string',
PostAuthenticationLoginBanner='string',
PreAuthenticationLoginBanner='string',
Protocols=[
'SFTP'|'FTP'|'FTPS'|'AS2',
],
SecurityPolicyName='string',
ServerId='string',
WorkflowDetails={
'OnUpload': [
{
'WorkflowId': 'string',
'ExecutionRole': 'string'
},
],
'OnPartialUpload': [
{
'WorkflowId': 'string',
'ExecutionRole': 'string'
},
]
}
)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon Web ServicesCertificate Manager (ACM) certificate. Required when Protocols
is set to FTPS
.
To request a new public certificate, see Request a public certificate in the Amazon Web ServicesCertificate Manager User Guide .
To import an existing certificate into ACM, see Importing certificates into ACM in the Amazon Web ServicesCertificate Manager User Guide .
To request a private certificate to use FTPS through private IP addresses, see Request a private certificate in the Amazon Web ServicesCertificate Manager User Guide .
Certificates with the following cryptographic algorithms and key sizes are supported:
Note
The certificate must be a valid SSL/TLS X.509 version 3 certificate with FQDN or IP address specified and information about the issuer.
The protocol settings that are configured for your server.
PassiveIp
parameter. Enter a single dotted-quad IPv4 address, such as the external IP address of a firewall, router, or load balancer.SETSTAT
command on a file that you are uploading to an Amazon S3 bucket, use the SetStatOption
parameter. To have the Transfer Family server ignore the SETSTAT
command and upload files without needing to make any changes to your SFTP client, set the value to ENABLE_NO_OP
. If you set the SetStatOption
parameter to ENABLE_NO_OP
, Transfer Family generates a log entry to Amazon CloudWatch Logs, so that you can determine when the client is making a SETSTAT
call.TlsSessionResumptionMode
parameter.As2Transports
indicates the transport method for the AS2 messages. Currently, only HTTP is supported.Indicates passive mode, for FTP and FTPS protocols. Enter a single IPv4 address, such as the public IP address of a firewall, router, or load balancer. For example:
aws transfer update-server --protocol-details PassiveIp=0.0.0.0
Replace 0.0.0.0
in the example above with the actual IP address you want to use.
Note
If you change thePassiveIp
value, you must stop and then restart your Transfer Family server for the change to take effect. For details on using passive mode (PASV) in a NAT environment, see Configuring your FTPS server behind a firewall or NAT with Transfer Family.
Special values
The AUTO
and 0.0.0.0
are special values for the PassiveIp
parameter. The value PassiveIp=AUTO
is assigned by default to FTP and FTPS type servers. In this case, the server automatically responds with one of the endpoint IPs within the PASV response. PassiveIp=0.0.0.0
has a more unique application for its usage. For example, if you have a High Availability (HA) Network Load Balancer (NLB) environment, where you have 3 subnets, you can only specify a single IP address using the PassiveIp
parameter. This reduces the effectiveness of having High Availability. In this case, you can specify PassiveIp=0.0.0.0
. This tells the client to use the same IP address as the Control connection and utilize all AZs for their connections. Note, however, that not all FTP clients support the PassiveIp=0.0.0.0
response. FileZilla and WinSCP do support it. If you are using other clients, check to see if your client supports the PassiveIp=0.0.0.0
response.
A property used with Transfer Family servers that use the FTPS protocol. TLS Session Resumption provides a mechanism to resume or share a negotiated secret key between the control and data connection for an FTPS session. TlsSessionResumptionMode
determines whether or not the server resumes recent, negotiated sessions through a unique session ID. This property is available during CreateServer
and UpdateServer
calls. If a TlsSessionResumptionMode
value is not specified during CreateServer
, it is set to ENFORCED
by default.
DISABLED
: the server does not process TLS session resumption client requests and creates a new TLS session for each request.ENABLED
: the server processes and accepts clients that are performing TLS session resumption. The server doesn't reject client data connections that do not perform the TLS session resumption client processing.ENFORCED
: the server processes and accepts clients that are performing TLS session resumption. The server rejects client data connections that do not perform the TLS session resumption client processing. Before you set the value to ENFORCED
, test your clients.Note
Not all FTPS clients perform TLS session resumption. So, if you choose to enforce TLS session resumption, you prevent any connections from FTPS clients that don't perform the protocol negotiation. To determine whether or not you can use the ENFORCED
value, you need to test your clients.
Use the SetStatOption
to ignore the error that is generated when the client attempts to use SETSTAT
on a file you are uploading to an S3 bucket.
Some SFTP file transfer clients can attempt to change the attributes of remote files, including timestamp and permissions, using commands, such as SETSTAT
when uploading the file. However, these commands are not compatible with object storage systems, such as Amazon S3. Due to this incompatibility, file uploads from these clients can result in errors even when the file is otherwise successfully uploaded.
Set the value to ENABLE_NO_OP
to have the Transfer Family server ignore the SETSTAT
command, and upload files without needing to make any changes to your SFTP client. While the SetStatOption
ENABLE_NO_OP
setting ignores the error, it does generate a log entry in Amazon CloudWatch Logs, so you can determine when the client is making a SETSTAT
call.
Note
If you want to preserve the original timestamp for your file, and modify other file attributes using SETSTAT
, you can use Amazon EFS as backend storage with Transfer Family.
Indicates the transport method for the AS2 messages. Currently, only HTTP is supported.
The virtual private cloud (VPC) endpoint settings that are configured for your server. When you host your endpoint within your VPC, you can make your endpoint accessible only to resources within your VPC, or you can attach Elastic IP addresses and make your endpoint accessible to clients over the internet. Your VPC's default security groups are automatically assigned to your endpoint.
A list of address allocation IDs that are required to attach an Elastic IP address to your server's endpoint.
Note
This property can only be set when EndpointType
is set to VPC
and it is only valid in the UpdateServer
API.
A list of subnet IDs that are required to host your server endpoint in your VPC.
Note
This property can only be set when EndpointType
is set to VPC
.
The identifier of the VPC endpoint.
Note
This property can only be set when EndpointType
is set to VPC_ENDPOINT
.
For more information, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/transfer/latest/userguide/create-server-in-vpc.html#deprecate-vpc-endpoint.
The VPC identifier of the VPC in which a server's endpoint will be hosted.
Note
This property can only be set when EndpointType
is set to VPC
.
A list of security groups IDs that are available to attach to your server's endpoint.
Note
This property can only be set when EndpointType
is set to VPC
.
You can edit the SecurityGroupIds
property in the UpdateServer API only if you are changing the EndpointType
from PUBLIC
or VPC_ENDPOINT
to VPC
. To change security groups associated with your server's VPC endpoint after creation, use the Amazon EC2 ModifyVpcEndpoint API.
The type of endpoint that you want your server to use. You can choose to make your server's endpoint publicly accessible (PUBLIC) or host it inside your VPC. With an endpoint that is hosted in a VPC, you can restrict access to your server and resources only within your VPC or choose to make it internet facing by attaching Elastic IP addresses directly to it.
Note
After May 19, 2021, you won't be able to create a server using EndpointType=VPC_ENDPOINT
in your Amazon Web Servicesaccount if your account hasn't already done so before May 19, 2021. If you have already created servers with EndpointType=VPC_ENDPOINT
in your Amazon Web Servicesaccount on or before May 19, 2021, you will not be affected. After this date, use EndpointType
= VPC
.
For more information, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/transfer/latest/userguide/create-server-in-vpc.html#deprecate-vpc-endpoint.
It is recommended that you use VPC
as the EndpointType
. With this endpoint type, you have the option to directly associate up to three Elastic IPv4 addresses (BYO IP included) with your server's endpoint and use VPC security groups to restrict traffic by the client's public IP address. This is not possible with EndpointType
set to VPC_ENDPOINT
.
The RSA, ECDSA, or ED25519 private key to use for your SFTP-enabled server. You can add multiple host keys, in case you want to rotate keys, or have a set of active keys that use different algorithms.
Use the following command to generate an RSA 2048 bit key with no passphrase:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 -N "" -m PEM -f my-new-server-key
.
Use a minimum value of 2048 for the -b
option. You can create a stronger key by using 3072 or 4096.
Use the following command to generate an ECDSA 256 bit key with no passphrase:
ssh-keygen -t ecdsa -b 256 -N "" -m PEM -f my-new-server-key
.
Valid values for the -b
option for ECDSA are 256, 384, and 521.
Use the following command to generate an ED25519 key with no passphrase:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -N "" -f my-new-server-key
.
For all of these commands, you can replace my-new-server-key with a string of your choice.
Warning
If you aren't planning to migrate existing users from an existing SFTP-enabled server to a new server, don't update the host key. Accidentally changing a server's host key can be disruptive.
For more information, see Manage host keys for your SFTP-enabled server in the Transfer Family User Guide .
An array containing all of the information required to call a customer's authentication API method.
Provides the location of the service endpoint used to authenticate users.
Provides the type of InvocationRole
used to authenticate the user account.
The identifier of the Directory Service directory that you want to stop sharing.
The ARN for a lambda function to use for the Identity provider.
Specifies a string to display when users connect to a server. This string is displayed after the user authenticates.
Note
The SFTP protocol does not support post-authentication display banners.
Specifies a string to display when users connect to a server. This string is displayed before the user authenticates. For example, the following banner displays details about using the system:
This system is for the use of authorized users only. Individuals using this computer system without authority, or in excess of their authority, are subject to having all of their activities on this system monitored and recorded by system personnel.
Specifies the file transfer protocol or protocols over which your file transfer protocol client can connect to your server's endpoint. The available protocols are:
SFTP
(Secure Shell (SSH) File Transfer Protocol): File transfer over SSHFTPS
(File Transfer Protocol Secure): File transfer with TLS encryptionFTP
(File Transfer Protocol): Unencrypted file transferAS2
(Applicability Statement 2): used for transporting structured business-to-business dataNote
FTPS
, you must choose a certificate stored in Certificate Manager (ACM) which is used to identify your server when clients connect to it over FTPS.Protocol
includes either FTP
or FTPS
, then the EndpointType
must be VPC
and the IdentityProviderType
must be either AWS_DIRECTORY_SERVICE
, AWS_LAMBDA
, or API_GATEWAY
.Protocol
includes FTP
, then AddressAllocationIds
cannot be associated.Protocol
is set only to SFTP
, the EndpointType
can be set to PUBLIC
and the IdentityProviderType
can be set any of the supported identity types: SERVICE_MANAGED
, AWS_DIRECTORY_SERVICE
, AWS_LAMBDA
, or API_GATEWAY
.Protocol
includes AS2
, then the EndpointType
must be VPC
, and domain must be Amazon S3.[REQUIRED]
A system-assigned unique identifier for a server instance that the user account is assigned to.
Specifies the workflow ID for the workflow to assign and the execution role that's used for executing the workflow.
In addition to a workflow to execute when a file is uploaded completely, WorkflowDetails
can also contain a workflow ID (and execution role) for a workflow to execute on partial upload. A partial upload occurs when a file is open when the session disconnects.
To remove an associated workflow from a server, you can provide an empty OnUpload
object, as in the following example.
aws transfer update-server --server-id s-01234567890abcdef --workflow-details '{"OnUpload":[]}'
A trigger that starts a workflow: the workflow begins to execute after a file is uploaded.
To remove an associated workflow from a server, you can provide an empty OnUpload
object, as in the following example.
aws transfer update-server --server-id s-01234567890abcdef --workflow-details '{"OnUpload":[]}'
Specifies the workflow ID for the workflow to assign and the execution role that's used for executing the workflow.
In addition to a workflow to execute when a file is uploaded completely, WorkflowDetails
can also contain a workflow ID (and execution role) for a workflow to execute on partial upload. A partial upload occurs when a file is open when the session disconnects.
A unique identifier for the workflow.
Includes the necessary permissions for S3, EFS, and Lambda operations that Transfer can assume, so that all workflow steps can operate on the required resources
A trigger that starts a workflow if a file is only partially uploaded. You can attach a workflow to a server that executes whenever there is a partial upload.
A partial upload occurs when a file is open when the session disconnects.
Specifies the workflow ID for the workflow to assign and the execution role that's used for executing the workflow.
In addition to a workflow to execute when a file is uploaded completely, WorkflowDetails
can also contain a workflow ID (and execution role) for a workflow to execute on partial upload. A partial upload occurs when a file is open when the session disconnects.
A unique identifier for the workflow.
Includes the necessary permissions for S3, EFS, and Lambda operations that Transfer can assume, so that all workflow steps can operate on the required resources
dict
Response Syntax
{
'ServerId': 'string'
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
ServerId (string) --
A system-assigned unique identifier for a server that the user account is assigned to.
Exceptions
Transfer.Client.exceptions.AccessDeniedException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.ServiceUnavailableException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.ConflictException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.InternalServiceError
Transfer.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.ResourceExistsException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
Transfer.Client.exceptions.ThrottlingException