EC2.ServiceResource.
register_image
(**kwargs)¶Registers an AMI. When you're creating an AMI, this is the final step you must complete before you can launch an instance from the AMI. For more information about creating AMIs, see Create your own AMI in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide .
Note
For Amazon EBS-backed instances, CreateImage creates and registers the AMI in a single request, so you don't have to register the AMI yourself. We recommend that you always use CreateImage unless you have a specific reason to use RegisterImage.
If needed, you can deregister an AMI at any time. Any modifications you make to an AMI backed by an instance store volume invalidates its registration. If you make changes to an image, deregister the previous image and register the new image.
Register a snapshot of a root device volume
You can use RegisterImage
to create an Amazon EBS-backed Linux AMI from a snapshot of a root device volume. You specify the snapshot using a block device mapping. You can't set the encryption state of the volume using the block device mapping. If the snapshot is encrypted, or encryption by default is enabled, the root volume of an instance launched from the AMI is encrypted.
For more information, see Create a Linux AMI from a snapshot and Use encryption with Amazon EBS-backed AMIs in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide .
Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes
If any snapshots have Amazon Web Services Marketplace product codes, they are copied to the new AMI.
Windows and some Linux distributions, such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES), use the Amazon EC2 billing product code associated with an AMI to verify the subscription status for package updates. To create a new AMI for operating systems that require a billing product code, instead of registering the AMI, do the following to preserve the billing product code association:
If you purchase a Reserved Instance to apply to an On-Demand Instance that was launched from an AMI with a billing product code, make sure that the Reserved Instance has the matching billing product code. If you purchase a Reserved Instance without the matching billing product code, the Reserved Instance will not be applied to the On-Demand Instance. For information about how to obtain the platform details and billing information of an AMI, see Understand AMI billing information in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
image = ec2.register_image(
ImageLocation='string',
Architecture='i386'|'x86_64'|'arm64'|'x86_64_mac'|'arm64_mac',
BlockDeviceMappings=[
{
'DeviceName': 'string',
'VirtualName': 'string',
'Ebs': {
'DeleteOnTermination': True|False,
'Iops': 123,
'SnapshotId': 'string',
'VolumeSize': 123,
'VolumeType': 'standard'|'io1'|'io2'|'gp2'|'sc1'|'st1'|'gp3',
'KmsKeyId': 'string',
'Throughput': 123,
'OutpostArn': 'string',
'Encrypted': True|False
},
'NoDevice': 'string'
},
],
Description='string',
DryRun=True|False,
EnaSupport=True|False,
KernelId='string',
Name='string',
BillingProducts=[
'string',
],
RamdiskId='string',
RootDeviceName='string',
SriovNetSupport='string',
VirtualizationType='string',
BootMode='legacy-bios'|'uefi'|'uefi-preferred',
TpmSupport='v2.0',
UefiData='string',
ImdsSupport='v2.0'
)
aws-exec-read
canned access control list (ACL) to ensure that it can be accessed by Amazon EC2. For more information, see Canned ACLs in the Amazon S3 Service Developer Guide .The architecture of the AMI.
Default: For Amazon EBS-backed AMIs, i386
. For instance store-backed AMIs, the architecture specified in the manifest file.
The block device mapping entries.
If you specify an Amazon EBS volume using the ID of an Amazon EBS snapshot, you can't specify the encryption state of the volume.
If you create an AMI on an Outpost, then all backing snapshots must be on the same Outpost or in the Region of that Outpost. AMIs on an Outpost that include local snapshots can be used to launch instances on the same Outpost only. For more information, Amazon EBS local snapshots on Outposts in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
Describes a block device mapping, which defines the EBS volumes and instance store volumes to attach to an instance at launch.
The device name (for example, /dev/sdh
or xvdh
).
The virtual device name ( ephemeral
N). Instance store volumes are numbered starting from 0. An instance type with 2 available instance store volumes can specify mappings for ephemeral0
and ephemeral1
. The number of available instance store volumes depends on the instance type. After you connect to the instance, you must mount the volume.
NVMe instance store volumes are automatically enumerated and assigned a device name. Including them in your block device mapping has no effect.
Constraints: For M3 instances, you must specify instance store volumes in the block device mapping for the instance. When you launch an M3 instance, we ignore any instance store volumes specified in the block device mapping for the AMI.
Parameters used to automatically set up EBS volumes when the instance is launched.
Indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination. For more information, see Preserving Amazon EBS volumes on instance termination in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
The number of I/O operations per second (IOPS). For gp3
, io1
, and io2
volumes, this represents the number of IOPS that are provisioned for the volume. For gp2
volumes, this represents the baseline performance of the volume and the rate at which the volume accumulates I/O credits for bursting.
The following are the supported values for each volume type:
gp3
: 3,000-16,000 IOPSio1
: 100-64,000 IOPSio2
: 100-64,000 IOPSFor io1
and io2
volumes, we guarantee 64,000 IOPS only for Instances built on the Nitro System. Other instance families guarantee performance up to 32,000 IOPS.
This parameter is required for io1
and io2
volumes. The default for gp3
volumes is 3,000 IOPS. This parameter is not supported for gp2
, st1
, sc1
, or standard
volumes.
The ID of the snapshot.
The size of the volume, in GiBs. You must specify either a snapshot ID or a volume size. If you specify a snapshot, the default is the snapshot size. You can specify a volume size that is equal to or larger than the snapshot size.
The following are the supported volumes sizes for each volume type:
gp2
and gp3
:1-16,384io1
and io2
: 4-16,384st1
and sc1
: 125-16,384standard
: 1-1,024The volume type. For more information, see Amazon EBS volume types in the Amazon EC2 User Guide . If the volume type is io1
or io2
, you must specify the IOPS that the volume supports.
Identifier (key ID, key alias, ID ARN, or alias ARN) for a customer managed CMK under which the EBS volume is encrypted.
This parameter is only supported on BlockDeviceMapping
objects called by RunInstances, RequestSpotFleet, and RequestSpotInstances.
The throughput that the volume supports, in MiB/s.
This parameter is valid only for gp3
volumes.
Valid Range: Minimum value of 125. Maximum value of 1000.
The ARN of the Outpost on which the snapshot is stored.
This parameter is only supported on BlockDeviceMapping
objects called by CreateImage.
Indicates whether the encryption state of an EBS volume is changed while being restored from a backing snapshot. The effect of setting the encryption state to true
depends on the volume origin (new or from a snapshot), starting encryption state, ownership, and whether encryption by default is enabled. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
In no case can you remove encryption from an encrypted volume.
Encrypted volumes can only be attached to instances that support Amazon EBS encryption. For more information, see Supported instance types.
This parameter is not returned by DescribeImageAttribute.
For CreateImage and RegisterImage, whether you can include this parameter, and the allowed values differ depending on the type of block device mapping you are creating.
true
for an encrypted volume, or false
for an unencrypted volume. If you omit this parameter, it defaults to false
(unencrypted).false
. If you specify true
, the request will fail. In this case, we recommend that you omit the parameter.true
or false
. However, if you specify false
, the parameter is ignored and the block device mapping is always encrypted. In this case, we recommend that you omit the parameter.To omit the device from the block device mapping, specify an empty string. When this property is specified, the device is removed from the block device mapping regardless of the assigned value.
DryRunOperation
. Otherwise, it is UnauthorizedOperation
.Set to true
to enable enhanced networking with ENA for the AMI and any instances that you launch from the AMI.
This option is supported only for HVM AMIs. Specifying this option with a PV AMI can make instances launched from the AMI unreachable.
[REQUIRED]
A name for your AMI.
Constraints: 3-128 alphanumeric characters, parentheses (()), square brackets ([]), spaces ( ), periods (.), slashes (/), dashes (-), single quotes ('), at-signs (@), or underscores(_)
The billing product codes. Your account must be authorized to specify billing product codes.
If your account is not authorized to specify billing product codes, you can publish AMIs that include billable software and list them on the Amazon Web Services Marketplace. You must first register as a seller on the Amazon Web Services Marketplace. For more information, see Getting started as a seller and AMI-based products in the Amazon Web Services Marketplace Seller Guide .
/dev/sda1
).Set to simple
to enable enhanced networking with the Intel 82599 Virtual Function interface for the AMI and any instances that you launch from the AMI.
There is no way to disable sriovNetSupport
at this time.
This option is supported only for HVM AMIs. Specifying this option with a PV AMI can make instances launched from the AMI unreachable.
The type of virtualization ( hvm
| paravirtual
).
Default: paravirtual
The boot mode of the AMI. A value of uefi-preferred
indicates that the AMI supports both UEFI and Legacy BIOS.
Note
The operating system contained in the AMI must be configured to support the specified boot mode.
For more information, see Boot modes in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
v2.0
to enable Trusted Platform Module (TPM) support. For more information, see NitroTPM in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .Set to v2.0
to indicate that IMDSv2 is specified in the AMI. Instances launched from this AMI will have HttpTokens
automatically set to required
so that, by default, the instance requires that IMDSv2 is used when requesting instance metadata. In addition, HttpPutResponseHopLimit
is set to 2
. For more information, see Configure the AMI in the Amazon EC2 User Guide .
Note
If you set the value to v2.0
, make sure that your AMI software can support IMDSv2.
ec2.Image
Image resource