Copyright | (c) 2013-2018 Brendan Hay |
---|---|
License | Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
Maintainer | Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay+amazonka@gmail.com> |
Stability | auto-generated |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Deletes a link aggregation group (LAG). You cannot delete a LAG if it has active virtual interfaces or hosted connections.
Synopsis
- deleteLag :: Text -> DeleteLag
- data DeleteLag
- dLagId :: Lens' DeleteLag Text
- lag :: Lag
- data Lag
- lagLagId :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagConnectionsBandwidth :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagMinimumLinks :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Int)
- lagLagName :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagLocation :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagConnections :: Lens' Lag [Connection]
- lagAwsDevice :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagAllowsHostedConnections :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Bool)
- lagNumberOfConnections :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Int)
- lagLagState :: Lens' Lag (Maybe LagState)
- lagOwnerAccount :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
- lagRegion :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text)
Creating a Request
Container for the parameters to the DeleteLag operation.
See: deleteLag
smart constructor.
Instances
Request Lenses
dLagId :: Lens' DeleteLag Text Source #
The ID of the LAG to delete. Example: dxlag-abc123 Default: None
Destructuring the Response
Creates a value of Lag
with the minimum fields required to make a request.
Use one of the following lenses to modify other fields as desired:
lagLagId
- Undocumented member.lagConnectionsBandwidth
- The individual bandwidth of the physical connections bundled by the LAG. Available values: 1Gbps, 10GbpslagMinimumLinks
- The minimum number of physical connections that must be operational for the LAG itself to be operational. If the number of operational connections drops below this setting, the LAG state changes todown
. This value can help to ensure that a LAG is not overutilized if a significant number of its bundled connections go down.lagLagName
- The name of the LAG.lagLocation
- Undocumented member.lagConnections
- A list of connections bundled by this LAG.lagAwsDevice
- The AWS Direct Connection endpoint that hosts the LAG.lagAllowsHostedConnections
- Indicates whether the LAG can host other connections.lagNumberOfConnections
- The number of physical connections bundled by the LAG, up to a maximum of 10.lagLagState
- Undocumented member.lagOwnerAccount
- The owner of the LAG.lagRegion
- Undocumented member.
Describes a link aggregation group (LAG). A LAG is a connection that uses the Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) to logically aggregate a bundle of physical connections. Like an interconnect, it can host other connections. All connections in a LAG must terminate on the same physical AWS Direct Connect endpoint, and must be the same bandwidth.
See: lag
smart constructor.
Instances
Response Lenses
lagConnectionsBandwidth :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text) Source #
The individual bandwidth of the physical connections bundled by the LAG. Available values: 1Gbps, 10Gbps
lagMinimumLinks :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Int) Source #
The minimum number of physical connections that must be operational for the LAG itself to be operational. If the number of operational connections drops below this setting, the LAG state changes to down
. This value can help to ensure that a LAG is not overutilized if a significant number of its bundled connections go down.
lagConnections :: Lens' Lag [Connection] Source #
A list of connections bundled by this LAG.
lagAwsDevice :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Text) Source #
The AWS Direct Connection endpoint that hosts the LAG.
lagAllowsHostedConnections :: Lens' Lag (Maybe Bool) Source #
Indicates whether the LAG can host other connections.