Document history
The following table describes important additions to the Amazon EC2 documentation starting in 2019. We also update the documentation frequently to address the feedback that you send us.
Change | Description | Date |
---|---|---|
NVMe reservations | Multi-Attach enabled | September 18, 2023 |
C7i instances | New compute optimized instance types that feature 4th generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors. | September 14, 2023 |
You can enable block public access for AMIs at the account level to block any attempts to make your AMIs public. | September 12, 2023 | |
R7a instances | New memory optimized instance types featuring 4th generation AMD EPYC 9R14 processors and up to 1536 GiB of system memory. | September 11, 2023 |
R7iz instances | New high-frequency and high memory instances powered by 4th generation Intel Xeon processors. | September 7, 2023 |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on M7i and M7i-flex instance types. | August 22, 2023 | |
Hpc7a instances | New compute optimized instance types that feature 4th generation AMD EPYC processors. These instance types support up to 300 Gbps networking bandwidth, and up to 192 CPU cores with up to 768 GB of system memory. | August 17, 2023 |
M7a instances | New general purpose instances powered by 4th generation AMD EPYC processors. | August 15, 2023 |
EC2-Classic has been deprecated | With EC2-Classic, EC2 instances ran in a single, flat network shared with other customers. Amazon VPC replaces EC2-Classic. With Amazon VPC, your instances run in a virtual private cloud (VPC) that's logically isolated to your Amazon account. | August 8, 2023 |
M7i-flex instances | New general purpose instances that offer a balance of compute, memory, and network resources for a broad spectrum of general purpose applications. They deliver a baseline CPU performance of 40 percent with the ability to deliver up to 100 percent CPU performance for 95 percent of the time over a 24-hour period. | August 2, 2023 |
M7i instances | New general purpose instance types that feature 4th generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors. | August 2, 2023 |
Updated Amazon EBS performance for R6a instances. | June 29, 2023 | |
You can allocate Dedicated Hosts on specific hardware assets on an Outpost. | June 20, 2023 | |
You can now connect to an instance via SSH or RDP without requiring the instance to have a public IPv4 address. | June 13, 2023 | |
You can now use the IMDS Packet Analyzer to identify sources of IMDSv1 calls on your EC2 instances. | June 1, 2023 | |
You can now view your quotas for launch templates and launch template versions in the Service Quotas console and by using the Service Quotas CLI. | April 3, 2023 | |
Amazon Health now sends notifications when capacity utilization for Capacity Reservations in your account drops below 20 percent. | April 3, 2023 | |
Updated Amazon EBS performance for M6a and C6a instances. | April 3, 2023 | |
You can now add Capacity Reservations that are shared with you to Capacity Reservation groups that you own. | March 30, 2023 | |
New bare metal instances | Bare metal instances for C6in, M6idn, M6in, R6idn, and R6in. | March 21, 2023 |
You can now use the Amazon EC2 console to modify instance metadata options. | March 20, 2023 | |
You can now create a single AMI that supports both Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) and Legacy BIOS boot modes. | March 3, 2023 | |
Modify your existing AMI so that instances launched from the AMI require IMDSv2 by default. | February 28, 2023 | |
Added a table with new and existing supported instance types for ENA Express. | February 13, 2023 | |
Use Amazon FIS to temporarily stop I/O between an EBS volume and the instances to which it is attached to test how your workloads handle I/O interruptions. | January 27, 2023 | |
You can specify an Amazon Systems Manager parameter instead of the AMI ID in your launch templates to avoid having to update the templates every time the AMI ID changes. | January 19, 2023 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on C6i, I3en, and M6i instance types. | December 19, 2022 | |
Improve the performance of your I/O-intensive relational database workloads and reduce latency without negatively impacting data resiliency with torn write prevention, a block storage feature. | November 29, 2022 | |
Hpc6id instance | New memory optimized instance featuring 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | November 29, 2022 |
R6in and R6idn instances | New memory optimized instances for network-intensive workloads. | November 28, 2022 |
M6in and M6idn instances | New general computing instances types. | November 28, 2022 |
Increase throughput and minimize tail latency of network traffic between EC2 instances with ENA Express. | November 28, 2022 | |
C6in instances | New compute optimized instances ideal for running high performance computing. | November 28, 2022 |
You can lock retention rules to help protect them against accidental or malicious modifications and deletions. | November 23, 2022 | |
When you copy an AMI, you can copy your user-defined AMI tags at the same time. | November 18, 2022 | |
The size of an AMI (before compression) that can be stored and restored to and from an Amazon S3 bucket can now be up to 5,000 GB. | November 16, 2022 | |
priceCapacityOptimized allocation strategy for Spot Instances | A Spot Fleet that uses the | November 10, 2022 |
price-capacity-optimized allocation strategy for Spot Instances | An EC2 Fleet that uses the | November 10, 2022 |
If an AMI has been shared with your Amazon Web Services account and you no longer want it shared with your account, you can remove your account from the AMI's launch permissions. | November 4, 2022 | |
You can now transfer Elastic IP addresses from one Amazon account to another. | October 31, 2022 | |
You can replace the root Amazon EBS volume for a running instance using an AMI. | October 27, 2022 | |
Trn1 instances | New accelerated computing instances optimized for deep learning powered by Amazon Trainium chips. | October 10, 2022 |
Use the automatic connection feature to quickly connect one or more EC2 instances to an RDS database to allow traffic between them. | October 10, 2022 | |
Quotas now apply to creating and sharing AMIs. | October 10, 2022 | |
Configure your AMI so that instances launched from the AMI require IMDSv2 by default. | October 3, 2022 | |
You can select a Spot Instance in the Amazon EC2 console and initiate an interruption so that you can test how the applications on your Spot Instances handle being interrupted. | September 26, 2022 | |
In the Amazon EC2 console, public AMIs that are owned by Amazon or a verified Amazon partner are marked Verified provider. | July 22, 2022 | |
R6a instances | New memory optimized instances featuring 3rd generation AMD EPYC processors. | July 19, 2022 |
Added a host spread strategy for placement groups on an Outpost. | June 30, 2022 | |
You can use the | June 14, 2022 | |
R6id instances | New memory optimized instances featuring 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | June 9, 2022 |
You can modify the size and provisioned IOPS of | May 31, 2022 | |
You can allocate Dedicated Hosts on Amazon Outposts. | May 31, 2022 | |
M6id instances | New general purpose instances featuring 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | May 26, 2022 |
C6id instances | New compute optimized instances featuring 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | May 26, 2022 |
To prevent your instance from being accidentally stopped, you can enable stop protection for the instance. | May 24, 2022 | |
C7g instances | New compute optimized instances featuring the latest Amazon Graviton3 processors. | May 23, 2022 |
UEFI Secure Boot builds on the long-standing secure boot process of Amazon EC2 and provides additional defense-in-depth that helps customers secure software from threats that persist across reboots. | May 10, 2022 | |
Nitro Trusted Platform Module (NitroTPM) is a virtual device that is provided by the Amazon Nitro System and conforms to the TPM 2.0 specification. | May 10, 2022 | |
Amazon EC2 now generates an event when an AMI changes state. You can use Amazon EventBridge to detect and react to these events. | May 9, 2022 | |
You can query the public key and creation date of an Amazon EC2 key pair. | April 28, 2022 | |
You can specify the key format (PEM or PPK) when creating a new key pair. | April 28, 2022 | |
I4i instances | New storage optimized instances featuring 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | April 27, 2022 |
You can mount a new or existing Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP or Amazon FSx for OpenZFS file system at launch using the new launch instance wizard. | April 12, 2022 | |
A new and improved launch experience in the Amazon EC2 console, providing a quicker and easier way to launch an EC2 instance. | April 5, 2022 | |
By default, the deprecation date of all public AMIs is set to two years from the AMI creation date. | March 31, 2022 | |
Instance metadata category: autoscaling/target-lifecycle-state | When using Auto Scaling groups, you can access an instance's target lifecycle state from the instance metadata. | March 24, 2022 |
Get a recommendation for an Amazon Region or Availability Zone based on your Spot capacity requirements. | March 16, 2022 | |
X2idn and X2iedn instances | New memory optimized instances featuring Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | March 10, 2022 |
The | February 28, 2022 | |
C6a instances | New compute optimized instances featuring 3rd generation AMD EPYC processors (Milan). | February 14, 2022 |
Recycle Bin enables you to restore accidentally deleted AMIs. | February 3, 2022 | |
X2iezn instances | New memory optimized instances featuring Intel Xeon Platinum processors (Cascade Lake). | January 26, 2022 |
Add Local Zones in Atlanta, Phoenix, and Seattle. | January 11, 2022 | |
Specify the attributes that an instance must have, and Amazon EC2 will identify all the instance types with those attributes. | January 11, 2022 | |
Specify the attributes that an instance must have, and Amazon EC2 will identify all the instance types with those attributes. | January 11, 2022 | |
Configure Windows AMIs to launch instances up to 65% faster, using pre-provisioned snapshots. | January 10, 2022 | |
You can access an instance's tags from the instance metadata. | January 6, 2022 | |
You can create Capacity Reservations in cluster placement groups. | January 6, 2022 | |
Recycle Bin for Amazon EBS snapshots is a snapshot recovery feature that enables you to restore accidentally deleted snapshots. | November 29, 2021 | |
M6a instances | New general purpose instances powered by AMD 3rd Generation EPYC processors. | November 29, 2021 |
R6i instances | New memory optimized instances. | November 22, 2021 |
G5 instances | New accelerated computing instances featuring up to 8 NVIDIA A10G GPUs and second generation AMD EPY processors. | November 11, 2021 |
Spot Fleet can terminate the Spot Instances that receive a rebalance notification after new replacement Spot Instances are launched. | November 4, 2021 | |
EC2 Fleet can terminate the Spot Instances that receive a rebalance notification after new replacement Spot Instances are launched. | November 4, 2021 | |
You can now share AMIs with the following Amazon resources: organizations and organizational units (OUs). | October 29, 2021 | |
C6i instances | New compute optimized instances featuring Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | October 28, 2021 |
Add Local Zones in Las Vegas, New York City, and Portland. | October 26, 2021 | |
You can use a Capacity Reservation Fleet to launch a group, or fleet, of Capacity Reservations. | October 5, 2021 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances that were launched from the Ubuntu 20.04 LTS - Focal AMI. | October 4, 2021 | |
Support for T3 instances on Amazon EC2 Dedicated Host. | September 14, 2021 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances that were launched from RHEL, Fedora, and CentOS AMIs. | September 9, 2021 | |
Add Local Zones in Chicago, Minneapolis, and Kansas City. | September 8, 2021 | |
Amazon EC2 Global View enables you to view VPCs, subnets, instances, security groups, and volumes across multiple Amazon Regions in a single console. | September 1, 2021 | |
Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager EBS-backed AMI policies can deprecate AMIs. The AWSDataLifecycleManagerServiceRoleForAMIManagement Amazon managed policy has been updated to support this feature. | August 23, 2021 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on C5d, M5d, and R5d instance types. | August 19, 2021 | |
Amazon EC2 now supports ED25519 keys on Linux and Mac instances. | August 17, 2021 | |
M6i instances | New general purpose instances featuring third generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake). | August 16, 2021 |
You can monitor your Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager policies using Amazon CloudWatch. | July 28, 2021 | |
Add Local Zone in Denver. | July 27, 2021 | |
The ListSnapshotBlocks, ListChangedBlocks, GetSnapshotBlock, and PutSnapshotBlock APIs can be logged data events in CloudTrail. | July 27, 2021 | |
You can assign a private IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR range, either automatically or manually, to your network interfaces. | July 22, 2021 | |
| July 19, 2021 | |
You can define custom, weekly-recurring event windows for scheduled events that reboot, stop, or terminate your Amazon EC2 instances. | July 15, 2021 | |
Resource IDs and tagging support for security group rules | You can refer to security group rules by resource ID. You can also add tags to your security group rules. | July 7, 2021 |
Add Local Zones in Dallas and Philadelphia. | July 7, 2021 | |
You can now specify when an AMI is deprecated. | June 11, 2021 | |
Windows per-second billing | Amazon EC2 charges for Windows- and SQL Server-based usage by the second, with a one-minute minimum charge. | June 10, 2021 |
High memory virtualized instances | Virtualized high memory instances purpose-built to run large in-memory databases. The new types are u-6tb1.56xlarge, u-6tb1.112xlarge, u-9tb1.112xlarge, and u-12tb1.112xlarge. | May 11, 2021 |
You can now use root volume replacement tasks to replace the root EBS volume for running instances. | April 22, 2021 | |
Store EBS-backed AMIs in S3 and restore them from S3 to enable cross-partition copying of AMIs. | April 6, 2021 | |
Troubleshoot boot and network connectivity issues by establishing a connection to the serial port of an instance. | March 30, 2021 | |
Amazon EC2 now supports UEFI boot on selected AMD- and Intel-based EC2 instances. | March 22, 2021 | |
You can now set up reverse DNS lookup for your Elastic IP addresses. | February 3, 2021 | |
Use Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager to automate the process of sharing snapshots and copying them across Amazon accounts. | December 17, 2020 | |
G4ad instances | New instances powered by AMD Radeon Pro V520 GPUs and AMD 2nd Generation EPYC processors. | December 9, 2020 |
When you create an AMI, you can tag the AMI and the snapshots with the same tags, or you can tag them with different tags. | December 4, 2020 | |
You can opt in to the | December 1, 2020 | |
gp3 volumes | A new Amazon EBS General Purpose SSD volume type. You can specify provisioned IOPS and throughput when you create or modify the volume. | December 1, 2020 |
D3, D3en, M5zn, and R5b instances | New instance types built on the Nitro System. | December 1, 2020 |
Throughput Optimized HDD ( | November 30, 2020 | |
Create EventBridge rules that trigger programmatic actions in response to Spot Fleet state changes and errors. | November 20, 2020 | |
Create EventBridge rules that trigger programmatic actions in response to EC2 Fleet state changes and errors. | November 20, 2020 | |
Delete an EC2 Fleet of type | November 18, 2020 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on T3 and T3a instance types. | November 17, 2020 | |
You can use Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager to automate the creation, retention, and deletion of EBS-backed AMIs. | November 9, 2020 | |
Capacity Reservations can now be created and used in Wavelength Zones. | November 4, 2020 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on I3, M5ad, and R5ad instance types. | October 21, 2020 | |
Spot Instance limits are now managed in terms of the number of vCPUs that your running Spot Instances are either using or will use pending the fulfillment of open requests. | October 1, 2020 | |
Capacity Reservations can now be created and used in Local Zones. | September 30, 2020 | |
Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager policies can be configured with up to four schedules. | September 17, 2020 | |
Hibernate your newly-launched instances running on M5a and R5a instance types. | August 28, 2020 | |
Provisioned IOPS SSD ( | August 24, 2020 | |
Instance metadata provides instance location and placement information | New instance metadata fields under the | August 24, 2020 |
C5ad instances | New compute optimized instances featuring second-generation AMD EPYC processors. | August 13, 2020 |
A Wavelength Zone is an isolated zone in the carrier location where the Wavelength infrastructure is deployed. | August 6, 2020 | |
You can use Amazon Resource Groups to create logical collections of Capacity Reservations, and then target instance launches into those groups. | July 29, 2020 | |
You can enable fast snapshot restore for snaphots that are shared with you. | July 21, 2020 | |
You can use EC2Launch v2 to perform tasks during instance startup, if an instance is stopped and later started, if an instance is restarted, and on demand. EC2Launch v2 supports all versions of Windows Server and replaces EC2Launch and EC2Config. | June 30, 2020 | |
Bare metal instances for G4dn | New instances that provide your applications with direct access to the physical resources of the host server. | June 5, 2020 |
C5a instances | New compute optimized instances featuring second-generation AMD EPYC processors. | June 4, 2020 |
You can bring part or all of your IPv6 address range from your on-premises network to your Amazon account. | May 21, 2020 | |
You can specify a Amazon Systems Manager parameter instead of an AMI when you launch an instance. | May 5, 2020 | |
Stop your Spot Instances backed by Amazon EBS and start them at will, instead of relying on the stop interruption behavior. | January 13, 2020 | |
Resource tagging | You can tag egress-only internet gateways, local gateways, local gateway route tables, local gateway virtual interfaces, local gateway virtual interface groups, local gateway route table VPC associations, and local gateway route table virtual interface group associations. | January 10, 2020 |
You can start a Session Manager session with an instance from the Amazon EC2 console. | December 18, 2019 | |
You can set the default credit specification per burstable performance instance family at the account level per Amazon Region. | November 25, 2019 | |
You can find an instance type that meets your needs. | November 22, 2019 | |
Dedicated Hosts | You can now configure a Dedicated Host to support multiple instance types in an instance family. | November 21, 2019 |
You can enable fast snapshot restores on an EBS snapshot to ensure that EBS volumes created from the snapshot are fully-initialized at creation and instantly deliver all of their provisioned performance. | November 20, 2019 | |
You can use Instance Metadata Service Version 2, which is a session-oriented method for requesting instance metadata. | November 19, 2019 | |
You can hibernate On-Demand Windows instances. | October 14, 2019 | |
You can queue the purchase of a Reserved Instance up to three years in advance. | October 4, 2019 | |
G4dn instances | New instances featuring NVIDIA Tesla GPUs. | September 19, 2019 |
You can send a diagnostic interrupt to an unreachable or unresponsive instance to trigger a blue screen/stop error. | August 14, 2019 | |
Using EC2 Fleet or Spot Fleet, you can launch Spot Instances from Spot pools with optimal capacity for the number of instances that are launching. | August 12, 2019 | |
Resource tagging | Launch templates on creation. | July 24, 2019 |
Automatically restart your instances on a new host in the event of an unexpected hardware failure on a Dedicated Host. | June 5, 2019 | |
You can take exact point-in-time, data coordinated, and crash-consistent snapshots across multiple EBS volumes attached to an EC2 instance. | May 29, 2019 | |
Resource tagging | You can tag Dedicated Host Reservations. | May 27, 2019 |
After you enable encryption by default in a Region, all new EBS volumes you create in the Region are encrypted using the default KMS key for EBS encryption. | May 23, 2019 | |
Take application-consistent snapshots of all Amazon EBS volumes attached to your Windows instances using Amazon Systems Manager Run Command. | May 13, 2019 | |
Resource tagging | You can tag VPC endpoints, endpoint services, and endpoint service configurations. | May 13, 2019 |
Windows to Linux Replatforming Assistant for Microsoft SQL Server Databases | Move existing Microsoft SQL Server workloads from a Windows to a Linux operating system. | May 8, 2019 |
I3en instances | New I3en instances can utilize up to 100 Gbps of network bandwidth. | May 8, 2019 |
Perform automated upgrades of EC2 Windows instances using Amazon Systems Manager. | May 6, 2019 | |
T3a instances | New instances featuring AMD EPYC processors. | April 24, 2019 |
M5ad and R5ad instances | New instances featuring AMD EPYC processors. | March 27, 2019 |
Resource tagging | You can assign custom tags to your Dedicated Host Reservations to categorize them in different ways. | March 14, 2019 |
Bare metal instances for M5, M5d, R5, R5d, and z1d | New instances that provide your applications with direct access to the physical resources of the host server. | February 13, 2019 |
History for previous years
The following table describes important additions to the Amazon EC2 documentation in 2018 and earlier years.
Feature | API version | Description | Release date |
---|---|---|---|
Partition placement groups | 2016-11-15 | Partition placement groups spread instances across logical partitions, ensuring that instances in one partition do not share underlying hardware with instances in other partitions. For more information, see Partition placement groups. | 20 December 2018 |
p3dn.24xlarge instances | 2016-11-15 | New p3dn.24xlarge instances provide 100 Gbps of network bandwidth. | 7 December 2018 |
Instances featuring 100 Gbps of network bandwidth | 2016-11-15 | New C5n instances can utilize up to 100 Gbps of network bandwidth. | 26 November 2018 |
Spot console recommends a fleet of instances | 2016-11-15 |
The Spot console recommends a fleet of instances based on Spot best practice (instance diversification) to meet the minimum hardware specifications (vCPUs, memory, and storage) for your application need. For more information, see Create a Spot Fleet request. |
20 November 2018 |
New EC2 Fleet request type: instant |
2016-11-15 | EC2 Fleet now supports a new request type, instant , that you can
use to synchronously provision capacity across instance types and purchase
models. The instant request returns the launched instances in
the API response, and takes no further action, enabling you to control if
and when instances are launched. For more information, see EC2 Fleet request types. |
14 November 2018 |
Instances featuring AMD EPYC processors | 2016-11-15 | New general purpose (M5a) and memory optimized instances (R5a) offer lower-priced options for microservices, small to medium databases, virtual desktops, development and test environments, business applications, and more. | 6 November 2018 |
Spot savings information | 2016-11-15 | You can view the savings made from using Spot Instances for a single Spot Fleet or for all Spot Instances. For more information, see Savings from purchasing Spot Instances. | 5 November 2018 |
Console support for optimizing CPU options | 2016-11-15 | When you launch an instance, you can optimize the CPU options to suit specific workloads or business needs using the Amazon EC2 console. For more information, see Optimize CPU options. | 31 October 2018 |
Console support for creating a launch template from an instance | 2016-11-15 | You can create a launch template using an instance as the basis for a new launch template using the Amazon EC2 console. For more information, see Create a launch template. | 30 October 2018 |
On-Demand Capacity Reservations | 2016-11-15 | You can reserve capacity for your Amazon EC2 instances in a specific Availability Zone for any duration. This allows you to create and manage capacity reservations independently from the billing discounts offered by Reserved Instances (RI). For more information, see On-Demand Capacity Reservations. | 25 October 2018 |
Bring Your Own IP Addresses (BYOIP) | 2016-11-15 | You can bring part or all of your public IPv4 address range from your on-premises network to your Amazon account. After you bring the address range to Amazon, it appears in your account as an address pool. You can create an Elastic IP address from your address pool and use it with your Amazon resources. For more information, see Bring your own IP addresses (BYOIP) in Amazon EC2. | 23 October 2018 |
Dedicated Host tag on create and console support |
2016-11-15 |
You can tag your Dedicated Hosts on creation, and you can manage your Dedicated Host tags using the Amazon EC2 console. For more information, see Allocate Dedicated Hosts. |
22 October 2018 |
g3s.xlarge instances | 2016-11-15 | Expands the range of the accelerated-computing G3 instance family with the introduction of g3s.xlarge instances. | 11 October 2018 |
High memory instances | 2016-11-15 | These instances are purpose-built to run large in-memory databases. They offer bare metal performance with direct access to host hardware. For more information, see Memory optimized instances. | 27 September 2018 |
f1.4xlarge instances | 2016-11-15 | Expands the range of the accelerated-computing F1 instance family with the introduction of f1.4xlarge instances. | 25 September 2018 |
Console support for scheduled scaling for Spot Fleet | 2016-11-15 | Increase or decrease the current capacity of the fleet based on the date and time. For more information, see Scale Spot Fleet using scheduled scaling. | 20 September 2018 |
T3 instances | 2016-11-15 | T3 instances are burstable general-purpose instance type that provide a baseline level of CPU performance with the ability to burst CPU usage at any time for as long as required. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. | 21 August 2018 |
Allocation strategies for EC2 Fleets |
2016-11-15 |
You can specify whether On-Demand capacity is fulfilled by price (lowest price first) or priority (highest priority first). You can specify the number of Spot pools across which to allocate your target Spot capacity. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances. |
26 July 2018 |
Allocation strategies for Spot Fleets |
2016-11-15 |
You can specify whether On-Demand capacity is fulfilled by price (lowest price first) or priority (highest priority first). You can specify the number of Spot pools across which to allocate your target Spot capacity. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances. |
26 July 2018 |
R5 and R5d instances |
2016-11-15 |
R5 and R5d instances are ideally suited for high-performance databases, distributed in-memory caches, and in-memory analytics. R5d instances come with NVMe instance store volumes. For more information, see Memory optimized instances. |
25 July 2018 |
z1d instances |
2016-11-15 |
These instances are designed for applications that require high per-core performance with a large amount of memory, such as electronic design automation (EDA) and relational databases. These instances come with NVME instance store volumes. For more information, see Memory optimized instances. |
25 July 2018 |
Automate snapshot lifecycle |
2016-11-15 |
You can use Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager to automate creation and deletion of snapshots for your EBS volumes. For more information, see Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager. |
12 July 2018 |
Launch template CPU options |
2016-11-15 |
When you create a launch template using the command line tools, you can optimize the CPU options to suit specific workloads or business needs. For more information, see Create a launch template. |
11 July 2018 |
Tag Dedicated Hosts |
2016-11-15 |
You can tag your Dedicated Hosts. For more information, see Tag Dedicated Hosts. |
5 July 2018 |
i3.metal instances |
2016-11-15 |
|
17 May 2018 |
Get latest console output |
2016-11-15 |
You can retrieve the latest console output for some instance types when you use the get-console-output Amazon CLI command. |
9 May 2018 |
Optimize CPU options |
2016-11-15 |
When you launch an instance, you can optimize the CPU options to suit specific workloads or business needs. For more information, see Optimize CPU options. |
8 May 2018 |
EC2 Fleet |
2016-11-15 |
You can use EC2 Fleet to launch a group of instances across different EC2 instance types and Availability Zones, and across On-Demand Instance, Reserved Instance, and Spot Instance purchasing models. For more information, see EC2 Fleet. |
2 May 2018 |
On-Demand Instances in Spot Fleets |
2016-11-15 |
You can include a request for On-Demand capacity in your Spot Fleet request to ensure that you always have instance capacity. For more information, see Spot Fleet. |
2 May 2018 |
Tag EBS snapshots on creation |
2016-11-15 |
You can apply tags to snapshots during creation. For more information, see Create Amazon EBS snapshots. |
2 April 2018 |
Change placement groups |
2016-11-15 |
You can move an instance in or out of a placement group, or change its placement group. For more information, see Change the placement group for an instance. |
1 March 2018 |
Longer resource IDs |
2016-11-15 |
You can enable the longer ID format for more resource types. For more information, see Resource IDs. |
9 February 2018 |
Network performance improvements |
2016-11-15 |
Instances outside of a cluster placement group can now benefit from increased bandwidth when sending or receiving network traffic between other instances or Amazon S3. |
24 January 2018 |
Tag Elastic IP addresses |
2016-11-15 |
You can tag your Elastic IP addresses. For more information, see Tag an Elastic IP address. |
21 December 2017 |
Amazon Time Sync Service |
2016-11-15 |
You can use the Amazon Time Sync Service to keep accurate time on your instance. For more information, see Set the time for a Windows instance. |
29 November 2017 |
T2 Unlimited |
2016-11-15 |
T2 Unlimited instances can burst above the baseline for as long as required. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. |
29 November 2017 |
Launch templates |
2016-11-15 |
A launch template can contain all or some of the parameters to launch an instance, so that you don't have to specify them every time you launch an instance. For more information, see Launch an instance from a launch template. |
29 November 2017 |
Spread placement |
2016-11-15 |
Spread placement groups are recommended for applications that have a small number of critical instances that should be kept separate from each other. For more information, see Spread placement groups. |
29 November 2017 |
H1 instances |
2016-11-15 |
H1 instances are designed for high-performance big data workloads. For more information, see Storage optimized instances. |
28 November 2017 |
M5 instances |
2016-11-15 |
M5 instances are general purpose compute instances. They provide a balance of compute, memory, storage, and network resources. |
28 November 2017 |
Spot Instance hibernation |
2016-11-15 |
The Spot service can hibernate Spot Instances in the event of an interruption. For more information, see Hibernate interrupted Spot Instances. |
28 November 2017 |
Spot Fleet target tracking |
2016-11-15 |
You can set up target tracking scaling policies for your Spot Fleet. For more information, see Scale Spot Fleet using a target tracking policy. |
17 November 2017 |
Spot Fleet integrates with Elastic Load Balancing |
2016-11-15 |
You can attach one or more load balancers to a Spot Fleet. |
10 November 2017 |
X1e instances |
2016-11-15 |
X1e instances are ideally suited for high-performance databases, in-memory databases, and other memory-intensive enterprise applications. For more information, see Memory optimized instances. |
28 November 2017 |
C5 instances |
2016-11-15 |
C5 instances are designed for compute-heavy applications. For more information, see Compute optimized instances. |
6 November 2017 |
Merge and split Convertible Reserved Instances |
2016-11-15 |
You can exchange (merge) two or more Convertible Reserved Instances for a new Convertible Reserved Instance. You can also use the modification process to split a Convertible Reserved Instance into smaller reservations. For more information, see Exchange Convertible Reserved Instances. |
6 November 2017 |
P3 instances |
2016-11-15 |
P3 instances are compute-optimized GPU instances. For more information, see Windows accelerated computing instances. |
25 October 2017 |
Modify VPC tenancy |
2016-11-15 |
You can change the instance tenancy attribute of a VPC from
|
16 October 2017 |
Stop on interruption |
2016-11-15 |
You can specify whether Amazon EC2 should stop or terminate Spot Instances when they are interrupted. For more information, see Interruption behavior. |
18 September 2017 |
Tag NAT gateways |
2016-11-15 |
You can tag your NAT gateway. For more information, see Tag your resources. |
7 September 2017 |
Security group rule descriptions |
2016-11-15 |
You can add descriptions to your security group rules. For more information, see Security group rules. |
31 August 2017 |
Elastic Graphics |
2016-11-15 |
Attach Elastic Graphics accelerators to your instances to accelerate the graphics performance of your applications. For more information, see Amazon Elastic Graphics. |
29 August 2017 |
Recover Elastic IP addresses |
2016-11-15 |
If you release an Elastic IP address for use in a VPC, you might be able to recover it. For more information, see Recover an Elastic IP address. |
11 August 2017 |
Tag Spot Fleet instances |
2016-11-15 |
You can configure your Spot Fleet to automatically tag the instances that it launches. |
24 July 2017 |
G3 instances |
2016-11-15 |
G3 instances provide a cost-effective, high-performance platform for graphics applications using DirectX or OpenGL. G3 instances also provide NVIDIA GRID Virtual Workstation features, supporting 4 monitors with resolutions up to 4096x2160. For more information, see Windows accelerated computing instances. |
13 July 2017 |
Tag resources during creation |
2016-11-15 |
You can apply tags to instances and volumes during creation. For more information, see Tag your resources. In addition, you can use tag-based resource-level permissions to control the tags that are applied. For more information see, Grant permission to tag resources during creation. |
28 March 2017 |
I3 instances |
2016-11-15 |
I3 instances are storage optimized instances. For more information, see Storage optimized instances. |
23 February 2017 |
Perform modifications on attached EBS volumes |
2016-11-15 |
With most EBS volumes attached to most EC2 instances, you can modify volume size, type, and IOPS without detaching the volume or stopping the instance. For more information, see Amazon EBS Elastic Volumes. |
13 February 2017 |
Attach an IAM role |
2016-11-15 |
You can attach, detach, or replace an IAM role for an existing instance. For more information, see IAM roles for Amazon EC2. |
9 February 2017 |
Dedicated Spot Instances |
2016-11-15 |
You can run Spot Instances on single-tenant hardware in a virtual private cloud (VPC). For more information, see Specify a tenancy for your Spot Instances. |
19 January 2017 |
IPv6 support |
2016-11-15 |
You can associate an IPv6 CIDR with your VPC and subnets, and assign IPv6 addresses to instances in your VPC. For more information, see Amazon EC2 instance IP addressing. |
1 December 2016 |
R4 instances |
2016-09-15 |
R4 instances are memory optimized instances. R4 instances are well-suited for memory-intensive, latency-sensitive workloads such as business intelligence (BI), data mining and analysis, in-memory databases, distributed web scale in-memory caching, and applications performance real-time processing of unstructured big data. For more information, see Memory optimized instances |
30 November 2016 |
New |
2016-09-15 |
T2 instances are designed to provide moderate base performance and the capability to burst to significantly higher performance as required by your workload. They are intended for applications that need responsiveness, high performance for limited periods of time, and a low cost. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. |
30 November 2016 |
P2 instances |
2016-09-15 |
P2 instances use NVIDIA Tesla K80 GPUs and are designed for general purpose GPU computing using the CUDA or OpenCL programming models. For more information, see Windows accelerated computing instances. |
29 September 2016 |
m4.16xlarge instances |
2016-04-01 |
Expands the range of the general-purpose M4 family with the
introduction of |
6 September 2016 |
Automatic scaling for Spot Fleet |
You can now set up scaling policies for your Spot Fleet. For more information, see Automatic scaling for Spot Fleet. |
1 September 2016 | |
Elastic Network Adapter (ENA) |
2016-04-01 |
You can now use ENA for enhanced networking. For more information, see Enhanced networking support. |
28 June 2016 |
Enhanced support for viewing and modifying longer IDs |
2016-04-01 |
You can now view and modify longer ID settings for other IAM users, IAM roles, or the root user. For more information, see Resource IDs. |
23 June 2016 |
Copy encrypted Amazon EBS snapshots between Amazon accounts |
2016-04-01 |
You can now copy encrypted EBS snapshots between Amazon accounts. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot. |
21 June 2016 |
Capture a screenshot of an instance console |
2015-10-01 |
You can now obtain additional information when debugging instances that are unreachable. For more information, see Troubleshoot an unreachable instance. |
24 May 2016 |
X1 instances |
2015-10-01 |
Memory-optimized instances designed for running in-memory databases, big data processing engines, and high performance computing (HPC) applications. For more information, see Memory optimized instances. |
18 May 2016 |
Two new EBS volume types |
2015-10-01 |
You can now create Throughput Optimized HDD (st1) and Cold HDD (sc1) volumes. For more information, see Amazon EBS volume types. |
19 April 2016 |
Added new NetworkPacketsIn and NetworkPacketsOut metrics for Amazon EC2 |
Added new NetworkPacketsIn and NetworkPacketsOut metrics for Amazon EC2. For more information, see Instance metrics. |
23 March 2016 | |
CloudWatch metrics for Spot Fleet |
You can now get CloudWatch metrics for your Spot Fleet. For more information, see CloudWatch metrics for Spot Fleet. |
21 March 2016 | |
Scheduled Instances |
2015-10-01 |
Scheduled Reserved Instances (Scheduled Instances) enable you to purchase capacity reservations that recur on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis, with a specified start time and duration. |
13 January 2016 |
Longer resource IDs |
2015-10-01 |
We're gradually introducing longer length IDs for some Amazon EC2 and Amazon EBS resource types. During the opt-in period, you can enable the longer ID format for supported resource types. For more information, see Resource IDs. |
13 January 2016 |
ClassicLink DNS support |
2015-10-01 |
You can enable ClassicLink DNS support for your VPC so that DNS hostnames that are addressed between linked EC2-Classic instances and instances in the VPC resolve to private IP addresses and not public IP addresses. |
11 January 2016 |
New |
2015-10-01 |
T2 instances are designed to provide moderate base performance and the capability to burst to significantly higher performance as required by your workload. They are intended for applications that need responsiveness, high performance for limited periods of time, and a low cost. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. |
15 December 2015 |
Dedicated hosts |
2015-10-01 |
An Amazon EC2 Dedicated host is a physical server with instance capacity dedicated for your use. For more information, see Dedicated Hosts. |
23 November 2015 |
Spot Instance duration |
2015-10-01 |
You can now specify a duration for your Spot Instances. Spot blocks is not supported (January 2023). |
6 October 2015 |
Spot Fleet modify request |
2015-10-01 |
You can now modify the target capacity of your Spot Fleet request. For more information, see Modify a Spot Fleet request. |
29 September 2015 |
Spot Fleet diversified allocation strategy |
2015-04-15 |
You can now allocate Spot Instances in multiple Spot pools using a single Spot Fleet request. For more information, see Allocation strategies for Spot Instances. |
15 September 2015 |
Spot Fleet instance weighting |
2015-04-15 |
You can now define the capacity units that each instance type contributes to your application's performance, and adjust the amount you are willing to pay for Spot Instances for each Spot pool accordingly. For more information, see Spot Fleet instance weighting. |
31 August 2015 |
New reboot alarm action and new IAM role for use with alarm actions |
Added the reboot alarm action and new IAM role for use with alarm actions. For more information, see Create alarms that stop, terminate, reboot, or recover an instance. |
23 July 2015 | |
New |
T2 instances are designed to provide moderate base performance and the capability to burst to significantly higher performance as required by your workload. They are intended for applications that need responsiveness, high performance for limited periods of time, and a low cost. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. |
16 June 2015 |
|
M4 instances |
General-purpose instances that provide a balance of compute, memory, and network resources. M4 instances are powered by a custom Intel 2.4 GHz Intel® Xeon® E5 2676v3 (Haswell) processor with AVX2. |
11 June 2015 | |
Spot Fleets |
2015-04-15 |
You can manage a collection, or fleet, of Spot Instances instead of managing separate Spot Instance requests. For more information, see Spot Fleet. |
18 May 2015 |
Migrate Elastic IP addresses to EC2-Classic |
2015-04-15 |
You can migrate an Elastic IP address that you've allocated for use in EC2-Classic to be used in a VPC.. |
15 May 2015 |
Importing VMs with multiple disks as AMIs |
2015-03-01 |
The VM Import process now supports importing VMs with multiple disks as AMIs. For more information, see Importing a VM as an Image Using VM Import/Export in the VM Import/Export User Guide . |
23 April 2015 |
New |
The new |
7 April 2015 |
|
D2 instances |
Dense-storage instances that are optimized for applications requiring sequential access to large amount of data on direct attached instance storage. D2 instances are designed to offer best price/performance in the dense-storage family. Powered by 2.4 GHz Intel® Xeon® E5 2676v3 (Haswell) processors, D2 instances improve on HS1 instances by providing additional compute power, more memory, and Enhanced Networking. In addition, D2 instances are available in four instance sizes with 6TB, 12TB, 24TB, and 48TB storage options. For more information, see Storage optimized instances. |
24 March 2015 |
|
Systems Manager |
Systems Manager enables you to configure and manage your EC2 instances. |
17 February 2015 |
|
Systems Manager for Microsoft SCVMM 1.5 |
You can now use Systems Manager for Microsoft SCVMM to launch an instance and to import a VM from SCVMM to Amazon EC2. For more information, see Create an EC2 Instance and Import your virtual machine. |
21 January 2015 |
|
Automatic recovery for EC2 instances |
You can create an Amazon CloudWatch alarm that monitors an Amazon EC2 instance and automatically recovers the instance if it becomes impaired due to an underlying hardware failure or a problem that requires Amazon involvement to repair. A recovered instance is identical to the original instance, including the instance ID, IP addresses, and all instance metadata. For more information, see Recover your instance. |
12 January 2015 |
|
C4 instances |
Next-generation compute-optimized instances that provide very high CPU performance at an economical price. C4 instances are based on custom 2.9 GHz Intel® Xeon® E5-2666 v3 (Haswell) processors. With additional Turbo boost, the processor clock speed in C4 instances can reach as high as 3.5Ghz with 1 or 2 core turbo. Expanding on the capabilities of C3 compute-optimized instances, C4 instances offer customers the highest processor performance among EC2 instances. These instances are ideally suited for high-traffic web applications, ad serving, batch processing, video encoding, distributed analytics, high-energy physics, genome analysis, and computational fluid dynamics. For more information, see Compute optimized instances. |
11 January 2015 |
|
ClassicLink | 2014-10-01 |
ClassicLink enables you to link your EC2-Classic instance to a VPC in your account. You can associate VPC security groups with the EC2-Classic instance, enabling communication between your EC2-Classic instance and instances in your VPC using private IP addresses. |
7 January 2015 |
Spot Instance termination notices | The best way to protect against Spot Instance interruption is to architect your application to be fault tolerant. In addition, you can take advantage of Spot Instance termination notices, which provide a two-minute warning before Amazon EC2 must terminate your Spot Instance. For more information, see Spot Instance interruption notices. |
5 January 2015 |
|
Systems Manager for Microsoft SCVMM |
Systems Manager for Microsoft SCVMM provides a simple, easy-to-use interface for managing Amazon resources, such as EC2 instances, from Microsoft SCVMM. For more information, see Amazon Systems Manager for Microsoft System Center VMM. |
29 October 2014 |
|
|
2014-09-01 |
The |
23 October 2014 |
Added support for Amazon CloudWatch Logs |
You can use Amazon CloudWatch Logs to monitor, store, and access your system, application, and custom log files from your instances or other sources. You can then retrieve the associated log data from CloudWatch Logs using the Amazon CloudWatch console, the CloudWatch Logs commands in the Amazon CLI, or the CloudWatch Logs SDK. |
10 July 2014 |
|
T2 instances |
2014-06-15 |
T2 instances are designed to provide moderate base performance and the capability to burst to significantly higher performance as required by your workload. They are intended for applications that need responsiveness, high performance for limited periods of time, and a low cost. For more information, see Burstable performance instances. |
30 June 2014 |
New EC2 Service Limits page |
Use the EC2 Service Limits page in the Amazon EC2 console to view the current limits for resources provided by Amazon EC2 and Amazon VPC, on a per-region basis. |
19 June 2014 |
|
Amazon EBS General Purpose SSD Volumes |
2014-05-01 |
General Purpose SSD volumes offer cost-effective storage that is ideal for a broad range of workloads. These volumes deliver single-digit millisecond latencies, the ability to burst to 3,000 IOPS for extended periods of time, and a base performance of 3 IOPS/GiB. General Purpose SSD volumes can range in size from 1 GiB to 1 TiB. For more information, see General Purpose SSD (gp2) volumes. |
16 June 2014 |
Windows Server 2012 R2 |
AMIs for Windows Server 2012 R2 use the new Amazon PV drivers. For more information, see Amazon PV drivers. |
3 June 2014 |
|
Amazon Management Pack |
Amazon Management Pack now supports for System Center Operations Manager 2012 R2. For more information, see Amazon Management Pack for Microsoft System Center. |
22 May 2014 |
|
Amazon EBS encryption |
2014-05-01 |
Amazon EBS encryption offers seamless encryption of EBS data volumes and snapshots, eliminating the need to build and maintain a secure key management infrastructure. EBS encryption enables data at rest security by encrypting your data using Amazon managed keys. The encryption occurs on the servers that host EC2 instances, providing encryption of data as it moves between EC2 instances and EBS storage. For more information, see Amazon EBS encryption. |
21 May 2014 |
R3 instances |
2014-02-01 |
Memory-optimized instances with the best price point per GiB of RAM and high performance. These instances are ideally suited for relational and NoSQL databases, in-memory analytics solutions, scientific computing, and other memory-intensive applications that can benefit from the high memory per vCPU, high compute performance, and enhanced networking capabilities of R3 instances. For more information, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types |
9 April 2014 |
Additional M3 instances |
2013-10-15 |
The M3 instance sizes |
20 January 2014 |
I2 instances |
2013-10-15 |
These instances provide very high IOPS. I2 instances also support enhanced networking that delivers improve inter-instance latencies, lower network jitter, and significantly higher packet per second (PPS) performance. For more information, see Storage optimized instances. |
19 December 2013 |
Updated M3 instances |
2013-10-15 |
The M3 instance sizes, |
19 December 2013 |
Resource-level permissions for RunInstances |
2013-10-15 |
You can now create policies in Amazon Identity and Access Management to control resource-level permissions for the Amazon EC2 RunInstances API action. For more information and example policies, see Identity and access management for Amazon EC2. |
20 November 2013 |
C3 instances |
2013-10-15 |
Compute-optimized instances that provide very high CPU performance at an economical price. C3 instances also support enhanced networking that delivers improved inter-instance latencies, lower network jitter, and significantly higher packet per second (PPS) performance. These instances are ideally suited for high-traffic web applications, ad serving, batch processing, video encoding, distributed analytics, high-energy physics, genome analysis, and computational fluid dynamics. For more information, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types |
14 November 2013 |
Launching an instance from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace |
You can now launch an instance from the Amazon Web Services Marketplace using the Amazon EC2 launch wizard. For more information, see Launch an Amazon Web Services Marketplace instance. |
11 November 2013 |
|
G2 instances |
2013-10-01 |
These instances are ideally suited for video creation services, 3D visualizations, streaming graphics-intensive applications, and other server-side workloads requiring massive parallel processing power. For more information, see Windows accelerated computing instances. |
4 November 2013 |
New launch wizard |
There is a new and redesigned EC2 launch wizard. For more information, see Launch an instance using the old launch instance wizard. |
10 October 2013 |
|
Modifying Amazon EC2 Reserved Instances |
2013-08-15 |
You can now modify Reserved Instances in a Region. |
11 September 2013 |
Assigning a public IP address |
2013-07-15 |
You can now assign a public IP address when you launch an instance in a VPC. For more information, see Assign a public IPv4 address during instance launch. |
20 August 2013 |
Granting resource-level permissions |
2013-06-15 |
Amazon EC2 supports new Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) and condition keys. For more information, see IAM policies for Amazon EC2. |
8 July 2013 |
Incremental Snapshot Copies |
2013-02-01 |
You can now perform incremental snapshot copies. For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot. |
11 June 2013 |
Amazon Management Pack |
The Amazon Management Pack links Amazon EC2 instances and the Windows or Linux operating systems running inside them. The Amazon Management Pack is an extension to Microsoft System Center Operations Manager. For more information, see Amazon Management Pack for Microsoft System Center. |
8 May 2013 | |
New Tags page |
There is a new Tags page in the Amazon EC2 console. For more information, see Tag your Amazon EC2 resources. |
04 April 2013 | |
Additional EBS-optimized instance types |
2013-02-01 |
The following instance types can now be launched as EBS-optimized
instances: For more information, see Amazon EBS–optimized instances. |
19 March 2013 |
PV Drivers |
To learn how to upgrade the paravirtualized (PV) drivers on your Windows AMI, see Upgrade PV drivers on Windows instances. |
March 2013 | |
Copy an AMI from one Region to another |
2013-02-01 |
You can copy an AMI from one Region to another, enabling you to launch consistent instances in more than one Amazon Region quickly and easily. For more information, see Copy an AMI. |
11 March 2013 |
Launch instances into a default VPC |
2013-02-01 |
Your Amazon account is capable of launching instances into either EC2-Classic or a VPC, or only into a VPC, on a region-by-region basis. If you can launch instances only into a VPC, we create a default VPC for you. When you launch an instance, we launch it into your default VPC, unless you create a nondefault VPC and specify it when you launch the instance. |
11 March 2013 |
High-memory cluster (cr1.8xlarge) instance type |
2012-12-01 |
Have large amounts of memory coupled with high CPU and network performance. These instances are well suited for in-memory analytics, graph analysis, and scientific computing applications. |
21 January 2013 |
High storage ( |
2012-12-01 |
High storage instances provide very high storage density and high sequential read and write performance per instance. They are well-suited for data warehousing, Hadoop/MapReduce, and parallel file systems. |
20 December 2012 |
EBS snapshot copy |
2012-12-01 |
You can use snapshot copies to create backups of data, to create new Amazon EBS volumes, or to create Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). For more information, see Copy an Amazon EBS snapshot. |
17 December 2012 |
Updated EBS metrics and status checks for Provisioned IOPS SSD volumes |
2012-10-01 |
Updated the EBS metrics to include two new metrics for Provisioned IOPS SSD volumes. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch metrics for Amazon EBS. Also added new status checks for Provisioned IOPS SSD volumes. For more information, see EBS volume status checks. |
20 November 2012 |
Support for Windows Server 2012 |
Amazon EC2 now provides you with several pre-configured Windows Server 2012 AMIs. These AMIs are immediately available for use in every region and for every 64-bit instance type. The AMIs support the following languages:
|
19 November 2012 | |
M3 instances | 2012-10-01 | There are new M3 extra-large and M3 double-extra-large instance types.
For more information, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types |
31 October 2012 |
Spot Instance request status |
2012-10-01 |
Spot Instance request status makes it easy to determine the state of your Spot requests. |
14 October 2012 |
Amazon EC2 Reserved Instance Marketplace | 2012-08-15 | The Reserved Instance Marketplace matches sellers who have Amazon EC2 Reserved Instances that they no longer need with buyers who are looking to purchase additional capacity. Reserved Instances bought and sold through the Reserved Instance Marketplace work like any other Reserved Instances, except that they can have less than a full standard term remaining and can be sold at different prices. |
11 September 2012 |
Provisioned IOPS SSD for Amazon EBS |
2012-07-20 |
Provisioned IOPS SSD volumes deliver predictable, high performance for I/O intensive workloads, such as database applications, that rely on consistent and fast response times. For more information, see Amazon EBS volume types. |
31 July 2012 |
High I/O instances for Amazon EC2 |
2012-06-15 |
High I/O instances provides very high, low latency, disk I/O performance using SSD-based local instance storage. |
18 July 2012 |
IAM roles on Amazon EC2 instances |
2012-06-01 |
IAM roles for Amazon EC2 provide:
|
11 June 2012 |
Spot Instance features that make it easier to get started and handle the potential of interruption. |
You can now manage your Spot Instances as follows:
|
7 June 2012 | |
EC2 instance export and timestamps for status checks for Amazon EC2 |
2012-05-01 |
Added support for exporting Windows Server instances that you originally imported into EC2. Added support for timestamps on instance status and system status to indicate the date and time that a status check failed. |
25 May 2012 |
EC2 instance export, and timestamps in instance and system status checks for Amazon VPC |
2012-05-01 |
Added support for EC2 instance export to Citrix Xen, Microsoft Hyper-V, and VMware vSphere. Added support for timestamps in instance and system status checks. |
25 May 2012 |
Cluster Compute Eight Extra Large instances |
2012-04-01 |
Added support for |
26 April 2012 |
Amazon Web Services Marketplace AMIs |
2012-04-01 |
Added support for Amazon Web Services Marketplace AMIs. |
19 April 2012 |
Medium instances, support for 64-bit on all AMIs |
2011-12-15 |
Added support for a new instance type and 64-bit information. |
7 March 2012 |
Reserved Instance pricing tiers |
2011-12-15 |
Added a new section discussing how to take advantage of the discount pricing that is built into the Reserved Instance pricing tiers. |
5 March 2012 |
Elastic Network Interfaces (ENIs) for EC2 instances in Amazon Virtual Private Cloud |
2011-12-01 |
Added new section about elastic network interfaces (ENIs) for EC2 instances in a VPC. For more information, see Elastic network interfaces. |
21 December 2011 |
New offering types for Amazon EC2 Reserved Instances |
2011-11-01 |
You can choose from a variety of Reserved Instance offerings that address your projected use of the instance. |
01 December 2011 |
Amazon EC2 instance status |
2011-11-01 |
You can view additional details about the status of your instances, including scheduled events planned by Amazon that might have an impact on your instances. These operational activities include instance reboots required to apply software updates or security patches, or instance retirements required where there are hardware issues. For more information, see Monitor the status of your instances. |
16 November 2011 |
Amazon EC2 Cluster Compute Instance Type |
Added support for Cluster Compute Eight Extra Large (cc2.8xlarge) to Amazon EC2. |
14 November 2011 | |
Spot Instances in Amazon VPC |
2011-07-15 |
Added information about the support for Spot Instances in Amazon VPC. With this update, users can launch Spot Instances a virtual private cloud (VPC). By launching Spot Instances in a VPC, users of Spot Instances can enjoy the benefits of Amazon VPC. |
11 October 2011 |
Simplified VM import process for users of the CLI tools |
2011-07-15 |
The VM Import process is simplified with the enhanced functionality of
|
15 September 2011 |
Support for importing in VHD file format |
VM Import can now import virtual machine image files in VHD format. The VHD file format is compatible with the Citrix Xen and Microsoft Hyper-V virtualization platforms. With this release, VM Import now supports RAW, VHD and VMDK (VMware ESX-compatible) image formats. For more information, see the VM Import/Export User Guide. |
24 August 2011 | |
Support for Windows Server 2003 R2 |
VM Import now supports Windows Server 2003 (R2). With this release, VM Import supports all versions of Windows Server supported by Amazon EC2. |
24 August 2011 | |
Update to the Amazon EC2 VM Import Connector for VMware vCenter |
Added information about the 1.1 version of the Amazon EC2 VM Import Connector for VMware vCenter virtual appliance (Connector). This update includes proxy support for Internet access, better error handling, improved task progress bar accuracy, and several bug fixes. |
27 June 2011 | |
Spot Instances Availability Zone pricing changes |
2011-05-15 |
Added information about the Spot Instances Availability Zone pricing feature. In this release, we've added new Availability Zone pricing options as part of the information returned when you query for Spot Instance requests and Spot price history. These additions make it easier to determine the price required to launch a Spot Instance into a particular Availability Zone. |
26 May 2011 |
Amazon Identity and Access Management |
Added information about Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM), which enables users to specify which Amazon EC2 actions a user can use with Amazon EC2 resources in general. For more information, see Identity and access management for Amazon EC2. |
26 April 2011 | |
Dedicated instances |
Launched within your Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC), Dedicated Instances are instances that are physically isolated at the host hardware level. Dedicated Instances let you take advantage of Amazon VPC and the Amazon cloud, with benefits including on-demand elastic provisioning and pay only for what you use, while isolating your Amazon EC2 compute instances at the hardware level. For more information, see Dedicated Instances. |
27 March 2011 | |
Reserved Instances updates to the Amazon Management Console |
Updates to the Amazon Management Console make it easier for users to view their Reserved Instances and purchase additional Reserved Instances, including Dedicated Reserved Instances. |
27 March 2011 | |
Support for Windows Server 2008 R2 |
Amazon EC2 now provides you with several pre-configured Windows Server 2008 R2 AMIs. These AMIs are immediately available for use in every region and in most 64-bit instance types, excluding t1.micro and HPC families. The AMIs will support multiple languages. |
15 March 2011 | |
Metadata information |
2011-01-01 |
Added information about metadata to reflect changes in the 2011-01-01 release. For more information, see Instance metadata and user data and Instance metadata categories. |
11 March 2011 |
Amazon EC2 VM Import Connector for VMware vCenter |
Added information about the Amazon EC2 VM Import Connector for VMware vCenter virtual appliance (Connector). The Connector is a plug-in for VMware vCenter that integrates with VMware vSphere Client and provides a graphical user interface that you can use to import your VMware virtual machines to Amazon EC2. |
3 March 2011 | |
Force volume detachment |
You can now use the Amazon Web Services Management Console to force the detachment of an Amazon EBS volume from an instance. For more information, see Detach an Amazon EBS volume from a Windows instance. |
23 February 2011 |
|
Instance termination protection |
You can now use the Amazon Management Console to prevent an instance from being terminated. For more information, see Enable termination protection. |
23 February 2011 |
|
VM Import |
2010-11-15 |
Added information about VM Import, which allows you to import a virtual machine or volume into Amazon EC2. For more information, see the VM Import/Export User Guide. |
15 December 2010 |
Basic monitoring for instances |
2010-08-31 |
Added information about basic monitoring for EC2 instances. |
12 December 2010 |
Filters and Tags |
2010-08-31 |
Added information about listing, filtering, and tagging resources. For more information, see List and filter your resources and Tag your Amazon EC2 resources. |
19 September 2010 |
Idempotent Instance Launch |
2010-08-31 |
Added information about ensuring idempotency when running instances. |
19 September 2010 |
Micro instances |
2010-06-15 |
Amazon EC2 offers the |
8 September 2010 |
Amazon Identity and Access Management for Amazon EC2 |
Amazon EC2 now integrates with Amazon Identity and Access Management (IAM). For more information, see Identity and access management for Amazon EC2. |
2 September 2010 |
|
Cluster instances |
2010-06-15 |
Amazon EC2 offers cluster compute instances for high-performance
computing (HPC) applications. For more information, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types |
12 July 2010 |
Amazon VPC IP Address Designation |
2010-06-15 |
Amazon VPC users can now specify the IP address to assign an instance launched in a VPC. |
12 July 2010 |
Amazon CloudWatch monitoring for Amazon EBS Volumes |
Amazon CloudWatch monitoring is now automatically available for Amazon EBS volumes. For more information, see Amazon CloudWatch metrics for Amazon EBS. |
14 June 2010 |
|
High-memory extra large instances |
2009-11-30 |
Amazon EC2 now supports a High-Memory Extra Large (m2.xlarge) instance
type. For more information, see Amazon EC2 Instance Types |
22 February 2010 |
Reserved Instances with Windows |
Amazon EC2 now supports Reserved Instances with Windows. |
22 February 2010 |