You are viewing documentation for version 2 of the AWS SDK for Ruby. Version 3 documentation can be found here.
Class: Aws::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::Types::TargetGroupAttribute
- Inherits:
-
Struct
- Object
- Struct
- Aws::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::Types::TargetGroupAttribute
- Defined in:
- (unknown)
Overview
When passing TargetGroupAttribute as input to an Aws::Client method, you can use a vanilla Hash:
{
key: "TargetGroupAttributeKey",
value: "TargetGroupAttributeValue",
}
Information about a target group attribute.
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#key ⇒ String
The name of the attribute.
-
#value ⇒ String
The value of the attribute.
Instance Attribute Details
#key ⇒ String
The name of the attribute.
The following attribute is supported by all load balancers:
deregistration_delay.timeout_seconds
- The amount of time, in seconds, for Elastic Load Balancing to wait before changing the state of a deregistering target fromdraining
tounused
. The range is 0-3600 seconds. The default value is 300 seconds. If the target is a Lambda function, this attribute is not supported.
^
The following attributes are supported by both Application Load Balancers and Network Load Balancers:
stickiness.enabled
- Indicates whether sticky sessions are enabled. The value istrue
orfalse
. The default isfalse
.stickiness.type
- The type of sticky sessions. The possible values arelb_cookie
for Application Load Balancers orsource_ip
for Network Load Balancers.
The following attributes are supported only if the load balancer is an Application Load Balancer and the target is an instance or an IP address:
load_balancing.algorithm.type
- The load balancing algorithm determines how the load balancer selects targets when routing requests. The value isround_robin
orleast_outstanding_requests
. The default isround_robin
.slow_start.duration_seconds
- The time period, in seconds, during which a newly registered target receives an increasing share of the traffic to the target group. After this time period ends, the target receives its full share of traffic. The range is 30-900 seconds (15 minutes). The default is 0 seconds (disabled).stickiness.lb_cookie.duration_seconds
- The time period, in seconds, during which requests from a client should be routed to the same target. After this time period expires, the load balancer-generated cookie is considered stale. The range is 1 second to 1 week (604800 seconds). The default value is 1 day (86400 seconds).
The following attribute is supported only if the load balancer is an Application Load Balancer and the target is a Lambda function:
lambda.multi_value_headers.enabled
- Indicates whether the request and response headers that are exchanged between the load balancer and the Lambda function include arrays of values or strings. The value istrue
orfalse
. The default isfalse
. If the value isfalse
and the request contains a duplicate header field name or query parameter key, the load balancer uses the last value sent by the client.
^
The following attributes are supported only by Network Load Balancers:
deregistration_delay.connection_termination.enabled
- Indicates whether the load balancer terminates connections at the end of the deregistration timeout. The value istrue
orfalse
. The default isfalse
.proxy_protocol_v2.enabled
- Indicates whether Proxy Protocol version 2 is enabled. The value istrue
orfalse
. The default isfalse
.
#value ⇒ String
The value of the attribute.