aws elbv2 create-target-group

Creates a target group. For more information, see the following: Target groups for your Application Load Balancers Target groups for your Network Load Balancers Target groups for your Gateway Load Balancers This operation is idempotent, which means that it completes at most one time. If you attempt to create multiple target groups with the same settings, each call succeeds

Options

NameDescription
--name <string>The name of the target group. This name must be unique per region per account, can have a maximum of 32 characters, must contain only alphanumeric characters or hyphens, and must not begin or end with a hyphen
--protocol <string>The protocol to use for routing traffic to the targets. For Application Load Balancers, the supported protocols are HTTP and HTTPS. For Network Load Balancers, the supported protocols are TCP, TLS, UDP, or TCP_UDP. For Gateway Load Balancers, the supported protocol is GENEVE. A TCP_UDP listener must be associated with a TCP_UDP target group. If the target is a Lambda function, this parameter does not apply
--protocol-version <string>[HTTP/HTTPS protocol] The protocol version. Specify GRPC to send requests to targets using gRPC. Specify HTTP2 to send requests to targets using HTTP/2. The default is HTTP1, which sends requests to targets using HTTP/1.1
--port <integer>The port on which the targets receive traffic. This port is used unless you specify a port override when registering the target. If the target is a Lambda function, this parameter does not apply. If the protocol is GENEVE, the supported port is 6081
--vpc-id <string>The identifier of the virtual private cloud (VPC). If the target is a Lambda function, this parameter does not apply. Otherwise, this parameter is required
--health-check-protocol <string>The protocol the load balancer uses when performing health checks on targets. For Application Load Balancers, the default is HTTP. For Network Load Balancers and Gateway Load Balancers, the default is TCP. The TCP protocol is not supported for health checks if the protocol of the target group is HTTP or HTTPS. The GENEVE, TLS, UDP, and TCP_UDP protocols are not supported for health checks
--health-check-port <string>The port the load balancer uses when performing health checks on targets. If the protocol is HTTP, HTTPS, TCP, TLS, UDP, or TCP_UDP, the default is traffic-port, which is the port on which each target receives traffic from the load balancer. If the protocol is GENEVE, the default is port 80
--health-check-enabledIndicates whether health checks are enabled. If the target type is lambda, health checks are disabled by default but can be enabled. If the target type is instance or ip, health checks are always enabled and cannot be disabled
--no-health-check-enabledIndicates whether health checks are enabled. If the target type is lambda, health checks are disabled by default but can be enabled. If the target type is instance or ip, health checks are always enabled and cannot be disabled
--health-check-path <string>[HTTP/HTTPS health checks] The destination for health checks on the targets. [HTTP1 or HTTP2 protocol version] The ping path. The default is /. [GRPC protocol version] The path of a custom health check method with the format /package.service/method. The default is /AWS.ALB/healthcheck
--health-check-interval-seconds <integer>The approximate amount of time, in seconds, between health checks of an individual target. If the target group protocol is TCP, TLS, UDP, or TCP_UDP, the supported values are 10 and 30 seconds. If the target group protocol is HTTP or HTTPS, the default is 30 seconds. If the target group protocol is GENEVE, the default is 10 seconds. If the target type is lambda, the default is 35 seconds
--health-check-timeout-seconds <integer>The amount of time, in seconds, during which no response from a target means a failed health check. For target groups with a protocol of HTTP, HTTPS, or GENEVE, the default is 5 seconds. For target groups with a protocol of TCP or TLS, this value must be 6 seconds for HTTP health checks and 10 seconds for TCP and HTTPS health checks. If the target type is lambda, the default is 30 seconds
--healthy-threshold-count <integer>The number of consecutive health checks successes required before considering an unhealthy target healthy. For target groups with a protocol of HTTP or HTTPS, the default is 5. For target groups with a protocol of TCP, TLS, or GENEVE, the default is 3. If the target type is lambda, the default is 5
--unhealthy-threshold-count <integer>The number of consecutive health check failures required before considering a target unhealthy. If the target group protocol is HTTP or HTTPS, the default is 2. If the target group protocol is TCP or TLS, this value must be the same as the healthy threshold count. If the target group protocol is GENEVE, the default is 3. If the target type is lambda, the default is 2
--matcher <structure>[HTTP/HTTPS health checks] The HTTP or gRPC codes to use when checking for a successful response from a target
--target-type <string>The type of target that you must specify when registering targets with this target group. You can't specify targets for a target group using more than one target type. instance - Register targets by instance ID. This is the default value. ip - Register targets by IP address. You can specify IP addresses from the subnets of the virtual private cloud (VPC) for the target group, the RFC 1918 range (10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, and 192.168.0.0/16), and the RFC 6598 range (100.64.0.0/10). You can't specify publicly routable IP addresses. lambda - Register a single Lambda function as a target
--tags <list>The tags to assign to the target group
--cli-input-json <string>Performs service operation based on the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by ``--generate-cli-skeleton``. If other arguments are provided on the command line, the CLI values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally
--generate-cli-skeleton <string>Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value ``input``, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for ``--cli-input-json``. If provided with the value ``output``, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command