oci.Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule
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This resource provides the Drg Route Table Route Rule resource in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Core service.
Adds one static route rule to the specified DRG route table.
Example Usage
import * as pulumi from "@pulumi/pulumi";
import * as oci from "@pulumi/oci";
const testDrgRouteTableRouteRule = new oci.core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("test_drg_route_table_route_rule", {
drgRouteTableId: testDrgRouteTable.id,
destination: drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestination,
destinationType: drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestinationType,
nextHopDrgAttachmentId: testDrgAttachment.id,
});
import pulumi
import pulumi_oci as oci
test_drg_route_table_route_rule = oci.core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("test_drg_route_table_route_rule",
drg_route_table_id=test_drg_route_table["id"],
destination=drg_route_table_route_rule_route_rules_destination,
destination_type=drg_route_table_route_rule_route_rules_destination_type,
next_hop_drg_attachment_id=test_drg_attachment["id"])
package main
import (
"github.com/pulumi/pulumi-oci/sdk/v2/go/oci/Core"
"github.com/pulumi/pulumi/sdk/v3/go/pulumi"
)
func main() {
pulumi.Run(func(ctx *pulumi.Context) error {
_, err := Core.NewDrgRouteTableRouteRule(ctx, "test_drg_route_table_route_rule", &Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs{
DrgRouteTableId: pulumi.Any(testDrgRouteTable.Id),
Destination: pulumi.Any(drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestination),
DestinationType: pulumi.Any(drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestinationType),
NextHopDrgAttachmentId: pulumi.Any(testDrgAttachment.Id),
})
if err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
})
}
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using Pulumi;
using Oci = Pulumi.Oci;
return await Deployment.RunAsync(() =>
{
var testDrgRouteTableRouteRule = new Oci.Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("test_drg_route_table_route_rule", new()
{
DrgRouteTableId = testDrgRouteTable.Id,
Destination = drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestination,
DestinationType = drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestinationType,
NextHopDrgAttachmentId = testDrgAttachment.Id,
});
});
package generated_program;
import com.pulumi.Context;
import com.pulumi.Pulumi;
import com.pulumi.core.Output;
import com.pulumi.oci.Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule;
import com.pulumi.oci.Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Map;
import java.io.File;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public class App {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Pulumi.run(App::stack);
}
public static void stack(Context ctx) {
var testDrgRouteTableRouteRule = new DrgRouteTableRouteRule("testDrgRouteTableRouteRule", DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs.builder()
.drgRouteTableId(testDrgRouteTable.id())
.destination(drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestination)
.destinationType(drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestinationType)
.nextHopDrgAttachmentId(testDrgAttachment.id())
.build());
}
}
resources:
testDrgRouteTableRouteRule:
type: oci:Core:DrgRouteTableRouteRule
name: test_drg_route_table_route_rule
properties:
drgRouteTableId: ${testDrgRouteTable.id}
destination: ${drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestination}
destinationType: ${drgRouteTableRouteRuleRouteRulesDestinationType}
nextHopDrgAttachmentId: ${testDrgAttachment.id}
Create DrgRouteTableRouteRule Resource
Resources are created with functions called constructors. To learn more about declaring and configuring resources, see Resources.
Constructor syntax
new DrgRouteTableRouteRule(name: string, args: DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs, opts?: CustomResourceOptions);
@overload
def DrgRouteTableRouteRule(resource_name: str,
args: DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs,
opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None)
@overload
def DrgRouteTableRouteRule(resource_name: str,
opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None,
destination: Optional[str] = None,
destination_type: Optional[str] = None,
drg_route_table_id: Optional[str] = None,
next_hop_drg_attachment_id: Optional[str] = None)
func NewDrgRouteTableRouteRule(ctx *Context, name string, args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs, opts ...ResourceOption) (*DrgRouteTableRouteRule, error)
public DrgRouteTableRouteRule(string name, DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs args, CustomResourceOptions? opts = null)
public DrgRouteTableRouteRule(String name, DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs args)
public DrgRouteTableRouteRule(String name, DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs args, CustomResourceOptions options)
type: oci:Core:DrgRouteTableRouteRule
properties: # The arguments to resource properties.
options: # Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
Parameters
- name string
- The unique name of the resource.
- args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs
- The arguments to resource properties.
- opts CustomResourceOptions
- Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
- resource_name str
- The unique name of the resource.
- args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs
- The arguments to resource properties.
- opts ResourceOptions
- Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
- ctx Context
- Context object for the current deployment.
- name string
- The unique name of the resource.
- args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs
- The arguments to resource properties.
- opts ResourceOption
- Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
- name string
- The unique name of the resource.
- args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs
- The arguments to resource properties.
- opts CustomResourceOptions
- Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
- name String
- The unique name of the resource.
- args DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs
- The arguments to resource properties.
- options CustomResourceOptions
- Bag of options to control resource's behavior.
Constructor example
The following reference example uses placeholder values for all input properties.
var drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource = new Oci.Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource", new()
{
Destination = "string",
DestinationType = "string",
DrgRouteTableId = "string",
NextHopDrgAttachmentId = "string",
});
example, err := Core.NewDrgRouteTableRouteRule(ctx, "drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource", &Core.DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs{
Destination: pulumi.String("string"),
DestinationType: pulumi.String("string"),
DrgRouteTableId: pulumi.String("string"),
NextHopDrgAttachmentId: pulumi.String("string"),
})
var drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource = new DrgRouteTableRouteRule("drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource", DrgRouteTableRouteRuleArgs.builder()
.destination("string")
.destinationType("string")
.drgRouteTableId("string")
.nextHopDrgAttachmentId("string")
.build());
drg_route_table_route_rule_resource = oci.core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource",
destination="string",
destination_type="string",
drg_route_table_id="string",
next_hop_drg_attachment_id="string")
const drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource = new oci.core.DrgRouteTableRouteRule("drgRouteTableRouteRuleResource", {
destination: "string",
destinationType: "string",
drgRouteTableId: "string",
nextHopDrgAttachmentId: "string",
});
type: oci:Core:DrgRouteTableRouteRule
properties:
destination: string
destinationType: string
drgRouteTableId: string
nextHopDrgAttachmentId: string
DrgRouteTableRouteRule Resource Properties
To learn more about resource properties and how to use them, see Inputs and Outputs in the Architecture and Concepts docs.
Inputs
In Python, inputs that are objects can be passed either as argument classes or as dictionary literals.
The DrgRouteTableRouteRule resource accepts the following input properties:
- Destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- Destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- Drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- Next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- Destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- Destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- Drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- Next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- destination String
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type String - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route StringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- next
Hop StringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- destination str
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination_
type str - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg_
route_ strtable_ id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- next_
hop_ strdrg_ attachment_ id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- destination String
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type String - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route StringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- next
Hop StringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
Outputs
All input properties are implicitly available as output properties. Additionally, the DrgRouteTableRouteRule resource produces the following output properties:
- Attributes Dictionary<string, string>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- Id string
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- Is
Blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- Is
Conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- Route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - Route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- Attributes map[string]string
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- Id string
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- Is
Blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- Is
Conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- Route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - Route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Map<String,String>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- id String
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- is
Blackhole Boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict Boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- route
Provenance String - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type String - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes {[key: string]: string}
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- id string
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- is
Blackhole boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Mapping[str, str]
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- id str
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- is_
blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is_
conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- route_
provenance str - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route_
type str - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Map<String>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- id String
- The provider-assigned unique ID for this managed resource.
- is
Blackhole Boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict Boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- route
Provenance String - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type String - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
Look up Existing DrgRouteTableRouteRule Resource
Get an existing DrgRouteTableRouteRule resource’s state with the given name, ID, and optional extra properties used to qualify the lookup.
public static get(name: string, id: Input<ID>, state?: DrgRouteTableRouteRuleState, opts?: CustomResourceOptions): DrgRouteTableRouteRule
@staticmethod
def get(resource_name: str,
id: str,
opts: Optional[ResourceOptions] = None,
attributes: Optional[Mapping[str, str]] = None,
destination: Optional[str] = None,
destination_type: Optional[str] = None,
drg_route_table_id: Optional[str] = None,
is_blackhole: Optional[bool] = None,
is_conflict: Optional[bool] = None,
next_hop_drg_attachment_id: Optional[str] = None,
route_provenance: Optional[str] = None,
route_type: Optional[str] = None) -> DrgRouteTableRouteRule
func GetDrgRouteTableRouteRule(ctx *Context, name string, id IDInput, state *DrgRouteTableRouteRuleState, opts ...ResourceOption) (*DrgRouteTableRouteRule, error)
public static DrgRouteTableRouteRule Get(string name, Input<string> id, DrgRouteTableRouteRuleState? state, CustomResourceOptions? opts = null)
public static DrgRouteTableRouteRule get(String name, Output<String> id, DrgRouteTableRouteRuleState state, CustomResourceOptions options)
Resource lookup is not supported in YAML
- name
- The unique name of the resulting resource.
- id
- The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
- state
- Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
- opts
- A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
- resource_name
- The unique name of the resulting resource.
- id
- The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
- name
- The unique name of the resulting resource.
- id
- The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
- state
- Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
- opts
- A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
- name
- The unique name of the resulting resource.
- id
- The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
- state
- Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
- opts
- A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
- name
- The unique name of the resulting resource.
- id
- The unique provider ID of the resource to lookup.
- state
- Any extra arguments used during the lookup.
- opts
- A bag of options that control this resource's behavior.
- Attributes Dictionary<string, string>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- Destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- Destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- Drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- Is
Blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- Is
Conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- Next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- Route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - Route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- Attributes map[string]string
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- Destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- Destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- Drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- Is
Blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- Is
Conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- Next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- Route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - Route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Map<String,String>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- destination String
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type String - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route StringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- is
Blackhole Boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict Boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- next
Hop StringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- route
Provenance String - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type String - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes {[key: string]: string}
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- destination string
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type string - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route stringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- is
Blackhole boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- next
Hop stringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- route
Provenance string - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type string - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Mapping[str, str]
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- destination str
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination_
type str - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg_
route_ strtable_ id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- is_
blackhole bool - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is_
conflict bool - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- next_
hop_ strdrg_ attachment_ id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- route_
provenance str - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route_
type str - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
- attributes Map<String>
- Additional properties for the route, computed by the service.
- destination String
(Updatable) This is the range of IP addresses used for matching when routing traffic. Only CIDR_BLOCK values are allowed.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 or IPv6 CIDR. For example:
- destination
Type String - Type of destination for the rule. Required if
direction
=EGRESS
. Allowed values:CIDR_BLOCK
: If the rule'sdestination
is an IP address range in CIDR notation.
- drg
Route StringTable Id The OCID of the DRG route table.
Potential values:
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
192.168.1.0/24
or2001:0db8:0123:45::/56
.
- IP address range in CIDR notation. This can be an IPv4 CIDR block or IPv6 prefix. For example:
- is
Blackhole Boolean - Indicates that if the next hop attachment does not exist, so traffic for this route is discarded without notification.
- is
Conflict Boolean - Indicates that the route was not imported due to a conflict between route rules.
- next
Hop StringDrg Attachment Id The OCID of the next hop DRG attachment. The next hop DRG attachment is responsible for reaching the network destination.
** IMPORTANT ** Any change to a property that does not support update will force the destruction and recreation of the resource with the new property values
- route
Provenance String - The earliest origin of a route. If a route is advertised to a DRG through an IPsec tunnel attachment, and is propagated to peered DRGs via RPC attachments, the route's provenance in the peered DRGs remains
IPSEC_TUNNEL
, because that is the earliest origin. - route
Type String - You can specify static routes for the DRG route table using the API. The DRG learns dynamic routes from the DRG attachments using various routing protocols.
Import
DrgRouteTableRouteRule can be imported using the id
, e.g.
$ pulumi import oci:Core/drgRouteTableRouteRule:DrgRouteTableRouteRule test_drg_route_table_route_rule "drgRouteTables/{drgRouteTableId}/routeRules/{id}"
To learn more about importing existing cloud resources, see Importing resources.
Package Details
- Repository
- oci pulumi/pulumi-oci
- License
- Apache-2.0
- Notes
- This Pulumi package is based on the
oci
Terraform Provider.