KubernetesNetworkConfigResponseArgs

data class KubernetesNetworkConfigResponseArgs(val ipFamily: Output<IpFamilyEnumValueArgs>? = null, val serviceIpv4Cidr: Output<String>? = null, val serviceIpv6Cidr: Output<String>? = null) : ConvertibleToJava<KubernetesNetworkConfigResponseArgs>

Definition of KubernetesNetworkConfigResponse

Constructors

Link copied to clipboard
constructor(ipFamily: Output<IpFamilyEnumValueArgs>? = null, serviceIpv4Cidr: Output<String>? = null, serviceIpv6Cidr: Output<String>? = null)

Properties

Link copied to clipboard
val ipFamily: Output<IpFamilyEnumValueArgs>? = null

The IP family used to assign Kubernetes Pod and Service objects IP addresses. The IP family is always ipv4, unless you have a 1.21 or later cluster running version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI plugin for Kubernetes and specified ipv6 when you created the cluster.

Link copied to clipboard
val serviceIpv4Cidr: Output<String>? = null

The CIDR block that Kubernetes Pod and Service object IP addresses are assigned from. Kubernetes assigns addresses from an IPv4 CIDR block assigned to a subnet that the node is in. If you didn't specify a CIDR block when you created the cluster, then Kubernetes assigns addresses from either the 10.100.0.0/16 or 172.20.0.0/16 CIDR blocks. If this was specified, then it was specified when the cluster was created and it can't be changed.

Link copied to clipboard
val serviceIpv6Cidr: Output<String>? = null

The CIDR block that Kubernetes pod and service IP addresses are assigned from if you created a 1.21 or later cluster with version 1.10.1 or later of the Amazon VPC CNI add-on and specified ipv6 for ipFamily when you created the cluster. Kubernetes assigns service addresses from the unique local address range (fc00::/7) because you can't specify a custom IPv6 CIDR block when you create the cluster.

Functions

Link copied to clipboard
open override fun toJava(): KubernetesNetworkConfigResponseArgs