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For example, if you want some software developers in your enterprise to use DNS resources but do not want them to delete DNS resources or perform any other high-risk operations, you can create IAM users and grant permission to use DNS resources but not permission to delete them.
To prevent the private zone from taking effect in the VPC, you can directly delete the private zone. Procedure Go to the Private Zones page. Click in the upper left corner and select the desired region and project.
You can add, modify, delete, view, disable, or enable record sets of the A, CNAME, MX, AAAA, TXT, SRV, NS, and CAA types for public zones. For details, see Record Set Overview.
You can create, modify, delete, and view inbound endpoints. For details, see Managing Inbound Endpoints.
The following is an example deny policy: { "Version": "1.1", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Deny", "Action": [ "dns:*:delete*" ] } ] } Example 3: Create a custom policy
You can change the rule name, associate other VPCs, disassociate VPCs, and add, delete, or change IP addresses. If only one IP address is configured for the endpoint rule, the IP address cannot be deleted. Deleting an Endpoint Rule Go to the Resolvers page.
Stopping a Share If a share is no longer needed, you can delete it at any time as the owner. Deleting a share does not delete the shared resources. After a share is deleted, the principals will no longer use the shared resources. For details, see Deleting a Resource Share.
Stopping a Share If a share is no longer needed, you can delete it at any time as the owner. Deleting a share does not delete the shared resources. After a share is deleted, the principals will no longer be able to use the shared resources.
If the message is displayed, perform either of the following operations: Delete the existing record set that conflicts with the record set that you want to add, and then add the record set. Deleting a record set may cause domain name resolution to fail.
DELETE Requests the server to delete specified resources, for example, an object. HEAD Same as GET except that the server must return only the response header. PATCH Requests the server to update partial content of a specified resource.
Do not delete original record sets until the changes take effect to ensure your service continuity. Parent topic: Best Practices for Public Domain Name Resolution
DELETE /v2.1/reverse/floatingips dns:ptr:set vpc:*:get* vpc:*:list* √ √ Query a PTR record. GET /v2/reverse/floatingips/{region}:{floatingip_id} dns:ptr:get - √ √ Query PTR records. GET /v2/reverse/floatingips dns:ptr:list - √ This API is used to list PTR records.
DNS enables you to create, modify, delete, enable, disable, or view public zones. All regions.
Do not delete original record sets until the changes take effect to ensure your service continuity. Check whether the record sets already taken effect. Run the command below to verify the record sets.
You can create, modify, delete, and view PTR records. TTL TTL is short for time to live, which specifies how long a record record is cached on a local DNS server. It is measured in seconds. The TTL value ranges from 1 to 2147483647.
DNS allows you to create, modify, delete, and view private zones, associate private zones with VPCs, and disassociate private zones from VPCs. Private zones can be created without the need to register domain names. Each private zone must be unique in an associated VPC.
Delete the existing record set and then add the record set again. Deleting a record set may cause domain name resolution failures. Exercise caution when performing this operation. Parent Topic: DNS Rules
URI DELETE /v2.1/ptrs/{ptr_id} Table 1 Path Parameters Parameter Mandatory Type Description ptr_id Yes String PTR record ID Request Parameters Table 2 Request header parameters Parameter Mandatory Type Description X-Auth-Token Yes String Definition The user token.
You can modify, delete, and view details about the public zone. For details, see Managing Public Zones. You can add record sets for the public zone. For details, see Adding Record Sets for a Public Zone. Parent Topic: Public Zones
Do not delete original record sets until the changes take effect to ensure your service continuity. Checking the Authoritative DNS Server Check whether the record sets configured for the domain name have taken effect on the authoritative DNS server.