- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
- Getting Started
-
User Guide
- Public Zones
- Private Zones
- Record Sets
- PTR Records
- Intelligent Resolution
- Resolver
- Permissions Management
- Using CTS to Collect DNS Key Operations
- Access Logging
- Quota Adjustment
- Best Practices
-
API Reference
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- APIs
- Examples
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Appendix
- SDK Reference
-
FAQs
-
DNS Overview
- Will I Be Billed for the DNS Service?
- How Many Zones, PTR Records, and Record Sets Can I Create?
- What Are Huawei Cloud DNS Servers?
- What Are Huawei Cloud Private DNS Server Addresses?
- What Are the Differences Between Public and Private Domain Names?
- Does DNS Support IPv6?
- Does DNS Support Explicit Forwarding and Implicit Forwarding?
- Does DNS Support Dynamic Domain Name Resolution?
- Does DNS Support Wildcard Entries?
- What Is TTL?
- How Many Domain Name Levels Does DNS Support?
- How Are Zones Queried to Resolve a Domain Name?
- What Are the Priorities of Resolution Lines?
- Why Was the Email Address Format Changed in the SOA Record?
- What Is CAA?
- Why Should I Set Priority For an MX Record Set?
- Can DNS Point a Domain Name to a Specific Port?
- Invalid Domain Resolution
- Website Access Failures
-
Public Zones
- Why Is a Message Indicating Conflict with an Existing Record Set Displayed When I Add a Record Set?
- How Do I Handle the Conflict Between CNAME and MX Record Sets?
- How Do I Add Record Sets to Subdomains?
- Which IP Address Is Returned for the Domain Name If There Are Multiple IP Addresses in a Record Set?
- Can I Modify a Zone?
- Can DNS Translate a Domain Name to IP Addresses of On-premises Servers or Third-Party Servers?
- How Can Multiple Domain Names Be Linked to the Same Website?
- Configuring Weighted Routing
- Can DNS Resolve a Domain Name that Has Not Been Licensed?
- Does DNS Support Dynamic Domain Name Resolution?
- How Do I Change the DNS Servers of a Domain Name?
- How Do I Handle Inaccurate Scheduling Caused by the CNAME Record Set Cache in the Default Lines?
-
Private Zones
- Why Is a Message Indicating Conflict with an Existing Record Set Displayed When I Add a Record Set?
- How Do I Change Default DNS Servers of an ECS to Huawei Cloud Private DNS Servers?
- How Can I Access an ECS Using Its Host Name?
- How Can I Map the Private IP Address of an ECS to a Domain Name?
- How Can I Use a Private Domain Name to Route Internet Traffic?
- Can I Use Private Domain Names Across Regions?
- Do I Need to Register Private Domain Names?
- Will a Deleted VPC Be Automatically Disassociated from the Private Zone?
- Are Private DNS Server Addresses the Same for All Users?
- What Are the Restrictions on Concurrent Private DNS Queries?
- Reverse Resolution
- Domain Transfer
-
DNS Overview
- Videos
-
More Documents
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- Overview
- Getting Started
- Private Zone
- Record Set
- PTR Record
- Permissions Management
- Key Operations Recorded by CTS
- Quota Adjustment
- FAQs
- Change History
- API Reference (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
-
User Guide (Paris Region)
- Overview
- Getting Started
- Public Zones
- Private Zones
- Record Sets
- PTR Records
- Intelligent Resolution
- Permissions Management
- Key Operations Recorded by CTS
- Quota Adjustment
-
FAQ
-
DNS Overview
- Will I Be Billed for the DNS Service?
- How Many Zones, PTR Records, and Record Sets Can I Create?
- What Are DNS Servers?
- What Are the Differences Between Public and Private Domain Names?
- Does DNS Support IPv6?
- Does DNS Support Explicit and Implicit URLs?
- Does DNS Support Dynamic Domain Name Resolution?
- Does DNS Support Wildcard Entries?
- What Is TTL?
- How Many Domain Name Levels Does DNS Support?
- How Are Zones Queried to Resolve a Domain Name?
- Why Was the Email Address Format Changed in the SOA Record?
- What Is CAA?
- Why Should I Set Priority For an MX Record Set?
- Can DNS Point a Domain Name to a Specific Port?
-
Public Zones
- How Do I Add Record Sets to Subdomains?
- Which IP Address Is Returned for the Domain Name If There Are Multiple IP Addresses in a Record Set?
- What Can I Do If There Is Message Indicating that the Public Zone Already Exists?
- Can I Modify a Zone?
- How Can Multiple Domain Names Be Linked to the Same Website?
- Configuring Weighted Routing
-
Private Zones
- How Can I Map the Private IP Address of an ECS to a Domain Name?
- Can I Use Private Domain Names Across Regions?
- Do I Need to Register Private Domain Names?
- Will a Deleted VPC Be Automatically Disassociated from the Private Zone?
- Are Private DNS Server Addresses the Same for All Users?
- What Are the Restrictions on Concurrent Private DNS Requests?
- Reverse Resolution
-
DNS Overview
- Change History
- API Reference (Paris Region)
-
User Guide (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- Overview
- Getting Started
- Private Zone
- Record Set
- Permissions Management
- Key Operations Recorded by CTS
- Quota Adjustment
-
FAQs
-
DNS Overview
- Will I Be Billed for the DNS Service?
- How Many Zones and Record Sets Can I Create?
- What Are the Private DNS Servers Provided by the DNS Service?
- Does DNS Support Wildcard Entries?
- How Are Zones Queried to Resolve a Domain Name?
- Why Was the Email Address Format Changed in the SOA Record?
- Can DNS Point a Domain Name to a Specific Port?
- Private Zones
-
DNS Overview
- Change History
- API Reference (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- User Guide (Ankara Region)
- API Reference (Ankara Region)
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- Glossary
- General Reference
Copied.
Making an API Request
This section describes the structure of a RESTful API request, and uses the IAM API for creating an IAM user as an example to describe how to call an API.
Request URI
A request URI is in the following format:
{URI-scheme} :// {Endpoint} / {resource-path} ? {query-string}
Although a request URI is included in the request header, most programming languages or frameworks require the request URI to be transmitted separately.
- URI-scheme: protocol used to send requests. All APIs use HTTPS.
- Endpoint: domain name or IP address of the server bearing the REST service. The endpoint varies between services in different regions. It can be obtained from Regions and Endpoints. For example, the endpoint of IAM in CN-Hong Kong: "iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com".
- resource-path: API access path. Obtain the value from the URI of an API. For example, resource-path of the API used to create an IAM user as the administrator is /v3.0/OS-USER/users.
- query-string: query parameters, which are optional. Ensure that a question mark (?) is included in front of each query parameter that is in the format of Parameter name=Parameter value. For example, limit=10 indicates that a maximum of 10 data records will be queried.
For example, if you want to create an IAM user, use the endpoint of any region (for example, the endpoint in CN-Hong Kong: "iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com") and the resource-path (/v3.0/OS-USER/users) in the URI of the API used by the administrator to create an IAM user. The following is an example:
https://iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com/v3.0/OS-USER/users

To simplify the URI display in this document, each API is provided only with a resource-path and a request method. The URI-scheme of all APIs is HTTPS, and the endpoints of all APIs in the same region are identical.
Request Methods
HTTP defines the following request methods that can be used to send a request to the server:
- GET: requests the server to return specified resources.
- PUT: requests the server to update specified resources.
- POST: requests the server to add resources or perform special operations.
- 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. If the resource is not found, a new resource will be created.
For example, in the URI of the API for creating an IAM user as an administrator, the request method is POST. The request is as follows:
POST https://iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com/v3.0/OS-USER/users
Request Headers
You can also add additional header fields to a request, such as the fields required by a specified URI or HTTP method, such as Content-Type (which defines data type) or authentication headers.
Common request header fields are as follows:
- Content-Type: request body type (format). This header is mandatory, and the default value is application/json. Other values of this header, if any, will be provided for specific APIs.
- Authorization: provides signature authentication information. This field is optional. When AK/SK authentication is enabled, this field is automatically specified for signing the request with SDK. For more information, see AK/SK-based Authentication.
- X-Sdk-Date: specifies the time when a request is sent. This field is optional. When AK/SK authentication is enabled, this field is automatically specified when SDK is used to sign the request. For more information, see AK/SK-based Authentication.
- X-Auth-Token: user token. This field is mandatory only when token-based API authentication is used. The user token is a response to the API for obtaining a user token. This API is the only one that does not require authentication.
- X-Project-ID: specifies the subproject ID. This field is optional and can be used in multi-project scenarios. The X-Project-ID field is mandatory in the request header for accessing resources in a sub-project through AK/SK authentication.
- X-Domain-ID: specifies the account ID, which is optional. When you call APIs of global services using AK/SK-based authentication, X-Domain-ID needs to be configured in the request header.
For the API for creating an IAM user as an administrator, if AK/SK-based authentication is enabled, the request with the header is as follows:
POST https://iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com/v3.0/OS-USER/users Content-Type: application/json X-Sdk-Date: 20240416T095341Z Authorization: SDK-HMAC-SHA256 Access=****************, SignedHeaders=content-type;host;x-sdk-date, Signature=****************
Request Body
A request body is generally sent in a structured format as specified in Content-Type. The request body transfers content except the request header. If the request body contains Chinese characters, set Content-type to utf-8, for example, Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8.
The request body varies between APIs. Some APIs do not require the request body, such as the APIs requested using the GET and DELETE methods.
The following shows an example request (a request body included) of the API for creating an IAM user. You can learn about request parameters and related description from this example. The bold parameters need to be replaced for a real request.
- accountid: account ID of an IAM user
- username: name of an IAM user
- email: email of an IAM user
- **********: login password of an IAM user
POST https://iam.ap-southeast-1.myhuaweicloud.com/v3.0/OS-USER/users Content-Type: application/json X-Sdk-Date: 20240416T095341Z Authorization: SDK-HMAC-SHA256 Access=****************, SignedHeaders=content-type;host;x-sdk-date, Signature=**************** { "user": { "domain_id": "accountid", "name": "username", "password": "**********", "email": "email", "description": "IAM User Description" } }
If all data required for the API request is available, you can send the request to call the API through curl, Postman, or coding.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot