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- What's New
- Function Overview
-
Service Overview
- ELB Infographics
- What Is ELB?
- ELB Advantages
- How ELB Works
- Application Scenarios
- Differences Between Dedicated and Shared Load Balancers
- Load Balancing on a Public or Private Network
- Network Traffic Paths
- Specifications of Dedicated Load Balancers
- Notes and Constraints
- Security
- Permissions
- Product Concepts
- ELB and Other Services
-
Billing
- Billing Overview
- Billing Mode
- Billing Items (Dedicated Load Balancers)
- Billing Items (Shared Load Balancers)
- Billing Examples
- Bills
- Arrears
- Stopping Billing
- Cost Management
-
FAQs
- When Do I Need Public Bandwidth for ELB?
- Will I Be Billed for Both the Bandwidth Used by the Load Balancer and the Bandwidth Used by Backend Servers?
- Do I Need to Adjust the Bandwidth of Shared Load Balancers Based on the Bandwidth Used by Backend Servers?
- Can I Modify the Bandwidth of a Load Balancer?
- What Functions Will Become Unavailable If a Load Balancer Is Frozen?
- Getting Started
-
User Guide
-
User Guide for Dedicated Load Balancers
- Using a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Permissions Management
-
Load Balancer
- Dedicated Load Balancer Overview
- Creating a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Enabling or Disabling Modification Protection for Dedicated Load Balancers
- Modifying the Basic Configurations of a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Modifying the Network Configurations of a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Exporting Dedicated Load Balancers
- Deleting a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Copying a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Enabling or Disabling a Load Balancer
- Listener
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server
- Health Check
- Security
- Access Logging
- Tags and Quotas
- Cloud Eye Monitoring
- Auditing
-
User Guide for Shared Load Balancers
- Permissions Management
-
Load Balancer
- Shared Load Balancer Overview
- Creating a Shared Load Balancer
- Configuring Modification Protection for Shared Load Balancers
- Changing the Network Configurations of a Shared Load Balancer
- Deleting a Shared Load Balancer
- Enabling or Disabling a Shared Load Balancer
- Enabling Guaranteed Performance for a Shared Load Balancer
- Listener
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server
- Health Check
- Security
- Access Logging
- Tags and Quotas
- Cloud Eye Monitoring
- Auditing
- Self-service Troubleshooting
- Appendix
-
User Guide for Dedicated Load Balancers
-
Best Practices
- Using IP as a Backend to Route Traffic Across Backend Servers
- Using Advanced Forwarding for Application Iteration
- Integrating WAF with ELB to Protect Your Websites
- Configuring HTTPS Mutual Authentication to Improve Service Security
- Using ELB to Redirect HTTP Requests to an HTTPS Listener for Higher Service Security
-
API Reference
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Selecting an API Version
- Calling APIs
-
APIs (V3)
- API Version
- Quota
- AZ
- Load Balancer Flavor
- Reserved IP Address
-
Load Balancer
- Creating a Load Balancer
- Batch Creating Load Balancers
- Upgrading a Load Balancer
- Querying Load Balancers
- Copying a Load Balancer
- Viewing the Details of a Load Balancer
- Updating a Load Balancer
- Deleting a Load Balancer
- Deleting a Load Balancer and Its Associated Resources
- Deleting a Load Balancer and Its Associated Resources (Including EIPs)
- Querying the Status Tree of a Load Balancer
- Deploying a Load Balancer in Other AZs
- Removing a Load Balancer from AZs
- Certificate
- Security Policy
-
IP Address Group
- Creating an IP Address Group
- Querying IP Address Groups
- Querying the Details of an IP Address Group
- Updating an IP Address Group
- Deleting an IP Address Group
- Updating IP Addresses in an IP Address Group
- Deleting IP Addresses from an IP Address Group
- Querying the Listeners Associated with an IP Address Group
- Listener
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server
- Health Check
- Forwarding Policy
- Forwarding Rule
- Active/Standby Backend Server Group
- Log
- Asynchronous Task
- Feature Configuration
- Asynchronous Tasks
- APIs (V2)
-
APIs (OpenStack)
-
Tag
- Adding a Tag to a Load Balancer
- Batch Adding Load Balancer Tags
- Batch Deleting Load Balancer Tags
- Querying All Tags of a Load Balancer
- Querying the Tags of All Load Balancers
- Querying Load Balancers by Tag
- Deleting a Tag from a Load Balancer
- Adding a Tag to a Listener
- Batch Adding Tags to a Listener
- Batch Deleting Tags from a Listener
- Querying All Tags of a Listener
- Querying the Tags of All Listeners
- Querying Listeners by Tag
- Deleting a Tag from a Listener
- Status Codes
-
Tag
- Examples
- Permissions and Supported Actions
-
Historical APIs
- Shared Load Balancer APIs (OpenStack) (Discarded)
- Asynchronous Job Query (Discarded)
- Querying Versions (Discarded)
-
Getting Started
- Creating a Load Balancer
- Obtaining a Token
- Creating a Load Balancer
- Creating a Public Network Load Balancer
- Adding a Listener
- Creating a Backend Server Group
- Adding Backend Servers
- Configuring a Health Check
- Adding a Forwarding Policy
- Adding a Forwarding Rule
- Adding a Whitelist
- Creating an SSL Certificate
- Appendix
- SDK Reference
-
FAQs
- Popular Questions
-
Service Abnormality
- What Can I Do If There Is Packet Loss?
- Why Can't I Access My Backend Servers Through a Load Balancer?
- Why Does a Server Occasionally Time Out When a Client Access It Through Different Load Balancers or Different Listeners of a Load Balancer?
- What Can I Do If ELB Can't Be Accessed or Traffic Routing is Interrupted?
- How Can I Handle Abnormal Status Codes?
- How Do I Handle Abnormal Request Headers?
- How Do I Check for Traffic Inconsistencies?
- Why Does ELB Fail to Distribute Traffic Evenly?
- How Do I Check If There Is Excessive Access Delay?
- What Do I Do If a Load Balancer Fails a Stress Test?
- How Do I Check If Sticky Sessions Failed to Take Effect?
- How Do I Check SSL/TLS Authentication Errors?
-
Health Checks
- How Do I Troubleshoot an Unhealthy Backend Server of a Dedicated Load Balancer?
- How Do I Troubleshoot an Unhealthy Backend Server of a Shared Load Balancer?
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from the Configured Interval?
- How Does ELB Perform UDP Health Checks? What Are the Precautions for UDP Health Checks?
- Why Does ELB Frequently Send Requests to Backend Servers During Health Checks?
- When Does a Health Check Start?
- What Do I Do If a Lot of Access Logs Are Generated During Health Checks?
- What Status Codes Will Be Returned If Backend Servers Are Identified as Healthy?
-
ELB Functionality
- Can Load Balancers Be Used Separately?
- Can ELB Block DDoS Attacks and Secure Web Code?
- What Types of APIs Does ELB Provide? What Are Permissions of ELB?
- Can Backend Servers of a Load Balancer Run Different OSs?
- Can ELB Be Used Across Accounts or VPCs?
- Can a Backend Server Access Its Load Balancer?
- Can Both the Listener and Backend Server Group Use HTTPS?
- Does ELB Support IPv6 Networks?
- How Do I Determine the Server Response Time Based on Monitoring Data and Logs?
- How Can I Transfer the IP Address of a Client?
- What Are the Differences Between Persistent Connections and Sticky Sessions?
- How Do I Test Sticky Sessions Using Linux Curl Commands?
-
Load Balancers
- How Does ELB Distribute Traffic?
- How Can I Configure Load Balancing for Containerized Applications?
- Can I Bind Multiple EIPs to a Load Balancer?
- Why Multiple IP Addresses Are Required When I Create a Dedicated Load Balancer?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet Using the EIP of the Load Balancer?
- Do Shared Load Balancers Have Specifications?
- What Is the Difference Between the Bandwidth Defined in Each Specification of a Dedicated Load Balancer and the Bandwidth of an EIP?
- How Do I Combine ELB and WAF?
-
Listeners
- What Are the Relationships Between Load Balancing Algorithms and Sticky Session Types?
- What HTTP Headers Can I Configure for an HTTP and HTTP Listener?
- Will ELB Stop Distributing Traffic Immediately After a Listener Is Deleted?
- Does ELB Have Restrictions on the File Upload Speed and Size?
- Can Multiple Load Balancers Route Requests to One Backend Server?
- How Is WebSocket Used?
- What Are the Three Timeouts of a Listener and What Are the Default Durations?
- Why Can't I Select the Target Backend Server Group When Adding or Modifying a Listener?
- Why Is There a Security Warning After a Certificate Is Configured for an HTTPS Listener?
- Why Is a Forwarding Policy in the Faulty State?
-
Backend Servers
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet After They Are Associated with a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Distribute Traffic Across Servers That Are Not Provided by Huawei Cloud?
- Why Are Backend Servers Frequently Accessed by IP Addresses in 100.125.0.0/16 or 214.0.0.0/8?
- Can ELB Route Traffic Across Regions?
- Does Each Backend Server Need an EIP to Receive Requests from a Public Network Load Balancer?
- How Do I Check the Network Conditions of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Network Configuration of a Backend Server?
- How Do I Check the Status of a Backend Server?
- How Do I Check Whether a Backend Server Can Be Accessed Through an EIP?
- Why Is the Number of Active Connections Monitored by Cloud Eye Different from the Number of Connections Established with the Backend Servers?
- Why Can I Access Backend Servers After a Whitelist Is Configured?
- When Will the Changes to Server Weights Be Applied?
- Certificates
- Access Logging
- Monitoring
-
Billing
- When Do I Need Public Bandwidth for ELB?
- Will I Be Billed for Both the Bandwidth Used by the Load Balancer and the Bandwidth Used by Backend Servers?
- Do I Need to Adjust the Bandwidth of Shared Load Balancers Based on the Bandwidth Used by Backend Servers?
- Can I Modify the Bandwidth of a Load Balancer?
- What Functions Will Become Unavailable If a Load Balancer Is Frozen?
- Videos
- Glossary
-
More Documents
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- Service Overview
- Load Balancer
- Listener
- Backend Server
- Health Check
- Certificate
- Access Logging
- Monitoring
- Auditing
-
FAQs
- Questions Summary
- ELB Usage
- Load Balancer
- Listener
-
Backend Server
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Is Different from the Configured Health Check Interval?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Public Network After They Are Associated with a Load Balancer?
- How Can I Check the Network Conditions of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Network Configuration of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Status of a Backend Server?
- When Is a Backend Server Considered Healthy?
- Health Check
- Obtaining Source IP Addresses
- HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Sticky Session
- Appendix
- Change History
-
API Reference (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- Getting Started
- Load Balancer APIs
- Load Balancer (Enterprise Project) APIs
- Common Parameters
- Appendix
- Change History
-
User Guide (Paris Region)
-
Service Overview
- What Is ELB?
- Product Advantages
- How ELB Works
- Application Scenarios
- Differences Between Dedicated and Shared Load Balancers
- Load Balancing on a Public or Private Network
- Network Traffic Paths
- Specifications of Dedicated Load Balancers
- Quotas and Constraints
- Billing (Shared Load Balancers)
- Billing (Dedicated Load Balancers)
- Permissions
- Product Concepts
- How ELB Works with Other Services
- Getting Started
-
Load Balancer
- Overview
- Preparations for Creating a Load Balancer
- Creating a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Creating a Shared Load Balancer
- Configuring Deletion Protection for Load Balancers
- Modifying the Bandwidth
- Changing the Specifications of a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Changing an IP Address
- Binding an IP Address to or Unbinding an IP Address from a Load Balancer
- Adding to or Removing from an IPv6 Shared Bandwidth
- Exporting the Load Balancer List
- Deleting a Load Balancer
- Listener
- Advanced Features of HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server (Dedicated Load Balancers)
- Backend Server (Shared Load Balancers)
- Certificate
- Access Control
- TLS Security Policy
- Tag
- Access Logging
- Monitoring
- Auditing
- Load Balancer Migration
- Permissions Management
- Quotas
-
FAQ
- Popular Questions
- Why Can't I Access My Backend Servers Through a Load Balancer?
- What Can I Do If ELB Can't Be Accessed or Traffic Routing is Interrupted?
- How Can I Handle Error Codes?
- Can ELB Be Used Separately?
- Does ELB Support Persistent Connections?
- Does ELB Support FTP on Backend Servers?
- Is an EIP Assigned Exclusively to a Load Balancer?
- How Many Load Balancers and Listeners Can I Have?
- What Types of APIs Does ELB Provide? What Are Permissions of ELB?
- Can I Adjust the Number of Backend Servers When a Load Balancer is Running?
- Can Backend Servers Run Different OSs?
- Can I Configure Different Backend Ports for a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Be Used Across Accounts or VPCs?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Ports of a Load Balancer?
- Can Both the Listener and Backend Server Group Use HTTPS?
- Can I Change the VPC and Subnet for My Load Balancer?
- Can I Upgrade a Shared Load Balancer to a Dedicated Load Balancer Without Interrupting Traffic Routing?
- Does ELB Support IPv6 Networks?
- How Do I Check for Traffic Inconsistencies?
- How Do I Check If Traffic Is Being Evenly Distributed?
- How Do I Check If There Is Excessive Access Delay?
- What Do I Do If a Load Balancer Fails a Stress Test?
-
Load Balancers
- How Does ELB Distribute Traffic?
- How Can I Access a Load Balancer Across VPCs?
- How Can I Configure Load Balancing for Containerized Applications?
- Why Can't I Delete My Load Balancer?
- Do I Need to Configure EIP Bandwidth for My Load Balancers?
- Can I Bind Multiple EIPs to a Load Balancer?
- Why Multiple IP Addresses Are Required When I Create or Enable a Dedicated Load Balancer?
- Why Are Requests from the Same IP Address Routed to Different Backend Servers When the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Source IP Hash?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet Using the EIP of the Load Balancer?
- Do Shared Load Balancers Have Specifications?
- Will Traffic Routing Be Interrupted If the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Changed?
- What Is the Difference Between the Bandwidth Included in Each Specification of a Dedicated Load Balancer and the Bandwidth of an EIP?
- How Do I Combine ELB and WAF?
-
Listeners
- What Are the Relationships Between Load Balancing Algorithms and Sticky Session Types?
- Can I Bind Multiple Certificates to a Listener?
- What HTTP Headers Can I Configure for an HTTP and HTTP Listener?
- Will ELB Stop Distributing Traffic Immediately After a Listener Is Deleted?
- Does ELB Have Restrictions on the File Upload Speed and Size?
- Can Multiple Load Balancers Route Requests to One Backend Server?
- How Is WebSocket Used?
- Why Can't I Select the Target Backend Server Group When Adding or Modifying a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Add a Listener to a Dedicated Load Balancer?
-
Backend Servers
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from What I Have Configured?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet After They Are Associated with a Load Balancer?
- Why Are Backend Servers Frequently Accessed by IP Addresses in 100.125.0.0/16?
- Can ELB Route Traffic Across Regions?
- Does Each Backend Server Need an EIP to Receive Requests from a Public Network Load Balancer?
- How Do I Check the Network Conditions of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Network Configuration of a Backend Server?
- How Do I Check the Status of a Backend Server?
- When Is a Backend Server Considered Healthy?
- How Do I Check Whether a Backend Server Can Be Accessed Through an EIP?
- Why Is the Number of Active Connections Monitored by Cloud Eye Different from the Number of Connections Established with the Backend Servers?
- Why Can I Access Backend Servers After a Whitelist Is Configured?
- When Will Modified Weights Take Effect?
- Why Must the Subnet Where the Load Balancer Resides Have at Least 16 Available IP Addresses for Enabling IP as a Backend?
-
Health Checks
- How Do I Troubleshoot an Unhealthy Backend Server?
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from the Configured Interval?
- How Does ELB Perform UDP Health Checks? What Are the Precautions for UDP Health Checks?
- Why Does ELB Frequently Send Requests to Backend Servers During Health Checks?
- When Does a Health Check Start?
- Do Maximum Retries Include Health Checks That Consider Backend Servers Unhealthy?
- What Do I Do If a Lot of Access Logs Are Generated During Health Checks?
- What Status Codes Will Be Returned If Backend Servers Are Identified as Healthy?
- Obtaining Source IP Addresses
-
HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Which Protocol Should I Select for the Backend Server Group When Adding an HTTPS Listener?
- Why Is There a Security Warning After a Certificate Is Configured?
- Why Is a Forwarding Policy in the Faulty State?
- Why Can't I Add a Forwarding Policy to a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Select an Existing Backend Server Group When Adding a Forwarding Policy?
- Sticky Sessions
- Certificates
- Monitoring
- Change History
-
Service Overview
-
API Reference (Paris Region)
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- Getting Started
- Dedicated Load Balancer APIs
- Classic Load Balancer APIs
- Enhanced Load Balancer APIs
- Appendix
- Change History
-
User Guide (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- Service Overview
- Getting Started
-
Load Balancer
- Overview
- Preparations for Creating a Load Balancer
- Creating a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Modifying the Bandwidth
- Changing the Specifications of a Dedicated Load Balancer
- Changing an IP Address
- Binding an IP Address to or Unbinding an IP Address from a Load Balancer
- Adding to or Removing from an IPv6 Shared Bandwidth
- Exporting the Load Balancer List
- Deleting a Load Balancer
- Listener
- Advanced Features of HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server
- Certificate
- Access Control
- Access Logging
- Monitoring
- Auditing
- Quotas
-
FAQ
- Popular Questions
- Service Abnormality
-
ELB Functionality
- Can ELB Be Used Separately?
- Does ELB Support Persistent Connections?
- Does ELB Support FTP on Backend Servers?
- Is an EIP Assigned Exclusively to a Load Balancer?
- How Many Load Balancers and Listeners Can I Have?
- What Types of APIs Does ELB Provide? What Are Permissions of ELB?
- Can I Adjust the Number of Backend Servers When a Load Balancer is Running?
- Can Backend Servers Run Different OSs?
- Can I Configure Different Backend Ports for a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Be Used Across Accounts or VPCs?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Ports of a Load Balancer?
- Can Both the Listener and Backend Server Group Use HTTPS?
- Can I Change the VPC and Subnet for My Load Balancer?
- Load Balancing Performance
-
Load Balancers
- How Does ELB Distribute Traffic?
- How Can I Access a Load Balancer Across VPCs?
- Do I Need to Configure EIP Bandwidth for My Load Balancers?
- Can I Bind Multiple EIPs to a Load Balancer?
- Why Multiple IP Addresses Are Required When I Create or Enable a Dedicated Load Balancer?
- Why Are Requests from the Same IP Address Routed to Different Backend Servers When the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Source IP Hash?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet Using the EIP of the Load Balancer?
- Will Traffic Routing Be Interrupted If the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Changed?
- What Is the Difference Between the Bandwidth Included in Each Specification of a Dedicated Load Balancer and the Bandwidth of an EIP?
-
Listeners
- What Are the Relationships Between Load Balancing Algorithms and Sticky Session Types?
- Can I Bind Multiple Certificates to a Listener?
- Will ELB Stop Distributing Traffic Immediately After a Listener Is Deleted?
- Does ELB Have Restrictions on the File Upload Speed and Size?
- Can Multiple Load Balancers Route Requests to One Backend Server?
- How Is WebSocket Used?
- Why Can't I Select the Target Backend Server Group When Adding or Modifying a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Add a Listener to a Dedicated Load Balancer?
-
Backend Servers
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from What I Have Configured?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet After They Are Associated with a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Route Traffic Across Regions?
- Does Each Backend Server Need an EIP to Receive Requests from a Public Network Load Balancer?
- How Do I Check the Network Conditions of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Network Configuration of a Backend Server?
- How Do I Check the Status of a Backend Server?
- When Is a Backend Server Considered Healthy?
- Why Can I Access Backend Servers After a Whitelist Is Configured?
- When Will Modified Weights Take Effect?
- Why Must the Subnet Where the Load Balancer Resides Have at Least 16 Available IP Addresses for Enabling IP as a Backend?
-
Health Checks
- How Do I Troubleshoot an Unhealthy Backend Server?
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from the Configured Interval?
- How Does ELB Perform UDP Health Checks? What Are the Precautions for UDP Health Checks?
- Why Does ELB Frequently Send Requests to Backend Servers During Health Checks?
- When Does a Health Check Start?
- Do Maximum Retries Include Health Checks That Consider Backend Servers Unhealthy?
- What Do I Do If a Lot of Access Logs Are Generated During Health Checks?
- What Status Codes Will Be Returned If Backend Servers Are Identified as Healthy?
- Obtaining Source IP Addresses
-
HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Which Protocol Should I Select for the Backend Server Group When Adding an HTTPS Listener?
- Why Is There a Security Warning After a Certificate Is Configured?
- Why Is a Forwarding Policy in the Faulty State?
- Why Can't I Add a Forwarding Policy to a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Select an Existing Backend Server Group When Adding a Forwarding Policy?
- Sticky Sessions
- Certificates
- Monitoring
- Change History
-
API Reference (Kuala Lumpur Region)
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- APIs
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Appendix
- Historical APIs
- Change History
-
User Guide (Ankara Region)
- Service Overview
- Load Balancer
- Listener
- Advanced Features of HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Backend Server Group
- Backend Server
- Certificate
- Access Control
- TLS Security Policy
- Access Logging
- Monitoring
- Quotas
-
FAQ
- Popular Questions
-
ELB Functionality
- Can ELB Be Used Separately?
- Does ELB Support Persistent Connections?
- Does ELB Support FTP on Backend Servers?
- Is an EIP Assigned Exclusively to a Load Balancer?
- How Many Load Balancers and Listeners Can I Have?
- What Types of APIs Does ELB Provide? What Are Permissions of ELB?
- Can I Adjust the Number of Backend Servers When a Load Balancer is Running?
- Can Backend Servers Run Different OSs?
- Can I Configure Different Backend Ports for a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Be Used Across Accounts or VPCs?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Ports of a Load Balancer?
- Can Both the Listener and Backend Server Group Use HTTPS?
- Can I Change the VPC and Subnet for My Load Balancer?
-
Load Balancers
- How Does ELB Distribute Traffic?
- How Can I Access a Load Balancer Across VPCs?
- Do I Need to Configure EIP Bandwidth for My Load Balancers?
- Can I Bind Multiple EIPs to a Load Balancer?
- Why Multiple IP Addresses Are Required When I Create or Enable a Dedicated Load Balancer?
- Why Are Requests from the Same IP Address Routed to Different Backend Servers When the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Source IP Hash?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet Using the EIP of the Load Balancer?
- Will Traffic Routing Be Interrupted If the Load Balancing Algorithm Is Changed?
- What Is the Difference Between the Bandwidth Included in Each Specification of a Dedicated Load Balancer and the Bandwidth of an EIP?
-
Listeners
- What Are the Relationships Between Load Balancing Algorithms and Sticky Session Types?
- Can I Bind Multiple Certificates to a Listener?
- Will ELB Stop Distributing Traffic Immediately After a Listener Is Deleted?
- Does ELB Have Restrictions on the File Upload Speed and Size?
- Can Multiple Load Balancers Route Requests to One Backend Server?
- How Is WebSocket Used?
- Why Can't I Select the Target Backend Server Group When Adding or Modifying a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Add a Listener to a Dedicated Load Balancer?
-
Backend Servers
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from What I Have Configured?
- Can Backend Servers Access the Internet After They Are Associated with a Load Balancer?
- Can ELB Route Traffic Across Regions?
- Does Each Backend Server Need an EIP to Receive Requests from a Public Network Load Balancer?
- How Do I Check the Network Conditions of a Backend Server?
- How Can I Check the Network Configuration of a Backend Server?
- How Do I Check the Status of a Backend Server?
- When Is a Backend Server Considered Healthy?
- Why Can I Access Backend Servers After a Whitelist Is Configured?
- When Will Modified Weights Take Effect?
- Why Must the Subnet Where the Load Balancer Resides Have at Least 16 Available IP Addresses for Enabling IP as a Backend?
-
Health Checks
- How Do I Troubleshoot an Unhealthy Backend Server?
- Why Is the Interval at Which Backend Servers Receive Health Check Packets Different from the Configured Interval?
- How Does ELB Perform UDP Health Checks? What Are the Precautions for UDP Health Checks?
- Why Does ELB Frequently Send Requests to Backend Servers During Health Checks?
- When Does a Health Check Start?
- Do Maximum Retries Include Health Checks That Consider Backend Servers Unhealthy?
- What Do I Do If a Lot of Access Logs Are Generated During Health Checks?
- What Status Codes Will Be Returned If Backend Servers Are Identified as Healthy?
- Obtaining Source IP Addresses
-
HTTP/HTTPS Listeners
- Which Protocol Should I Select for the Backend Server Group When Adding an HTTPS Listener?
- Why Is There a Security Warning After a Certificate Is Configured?
- Why Is a Forwarding Policy in the Faulty State?
- Why Can't I Add a Forwarding Policy to a Listener?
- Why Cannot I Select an Existing Backend Server Group When Adding a Forwarding Policy?
- Sticky Sessions
- Certificates
- Monitoring
- Change History
-
API Reference (Ankara Region)
- Before You Start
- API Overview
- Calling APIs
- APIs (V3)
- APIs (V2)
-
APIs (OpenStack)
-
Tag
- Adding a Tag to a Load Balancer
- Batch Adding Load Balancer Tags
- Batch Deleting Load Balancer Tags
- Querying All Tags of a Load Balancer
- Querying the Tags of All Load Balancers
- Querying Load Balancers by Tag
- Deleting a Tag from a Load Balancer
- Adding a Tag to a Listener
- Batch Adding Tags to a Listener
- Batch Deleting Tags from a Listener
- Querying All Tags of a Listener
- Querying the Tags of All Listeners
- Querying Listeners by Tag
- Deleting a Tag from a Listener
- Status Codes
-
Tag
- Permissions and Supported Actions
- Appendix
- Change History
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- General Reference
Copied.
Feature Comparison Details
Protocols
Protocol |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
TCP/UDP (Layer 4) |
After receiving TCP or UDP requests from the clients, the load balancer directly routes the requests to backend servers. Load balancing at Layer 4 features high routing efficiency. |
Supported |
Supported |
HTTP/HTTPS (Layer 7) |
After receiving an access request, the listener needs to identify the request and forward data based on the fields in the HTTP/HTTPS packet header. Load balancing at Layer 7 provides some advanced features such as encrypted transmission and cookie-based sticky sessions. |
Supported |
Supported |
HTTPS support |
HTTPS can be used as both the frontend and backend protocol. |
Supported |
Not supported |
QUIC |
If you use UDP and QUIC as the frontend protocol, you can select QUIC as the backend protocol, and select the connection ID algorithm to route requests with the same connection ID to the same backend server. QUIC has the advantages of low latency, high reliability, and no head-of-line blocking (HOL blocking), and is very suitable for the mobile Internet. No new connections need to be established when you switch between a Wi-Fi network and a mobile network. |
Supported |
Not supported |
HTTP/2 |
Hypertext Transfer Protocol 2.0 (HTTP/2) is a new version of the HTTP protocol. It is compatible with HTTP/1.X and provides improved performance and security. Only HTTPS listeners support this feature. |
Supported |
Supported |
WebSocket |
WebSocket is a new HTML5 protocol that provides full-duplex communication between the browser and the server. WebSocket saves server resources and bandwidth, and enables real-time communication. |
Supported |
Supported |
Network Configurations
Feature |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Public IPv4 network |
The load balancer routes requests from the clients to backend servers over the Internet. |
Supported |
Supported |
Private IPv4 network |
The load balancer routes requests from the clients to backend servers in a VPC. |
Supported |
Supported |
IPv6 network |
Load balancers can route requests from IPv6 clients. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Changing a private IPv4 address |
You can change the private IPv4 address into another one in the current subnet or other subnets. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Binding or unbinding an EIP |
You can bind an EIP to a load balancer or unbind the EIP from a load balancer based on service requirements. |
Supported |
Supported |
Modifying the bandwidth |
You can change the bandwidth of public network load balancers as required. |
Supported |
Supported |
Key Features of Listeners
Feature |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Access Control |
You can add IP addresses to a whitelist or blacklist to control access to a listener.
|
Supported |
Supported |
Mutual Authentication |
This feature allows the clients and the load balancer to authenticate each other. Only authenticated clients will be allowed to access the load balancer. Mutual authentication is supported only by HTTPS listeners. |
Supported |
Supported |
SNI |
Server Name Indication (SNI) is an extension to TLS and is used when a server uses multiple domain names and certificates. After SNI is enabled, certificates corresponding to the domain names are required. SNI can be enabled only for HTTPS listeners. |
Supported |
Supported |
Transfer Client IP Address |
This feature allows backend servers to obtain the real IP addresses of the clients. This feature is enabled for dedicated load balancers by default and cannot be disabled. |
Supported |
Supported |
Advanced features of HTTP/HTTPS listeners |
|||
Default Security Policy |
Allows you to select appropriate security policies to improve service security when you add HTTPS listeners. A security policy is a combination of TLS protocols and cipher suites. |
Supported |
Supported |
Custom Security Policy |
Allows you to select a TLS protocol and cipher suite to custom a security policy when you add HTTPS listeners. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Transfer Load Balancer EIP |
Allows you to store the EIP bound to the load balancer in the X-Forwarded-ELB-IP header and pass it to backend servers. |
Supported |
Supported |
Forwarding Capabilities
You can add forwarding policies to HTTP or HTTPS listeners to forward requests to different backend server groups. Advanced forwarding policies are available only for dedicated load balancers.
You can set forwarding rules and actions for a forwarding policy. For details, see Table 4 and Table 5.
Forwarding Rule |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Domain name |
Route requests based on the domain name. The domain name in the request must exactly match that in the forwarding policy. |
Supported |
Supported |
URL |
Route requests based on the URLs. There are three URL matching rules: exact match, prefix match, and regular expression match. |
Supported |
Supported |
HTTP request method |
Route requests based on the HTTP method. The options include GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, PATCH, HEAD, and OPTIONS. |
Supported |
Not supported |
HTTP header |
Route requests based on the HTTP header. An HTTP header consists of a key and one or more values. You need to configure the key and values separately. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Query string |
Route requests based on the query string. |
Supported |
Not supported |
CIDR block |
Route requests based on source IP addresses from where the requests originate. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Action |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Forward to a backend server group |
Forward requests to the specified backend server group. |
Supported |
Supported |
Redirect to another listener |
Redirect requests to an HTTPS listener, which then routes the requests to its associated backend server group. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Redirect to another URL |
Redirect requests to the configured URL. When clients access website A, the load balancer returns 302 or any other 3xx status code and automatically redirects the clients to website B. You can custom the redirection URL that will be returned to the clients. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Return a specific response body |
Return a fixed response to the clients. You can custom the status code and response body that load balancers directly return to the clients without the need to route the requests to backend servers. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Key Features of Backend Server Groups
Key Feature |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Health check |
ELB periodically sends requests to backend servers to check their running statuses. This process is called health check. You can perform health checks to determine whether a backend server is available. |
Supported |
Supported |
Sticky session |
Requests from the same client will be routed to the same backend server during the session. |
Supported |
Supported |
Slow start |
The load balancer linearly increases the proportion of requests to the new backend servers added to the backend server group. Slow start gives applications time to warm up and respond to requests with optimal performance. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Active/Standby forwarding |
The load balancer routes the traffic to the active server if it works normally and to the standby server if the active server becomes unhealthy. You must add two backend servers to the backend server group, one acting as the active server and the other as the standby server. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Load Balancing Algorithms
Load Balancing Algorithm |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
Weighted round robin |
Route requests to backend servers using the round robin algorithm. Backend servers with higher weights receive proportionately more requests, whereas equal-weighted servers receive the same number of requests. |
Supported |
Supported |
Weighted least connections |
Route requests to backend servers with the smallest ratio (current connections divided by weight). |
Supported |
Supported |
Source IP hash |
Route requests from the same client to the same backend server within a period of time. |
Supported |
Supported |
Connection ID |
Calculate the source IP address of each request using the consistent hashing algorithm to obtain a unique hash key and route the requests to the particular server based on the generated key. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Backend Server Type
Backend Server Type |
Description |
Dedicated Load Balancer |
Shared Load Balancer |
---|---|---|---|
IP as backend server |
You can add servers in a peer VPC, in a VPC that is in another region and connected through a cloud connection, or in an on-premises data center at the other end of a Direct Connect or VPN connection, by using the server IP addresses. |
Supported |
Not supported |
Supplementary network interface |
You can attach supplementary network interfaces to backend servers. |
Supported |
Not supported |
ECS |
You can use load balancers to distribute incoming traffic across ECSs. |
Supported |
Supported |
BMS |
You can use load balancers to distribute incoming traffic across BMSs. |
Supported |
Supported |
CCE Turbo cluster |
You can use load balancers to distribute incoming traffic across CCE Turbo clusters. For details, see the Cloud Container Engine User Guide. |
Supported |
Supported |
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