There are more AWS SDK examples available in the AWS Doc SDK Examples
Use DescribeInstanceTypes
with an AWS SDK or CLI
The following code examples show how to use DescribeInstanceTypes
.
Action examples are code excerpts from larger programs and must be run in context. You can see this action in context in the following code example:
- .NET
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- AWS SDK for .NET
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. /// <summary> /// Describe the instance types available. /// </summary> /// <returns>A list of instance type information.</returns> public async Task<List<InstanceTypeInfo>> DescribeInstanceTypes(ArchitectureValues architecture) { try { var request = new DescribeInstanceTypesRequest(); var filters = new List<Filter> { new Filter("processor-info.supported-architecture", new List<string> { architecture.ToString() }) }; filters.Add(new Filter("instance-type", new() { "*.micro", "*.small" })); request.Filters = filters; var instanceTypes = new List<InstanceTypeInfo>(); var paginator = _amazonEC2.Paginators.DescribeInstanceTypes(request); await foreach (var instanceType in paginator.InstanceTypes) { instanceTypes.Add(instanceType); } return instanceTypes; } catch (AmazonEC2Exception ec2Exception) { if (ec2Exception.ErrorCode == "InvalidParameterValue") { _logger.LogError( $"Parameters are invalid. Ensure architecture and size strings conform to DescribeInstanceTypes API reference."); } throw; } catch (Exception ex) { Console.WriteLine($"Couldn't delete the security group because: {ex.Message}"); throw; } }
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes in AWS SDK for .NET API Reference.
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- Bash
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- AWS CLI with Bash script
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. ############################################################################### # ec2_describe_instance_types # # This function describes EC2 instance types filtered by processor architecture # and optionally by instance type. It takes the following arguments: # # -a, --architecture ARCHITECTURE Specify the processor architecture (e.g., x86_64) # -t, --type INSTANCE_TYPE Comma-separated list of instance types (e.g., t2.micro) # -h, --help Show the usage help # # The function prints the instance type and supported architecture for each # matching instance type. ############################################################################### function ec2_describe_instance_types() { local architecture="" local instance_types="" # bashsupport disable=BP5008 function usage() { echo "Usage: ec2_describe_instance_types [-a|--architecture ARCHITECTURE] [-t|--type INSTANCE_TYPE] [-h|--help]" echo " -a, --architecture ARCHITECTURE Specify the processor architecture (e.g., x86_64)" echo " -t, --type INSTANCE_TYPE Comma-separated list of instance types (e.g., t2.micro)" echo " -h, --help Show this help message" } while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do case "$1" in -a | --architecture) architecture="$2" shift 2 ;; -t | --type) instance_types="$2" shift 2 ;; -h | --help) usage return 0 ;; *) echo "Unknown argument: $1" return 1 ;; esac done if [[ -z "$architecture" ]]; then errecho "Error: Architecture not specified." usage return 1 fi if [[ -z "$instance_types" ]]; then errecho "Error: Instance type not specified." usage return 1 fi local tmp_json_file="temp_ec2.json" echo -n '[ { "Name": "processor-info.supported-architecture", "Values": [' >"$tmp_json_file" local items IFS=',' read -ra items <<<"$architecture" local array_size array_size=${#items[@]} for i in $(seq 0 $((array_size - 1))); do echo -n '"'"${items[$i]}"'"' >>"$tmp_json_file" if [[ $i -lt $((array_size - 1)) ]]; then echo -n ',' >>"$tmp_json_file" fi done echo -n ']}, { "Name": "instance-type", "Values": [' >>"$tmp_json_file" IFS=',' read -ra items <<<"$instance_types" local array_size array_size=${#items[@]} for i in $(seq 0 $((array_size - 1))); do echo -n '"'"${items[$i]}"'"' >>"$tmp_json_file" if [[ $i -lt $((array_size - 1)) ]]; then echo -n ',' >>"$tmp_json_file" fi done echo -n ']}]' >>"$tmp_json_file" local response response=$(aws ec2 describe-instance-types --filters file://"$tmp_json_file" \ --query 'InstanceTypes[*].[InstanceType]' --output text) local error_code=$? rm "$tmp_json_file" if [[ $error_code -ne 0 ]]; then aws_cli_error_log $error_code echo "ERROR: AWS reports describe-instance-types operation failed." return 1 fi echo "$response" return 0 }
The utility functions used in this example.
############################################################################### # function errecho # # This function outputs everything sent to it to STDERR (standard error output). ############################################################################### function errecho() { printf "%s\n" "$*" 1>&2 } ############################################################################## # function aws_cli_error_log() # # This function is used to log the error messages from the AWS CLI. # # The function expects the following argument: # $1 - The error code returned by the AWS CLI. # # Returns: # 0: - Success. # ############################################################################## function aws_cli_error_log() { local err_code=$1 errecho "Error code : $err_code" if [ "$err_code" == 1 ]; then errecho " One or more S3 transfers failed." elif [ "$err_code" == 2 ]; then errecho " Command line failed to parse." elif [ "$err_code" == 130 ]; then errecho " Process received SIGINT." elif [ "$err_code" == 252 ]; then errecho " Command syntax invalid." elif [ "$err_code" == 253 ]; then errecho " The system environment or configuration was invalid." elif [ "$err_code" == 254 ]; then errecho " The service returned an error." elif [ "$err_code" == 255 ]; then errecho " 255 is a catch-all error." fi return 0 }
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes in AWS CLI Command Reference.
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- CLI
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- AWS CLI
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Example 1: To describe an instance type
The following
describe-instance-types
example displays details for the specified instance type.aws ec2 describe-instance-types \ --instance-types
t2.micro
Output:
{ "InstanceTypes": [ { "InstanceType": "t2.micro", "CurrentGeneration": true, "FreeTierEligible": true, "SupportedUsageClasses": [ "on-demand", "spot" ], "SupportedRootDeviceTypes": [ "ebs" ], "BareMetal": false, "Hypervisor": "xen", "ProcessorInfo": { "SupportedArchitectures": [ "i386", "x86_64" ], "SustainedClockSpeedInGhz": 2.5 }, "VCpuInfo": { "DefaultVCpus": 1, "DefaultCores": 1, "DefaultThreadsPerCore": 1, "ValidCores": [ 1 ], "ValidThreadsPerCore": [ 1 ] }, "MemoryInfo": { "SizeInMiB": 1024 }, "InstanceStorageSupported": false, "EbsInfo": { "EbsOptimizedSupport": "unsupported", "EncryptionSupport": "supported" }, "NetworkInfo": { "NetworkPerformance": "Low to Moderate", "MaximumNetworkInterfaces": 2, "Ipv4AddressesPerInterface": 2, "Ipv6AddressesPerInterface": 2, "Ipv6Supported": true, "EnaSupport": "unsupported" }, "PlacementGroupInfo": { "SupportedStrategies": [ "partition", "spread" ] }, "HibernationSupported": false, "BurstablePerformanceSupported": true, "DedicatedHostsSupported": false, "AutoRecoverySupported": true } ] }
For more information, see Instance Types in Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances.
Example 2: To filter the available instance types
You can specify a filter to scope the results to instance types that have a specific characteristic. The following
describe-instance-types
example lists the instance types that support hibernation.aws ec2 describe-instance-types \ --filters
Name=hibernation-supported,Values=true
--query 'InstanceTypes[*].InstanceType
'Output:
[ "m5.8xlarge", "r3.large", "c3.8xlarge", "r5.large", "m4.4xlarge", "c4.large", "m5.xlarge", "m4.xlarge", "c3.large", "c4.8xlarge", "c4.4xlarge", "c5.xlarge", "c5.12xlarge", "r5.4xlarge", "c5.4xlarge" ]
For more information, see Instance Types in Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances.
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes
in AWS CLI Command Reference.
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- Java
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- SDK for Java 2.x
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. /** * Asynchronously retrieves the instance types available in the current AWS region. * <p> * This method uses the AWS SDK's asynchronous API to fetch the available instance types * and then processes the response. It logs the memory information, network information, * and instance type for each instance type returned. Additionally, it returns a * {@link CompletableFuture} that resolves to the instance type string for the "t2.2xlarge" * instance type, if it is found in the response. If the "t2.2xlarge" instance type is not * found, an empty string is returned. * </p> * * @return a {@link CompletableFuture} that resolves to the instance type string for the * "t2.2xlarge" instance type, or an empty string if the instance type is not found */ public CompletableFuture<String> getInstanceTypesAsync() { DescribeInstanceTypesRequest typesRequest = DescribeInstanceTypesRequest.builder() .maxResults(10) .build(); CompletableFuture<DescribeInstanceTypesResponse> response = getAsyncClient().describeInstanceTypes(typesRequest); response.whenComplete((resp, ex) -> { if (resp != null) { List<InstanceTypeInfo> instanceTypes = resp.instanceTypes(); for (InstanceTypeInfo type : instanceTypes) { logger.info("The memory information of this type is " + type.memoryInfo().sizeInMiB()); logger.info("Network information is " + type.networkInfo().toString()); logger.info("Instance type is " + type.instanceType().toString()); } } else { throw (RuntimeException) ex; } }); return response.thenApply(resp -> { for (InstanceTypeInfo type : resp.instanceTypes()) { String instanceType = type.instanceType().toString(); if (instanceType.equals("t2.2xlarge")) { return instanceType; } } return ""; }); }
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes in AWS SDK for Java 2.x API Reference.
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- JavaScript
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- SDK for JavaScript (v3)
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. import { EC2Client, paginateDescribeInstanceTypes } from "@aws-sdk/client-ec2"; /** * Describes the specified instance types. By default, all instance types for the * current Region are described. Alternatively, you can filter the results. * @param {{ pageSize: string, supportedArch: string[], freeTier: boolean }} options */ export const main = async ({ pageSize, supportedArch, freeTier }) => { pageSize = Number.parseInt(pageSize); const client = new EC2Client({}); // The paginate function is a wrapper around the underlying command. const paginator = paginateDescribeInstanceTypes( // Without limiting the page size, this call can take a long time. pageSize is just sugar for // the MaxResults property in the underlying command. { client, pageSize }, { Filters: [ { Name: "processor-info.supported-architecture", Values: supportedArch, }, { Name: "free-tier-eligible", Values: [freeTier ? "true" : "false"] }, ], }, ); try { /** * @type {import('@aws-sdk/client-ec2').InstanceTypeInfo[]} */ const instanceTypes = []; for await (const page of paginator) { if (page.InstanceTypes.length) { instanceTypes.push(...page.InstanceTypes); // When we have at least 1 result, we can stop. if (instanceTypes.length >= 1) { break; } } } console.log( `Memory size in MiB for matching instance types:\n\n${instanceTypes.map((it) => `${it.InstanceType}: ${it.MemoryInfo.SizeInMiB} MiB`).join("\n")}`, ); } catch (caught) { if (caught instanceof Error && caught.name === "InvalidParameterValue") { console.warn(`${caught.message}`); return []; } throw caught; } };
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes in AWS SDK for JavaScript API Reference.
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- Kotlin
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- SDK for Kotlin
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. // Get a list of instance types. suspend fun getInstanceTypesSc(): String { var instanceType = "" val filterObs = ArrayList<Filter>() val filter = Filter { name = "processor-info.supported-architecture" values = listOf("arm64") } filterObs.add(filter) val typesRequest = DescribeInstanceTypesRequest { filters = filterObs maxResults = 10 } Ec2Client { region = "us-west-2" }.use { ec2 -> val response = ec2.describeInstanceTypes(typesRequest) response.instanceTypes?.forEach { type -> println("The memory information of this type is ${type.memoryInfo?.sizeInMib}") println("Maximum number of network cards is ${type.networkInfo?.maximumNetworkCards}") instanceType = type.instanceType.toString() } return instanceType } }
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes
in AWS SDK for Kotlin API reference.
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- Python
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- SDK for Python (Boto3)
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. class EC2InstanceWrapper: """Encapsulates Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instance actions using the client interface.""" def __init__( self, ec2_client: Any, instances: Optional[List[Dict[str, Any]]] = None ) -> None: """ Initializes the EC2InstanceWrapper with an EC2 client and optional instances. :param ec2_client: A Boto3 Amazon EC2 client. This client provides low-level access to AWS EC2 services. :param instances: A list of dictionaries representing Boto3 Instance objects. These are high-level objects that wrap instance actions. """ self.ec2_client = ec2_client self.instances = instances or [] @classmethod def from_client(cls) -> "EC2InstanceWrapper": """ Creates an EC2InstanceWrapper instance with a default EC2 client. :return: An instance of EC2InstanceWrapper initialized with the default EC2 client. """ ec2_client = boto3.client("ec2") return cls(ec2_client) def get_instance_types( self, architecture: str = "x86_64", sizes: List[str] = ["*.micro", "*.small"] ) -> List[Dict[str, Any]]: """ Gets instance types that support the specified architecture and size. See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeInstanceTypes.html for a list of allowable parameters. :param architecture: The architecture supported by instance types. Default: 'x86_64'. :param sizes: The size of instance types. Default: '*.micro', '*.small', :return: A list of dictionaries representing instance types that support the specified architecture and size. """ try: inst_types = [] paginator = self.ec2_client.get_paginator("describe_instance_types") for page in paginator.paginate( Filters=[ { "Name": "processor-info.supported-architecture", "Values": [architecture], }, {"Name": "instance-type", "Values": sizes}, ] ): inst_types += page["InstanceTypes"] except ClientError as err: logger.error( f"Failed to get instance types: {architecture}, {','.join(map(str, sizes))}" ) error_code = err.response["Error"]["Code"] if error_code == "InvalidParameterValue": logger.error( "Parameters are invalid. " "Ensure architecture and size strings conform to DescribeInstanceTypes API reference." ) raise else: return inst_types
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes in AWS SDK for Python (Boto3) API Reference.
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- Rust
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- SDK for Rust
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Note
There's more on GitHub. Find the complete example and learn how to set up and run in the AWS Code Examples Repository
. /// List instance types that match an image's architecture and are free tier eligible. pub async fn list_instance_types(&self, image: &Image) -> Result<Vec<InstanceType>, EC2Error> { let architecture = format!( "{}", image.architecture().ok_or_else(|| EC2Error::new(format!( "Image {:?} does not have a listed architecture", image.image_id() )))? ); let free_tier_eligible_filter = Filter::builder() .name("free-tier-eligible") .values("false") .build(); let supported_architecture_filter = Filter::builder() .name("processor-info.supported-architecture") .values(architecture) .build(); let response = self .client .describe_instance_types() .filters(free_tier_eligible_filter) .filters(supported_architecture_filter) .send() .await?; Ok(response .instance_types .unwrap_or_default() .into_iter() .filter_map(|iti| iti.instance_type) .collect()) }
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For API details, see DescribeInstanceTypes
in AWS SDK for Rust API reference.
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