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Reviewed-by: gtema <artem.goncharov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: zhoumeng <zhoumeng35@huawei.com>
Co-committed-by: zhoumeng <zhoumeng35@huawei.com>
2022-11-08 19:19:30 +00:00

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Creating a Dedicated Load Balancer

Scenarios

You have prepared everything required for creating a load balancer. For details, see Preparations for Creating a Load Balancer.

  • In the eu-de region, you can create both dedicated and shared load balancers, and you can create either type of load balancers on the management console or by calling APIs.
  • In the eu-nl region, you can only create dedicated load balancers, either on the console or by calling APIs.

Constraints and Limitations

After a load balancer is created, the VPC cannot be changed. If you want to change the VPC, create another load balancer and select the VPC during creation.

Procedure

  1. Log in to the management console.
  2. In the upper left corner of the page, click and select the desired region and project.
  3. Hover on in the upper left corner to display Service List and choose Network > Elastic Load Balancing.
  4. Click Create Elastic Load Balancer and specify the parameters by referring to Table 1.
    Table 1 Parameter description

    Parameter

    Description

    Example Value

    Type

    Specifies the type of the load balancer.

    Dedicated

    Region

    Specifies the region. Resources in different regions cannot communicate with each other over internal networks. For lower network latency and faster access to resources, select the nearest region.

    en-nl

    AZ

    Specifies the AZ of the load balancer. You can deploy a load balancer in multiple AZs for high availability. When an AZ becomes faulty or unavailable, requests are routed to backend servers in other AZs. This ensures service continuity and improves application reliability.

    If you deploy a dedicated load balancer in multiple AZs, its performance such as the number of new connections and the number of concurrent connections will multiply. For example, if you deploy a dedicated load balancer in two AZs, it can handle up to 40 million concurrent connections.

    NOTE:
    • If requests are from the Internet, the load balancer in each AZ you select routes the requests based on source IP addresses.
    • For requests from a private network:
      • If clients are in an AZ you select when you create the load balancer, requests are distributed by the load balancer in this AZ. If the load balancer is unavailable, requests are distributed by the load balancer in another AZ you select.
      • If clients are in an AZ that is not selected when you create the load balancer, requests are distributed by the load balancer in each AZ you select based on source IP addresses.
    NOTE:

    If you change the AZs of an existing load balancer, the load balancer may fail to route requests for several seconds. It is recommended that you plan the AZs in advance, or change the AZs during off-peak hours when necessary.

    -

    Network Type

    Specifies the type of the network where the load balancer works. You can select one or more network types.

    • Public IPv4 network: The load balancer routes requests from the clients to backend servers over the Internet.
    • Private IPv4 network: The load balancer routes requests from the clients to backend servers in a VPC.
    NOTE:

    If you do not select any of the options, the load balancer cannot communicate with the clients after it is created. When you are using ELB or testing network connectivity, ensure that the load balancer has a public or private IP address bound.

    Public IPv4 network

    VPC

    Specifies the VPC where the load balancer works. You need to configure this parameter regardless of the selected network type.

    Select an existing VPC or create one.

    For more information about VPC, see the Virtual Private Cloud User Guide.

    vpc-4536

    Subnet

    Specifies the subnet where the load balancer will reside.

    You need to configure this parameter regardless of the selected network type.

    subnet-4536

    Public IPv4 network configuration

    EIP

    This parameter is mandatory when Network Type is set to IPv4 public network. You can use an existing EIP or apply for a new one. If you select Use existing, select an existing IP address.

    • New EIP: The system will assign a new EIP to the load balancer.
    • Use existing: Select an existing IP address.
      NOTE:
      • By default, load balancers created in the eu-nl region are dedicated load balancers. You can unbind an EIP from a dedicated load balancer only on the ELB console if you no longer need the EIP.
      • If you bind a new EIP to the load balancer and specify a shared bandwidth, this EIP will be added to the shared bandwidth.
      • If you set EIP to New EIP when you create a dedicated load balancer in the eu-de region, the system will automatically assign and bind an EIP to the load balancer. This type of EIPs can also be bound to a shared load balancer. If you set EIP to Use existing, you can select one from the EIPs that were assigned when you created dedicated load balancers and have been unbound from the dedicated load balancers.
      • To unbind an EIP from a load balancer, locate the load balancer and choose More > Unbind EIP in the Operation column.

    N/A

    EIP Type

    Specifies the link type (BGP) when a new EIP is used.

    Dynamic BGP

    Private IPv4 network configuration

    IPv4 Address

    Specifies how you want the IPv4 address to be assigned.

    • Automatically-assigned IP address: The system automatically assigns an IPv4 address to the load balancer.
    • Manually-specified IP address: Manually specify an IPv4 address to the load balancer.

    Automatically-assigned IP address

    Specification

    • Select either Application load balancing (HTTP/HTTPS) or Network load balancing (TCP/UDP) or both, and then select the desired specification. You can select only one specification for Application load balancing (HTTP/HTTPS) and Network load balancing (TCP/UDP), respectively.
    • For application load balancing, the number of IP addresses varies depending on the specification. You can view the number of IP addresses required by the load balancer in the infotip after the selected subnet.
    • The performance of load balancers varies depending on the selected specifications. You can evaluate the actual traffic and select appropriate specifications based on the key metrics.
    • Dedicated load balancers have the following six specifications:
      • Small I
      • Small II
      • Medium I
      • Medium II
      • Large I
      • Large II

    Medium II

    Name

    Specifies the load balancer name.

    elb93wd

    Advanced Settings

    Description

    Provides supplementary information about the load balancer.

    N/A

    Tag

    Identifies load balancers so that they can be easily found. A tag consists of a tag key and a tag value. The tag key marks a tag, and the tag value specifies the tag content. For details about the naming specifications, see Table 2.

    • Key: elb_key1
    • Value: elb-01
    Table 2 Tag naming rules

    Item

    Requirement

    Example Value

    Tag key

    • Cannot be left blank.
    • Must be unique for the same load balancer.
    • Can contain a maximum of 36 characters.
    • Can contain only the following character types:
      • Uppercase letters
      • Lowercase letters
      • Digits
      • Special characters, including hyphens (-), underscores (_), and at signs (@)

    elb_key1

    Tag value

    • Can contain a maximum of 43 characters.
    • Can contain only the following character types:
      • Uppercase letters
      • Lowercase letters
      • Digits
      • Special characters, including hyphens (-), underscores (_), and at signs (@)

    elb-01

  5. Click Create Now.
  6. Confirm the configuration and submit your request.