Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with HTTP routes

Objective

The OVHcloud Load Balancer service redirects the front-end's incoming traffic to the servers that make up the front-end's default farm, or its default redirection.

In some cases, you can go further and route, redirect, or block traffic according to a range of criteria. For example, in the case of an HTTP(S) service, you can filter traffic based on the HTTP method, the URL, or even the value of a cookie or header.

In the OVHcloud Load Balancer service, these elements are called routes. A route is a specific action to perform if one or more conditions are met.

This guide will show you how to direct your requests dynamically to a specific farm using routes.

Requirements

Instructions

INFO

Although this guide focuses on HTTP routes, the same principle applies to TCP routes. This can be useful for directing HTTP/2 traffic to a specific farm or rejecting incoming requests from certain IP addresses.

This feature is only available via the API. This guide will present the general principles as well as use cases for routes drawn from real-life scenarios.

Introduction to routes

A route is used to control traffic according to different criteria. They can be expressed in the form of rules, conditions, or actions.

For example, IF the URL starts with '/wp-admin/' (1) AND the connection is HTTP (2) THEN redirect to the HTTPS version of the page (3).

In this example, there are two rules :

  • the connection must come from an HTTP frontend (2);
  • its URL must start with the WordPress administration pages (1).

There is an action associated with these rules: redirect to the HTTPS version of the page (3).

This is what is known as an "end action". That means if the rules are validated, the evaluation of the routes stops and the action is executed.

API presentation

Route management is only available through the OVHcloud API. It is only valid for the http and tcp protocols, and the path /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/{protocol}/route/ exposes the dedicated route API.

The OVHcloud Load Balancer service route API has been specifically designed to be flexible, powerful, and scalable. It is organized around three main sections:

  1. API calls listing the available rules and actions.
  2. API calls listing the routes configured on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service.
  3. API calls for configuring the routes of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service.
INFO

To display only the API calls related to routes in the OVHcloud API console, you can use the filter field with the keyword "[a-z]*".

When you want to configure a route or rules, the first thing to do is to consult the available actions and rules. This will give you the possible values for the configuration fields of the route and rule APIs.

  • A route can have several rules.
  • A route can only be attached to a single frontend.
  • A frontend can have several routes. In this case, the evaluation order depends on its type and weight.

When a request arrives on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service, the routes are evaluated successively according to the following principles:

  1. first, the reject and rewrite routes, then the farm routes;
  2. within these categories, the routes are evaluated in increasing weight order;
  3. if two routes have the same weight, the first route created is evaluated first;
  4. only the first action of all validated rules is executed.

Available rules and actions

This first section of the API contains an up-to-date list of available actions and rules for your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. It contains one call for the actions and another for the rules. These two calls return a list of objects. Each object is named, and indicates whether it applies to TCP or HTTP routes, as well as the expected values or types of values for the different fields of the API. If a field is "null", it means no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error.

Actions

For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section Available Actions, at the bottom of this guide.

Rules

For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section Available Rules, at the bottom of this guide.

Configured routes

This second section of the API contains only one call. It was mainly designed to facilitate the implementation of auto-completion mechanisms. It returns the identifier, name, and type of each defined route. The details of a route can be obtained with a GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/route/{type}/{routeId} call defined below.

GET/ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/definedRoutes

For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section " Route Handling ", at the bottom of this guide.

Route configuration

With these basic principles on available actions and rules, and the route evaluation order, these routes can be manipulated in the same way as farms. When you create a route, you can attach rules to it. The possible values for the rules and actions are defined by the API calls.

For more information on these methods, you can consult the section " Route Handling ", at the bottom of this guide.

Examples

To demonstrate the utility of routes, this section will offer some practical examples of the use of this technology for OVHcloud's internal needs, without going into the details of the API calls.

You will find the details of the API calls in the section Route Handling, at the bottom of this guide and the following sections.

Force HTTPS for WordPress login pages

The HTTPS protocol has become the norm. Its objective is to make all websites available in HTTPS in a secure manner, thanks to the SSL/TLS protocol. If you need an SSL/TLS certificate, you can use your OVHcloud Load Balancer service to order a new one, which will be managed for you in a completely automatic way.

Migrating a website to HTTPS requires work, especially to avoid Mixed-Content problems. It may be interesting to migrate your website section by section, starting by securing the pages that send login credentials.

An approach could be to rely on the beginning of WordPress URLs. By default, the URLs of WordPress login pages start with "/wp-login". We would therefore need to:

  • a route with a redirection action;
  • a rule in this route that detects URLs starting with "/wp-login".

In practice, this gives a route as follows:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your HTTP frontend
displayName"Redirect WordPress connections to HTTPS"
weight(empty)
action.type"redirect"
action.status302 for a temporary redirect, 301 for a permanent redirect
action.target"https://\${host}\${path}\${arguments}" to take the same host, path and arguments

On this route, we will attach a rule:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
routeIdIdentifier of the route created above
field"uri"
subField(empty)
match"startswith"
negatefalse
pattern"/wp-login"

Then apply the configuration to the concerned area.

WARNING

To add a new redirection, you will have to repeat these actions, creating a route, then a rule. If a second rule is added to the same route, both rules must be validated for the redirection to work. Note that if the rules are startswith /wp-login and startswith /wp-admin, the redirection will never work because these two conditions cannot be true at the same time.

Route based on a domain (VHost)

This is the feature that made the web possible when it was in its infancy, with the possibility of exposing several sites behind the same IP address thanks to the "Host" field of HTTP headers.

For example, if your infrastructure is composed of a VPS for your website, an OVHcloud Load Balancer for SSL/TLS termination, and redirections to a maintenance page with a backup server in the farms, you would have needed an Additional IP per website, routed to your OVHcloud Load Balancer, and a frontend per IP in the past.

With routes, you can share the same frontend and choose the server farm dynamically, thanks to the [a-z] field.

For this, you will need:

  • a route per VHost;
  • a rule per route detecting a specific domain.

In practice, to route the domain www.example.com, this will give the following route:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your frontend
displayName"VHost - www.example.com"
weight(empty)
action.type"farm"
action.status(empty)
action.targetIdentifier of the farm to which to direct this domain

And on this route, we will attach a rule:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
routeIdIdentifier of the route created above
field"host"
subField(empty)
match"is"
negatefalse
pattern"www.example.com" or a domain of your choice

Finally, apply the configuration.

Reserve an Additional IP for a specific website

If you host a website on a VPS, you might want to dedicate an IP address to a specific client. You can easily make the IP available by routing it to your OVHcloud Load Balancer service, then configuring a dedicated frontend attached to this Additional IP, and setting the client's target VPS as the defaultFarmId.

However, what will happen if another client detects this and configures their domain to point to the premium client's IP? By default, this will work, and their website will be routed to another client's VPS. If an SSL/TLS certificate is present, this will still work, as all certificates are automatically available for all frontends.

In such scenarios, the solution is to add a rule that rejects requests if the domain is not a premium domain. You can do this with a reject route and a rule.

In practice, to reserve a frontend with a dedicated IP for the domain www.example.com, this will give the following route:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your frontend
displayName"Restriction to www.example.com"
weight(empty)
action.type"reject"
action.status403
action.target(empty)

And on this route, we will attach a rule:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
routeIdIdentifier of the route created above
field"host"
subField(empty)
match"is"
negatetrue
pattern"www.example.com" or a domain of your choice

Finally, apply the configuration.

Route based on a URL and an HTTP method

On some specific infrastructures, certain requests must be routed to a specific farm. For example, to handle rare but data-intensive requests without impacting production, such as analytical requests that work on a read-only copy of the data with a server having a higher memory volume.

If, for example, the request is sent:

  • with the POST method;
  • on a URL matching "^/.*/batch-analytics$".

Then, you would need a route with two rules, one of which uses a regular expression.

In practice, this gives a route as follows:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your frontend
displayName"Route batch analytics to a dedicated farm"
weight(empty)
action.type"farm"
action.status(empty)
action.targetIdentifier of the farm to which to direct these operations

And on this route, we will attach two rules:

FieldRule 1Rule 2
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer serviceas for rule 1
routeIdIdentifier of the route created aboveas for rule 1
field"method""uri"
subField(empty)(empty)
match"is""matches"
negatefalsefalse
pattern"POST""^/.*/batch-analytics$"

Here, the first rule applies to an enumeration. Only standard HTTP methods are available. The second rule, on the other hand, exploits the full power of routes by using a regular expression. Although it is possible to use such expressions, avoiding them results in enhanced performance.

All that remains is to apply the configuration in the concerned area.

Route certain IPs and voluntary clients to preproduction

When a site grows, you may want to set up a preproduction environment to validate ongoing changes, without affecting the majority of users. Generally, when configuring this type of environment, you want to reduce the gap as much as possible between production and preproduction, in order to detect problems as accurately as possible. A classic and often neglected source of problems is the domain name. It is sometimes hardcoded in a file or an article. At that point, a link may work in preproduction but not in production.

Instead of setting up rules based on the domain name, you could set up rules based on the source IP address (for example, an enterprise proxy) and possibly a cookie for voluntary clients. These configurations can be detected with two routes on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service.

For this example, we will consider:

  • that the enterprise proxy can use the addresses 42.42.42.0/24 and the VPN uses 1.2.3.4/32;
  • that the voluntary users have a "PreprodOptIn" cookie, the value of which is not important.

In practice, you will need two identical routes:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your frontend
displayName"Route Opt-In and internal users to preproduction environment"
weight(empty)
action.type"farm"
action.status(empty)
action.targetIdentifier of the preproduction farm

Next, we attach the following 2 rules, each on one of the routes (1 rule per route):

FieldRule 1Rule 2
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer servicesame
routeIdIdentifier of the first routeIdentifier of the second route
field"source""cookie"
subField(empty)"PreprodOptIn"
match"in""exists"
negatefalsefalse
pattern"42.42.42.0/24, 1.2.3.4"(empty)

The first rule checks if the source IP is in a list of address ranges. In this case, the different address ranges are separated by commas and can be surrounded by spaces for better readability. If a range contains only one address, the "/32" is implicit but can be added explicitly. In any case, the size of this field is limited to 255 characters.

The second rule simply checks the existence of the cookie. It would be possible to check if its value matches a regular expression or is in a list of possibilities, but this allows to show a simple example of what can be done with cookies. Rules based on HTTP Headers work according to a similar approach.

All that remains is to apply the configuration in the concerned area.

Route WebSockets to a dedicated farm

When a site has interactive functions based on WebSockets such as a chatbot, you may want to direct these connections to a server farm dedicated to this task. In fact, it is quite simple.W

When a browser tries to open a WebSocket connection, it sends a standard HTTP request with the headers:

Upgrade: websocket
Connection: Upgrade

In practice, it is sufficient to detect the first header. This can be done very easily with a route and a rule:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
frontendIdIdentifier of your frontend
displayName"Route WebSockets to a dedicated farm"
weight(empty)
action.type"farm"
action.status(empty)
action.targetIdentifier of the WebSocket dedicated farm

And on this route, we come to attach a rule:

FieldValue and description
serviceNameIdentifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service
routeIdIdentifier of the route created just above
field"header"
subField"Upgrade"
match"is"
negatefalse
pattern"websocket" (case-sensitive)

All that remains is to apply the configuration in the relevant zone.

References

You will find here the details of the API calls related to routes. For a more general overview of route features, we invite you to first consult the section " API presentation " a little further up in this guide.

Handling routes

TCP and HTTP routes are configured in the same way. Since HTTP routes are more powerful, this section focuses on HTTP routes and rules. The operation of TCP routes can be extrapolated by replacing "http" with "tcp" in the routes. Some fields only make sense in HTTP, so they are not available in TCP.

List routes

This call returns the list of numeric identifiers of routes defined for the HTTP protocol. You can filter this list by frontendId. This call returns the routes in the order in which they will be evaluated. The evaluation order can be partially controlled using the "weight" of the route.

GET/ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route
ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
frontendIdNumeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which the routes are attached
Create a route

This call allows you to create a route. Only the action is mandatory. A route can be attached and detached from a frontend. It is possible to create up to 50 routes on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. This call returns the created route in case of success. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

POST/ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route
ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
displayNameDisplay name of your route (maximum 255 characters)
frontendIdNumeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which to attach the route
weightPriority of the route, between 1 (passes first) and 255 (passes after others)
action.typeRequiredName of the type of action to execute if all the rules associated with the route are validated
action.statusHTTP status code for the reject and redirect actions
action.targetNumeric identifier of the target farm for the farm actions, or URL pattern for the redirect actions

The possible action types are:

actionMeaning
redirectRedirect a request to action.target with the HTTP status code action.status
rejectReject a request with the HTTP status code action.status
farmRoute a request to the farm whose identifier is specified in action.target

For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available actions " further down in this guide.

View the details of a route

This call allows you to view the details of an HTTP route, knowing its identifier.

  • Request:
ParameterMeaning
serviceNameIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdNumeric identifier of the route
  • Response:
ParameterMeaning
routeIdNumeric identifier of the route
displayNameDisplay name of your route
frontendIdNumeric identifier of the frontend to which your route is attached
weightPriority of your route
action.typeName of the type of action of your route
action.statusAssociated HTTP status code
action.targetNumeric identifier of the farm or associated URL pattern
rulesList of rules that must be validated to trigger the action of the route. More details are available in the section " Handling Rules ".

For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section "Available actions" further down in this guide.

Modify a route

This call allows you to modify an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route
displayNameDisplay name of your route (maximum 255 characters)
frontendIdNumeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which to attach the route
weightPriority of the route, between 1 (passes first) and 255 (passes after others)
action.typeRequiredName of the type of action to execute if all the rules associated with the route are validated
action.statusHTTP status code for the reject and redirect actions
action.targetNumeric identifier of the target farm for the farm actions, or URL pattern for the redirect actions

For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available actions " further down in this guide.

Delete a route

This call allows you to delete an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. When a route is deleted, all the rules associated with that route are also deleted. There is no need to delete them individually. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route

Handling rules

List rules

This call returns the list of numeric identifiers of rules defined for a given route.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route
Attach a rule

This call allows you to attach a rule to a route. It is possible to attach up to 5 rules per route on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. This call returns the created rule in case of success. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route
fieldRequiredName of the HTTP parameter on which to apply this rule
subFieldName of the HTTP header for header rules or name of the cookie for cookie rules
matchRequiredName of the comparator to apply to validate the rule
negateInverts the result of the comparator
patternComparator argument
  • field
ValueMeaning
sourceAddress or list of source addresses in the form of IP (a.b.c.d/z)
protocolProtocol. "http" or "https"
methodHTTP method (GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS, CONNECT, TRACE)
hostDomain name (vhost), without the port number
uriRequest path as understood between the first "/" and the first "?"
paramHTTP parameter coming from the part after the first "?"
headerHTTP header
cookieHTTP cookie
  • match
ValueMeaning
existsThe property must exist (HTTP header or cookie for example)
isThe property must match exactly pattern
inThe property must be in the list of values (separated by commas) defined by pattern
containsThe property must contain the value of pattern
startswithThe property must start with the value of pattern
endswithThe property must end with the value of pattern
matchesThe property must match the regular expression of pattern

For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide.

View the details of a rule

This call allows you to view the details of a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier.

  • Request:
ParameterMeaning
serviceNameIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdNumeric identifier of the route
ruleIdNumeric identifier of the rule
  • Response:
ParameterMeaning
ruleIdNumeric identifier of the rule
fieldName of the HTTP parameter on which to apply the rule
subFieldName of the HTTP header or cookie for the rule
matchName of the comparator to apply to validate the rule
negate"true" if the result of the comparator is inverted
patternComparator argument. The meaning and syntax depend on match and field

For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide.

Modify a rule

This call allows you to modify a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route
ruleIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the rule
fieldRequiredName of the HTTP parameter on which to apply this rule
subFieldName of the HTTP header for header rules or name of the cookie for cookie rules
matchRequiredName of the comparator to apply to validate the rule
negateInverts the result of the comparator
patternComparator argument

For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide.

Delete a rule

This call allows you to delete a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes.

ParameterRequiredMeaning
serviceNameRequiredIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
routeIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the route
ruleIdRequiredNumeric identifier of the rule
INFO

If you want to delete a route, it is not necessary to delete all the rules attached to it. The rules are automatically deleted when you delete a route.

List all TCP and HTTP routes

This call allows you to list all the identifiers, display names and types ("http"/"tcp") of routes defined on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. It was designed to simplify the implementation of auto-completion.

GET/ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/definedRoutes
  • Request:
ParameterMeaning
serviceNameIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
  • Response:
ParameterMeaning
typeType of protocol of the route: "tcp" for TCP routes, "http" for HTTP routes
routeIdNumeric identifier of the route
displayNameDisplay name of the route

Available actions

This call returns the list of available actions for TCP and HTTP routes as well as the expected values for each of the fields.

If a field is "null", it means that no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error.

All actions managed by the OVHcloud Load Balancer service are final. This means that the execution of an action also ends the evaluation of the routes.

  • Request:
ParameterMeaning
serviceNameIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
  • Response:
ParameterMeaning
typeIndicates whether this action is valid for an HTTP route or a TCP route
nameName of the action to specify in the type field of the routes
statusList of available HTTP status codes for this action (the status field of the routes)
destinationType of value expected in the destination field of the routes
Redirection

This action returns a redirection to the visitor. The type of redirection can be configured with the status field. When this action is selected, no farm will receive the request.

ParameterValue
typeredirect
status301, 302, 303, 307 or 308
targetDestination URL (can contain variables)

Only HTTP redirection status codes can be specified. The most common are codes 301 and 302. If you are unsure, you can use the 302 "Temporary Redirect". The HTTP status codes recognized for redirections are:

Status codeDescription
301Permanent redirect. The redirect can be stored by the browser.
302 (default)Temporary redirect. The redirect must be revalidated by the browser on each request.
303Like 302 and forces the use of the HTTP GET method.
307Like 302 and forces the reuse of the same HTTP method (GET, POST, etc.).
308Like 301 and forces the reuse of the same HTTP method (GET, POST, etc.).

The destination URL can contain simple variables. This allows you to redirect to another domain, another protocol or add a suffix / prefix to a URL. The recognized variables are:

VariableDescription
protocolProtocol of the request ("http" or "https")
domainDomain name of the request, without the port number
host"Host" field of the request, including the port number if present
portPort of the request
pathPath of the request, starts with a '/' and ends at the first '?'
argumentsArguments of the request, starts with a '?' if present

For example, to:

  • redirect to https: https://\${host}\${path}\${arguments}
  • redirect to a new domain: ${protocol}://new.example.com\${path}\${arguments}
  • prefix the URL: ${protocol}://\${host}/staging\${path}\${arguments}
Rejection

This action returns an HTTP error status code to the visitor. The error HTTP status code can be configured with the status field. When this action is selected, no farm will receive the request.

ParameterValue
typereject
status200, 400, 403, 405, 408, 429, 500, 502, 503 or 504
targetnot available
INFO

This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the status parameter is not available and the request is terminated. TCP requests terminated in this way are not counted in the request rate.

Only the HTTP error status codes listed in the API can be specified. The most common are the codes 400 "Bad request" and 403 "Forbidden". 200 can be used to block a type of request while simulating a success, and 503 can be used to simulate a server failure.

Status codeDescription
200The request was executed successfully.
400Invalid request.
403 (default)Access forbidden.
405Invalid or unhandled method (GET, POST, PUT, etc.)
408The client failed to send a complete request within the server's time limit.
429The client sent too many requests (rate-limiting).
500Generic server error.
502Communication error with the server.
503The service is temporarily unavailable.
504The server took too long to respond.
Routing

This action directs requests to a specific farm, other than the default farm configured on the frontend. The target farm must be of the same type as the frontend ("http" or "tcp").

ParameterValue
typefarm
statusnot available
targetNumeric identifier of the target farm. This must be of the same type
INFO

This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the target farm must be of type "tcp".

Available rules

This call returns the list of available rules for TCP and HTTP routes, as well as the expected values for each field.

If a field is "null", it means no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error.

  • Request:
ParameterMeaning
serviceNameIdentifier of your Load Balancer service
  • Response:
ParameterMeaning
typeProtocol type of the route: "tcp" for TCP routes, "http" for HTTP routes
nameName of the property to which this rule applies, to be filled in the field field
hasSubField"true" if this property has a "sub-property" (e.g.: a header or a cookie)
matchesList of available comparators for this rule, to be filled in the match field
patternType of expected value for the pattern field
enumList of possible values for the pattern field if it is an enumeration

The different types of pattern are:

ValueMeaning
cidrIP address (a.b.c.d) or subnet (a.b.c.d/z)
stringFree text. For the operator in, a list of comma-separated values (maximum 255 characters)
enumThe field is an enumeration defined in enum
Protocol

This rule allows filtering requests based on their protocol. In practice, the use cases for this rule are quite limited because the protocol depends on the frontend to which the route is attached, and a frontend only handles one protocol, which is known at the time the route is defined.

FieldValue
nameprotocol
hasSubFieldno
matchesis or in
patterntcp, tls, http or https
INFO

This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the "http/2.0" protocol is also available. It is based on the SSL/TLS "ALPN" field used by browsers to announce that they are trying to establish an HTTP/2.0 connection. This allows for a common TCP frontend for HTTP 1 and 2 SSL/TLS termination, then routing these streams based on the protocol version.

Source address

This rule allows filtering requests based on their source address. By combining it with a rule based on the URI or domain name, it is for example possible to restrict certain resources to an enterprise proxy, while exposing all other resources without restrictions on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service.

FieldValue
namesource
hasSubFieldno
matchesis or in
patternSubnet (a.b.c.d/z) or address (a.b.c.d)
INFO

This action is also available in TCP with the same behavior.

For example, to block a network and a specific address, you can use a pattern such as "4.4.0.0/16, 8.8.8.8".

Domain name

This rule allows filtering requests based on their domain name. This can for example be used to reproduce the "vhost" function of Apache or to route all domains starting with "mail." to a server dedicated to webmail.

FieldValue
namehost
hasSubFieldno
matchesis, in, contains, startswith, endswith or matches
patternString or regular expression
INFO

This action is also available in TCP. It is only applicable if the frontend is configured to accept SSL/TLS connections and the client sends an "SNI" option. This is particularly the case for recent web browsers.

HTTP method

This rule allows filtering requests based on the HTTP method. It is commonly used in conjunction with a rule based on the request URI or path to make the rule more selective.

FieldValue
namemethod
hasSubFieldno
matchesis or in
patternGET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, CONNECT, OPTIONS or TRACE
Request path

This rule allows filtering requests based on the request path or URI. The request path is the part between the first '/' included and the first '?' excluded.

FieldValue
nameuri
hasSubFieldno
matchesis, in, contains, startswith, endswith or matches
patternString or regular expression
Request parameter

This rule allows filtering requests based on the existence or value of a specific HTTP request parameter. This is the part after the first '?'. If a parameter is specified multiple times in the request, only the first one is taken into account.

FieldValue
nameparam
hasSubFieldyes
matchesis, in, contains, startswith, endswith or matches
patternString or regular expression
HTTP header

This rule allows filtering requests based on the existence or value of a specific HTTP header. This can for example be used to detect the opening of a websocket connection and route it to a dedicated farm.

FieldValue
nameheader
hasSubFieldyes
matchesis, in, contains, startswith, endswith or matches
patternString or regular expression

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Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with HTTP routes

Webmail Mein Konto Support 🇩🇪 Deutsch Design Sprachen 🇩🇪 Deutsch 🇫🇷 Francais 🇬🇧 English 🇩🇪 Deutsch 🇪🇸 Espanol 🇮🇹 Italiano 🇵🇱 Polski 🇵🇹 Portugues Menu Auf dieser Seite Search ⌘K Documentation Beta API-Referenz Produkt-Changelog E-Learning & Zertifizierungen Migration Bare Metal Cloud Dedicated Server Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Bare Metal 3-AZ Region - Vorstellung des Angebots Kimsufi und So you Start Kunden - Einfuhrung in das OVHcloud Kundencenter Shared responsibility for Dedicated Servers (EN) Understanding the dedicated server boot process Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit einem Dedicated Server Erste Schritte mit einem Kimsufi, So You Start oder Rise Dedicated Server SSH-Verbindungen verwenden Authentifizierungsschlussel fur SSH-Verbindungen zu OVHcloud Servern erstellen und verwenden Offentliche Authentifizierungsschlussel im OVHcloud Kundencenter speichern Verwendung der IPMI-Konsole fur Dedicated Server CO2-Fußabdruck Ihrer OVHcloud Dienste einsehen Konfiguration System Konfigurieren von Benutzer-Accounts und Root-Zugriff auf einem Server Windows Server Product Key andern Administrator-Passwort eines Windows Servers andern Administrator-Passwort eines Windows Servers mit dem Windows Customer Rescue System zurucksetzen Intel SGX auf Ihrem Dedicated Server aktivieren Hardware-Upgrade auf einem Dedicated Server der Reihen High Grade oder SCALE Bare Metal Server - Zuweisen von Tags im OVHcloud Kundencenter How to install VMware ESXi 8 on a dedicated server Speicher Verwalten und Neuaufbauen von Software-RAID auf Servern im Legacy-Boot-Modus (BIOS) Verwalten und Neuaufbauen von Software-RAID auf Servern mit UEFI-Boot-Modus Managing hardware RAID (EN) Hot Swap - Hardware RAID (EN) Festplatte auf einem Server mit Software-RAID im laufenden Betrieb wechseln MegaRAID mit RAID 0 konfigurieren Konfigurieren eines Software-Mirror (RAID) mit Windows OVHcloud API and Storage (EN) Configuring the storage on a HGR-STOR-2 server (EN) Creating a Windows partition on a server with hardware RAID Advance Dedicated Servers - Upgrading your Samsung NVMe PM9A1 firmware (EN) High Grade Dedicated Servers - Upgrading your SSD SAS Western Digital SS300 firmware (EN) High Grade Dedicated Servers - Upgrading your SSD SAS Western Digital SS530 firmware (EN) Dedicated Servers - Upgrading your SSD Solidigm D7-P5520 firmware Dedicated Servers - Upgrading your Micron 7500 PRO firmware So uberprufen Sie die BMC-Firmware-Version auf einem dedizierten Server Netzwerk OVHcloud DNS Server mit einem Dedicated Server verwenden Installation des OVHcloud SSH-Schlussels Konfigurieren der OVHcloud Link Aggregation Konfigurieren Ihrer Netzwerkkarte fur die OVHcloud Link Aggregation in Debian 9 bis 11 So konfigurieren Sie Link-Aggregation mit LACP in Debian 12 oder Ubuntu 24.04 (EN) Konfigurieren Ihrer Netzwerkkarte fur die OVHcloud Link Aggregation in Windows Server 2019 Konfigurieren der OVHcloud Link Aggregation in SLES 15 Webserver (LAMP) auf Debian oder Ubuntu installieren Manage your server reboot with the OVHcloud Link Aggregation feature (EN) IPv6 auf einem Dedicated Server konfigurieren Konfigurieren einer IPv6-Adresse auf einer virtuellen Maschine (EN) Eine Additional IP umziehen Konfiguration von Additional IPs im Bridge-Modus auf Ihren virtuellen Maschinen Welche IP-Adressen nutzt das OVHcloud Monitoring? Configurer son adresse IP en alias Reverse DNS Ihres Servers konfigurieren (PTR record) Uberprufen ob Ihr Dedicated Server virtuelle MAC-Adressen unterstutzt Virtuelle MAC-Adresse einer Additional IP zuweisen Netzwerk auf Windows Server mit Hyper-V konfigurieren Netzwerk auf Proxmox VE fur die High Grade, Scale & SCALE Reihen konfigurieren (EN) Upgrade and downgrade Bandwidth via the OVHcloud API Improving Network Resilience on Bare Metal servers vRack vRack fur Dedicated Server konfigurieren Konfiguration von Jumbo-Frames im vRack Konfiguration eines Additional IP-Blocks in einem vRack Einen Additional-IPv6-Block in einem vRack konfigurieren IP-Block-Ankundigung im vRack andern Mehrere VLANs im vRack erstellen Hyper-V mit Additional IPs in einem vRack verwenden vRack zwischen Public Cloud und Dedicated Server einrichten Upgrade and downgrade private bandwidth (vRack) via the OVHcloud API Deployments OVHcloud API and OS Installation (EN) Bring Your Own Image (BYOI) / Bring Your Own Linux (BYOLinux), a comparison sheet (EN) Bring Your Own Image (BYOI) (EN) Bring Your Own Linux (BYOLinux) (EN) Konfigurieren von personalisierten iPXE Skripten uber die OVHcloud API Migration Migrieren von Daten von einem Dedicated Server auf einen anderen Daten von einem dedizierten Server auf einen anderen mit rsync kopieren Tutorials PuTTY fur SSH-Verbindungen und Authentifizierung verwenden Tutorial - Configuring pfSense network bridge (EN) Webserver (LAMP) auf Debian oder Ubuntu installieren Activating Windows Machines using Hyper-V on an OVHcloud licensed Windows Server CUDA auf einem GPU Dedicated Server installieren Backups von Daten und Datenbanken auf einem Storage Server erstellen SFTP zum Ubertragen von Dateien verwenden How to create a Palworld compatible server (EN) Installer un environnement de developpement web sur un VPS ou un serveur dedie How to deploy and verify an OpenNebula Hosted Cloud on Bare Metal servers How to install CloudPanel on a VPS or a Dedicated Server How to install WordPress with Docker on a VPS or a dedicated server How to install WordPress with WP-CLI on a VPS or a dedicated server How to install ISPmanager on a VPS or Dedicated Server Optimierung des E-Mail-Versands, damit Ihre E-Mails nicht als Spam markiert werden Sicherheit Systemabsicherung Einen Dedicated Server absichern Einen Server mit Memcached-Dienst sichern How to mitigate the Zenbleed vulnerability How to mitigate the Downfall vulnerability How to mitigate the Inception vulnerability Find your patch for Meltdown and Spectre Information about Meltdown and Spectre vulnerability fixes AMD SME/SEV on Ubuntu 20 Dedicated Server Security Specifications Sichere Verwaltung eines ESXi Dedicated Server (EN) ESXi Dedicated Servers - FAQ Backup Preparing a Bare Metal Server backup with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Backing up a Bare Metal Linux Server with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Backing Up a Bare Metal Windows Server Using Veeam Agent for Windows (EN) Restoring a Bare Metal Server with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Backup Storage auf einem Dedicated Server verwenden Netzwerk OVHcloud AntiSpam - Best Practices und Entsperren einer IP-Adresse Konfiguration der Linux Firewall mit iptables Firewall auf einem Windows Server konfigurieren Aktivieren und Konfigurieren der Edge Network Firewall Game Server mit der Application Firewall schutzen Monitoring von DDoS-Angriffen mit dem Network Security Dashboard How to configure the Anti-DDos Infrastructure for Solana Storungsbehebung Wiederherstellen des Serverzugriffs bei Passwortverlust OVHcloud Rescue-Modus aktivieren und verwenden Windows Rescue-Modus aktivieren und verwenden Austauschen eines SSH-Schlusselpaars Austausch einer defekten Disk Hardwarefehler auf einem dedizierten Server im Rescue-Modus diagnostizieren Seriennummer einer Festplatte ermitteln Abschließen eines Wartungseingriffs an Ihrem dedizierten Server (EN) Das RTM v2 Monitoringsystem deinstallieren Sicherung Ihrer Datenbanken im Rescue-Modus Network - Fixing slow downloads problems inside containers and VMs running on Proxmox VE servers with Broadcom BCM57502 NICs Virtual Private Server Ubersicht Erste Schritte Einstieg in einen VPS VPS - Verwaltung uber das OVHcloud Kundencenter OVHcloud VPS FAQ Konfigurieren von Benutzer-Accounts und Root-Zugriff auf einem Server SSH-Verbindungen verwenden Authentifizierungsschlussel fur SSH-Verbindungen zu OVHcloud Servern erstellen und verwenden Offentliche Authentifizierungsschlussel im OVHcloud Kundencenter speichern Upgrade der Ressourcen eines VPS VPS-Partitionierung nach einem Storage-Upgrade Erste Schritte mit vorinstallierten Anwendungen Verwendung der KVM-Konsole zum Zugriff auf einen VPS Legacy VPS verwalten Konfiguration Backups Snapshots auf einem VPS verwenden Comment utiliser les sauvegardes automatisees sur un VPS Zusatzliche Disk konfigurieren Die Große einer zusatzlichen Disk erweitern Netzwerk und IP IPv6 auf einem VPS einrichten Reverse DNS Ihres Servers konfigurieren (PTR record) IP-Adresse als Alias konfigurieren OVHcloud DNS Server mit einem VPS verwenden Fortgeschrittene Anwendung cPanel auf einem VPS installieren Automatische Sicherung - Kernel Panic (cPanel) Migration How to migrate a website from a VPS to a Dedicated Server or a Public Cloud instance (EN) How to migrate an n8n configuration between two VPS Tutorials PuTTY fur SSH-Verbindungen und Authentifizierung verwenden SFTP zum Ubertragen von Dateien verwenden Sicherung Ihrer Datenbanken im Rescue-Modus Einen Minecraft-Server auf einem VPS oder Dedicated Server einrichten How to create a Palworld compatible server (EN) Webserver (LAMP) auf Debian oder Ubuntu installieren Installer un environnement de developpement web sur un VPS ou un serveur dedie How to install CloudPanel on a VPS or a Dedicated Server How to install WordPress with Docker on a VPS or a dedicated server How to install WordPress with WP-CLI on a VPS or a dedicated server Automating the deployment of your website on your VPS via GitHub Actions (EN) Automating the deployment of your website on your VPS via GitLab CI/CD (EN) How to install n8n on an OVHcloud VPS How to migrate an n8n configuration between two VPS Automate SMS sending with n8n via the OVHcloud API How to create and import a Lovable website on an OVHcloud VPS How to install an AI agent on an OVHcloud VPS How to install ISPmanager on a VPS or Dedicated Server How to install Docker and Docker Compose on a VPS How to install Nextcloud on an OVHcloud VPS with Docker How to install Nextcloud on an OVHcloud VPS with Docker and Traefik How to install an OpenClaw agent on a VPS Automated backup with plakar Sicherheit Securiser un VPS Tutorial - Installieren eines SSL-Zertifikats auf einem VPS Konfiguration der Linux Firewall mit iptables Firewall auf einem Windows VPS konfigurieren Diagnose Dateisystem auf einem VPS uberprufen VPS - Windows-Startprotokolle aktivieren Boot-Logs mit KVM anzeigen Rescue-Modus fur einen VPS aktivieren und verwenden Wiederherstellen des Serverzugriffs bei Passwortverlust Administratorpasswort auf einem Windows-Server andern Austauschen eines SSH-Schlusselpaars Optimierung des E-Mail-Versands, damit Ihre E-Mails nicht als Spam markiert werden Zusatzliche Ressourcen Public Cloud & VPS - Image and OS life cycle and end of life/support announcements Plesk und cPanel: End of Support fur VPS - Gewahrleistung der Kontinuitat Ihrer Dienste Managed Bare Metal Ubersicht Dienste und Zusatzfunktionen von OVHcloud VPN fur Ihren OVHcloud Zerto DRP einrichten Backups uber die OVHcloud API wiederherstellen Activating and using Veeam Managed Backup Die Zugriffsregeln fur das vCenter andern Die Verbindung von IPs mit dem vCenter erlauben FAQ Technische Kapazitaten OVHcloud Funktionen IP-Block hinzufugen OVHcloud Snapshots Anderung des Nutzerpassworts VLAN-Erstellung Managed Bare Metal in einem vRack verwenden Spare-Hosts Host-Server loschen Datastore loschen Die Rechte eines Nutzers andern Stundliche Ressourcen hinzufugen Eine E-Mail-Adresse mit einem vSphere-Nutzer verbinden OVHcloud Network Plugin verwenden Managed Bare Metal kundigen Erste Schritte Einfuhrung in das OVHcloud Managed Bare Metal Kundencenter IP auf einer virtuellen Maschine konfigurieren (EN) vSphere Web Client sichern Verbindung mit dem vSphere Interface Migrating an infrastructure to a new vDC Migrating an infrastructure to a Managed Bare Metal solution Verwalten von virtuellen Maschinen Ressourcen einer virtuellen Maschine anpassen Snapshots erstellen Einen Alarm erstellen Eine VM klonen Die Wahl des Festplattenformats VMware Tools installieren Deployment eines Linux, Windows Server oder Windows SQL Server OVF Template Eine virtuelle Maschine deployen Umstellung der Festplatte Ihrer VM unter Linux auf ausschließliche Leseberechtigung verhindern Funktionen von VMware vSphere VMware vMotion VMware Storage vMotion VMware HA (High Availability) VMware Fault Tolerance VMware DRS (Distributed Resource Scheduler) Virtual Machine Encryption (VM Encryption) einrichten vSphere SDK verwenden Hosted Private Cloud Public VCF as-a-Service Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Technische Kapazitaten Hosted Private Cloud VMware Lifecycle Policy Lebenszyklus von VMware on OVHcloud - Zu ergreifende Maßnahmen festlegen (EN) Responsibility sharing for the VMware on OVHcloud service Datamotive - Introduction Public VCF as-a-Service - The fundamentals of Public VCF as-a-Service Technical capabilities and limitations of Public VCF as-a-Service Erste Schritte Einfuhrung in das OVHcloud Hosted Private Cloud Kundencenter Verbindung mit dem vSphere Interface Connexion a l'API OVH Public VCF as-a-Service - Logging in to your organization (EN) Public VCF as-a-Service - Find out how to use the Public VCF as-a-Service user interface (EN) Konfiguration Ein ISO Image mit einer VM verbinden (EN) How to disconnect an ISO image from a VM (EN) IP auf einer virtuellen Maschine konfigurieren (EN) Public VCF as-a-Service - Network concepts and best practices Public VCF as-a-Service - Creating network components from the Public VCF as-a-Service control panel Public VCF as-a-Service - Linking a public IP block with vRack Public VCF as-a-Service - Declaring the public IP gateway in VCD Migration Migrating a PCC to Hosted Private Cloud Migrating an infrastructure to a new vDC End-Of-Life management for LV1 and LV2 storage Public VCF as-a-Service - Migrate from VMware vSphere on OVHcloud Public VCF as-a-Service - Setting up your network after vSphere to Public VCF as-a-Service migration Reversibility Policy for the Managed Mutualized Virtualization product Tutorials Public VCF as-a-Service - Creating a new virtual machine (EN) Public VCF as-a-Service - Backups with Veeam Data Platform (EN) Sicherheit Diagnose Zusatzliche Ressourcen Hosted Private Cloud FAQ CO2-Fußabdruck Ihrer OVHcloud Dienste einsehen Public VCF as-a-Service - FAQ (EN) Managed VMware Schlusselkonzepte SPN Concept Concepts overview Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit NSX (EN) Activer NSX-T dans un Hosted Private Cloud VMware on OVHcloud Einfuhrung in vRealize Operations - vROPS (EN) Getting started with your SecNumCloud vSphere Konfiguration Virtuelle Maschinen Eine virtuelle Maschine deployen VMware Tools installieren Die Wahl des Festplattenformats Ressourcen einer virtuellen Maschine anpassen Umstellung der Festplatte Ihrer VM unter Linux auf ausschließliche Leseberechtigung verhindern Aktivieren des Promiscuous-Modus auf einer virtuellen Maschine (EN) Changing the MTU size for machines reaching the OVHcloud Gateway SSL (EN) Deploy an OVF template through content libraries (EN) Deployment eines Linux, Windows Server oder Windows SQL Server OVF Template OVF Tool (EN) Speicher und Ressourcen Wie fuge ich ein Storage hinzu? (EN) Wie fuge ich einen Host hinzu? (EN) Datastore loschen Host-Server loschen Uploading an ISO in a datastore Netzwerk und Konnektivitat Erstellung eines VLAN (EN) Kompatibilitat zwischen vRack und Hosted Private Cloud Enable the Private Gateway IP-Block hinzufugen Spare-Host Auslieferung und Ruckgabe Segmentverwaltung in NSX (EN) DHCP-Konfiguration in NSX (EN) DNS-Weiterleitung in NSX konfigurieren (EN) Hinzufugen eines neuen Tier-1-Gateways in NSX (EN) vSphere-Funktionen vSphere SDK verwenden Managing granular rights on vSphere objects Cluster erstellen und EVC aktivieren (EN) Backup und Replikation Activating and using Veeam Managed Backup (EN) Setting up Zerto Virtual Replication between two OVHcloud data centres Setting up Zerto multi-site replication on OVHcloud Managed vSphere Using Zerto between OVHcloud and a third-party platform Encrypting backup jobs with Veeam and OKMS Einfrieren virtueller Maschinen mit Veeam Managed Backup Option vermeiden Migration Migrating OmniOS datastores Move2Cloud - Migrating VMware Workloads to OVHcloud Hosted Private Cloud with Veeam Replication Move2Cloud - Migrate VMware workloads to OVHcloud Hosted Private Cloud with Zerto Move2Cloud - Migrating VMware Workloads to OVHcloud SecNumCloud with Veeam Replication Move2Cloud - Migrate VMware workloads to OVHcloud SecNumCloud Hosted Private Cloud with Zerto Tutorials Virtuelle Maschinen Snapshots erstellen (EN) Eine VM klonen (EN) VMs in einer PCC re-registrieren Eine Maschine bei auftretenden Verlangsamungen uberprufen (EN) Einen Alarm erstellen VMware vCenter Converter Speicher und Replikation OVHcloud Snapshots Zmotion Backups uber die OVHcloud API wiederherstellen Replikationskopie einer VM vom Zerto Standort loschen Veeam Cloud Connect - How to migrate data from Veeam Cloud Connect to Object Storage Netzwerk und NSX OVHcloud Network Plugin verwenden Hosted Private Cloud in einem vRack verwenden OVHcloud Private Cloud Plugin verwenden Konfigurieren von NAT fur Port-Weiterleitungen mit NSX (EN) Konfiguration von Load Balancing in NSX (EN) vSphere-Funktionen Das vScope-Interface verstehen (EN) VMware DRS (Distributed Resource Scheduler) VMware Storage vMotion Hyperkonvergenz mit VMware vSAN umsetzen (EN) Einen ESXi-Server in einem vSAN-Cluster hinzufugen (EN) Aktualisieren des vSAN Diskformats (EN) Verwaltung von vSAN Fault Domains VMware vMotion Hochverfugbarkeit und Resilienz VMware HA (High Availability) VMware Fault Tolerance Sicherheit Identitats- und Zugriffsmanagement IAM for VMware on OVHcloud - Presentation and FAQ IAM for VMware on OVHcloud - How to activate IAM IAM for VMware on OVHcloud - How to create an IAM vSphere role IAM for VMware on OVHcloud - How to associate a vSphere role with an IAM policy IAM for VMware on OVHcloud - How to associate a user with a global IAM policy How to use IAM policies with vSphere (EN) Anderung des Nutzerpassworts Eine E-Mail-Adresse mit einem vSphere-Nutzer verbinden Verschlusselung und Schlusselmanagement vNKP - Enabling virtual machine encryption (EN) Virtual Machine Encryption (VM Encryption) einrichten (EN) KMS for VMware on OVHcloud - VM encryption use case scenarios KMS for VMware on OVHcloud - Configuring VM encryption Mise en route du KMS CipherTrust Manager Netzwerksicherheit (NSX) Verwaltung der Distributed Firewall in NSX (EN) Verwaltung der Gateway Firewall in NSX (EN) Setting up an IPsec Tunnel with NSX (EN) Configure BGP between two PCCs via NSX-T (EN) Systemhartung und Schwachstellen vSphere Web Client sichern Das sichere Interface verwenden Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung (2FA) auf Ihrer Private Cloud Infrastruktur verwenden IP-Autorisierung fur vCenter Sicherheitslucke L1TF uberprufen und blockieren Checking and applying patches for Spectre/Meltdown vulnerabilities on your hosts Utiliser le protocole SSLv3 sur Private Cloud Compliance und SecNumCloud Partage de responsabilite sur le service Hosted Private Cloud by VMware sous la qualification SecNumCloud VPN-SPN Concept SPN Connector Concept Diagnose Wartung und Updates VMware on OVHcloud maintenance operations (EN) Wartungsarbeiten auf Ihrer Hosted Private Cloud verschieben Updating hosts using vSphere Lifecycle Management (vLCM) Verwendung des VMware Update Manager Volume in vSphere und einem Betriebssystem erweitern (EN) Testen des vorubergehenden Verlusts eines Hosts durch Aktivierung des Resilienz-Modus (EN) Uberwachung und Protokolle Configuring a vROps alert via the SMTP protocol Logs Data Platform - Collect VMware on OVHcloud logs (EN) NSX-T: retrieving logs (EN) How to read and filter NSX-T logs Compliance-Uberwachung PCI-DSS-Zertifizierung fur Ihre Private Cloud aktivieren How to manage Windows licences for virtual machines on your Hosted Private Cloud infrastructure Windows Server Product Key andern Zusatzliche Ressourcen NSX - FAQ (EN) Pricing and Management of OVHcloud NSX Edges FAQ SecNumCloud Connectivity SNC Cloud Platform Erste Schritte Mise en route de votre projet SNC Cloud Platform Comment sauvegarder une instance SNC Cloud Platform Comment sauvegarder un bucket Object Storage SNC Cloud Platform Bare Metal Pod Erste Schritte Getting started with your Bare Metal Pod SecNumCloud On-Prem Cloud Platform Erste Schritte Getting started with your OPCP Lifecycle of an OPCP Node OPCP - How to use the APIs and obtain the credentials OPCP - How to install an instance from the Horizon interface OPCP - How to Deploy an Instance via OpenStack APIs OPCP - How to setup LACP on a Node OPCP - How to set up Trunk ports on a Node OPCP - How to configure a software RAID on a node OPCP - How to see the node inventory Zusatzliche Ressourcen OPCP - Object Storage features and specifications Building a custom OpenStack Image on OPCP OPCP - Ceph RBD Block Storage - Performance, Resilience and Scalability with OpenStack Nutanix on OVHcloud Schlusselkonzepte Nutanix on OVHcloud - Allgemeine Dokumentation (EN) Nutanix hardware compatibility - OVHcloud configurations Von OVHcloud unterstutzte Nutanix AOS Versionen (EN) Liste der inkludierten Lizenzen (EN) Disaster Recovery Plan in Nutanix (EN) Gemeinsame Verantwortung - Nutanix on OVHcloud (EN) Nutanix on OVHcloud - Lifecycle Policy Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit Ihrem Nutanix Cluster (EN) Hyperkonvergenz Nutanix (EN) Personalisierte Umverteilung Ihres Clusters (EN) Ubersicht Nutanix Storage (EN) ISO Images importieren (EN) Verwaltung von virtuellen Maschinen (EN) Verwaltung von Warnungen und Ereignissen (EN) Verwaltung von Lizenzen fur ein Nutanix on OVHcloud BYOL-Angebot (EN) Netzwerk und Sicherheit OVHgateway Dokumentation (EN) Eine offentliche IP-Adresse zu einer neuen VM hinzufugen (EN) Nutanix Cluster upgraden (EN) Nutanix Cluster Firmware Update (EN) Konfiguration Anderung des vRack eines Nutanix Clusters (EN) Isolierung von Management-Maschinen von der Produktion (EN) Nutanix Flow konfigurieren (EN) Ersetzen des OVHgateway durch einen dedizierten Server (EN) OVHgateway ersetzen (EN) KMS configuration with Nutanix on OVHcloud HYCU Backup konfigurieren (EN) Veeam Backup fur Nutanix konfigurieren (EN) Migration Migration zu Nutanix uber das Nutanix Move Tool (EN) Tutorials Erweiterte Werkzeuge (EN) Aktivieren Sie Windows-VMs, die von OVHcloud auf Nutanix installiert wurden (EN) Hinzufugen oder Entfernen eines Nodes in einem Nutanix-Cluster (Scale In/Out) (EN) Ersatz von Prism Central vom Small Modus im X-LARGE Modus (EN) NCM Self Service (CALM) einrichten (EN) Nutanix Objects einrichten (EN) Sicherheit Sichern des Prism Central-Webzugriffs (EN) Verbindung zweier Standorte mit IPsec (EN) Cluster-Verbindung uber das vRack (EN) Diagnose Status-Informationen Ihrer Nutanix-Installation abrufen (EN) Zusatzliche Ressourcen Asynchrone oder NearSync-Replikation mit Prism Element (EN) Erweiterte Replikation mit Leap (EN) Notfallwiederherstellung mit Metro konfigurieren (EN) Setting up Multicloud Snapshot Technology (MST) on a Nutanix on OVHcloud infrastructure Configuring Prism Central Point-in-Time Backup to OVHcloud S3-compatible Object Storage SAP on OVHcloud Konzepte SAP HANA on Bare Metal and SAP Application Servers on VMware on OVHcloud SAP infrastructure with VMware on OVHcloud solution SAP infrastructure with SecNumCloud-qualified SAP HANA on Private Cloud Erste Schritte Install SAP HANA on Bare Metal with SLES 15 for SAP Deploy a virtual machine with SAP HANA and OVHcloud Backint Agent pre-installed Deployer un SAProuter avec NSX Shared responsibility for SAP on OVHcloud solutions Automatische Deployments Deploy virtual machines of SAP Application Server on VMware on OVHcloud solution with Terraform Deploy virtual machines of SAP HANA database on VMware on OVHcloud solution with Terraform Deploy an SAP system infrastructure on VMware on OVHcloud solution with Terraform SAP pre-installation wizard Resilienz SAP HANA cluster with SLES on VMware on OVHcloud Backups Install and use OVHcloud Backint Agent for SAP HANA Use OVHcloud Backint Agent with several Object Storage buckets OVHcloud Backint Agent versions Sauvegarder SAP HANA avec Veeam Backup and Replication Observability SAP logs on OVHcloud Logs Data Platform - Configuration SAP logs on OVHcloud Logs Data Platform - Analysez et exploitez vos logs SAP logs on OVHcloud Logs Data Platform - Index des logs SAP Public Cloud Public Cloud - Allgemeine Informationen Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Public Cloud Glossary Durchsatzlimits der Public Cloud API Comparison and resilience of Deployment Modes - Understanding 3-AZ / 1-AZ / Local Zones (EN) 3-AZ resilience: Mechanisms and reference architectures (EN) How do Savings Plans work? Erste Schritte Die wichtigsten Informationen zum Start mit Public Cloud Einfuhrung in das Public Cloud Interface Erstellung Ihres ersten OVHcloud Public Cloud Projekts Getting started with OVHcloud Shell Getting Started with OVHcloud CLI Konfiguration Abrechnungsinformationen Public Cloud Quota erhohen Comment gerer un Savings Plan Public Cloud Projektverwaltung Best Practices for securing & structuring OVHcloud Public Cloud Projects (EN) Ein Public Cloud Projekt loschen Projekte delegieren Migration Public Cloud IaaS Migration - Steps and Best Practices Architecture Reference - Building a Landing Zone with OVHcloud Public Cloud Tutorials Verwaltung uber Horizon Einfuhrung in das Horizon Interface Zugriffs- und Sicherheitseinstellungen in Horizon Verwaltung uber OpenStack System fur die Verwendung der OpenStack API vorbereiten OpenStack Umgebungsvariablen einrichten OpenStack-Tokens verwenden Token-Verwaltung How to use service accounts to connect to OpenStack (EN) Verwalten von OpenStack-Benutzern Verwaltung von Firewall-Regeln und Port Security fur Netzwerke uber die OpenStack CLI Verwaltung uber Terraform Terraform verwenden (EN) Sicherheit Healthcare (HDS) compliance activation (EN) Storungsbehebung FAQ Public Cloud OVHcloud Zusatzliche Ressourcen Informationen zu den Abrechnungsoptionen der Public Cloud Proper Usage and Limitations of Classic Multi-Attach Block Storage in 3AZ Regions Understanding Landing Zones Understanding metrics in OVHcloud Public Cloud Compute Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Public Cloud Instances - Schlusselkonzepte Erste Schritte Cloud Guthaben aufladen Eine Public Cloud Instanz erstellen und darauf zugreifen Public Cloud Instanzen verwalten Starten einer Public Cloud Instanz von einem bootfahigen Volume Aussetzen oder Pausieren einer Instanz Windows-Lizenz fur eine Instanz im privaten Modus aktivieren Erste Schritte mit vorinstallierten Anwendungen Configuration Projektverwaltung Kontakte eines Projekts andern Public Cloud Compute - Von der stundlichen auf monatliche Abrechnung umstellen Verwaltung von Instanzen Backup einer Instanz erstellen Verwenden von Backups zum Erzeugen oder Wiederherstellen von Instanzen Hostname einer Public Cloud Instanz andern Comment activer le mode rescue sur une instance Public Cloud Een Metal instance in rescue modus zetten - (EN) Ersetzen eines SSH-Schlusselpaars einer Public Cloud-Instanz GPU Instanzen einrichten Reverse DNS einer Public Cloud Instanz konfigurieren Instanzgroße uber das OVHcloud Kundencenter andern Creating and using a Server Group in Horizon and CLI Verwaltung uber Horizon Eine Instanz uber das Horizon-Interface erstellen Die ersten Schritte mit Ihrer Public Cloud Instanz Eine Sicherheitsgruppe in Horizon erstellen und konfigurieren Verwaltung von Snapshots einer Instanz in Horizon Erstellung, Start und Loschung von Abbildern (Images) in Horizon Anderung der Große einer Instanz mit Horizon Revertierung einer Flex-Instanz Verwaltung uber OpenStack Erste Schritte mit der OpenStack API Erste Schritte mit der Volume-Verwaltung uber die OpenStack API Ein eigenes Image importieren Die Große einer Public Cloud Instanz uber OpenStack CLI andern Backup einer Instanz herunterladen und in eine andere OpenStack-Region ubertragen Launching a script when an instance is created Objekt uber eine temporare URL teilen Image zwischen Public Cloud Projekten teilen Migration Migration von Instanzen zwischen verschiedenen Regionen Tutorials PuTTY fur SSH-Verbindungen und Authentifizierung verwenden Using OVHcloud Object Storage as Terraform Backend to store your Terraform state (EN) Using OVHcloud Object Storage as Pulumi Backend to store your Pulumi state Create a custom OpenStack image with Packer (EN) How To Install ownCloud on a Public Cloud Instance Plesk auf einer Public Cloud Instanz installieren Installation von WordPress auf einer Instanz Prometheus Agent auf einer Public Cloud Instanz installieren How to deploy the 3CX IPBX automatically on OVHcloud Public Cloud Webserver (LAMP) auf Debian oder Ubuntu installieren Local Zone VPN-as-a-Service (VPNaaS) with Tailscale integration (EN) Enterprise File Storage - Connect a Public Cloud instance to an EFS Volume via vRack Private Network Sicherheit Authentifizierungsschlussel fur SSH-Verbindungen zu Public Cloud Instanzen erstellen und verwenden Zusatzliche SSH-Schlussel fur eine Instanz konfigurieren Administratorpasswort auf einem Windows-Server andern Betriebssystem aktualisieren Storungsbehebung Forensics: How to deal with Public Cloud instances (EN) GRUB Bootloader reparieren Dateisystem auf FreeBSD 12 anpassen Sicherung Ihrer Datenbanken im Rescue-Modus FAQ - Anderung des Abrechnungsmodus fur Instanzen mit monatlicher Abrechnung Zusatzliche Ressourcen Public Cloud Instances - Shared responsibilities (EN) Public Cloud & VPS - Image and OS life cycle and end of life/support announcements Local Zone Compute - Funktionen, Kapazitaten und Einschrankungen CO2-Fußabdruck Ihrer OVHcloud Dienste einsehen Optimierung des E-Mail-Versands, damit Ihre E-Mails nicht als Spam markiert werden Storage and Backup Object Storage S3 compatible Schlusselkonzepte Object Storage - Choosing the right storage class for your needs Object Storage - Endpoints and Object Storage geoavailability Comparison of Object Storage Deployment Modes - Understanding 3-AZ / 1-AZ / Local Zones Cold Archive - Uberblick (EN) Erste Schritte Object Storage - Getting started Cold Archive - Getting started with Cold Archive Object Storage - Identity and access management Konfiguration Object Storage - Getting Started with Versioning Object Storage - Smart Storage Management with Lifecycle Rules Object Storage - Master asynchronous replication across your buckets Object Storage - Server Access Logging Object Storage - Setting up CORS on Object Storage Object Storage - Bucket ACL Object Storage - Hosting a static website in an Object Storage bucket Object Storage - Restoring an archived object from Cold Archive storage class Object Storage - Enabling HTTPS on a static website using a custom domain Object Storage - How to connect Object Storage buckets with other resources in a vRack Migration Object Storage - How to migrate from an S3-compatible object storage provider to OVHcloud Object Storage Object Storage - How to migrate from OVHcloud Swift Object Storage to OVHcloud S3-compatible Object Storage Tutorials Object Storage - Use Object Storage with Rclone Object Storage - Use Object Storage with S3cmd Object Storage - Use Object Storage with WinSCP Object Storage - Object Storage mit Veeam (EN) Object Storage - Object Storage mit Nextcloud nutzen (EN) Object Storage - Object Storage mit Owncloud nutzen (EN) Object Storage – Use Object Storage with Cohesity NetBackup Object Storage – Use Object Storage with Pure Storage Flashblade Object Storage - Manage an Object Storage bucket with Terraform Object Storage – How to share an object or file externally Sicherheit Object Storage - Encrypt your server-side objects with SSE-C or SSE-OMK Object Storage - Managing object immutability with Object Lock (WORM) Object Storage - Identity and access management Storungsbehebung Object Storage - FAQ Cold Archive - FAQ (EN) Object Storage - Local Zones specifications Object Storage - Compliance Object Storage - Technische Grenzen (EN) Object Storage - Optimising Performance Object Storage - Optimise the sending of your files to Object Storage Zusatzliche Ressourcen Object Storage - Shared Responsibility Cold Storage - Shared Responsibility for archive and restoration services Object Storage - Third-party applications compatibility Swift Erste Schritte Object Storage Swift - Creating an Object Storage container Object Storage Swift - Erste Schritte mit der Swift API Object Storage Swift - Erste Schritte mit der Swift S3 API Konfiguration Object Storage Swift - Einem Object Storage Container eine spezifische Domain zuweisen Object Storage Swift – Synchronisieren von Objektcontainern (EN) Object Storage Swift - Automatisches Loschen von Objekten konfigurieren (EN) Object Storage Swift - Setting up CORS on Object Storage (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung der Archive via SFTP/SCP Client Cloud Archive Swift - Erstellung von Public Cloud Archive Containern Cloud Archive Swift - Auf Public Cloud Archive gespeicherte Daten freigeben Cloud Archive Swift - Set up an Access Control List on Public Cloud Archive (EN) Migration Object Storage - How to migrate from OVHcloud Swift Object Storage to OVHcloud S3-compatible Object Storage Tutorials Object Storage Swift - Synology NAS mit Object Storage synchronisieren Object Storage Swift - Einen Object Container mit S3QL mounten Object Storage Swift - Verwaltung Ihres Object Storage mit CyberDuck Object Storage Swift - Using Object Storage with Rclone Object Storage Swift - Konfiguration von ownCloud mit Object Storage (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung von Archiven uber einen Swift-Client (Cyberduck) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung Ihrer Archive mit Rsync Sicherheit Object Storage Swift - Set up an Access Control List on Object Storage (EN) Storungsbehebung Object Storage Swift - S3/Swift REST API compatibility (EN) Object Storage Swift - Capabilities and limitations Cloud Archive Swift - Capabilities and limitations Object Storage Swift - Upload auf Object Storage optimieren Zusatzliche Ressourcen Object Storage Swift - Curl Command Memo (EN) Object Storage Swift - Swift commands Memo (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Curl Command Memo (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Swift Command Memo (EN) Block Storage Schlusselkonzepte Die richtige Block Storage-Klasse auswahlen Proper Usage and Limitations of Classic Multi-Attach Block Storage in 3AZ Regions Erste Schritte Zusatzliches Volume auf einer Instanz erstellen und konfigurieren Volume Backup erstellen Volume Snapshot erstellen Konfiguration Zusatzliche Festplatten aus einem Backup erstellen Die Große einer zusatzlichen Disk erweitern Disk-Geschwindigkeit testen Migration Migrer un volume Block Storage vers un volume chiffre LUKS Block Storage Volume bearbeiten Zusatzliche Ressourcen Public Cloud Block Storage - Shared responsibilities (EN) File Storage Key concepts Erste Schritte File Storage Service - Getting started (Beta) Public Cloud Network Services Schlusselkonzepte Concepts - Public Cloud Networking (EN) Concepts - Additional IP or Floating IP (EN) Concepts - Load Balancer (EN) Public Cloud Network Services - Known limits (EN) Erste Schritte Private Network Creating a private network with Gateway (EN) vRack fur Public Cloud konfigurieren Configuring vRack on the Public Cloud using the OVHcloud API (EN) Konfiguration des Public Cloud vRack mit OpenStack CLI DNS Server einer Public Cloud Instanz andern Load Balancer Getting started with Load Balancer on Public Cloud Public IPs Attaching a Floating IP to a Public Cloud instance (EN) Konfiguration Private Network How to share a private network between 2 Public Cloud projects How to extend a private OVHcloud network across Public Cloud regions Update a subnet properties (EN) Changing the MTU size for existing networks using OpenStack CLI/API (EN) Load Balancer Deploying a Public Cloud Load Balancer (EN) Updating a Load Balancer size via the Horizon interface Using the weight feature on a Load Balancer member Public Cloud Load Balancer TCP / HTTP / HTTPS Logs Forwarding (EN) Public IPs Additional IP konfigurieren Eine Additional IP erwerben Additional IP importieren Additional IP migrieren Gateway L3 services SNAT configuration (EN) IPv6 auf einer Public Cloud Instanz konfigurieren Configuring a public IP block in a vRack on a Public Cloud instance Tutorials Allgemeine OVHcloud Infrastruktur mit Stormshield Network Security sichern OVHcloud Infrastruktur mit Ubika WAAP Gateway sichern Private Network Local Zone VPN-as-a-Service (VPNaaS) with Tailscale integration (EN) Load Balancer Configuring a secure Load Balancer with Let's Encrypt (EN) Sicherheit Configuring a secure Load Balancer with Let's Encrypt (EN) Configuring a TERMINATED_HTTPS listener via CLI / Horizon OVHcloud Infrastruktur mit Stormshield Network Security sichern OVHcloud Infrastruktur mit Ubika WAAP Gateway sichern Storungsbehebung Public Cloud Network Services - FAQ (EN) Zusatzliche Ressourcen How to create and manage a Health Monitor for OVHcloud Public Cloud Load Balancer How to create and manage Level 7 (L7) Policies and Rules for OVHcloud Public Cloud Load Balancers Public Cloud Load Balancer monitoring with Prometheus Containers & Orchestration Managed Kubernetes Service (MKS) Ubersicht Key concepts Understanding OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes architecture Limites connues Choosing the right OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Plan: Free or Standard Available datacenters, worker nodes and persistent storage flavors Exposed APIs, Kubernetes configuration and Feature gates Getting started Creating a cluster Deploying an application Deploying a Hello World application Expose your app deployed on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Installing the Kubernetes Dashboard on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Installing and using Helm on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Installing WordPress on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Deploying a GPU application on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Managed Kubernetes objects (services, deployments, pods...) Configuration Cluster Configuring kubectl on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Configuring the API server flags on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Resetting an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Upgrading Kubernetes version on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Add IP restrictions on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Changing the security update policy on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Configuring the OIDC provider on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Personnaliser l'allocation IP sur un cluster OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Nodepools & Nodes How to manage nodes and node pools on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Dynamically resizing a cluster with the cluster autoscaler Configuring the cluster autoscaler Adding Labels & Taint on Node Pool (Node Pool template) Cluster autoscaler example Deploy applications to specific Nodes and Nodes Pools Taint, cordon and drain specific Nodes and Nodes Pools Adapt your Inotify parameters for your Managed Kubernetes Service deployments Storage Persistent Volumes on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Resizing Persistent Volumes Configuring multi-attach persistent volumes with OVHcloud NAS-HA Configuring multi-attach persistent volumes with Enterprise File Storage Configuring multi-attach persistent volumes with OVHcloud Cloud Disk Array Formating NVMe disks on IOPS nodes Network Using vRack Private Network Using vRack - Communicating between different private networks Using a custom gateway on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Working with vRack example - Managed Kubernetes and Public Cloud instances Working with vRack example - Communicating between different private networks Using Floating IPs on Managed Kubernetes Service Customizing Kube-proxy on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Customizing CoreDNS on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Customizing Cilium on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Traffic management Installing Nginx Ingress on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Expose your applications using OVHcloud Public Cloud Load Balancer Sticky sessions/Session Affinity based on Nginx Ingress on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Secure a Nginx Ingress with cert-manager on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Getting the source IP behind the LoadBalancer How to migrate from Load Balancer for MKS (IOLB) to Public Cloud Load Balancer (Octavia) Backup and Restore Backup and Restore OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Cluster, Namespace and Applications using TrilioVault for Kubernetes Backing-up an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster using CloudCasa Backing up and restoring your Persistent Volume with Volume Snapshots on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Backing-up an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster using Velero Backing-up Persistent Volumes using Stash Monitoring & Observability Monitoring apps with Prometheus and Grafana on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Collect metrics from Public Cloud instances with Prometheus on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Distributed tracing with Jaeger on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Pushing logs from a Kubernetes cluster to Logs Data Platform using Fluent Bit Managed Kubernetes Service Audit Logs Forwarding Monitoring GPU usage on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Service Managed Kubernetes Service Audit Logs Forwarding Operators Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Deploying a Kubernetes Operator based on Helm on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Deploying a Kubernetes Operator written in Golang on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Migration Migration Guide – Moving Your Kubernetes cluster to OVHcloud How to migrate from Load Balancer for MKS (IOLB) to Public Cloud Load Balancer (Octavia) Tutorials Installing Agones on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Installing Jenkins on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Using Codefresh with OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Deploying Apache Pulsar on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster How to install OpenFaaS CE on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Run Serverless containers on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes with Knative Deploying Artifactory on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Enforcing policy management on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes with Kyverno Scan for vulnerabilities and misconfigurations of your OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes with Trivy Near real-time threats detection with Falco on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Sanitize your OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes with Popeye Installing cert-manager on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Installing Keycloak, an OIDC Provider, on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Installing Istio on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Traffic management with Istio on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Security Add IP restrictions on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Changing the security update policy on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Configuring the OIDC provider on an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Encrypt your Secret for OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes with Sealed Secrets (Kubeseal) Using RBAC to handle limited access to an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster Troubleshooting ETCD Quotas, usage, troubleshooting and error Troubleshooting permission errors when enabling persistence Additional resources Managed Kubernetes End-of-Sale, End-of-Service and End-of-Life policies Managed Kubernetes - Responsibility model Orchestration product reversibility policy Recommended external resources OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes - Features and roadmap Kubernetes Plugins (CNI, CRI, CSI...) & softwares versions and reserved resources Managed Private Registry (MPR) Ubersicht Getting started Creating a private registry Creating a private registry (Harbor) through Terraform Creating a private registry with Pulumi Creating and using a Docker image stored in an OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Connecting to the UI Managing users and projects Configuration Using Private Registry with OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Managing Helm charts in the OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Deploying a Helm chart from your private registry in Kubernetes Configuring Proxy Cache on an OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Migrate Helm Charts from Chartmuseum to OCI Security Configure the authentication via an OIDC provider on an OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Adding IP restrictions on an OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Sign OCI artifacts with Cosign on OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Scanning Docker images for vulnerabilities with OVHcloud Managed Private Registry Troubleshooting FAQ Managed Private Registry (MPR) Additional resources Managed Private Registry - Responsibility model (EN) Managed OCI artifact Registry Product Reversibility Policy Managed Rancher Service (MRS) Ubersicht Getting started Getting Started with Managed Rancher Service Creating, updating and accessing a Managed Rancher Service (EN) Managing users and projects in Managed Rancher Service Importing an existing Kubernetes cluster in MRS Creating a Managed Kubernetes Service (MKS) cluster in MRS Creating a Kubernetes cluster based on OVHcloud Public Cloud Compute Instances in MRS Creating a Kubernetes cluster with existing nodes (Generic) in MRS Configuration Editing the configuration of a Kubernetes cluster in Managed Rancher Service Backing up and restoring a Kubernetes cluster in Managed Rancher Service Deploying a monitoring stack (Prometheus & Grafana) in a Kubernetes cluster in MRS Tutorials How to use Rancher CLI Additional resources Managed Rancher Service supported versions and lifecycle policy Orchestration product reversibility policy Public Cloud Databases Ubersicht PostgreSQL Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Public Cloud Databases FAQ for Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Automated Backups for Public Cloud Databases High availability and failure scenarios for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Erste Schritte Getting started with Public Cloud Databases Getting started with Public Cloud Databases APIs Getting started with Terraform for Public Cloud Databases Configure incoming connections of a Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL service Connect using the CLI for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Connect using PHP for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Connect using Python for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Connect using PgAdmin for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Konfiguration Create and use connection pools in Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Maintenance operations for Public Cloud Databases Configurer le reseau prive des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Configure the advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases Advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Restore a backup of Public Cloud Databases Detecter et terminer les requetes de longue duree de Public CLoud Databases pour PostgreSQL (EN) Resize the storage of Public Cloud Databases Update the flavor of Public Cloud Databases Update the plan of Public Cloud Databases Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Set up service integration for Public Cloud Databases Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Public Cloud Databases Enable deletion protection for Public Cloud Databases Migration Public Cloud Databases - How to migrate to OVHcloud Database as a Service (DBaaS) Reversibility Policy for Managed Relational Database Product Tutorials Build a Strapi app connected to Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Install and connect Wagtail to Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Migrate an on-premises database to Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL Sicherheit Security Overview for Public Cloud Databases Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Diagnose Troubleshoot your Public Cloud Databases Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Public Cloud Databases Zusatzliche Ressourcen Available extensions for Public Cloud Databases for PostgreSQL MySQL Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Public Cloud Databases FAQ for Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Automated Backups for Public Cloud Databases Erste Schritte Getting started with Public Cloud Databases Getting started with Public Cloud Databases APIs Getting started with Terraform for Public Cloud Databases Configure incoming connections of a Public Cloud Databases for MySQL service Connect using the CLI for Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Connect using PHP for Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Connect using Python for Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Connect using Workbench for Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Public Cloud Databases Configurer le reseau prive des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Configure the advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases Advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Restore a backup of Public Cloud Databases Resize the storage of Public Cloud Databases Update the flavor of Public Cloud Databases Update the plan of Public Cloud Databases Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Set up service integration for Public Cloud Databases Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Public Cloud Databases Enable deletion protection for Public Cloud Databases Migration Public Cloud Databases - How to migrate to OVHcloud Database as a Service (DBaaS) Reversibility Policy for Managed Relational Database Product Tutorials Connect Managed Kubernetes to Public Cloud Databases for MySQL Sicherheit Security Overview for Public Cloud Databases Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Diagnose Troubleshoot your Public Cloud Databases Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Public Cloud Databases MongoDB Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Why choose MongoDB? Cluster sizing for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Developer Best Practices with Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Operational Best Practices with Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Lifecycle policy for Public Cloud Databases FAQ for Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Automated Backups for Public Cloud Databases Understand the connection strings URI format of Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Erste Schritte Getting started with Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Getting started with Public Cloud Databases Getting started with Public Cloud Databases APIs Getting started with Terraform for Public Cloud Databases Deploy with Terraform for Public Cloud for MongoDB Configure incoming connections of a Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB service Connect using the CLI for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Connect using PHP for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Connect using Python for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Connect using Compass for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Developer Tools for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Cluster monitoring for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Public Cloud Databases Configurer le reseau prive des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Configure the advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases Restore a backup of Public Cloud Databases Backup and restore a service with the CLI for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Resize the storage of Public Cloud Databases Update the flavor of Public Cloud Databases Update the plan of Public Cloud Databases Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Set up service integration for Public Cloud Databases Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Public Cloud Databases Enable deletion protection for Public Cloud Databases Migration Public Cloud Databases - How to migrate to OVHcloud Database as a Service (DBaaS) Migrate to OVHcloud Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Relational Migrator for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Reversibility Policy for Managed Document Database Product Tutorials Build and connect a Node.js application to Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Sicherheit Security Overview for Public Cloud Databases Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Diagnose Troubleshoot your Public Cloud Databases Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Public Cloud Databases Zusatzliche Ressourcen Set up BI Connector for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Configure an Analytics node for Public Databases for MongoDB Set up a Kafka integration for Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Understand readPreference and writeConcern of Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Benchmark Public Cloud Databases for MongoDB Valkey Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Public Cloud Databases FAQ for Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Automated Backups for Public Cloud Databases Erste Schritte Getting started with Public Cloud Databases Getting started with Public Cloud Databases APIs Getting started with Terraform for Public Cloud Databases Configure incoming connections of a Public Cloud Databases for Valkey service Connect using the CLI for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Connect using PHP for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Connect using Python for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Connect using RedisInsight for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Public Cloud Databases Configurer le reseau prive des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Configure the advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases Advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Restore a backup of Public Cloud Databases Update the flavor of Public Cloud Databases Update the plan of Public Cloud Databases Manage ACLs via API for Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Set up service integration for Public Cloud Databases Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Public Cloud Databases Enable deletion protection for Public Cloud Databases Migration Public Cloud Databases - How to migrate to OVHcloud Database as a Service (DBaaS) Reversibility Policy for the Managed In-Memory Database product Tutorials Boost your WordPress CMS with caching with Public Cloud Databases for Valkey Sicherheit Security Overview for Public Cloud Databases Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Diagnose Troubleshoot your Public Cloud Databases Common Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Public Cloud Databases FAQ for Public Cloud Databases Capabilities and Limitations of Public Cloud Databases Automated Backups for Public Cloud Databases Erste Schritte Getting started with Public Cloud Databases Getting started with Public Cloud Databases APIs Getting started with Terraform for Public Cloud Databases Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Public Cloud Databases Configurer le reseau prive des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Configure the advanced parameters for Public Cloud Databases Restore a backup of Public Cloud Databases Resize the storage of Public Cloud Databases Update the flavor of Public Cloud Databases Update the plan of Public Cloud Databases Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Set up the Kubernetes operator for Public Cloud Databases Set up service integration for Public Cloud Databases Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Public Cloud Databases Enable deletion protection for Public Cloud Databases Migration Public Cloud Databases - How to migrate to OVHcloud Database as a Service (DBaaS) Reversibility Policy for Managed Relational Database Product Reversibility Policy for Managed Document Database Product Reversibility Policy for the Managed In-Memory Database product Sicherheit Security Overview for Public Cloud Databases Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Diagnose Troubleshoot your Public Cloud Databases Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Public Cloud Databases Analytics Clickhouse Ubersicht Key concepts Getting started Configuration Tutorials Kafka Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Analytics Capabilities and Limitations of Analytics Capabilities and Limitations of Analytics with Kafka Capabilities and Limitations of Analytics with Kafka Connect Capabilities and Limitations of Analytics with Kafka MirrorMaker Automated Backups for Analytics Erste Schritte Getting started with Analytics with Kafka Getting started with Analytics Getting started with Analytics APIs Getting started with Terraform for Analytics Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Analytics Configure the advanced parameters for Analytics Advanced parameters for Analytics with Kafka Advanced parameters for Analytics with Kafka Connect Restore a backup of Analytics Resize the storage of Analytics Update the flavor of Analytics Update the plan of Analytics Set up logs forwarding for Analytics Set up the Kubernetes operator for Analytics Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Analytics Migration Reversibility Policy for the Managed Message Broker product Tutorials Create publisher and consumer applications with Analytics with Kafka Sicherheit Presentation de la securite des services Analytics (EN) Partage des responsabilites des services Analytics (EN) Diagnose Troubleshoot your Analytics Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Analytics OpenSearch OpenSearch - Guides OpenSearch - Capabilities and Limitations OpenSearch - Getting started OpenSearch - Monitor your infra (with Logstash or Fluent Bit) OpenSearch - Advanced parameters references Dashboards Ubersicht Dashboards - Guides Dashboards - Capabilities and Limitations Dashboards - Configure your Dashboards instance to accept incoming connections Dashboards - Advanced parameters references Dashboards - Tutorials Dashboards - Tutorial - Expose your Dashboards instance in your private network via a reverse proxy NGINX Dashboards - Tutorial - How to use the Grafana® API Common Schlusselkonzepte Lifecycle policy for Analytics Capabilities and Limitations of Analytics Automated Backups for Analytics Erste Schritte Getting started with Analytics Getting started with Analytics APIs Getting started with Terraform for Analytics Konfiguration Maintenance operations for Analytics Configure the advanced parameters for Analytics Restore a backup of Analytics Resize the storage of Analytics Update the flavor of Analytics Update the plan of Analytics Set up logs forwarding for Analytics Set up the Kubernetes operator for Analytics Fetch service metrics with Prometheus for Analytics Migration Reversibility Policy for the Managed Message Broker product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Search Engine Software Platform product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Data Visualization product Sicherheit Presentation de la securite des services Analytics (EN) Partage des responsabilites des services Analytics (EN) Diagnose Troubleshoot your Analytics Handle 'Disk Full' situations for Analytics AI & Machine Learning Ubersicht General Information Comparative tables - AI Notebooks, AI Training, AI Deploy AI Tools - Lifecycle policy Data - Concept and best practices Data - Compliance between AI Tools and S3 compatible Object Storage AI Dashboard - Getting started Users - Manage AI users and roles Registries - Use & manage your registries AI Tools - Remote SSH Connection AI Tools - Monitor your cloud resources AI Tools - ovhai SDK Reversibility Policy for the AI Managed Container product FAQ - AI Tools Command Line Interface CLI - Installation CLI - Cheat Sheet CLI - Launch an AI notebook CLI - Launch an AI Training job CLI - Manage access tokens CLI - Launch and share an AI Notebook with tokens CLI - Commands reference CLI - Commands reference for data CLI - Use your data in a notebook CLI - Launch an AI Deploy app AI Notebooks Ubersicht AI Notebooks - Key concepts AI Notebooks - Notebook concept AI Notebooks - Features, Capabilities and Limitations AI Notebooks - Getting started AI Notebooks - Premiers pas (EN) AI Notebooks - Workspace AI Notebooks - Configuration AI Notebooks - Manage and use data in a notebook via UI AI Notebooks - Politique de reversibilite du produit Notebook Interface AI Notebooks - Tutorials Audio/Speech AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Audio analysis and classification with AI AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Use Speech-to-Text powers on audio and video Computer vision AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Train YOLOv5 on a custom dataset AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Train YOLOv7 for sign language recognition AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Train YOLOv8 to play rock paper scissors (EN) AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Use ResNet for image classification AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Brain tumor segmentation using U-Net AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Create and train an image generation model NLP AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Sentiment analysis on Tweets using Hugging Face AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Build your spam classifier Code assistant AI Notebooks - Using a code assistant (EN) Fine Tuning AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Fine-Tune and export an AI model to ONNX AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Create and train a Rasa chatbot AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Fine-tuning LLaMA 2 MLOps/Monitoring AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Use tensorboard inside notebooks AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Weights & Biases integration AI Notebooks - Tutorial - Track your ML models with MLflow inside notebooks AI Notebooks - Troubleshooting AI Notebooks - Troubleshooting AI Notebooks - Additional resources AI Notebooks - Billing and lifecycle AI Training Ubersicht AI Training - Key concepts AI Training - Job concept AI Training - Features, Capabilities and Limitations AI Training - Getting started AI Training - Getting started AI Training - Start a job with a notebook Docker image AI Training - Tutorial - Build & use custom Docker image AI Training - Tutorial - Train your first ML model AI Training - Configuration AI Training - Tutorial - Build & use custom Docker image AI Training - Tutorials MLOps/Monitoring AI Training - Tutorial - Use tensorboard inside a job AI Training - Tutorial - Compare models with W&B for audio classification task NLP AI Training - Tutorial - Train a Rasa chatbot inside a Docker container Audio/Signal processing AI Training - Tutorial - Train a model to recognize marine mammal sounds Computer vision AI Training - Tutorial - Train YOLOv8 to play rock paper scissors (EN) AI Training - Tutorial - Turn a video into a 3D model using NVIDIA Neuralangelo Model export/Inference AI Training - Tutorial - Train a PyTorch model and export it to ONNX AI Training - Tutorial - Get started with NVIDIA Triton Inference Server and AI Training AI Training - Troubleshooting AI Training - Troubleshooting AI Training - Additional resources AI Training - Billing and lifecycle AI Deploy Ubersicht AI Deploy - Key concepts AI Deploy - App concept AI Deploy - Features, Capabilities and Limitations AI Deploy - Apps portfolio AI Deploy - Scaling strategies AI Deploy - Getting started AI Deploy - Getting started AI Deploy - Configuration AI Deploy - Accessing your app with tokens (EN) AI Deploy - Scaling strategies AI Deploy - Update custom Docker images AI Deploy - Security AI Deploy - Accessing your app with tokens (EN) AI Deploy - Tutorials AI Deploy - Tutorial - Build & use a custom Docker image AI Deploy - Tutorial - Build & use a Streamlit image AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy a simple app with Flask AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy an app for audio classification task using Streamlit AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy a web service for YOLOv5 using Flask AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy a Gradio app for sketch recognition AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy an app for sentiment analysis with Hugging Face and Flask AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy an interactive app for EDA and prediction using Streamlit AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy and call a spam classifier with FastAPI AI Deploy - Tutorial - Create and deploy a Speech to Text application using Streamlit AI Deploy - Tutorial - How to load test your application with Locust AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy a Rasa chatbot with a simple Flask app AI Deploy - Tutorial - Create a web service to recognize sign language with YOLOv7 AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy a brain tumor segmentation app using Streamlit AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy LLaMA 2 in a Streamlit application AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy an ONNX model using FastAPI AI Deploy - Tutorial - Create an application to play rock paper scissors with YoloV8 (EN) AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy Whisper Speech Recognition Model AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy Stable Diffusion WebUI AI Deploy - Tutorial - Deploy FLUX Text-to-Image Models AI Deploy - Troubleshooting AI Deploy - Troubleshooting AI Deploy - Additional resources AI Deploy - Billing and lifecycle AI Endpoints Ubersicht AI Endpoints - Key concepts AI Endpoints - Features, Capabilities and Limitations AI Endpoints - Structured Output AI Endpoints - Function Calling AI Endpoints - Responses API AI Endpoints - Getting started AI Endpoints - Getting started AI Endpoints - Tutorials AI Endpoints - Create your own audio summarizer AI Endpoints - Create your own voice assistant AI Endpoints - Using Virtual Models AI Endpoints - Speech to Text Integrations AI Endpoints - Create a code assistant with Continue AI Endpoints - Build a Python Chatbot with LangChain AI Endpoints - Build a JavaScript Chatbot with LangChain AI Endpoints - Create your own AI chatbot using LangChain4j and Quarkus AI Endpoints - Create a Streaming Chatbot with LangChain4j and Quarkus AI Endpoints - Enable conversational memory in your chatbot using LangChain AI Endpoints - Create a Memory Chatbot with LangChain4j AI Endpoints - Build a RAG Chatbot with LangChain AI Endpoints - Build a RAG Chatbot with LangChain4j AI Endpoints - Using Structured Output with LangChain4j AI Endpoints - Using Function Calling with LangChain4J AI Endpoints - Model Context Protocol (MCP) with LangChain4j AI Endpoints - Integration in Python with LiteLLM AI Endpoints - Integration with Apache Airflow AI Endpoints - Integration with Hugging Face Inference Providers AI Endpoints - Integration with Pydantic AI AI Endpoints - Troubleshooting AI Endpoints - Troubleshooting AI Endpoints - Additional resources AI Endpoints - Billing and lifecycle AI Partners Ecosystem Ubersicht AI Partners - Key concepts AI Partners Ecosystem - Voxist - Models concept (EN) AI Partners Ecosystem - Lettria - Models concept (EN) AI Partners - Getting started AI Partners Ecosystem - Lettria - Models features, capabilities and billing (EN) AI Partners Ecosystem - Voxist - Models features, capabilities and billing (EN) Quantum computing General information Quantum computing - Features, Capabilities and Limitations Quantum computing - Billing and lifecycle Quantum computing - Troubleshooting Quantum emulators Guides Quantum computing - Getting started with Emulators Notebooks Quantum QPUs Guides Quantum computing - Getting started with QPUs Notebooks Integrations Prefect Prefect - Getting Started Prefect - Tutorial - Emails notification with blocks and automations Prefect - Tutorial - AI pipeline with training job Data Platform Data Platform documentation Sign-up to OVHcloud Data Platform Web Cloud Domains Ubersicht API Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Introduction Erste Schritte Order a Domain Name Konfiguration Tasks Management Manage Contacts of a Domain Name Managing Eligibility Rules Configure the Display of Contact Data in the Whois Configure the DNS of your Domain Name Migration Transfer a Domain Name Domainnamen Ubersicht Erste Schritte FAQ zu Domainnamen & DNS Erstellung einer Subdomain Weiterleitung von bei OVHcloud verwalteten Domainnamen OVHcloud Domainnamen verlangern WHOIS Informationen eines Domainnamens abrufen Wie konfiguriere ich die Anzeige des WHOIS einer Domain? Exportieren Ihrer Domainnamen als Liste im CSV-Format Konfiguration Verwaltung der Kontakte fur Domains Domainnamen - Inhaber eines Domainnamens andern Verwaltung der Kontaktdaten des Domaininhabers Changer le proprietaire d'un domaine avec une Demande d'Operation AFNIC (DOA) Diagnose Fehler bei Domainnamen-Operationen beheben Migration Eingehender Transfer zu OVHcloud Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren Transfer einer .uk-Domainname zu OVHcloud Transferring a .pl domain name to OVHcloud Hostinger-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren GoDaddy-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren Transferring a home.pl domain name to OVHcloud Ionos-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren O2Switch-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren Gandi-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren Wix-Domainnamen zu OVHcloud transferieren Transfer ausgehend von OVHcloud Einen Domainnamen zu einem anderen Registrar transferieren Einen .uk-Domainnamen zu einem anderen Registrar transferieren Tutorials Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einer Google Site Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einem Shopify Hosting Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einem SquareSpace Hosting Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einem Wix Hosting Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einem GoDaddy Hosting Verbinden eines OVHcloud Domainnamens mit einem Webflow Hosting How to use an OVHcloud domain with iCloud Mail DNS (Domain Name System) Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Alle Informationen zu DNS-Servern Everything you need to know about DNS zone Alle Informationen zu DNS-Eintragen Konfiguration DNS-Server DNS-Server eines OVHcloud Domainnamens andern List of IP addresses of OVHcloud DNS servers DNS-Zone OVHcloud DNS-Zone fur eine Domainnamen erstellen OVHcloud DNS-Zone fur Subdomain erstellen Bearbeiten der OVHcloud DNS-Zone Versionsverlauf einer DNS-Zone verwalten Wie losche ich eine OVHcloud DNS-Zone? DNS-Eintrage DNS-A-Eintrag fur einen Domainnamen hinzufugen DNS-AAAA-Eintrag fur einen Domainnamen hinzufugen Hinzufugen eines CNAME DNS-Eintrags fur eine Subdomain DNS-TXT-Eintrag fur einen Domainnamen hinzufugen MX-Eintrag fur die E-Mail-Verwaltung konfigurieren DNS-Optionen DNS Anycast fur Ihren Domainnamen aktivieren DNS-Server eines Domainnamens individualisieren (Hosts) Konfiguration von dynamischen DNS-Aktualisierungen (DynHost/DynDNS) fur Ihren Domainnamen Sicherheit E-Mail-Sicherheit durch SPF-Eintrag verbessern Ameliorer la securite des e-mails via un enregistrement DKIM E-Mail-Sicherheit durch DMARC-Eintrag verbessern Domainnamen mit DNSSEC absichern Tutorials Tutorial - Using Zonemaster Webhosting Erste Schritte Webhosting - Kostenloses Hosting 100M aktivieren Webhosting - Schnellstart-Anleitung Premiers pas avec un hebergement Cloud Web Premiers pas avec la solution Visibilite Pro Alle Ihre Websites im OVHcloud Kundencenter anzeigen und verwalten Erstellen Ihrer Website - So setzen Sie Ihr Projekt in 5 Schritten um FAQ Webhosting Eine Website auf Ihrem Webhosting online stellen Webhosting - Inklusiv-E-Mail-Adressen aktivieren Webhosting - Cluster und Filer eines Webhostings finden Namen Ihres Webhosting Angebots ermitteln Konfiguration Mehrere Websites auf einem Webhosting einrichten Konfiguration und Nutzung von Git mit OVHcloud Webhosting Webhosting - Andern von mit einem Webhosting verbundenen Domainnamen Webhosting - Laufzeitumgebung, PHP-Version, .ovhconfig IPv6 fur Ihre Website konfigurieren Cloud Web Runtime Engines verwalten Backup des FTP-Speicherplatzes Ihres Cloud Web Hostings abrufen Webhosting - Wie kann ich mein Angebot wechseln Ihre Webseiten mit CDN beschleunigen Webhosting - Statistiken und Logs einer Website einsehen Webhosting - CDN Statistiken und Logs einsehen Wie kann ich eine Website in einem bestimmten Land geolokalisieren? Optimierung der Performance Ihrer Webseite Automatische Tasks mit einem Webhosting verwenden How to create and manage a web application using the OVHcloud public API (EN) Datenbanken Eine Datenbank auf Ihrem Webhosting erstellen Passwort einer Webhosting-Datenbank andern Inhalt einer Datenbank in eine andere duplizieren Backup einer Webhosting-Datenbank exportieren Backup einer geloschten Datenbank wiederherstellen Server Ihrer Datenbank identifizieren FTP und SSH Webhosting - Verwendung von FileZilla Webhosting - FTP-Benutzer verwalten Mit dem FTP-Speicherplatz eines Webhostings verbinden Webhosting – Aktivieren des Zugriffs uber SFTP Passwort eines FTP-Benutzers andern Webhosting mit Visual Studio Code uber SFTP verwalten Tutorial - Cyberduck mit einem Webhosting verwenden Den Speicherplatz Ihres Webhostings wiederherstellen Webhosting - Verwendung des SSH Zugangs PuTTY fur SSH-Verbindungen und Authentifizierung verwenden SVN verwenden Webhosting - Dateien mit dem Befehl SCP kopieren CMS Installation Ihrer Website mit 1-Klick-Modulen (CMS) Administratorpasswort eines CMS andern 1-Klick-Module verwalten Migration Migrieren einer Website von einem Webhosting auf einen VPS Backup in eine Webhosting-Datenbank importieren Ihre Webseite exportieren Migration Ihrer Website und zugehorigen Dienste zu OVHcloud Migration Ihrer Xara Website zu OVHcloud Migration Ihrer WordPress Website zu OVHcloud Tutorials Tutorial - Eigene Webseite bei OVHcloud erstellen Anwendungsbeispiele - Domainnamen einer Website andern Tutorial - Installation und Konfiguration von Cecil, einem Static Site Generator (SSG) in PHP Tutorial - Dynamischen Inhalt auf einer statischen Webseite hinzufugen, die mit Cecil erstellt wurde Composer auf einem Webhosting installieren Tutorials WordPress Tutorial - Erste Schritte mit WordPress Tutorial - Backup Ihrer WordPress Installation Tutorial - htaccess-Dateien mit WordPress verwenden Tutorial - WooCommerce mit WordPress verwenden Managing multiple WordPress websites with the MainWP plugin Backing up your WordPress websites with MainWP Improving your website's security with the MainWP plugin for WordPress Managing customer information on your WordPress websites with MainWP Tutorials fur Cloud Web Hostings Ghost auf einem Cloud Web Hosting installieren Installer Etherpad sur son hebergement Cloud Web Comment installer Django CMS sur son hebergement Cloud Web Installer Camaleon CMS sur son hebergement Cloud Web Weiterleitung und Authentifizierung Tutorial - Ordner und Verwaltungsinterface Ihrer Website mit den Dateien .htaccess und .htpasswd schutzen Tutorial - Die URL einer Website mit mod_rewrite uber die .htaccess Datei umschreiben Tutorial - Wie kann ich den Zugang zu meiner Website fur bestimmte IP-Adressen uber eine .htaccess Datei sperren? Tutorial - Operationen mit .htaccess Dateien CMS Tutorial - Manuelle Installation eines CMS auf einem Webhosting Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von WordPress Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von Joomla! Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von Pico Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von PrestaShop Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von Drupal Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von Grav Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von Typo3 Tutorial - Manuelle Installation von SPIP Sicherheit Die Sicherheit Ihrer Website optimieren Aktivieren der Web Application Firewall Webhosting - SSL-Zertifikat einrichten Webhosting - Website auf HTTPS umstellen Webhosting - Kostenloses SSL-Zertifikat von Let's Encrypt aktivieren Webhosting - Sectigo DV SSL-Zertifikat aktivieren Webhosting - Sectigo EV SSL-Zertifikat aktivieren Webhosting - Eigenes SSL-Zertifikat installieren Haufige Fehler beim Schutz Ihrer Website mit SSL Diagnose Anwendungsbeispiele - Ihre Website ist von einem Hack betroffen So entscharfen Sie die HTTP/2-Rapid-Reset-Sicherheitslucke (EN) Was tun, wenn Ihre Website nicht erreichbar ist? Meine Website ladt zu langsam. Was soll ich tun? Die haufigsten Fehler bei 1-Klick-Modulen beheben Was tun bei dem Fehler "Dies ist keine sichere Verbindung"? Die haufigsten Datenbankfehler beheben Fehler "Seite nicht installiert" beheben Beheben des Fehlers “500 Internal Server Error” Was tun, wenn eine “Index of“-Seite angezeigt wird? Was tun bei dem Fehler "403 forbidden"? Was tun, wenn die Meldung „Your IP has been banned“ angezeigt wird? Was tun, wenn die Meldung „Your request has been blocked“ angezeigt wird? Automatische E-Mails eines Webhostings verwalten Wie reagiere ich auf ungewohnliche Aktivitaten auf meinem Webhosting? Webhosting - Was tun, wenn meine Datenbank voll ist? Haufige FTP-Probleme beheben Zusatzliche Ressourcen Webhosting - Liste der IP-Adressen pro Cluster Technische Eigenschaften von Webhostings Hebergement web - Versions disponibles des langages Web Hosting Reversibility Policy (DE) SQL Database Web Hosting EOL und EOS Ankundigungen Migration von MySQL zu Percona Server fur MySQL Managed Hosting for WordPress Erste Schritte Discover Managed Hosting for WordPress (Beta version) Video Center Erste Schritte Video Center - Manage your videos online SSL Gateway Erste Schritte SSL Gateway bestellen Verwendung von SSL Gateway Web Cloud Databases Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit Web Cloud Databases Erste Schritte mit MySQL und MariaDB Erste Schritte mit PostgreSQL Konfiguration Web Cloud Databases - Wie autorisiere ich eine IP-Adresse? Datenbanken und Benutzer auf Ihrem Datenbankserver erstellen Web Cloud Databases - Nutzerrechte andern Web Cloud Databases - Verbindung mit einer Datenbank herstellen Konfigurieren Ihres Datenbankservers Web Cloud Databases - Wie verwaltet man Logs? Web Cloud Databases von einem Webhosting abtrennen Migration Eine Datenbank Ihres Datenbankservers sichern und exportieren Datenbank auf Ihrem Datenbankserver wiederherstellen und importieren Zusatzliche Ressourcen Web Cloud Databases - EOL und EOS Ankundigungen EOL Policy fur Managed Databases Reversibility Policy for the Managed Database System for Web Hosting product E-Mail-Losungen und kollaborative Tools Gemeinsame Funktionen von E-Mail-Accounts Sicherheitseinstellungen eines E-Mail-Dienstes verwalten E-Mail Alias und Weiterleitung verwenden Loschen eines E-Mail-Accounts Outlook Web App (OWA) Webmail verwenden E-Mail-Accounts uber Outlook Web App (OWA) verwenden Posteingangsregeln in OWA erstellen Einrichten einer automatischen Antwort in OWA Ordner in OWA freigeben Kalender in OWA freigeben Migration von Dienstleistungen E-Mail-Accounts von MX Plan zu E-Mail Pro, Exchange oder Zimbra migrieren Ihre E-Mail-Adresse manuell migrieren E-Mail-Accounts mit dem OVHcloud Mail Migrator migrieren Ihre E-Mail-Adressen von einer OVHcloud E-Mail-Plattform auf eine andere migrieren Storungsbehebung E-Mails konnen nicht gesendet oder empfangen werden Was tun, wenn ein Account wegen Spamversands gesperrt wurde? E-Mail-Header und .eml-Datei abrufen Speicherplatz eines E-Mail-Accounts verwalten Die aus Ihrem E-Mail-Account geloschten Elemente wiederherstellen MX Plan Ubersicht Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit MX Plan E-Mail-Accounts mit MX Plan erstellen Passwort eines E-Mail-Accounts andern Verwendung Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit Roundcube Webmail FAQ OVHcloud E-Mails Zimbra Webmail verwenden OVHcloud Zimbra FAQ Funktionen von E-Mail-Accounts MX Plan - Einrichten von Auto-Antworten fur E-Mails Mailinglisten verwalten und nutzen Filter fur Ihre E-Mail-Adressen erstellen MX Plan - Die Verwaltung Ihrer E-Mail-Accounts einer anderen Person ubertragen E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Computer einrichten MX Plan / Zimbra Starter - Konfigurieren Sie Ihre E-Mail-Adresse auf klassischem Outlook fur Windows MX Plan - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse auf Outlook fur macOS MX Plan - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts in Mail fur macOS MX Plan – E-Mail-Account in Thunderbird fur Windows konfigurieren MX Plan - E-Mail-Account in Thunderbird fur macOS konfigurieren MX Plan / Zimbra Starter - Konfigurieren eines E-Mail-Accounts im neuen Outlook fur Windows E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Mobilgerat einrichten MX Plan - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Mail fur iPhone und iPad MX Plan - Konfiguration eines E-Mail-Accounts in Gmail fur Android MX Plan / Zimbra STARTER - Konfiguration von Outlook fur Android MX Plan - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts in Outlook fur iOS Hinzufugen eines Accounts zu einem vorhandenen E-Mail-Dienst MX Plan - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse im Gmail-Webinterface E-Mail Pro Ubersicht Erste Schritte Konfiguration von E-Mail Pro Die Abrechnung Ihrer E-Mail Pro Accounts verwalten Berechtigungen fur einen E-Mail Account ubertragen Automatische Signaturen erstellen E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Computer einrichten E-Mail Pro - Einrichten eines E-Mail-Accounts auf klassischem Outlook fur Windows E-Mail Pro - Konfigurieren Sie Ihr E-Mail-Konto in Outlook fur macOS E-Mail Pro - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Mail fur macOS E-Mail Pro - Konfigurieren Ihres E-Mail Pro Accounts im neuen Outlook fur Windows E-Mail Pro – E-Mail-Account in Thunderbird fur Windows konfigurieren E-Mail Pro – E-Mail Pro Account in Thunderbird fur macOS konfigurieren E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Mobilgerat einrichten E-Mail Pro - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Mail fur iPhone und iPad E-Mail Pro - Konfiguration eines E-Mail-Accounts in Gmail fur Android E-Mail Pro - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adressen in Outlook fur Android E-Mail Pro - Konfiguration eines E-Mail-Accounts in Outlook fur iOS Hinzufugen eines Accounts zu einem vorhandenen E-Mail-Dienst E-Mail Pro - Konfigurieren Sie Ihr E-Mail-Konto im Gmail-Webinterface Microsoft Exchange Ubersicht Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit Hosted Exchange Erste Schritte mit Private Exchange Private Exchange - Backing up your email accounts with Veeam Backup for Microsoft 365 Die Abrechnung fur Ihre Exchange Accounts verwalten Domainnamen zu Ihrem Exchange Dienst hinzufugen CNAME-Eintrag erstellen, um Domainnamen fur Ihren E-Mail-Dienst zu validieren Responsibility model for the product Managed Email Server on Mutualized Infrastructure (EN) Responsibility model for the product Managed Dedicated E-mail Infrastructure (EN) Funktionen von Exchange-Accounts Exchange - Kontaktgruppen erstellen Berechtigungen fur einen E-Mail Account ubertragen Die Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung fur einen Exchange Account konfigurieren Verwendung von Ressourcen-Accounts Freigegebenes Postfach erstellen und verwenden Automatische Signaturen erstellen Eine Outlook-Lizenz fur Exchange beziehen Configurer un connecteur d'envoi sur votre plateforme Private ou Trusted Exchange E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Computer einrichten Exchange - E-Mail-Account auf klassischem Outlook fur Windows einrichten Exchange - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse auf Outlook fur macOS Exchange - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Mail fur macOS Exchange - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Windows Mail App Exchange - Konfigurieren Ihres E-Mail-Accounts in Thunderbird fur Windows Exchange - E-Mail-Account in Thunderbird fur macOS konfigurieren E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Mobilgerat einrichten Exchange - Konfiguration Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse in Mail fur iPhone und iPad Exchange - Konfiguration von E-Mail-Accounts in Google Mail fur Android Storungsbehebung Verwendung der Exchange Fehlerdiagnose Exchange - Verwaltung der Logs Microsoft Office Microsoft 365 Lizenzgruppen bei OVHcloud verwalten Verwaltung einer Office 365 Reseller Lizenzgruppe (CSP2) bei OVHcloud Remote Desktop mit Microsoft 365 Apps verwenden Zimbra Ubersicht Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit Zimbra Zimbra Webmail verwenden OVHcloud Zimbra FAQ Zimbra-E-Mail-Adresse auf einem E-Mail-Client konfigurieren MX Plan E-Mail-Account auf einen OVHcloud Zimbra E-Mail-Account migrieren Zimbra - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail Accounts auf der Zimbra Mobil-App Zimbra - CalDAV-Kalender in einer Anwendung synchronisieren Zimbra - Einrichten eines WebDAV-Ordners auf Ihrem Computer E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Computer einrichten Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit ActiveSync auf Outlook fur Windows Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts via EWS auf Outlook fur Mac Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts via EWS in Mail auf Mac E-Mail-Anwendung auf Ihrem Mobilgerat einrichten Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit ActiveSync auf Outlook fur iOS Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit ActiveSync auf Mail fur iPhone oder iPad Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit ActiveSync auf Outlook fur Android Zimbra Pro - Konfiguration Ihres E-Mail-Accounts mit ActiveSync auf Gmail fur Android Internet Internetzugang Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte La desserte interne Comprendre le cycle de vie des commandes FTTE et FTTO Erste Schritte FAQ solutions Internet OVHcloud Obtenir les identifiants PPPoE Konfiguration Installation Ihrer Zugange Configurer sa box a partir de l'espace client OVHcloud Modification du profil de synchronisation Comment configurer le reverse DNS de ma connexion Internet OVHcloud Activer l'adresse IPv6 d'une connexion Internet OVHcloud Verwaltung Ihres Angebots Comment changer mon offre xDSL/Fibre Fin du cuivre - Comment migrer mon offre xDSL vers la Fibre ? Comment demenager mon acces xDSL/Fibre Comment resilier un acces xDSL/Fibre VoIP / Acces Internet - Deroulement d'un RMA Verwaltung Ihrer Optionen Comment activer mes lignes telephoniques ? (Offres ADSL/VDSL/FTTH) Activer les adresses e-mail incluses dans votre offre FTTH/xDSL Erweiterte Einrichtung Comment activer le mode bridge sur un modem Zyxel Comment reutiliser le WiFi d'un modem Zyxel avec OverTheBox Activer ou desactiver l'envoi d'e-mails depuis le SMTP OVHcloud Gerer et configurer un bloc IP /29 Comment changer le backend ACS du modem Connectivity API Configurer un routeur manuellement Diagnose Redemarrer ou reinitialiser une box OVHcloud Depanner son acces Internet fibre Resoudre une interruption ou des lenteurs de navigation Retablir la synchronisation d'une connexion suite a une coupure Retablir un acces a Internet suite a une coupure complete ou partielle Verifier si son lien xDSL est sature Verifier la stabilite de son acces OVHcloud via les logs radius Activer une alerte de monitoring OverTheBox Ubersicht Erste Schritte Premiers pas avec OverTheBox Comment installer OverTheBox ? FAQ OverTheBox Konfiguration Verwaltung Ihres Angebots Comment changer mon offre OverTheBox Erstkonfiguration Comment mettre a jour un appareil OverTheBox ? Comment acceder a distance a une OverTheBox Comment configurer IPv6 sur OverTheBox ? Comment reinitialiser ou restaurer la configuration d'une OverTheBox Comment configurer le pare-feu (firewall) sur OverTheBox ? Comment configurer le reseau local d'une OverTheBox ? Comment configurer une route statique sur OverTheBox ? Comment configurer la qualite de service (QoS) sur OverTheBox ? Comment configurer un lien 4G sur OverTheBox? Erweiterte Einrichtung Comment configurer une interface reseau ? Installer l'image OverTheBox sur votre appareil Configurer un ancien appareil OverTheBox v1 (Intel & IT v1) Telefon und Fax VoIP - Presentation de la documentation Erste Schritte FAQ VoIP OVHcloud Gerer vos services VoIP Gerer vos groupes de telephonie Renseigner les coordonnees d'une ligne ou d'un numero et les faire paraitre en ligne Verwalten Valider votre identite pour l'utilisation des services VoIP Valider votre identite pour l'exploitation d'un numero special SVA Gerer les reversements ou les couts de vos numeros speciaux Gestion du depot de garantie et de la limite hors-forfait Effectuer un changement de contacts pour vos groupes de telephonie Comment resilier un service VoIP ou une ligne Fax VoIP / Acces Internet - Deroulement d'un RMA Konfiguration Telefonleitungen Ligne SIP - commander, modifier, rattacher ou detacher un telephone OVHcloud Configurer et consulter le repondeur de sa ligne Configurer la presentation de son numero Filtrer et renvoyer ses appels Configurer des plages horaires et des fermetures exceptionnelles sur une ligne Installer et configurer Softcall Gerer un carnet de contacts sur une ligne SIP Creer des numeros abreges Modifier les musiques et sonneries de votre ligne Activer ou desactiver des services depuis le telephone Gerer et utiliser les appels simultanes Configurer les touches programmables de votre telephone OVHcloud Gerer le mode intercom de votre ligne Configurer et utiliser le Click2Call sur une ligne SIP Statistiques sur la QoS des appels Nummern und Alias Demander et suivre une portabilite de numero Demander et suivre une portabilite de numero belge Choisir et appliquer une configuration pour un numero Configurer une redirection d'appels Configurer une file d'appels Configurer un serveur vocal interactif (SVI) Configurer un Contact Center Solution Creer et gerer des conferences telephoniques POPC Installer le logiciel POPC Prise en main du logiciel POPC IPBX How to deploy the 3CX IPBX automatically on OVHcloud Public Cloud Asterisk - configuration et utilisation Comment modifier le temps d’enregistrement d’une ligne sur Asterisk 3CX - Configuration et utilisation Freeswitch - configuration et utilisation Automatische Telefonverbindung (CTI) Integration CTI de la telephonie OVHcloud aux CRM et ERP - exemple avec SugarCRM Documentation technique CTI Projet communautaire CTI Tutorials Ligne SIP - Configuration sur un softphone / telephone personnel Enregistrer une ligne SIP OVHcloud sur Zoiper Tutoriel - Utiliser une ligne SIP OVHcloud sur Linphone Sicherheit Securiser sa ligne SIP OVHcloud Modifier le mot de passe d'une ligne SIP Restreindre sa ligne SIP OVHcloud par IP Diagnose Tutoriel - Diagnostic du reseau local Depanner son telephone OVHcloud Zusatzliche Ressourcen Guides d'utilisation de nos precedentes gammes de telephones Utiliser le Cisco 8851 Utiliser le Cisco 7841 Utiliser le Yealink T4X Utiliser le Yealink W56P Utiliser le Yealink CP860 Branchements du C530 IP Utiliser le Gigaset C530IP Depannage C530 IP Branchements SPA112 Adaptateur SPA112 Depannage SPA112 Branchements SPA504G Fonctionalites SPA504G Depannage SPA504G Branchements IP5000 Depannage IP5000 Faxe versenden und empfangen Ubersicht Erste Schritte FAQ sur la solution Fax OVHcloud Configuration de votre ligne Fax Utiliser son fax physique avec l'offre Plug & Fax Activation du repondeur Fax EcoFax Pro / Plug & Fax Konfiguration Faxe versenden und empfangen Envoyer des fax par e-mail Envoyer une campagne de fax depuis l'espace client OVHcloud Envoyer des Fax via l'imprimante virtuelle EcoFax - macOS X Envoyer des Fax via l'imprimante virtuelle EcoFax - Windows Comment resilier un service VoIP ou une ligne Fax Messaging SMS Ubersicht Erste Schritte FAQ SMS OVHcloud Launching your first SMS campaign Time2Chat, la messagerie conversationnelle par SMS pour les entreprises Konfiguration SMS versenden Sending SMS messages via the OVHcloud Control Panel Sending SMS messages via an email address Sending SMS messages with the OVHcloud API in PHP Sending SMS messages with the OVHcloud API in Node.js Sending SMS messages with the OVHcloud API in Java Envoyer des SMS avec l’API OVHcloud en c# Sending SMS messages to the USA Sending SMS messages via a URL - http2sms Meine IT-Losung verwalten Managing SMS credits and enabling automatic re-crediting Manage your SMS history Everything you need to know about SMS senders Everything you need to know about SMS users How to create an SMS recipient list Managing SMS address books Envoyer des SMS permettant la reponse Fortgeschrittene Anwendung Tout ce qu'il faut savoir sur le HLR - SMS API SMS Cookbook Automate SMS sending with n8n via the OVHcloud API SMPP Managing an SMS SMPP account SMPP Technical Specifications Speicher und Backup Object Storage Ubersicht S3 compatible Schlusselkonzepte Object Storage - Choosing the right storage class for your needs Object Storage - Endpoints and Object Storage geoavailability Comparison of Object Storage Deployment Modes - Understanding 3-AZ / 1-AZ / Local Zones Cold Archive - Uberblick (EN) Erste Schritte Object Storage - Getting started Cold Archive - Getting started with Cold Archive Object Storage - Identity and access management Konfiguration Object Storage - Getting Started with Versioning Object Storage - Smart Storage Management with Lifecycle Rules Object Storage - Master asynchronous replication across your buckets Object Storage - Server Access Logging Object Storage - Setting up CORS on Object Storage Object Storage - Bucket ACL Object Storage - Hosting a static website in an Object Storage bucket Object Storage - Enabling HTTPS on a static website using a custom domain Object Storage - How to connect Object Storage buckets with other resources in a vRack Migration Object Storage - How to migrate from an S3-compatible object storage provider to OVHcloud Object Storage Object Storage - How to migrate from OVHcloud Swift Object Storage to OVHcloud S3-compatible Object Storage Tutorials Object Storage - Use Object Storage with Rclone Object Storage - Use Object Storage with S3cmd Object Storage - Use Object Storage with WinSCP Object Storage - Object Storage mit Veeam (EN) Object Storage - Object Storage mit Nextcloud nutzen (EN) Object Storage - Object Storage mit Owncloud nutzen (EN) Object Storage – Use Object Storage with Cohesity NetBackup Object Storage – Use Object Storage with Pure Storage Flashblade Object Storage - Manage an Object Storage bucket with Terraform Object Storage – How to share an object or file externally Sicherheit Object Storage - Encrypt your server-side objects with SSE-C or SSE-OMK Object Storage - Managing object immutability with Object Lock (WORM) Object Storage - Identity and access management Storungsbehebung Object Storage - FAQ Cold Archive - FAQ (EN) Object Storage - Local Zones specifications Object Storage - Compliance Object Storage - Technische Grenzen (EN) Object Storage - Optimising Performance Object Storage - Optimise the sending of your files to Object Storage Zusatzliche Ressourcen Object Storage - Shared Responsibility Cold Storage - Shared Responsibility for archive and restoration services Object Storage - Third-party applications compatibility Swift Erste Schritte Object Storage Swift - Creating an Object Storage container Object Storage Swift - Erste Schritte mit der Swift API Object Storage Swift - Erste Schritte mit der Swift S3 API Konfiguration Object Storage Swift - Einem Object Storage Container eine spezifische Domain zuweisen Object Storage Swift – Synchronisieren von Objektcontainern (EN) Object Storage Swift - Automatisches Loschen von Objekten konfigurieren (EN) Object Storage Swift - Setting up CORS on Object Storage (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung der Archive via SFTP/SCP Client Cloud Archive Swift - Erstellung von Public Cloud Archive Containern Cloud Archive Swift - Auf Public Cloud Archive gespeicherte Daten freigeben Cloud Archive Swift - Set up an Access Control List on Public Cloud Archive (EN) Migration Object Storage - How to migrate from OVHcloud Swift Object Storage to OVHcloud S3-compatible Object Storage Tutorials Object Storage Swift - Synology NAS mit Object Storage synchronisieren Object Storage Swift - Einen Object Container mit S3QL mounten Object Storage Swift - Verwaltung Ihres Object Storage mit CyberDuck Object Storage Swift - Using Object Storage with Rclone Object Storage Swift - Konfiguration von ownCloud mit Object Storage (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung von Archiven uber einen Swift-Client (Cyberduck) Cloud Archive Swift - Verwaltung Ihrer Archive mit Rsync Sicherheit Object Storage Swift - Set up an Access Control List on Object Storage (EN) Storungsbehebung Object Storage Swift - S3/Swift REST API compatibility (EN) Object Storage Swift - Capabilities and limitations Cloud Archive Swift - Capabilities and limitations Object Storage Swift - Upload auf Object Storage optimieren Zusatzliche Ressourcen Object Storage Swift - Curl Command Memo (EN) Object Storage Swift - Swift commands Memo (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Curl Command Memo (EN) Cloud Archive Swift - Swift Command Memo (EN) File Storage Ubersicht Enterprise File Storage Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Enterprise File Storage - Konzepte Enterprise File Storage - Performance-Konzepte Enterprise File Storage - FAQ Erste Schritte Enterprise File Storage - Verwaltung uber das OVHcloud Kundencenter Managing Enterprise File Storage with OVHcloud Terraform provider Enterprise File Storage - API verwenden Enterprise File Storage - Einfuhrung in Trident CSI Konfiguration Enterprise File Storage - Snapshot-Policy verwalten Enterprise File Storage - Automatische Snapshots beibehalten Enterprise File Storage - Volume Snapshot uber API wiederherstellen Enterprise File Storage - Volumes verwalten Enterprise File Storage - Volume ACLs verwalten Enterprise File Storage - Volume Snapshots verwalten Enterprise File Storage - NFS Client konfigurieren Enterprise File Storage - Connect a Public Cloud instance to an EFS Volume via vRack Private Network Enterprise File Storage - Private network configuration Migration Enterprise File Storage - Volume klonen Zusatzliche Ressourcen File Storage services - Responsibility model (EN) File Storage reversibility policy NAS-HA Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Haufig gestellte Fragen zu HA-NAS Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit einem HA-NAS HA-NAS - Erste Schritte mit API Konfiguration HA-NAS uber NFS mounten Mounten Sie Ihr HA-NAS uber eine CIFS-Freigabe HA-NAS - ACLs verwalten HA-NAS - Partitionsverwaltung uber API HA-NAS - Snapshot-Verwaltung via API Migration Migration von Daten von einem HA-NAS auf ein anderes uber NFS Zusatzliche Ressourcen File Storage reversibility policy File Storage services - Responsibility model (EN) Public Cloud File Storage Key concepts Erste Schritte File Storage Service - Getting started (Beta) Block Storage Ubersicht Block volume Schlusselkonzepte Proper Usage and Limitations of Classic Multi-Attach Block Storage in 3AZ Regions Erste Schritte Zusatzliches Volume auf einer Instanz erstellen und konfigurieren Volume Backup erstellen Volume Snapshot erstellen Konfiguration Zusatzliche Festplatten aus einem Backup erstellen Die Große einer zusatzlichen Disk erweitern Disk-Geschwindigkeit testen Migration Migrer un volume Block Storage vers un volume chiffre LUKS Block Storage Volume bearbeiten Zusatzliche Ressourcen Public Cloud Block Storage - Shared responsibilities (EN) Cloud Disk Array Schlusselkonzepte FAQ (EN) Erste Schritte Cloud Disk Array - Benutzererstellung (EN) Cloud Disk Array - Pool-Erstellung (EN) Cloud Disk Array - IP-ACL-Erstellung (EN) Konfiguration Benutzerrechte andern (EN) Verteiltes CephFS-Dateisystem (EN) How to upgrade a Cloud Disk Array (CDA) using the OVHcloud API Greifen Sie mit dem rbd-Client auf den Cluster zu (EN) Tutorials Ceph mit Proxmox verwenden (EN) Zusatzliche Ressourcen Clusterstatus (EN) Speicher-Benchmark durchfuhren Backup and disaster recovery solution Backup Agent Schlusselkonzepte Backup Agent - Produktubersicht Backup Agent - So funktionieren Vaults Erste Schritte Backup Agent - Konfigurieren einer ersten Sicherung Backup Agent - Verwalten Ihrer Backups und Wiederherstellungen Backup Agent - Verbindung mit VSPC herstellen Storungsbehebung Backup Agent - Problembehandlung Backup Agent - Restore a Bare Metal server with Veeam Backup Agent Zusatzliche Ressourcen Backup Agent - Bekannte Einschrankungen Backup Agent - Abrechnung Backup Agent - Service-Updates Backup Agent - Loschverfahren Veeam Enterprise Plus Erste Schritte Veeam Backup & Replication einrichten (EN) Konfiguration Preparing a Bare Metal Server backup with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Backing up a Bare Metal Linux Server with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Backing Up a Bare Metal Windows Server Using Veeam Agent for Windows (EN) Restoring a Bare Metal Server with Veeam Enterprise (EN) Sicherheit Encrypting backup jobs with Veeam and OKMS Managed Veeam for Public VCF aaS Erste Schritte Public VCF as-a-Service - Backups with Veeam Data Platform (EN) HYCU for OVHcloud Erste Schritte HYCU Backup konfigurieren (EN) Managed Kubernetes - Data Protection Tutorials Backup and Restore OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Cluster, Namespace and Applications using TrilioVault for Kubernetes Backing-up an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster using CloudCasa Backing up and restoring your Persistent Volume with Volume Snapshots on OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes Backing-up an OVHcloud Managed Kubernetes cluster using Velero Backing-up Persistent Volumes using Stash Netzwerk Additional IP Schlusselkonzepte Concepts - Primary IP and Additional IP Konfiguration Eine Additional IP umziehen Konfiguration eines Additional IP-Blocks in einem vRack Einen Additional-IPv6-Block in einem vRack konfigurieren Produkt-spezifische Anleitungen Dedicated Server Netzwerk auf Proxmox VE fur die High Grade, Scale & SCALE Reihen konfigurieren (EN) Konfiguration von Additional IPs im Bridge-Modus auf Ihren virtuellen Maschinen Tutorial - Configuring pfSense network bridge (EN) Configurer son adresse IP en alias Netzwerk auf Windows Server mit Hyper-V konfigurieren Virtuelle MAC-Adresse einer Additional IP zuweisen Hyper-V mit Additional IPs in einem vRack verwenden Hosted Private Cloud Eine offentliche IP-Adresse zu einer neuen VM hinzufugen (EN) IP-Block hinzufugen Load Balancer How to route an Additional IP Managed Bare Metal IP-Block hinzufugen Public Cloud Concepts - Additional IP or Floating IP (EN) Additional IP konfigurieren Eine Additional IP erwerben Additional IP migrieren Additional IP importieren Virtual Private Server IP-Adresse als Alias konfigurieren Problembehandlung IP-Adresse von Blocklisten entfernen Cancelling an Additional IP service Bring Your Own IP How to use the Bring Your Own IP feature (EN) BGP Service Configuration du service BGP Content Delivery Network (CDN) Infrastructure Erste Konfiguration einer Domain im CDN Quota im CDN verwalten Funktionsweise des SSL-Zertifikats auf dem CDN Liste der IP-Adressen, die fur Ihr CDN Infrastructure autorisiert werden sollen Load Balancer Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Introduction to the OVHcloud Load Balancer OVHcloud Load Balancer FAQ Einstieg Gestion du service OVHcloud Load Balancer via l'espace client Order a free SSL certificate Load Balancer API Quick Reference OVHcloud Load Balancer TCP / HTTP / HTTPS Logs Forwarding Load balancing methods Konfiguration Infrastruktur How to route an Additional IP Configuring the vRack on the load balancer How to configure the OVHcloud Load Balancer in multiple zones Traffic Konfiguration von HTTP/2 auf dem OVHcloud Load Balancer Comment configurer le SMTP sur un service Load Balancer Configuration of an OVHcloud Load Balancer service - HTTP headers Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with ProxyProtocol Configuration of probes on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer service with redirects Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with HTTP routes Tracking connections on the OVHcloud Load Balancer Deployments Configuration of an OVHcloud Load Balancer service with HTTP/HTTPS Deploying a blue-green infrastructure Zusatzliche Ressourcen Details of API functions Problembehandlung Retrieving server health status Netzwerksicherheit Aktivieren und Konfigurieren der Edge Network Firewall Game Server mit der Application Firewall schutzen Monitoring von DDoS-Angriffen mit dem Network Security Dashboard OVHcloud Connect Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Concepts overview Layer 2 mode Layer 3 mode Einstieg Installation of OVHcloud Connect Direct from the OVHcloud Control Panel Installation of OVHcloud Connect Provider from the OVHcloud Control Panel How to initiate a diagnostic for OVHcloud Connect from the OVHcloud Control Panel OVHcloud Connect Logs Forwarding FAQ OVHcloud Connect Konfiguration Configuration of OVHcloud Connect using OVHcloud APIv6 Problembehandlung Troubleshooting common errors setting up OVHcloud Connect Zusatzliche Ressourcen Technical capabilities and limitations SecNumCloud Concepts overview SPN Concept VPN-SPN Concept FAQ SecNumCloud Connectivity vRack Private Network Ubersicht Konfiguration Konfiguration eines Additional IP-Blocks in einem vRack Einen Additional-IPv6-Block in einem vRack konfigurieren Konfiguration von Jumbo-Frames im vRack Mehrere VLANs im vRack erstellen IP-Block-Ankundigung im vRack andern Upgrade and downgrade private bandwidth (vRack) via the OVHcloud API Produkt-spezifische Anleitungen Dedicated Server Netzwerk auf Proxmox VE fur die High Grade, Scale & SCALE Reihen konfigurieren (EN) vRack fur Dedicated Server konfigurieren Netzwerk auf Windows Server mit Hyper-V konfigurieren vRack zwischen Public Cloud und Dedicated Server einrichten Hyper-V mit Additional IPs in einem vRack verwenden Konfigurieren Ihrer Netzwerkkarte fur die OVHcloud Link Aggregation in Debian 9 bis 11 Hosted Private Cloud Nutanix on OVHcloud Cluster-Verbindung uber das vRack (EN) Anderung des vRack eines Nutanix Clusters (EN) VMware on OVHcloud Erstellung eines VLAN (EN) Hosted Private Cloud in einem vRack verwenden Kompatibilitat zwischen vRack und Hosted Private Cloud Load Balancer Configuring the vRack on the load balancer Managed Bare Metal Managed Bare Metal in einem vRack verwenden VLAN-Erstellung Public Cloud Containers & Orchestration Using vRack Private Network Working with vRack example - Communicating between different private networks Using vRack - Communicating between different private networks Working with vRack example - Managed Kubernetes and Public Cloud instances Public Cloud Network Services vRack fur Public Cloud konfigurieren Configuring vRack on the Public Cloud using the OVHcloud API (EN) Konfiguration des Public Cloud vRack mit OpenStack CLI vRack zwischen Public Cloud und Dedicated Server einrichten Configuring a public IP block in a vRack on a Public Cloud instance vRack Services vRack Services - Exposing a Managed Service on your vRack Enterprise File Storage - Private network configuration Enterprise File Storage - Connect a Public Cloud instance to an EFS Volume via vRack Private Network Problembehandlung How to troubleshoot your network using OVHcloud tools Wie kann ich feststellen, ob meine IP-Adresse von OVHcloud verwaltet wird? Verwalten & Betreiben API Erste Schritte Erste Schritte mit der OVHcloud API Exploring the OVHcloud APIs (EN) APIv6 OVHcloud API v2 - Principles of operation Manage services Manage payment and billing of OVHcloud services Create a OVH sub-account and a user account with OVH API Managing OVHcloud service accounts via the API (EN) How to use service accounts to connect to OVHcloud APIs (EN) Generating OVHcloud account logs with Logs Data Platform (EN) Verwaltung der Benutzer und des Verbunds Erste Schritte Prasentation der Identitaten, die innerhalb eines OVHcloud Accounts interagieren konnen Lokale Benutzer auf einem OVHcloud Kunden-Account erstellen und verwalten Managing OVHcloud service accounts via the API (EN) Identitatsverbund SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Google Workspace aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Entra ID aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Okta aktivieren IAM Verwendung von IAM-Richtlinien mit der OVHcloud API (EN) Verwendung von IAM-Richtlinie uber Ihr Kundencenter Liste der Berechtigungsgruppen bei OVHcloud (EN) How to manage tags on resources IAM-Richtlinien erstellen, um Benutzern das Anmelden im OVHcloud Kundencenter zu ermoglichen (EN) How to use IAM policies with vSphere (EN) How to use service accounts to connect to OpenStack (EN) How to analyse IAM policy results (EN) Generating OVHcloud account logs with Logs Data Platform (EN) Terraform Using Terraform with OVHcloud (EN) CLI Getting Started with OVHcloud CLI Observability Logs Data Platform Getting Started Introduction to Logs Data Platform Quick start for Logs Data Platform Logs Data Platform - Responsibility model Reversibility Policy for the Managed Log Manager product OVHcloud Service Logs Generating OVHcloud account logs with Logs Data Platform (EN) Logs Data Platform - Collect VMware on OVHcloud logs (EN) Public Cloud Load Balancer TCP / HTTP / HTTPS Logs Forwarding (EN) Mettre en place le transfert de logs des bases de donnees Public Cloud (EN) Web Cloud Databases - Wie verwaltet man Logs? Managed Kubernetes Service Audit Logs Forwarding Pushing logs from OVHcloud KMS to Logs Data Platform OVHcloud Connect Logs Forwarding IAM Ingesting your logs Field naming convention Mutualized Inputs Dedicated input - Logstash Mutualized input - OpenSearch API Pushing logs with a SDK - Python 2.x - Djehouty Pushing logs with a SDK - Python 3.x - logging-ldp Pushing logs with a logging library - Rust - gelf_logger and log4rs-gelf Pushing logs with a forwarder - Filebeat (Linux) Pushing logs with a forwarder - Syslog-ng 3.12.1+ (Linux) Pushing logs with a forwarder - NXLog (Windows) Pushing logs from software - Apache Pushing logs from a Kubernetes cluster to Logs Data Platform using Fluent Bit Generating OVHcloud account logs with Logs Data Platform (EN) SAP logs on OVHcloud Logs Data Platform - Configuration Logs Data Platform - Collect VMware on OVHcloud logs (EN) Visualizing, querying and exploiting your logs Exposing your logs to third-party tools via the OpenSearch API Using OpenSearch Dashboards with Logs Data Platform Using Grafana with Logs Data Platform CLI - ldp-tail, a tool to follow your logs in real-time CLI - bonfire, querying graylog from a CLI Alerting - Configuring alerts on your streams Alerting - Using ElastAlert 2 with Logs Data Platform OpenSearch Index as a service OpenSearch Index as a Service Security and conformity Archiving your logs - Cold-storage Encrypting your logs archives Securing Logs Data Platform's APIs with tokens Usecases Tracking slow MySQL queries with Logs Data Platform Supervising your HAProxy deployment with Logs Data Platform Pushing logs from a Kubernetes cluster to Logs Data Platform using Fluent Bit Handling roles and permissions when IAM is not enabled SAP logs on OVHcloud Logs Data Platform - Configuration KMS Getting started with OVHcloud Key Management Service (KMS) Using OVHcloud Key Management Service (KMS) Manage your OKMS access certificate OKMS Architecture overview OKMS - Shared responsibilities How to connect a compatible product using KMIP protocol How to Encrypt Kubernetes ETCD with OVHcloud KMS Pushing logs from OVHcloud KMS to Logs Data Platform Secret Manager Using the Secret Manager in the OVHcloud Control Panel Using the Secret Manager with the REST API Using the Secret Manager with the HashiCorp Vault KV2 compliant API Manage your OKMS access certificate OKMS Architecture overview OKMS - Shared responsibilities How to use Kubernetes External Secret Operator with Secret Manager Kontoverwaltung Account-Informationen Ubersicht Erste Schritte OVHcloud Kunden-Account erstellen In das OVHcloud Kundencenter einloggen Das Passwort Ihres Kunden-Accounts anlegen und verwalten OVHcloud Kunden-Account absichern und personliche Informationen verwalten Die Kontakte Ihrer Dienste verwalten Verwalten von Benachrichtigungen in Ihrem OVHcloud Kundencenter Einfuhrung in das OVHcloud Kundencenter Plik nutzen, um Dateien zu teilen Erstellen und Verwalten von Nutzern Prasentation der Identitaten, die innerhalb eines OVHcloud Accounts interagieren konnen Lokale Benutzer auf einem OVHcloud Kunden-Account erstellen und verwalten Verwendung von IAM-Richtlinien mit der OVHcloud API (EN) Verwendung von IAM-Richtlinie uber Ihr Kundencenter Generating OVHcloud account logs with Logs Data Platform (EN) How to analyse IAM policy results (EN) Liste der Berechtigungsgruppen bei OVHcloud (EN) IAM-Richtlinien erstellen, um Benutzern das Anmelden im OVHcloud Kundencenter zu ermoglichen (EN) Managing OVHcloud service accounts via the API (EN) SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Google Workspace aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Entra ID aktivieren SSO-Verbindungen zu Ihrem OVHcloud Account uber Okta aktivieren How to use IAM policies with vSphere (EN) How to use service accounts to connect to OpenStack (EN) How to use service accounts to connect to OVHcloud APIs (EN) How-to add an ssh key in the OVHcloud Control Panel (generated by AI) FAQ FAQ zur Verwaltung des OVHcloud Kunden-Accounts OVHcloud Support FAQ Sicherheit und Konformitat Den OVHcloud Kunden-Account mit der Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung absichern Zugriff auf Ihr OVHcloud Kundencenter nach IP beschranken Phishing erkennen − Schutz vor betrugerischen E-Mails Information System Security Policy (ISSP) Dedicated Server Security Specifications Security specification for Private Cloud by VMmare (EN) Block Storage security specifications Security specification for Private Cloud VMmare under SecNumCloud qualification (EN) OVHcloud products ISO27k certifications OVHcloud products HDS certification Representation des garanties de la certification d'Hebergement de Donnees de Sante (HDS) sur les produits OVHcloud Verwaltung von Abrechnung, Zahlungen und Dienstleistungen Verlangerung einer Dienstleistung Wie verlangere ich meine OVHcloud Dienste? OVHcloud Domainnamen verlangern Ihre Dienste uber die OVHcloud API verlangern Verwaltung von Dienstleistungen Best Practices fur die Verwaltung Ihrer Dienstleistungen und Ihres OVHcloud Accounts CO2-Fußabdruck Ihrer OVHcloud Dienste einsehen Abrechnung und Zahlungen OVHcloud Bestellungen verwalten Meine Zahlungsarten verwalten OVHcloud Rechnungen verwalten Purchase Order (PO) Payer une commande en tant qu’administration publique Hosted Private Cloud Hosted Private Cloud Billing (EN) AI Notebooks AI Notebooks - Billing and lifecycle Public Cloud Cloud Guthaben aufladen Public Cloud Compute - Von der stundlichen auf monatliche Abrechnung umstellen Kundigung einer Dienstleistung Kundigen von OVHcloud Diensten Hosted Private Cloud Hosted Private Cloud kundigen GDPR - How to immediately delete your OVHcloud services FAQ FAQ fur Abrechnung und Zahlung FAQ zur Nachverfolgung der Bestellung von OVHcloud Wie kann ich feststellen, ob meine IP-Adresse von OVHcloud verwaltet wird? API Ein Public Cloud Projekt uber die OVHcloud API bestellen Reversibilitat Reversibilitatstrategie Global Reversibility Policy (EN) Web Hosting Reversibility Policy (DE) Public Cloud Reversibility Policy Reversibility Policy for Managed Dedicated Cloud product (EN) Reversibility policy for the service VMware on OVHcloud under SecNumCloud qualification (EN) Dedicated Servers Reversibility Policy (EN) Dedicated Servers 3-AZ Reversibility Policy Reversibility Policy for Managed Document Database Product Reversibility Policy for Managed Relational Database Product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Message Broker product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Data Visualization product File Storage reversibility policy Cold Storage product reversibility policy Object Storage product reversibility policy Politique de reversibilite du produit Object Storage 3AZ Orchestration product reversibility policy Managed OCI artifact Registry Product Reversibility Policy Reversibility Policy for the Managed Log Manager product Reversibility Policy for the Unified Data Platform product AI Notebooks - Politique de reversibilite du produit Notebook Interface Reversibility Policy for the AI Managed Container product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Search Engine Software Platform product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Mutualized Virtualization product Reversibility Policy for the Dedicated PoD-SecNumCloud product Reversibility Policy for the Managed Database System for Web Hosting product Reversibility Policy for the Managed In-Memory Database product Geteilte Verantwortung Shared responsibility for Dedicated Servers (EN) File Storage services - Responsibility model (EN) Cold Storage - Shared Responsibility for archive and restoration services Responsibility sharing for the VMware on OVHcloud service Partage de responsabilite sur le service Hosted Private Cloud by VMware sous la qualification SecNumCloud Gemeinsame Verantwortung - Nutanix on OVHcloud (EN) Shared responsibility for SAP on OVHcloud solutions Logs Data Platform - Responsibility model Public Cloud Instances - Shared responsibilities (EN) Responsibility model for Public Cloud Databases Public Cloud Block Storage - Shared responsibilities (EN) Object Storage - Shared Responsibility Managed Kubernetes - Responsibility model Managed Private Registry - Responsibility model (EN) Responsibility model for the product Managed Email Server on Mutualized Infrastructure (EN) Responsibility model for the product Managed Dedicated E-mail Infrastructure (EN) OKMS - Shared responsibilities Startup Program Ubersicht General information Startup Program - How to apply to our newsletter? How to optimise your application to the Startup Program How to sign your Startup Program contract Support & Communication How to contact a Startup Program manager and/or request a technical consultation Credits & Billing How to check your Startup Program credits How to pay a bill with your Startup Program credits Which products are available to use with Startup Program credits? Technical resources How to increase Public Cloud quotas for a Startup Program member Sicherheit & Identitat IAM Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Erste Schritte Konfiguration Richtlinien verwalten (UI) Richtlinien verwalten (API) Berechtigungsgruppen Dienstkonten SSO / SAML Ubersicht Schlusselkonzepte Erste Schritte Konfiguration Verbindung mit ADFS Verbindung mit Azure AD Verbindung mit Google Workspace Verbindung mit Okta Sicherheitszertifizierungen HDS-Zertifizierung Sicherheitsrichtlinie Dedicated Server Specs Block Storage Specs Private Cloud VMware Specs Private Cloud SNC Specs Home › Netzwerk › Load Balancer › Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with HTTP routes Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer with HTTP routes Markdown kopieren KI fragen Objective The OVHcloud Load Balancer service redirects the front-end's incoming traffic to the servers that make up the front-end's default farm, or its default redirection. In some cases, you can go further and route, redirect, or block traffic according to a range of criteria. For example, in the case of an HTTP(S) service, you can filter traffic based on the HTTP method, the URL, or even the value of a cookie or header. In the OVHcloud Load Balancer service, these elements are called routes . A route is a specific action to perform if one or more conditions are met. This guide will show you how to direct your requests dynamically to a specific farm using routes. Requirements Have an OVHcloud Load Balancer on an offer allowing the creation of routes. Have access to the OVHcloud API . Instructions INFO Although this guide focuses on HTTP routes , the same principle applies to TCP routes . This can be useful for directing HTTP/2 traffic to a specific farm or rejecting incoming requests from certain IP addresses. This feature is only available via the API. This guide will present the general principles as well as use cases for routes drawn from real-life scenarios. Introduction to routes A route is used to control traffic according to different criteria. They can be expressed in the form of rules , conditions , or actions . For example, IF the URL starts with '/wp-admin/' (1) AND the connection is HTTP (2) THEN redirect to the HTTPS version of the page (3). In this example, there are two rules : the connection must come from an HTTP frontend (2); its URL must start with the WordPress administration pages (1). There is an action associated with these rules: redirect to the HTTPS version of the page (3). This is what is known as an "end action". That means if the rules are validated, the evaluation of the routes stops and the action is executed. API presentation Route management is only available through the OVHcloud API . It is only valid for the http and tcp protocols, and the path exposes the dedicated route API. The OVHcloud Load Balancer service route API has been specifically designed to be flexible, powerful, and scalable. It is organized around three main sections: API calls listing the available rules and actions. API calls listing the routes configured on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. API calls for configuring the routes of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. INFO To display only the API calls related to routes in the OVHcloud API console, you can use the field with the keyword "[a-z]*". When you want to configure a route or rules, the first thing to do is to consult the available actions and rules . This will give you the possible values for the configuration fields of the route and rule APIs. A route can have several rules. A route can only be attached to a single frontend. A frontend can have several routes. In this case, the evaluation order depends on its type and weight. When a request arrives on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service, the routes are evaluated successively according to the following principles: first, the reject and rewrite routes , then the farm routes ; within these categories, the routes are evaluated in increasing weight order ; if two routes have the same weight, the first route created is evaluated first; only the first action of all validated rules is executed. Available rules and actions This first section of the API contains an up-to-date list of available actions and rules for your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. It contains one call for the actions and another for the rules. These two calls return a list of objects. Each object is named, and indicates whether it applies to TCP or HTTP routes, as well as the expected values or types of values for the different fields of the API. If a field is "null", it means no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error. Actions 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/availableRouteActions For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section Available Actions , at the bottom of this guide. Rules 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/availableRouteRules For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section Available Rules , at the bottom of this guide. Configured routes This second section of the API contains only one call. It was mainly designed to facilitate the implementation of auto-completion mechanisms. It returns the identifier, name, and type of each defined route. The details of a route can be obtained with a call defined below. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/definedRoutes For more information on this call, we invite you to consult the section " Route Handling ", at the bottom of this guide. Route configuration With these basic principles on available actions and rules, and the route evaluation order, these routes can be manipulated in the same way as farms. When you create a route, you can attach rules to it. The possible values for the rules and actions are defined by the API calls. For more information on these methods, you can consult the section " Route Handling ", at the bottom of this guide. Examples To demonstrate the utility of routes, this section will offer some practical examples of the use of this technology for OVHcloud's internal needs, without going into the details of the API calls. You will find the details of the API calls in the section Route Handling , at the bottom of this guide and the following sections. Force HTTPS for WordPress login pages The HTTPS protocol has become the norm. Its objective is to make all websites available in HTTPS in a secure manner, thanks to the SSL/TLS protocol. If you need an SSL/TLS certificate, you can use your OVHcloud Load Balancer service to order a new one, which will be managed for you in a completely automatic way. Migrating a website to HTTPS requires work, especially to avoid Mixed-Content problems. It may be interesting to migrate your website section by section, starting by securing the pages that send login credentials. An approach could be to rely on the beginning of WordPress URLs. By default, the URLs of WordPress login pages start with "/wp-login". We would therefore need to: a route with a redirection action ; a rule in this route that detects URLs starting with "/wp-login" . In practice, this gives a route as follows: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your HTTP frontend displayName "Redirect WordPress connections to HTTPS" weight (empty) action.type "redirect" action.status 302 for a temporary redirect, 301 for a permanent redirect action.target "" to take the same host, path and arguments On this route, we will attach a rule: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service routeId Identifier of the route created above field "uri" subField (empty) match "startswith" negate false pattern "/wp-login" Then apply the configuration to the concerned area. WARNING To add a new redirection, you will have to repeat these actions, creating a route, then a rule. If a second rule is added to the same route, both rules must be validated for the redirection to work. Note that if the rules are and , the redirection will never work because these two conditions cannot be true at the same time. Route based on a domain (VHost) This is the feature that made the web possible when it was in its infancy, with the possibility of exposing several sites behind the same IP address thanks to the "Host" field of HTTP headers. For example, if your infrastructure is composed of a VPS for your website, an OVHcloud Load Balancer for SSL/TLS termination, and redirections to a maintenance page with a backup server in the farms, you would have needed an Additional IP per website, routed to your OVHcloud Load Balancer, and a frontend per IP in the past. With routes, you can share the same frontend and choose the server farm dynamically, thanks to the [a-z] field. For this, you will need: a route per VHost; a rule per route detecting a specific domain. In practice, to route the domain www.example.com , this will give the following route: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your frontend displayName "VHost - www.example.com " weight (empty) action.type "farm" action.status (empty) action.target Identifier of the farm to which to direct this domain And on this route, we will attach a rule: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service routeId Identifier of the route created above field "host" subField (empty) match "is" negate false pattern " www.example.com " or a domain of your choice Finally, apply the configuration. Reserve an Additional IP for a specific website If you host a website on a VPS, you might want to dedicate an IP address to a specific client. You can easily make the IP available by routing it to your OVHcloud Load Balancer service, then configuring a dedicated frontend attached to this Additional IP, and setting the client's target VPS as the . However, what will happen if another client detects this and configures their domain to point to the premium client's IP? By default, this will work, and their website will be routed to another client's VPS. If an SSL/TLS certificate is present, this will still work, as all certificates are automatically available for all frontends. In such scenarios, the solution is to add a rule that rejects requests if the domain is not a premium domain . You can do this with a reject route and a rule. In practice, to reserve a frontend with a dedicated IP for the domain www.example.com , this will give the following route: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your frontend displayName "Restriction to www.example.com " weight (empty) action.type "reject" action.status 403 action.target (empty) And on this route, we will attach a rule: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service routeId Identifier of the route created above field "host" subField (empty) match "is" negate true pattern " www.example.com " or a domain of your choice Finally, apply the configuration. Route based on a URL and an HTTP method On some specific infrastructures, certain requests must be routed to a specific farm. For example, to handle rare but data-intensive requests without impacting production, such as analytical requests that work on a read-only copy of the data with a server having a higher memory volume. If, for example, the request is sent: with the POST method; on a URL matching "^/.*/batch-analyticsquot; . Then, you would need a route with two rules, one of which uses a regular expression. In practice, this gives a route as follows: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your frontend displayName "Route batch analytics to a dedicated farm" weight (empty) action.type "farm" action.status (empty) action.target Identifier of the farm to which to direct these operations And on this route, we will attach two rules: Field Rule 1 Rule 2 serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service as for rule 1 routeId Identifier of the route created above as for rule 1 field "method" "uri" subField (empty) (empty) match "is" "matches" negate false false pattern "POST" "" Here, the first rule applies to an enumeration. Only standard HTTP methods are available. The second rule, on the other hand, exploits the full power of routes by using a regular expression. Although it is possible to use such expressions, avoiding them results in enhanced performance. All that remains is to apply the configuration in the concerned area. Route certain IPs and voluntary clients to preproduction When a site grows, you may want to set up a preproduction environment to validate ongoing changes, without affecting the majority of users. Generally, when configuring this type of environment, you want to reduce the gap as much as possible between production and preproduction, in order to detect problems as accurately as possible. A classic and often neglected source of problems is the domain name. It is sometimes hardcoded in a file or an article. At that point, a link may work in preproduction but not in production. Instead of setting up rules based on the domain name, you could set up rules based on the source IP address (for example, an enterprise proxy) and possibly a cookie for voluntary clients. These configurations can be detected with two routes on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. For this example, we will consider: that the enterprise proxy can use the addresses 42.42.42.0/24 and the VPN uses 1.2.3.4/32; that the voluntary users have a "PreprodOptIn" cookie, the value of which is not important. In practice, you will need two identical routes: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your frontend displayName "Route Opt-In and internal users to preproduction environment" weight (empty) action.type "farm" action.status (empty) action.target Identifier of the preproduction farm Next, we attach the following 2 rules, each on one of the routes (1 rule per route): Field Rule 1 Rule 2 serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service same routeId Identifier of the first route Identifier of the second route field "source" "cookie" subField (empty) "PreprodOptIn" match "in" "exists" negate false false pattern "42.42.42.0/24, 1.2.3.4" (empty) The first rule checks if the source IP is in a list of address ranges. In this case, the different address ranges are separated by commas and can be surrounded by spaces for better readability. If a range contains only one address, the "/32" is implicit but can be added explicitly. In any case, the size of this field is limited to 255 characters. The second rule simply checks the existence of the cookie. It would be possible to check if its value matches a regular expression or is in a list of possibilities, but this allows to show a simple example of what can be done with cookies. Rules based on HTTP Headers work according to a similar approach. All that remains is to apply the configuration in the concerned area. Route WebSockets to a dedicated farm When a site has interactive functions based on WebSockets such as a chatbot, you may want to direct these connections to a server farm dedicated to this task. In fact, it is quite simple.W When a browser tries to open a WebSocket connection, it sends a standard HTTP request with the headers: In practice, it is sufficient to detect the first header. This can be done very easily with a route and a rule: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service frontendId Identifier of your frontend displayName "Route WebSockets to a dedicated farm" weight (empty) action.type "farm" action.status (empty) action.target Identifier of the WebSocket dedicated farm And on this route, we come to attach a rule: Field Value and description serviceName Identifier of your OVHcloud Load Balancer service routeId Identifier of the route created just above field "header" subField "Upgrade" match "is" negate false pattern "websocket" (case-sensitive) All that remains is to apply the configuration in the relevant zone. References You will find here the details of the API calls related to routes. For a more general overview of route features, we invite you to first consult the section " API presentation " a little further up in this guide. Handling routes TCP and HTTP routes are configured in the same way. Since HTTP routes are more powerful, this section focuses on HTTP routes and rules. The operation of TCP routes can be extrapolated by replacing "http" with "tcp" in the routes. Some fields only make sense in HTTP, so they are not available in TCP. List routes This call returns the list of numeric identifiers of routes defined for the HTTP protocol. You can filter this list by . This call returns the routes in the order in which they will be evaluated. The evaluation order can be partially controlled using the "weight" of the route. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service frontendId Numeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which the routes are attached Create a route This call allows you to create a route. Only the action is mandatory. A route can be attached and detached from a frontend. It is possible to create up to 50 routes on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. This call returns the created route in case of success. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US POST /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service displayName Display name of your route (maximum 255 characters) frontendId Numeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which to attach the route weight Priority of the route, between 1 (passes first) and 255 (passes after others) action.type Required Name of the type of action to execute if all the rules associated with the route are validated action.status HTTP status code for the and actions action.target Numeric identifier of the target farm for the actions, or URL pattern for the actions The possible action types are: action Meaning redirect Redirect a request to with the HTTP status code reject Reject a request with the HTTP status code farm Route a request to the farm whose identifier is specified in For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available actions " further down in this guide. View the details of a route This call allows you to view the details of an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId} Request: Parameter Meaning serviceName Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Numeric identifier of the route Response: Parameter Meaning routeId Numeric identifier of the route displayName Display name of your route frontendId Numeric identifier of the frontend to which your route is attached weight Priority of your route action.type Name of the type of action of your route action.status Associated HTTP status code action.target Numeric identifier of the farm or associated URL pattern rules List of rules that must be validated to trigger the action of the route. More details are available in the section " Handling Rules ". For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available actions " further down in this guide. Modify a route This call allows you to modify an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US PUT /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId} Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route displayName Display name of your route (maximum 255 characters) frontendId Numeric identifier of an HTTP frontend to which to attach the route weight Priority of the route, between 1 (passes first) and 255 (passes after others) action.type Required Name of the type of action to execute if all the rules associated with the route are validated action.status HTTP status code for the and actions action.target Numeric identifier of the target farm for the actions, or URL pattern for the actions For more information on the actions handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available actions " further down in this guide. Delete a route This call allows you to delete an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. When a route is deleted, all the rules associated with that route are also deleted. There is no need to delete them individually. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US DELETE /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId} Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route Handling rules List rules This call returns the list of numeric identifiers of rules defined for a given route. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId}/rule Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route Attach a rule This call allows you to attach a rule to a route. It is possible to attach up to 5 rules per route on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. This call returns the created rule in case of success. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US POST /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId}/rule Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route field Required Name of the HTTP parameter on which to apply this rule subField Name of the HTTP header for rules or name of the cookie for rules match Required Name of the comparator to apply to validate the rule negate Inverts the result of the comparator pattern Comparator argument Value Meaning source Address or list of source addresses in the form of IP (a.b.c.d/z) protocol Protocol. "http" or "https" method HTTP method (GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS, CONNECT, TRACE) host Domain name (vhost), without the port number uri Request path as understood between the first "/" and the first "?" param HTTP parameter coming from the part after the first "?" header HTTP header cookie HTTP cookie Value Meaning exists The property must exist (HTTP header or cookie for example) is The property must match exactly in The property must be in the list of values (separated by commas) defined by contains The property must contain the value of startswith The property must start with the value of endswith The property must end with the value of matches The property must match the regular expression of For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide. View the details of a rule This call allows you to view the details of a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId}/rule/{ruleId} Request: Parameter Meaning serviceName Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Numeric identifier of the route ruleId Numeric identifier of the rule Response: Parameter Meaning ruleId Numeric identifier of the rule field Name of the HTTP parameter on which to apply the rule subField Name of the HTTP header or cookie for the rule match Name of the comparator to apply to validate the rule negate "true" if the result of the comparator is inverted pattern Comparator argument. The meaning and syntax depend on and For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide. Modify a rule This call allows you to modify a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US PUT /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId}/rule/{ruleId} Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route ruleId Required Numeric identifier of the rule field Required Name of the HTTP parameter on which to apply this rule subField Name of the HTTP header for rules or name of the cookie for rules match Required Name of the comparator to apply to validate the rule negate Inverts the result of the comparator pattern Comparator argument For more information on the rules handled and the format of the parameters, we invite you to consult the section " Available rules " further down in this guide. Delete a rule This call allows you to delete a rule attached to an HTTP route, knowing its identifier. Your OVHcloud Load Balancer service must be redeployed to apply the changes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US DELETE /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/http/route/{routeId}/rule/{ruleId} Parameter Required Meaning serviceName Required Identifier of your Load Balancer service routeId Required Numeric identifier of the route ruleId Required Numeric identifier of the rule INFO If you want to delete a route, it is not necessary to delete all the rules attached to it. The rules are automatically deleted when you delete a route. List all TCP and HTTP routes This call allows you to list all the identifiers, display names and types ("http"/"tcp") of routes defined on an OVHcloud Load Balancer service. It was designed to simplify the implementation of auto-completion. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/definedRoutes Request: Parameter Meaning serviceName Identifier of your Load Balancer service Response: Parameter Meaning type Type of protocol of the route: "tcp" for TCP routes, "http" for HTTP routes routeId Numeric identifier of the route displayName Display name of the route Available actions This call returns the list of available actions for TCP and HTTP routes as well as the expected values for each of the fields. If a field is "null", it means that no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error. All actions managed by the OVHcloud Load Balancer service are final. This means that the execution of an action also ends the evaluation of the routes. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/availableRouteActions Request: Parameter Meaning serviceName Identifier of your Load Balancer service Response: Parameter Meaning type Indicates whether this action is valid for an HTTP route or a TCP route name Name of the action to specify in the field of the routes status List of available HTTP status codes for this action (the field of the routes) destination Type of value expected in the field of the routes Redirection This action returns a redirection to the visitor. The type of redirection can be configured with the field. When this action is selected, no farm will receive the request. Parameter Value type status 301, 302, 303, 307 or 308 target Destination URL (can contain variables) Only HTTP redirection status codes can be specified. The most common are codes 301 and 302. If you are unsure, you can use the 302 "Temporary Redirect". The HTTP status codes recognized for redirections are: Status code Description 301 Permanent redirect. The redirect can be stored by the browser. 302 (default) Temporary redirect. The redirect must be revalidated by the browser on each request. 303 Like 302 and forces the use of the HTTP GET method. 307 Like 302 and forces the reuse of the same HTTP method (GET, POST, etc.). 308 Like 301 and forces the reuse of the same HTTP method (GET, POST, etc.). The destination URL can contain simple variables. This allows you to redirect to another domain, another protocol or add a suffix / prefix to a URL. The recognized variables are: Variable Description Protocol of the request ("http" or "https") Domain name of the request, without the port number "Host" field of the request, including the port number if present Port of the request Path of the request, starts with a '/' and ends at the first '?' Arguments of the request, starts with a '?' if present For example, to: redirect to https: redirect to a new domain: prefix the URL: Rejection This action returns an HTTP error status code to the visitor. The error HTTP status code can be configured with the field. When this action is selected, no farm will receive the request. Parameter Value type status 200, 400, 403, 405, 408, 429, 500, 502, 503 or 504 target not available INFO This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the parameter is not available and the request is terminated. TCP requests terminated in this way are not counted in the request rate. Only the HTTP error status codes listed in the API can be specified. The most common are the codes 400 "Bad request" and 403 "Forbidden". 200 can be used to block a type of request while simulating a success, and 503 can be used to simulate a server failure. Status code Description 200 The request was executed successfully. 400 Invalid request. 403 (default) Access forbidden. 405 Invalid or unhandled method (GET, POST, PUT, etc.) 408 The client failed to send a complete request within the server's time limit. 429 The client sent too many requests (rate-limiting). 500 Generic server error. 502 Communication error with the server. 503 The service is temporarily unavailable. 504 The server took too long to respond. Routing This action directs requests to a specific farm, other than the default farm configured on the frontend. The target farm must be of the same type as the frontend ("http" or "tcp"). Parameter Value type status not available target Numeric identifier of the target farm. This must be of the same type INFO This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the target farm must be of type "tcp". Available rules This call returns the list of available rules for TCP and HTTP routes, as well as the expected values for each field. If a field is "null", it means no value is expected. If an invalid value is provided, the API will return a validation error. 🇪🇺 EU 🇨🇦 CA 🇺🇸 US GET /ipLoadbalancing/{serviceName}/availableRouteRules Request: Parameter Meaning serviceName Identifier of your Load Balancer service Response: Parameter Meaning type Protocol type of the route: "tcp" for TCP routes, "http" for HTTP routes name Name of the property to which this rule applies, to be filled in the field hasSubField "true" if this property has a "sub-property" (e.g.: a header or a cookie) matches List of available comparators for this rule, to be filled in the field pattern Type of expected value for the field enum List of possible values for the field if it is an enumeration The different types of are: Value Meaning cidr IP address (a.b.c.d) or subnet (a.b.c.d/z) string Free text. For the operator , a list of comma-separated values (maximum 255 characters) enum The field is an enumeration defined in Protocol This rule allows filtering requests based on their protocol. In practice, the use cases for this rule are quite limited because the protocol depends on the frontend to which the route is attached, and a frontend only handles one protocol, which is known at the time the route is defined. Field Value name hasSubField no matches or pattern , , or INFO This action is also available in TCP. In this case, the "http/2.0" protocol is also available. It is based on the SSL/TLS "ALPN" field used by browsers to announce that they are trying to establish an HTTP/2.0 connection. This allows for a common TCP frontend for HTTP 1 and 2 SSL/TLS termination, then routing these streams based on the protocol version. Source address This rule allows filtering requests based on their source address. By combining it with a rule based on the URI or domain name, it is for example possible to restrict certain resources to an enterprise proxy, while exposing all other resources without restrictions on your OVHcloud Load Balancer service. Field Value name hasSubField no matches or pattern Subnet (a.b.c.d/z) or address (a.b.c.d) INFO This action is also available in TCP with the same behavior. For example, to block a network and a specific address, you can use a pattern such as "4.4.0.0/16, 8.8.8.8". Domain name This rule allows filtering requests based on their domain name. This can for example be used to reproduce the "vhost" function of Apache or to route all domains starting with "mail." to a server dedicated to webmail. Field Value name hasSubField no matches , , , , or pattern String or regular expression INFO This action is also available in TCP. It is only applicable if the frontend is configured to accept SSL/TLS connections and the client sends an "SNI" option. This is particularly the case for recent web browsers. HTTP method This rule allows filtering requests based on the HTTP method. It is commonly used in conjunction with a rule based on the request URI or path to make the rule more selective. Field Value name hasSubField no matches or pattern , , , , , , or Request path This rule allows filtering requests based on the request path or URI. The request path is the part between the first '/' included and the first '?' excluded. Field Value name hasSubField no matches , , , , or pattern String or regular expression Request parameter This rule allows filtering requests based on the existence or value of a specific HTTP request parameter. This is the part after the first '?'. If a parameter is specified multiple times in the request, only the first one is taken into account. Field Value name hasSubField yes matches , , , , or pattern String or regular expression HTTP header This rule allows filtering requests based on the existence or value of a specific HTTP header. This can for example be used to detect the opening of a websocket connection and route it to a dedicated farm. Field Value name hasSubField yes matches , , , , or pattern String or regular expression Cookie This rule allows filtering requests based on the existence or value of a specific HTTP cookie. This can for example be used to direct opt-in visitors to a pre-production farm. Field Value name hasSubField yes matches , , , , or pattern String or regular expression Go further Join our community of users . War diese Seite hilfreich? Ja Nein Diese Seite bearbeiten Zuletzt aktualisiert : 31.3.2026, 09:35:42 Vorherige Seite Configuring an OVHcloud Load Balancer service with redirects Nachste Seite Tracking connections on the OVHcloud Load Balancer Auf dieser Seite Objective Requirements Instructions Introduction to routes API presentation Available rules and actions Actions Rules Configured routes Route configuration Examples Force HTTPS for WordPress login pages Route based on a domain (VHost) Reserve an Additional IP for a specific website Route based on a URL and an HTTP method Route certain IPs and voluntary clients to preproduction Route WebSockets to a dedicated farm References Handling routes Handling rules Available actions Available rules Go further Diese Seite bearbeiten 🚀 Teilen Sie Ihr Feedback zur neuen Dokumentation Ihr Feedback hilft unseren Teams, Ihre Erfahrung zu verbessern. 2 Minuten · Anonym Nein danke Antworten