package VM::EC2::Region; =head1 NAME VM::EC2::Region - Object describing an Amazon region =head1 SYNOPSIS use VM::EC2; $ec2 = VM::EC2->new(...); @regions = $ec2->describe_regions(); $region = $regions[0]; $name = $region->regionName; $url = $region->regionEndpoint; @zones = $region->zones; =head1 DESCRIPTION This object represents an Amazon EC2 region, and is returned by VM::EC2->describe_regions(). =head1 METHODS These object methods are supported: regionName -- Name of the region, e.g. "eu-west-1" regionEndpoint -- URL endpoint for AWS API calls, e.g. "ec2.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com" zones -- List of availability zones within this region, as VM::EC2::AvailabilityZone objects. Note that you should prefix the endpoint with http:// or https:// before using it to change the VM::EC2 endpoint with the endpoint() call. If you do not do so, then http:// will be assumed. =head1 STRING OVERLOADING When used in a string context, this object will interpolate the regionName. =head1 SEE ALSO L L =head1 AUTHOR Lincoln Stein Elincoln.stein@gmail.comE. Copyright (c) 2011 Ontario Institute for Cancer Research This package and its accompanying libraries is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GPL (either version 1, or at your option, any later version) or the Artistic License 2.0. Refer to LICENSE for the full license text. In addition, please see DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty. =cut use strict; use base 'VM::EC2::Generic'; sub primary_id {shift->regionName} sub valid_fields { my $self = shift; return qw(regionName regionEndpoint); } sub zones { my $self = shift; my $aws = $self->aws; # break encapsulation, but it is elegant this way local $aws->{endpoint} = 'http://'.$self->regionEndpoint; return $aws->describe_availability_zones(-filter=>{'region-name'=>$self}); } 1;