Data Source: oci_load_balancer_backends
This data source provides the list of Backends in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Load Balancer service.
Lists the backend servers for a given load balancer and backend set.
Example Usage
data "oci_load_balancer_backends" "test_backends" {
	#Required
	backendset_name = oci_load_balancer_backend_set.test_backend_set.name
	load_balancer_id = oci_load_balancer_load_balancer.test_load_balancer.id
}
Argument Reference
The following arguments are supported:
- backendset_name- (Required) The name of the backend set associated with the backend servers. Example:- example_backend_set
- load_balancer_id- (Required) The OCID of the load balancer associated with the backend set and servers.
Attributes Reference
The following attributes are exported:
- backends- The list of backends.
Backend Reference
The following attributes are exported:
- backup- Whether the load balancer should treat this server as a backup unit. If- true, the load balancer forwards no ingress traffic to this backend server unless all other backend servers not marked as “backup” fail the health check policy.- Note: You cannot add a backend server marked as - backupto a backend set that uses the IP Hash policy.- Example: - false
- drain- Whether the load balancer should drain this server. Servers marked “drain” receive no new incoming traffic. Example:- false
- ip_address- The IP address of the backend server. Example:- 10.0.0.3
- max_connections- The maximum number of simultaneous connections the load balancer can make to the backend. If this is not set or set to 0 then the maximum number of simultaneous connections the load balancer can make to the backend is unlimited. Example:- 300
- name- A read-only field showing the IP address and port that uniquely identify this backend server in the backend set. Example:- 10.0.0.3:8080
- offline- Whether the load balancer should treat this server as offline. Offline servers receive no incoming traffic. Example:- false
- port- The communication port for the backend server. Example:- 8080
- weight- The load balancing policy weight assigned to the server. Backend servers with a higher weight receive a larger proportion of incoming traffic. For example, a server weighted ‘3’ receives 3 times the number of new connections as a server weighted ‘1’. For more information on load balancing policies, see How Load Balancing Policies Work. Example:- 3