The OCID of the compartment in which to create the load balancer.
Defined tags for this resource. Each key is predefined and scoped to a namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags.
Example: {@code {\"Operations\": {\"CostCenter\": \"42\"}}}
A user-friendly name. It does not have to be unique, and it is changeable. Avoid entering confidential information.
Example: {@code example_load_balancer}
Free-form tags for this resource. Each tag is a simple key-value pair with no predefined name, type, or namespace. For more information, see Resource Tags.
Example: {@code {\"Department\": \"Finance\"}}
Whether the load balancer has an IPv4 or IPv6 IP address.
If \"IPV4\", the service assigns an IPv4 address and the load balancer supports IPv4 traffic.
If \"IPV6\", the service assigns an IPv6 address and the load balancer supports IPv6 traffic.
Example: \"ipMode\":\"IPV6\"
Whether or not the load balancer has delete protection enabled.
If \"true\", the loadbalancer will be protected against deletion if configured to accept traffic.
If \"false\", the loadbalancer will not be protected against deletion.
Delete protection will not be enabled unless a value of \"true\" is provided. Example: {@code true}
Whether the load balancer has a VCN-local (private) IP address.
If \"true\", the service assigns a private IP address to the load balancer.
If \"false\", the service assigns a public IP address to the load balancer.
A public load balancer is accessible from the internet, depending on your VCN's [security list rules](https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/Content/Network/Concepts/securitylists.htm). For more information about public and private load balancers, see [How Load Balancing Works](https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/Content/Balance/Concepts/balanceoverview.htm#how-load-balancing-works).
Example: {@code true}
An array of NSG OCIDs associated with this load balancer.
During the load balancer's creation, the service adds the new load balancer to the specified NSGs.
The benefits of using NSGs with the load balancer include:
NSGs define network security rules to govern ingress and egress traffic for the load balancer.
The network security rules of other resources can reference the NSGs associated with the load balancer to ensure access.
Example: {@code [\"ocid1.nsg.oc1.phx.unique_ID\"]}
An array of reserved Ips.
The configuration details to create load balancer using Flexible shape. This is required only if shapeName is {@code Flexible}.
A template that determines the total pre-provisioned bandwidth (ingress plus egress). To get a list of available shapes, use the {@link #listShapes(ListShapesRequest) listShapes} operation.
Example: {@code flexible} NOTE: After May 2023, Fixed shapes - 10Mbps, 100Mbps, 400Mbps, 8000Mbps would be deprecated and only shape allowed would be {@code Flexible}
An array of subnet OCIDs.
The configuration details for creating a load balancer.
*Warning:** Oracle recommends that you avoid using any confidential information when you supply string values using the API.