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Yandex BareMetal
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In this article:

  • HTTP request
  • Path parameters
  • Response
  1. API reference
  2. REST
  3. PrivateCloudConnection
  4. Get

BareMetal API, REST: PrivateCloudConnection.Get

Written by
Yandex Cloud
Updated at August 8, 2025
  • HTTP request
  • Path parameters
  • Response

Returns the specific Private cloud connection resource.

To get the list of available Private cloud connection resources, make a List request.

HTTP requestHTTP request

GET https://baremetal.api.cloud.yandex.net/baremetal/v1alpha/privateCloudConnections/{privateCloudConnectionId}

Path parametersPath parameters

Field

Description

privateCloudConnectionId

string

Required field. ID of the Private cloud connection resource to return.

To get the server ID, use a PrivateCloudConnectionService.List request.

ResponseResponse

HTTP Code: 200 - OK

{
  "id": "string",
  "folderId": "string",
  "cloudId": "string",
  "routingInstanceId": "string",
  "vrfId": "string",
  "status": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "createdAt": "string"
}

A Private cloud connection resource.

Field

Description

id

string

ID of the private cloud connection.

folderId

string

ID of the folder that the private cloud connection belongs to.

cloudId

string

ID of the cloud that the private cloud connection belongs to.

routingInstanceId

string

ID of Cloud Router Routing Instance.

vrfId

string

ID of VRF that is connected to routing Instance.

status

enum (Status)

Status of the private cloud connection.

  • STATUS_UNSPECIFIED: Unspecified private cloud connection status.
  • CREATING: Private cloud connection is waiting for network resources to be allocated.
  • READY: Private cloud connection is ready to use.
  • ERROR: Private cloud connection encountered a problem and cannot operate.
  • DELETING: Private cloud connection is being deleted.
  • UPDATING: Private cloud connection is being updated.

name

string

Name of the private cloud connection.

createdAt

string (date-time)

Creation timestamp.

String in RFC3339 text format. The range of possible values is from
0001-01-01T00:00:00Z to 9999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999Z, i.e. from 0 to 9 digits for fractions of a second.

To work with values in this field, use the APIs described in the
Protocol Buffers reference.
In some languages, built-in datetime utilities do not support nanosecond precision (9 digits).

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