Reserved IPv6 Actions

Validated on 19 Jun 2018 • Last edited on 23 Mar 2026

Reserved IPv6 actions requests are made on the actions endpoint of a specific reserved IPv6.

An action object is returned. These objects hold the current status of the requested action.

Base URL https://api.digitalocean.com

POST Initiate a Reserved IPv6 Action

/v2/reserved_ipv6/{reserved_ipv6}/actions
Authorizations: bearer_auth (1 scope)
Http: Bearer
Required scopes: reserved_ip:update

OAuth Authentication

In order to interact with the DigitalOcean API, you or your application must authenticate.

The DigitalOcean API handles this through OAuth, an open standard for authorization. OAuth allows you to delegate access to your account. Scopes can be used to grant full access, read-only access, or access to a specific set of endpoints.

You can generate an OAuth token by visiting the Apps & API section of the DigitalOcean control panel for your account.

An OAuth token functions as a complete authentication request. In effect, it acts as a substitute for a username and password pair.

Because of this, it is absolutely essential that you keep your OAuth tokens secure. In fact, upon generation, the web interface will only display each token a single time in order to prevent the token from being compromised.

DigitalOcean access tokens begin with an identifiable prefix in order to distinguish them from other similar tokens.

  • dop_v1_ for personal access tokens generated in the control panel
  • doo_v1_ for tokens generated by applications using the OAuth flow
  • dor_v1_ for OAuth refresh tokens

Scopes

Scopes act like permissions assigned to an API token. These permissions determine what actions the token can perform. You can create API tokens that grant read-only access, full access, or limited access to specific endpoints by using custom scopes.

Generally, scopes are designed to match HTTP verbs and common CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete).

HTTP Verb CRUD Operation Scope
GET Read <resource>:read
POST Create <resource>:create
PUT/PATCH Update <resource>:update
DELETE Delete <resource>:delete

For example, creating a new Droplet by making a POST request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:create scope while listing Droplets by making a GET request to the /v2/droplets endpoint requires the droplet:read scope.

Each endpoint below specifies which scope is required to access it when using custom scopes.

How to Authenticate with OAuth

In order to make an authenticated request, include a bearer-type Authorization header containing your OAuth token. All requests must be made over HTTPS.

Authenticate with a Bearer Authorization Header

curl -X $HTTP_METHOD -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/$OBJECT"

To initiate an action on a reserved IPv6 send a POST request to /v2/reserved_ipv6/$RESERVED_IPV6/actions. In the JSON body to the request, set the type attribute to on of the supported action types:

Action Details
assign Assigns a reserved IPv6 to a Droplet
unassign Unassign a reserved IPv6 from a Droplet

Path Parameters

reserved_ipv6 string (ipv6) >= 1 required
Example: 2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e

A reserved IPv6 address.

Request Body: application/json

The type attribute set in the request body will specify the action that will be taken on the reserved IPv6.

type string, one of: assign, unassign required

The type of action to initiate for the reserved IPv6.

type string, one of: assign, unassign required

The type of action to initiate for the reserved IPv6.

droplet_id integer required
Example: 758604968

The ID of the Droplet that the reserved IPv6 will be assigned to.

Content type application/json
{
  "type": "assign"
}
# Assign a Reserved IPv6 to a Droplet
curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  -d '{"type":"assign","droplet_id":8219222}' \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/reserved_ipv6/2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e/actions"

# Unassign a Reserved IPv6 from a Droplet
curl -X POST \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN" \
  -d '{"type":"unassign"}' \
  "https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/reserved_ipv6/2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e/actions"
import (
    "context"
    "os"

    "github.com/digitalocean/godo"
)

func main() {
    token := os.Getenv("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN")

    client := godo.NewFromToken(token)
    ctx := context.TODO()

  // Assign a Reserved IPv6 to a Droplet
    action, _, err := client.ReservedIPV6Actions.Assign(ctx, "2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e", 8219222)

  // Unassign a Reserved IPv6
   action, _, err := client.ReservedIPV6Actions.Unassign(ctx, "2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e")  
}
import os
from pydo import Client

client = Client(token=os.environ.get("DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN"))

req={
  "type": "unassign"
}

resp = client.reserved_ipv6s_actions.post(reserved_ipv6="2409:40d0:f7:1017:74b4:3a96:105e:4c6e", body=req)

Responses

201

The response will be an object with a key called action. The value of this will be an object that contains the standard reserved IP action attributes.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

action object optional
401

Authentication failed due to invalid credentials.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

404

The resource was not found.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

429

The API rate limit has been exceeded.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

500

There was a server error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

default

There was an unexpected error.

ratelimit-limit integer

The default limit on number of requests that can be made per hour and per minute. Current rate limits are 5000 requests per hour and 250 requests per minute.

ratelimit-remaining integer

The number of requests in your hourly quota that remain before you hit your request limit. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

ratelimit-reset integer

The time when the oldest request will expire. The value is given in Unix epoch time. See https://docs.digitalocean.com/reference/api/reference/#rate-limit for information about how requests expire.

id string required
Example: not_found

A short identifier corresponding to the HTTP status code returned. For example, the ID for a response returning a 404 status code would be "not_found."

message string required
Example: The resource you were accessing could not be found.

A message providing additional information about the error, including details to help resolve it when possible.

request_id string optional
Example: 4d9d8375-3c56-4925-a3e7-eb137fed17e9

Optionally, some endpoints may include a request ID that should be provided when reporting bugs or opening support tickets to help identify the issue.

{
  "action": {
    "completed_at": "2015-11-12T17:51:14Z",
    "id": 72531856,
    "region": {
      "available": true,
      "features": [
        "private_networking",
        "backups",
        "ipv6",
        "metadata"
      ],
      "name": "New York 3",
      "sizes": [
        "s-1vcpu-1gb",
        "s-1vcpu-2gb",
        "s-1vcpu-3gb",
        "s-2vcpu-2gb",
        "s-3vcpu-1gb",
        "s-2vcpu-4gb",
        "s-4vcpu-8gb",
        "s-6vcpu-16gb",
        "s-8vcpu-32gb",
        "s-12vcpu-48gb",
        "s-16vcpu-64gb",
        "s-20vcpu-96gb",
        "s-24vcpu-128gb",
        "s-32vcpu-192gb"
      ],
      "slug": "nyc3"
    },
    "region_slug": "nyc3",
    "resource_id": 758604968,
    "resource_type": "reserved_ipv6",
    "started_at": "2015-11-12T17:51:03Z",
    "status": "completed",
    "type": "assign_ip"
  }
}
{
  "id": "unauthorized",
  "message": "Unable to authenticate you."
}
{
  "id": "not_found",
  "message": "The resource you requested could not be found."
}
{
  "id": "too_many_requests",
  "message": "API rate limit exceeded."
}
{
  "id": "server_error",
  "message": "Unexpected server-side error"
}
{
  "id": "example_error",
  "message": "some error message"
}

We can't find any results for your search.

Try using different keywords or simplifying your search terms.