Amazon AWS Concepts: Difference between revisions
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AWS has data centers in different areas of the world. | AWS has data centers in different areas of the world. | ||
Amazon regions | Amazon regions: | ||
ap-southeast-2, EU (Frankfurt) eu-central-1 | * Asia Pacific (Tokyo) ap-northeast-1 | ||
* Asia Pacific (Singapore) ap-southeast-1 | |||
* Asia Pacific (Sydney) ap-southeast-2, | |||
* EU (Frankfurt) eu-central-1 | |||
* EU (Ireland) eu-west-1 | |||
* South America (Sao Paulo) sa-east-1 | |||
* US East (N. Virginia) us-east-1 | |||
* US West (N. California) us-west-1 | |||
* US West (Oregon) us-west-2 | |||
=Availability Zones= | =Availability Zones= |
Revision as of 17:02, 24 October 2018
Internal
Account
IAM User
Region
AWS has data centers in different areas of the world.
Amazon regions:
- Asia Pacific (Tokyo) ap-northeast-1
- Asia Pacific (Singapore) ap-southeast-1
- Asia Pacific (Sydney) ap-southeast-2,
- EU (Frankfurt) eu-central-1
- EU (Ireland) eu-west-1
- South America (Sao Paulo) sa-east-1
- US East (N. Virginia) us-east-1
- US West (N. California) us-west-1
- US West (Oregon) us-west-2
Availability Zones
An availability zone is a distinct location within a region engineered to be isolated from failures in other availability zones. Think about it as location: by placing resources in different availability zones you can protect the application from the failure of a single location. Each region provides low-latency network connectivity with other zones within the same region. Example of availability zones within a region: us-west-2b.
The list of zones and their codes is available here:
An auto-scaling group can span multiple availability zones.
Availability zone operations: