Book Image

AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide

By : Vipul Tankariya, Bhavin Parmar
Book Image

AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide

By: Vipul Tankariya, Bhavin Parmar

Overview of this book

AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide starts with a quick introduction to AWS and the prerequisites to get you started. Then, this book gives you a fair understanding of core AWS services and basic architecture. Next, this book will describe about getting familiar with Identity and Access Management (IAM) along with Virtual private cloud (VPC). Moving ahead you will learn about Elastic Compute cloud (EC2) and handling application traffic with Elastic Load Balancing (ELB). Going ahead you we will talk about Monitoring with CloudWatch, Simple storage service (S3) and Glacier and CloudFront along with other AWS storage options. Next we will take you through AWS DynamoDB – A NoSQL Database Service, Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS) and CloudFormation Overview. Finally, this book covers understanding Elastic Beanstalk and overview of AWS lambda. At the end of this book, we will cover enough topics, tips and tricks along with mock tests for you to be able to pass the AWS Certified Developer - Associate exam and develop as well as manage your applications on the AWS platform.
Table of Contents (29 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface
Index

Chapter 7. Monitoring with CloudWatch

CloudWatch is an AWS service that can be used on the AWS cloud for monitoring various infrastructure and application resources running on your AWS cloud. CloudWatch can be used to collect a number of metrics from the AWS resources. It allows you to track these metrics and also initiate actions based on the threshold you set. CloudWatch can also collect log files, generate metrics out of them, and help to monitor log files. You can set alarms on specific events and trigger an action whenever an event occurs. For example, if CPU utilization for a specific instance crosses a threshold of 80%, you can initiate an action to spin up a new instance.

CloudWatch supports the monitoring of many AWS services such as EC2 instances, DynamoDB, RDS, and so on. You can also generate custom metrics and log files using your own applications and associate them with CloudWatch. Amazon services like Auto Scaling uses CloudWatch alarms to automatically scale an environment...