Book Image

AWS Observability Handbook

By : Phani Kumar Lingamallu, Fabio Braga de Oliveira
Book Image

AWS Observability Handbook

By: Phani Kumar Lingamallu, Fabio Braga de Oliveira

Overview of this book

As modern application architecture grows increasingly complex, identifying potential points of failure and measuring end user satisfaction, in addition to monitoring application availability, is key. This book helps you explore AWS observability tools that provide end-to-end visibility, enabling quick identification of performance bottlenecks in distributed applications. You’ll gain a holistic view of monitoring and observability on AWS, starting from observability basics using Amazon CloudWatch and AWS X-Ray to advanced ML-powered tools such as AWS DevOps Guru. As you progress, you'll learn about AWS-managed open source services such as AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry (ADOT) and AWS managed Prometheus, Grafana, and the ELK Stack. You’ll implement observability in EC2 instances, containers, Kubernetes, and serverless apps and grasp UX monitoring. With a fair mix of concepts and examples, this book helps you gain hands-on experience in implementing end-to-end AWS observability in your applications and navigating and troubleshooting performance issues with the help of use cases. You'll also learn best practices and guidelines, such as how observability relates to the Well-Architected Framework. By the end of this AWS book, you’ll be able to implement observability and monitoring in your apps using AWS’ native and managed open source tools in real-world scenarios.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started with Observability on AWS
6
Part 2: Automated and Machine Learning-Powered Observability on AWS
11
Part 3: Open Source Managed Services on AWS
15
Part 4: Scaled Observability and Beyond

Applying the Well-architected framework and exploring automated solutions

Let’s understand how you can apply the Well-architected framework for your cloud observability solution and understand the automated solutions available to meet the business requirements, such as high availability, resiliency, and failover mechanisms.

Operational excellence

The Operational Excellence design principles focus on five major components: perform operations as a code; make frequent, small, and reversible changes; refine operations procedures frequently; anticipate failures; and learn from all operational failures. I suggest you look into the details of the Operational Excellence pillar and go through the design principles and the best practice definitions from AWS at https://docs.aws.amazon.com/wellarchitected/latest/operational-excellence-pillar/welcome.html.

Now let’s see how we can apply these design principles and understand the best practice recommendations from AWS and...