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Book Overview & Buying
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Table Of Contents
AWS for System Administrators - Second Edition
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When dealing with an AWS environment, it is often useful to think of an account as a container into which workloads and infrastructure are deployed. In theory, we can put all our resources into one account. However, this will quickly lead to problems with separation. Imagine you have your development and production all in one account. Which of the databases was the production one again? And which resource can be deleted without any side effects for our production workload?
It thus makes sense to operate multiple AWS accounts that are dedicated to aspects of your cloud infrastructure. Depending on the size of your organization, you might want to have a dedicated account just for backups, one where you store audit logs and multiple accounts for a workload – one for each stage.
To make these kinds of setups easier to build, AWS provides us with a few tools. To manage our accounts, we have the previously introduced AWS Organizations...