Book Image

Hybrid Cloud for Developers

By : Manoj Hirway
Book Image

Hybrid Cloud for Developers

By: Manoj Hirway

Overview of this book

This book introduces you to the hybrid cloud platform, and focuses on the AWS public cloud and OpenStack private cloud platforms. It provides a deep dive into the AWS and OpenStack cloud platform services that are essential for developing hybrid cloud applications. You will learn to develop applications on AWS and OpenStack platforms with ease by leveraging various cloud services and taking advantage of PaaS. The book provides you with the ability to leverage the ?exibility of choosing a cloud platform for migrating your existing resources to the cloud, as well as developing hybrid cloud applications that can migrate virtual machine instances from AWS to OpenStack and vice versa. You will also be able to build and test cloud applications without worrying about the system that your development environment supports. The book also provides an in-depth understanding of the best practices that are followed across the industry for developing cloud applications, as well as for adapting the hybrid cloud platform. Lastly, it also sheds light on various troubleshooting techniques for OpenStack and AWS cloud platform services that are consumed by hybrid cloud applications. By the end of this book, you will have a deep understanding of the hybrid cloud platform and will be able to develop robust, efficient, modular, scalable, and ?exible cloud applications.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Troubleshooting AWS


The AWS public cloud provides several services and troubleshooting each of these services requires its own set of expertise. We will look at the the most commonly used services that are involved in hybrid cloud configuration, for instance, the EC2 service.  

AWS Direct Connect

The AWS Direct Connect service is widely used for configuring hybrid cloud environments. Let's discuss some of the most common issues with AWS Direct Connect:

  • If you are unable to ping the Amazon peer IP address, check if the IP address is correctly configured and is in the proper VLAN. Also in the ARP table, check that the router has a MAC address of the AWS endpoint.
  • If there are any intermediate devices in between, check that they have VLAN trunking enabled for the 802.1Q VLAN tag.
  • Its always a good idea to flush the ARP table cache before testing connectivity issues.
  • If you are able to ping the AWS peer IP address, but the virtual interface seems down, check if the BGP ASN and AWS ASN are correctly...