Book Image

AWS Administration Cookbook

By : Rowan Udell, Lucas Chan
Book Image

AWS Administration Cookbook

By: Rowan Udell, Lucas Chan

Overview of this book

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is a bundled remote computing service that provides cloud computing infrastructure over the Internet with storage, bandwidth, and customized support for application programming interfaces (API). Implementing these services to efficiently administer your cloud environments is a core task. This book will help you build and administer your cloud environment with AWS. We’ll begin with the AWS fundamentals, and you’ll build the foundation for the recipes you’ll work on throughout the book. Next, you will find out how to manage multiple accounts and set up consolidated billing. You will then learn to set up reliable and fast hosting for static websites, share data between running instances, and back up your data for compliance. Moving on, you will find out how to use the compute service to enable consistent and fast instance provisioning, and will see how to provision storage volumes and autoscale an application server. Next, you’ll discover how to effectively use the networking and database service of AWS. You will also learn about the different management tools of AWS along with securing your AWS cloud. Finally, you will learn to estimate the costs for your cloud. By the end of the book, you will be able to easily administer your AWS cloud.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Creating a database with automatic failover


In this recipe, we're going to create a MySQL RDS database instance configured in multi-AZ mode to facilitate automatic failover.

Database with automatic failover

Getting ready

The default VPC will work fine for this example. Once you are comfortable with creating databases, you may want to consider a VPC containing private subnets that you can use to segment your database away from the Internet and other resources (in the style of a three tier application). Either way, you'll need to note down the following:

  • The ID of the VPC
  • The CIDR range of the VPC
  • The IDs of at least two subnets in your VPC. These subnets need to be in different Availability Zones, for example, us-east-1a and us-east-1b

How to do it...

Create a new CloudFormation template. We're going to add a total of 12 parameters to it:

  1. The first three parameters will contain the values we mentioned in the Getting ready section:
      VPCId: 
        Type: AWS::EC2::VPC::Id 
        Description:...