Book Image

Effective DevOps with AWS - Second Edition

By : Yogesh Raheja, Giuseppe Borgese, Nathaniel Felsen
Book Image

Effective DevOps with AWS - Second Edition

By: Yogesh Raheja, Giuseppe Borgese, Nathaniel Felsen

Overview of this book

The DevOps movement has transformed the way modern tech companies work. Amazon Web Services (AWS), which has been at the forefront of the cloud computing revolution, has also been a key contributor to the DevOps movement, creating a huge range of managed services that help you implement DevOps principles. Effective DevOps with AWS, Second Edition will help you to understand how the most successful tech start-ups launch and scale their services on AWS, and will teach you how you can do the same. This book explains how to treat infrastructure as code, meaning you can bring resources online and offline as easily as you control your software. You will also build a continuous integration and continuous deployment pipeline to keep your app up to date. Once you have gotten to grips will all this, we'll move on to how to scale your applications to offer maximum performance to users even when traffic spikes, by using the latest technologies, such as containers. In addition to this, you'll get insights into monitoring and alerting, so you can make sure your users have the best experience when using your service. In the concluding chapters, we'll cover inbuilt AWS tools such as CodeDeploy and CloudFormation, which are used by many AWS administrators to perform DevOps. By the end of this book, you'll have learned how to ensure the security of your platform and data, using the latest and most prominent AWS tools.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

CloudTrail


We have enabled IAM personal users and have avoided the root account. We have also assigned the necessary IAM policy to our groups, and have assigned each user to the right group. However, we also need to record all of their actions. To fulfill this purpose, the AWS service to enable is CloudTrail. 

Each event performed over the AWS infrastructure by an IAM user or a resource with an IAM role assigned to it will be recorded in an S3 bucket and/or in a CloudWatch log group. My advice is to follow the AWS documentation at: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/awscloudtrail/latest/userguide/cloudtrail-create-a-trail-using-the-console-first-time.html. Creating a trail from the web console will be very straightforward, if you read this document.

VPC Flow Logs

An intrusion detection system (IDS) and anintrusion prevention system (IPS) are common tools in a secure network. In an on-premise environment, they are not so easy or cheap to implement, because you need dedicated hardware, and also a network...