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Instance-store volumes are temporary storage, which survive rebooting an EC2 instance, but when the instance is stopped or terminated (e.g., by an API call, or due to a failure), this store is lost. The Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) provides raw block devices that can be attached to Amazon EC2 instances. These block devices can then be used ...
Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) provides raw block-level storage that can be attached to Amazon EC2 instances and is used by Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS). [1] It is one of the two block-storage options offered by AWS, with the other being the EC2 Instance Store. [2] Amazon EBS provides a range of options for storage performance and ...
The number of instances that the autoscaling group should have at any given point in time. If the size is less than the desired size, the autoscaling group will try to launch (provision and attach) new instances. If the size is more than the desired size, the autoscaling group will try to remove (detach and terminate) instances: Minimum size
AWS Graviton CPU powered EC2 A1 instances are publicly available in 4 regions. [183] 2018 November 28 Product (compute) AWS launches hibernation for EC2 instances. [184] 2018 November 28 Product (AI) Amazon Textract is a "service that automatically extracts text and data from scanned documents." [185] [186] 2018 November 28 Product
Amazon ElastiCache is a fully managed in-memory data store and cache service by Amazon Web Services (AWS).The service improves the performance of web applications by retrieving information from managed in-memory caches, instead of relying entirely on slower disk-based databases.
EC2 or EC-2 may refer to: Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), a commercial web service for hosting computer applications; Cardoen EC-2 mine, an anti-personnel mine; Cessna EC-2, a 1930s aircraft; EC2, a district in the London EC postcode area; EC2-S-C1, U.S. World War II Liberty ships
Often used together, the terms business continuity (BC) and disaster recovery (DR) are very different. BC refers to the ability of a business to continue critical functions and business processes after the occurrence of a disaster, whereas DR refers specifically to the IT functions of the business, albeit a subset of BC.
IT service continuity (ITSC) is a subset of BCP, [4] which relies on the metrics (frequently used as key risk indicators) of recovery point/time objectives.It encompasses IT disaster recovery planning and the wider IT resilience planning.