Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Elastic IP addresses (EIPs) in Amazon Web Services (AWS) are a useful resource for static public IP addresses that you can allocate to your AWS resources, such as EC2 instances, NAT Gateways, and Elastic Load Balancers.
Over time, it’s common to accumulate unused EC2 keypairs from EC2 instances that might not be running on your AWS account anymore. Keeping these unused keypairs can create unnecessary clutter and increase security risks.
As an AWS developer or engineer, it’s essential to manage your AWS resources effectively to optimize your usage and reduce costs. One common issue that arises is the accumulation of unattached EBS volumes, which can result in unnecessary costs.
Security groups are an important part of ensuring your instances are secure. It acts as a virtual firewall for your instances, controlling inbound and outbound traffic. Over time, you might have created many security groups that are not used anymore.
When you’re working with AWS, you might create security groups that are no longer needed. These unused security groups can clutter up your account and make it difficult to manage your security configuration.
Have you ever needed to execute boto3 methods on multiple AWS accounts at once? Manually switching between accounts and running the same commands over and over can be a tedious and time-consuming task.
Amazon CloudWatch Logs is a great tool to help you collect, monitor, and analyze your logs. When you create a log group, it is important to consider how long you need to retain the log data for compliance reasons.
Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) is a fully-managed container orchestration service that makes it easy to run, stop, and manage Docker containers on a cluster. In ECS, task definitions describe the container and task configuration for tasks that are run on the ECS service.
It seems like only yesterday I was last writing the Week in Review post, at the end of January, and now here we are almost mid-way through March, almost into spring in the northern hemisphere, and close to a quarter way through 2023. Where does time fly?!
Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform 2 is the next generation automation platform from Red Hat’s trusted enterprise technology experts. We are excited to announce that the Ansible Automation Platform 2.3 release includes automation controller 4.3.
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