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AWS for System Administrators

You're reading from  AWS for System Administrators

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800201538
Pages 388 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Prashant Lakhera Prashant Lakhera
Profile icon Prashant Lakhera
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: AWS Services and Tools
2. Chapter 1: Setting Up the AWS Environment 3. Chapter 2: Protecting Your AWS Account Using IAM 4. Section 2: Building the Infrastructure
5. Chapter 3: Creating a Data Center in the Cloud Using VPC 6. Chapter 4: Scalable Compute Capacity in the Cloud via EC2 7. Section 3: Adding Scalability and Elasticity to the Infrastructure
8. Chapter 5: Increasing an Application's Fault Tolerance with Elastic Load Balancing 9. Chapter 6: Increasing Application Performance Using AWS Auto Scaling 10. Chapter 7: Creating a Relational Database in the Cloud using AWS Relational Database Service (RDS) 11. Section 4: The Monitoring, Metrics, and Backup Layers
12. Chapter 8: Monitoring AWS Services Using CloudWatch and SNS 13. Chapter 9: Centralizing Logs for Analysis 14. Chapter 10: Centralizing Cloud Backup Solution 15. Chapter 11: AWS Disaster Recovery Solutions 16. Chapter 12: AWS Tips and Tricks 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

CloudWatch monitoring

Let's take a look at some of the metrics published by CloudWatch. To view those metrics, go to the EC2 instance Uniform Resource Locator (URL) at https://us-west-2.console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/v2/home?region=us-west-2#Instances, and then select one of the instances (created during Chapter 4, Scalable Compute Capacity in the Cloud via EC2) and click on Monitoring. In this case, we see metrics sent by EC2 to CloudWatch. These are host-level metrics that consist of the following:

  • CPU utilization, CPU credit usage, and balance
  • Network packets/data in and out
  • Disk read/write
  • Status check (instance/system)

We can see some of these metrics (for example, CPU utilization, disk read/write, and network packets) in the following screenshot:

Figure 8.1 – AWS CloudWatch dashboard for EC2 instance

Figure 8.1 – AWS CloudWatch dashboard for EC2 instance

By default, EC2 monitoring takes 5 minutes, but if you enable Detailed Monitoring, you will get data in 1 minute...

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