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Infrastructure Monitoring with Amazon CloudWatch

You're reading from   Infrastructure Monitoring with Amazon CloudWatch Effectively optimize resource allocation, detect anomalies, and set automated actions on AWS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566057
Length 314 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ewere Diagboya Ewere Diagboya
Author Profile Icon Ewere Diagboya
Ewere Diagboya
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Monitoring and Amazon CloudWatch
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Monitoring FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: CloudWatch Events and Alarms 4. Chapter 3: CloudWatch Logs, Metrics, and Dashboards 5. Section 2: AWS Services and Amazon CloudWatch
6. Chapter 4: Monitoring AWS Compute Services 7. Chapter 5: Setting Up Container Insights on Amazon CloudWatch 8. Chapter 6: Performance Insights for Database Services 9. Chapter 7: Monitoring Serverless Applications 10. Chapter 8: Using CloudWatch for Maintaining Highly Available Big Data Services 11. Chapter 9: Monitoring Storage Services with Amazon CloudWatch 12. Chapter 10: Monitoring Network Services 13. Chapter 11: Best Practices and Conclusion 14. Assessments 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Analyzing Amazon CloudTrail with Amazon Athena

Our monitoring scope has been focused on a particular service, getting logs from the service and analyzing those logs, using the autogenerated metrics from Amazon CloudWatch or creating our own custom metrics. This monitoring is based on what is going on within the service itself. There are external activities that also go on outside the service. When an EC2 instance is created in the AWS console, that activity can be monitored to know who created the instance, when it was created, and other relevant information about the EC2 instance that has been created. The service that keeps this type of information and more about any service creation or update or deletion is called AWS CloudTrail. CloudTrail serves as the auditor to your AWS account(s). It captures a trail of every activity that goes on within the AWS console. Most of the information it collects is through API calls to the different AWS services.

Important note

API is the acronym...

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