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AWS Certified SysOps Administrator ??? Associate Guide

You're reading from   AWS Certified SysOps Administrator ??? Associate Guide Your one-stop solution for passing the AWS SysOps Administrator certification

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788990776
Length 584 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marko Sluga Marko Sluga
Author Profile Icon Marko Sluga
Marko Sluga
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of AWS Certified SysOps Administrators and Associated Certification 2. The Fundamentals of Amazon Web Services FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing AWS Security with Identity and Access Management 4. Networking with the Virtual Private Cloud 5. Managing Servers on AWS with Elastic Compute Cloud 6. Handling Server Traffic with Elastic Load Balancing 7. Understanding Simple Storage Service and Glacier 8. Understanding Content Distribution with CloudFront 9. AWS Storage Options 10. Working with the Route 53 Domain Name System 11. Working with Relational Database Services 12. Introduction to ElastiCache 13. Amazon DynamoDB - A NoSQL Database Service 14. Working with Simple Queue Service 15. Handling Messaging with Simple Notification Service 16. Getting Started with Simple Workflow Service 17. Overview of AWS Lambda 18. Monitoring Resources with Amazon CloudWatch 19. Understanding Elastic Beanstalk 20. Automation with the CloudFormation Service 21. Cloud Orchestration with OpsWorks 22. Exam Tips and Tricks 23. Mock Tests 24. Assessments 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Monitoring Elastic Beanstalk environments

We will discuss Elastic Beanstalk in more detail in the next chapter, but essentially our Elastic Beanstalk environments are self-contained applications that provide all the services required to run our code. The environments themselves are created in a transparent manner and should be monitored according to the features that are created within the environment.

For example, an Elastic Beanstalk application could be composed of EC2 instances, an ELB, a RDS database, an SQS queue, and so on. All of these components need to be monitored in the same way as if we created those services ourselves. We do have an additional set of metrics that we can follow in the CloudWatch overview section when selecting Elastic Beanstalk. Here, we can see the environment health status and the HTTP response codes ordered by class (200, 300, 400, and 500 errors...

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