AWS Distro für OpenTelemetry bietet Unterstützung für Amazon ECS in Amazon CloudWatch Container Insights und Metrik-Unterstützung für AWS Lambda-Anwendungen in Amazon Managed Prometheus (Vorschau)

Ab heute bietet AWS Distro for OpenTelemetry (ADOT) Unterstützung für Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS)-Metriken, die auf Amazon Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) laufen, in Amazon CloudWatch Container Insights (Vorschau), so dass Kunden auf einfache Weise Container-Metriken sammeln und sie zusammen mit anderen Metriken in Amazon CloudWatch analysieren können. Sie können auch AWS Lambda-Anwendungsmetriken sammeln und sie an Amazon Managed Service for Prometheus (Vorschau) senden.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

AWS IoT Device Management kündigt neue Erweiterungen für die Flottenüberwachung an

Heute kündigt AWS IoT die allgemeine Verfügbarkeit mehrerer neuer Erweiterungen für AWS IoT Device Management an. Diese neuen Funktionen ermöglichen es den Kunden, die Merkmale ihrer Flotte im Laufe der Zeit besser zu überwachen, Verbindungsprobleme zu diagnostizieren und Aggregationsabfragen durchzuführen, um Geräte mit unterschiedlichen Werten zu gruppieren.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

AWS kündigt allgemeine Verfügbarkeit von Amazon Managed Grafana mit SAML 2.0 und Grafana v8.0-Funktionen an

Amazon Managed Grafana ist nun allgemein verfügbar. Amazon Managed Grafana ist ein vollständig verwalteter, sicherer Datenvisualisierungsservice, mit dem Kunden Betriebsmetriken, Protokolle und Traces für ihre Anwendungen über mehrere Datenquellen hinweg abfragen, korrelieren und visualisieren können. Entwickelt in Zusammenarbeit mit Grafana Labs, verwaltet Amazon Managed Grafana die Bereitstellung, Einrichtung, Skalierung und Wartung von Grafana-Servern, was den Bedarf für Kunden dies selbst zu tun eliminiert.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Modernizing your serverless applications

Continuing innovation in serverlessGoogle Cloud recently released a suite of resources designed to help customers modernize their serverless compute platform experience and upgrade to the latest features as well as newer products which may be a better fit for their workloads. The initial content is focused on users of the very first Cloud product, Google App Engine.App Engine launched in 2008 as the first serverless product long before the buzzword was coined. Since then, App Engine has been adopted by many customers worldwide. The Cloud team didn’t stop there and continued to roll out additional features and product launches, including: App Engine’s Flexible environment to support additional runtimes (2016), Cloud Functions, for microservice or FaaS/function-hosting (2017), a more open second generation App Engine platform supporting newer language releases (2018), and Cloud Run, giving users the ability to serve containerized applications in a serverless environment (2019). With a more complete product suite and a more open platform, developers have more choices than ever before.As App Engine became more popular, many of its original services matured to become their own standalone Cloud products. For example, App Engine’s original Task Queues service is now Cloud Tasks, and its original Datastore service is now Cloud Datastore. Furthermore, some users have expressed the desire to also run their App Engine apps on-premise but discovered the App Engine services only work on the platform. These factors led to the launch of App Engine’s second generation platform without those bundled proprietary services. As a result, users have more options, and their apps are more portable. Support for more modern language runtimes such as Python 3, PHP 7, and the introduction of Node.js was also featured as part of this release.Helping users modernize their serverless appsWith the sunset of Python 2, Java 8, PHP 5, and Go 1.11, by their respective communities, Google Cloud has assured users by expressing continued long-term support of these legacy runtimes, including maintaining the Python 2 runtime. So while there is no requirement for users to migrate, developers themselves are expressing interest in updating their applications to the latest language releases.Google Cloud provides a set of migration guides for users modernizing from Python 2 to 3, Java 8 to 11, PHP 5 to 7, and Go 1.11 to 1.12+ as well as a summary of what is available in both first and second generation runtimes. However, moving to unbundled services (standalone Cloud equivalents or third-party alternatives) may not be intuitive to everyone. And while new products and users are great, helping existing users modernize their apps to take advantage of newer features is just as good. To that end, earlier this year, we launched the “Serverless Migration Station” video series and corresponding code samples and codelab tutorials, initially focused on Python and App Engine.Migration modulesEach “migration module” teaches a single modernization technique, usually as it relates to one of our serverless platforms. These scenarios include migrating from a legacy App Engine service, upgrading a serverless data storage solution from Cloud Datastore to Cloud Firestore, or even changing products altogether, like containerizing App Engine apps for Cloud Run.A video plus a codelab (free, self-paced tutorial) provide with hands-on experience implementing specific migrations, giving users the “muscle memory” needed for when they’re ready to make the same upgrades to their own applications. All modules feature a nearly-identical sample app. The starting point is always a working app to which the migration is applied, resulting in another working app, usually functionally-identical unless otherwise specified. Here are some modules available today (with more coming soon):Migrating web frameworks from webapp2 to FlaskMigrating from App Engine ndb to Cloud NDBMigrating from the Cloud NDB to Cloud DatastoreContainerizing and migrating from App Engine to Cloud Run (Docker)Containerizing and migrating from App Engine to Cloud Run (Cloud Buildpacks)Migrating from Cloud Datastore to Cloud FirestoreMigrating from App Engine taskqueue to Cloud TasksAll migration modules, their videos (when available), codelabs, and sample source code, can be found in the migration module repo. In addition to these modules, separate repos for migration samples from the documentation as well as community-sourced migration samples are also available. We hope these resources help you accelerate modernizing your serverless apps and demonstrates Google Cloud’s commitment to both existing customers as well as new ones!Related ArticleNew features to better secure your Google App Engine appsAnnouncing new features to further extend the security already provided by App Engine: Egress Controls and User-managed service accounts.Read Article
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform

AWS Launch Wizard unterstützt jetzt zusätzliche Bereitstellungsfunktionen, um DevOps und organisatorische Anforderungen zu erfüllen

Wenn Sie SAP-Anwendungen mit AWS Launch Wizard bereitstellen, werden jetzt die CloudFormation-Vorlagen und der Anwendungskonfigurationscode in Ihren S3 Buckets gespeichert und nach Abschluss der Bereitstellung ein AWS-Service-Catalog-Produkt erstellt. Auf diese Weise können Sie die vom Launch Wizard generierte Infrastruktur als Code nutzen, um Bereitstellungen mit identischer Konfiguration zu wiederholen oder sie an die organisatorischen Anforderungen anzupassen. Dies bietet eine Reihe von Nutzen:

Auswahl: Verwenden Sie Bereitstellungstools (z. B. ServiceNow, Jira, CloudFormation) und Prozesse Ihrer Wahl.
Versioning: Nehmen Sie neue Funktionen und Fähigkeiten des Launch Wizard in Ihrem eigenen Tempo an.
Vereinfachung: Mit dieser Einführung können Sie die Anzahl der Eingaben reduzieren, die für wiederholte Bereitstellungen desselben Produkts/Musters erforderlich sind. Wenn Sie beispielsweise mehrere HANA-Systeme derselben Version in derselben VPC und demselben Subnetz bereitstellen, können Sie diese Einstellungen in AWS ServiceCatalog/AWS CloudFormation standardmäßig festlegen und den Endbenutzer nur mit anderen Eingaben interagieren lassen, die sich von Bereitstellung zu Bereitstellung ändern.

Quelle: aws.amazon.com