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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 03 Student Guide: 100-ACCLFO-20-EN-SG

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The key takeaways are that AWS has multiple regions, availability zones and edge locations globally and this module will cover AWS global infrastructure and services.

The main components of AWS global infrastructure are regions, availability zones, and edge locations.

The topics covered in this module include AWS global infrastructure, AWS services and categories, and a demonstration and hands-on activity exploring the AWS management console.

AWS Academy Cloud Foundations

Module 03 Student Guide


Version 2.0.6
100-ACCLFO-20-EN-SG
© 2020 Amazon Web Services, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations AWS Academy Cloud Foundations

Contents

Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview 4

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Welcome to Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

This module will address the following topics:


• AWS Global Infrastructure
• AWS service and service category overview

The module includes an educator-led demonstration that focuses on the details of the AWS
Global Infrastructure. The module also includes a hands-on activity where you will explore
the AWS Management Console.

Finally, you will be asked to complete a knowledge check that will test your understanding of
the key concepts that are covered in this module.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

After completing this module, you should be able to:

• Identify the difference between AWS Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations

• Identify AWS service and service categories

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Introducing Section 1: AWS Global Infrastructure.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

To learn more about the AWS Regions that are currently available, see:
https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/.

The diagram shows the 22 current AWS Regions, as well as a few Regions that will become
available soon, including Milan, Cape Town, and Indonesia (as of October 2019).

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

The educator might now choose to conduct a live demonstration of the AWS Global
Infrastructure tool at https://infrastructure.aws. This resource provides an interactive way to
learn about the AWS Global Infrastructure. The remaining slides in this section cover many of
the same topics and go into greater detail on some topics.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

The AWS Cloud infrastructure is built around Regions. AWS has 22 Regions worldwide. An
AWS Region is a physical geographical location with one or more Availability Zones.
Availability Zones in turn consist of one or more data centers.

To achieve fault tolerance and stability, Regions are isolated from one another. Resources in
one Region are not automatically replicated to other Regions. When you store data in a
specific Region, it is not replicated outside that Region.

It is your responsibility to replicate data across Regions, if your business needs require it.

AWS Regions that were introduced before March 20, 2019 are enabled by default. Regions that
were introduced after March 20, 2019—such as Asia Pacific (Hong Kong) and Middle East
(Bahrain)—are disabled by default. You must enable these Regions before you can use them. You
can use the AWS Management Console to enable or disable a Region.

Some Regions have restricted access. An Amazon AWS (China) account provides access to the
Beijing and Ningxia Regions only. To learn more about AWS in China, see:
https://www.amazonaws.cn/en/about-aws/china/. The isolated AWS GovCloud (US) Region is
designed to allow US government agencies and customers to move sensitive workloads into the
cloud by addressing their specific regulatory and compliance requirements.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

There are a few factors that you should consider when you select the optimal Region or Regions
where you store data and use AWS services.

One essential consideration is data governance and legal requirements. Local laws might require
that certain information be kept within geographical boundaries. Such laws might restrict the
Regions where you can offer content or services. For example, consider the European Union (EU)
Data Protection Directive.

All else being equal, it is generally desirable to run your applications and store your data in a
Region that is as close as possible to the user and systems that will access them. This will help you
reduce latency. CloudPing is one website that you can use to test latency between your location
and all AWS Regions. To learn more about CloudPing, see: http://www.cloudping.info/

Keep in mind that not all services are available in all Regions. To learn more, see:
https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-
services/?p=tgi&loc=4.

Finally, there is some variation in the cost of running services, which can depend on which Region
you choose. For example, as of this writing, running an On-Demand t3.medium size Amazon
Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) Linux instance in the US East (Ohio) Region costs $0.0416
per hour, but running the same instance in the Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region costs $0.0544 per hour.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Each AWS Region has multiple, isolated locations that are known as Availability Zones.

Each Availability Zone provides the ability to operate applications and databases that are
more highly available, fault-tolerant, and scalable than would be possible with a single data
center. Each Availability Zone can include multiple data centers (typically three), and at full-
scale, they can include hundreds of thousands of servers. They are fully isolated partitions of
the AWS Global Infrastructure. Availability Zones have their own power infrastructure, and
they are physically separated by many kilometers from other Availability Zones—though all
Availability Zones are within 100 km of each other.

All Availability Zones are interconnected with high-bandwidth, low-latency networking over
fully redundant, dedicated fiber that provides high-throughput between Availability Zones.
The network accomplishes synchronous replication between Availability Zones.

Availability Zones help build highly available applications. When an application is partitioned
across Availability Zones, companies are better isolated and protected from issues such as
lightning, tornadoes, earthquakes, and more.

You are responsible for selecting the Availability Zones where your systems will reside.
Systems can span multiple Availability Zones. AWS recommends replicating across Availability
Zones for resiliency. You should design your systems to survive the temporary or prolonged
failure of an Availability Zone if a disaster occurs.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

The foundation for the AWS infrastructure is the data centers. Customers do not specify a
data center for the deployment of resources. Instead, an Availability Zone is the most
granular level of specification that a customer can make. However, a data center is the
location where the actual data resides. Amazon operates state-of-the-art, highly available
data centers. Although rare, failures can occur that affect the availability of instances in the
same location. If you host all your instances in a single location that is affected by such a
failure, none of your instances will be available.

Data centers are securely designed with several factors in mind:

• Each location is carefully evaluated to mitigate environmental risk.


• Data centers have a redundant design that anticipates and tolerates failure while
maintaining service levels.
• To ensure availability, critical system components are backed up across multiple
Availability Zones.
• To ensure capacity, AWS continuously monitors service usage to deploy infrastructure to
support availability commitments and requirements.
• Data center locations are not disclosed and all access to them is restricted.
• In case of failure, automated processes move data traffic away from the affected area.

AWS uses custom network equipment sourced from multiple original device manufacturers
(ODMs). ODMs design and manufacture products based on specifications from a second
company. The second company then rebrands the products for sale.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Amazon CloudFront is a content delivery network (CDN) used to distribute content to end
users to reduce latency. Amazon Route 53 is a Domain Name System (DNS) service. Requests
going to either one of these services will be routed to the nearest edge location
automatically in order to lower latency.

AWS Points of Presence are located in most of the major cities (69 cities in total) across 30
countries around the world. By continuously measuring internet connectivity, performance
and computing to find the best way to route requests, the Points of Presence deliver a
better near real-time user experience. They are used by many AWS services, including
Amazon CloudFront, Amazon Route 53, AWS Shield, and AWS Web Application Firewall (AWS
WAF) services.

Regional edge caches are used by default with Amazon CloudFront. Regional edge caches are
used when you have content that is not accessed frequently enough to remain in an edge
location. Regional edge caches absorb this content and provide an alternative to that content
having to be fetched from the origin server.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Now that you have a good understanding of the major components that comprise the AWS
Global Infrastructure, let's consider the benefits provided by this infrastructure.

The AWS Global Infrastructure has several valuable features:

• First, it is elastic and scalable. This means resources can dynamically adjust to increases or
decreases in capacity requirements. It can also rapidly adjust to accommodate growth.

• Second, this infrastructure is fault tolerant, which means it has built-in component
redundancy which enables it to continue operations despite a failed component.

• Finally, it requires minimal to no human intervention, while providing high availability


with minimal down time.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Some key takeaways from this section of the module include:

• The AWS Global Infrastructure consists of Regions and Availability Zones.

• Your choice of a Region is typically based on compliance requirements or to reduce


latency.

• Each Availability Zone is physically separate from other Availability Zones and has
redundant power, networking, and connectivity.

• Edge locations, and Regional edge caches improve performance by caching content closer
to users.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Introducing Part 2: AWS Service and Service Category Overview.

AWS offers a broad set of global cloud-based products that can be used as building blocks for
common cloud architectures. Here is a look at how these cloud based products are organized.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

As discussed previously, the AWS Global Infrastructure can be broken down into three
elements: Regions, Availability Zones, and Points of Presence, which include edge locations.
This infrastructure provides the platform for a broad set of services, such as networking,
storage, compute services, and databases—and these services are delivered as an on-
demand utility that is available in seconds, with pay-as-you-go pricing.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS offers a broad set of cloud-based services. There are 23 different product or service
categories, and each category consists of one or more services. This course will not attempt
to introduce you to each service. Rather, the focus of this course is on the services that are
most widely used and offer the best introduction to the AWS Cloud. This course also focuses
on services that are more likely to be covered in the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam.

The categories that this course will discuss are highlighted on the slide: Compute, Cost
Management, Database, Management and Governance, Networking and Content Delivery,
Security, Identity, and Compliance, and Storage.

To learn more about AWS products, see Cloud Products. All AWS products are organized
into the service categories that are shown here. For example, if you click Compute, you will
see that Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) is first on the list. The compute
category also lists many other products and services.

If you click Amazon EC2, it takes you to the Amazon EC2 page. Each product page provides a
detailed description of the product and lists some of its benefits.

Explore the different service groups to understand the categories and services within them.
Now that you know how to locate information about different services, this module will
discuss the highlighted service categories. The next seven slides list the individual services
—within each of the categories highlighted above—that this course will discuss.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS storage services include the services listed here, and many others.

Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) is an object storage service that offers
scalability, data availability, security, and performance. Use it to store and protect any
amount of data for websites, mobile apps, backup and restore, archive, enterprise
applications, Internet of Things (IoT) devices, and big data analytics.

Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) is high-performance block storage that is designed
for use with Amazon EC2 for both throughput and transaction intensive workloads. It is used
for a broad range of workloads, such as relational and non-relational databases, enterprise
applications, containerized applications, big data analytics engines, file systems, and media
workflows.

Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) provides a scalable, fully managed elastic Network
File System (NFS) file system for use with AWS Cloud services and on-premises resources. It is
built to scale on demand to petabytes, growing and shrinking automatically as you add and
remove files. It reduces the need to provision and manage capacity to accommodate growth.

Amazon Simple Storage Service Glacier is a secure, durable, and extremely low-cost Amazon
S3 cloud storage class for data archiving and long-term backup. It is designed to deliver 11 9s
of durability, and to provide comprehensive security and compliance capabilities to meet
stringent regulatory requirements.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS compute services include the services listed here, and many others.

Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) provides resizable compute capacity as virtual
machines in the cloud.

Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling enables you to automatically add or remove EC2 instances
according to conditions that you define.

Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) is a highly scalable, high-performance


container orchestration service that supports Docker containers.

Amazon Elastic Container Registry (Amazon ECR) is a fully-managed Docker container


registry that makes it easy for developers to store, manage, and deploy Docker container
images.

AWS Elastic Beanstalk is a service for deploying and scaling web applications and services on
familiar servers such as Apache and Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS).

AWS Lambda enables you to run code without provisioning or managing servers. You pay
only for the compute time that you consume. There is no charge when your code is not
running.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) makes it easy to deploy, manage, and
scale containerized applications that use Kubernetes on AWS.

AWS Fargate is a compute engine for Amazon ECS that allows you to run containers without
having to manage servers or clusters.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS database services include the services listed here, and many others.

Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) makes it easy to set up, operate, and
scale a relational database in the cloud. It provides resizable capacity while automating time-
consuming administration tasks such as hardware provisioning, database setup, patching, and
backups.

Amazon Aurora is a MySQL and PostgreSQL-compatible relational database. It is up to five


times faster than standard MySQL databases and three times faster than standard
PostgreSQL databases.

Amazon Redshift enables you to run analytic queries against petabytes of data that is stored
locally in Amazon Redshift, and directly against exabytes of data that are stored in Amazon
S3. It delivers fast performance at any scale.

Amazon DynamoDB is a key-value and document database that delivers single-digit


millisecond performance at any scale, with built-in security, backup and restore, and in-
memory caching.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS networking and content delivery services include the services listed here, and many
others.

Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) enables you to provision logically isolated
sections of the AWS Cloud.

Elastic Load Balancing automatically distributes incoming application traffic across multiple
targets, such as Amazon EC2 instances, containers, IP addresses, and Lambda functions.

Amazon CloudFront is a fast content delivery network (CDN) service that securely delivers
data, videos, applications, and application programming interfaces (APIs) to customers
globally, with low latency and high transfer speeds.

AWS Transit Gateway is a service that enables customers to connect their Amazon Virtual
Private Clouds (VPCs) and their on-premises networks to a single gateway.

Amazon Route 53 is a scalable cloud Domain Name System (DNS) web service designed to
give you a reliable way to route end users to internet applications. It translates names (like
www.example.com) into the numeric IP addresses (like 192.0.2.1) that computers use to
connect to each other.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS Direct Connect provides a way to establish a dedicated private network connection
from your data center or office to AWS, which can reduce network costs and increase
bandwidth throughput.

AWS VPN provides a secure private tunnel from your network or device to the AWS global
network.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS security, identity, and compliance services include the services listed here, and many
others.

AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) enables you to manage access to AWS services
and resources securely. By using IAM, you can create and manage AWS users and groups. You
can use IAM permissions to allow and deny user and group access to AWS resources.

AWS Organizations allows you to restrict what services and actions are allowed in your
accounts.

Amazon Cognito lets you add user sign-up, sign-in, and access control to your web and
mobile apps.

AWS Artifact provides on-demand access to AWS security and compliance reports and select
online agreements.

AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) enables you to create and manage keys. You can
use AWS KMS to control the use of encryption across a wide range of AWS services and in
your applications.

AWS Shield is a managed Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) protection service that
safeguards applications running on AWS.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS cost management services include the services listed here, and others.

The AWS Cost and Usage Report contains the most comprehensive set of AWS cost and
usage data available, including additional metadata about AWS services, pricing, and
reservations.

AWS Budgets enables you to set custom budgets that alert you when your costs or usage
exceed (or are forecasted to exceed) your budgeted amount.

AWS Cost Explorer has an easy-to-use interface that enables you to visualize, understand,
and manage your AWS costs and usage over time.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

AWS management and governance services include the services listed here, and others.

The AWS Management Console provides a web-based user interface for accessing your AWS
account.

AWS Config provides a service that helps you track resource inventory and changes.

Amazon CloudWatch allows you to monitor resources and applications.

AWS Auto Scaling provides features that allow you to scale multiple resources to meet
demand.

AWS Command Line Interface provides a unified tool to manage AWS services.

AWS Trusted Advisor helps you optimize performance and security.

AWS Well-Architected Tool provides help in reviewing and improving your workloads.

AWS CloudTrail tracks user activity and API usage.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

In this educator-led activity, you will be asked to log in to the AWS Management Console. The
activity instructions are on the next slide. You will be challenged to answer five questions.
The educator will lead the class in a discussion of each question, and reveal the correct
answers.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

The purpose of this activity is to expose you to the AWS Management Console. You will gain
experience navigating between AWS service consoles (such as the Amazon VPC console). You
will also practice navigating to services in different service categories. Finally, the console will
help you distinguish whether a given service or service resource is global or Regional.

Follow the instructions on the slide. After most or all students have completed the steps
document above, the educator will review the questions and answers with the whole class.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

This slide provides an answer key to the questions that were asked in the activity on the
previous slide. The educator will use this slide to lead a discussion and debrief the hands-on
activity.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

It’s now time to review the module and wrap up with a knowledge check and discussion of a
practice certification exam question.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

In summary, in this module you learned how to:

• Identify the difference between AWS Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations

• Identify AWS service and service categories

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

It is now time to complete the knowledge check for this module.

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Look at the answer choices and rule them out based on the keywords that were previously
highlighted.

This sample exam question comes from the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner sample exam
questions document that is linked to from the main AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam
information page. To learn more about the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam, see:
https://aws.amazon.com/certification/certified-cloud-practitioner/

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

The following resources provide more detail on the topics discussed in this module:

• AWS Global Infrastructure


• AWS Global Infrastructure Region Table
• AWS Cloud Products

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AWS Academy Cloud Foundations Module 3: AWS Global Infrastructure Overview

Thank you for completing this module.

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