Today, we’re announcing the general availability of Amazon EC2 I8g instances, a new storage optimized instance type to provide the highest real-time storage performance among storage-optimized EC2 instances with the third generation of AWS Nitro SSDs and AWS Graviton4 processors. AWS Graviton4 is the most powerful and energy efficient processor we have ever designed for a broad range of workloads running on EC2 instances using a 64-bit ARM instruction set architecture. AWS Nitro System SSDs are custom built by AWS and offer high I/O performance, low latency, minimal latency variability, and security with always-on encryption. EC2 I8g instances are the first instance type to use third-generation AWS Nitro SSDs. These instances offer up to 22.5 TB local NVME SSD storage…
Now available: Storage optimized Amazon EC2 I7ie instances
The new storage optimized Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) I7ie instances feature up to 120 TB of low latency NVMe storage and 5th generation Intel Xeon Scalable Processors with an all-core turbo frequency of 3.2 GHz. Fueled by 3rd Generation AWS Nitro SSDs, these instances deliver the highest storage density available in the cloud today. When compared to the previous generation of storage optimized instances, they provide: Up to 65% better real-time storage performance per TB Up to 50% lower I/O latency with up to 65% lower latency variability Up to 40% better compute performance Up to twice as many vCPUs and twice as much memory 20% better price-performance The instances are designed to support I/O intensive workloads that…
New Amazon CloudWatch Database Insights: Comprehensive database observability from fleets to instances
Observing your Amazon Aurora databases is now a whole lot easier. Instead of spending time setting up telemetry, building dashboards, and configuring alarms, you just open Amazon CloudWatch Database Insights and take a look. With no further setup, you can monitor the health of all of your Amazon Aurora MySQL and PostgreSQL instances in the selected Region: Each of the sections contains a wealth of detail and I’ll get to that in a moment (this may be the ultimate “but wait, there’s more” post). From this view, I can open the filter control on the left and filter the set of instances in a couple of different ways. For example, I can filter for all of the instances running Amazon…
New Amazon CloudWatch and Amazon OpenSearch Service launch an integrated analytics experience
Today, Amazon Web Services (AWS) announces a new integrated analytics experience and zero-ETL integration between Amazon CloudWatch and Amazon OpenSearch Service. This integration simplifies log data analysis and visualization without data duplication, streamlining log management while reducing technical overhead and operational costs. CloudWatch Logs customers now have access to two additional query languages beyond CloudWatch Logs Insights QL, while OpenSearch customers can query CloudWatch logs in place without creating separate extract, transform, and load (ETL) pipelines. Organizations often need different analytics capabilities for their log data. Some teams prefer CloudWatch Logs for its scalability and simplicity in centralizing logs from all their systems, applications, and AWS services. Others require OpenSearch Service for advanced analytics and visualizations. Previously, integration between these…