The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘AWS Amazon Web Services’ Category

Is this the ultimate XKCD “Dependency” derivative?

Posted by jpluimers on 2025/11/29

xkcd modern digital infrastructure torn down by a satisfied looking cat

Besides the August 2025 XKCD infrastructure dependency inspired cartoon on the right, the more recent and great [Wayback/Archive] XCKD: Dependency derivative below is a monumental piece as it combines the recent:

  • fiber outage of the Internet Archive
  • DoS of Cloudflare by itself
  • AWS us-east-1 dependencies outage
  • Crowdstrike DoS of Windows machines
  • framework-du-jour mentality in the JavaScript world
  • many more¹

Image [Wayback/Archive] 36247840bf294a9d.png (1080×1389) from [Wayback/Archive] xyla 🐀🪇: “someone pls alt text this shit…” – buy shitpost cheap:

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Posted in *nix, Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, C, CDN (Content Delivery Network), Cloud, Cloudflare, cURL, Development, Fun, Hardware, Infrastructure, ISP, JavaScript/ECMAScript, Network-and-equipment, Node.js, npm, Power User, Rust, Scripting, Software Development, Web Development | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

den on Twitter: “Kubernetes.” portrayed by Seinfeld characters (Engineering Festivus)

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/12/18

At the end of 2020, in the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, [Wayback/Archive] den (@DennisCode) / Twitter started [Wayback/Archive] Engineering Festivus

The only thing 2020 needed is Seinfeld making a career change and getting into tech.

It is a series of IT parodies that at the time of writing just had its’ 35th episode: [Wayback/Archive] den on Twitter: “Kubernetes.”

Kubernetes

Kramer decided to use Kubernetes for his website. Jerry tries to explain what that entails. Kramer is adamant to do it all himself.

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Posted in Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, Cloud, Cloud Development, Containers, Development, Docker, Infrastructure, Kubernetes (k8n), Software Development | Leave a Comment »

s3-ocr: Extract text from PDF files stored in an S3 bucket

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/07/16

For my link archive: [Wayback/Archive] s3-ocr: Extract text from PDF files stored in an S3 bucket

One reason is archival of books. Even (or maybe especially) in IT, books already have historic meaning especially in narrower fields where they often are not available in the Internet Archive or have been scanned by Google Books.

Via/related:

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Posted in Amazon S3, AWS Amazon Web Services, Cloud, Cloud Apps, Development, Infrastructure, Internet, Power User, Python, Scripting, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Nuking resources from (sandbox) AWS accounts

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/04/02

I will need this one day as keeping resources up for sandbox or test accounts can cost a lot when things do not happen according to plan:

Both have been written in golang.

Warning: these can be abused, wreak havoc when accidentally used in production, or not even delete all (it’s software; there might be bugs).

Via:

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Posted in Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, Cloud, Cloud Development, Development, Infrastructure, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

howisthecloud (@howisthecloud) / Twitter

Posted by jpluimers on 2023/02/09

Getting the latest cloud outages is easy: just follow [Archive] howisthecloud (@howisthecloud) / Twitter

Feeding cloud provider statuses from all over the Internets. Currently tweeting AWS,SFDC,Heroku,GoogleApps,Azure,Sakura,Rackspace,Pivotal statuses. By

I used it to keep an eye on the december 2021 US-EAST-1 AWS outage I wrote about in Does it still hold: “Never keep anything important on AWS in US-EAST-1”?.

–jeroen

Posted in Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, Azure Cloud, Cloud, Infrastructure, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Does it still hold: “Never keep anything important on AWS in US-EAST-1”?

Posted by jpluimers on 2023/01/31

Reminder to self to check if this still holds: [Archive] Varun Krishnan on Twitter: “Never keep anything important on AWS in US-EAST-1” / Twitter

Slightly more than a year ago, the Amawon Web Services region US-EAST-1 collapsed with world-wide downtime consequences for many AWS services. It took some 8 hours to recover most of the services.

Before that, it was plagued with outages, maybe because it was their first ever region:

The outage was covered many times. I have included this El Reg link, as I like their tone of voice: [Wayback/Archive] AWS technical woes in US East region cause widespread outage • The Register.

Basically, any cloud stack is founded on these three layers:

  • Storage (S3 or Simple Storage Service in AWS speak)
  • Compute (EC2 or Elastic Compute Cloud in AWS speak)
  • Authentication and Authorisation (IAM or Identity and Access Management in AWS speak)

On top of that, any other services are implemented. And for Amazon Web Services, many of these have become available over the last two decades.

Indeed Anders Borum was right in his tweet: US-EAST-1 is the first ever AWS EC2 region and started in 2006, more than 15 years ago. It is also the region with the largest capacity. Likely both play a role in US-EAST-1 being part or initiating factor in many of the major AWS outages. If you look in all AWS outages, US-EAST-1 plays a role in most if not all outages since 2017,

So for now, if hosting at AWS, I would host outside of US-EAST-1.

Depending on the kind of application and money involved, I would consider hosting in multiple regions, and if a truckload of money was involved: hosting on multiple clouds.

I fully agree with [Archive] Gergely Orosz on Twitter: “If you were impacted by the recent AWS outage, the decision to invest in multi-cloud / multi-datacenter is simple: How much did this outage cost you vs the cost of adding a (lot) more complexity & maintenance with multi-cloud/DC? If outage cost >> this, only then do it.” / Twitter

Some more insight on multi-cloud hosting is via [Archive] Redmond on Twitter: “New feature from @jdanton: A full post-mortem from AWS is still to come, but in the meantime, IT pros should start bolstering their cloud disaster recovery strategies now — before the next outage. https://t.co/ios5Re5ZCs” / Twitter at [Wayback/Archive] AWS Outage Fallout: What Lessons You Should Learn — Redmondmag.com

Is It Time to Go Multicloud?

No. Well…if you are running a major property with a big customer-facing presence, it can be a good strategy to have static Web and app content hosted in a second cloud. In the case of an outage like yesterday’s, you’d have the option to direct traffic to the static presence, which can supply some level of experience for your users.

A good example of how this approach can be useful is an outage dashboard. Whenever a cloud provider has an outage, they are notoriously bad at properly reporting ongoing status. This is because they have hosted their dashboards in their own clouds using their own APIs — and when these APIs go down, they take the monitoring with them. Using DNS, you can quickly redirect traffic to this static site, where your engineers can update the page with status updates.

Related

–jeroen

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Posted in AWS Amazon Web Services, Cloud, Cloud Development, Deployment, Development, DevOps, Infrastructure, Power User, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

I won a “The Cloud Resume Challenge Guidebook” bundle: Thanks Forrest Brazeal for writing it and Lightspin for the prize (:

Posted by jpluimers on 2022/12/03

Since all three editions of [Wayback/Archive] The Cloud Resume Challenge Guidebook were on my wish list as I wanted to practice more cloud computing skills in a structured way during my reintegration after the long series of procedures that (hopefully for a long time) got rid of my metastasised rectum cancer, I was really happy to win the bundle late 2022:

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Posted in Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, Azure Cloud, Cloud, Cloud Development, Development, GCP Google Cloud Platform, Infrastructure, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Links to learn more about infrastructure.

Posted by jpluimers on 2021/10/14

For my link archive; [Archive.is] .DS_Storoz on Twitter: “Alright, I’m rage-quitting the frontend, moving into infrastructure. (Seriously.) Where is my community for this? Who do I follow? What conferences do I go to? Please and thanks and RT!”

Keywords:

  • Terraform, Docker, Kubernetes, AWS!
  • Systems Performance, Google SRE book, DDIA
  • the DORA report
  • b0rk

–jeroen

Posted in Amazon S3, Amazon SES, Amazon.com/.de/.fr/.uk/..., AWS Amazon Web Services, Cloud, Containers, Docker, Infrastructure, Kubernetes (k8n), Power User | Leave a Comment »