Commit d482898a authored by fneill's avatar fneill

Updates AWS RDS term

Replaces AWS RDS with correct name, Amazon RDS
parent 1ac8a9d1
......@@ -140,6 +140,7 @@ exceptions:
- RPM
- RPS
- RSA
- RDS
- RSS
- RVM
- SAAS
......
......@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ type: howto
# Geo with external PostgreSQL instances **(PREMIUM SELF)**
This document is relevant if you are using a PostgreSQL instance that is *not
managed by Omnibus*. This includes cloud-managed instances like AWS RDS, or
managed by Omnibus*. This includes cloud-managed instances like Amazon RDS, or
manually installed and configured PostgreSQL instances.
NOTE:
......@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ developed and tested. We aim to be compatible with most external
To set up an external database, you can either:
- Set up [streaming replication](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/warm-standby.html#STREAMING-REPLICATION-SLOTS) yourself (for example AWS RDS, bare metal not managed by Omnibus, and so on).
- Set up [streaming replication](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/warm-standby.html#STREAMING-REPLICATION-SLOTS) yourself (for example Amazon RDS, bare metal not managed by Omnibus, and so on).
- Perform the Omnibus configuration manually as follows.
#### Leverage your cloud provider's tools to replicate the primary database
......@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ This is for the installation of extensions during installation and upgrades. As
To setup an external tracking database, follow the instructions below:
NOTE:
If you want to use AWS RDS as a tracking database, make sure it has access to
If you want to use Amazon RDS as a tracking database, make sure it has access to
the secondary database. Unfortunately, just assigning the same security group is not enough as
outbound rules do not apply to RDS PostgreSQL databases. Therefore, you need to explicitly add an inbound
rule to the read-replica's security group allowing any TCP traffic from
......
......@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ full list of reference architectures, see
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......@@ -2199,7 +2199,7 @@ services where applicable):
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......
......@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ full list of reference architectures, see
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......@@ -2199,7 +2199,7 @@ services where applicable):
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......
......@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ For a full list of reference architectures, see
| NFS server (optional, not recommended) | 1 | 4 vCPU, 3.6 GB memory | `n1-highcpu-4` | `c5.xlarge` | `F4s v2` |
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run as reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run as reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......@@ -1027,7 +1027,7 @@ services where applicable):
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
<!-- markdownlint-enable MD029 -->
......
......@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ For a full list of reference architectures, see
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......@@ -2106,7 +2106,7 @@ but with smaller performance requirements, several modifications can be consider
- GitLab Rails and Sidekiq: Stateless services don't have a minimum node count. Two are enough for redundancy.
- Gitaly and Praefect: A quorum is not strictly necessary. Two Gitaly nodes and two Praefect nodes are enough for redundancy.
- Running select components in reputable Cloud PaaS solutions: Select components of the GitLab setup can instead be run on Cloud Provider PaaS solutions. By doing this, additional dependent components can also be removed:
- PostgreSQL: Can be run on reputable Cloud PaaS solutions such as Google Cloud SQL or AWS RDS. In this setup, the PgBouncer and Consul nodes are no longer required:
- PostgreSQL: Can be run on reputable Cloud PaaS solutions such as Google Cloud SQL or Amazon RDS. In this setup, the PgBouncer and Consul nodes are no longer required:
- Consul may still be desired if [Prometheus](../monitoring/prometheus/index.md) auto discovery is a requirement, otherwise you would need to [manually add scrape configurations](../monitoring/prometheus/index.md#adding-custom-scrape-configurations) for all nodes.
- As Redis Sentinel runs on the same box as Consul in this architecture, it may need to be run on a separate box if Redis is still being run via Omnibus.
- Redis: Can be run on reputable Cloud PaaS solutions such as Google Memorystore and AWS ElastiCache. In this setup, the Redis Sentinel is no longer required.
......@@ -2170,7 +2170,7 @@ services where applicable):
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......
......@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ full list of reference architectures, see
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......@@ -2213,7 +2213,7 @@ services where applicable):
<!-- Disable ordered list rule https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/main/doc/Rules.md#md029---ordered-list-item-prefix -->
<!-- markdownlint-disable MD029 -->
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and AWS RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
1. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS PostgreSQL solutions. Google Cloud SQL and Amazon RDS are known to work, however Azure Database for PostgreSQL is [not recommended](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/reference-architectures/-/issues/61) due to performance issues. Consul is primarily used for PostgreSQL high availability so can be ignored when using a PostgreSQL PaaS setup. However it is also used optionally by Prometheus for Omnibus auto host discovery.
2. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party external PaaS Redis solutions. Google Memorystore and AWS Elasticache are known to work.
3. Can be optionally run on reputable third-party load balancing services (LB PaaS). AWS ELB is known to work.
4. Should be run on reputable third-party object storage (storage PaaS) for cloud implementations. Google Cloud Storage and AWS S3 are known to work.
......
......@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ GitLab also provides [Docker images](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cloud-deploy/
- Use `registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cloud-deploy/aws-ecs:latest` to deploy your application to AWS ECS.
Before getting started with this process, you need a cluster on AWS ECS, as well as related
components, like an ECS service, ECS task definition, a database on AWS RDS, and so on.
components, like an ECS service, ECS task definition, a database on Amazon RDS, and so on.
[Read more about AWS ECS](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/Welcome.html).
The ECS task definition can be:
......
......@@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ If EKS node autoscaling is employed, it is likely that your average loading will
| **<u>Gitaly Cluster</u>** [Details](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-sre-considerations) | | | | |
| Gitaly Instances (in ASG) | 12 vCPU, 45GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **m5.large** x 3 nodes<br />(12 vCPU, 48 GB) | $0.192 x 3 = $0.58/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect (Instances in ASG with load balancer) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **c5.large** x 3 nodes<br />(6 vCPU, 12 GB) | $0.09 x 3 = $0.21/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (AWS RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (Amazon RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Internal Load Balancing Node | 2 vCPU, 1.8 GB | AWS ELB | $0.10/hr | $0.10/hr |
### 5K Cloud Native Hybrid on EKS
......@@ -273,7 +273,7 @@ If EKS node autoscaling is employed, it is likely that your average loading will
| **<u>Gitaly Cluster</u>** [Details](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-sre-considerations) | | | | |
| Gitaly Instances (in ASG) | 24 vCPU, 90GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **m5.2xlarge** x 3 nodes<br />(24 vCPU, 96GB) | $0.384 x 3 = $1.15/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect (Instances in ASG with load balancer) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **c5.large** x 3 nodes<br />(6 vCPU, 12 GB) | $0.09 x 3 = $0.21/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (AWS RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (Amazon RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Internal Load Balancing Node | 2 vCPU, 1.8 GB | AWS ELB | $0.10/hr | $0.10/hr |
### 10K Cloud Native Hybrid on EKS
......@@ -326,7 +326,7 @@ If EKS node autoscaling is employed, it is likely that your average loading will
| **<u>Gitaly Cluster</u>** [Details](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-sre-considerations) | | | | |
| Gitaly Instances (in ASG) | 48 vCPU, 180GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **m5.4xlarge** x 3 nodes<br />(48 vCPU, 180 GB) | $0.77 x 3 = $2.31/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect (Instances in ASG with load balancer) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | **c5.large** x 3 nodes<br />(6 vCPU, 12 GB) | $0.09 x 3 = $0.21/hr | [Gitaly & Praefect Must Have an Uneven Node Count for HA](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections) |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (AWS RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Praefect PostgreSQL(1) (Amazon RDS) | 6 vCPU, 5.4 GB<br />([across 3 nodes](gitlab_sre_for_aws.md#gitaly-and-praefect-elections)) | N/A Reuses GitLab PostgreSQL | $0 | |
| Internal Load Balancing Node | 2 vCPU, 1.8 GB | AWS ELB | $0.10/hr | $0.10/hr |
### 50K Cloud Native Hybrid on EKS
......
......@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ For the Cloud Native Hybrid architectures there are two Infrastructure as Code o
## Introduction
For the most part, we'll make use of Omnibus GitLab in our setup, but we'll also leverage native AWS services. Instead of using the Omnibus bundled PostgreSQL and Redis, we will use AWS RDS and ElastiCache.
For the most part, we'll make use of Omnibus GitLab in our setup, but we'll also leverage native AWS services. Instead of using the Omnibus bundled PostgreSQL and Redis, we will use Amazon RDS and ElastiCache.
In this guide, we'll go through a multi-node setup where we'll start by
configuring our Virtual Private Cloud and subnets to later integrate
......
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