Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability zones?

Learning Objectives

After completing this unit, you’ll be able to:

  • Explain the differences between Regions, Availability Zones, and edge locations.
  • Explain how the AWS Global Infrastructure maximizes resiliency for your apps and services.

AWS is a global cloud provider and has infrastructure built around the world. You can use these resources whenever you want and your business can go from local to global in minutes. In this unit, you learn about the AWS Global Infrastructure.

Go Global

The AWS Global Infrastructure is built around Regions and Availability Zones.

  • A Region is a physical location in the world that provides multiple, physically separated, and isolated Availability Zones.
  • Availability Zones consist of one or more discrete data centers, each with redundant power, networking, connectivity, and are housed in separate facilities.

AWS builds data centers in many Regions, and across multiple Availability Zones within each Region. Each data center is designed with excess bandwidth connections. If a major disruption occurs, there’s capacity to route traffic to the remaining sites, minimizing the impact on you.

When a Region is designed, AWS reviews potential hazards or scenarios which can impact a data center, such as utility faults, like power and network outages, as well as, geographic hazards like typhoons, floods, and earthquakes. Also, Availability Zones are physically separated within a typical metropolitan Region and are located in lower risk flood plains.

All this leads to maximum resiliency against system disruption.

A successful global footprint depends on how you use Regions and their Availability Zones. The AWS Global Infrastructure is comprised of 69 Availability Zones within 22 geographic Regions. There are also announced plans for nine more Availability Zones and three more Regions in Indonesia, Italy, and South Africa. 

All this means there's opportunity for cloud computing internationally and you can expect that AWS will continue to add Regions.

Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability zones?

Let’s do a quick check before moving on. 

  • A Region is a geographical location, like US East (N. Virginia).
    • Within each Region, there are multiple Availability Zones.
      • Each Availability Zone has one or more data centers, with some Availability Zones having as many as six data centers, housed in separate facilities, all with capacity to fail-over to other Availability Zones within the same Region.

Note that no Availability Zone can be part of two Regions. 

Now, let’s dive deeper into the AWS Global Infrastructure.

Regions and Availability Zones

From the below example, you can see two Regions, US East (N. Virginia) and Asia Pacific (Hong Kong). Each Region is completely independent. The example shows each Region has two Availability Zones. Availability Zones are connected to each other with fast, private fiber-optic networking designed to allow users to automatically fail-over between Availability Zones without interruption. 

Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability zones?

When you launch a computing resource, you can select an Availability Zone or let AWS choose one for you. If you distribute your resources across multiple Availability Zones, you can design your app so that if a resource fails, a resource in another Availability Zone can handle requests.  

Keep in mind, when you create resources in AWS, they will be tied to the Region that you select and not automatically replicated. AWS recommends provisioning your resources across multiple Availability Zones. You learn about the tools you use to manage these resources later in this module. 

Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability zones?

Points of Presence Locations

To deliver content to end-users in the fastest way possible, AWS employs a Global Network of 166 Points of Presence (PoP) in 65 cities across 29 countries.

These Points of Presence are divided into edge locations and regional edge caches. Some highly populated areas have multiple edge locations to ensure efficient content delivery when there’s high traffic.

Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability zones?

When a user makes an initial request for your content, the closest edge location caches a copy. The edge location then delivers the newly cached content to users who access that content and are close to that edge location, rather than retrieving the same content over and over again. This process speeds up content delivery by giving users access to content from an edge location potentially in the same city. The process repeats as more users access content from edge locations around the globe.

Regional edge caches are used when content isn’t accessed frequently enough to remain in an edge location. Regional edge caches absorb this content and provide an alternative to fetching that content from the origin server.

Wrap-Up

Every component of the AWS Global Infrastructure is designed and built for redundancy and reliability, from Regions to Availability Zones to edge locations and more.

In the next unit, get to know the tools that you can use to create and manage AWS resources within the AWS Global Infrastructure.

Resources

  • Site: AWS Global Infrastructure

Which element of AWS global infrastructure consists of multiple availability Zones edge location?

The AWS Cloud infrastructure is built around AWS Regions and Availability Zones. An AWS Region is a physical location in the world where we have multiple Availability Zones.

What is multi availability Zone in AWS?

Each AWS Region is subdivided into separate Availability Zones. Each Availability Zone has its own power, cooling, and network connectivity and thus forms an isolated failure domain. Within the constructs of AWS, customers are encouraged to run their workloads in more than one Availability Zone.

Why does every AWS region contain multiple availability zones?

An AWS account provides multiple Regions so that you can launch Amazon EC2 instances in locations that meet your requirements. For example, you might want to launch instances in Europe to be closer to your European customers or to meet legal requirements.

What are the components of AWS global infrastructure?

AWS Global Infrastructure.
30 Launched Regions. each with multiple Availability Zones (AZs).
96 Availability Zones..
410+ Points of Presence. 400+ Edge Locations and 13 Regional Edge Caches..