To connect programmatically to an AWS service, you use an endpoint. AWS services offer the following endpoint types in some or all of the AWS Regions that the service supports: IPv4 endpoints, dual-stack endpoints, and FIPS endpoints. Some services provide global endpoints. For more information, see| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn about the task definition parameters that you can use to define your Amazon ECS tasks.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Being prepared for Fargate task retirement. Fargate stops tasks for maintenance.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn about supported AWS Fargate Linux and Windows platform versions.| docs.aws.amazon.com
You can use CloudWatch usage metrics to provide visibility into your accounts usage of resources. Use these metrics to visualize your current service usage on CloudWatch graphs and dashboards.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn about task definition considerations for Fargate on Amazon ECS.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn about the Fargate capacity provider options.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Get started with Amazon ECS on AWS Fargate by using the Fargate launch type for your tasks in the Regions where Amazon ECS supports AWS Fargate.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Complete these steps with the AWS CLI to run IIS in a container on Windows on Fargate without any EC2 instances.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn how to create a Fargate cluster using the AWS CLI.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn about the Region support for Linux containers on AWS Fargate and Windows containers on AWS Fargate.| docs.aws.amazon.com
Use containers on AWS to run microservices architecture applications, batch processing, hybrid deployments, and machine learning.| Amazon Web Services, Inc.
Use Elastic Load Balancing to distribute traffic evenly across the tasks in your service| docs.aws.amazon.com
Learn how to get started using Fargate Linux containers on Amazon ECS| docs.aws.amazon.com