In this post, we demonstrate how to test network resilience of AWS Fargate workloads on Amazon ECS using AWS Fault Injection Service's new network fault injection capabilities, including network latency, blackhole, and packet loss experiments. Through a sample three-tier application architecture, we show how to conduct controlled chaos engineering experiments to validate application behavior during network disruptions and improve system resilience.| Amazon Web Services
Lists all of the available service-specific resources, actions, and condition keys that can be used in IAM policies to control access to Amazon EC2.| docs.aws.amazon.com
This post was co-written with Luke Sudgen, Lead DevOps Engineer Post Trade, and Padraig Murphy, Solutions Architect Post Trade, from London Stock Exchange Group. In this post, we’ll discuss some failure scenarios that were tested by London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) Post Trade Technology teams during a chaos engineering event supported by AWS. Chaos engineering […]| Amazon Web Services
A common challenge organizations face is how to gain confidence in and provide evidence for the continuous resilience of their workloads. Using modern chaos engineering principles can help in meeting this challenge, but the practice of chaos engineering can become complex. As a result, both the definition of the inputs and comprehension of the outputs […]| Amazon Web Services