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Introducing Pure Protect //Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS)

Pure Storage

Introducing Pure Protect //Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) by Pure Storage Blog In today’s unpredictable world, natural disasters are ramping up in both frequency and intensity. Combatting these various threats and disasters can lead to complex solutions and costly applications that only solve part of the problem.

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Stateful vs. Stateless Applications: What’s the Difference?

Pure Storage

Stateful vs. Stateless Applications: What’s the Difference? by Pure Storage Blog “Stateful” and “stateless” describe what, if anything, an application records around processes, transactions, and/or interactions. Stateful applications retain data between sessions, stateless applications don’t. Money in, candy out.

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Disaster Recovery Solutions with AWS-Managed Services, Part 3: Multi-Site Active/Passive

AWS Disaster Recovery

Welcome to the third post of a multi-part series that addresses disaster recovery (DR) strategies with the use of AWS-managed services to align with customer requirements of performance, cost, and compliance. Full documentation for cross-cluster replication is available in the OpenSearch documentation. or OpenSearch 1.1,

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Minimizing Dependencies in a Disaster Recovery Plan

AWS Disaster Recovery

The Availability and Beyond whitepaper discusses the concept of static stability for improving resilience. What does static stability mean with regard to a multi-Region disaster recovery (DR) plan? In the simplest case, we’ve deployed an application in a primary Region and a backup Region.

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Disaster Recovery with AWS Managed Services, Part I: Single Region

AWS Disaster Recovery

This 3-part blog series discusses disaster recovery (DR) strategies that you can implement to ensure your data is safe and that your workload stays available during a disaster. In Part I, we’ll discuss the single AWS Region/multi-Availability Zone (AZ) DR strategy. Backing up data across Regions.

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Implementing Multi-Region Disaster Recovery Using Event-Driven Architecture

AWS Disaster Recovery

In this blog post, we share a reference architecture that uses a multi-Region active/passive strategy to implement a hot standby strategy for disaster recovery (DR). The main traffic flows through the primary and the secondary Region acts as a recovery Region in case of a disaster event. Conclusion.

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Disaster Recovery (DR) for a Third-party Interactive Voice Response on AWS

AWS Disaster Recovery

Since the primary objective of a backup site is disaster recovery (DR) management, this site is often referred to as a DR site. Disaster Recovery on AWS. DR strategy defines the recovery objectives for downtime and data loss. The workload has a recovery time objective (RTO) and a recovery point objective (RPO).