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Disaster Recovery (DR) Architecture on AWS, Part I: Strategies for Recovery in the Cloud

AWS Disaster Recovery

Figure 2 shows the four strategies for DR that are highlighted in the DR whitepaper. If data needs to be restored from backup, this can increase the recovery point (and data loss). If such a disaster results in deleted or corrupted data, it then requires use of point-in-time recovery from backup to a last known good state.

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Journey to Adopt Cloud-Native Architecture Series: #3 – Improved Resilience and Standardized Observability

AWS Disaster Recovery

In this blog, we talk about architecture patterns to improve system resiliency, why observability matters, and how to build a holistic observability solution. Earlier, we were able to restore from the backup but wanted to improve availability further. Current Architecture with improved resiliency and standardized observability.

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Disaster Recovery (DR) Architecture on AWS, Part IV: Multi-site Active/Active

AWS Disaster Recovery

My subsequent posts shared details on the backup and restore , pilot light, and warm standby active/passive strategies. The architecture in Figure 2 shows you how to use AWS Regions as your active sites, creating a multi-Region active/active architecture. I use Amazon DynamoDB for the example architecture in Figure 2.

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Why Containers are Susceptible to Ransomware (& How Zerto Can Help!)

Zerto

To help mitigate against ransomware attacks, organizations need to not only carefully identify which applications should be refactored but consider the integration of data protection solutions early on. Check out the IDC whitepaper The State of Ransomware and Disaster Preparedness. Backup to a Cloud Bucket. CDP-As-Code.