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Amazon improves reliability of its cloud database

Amazon improves reliability of its cloud database

By:  Mikael Ricknas  On: 18 May 2010 For: IDG News Service (Stockholm Bureau) Creator
 

The new high-availability feature, Multi-Availability Zone (Multi-AZ), automatically configures a standby copy of the database. But it doubles the price

Amazon Web Services has added a new high-availability feature called Multi-Availability Zone (Multi-AZ) to its cloud-based Relational Database Service (RDS), the company said on Tuesday.

The addition of Multi-AZ provides better database availability by automatically configuring a standby copy of the database, which is stored in a different physical location from the original in Amazon's cloud. Updates to the primary database are automatically replicated to the copy, according to Amazon. A drawback is that users may experience more latency compared to a database that doesn't use Multi-AZ, Amazon said in an FAQ.

The copy takes over during an outage caused by, for example, a network or a storage failure or during planned maintenance. From start to finish, the failover between the two databases typically completes within five minutes, according to Amazon.

Adding Multi-AZ doubles the hourly costs users pay for each database instance to between US$0.22 and $6.82, depending on the location and the performance metrics of the instance. Users also have to pay for primary and backup storage, the number of requests, and data transfer in and out of Amazon's cloud.

Amazon RDS is based on MySQL 5.1 and is still in beta.

Amazon is also working on a second feature that will replicate data to improve scalability by using multiple database instances at the same time. So-called Read Replicas will make it easier to take advantage of MySQL's native, asynchronous replication to dynamically add instances to handle large amounts of incoming read traffic, according to Amazon, which didn't provide when the feature would become available.


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mikael ricknas Mikael Ricknas is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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