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©2015, Amazon Web Services, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved Introducing Amazon Elastic File System (EFS) Danilo Poccia, Technical Evangelist, AWS – @danilop

Amazon EFS

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©2015,  Amazon  Web  Services,  Inc.  or  its  affiliates.  All  rights  reserved

Introducing Amazon Elastic File System (EFS)

Danilo Poccia, Technical Evangelist, AWS – @danilop

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Goals and expectations for this session

•  Overall goal: Introduce you to Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS)

•  Session intended for all levels:

We’ll cover both beginner topics and more advanced concepts

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Agenda

1.  Provide overview of EFS 2.  Introduce EFS technical concepts 3.  See how to create and use a file system 4.  Discuss file system security mechanisms 5.  Explore the EFS regional availability

and durability model

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Overview of Amazon EFS

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The AWS storage portfolio

Amazon S3 •  Object storage: data presented as buckets of objects •  Data access via APIs over the Internet

Amazon EFS

•  File storage (analogous to NAS): data presented as a file system •  Shared low-latency access from multiple EC2 instances

Amazon Elastic Block

Store

•  Block storage (analogous to SAN): data presented as disk volumes •  Lowest-latency access from single Amazon EC2 instances

Amazon Glacier

•  Archival storage: data presented as vaults/archives of objects •  Lowest-cost storage, infrequent access via APIs over the Internet

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What is Amazon EFS?

•  Fully managed file system for EC2 instances •  Provides standard file system semantics •  Works with standard operating system APIs •  Sharable across thousands of instances •  Elastically grows to petabyte scale •  SSD-based •  Delivers performance for a wide variety of workloads •  Highly available and durable •  NFS v4-based

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EFS is designed for a broad range of use cases, such as…

•  Content repositories •  Development environments •  Home directories •  Big data

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Operating shared file storage today is a pain

Application owner or developer

IT administrator

Business owner

•  Estimate demand •  Procure hardware •  Set aside physical space •  Set up and maintain hardware (and network) •  Manage access and security

•  Provide demand forecasts/business case •  Add lead times and extra coordination to your schedule •  Limit your flexibility and agility

•  Make up-front capital investments, over-buy, stay on a constant upgrade/refresh cycle

•  Sacrifice business agility •  Distract your people from your business’s mission

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We focused on changing the game

EFS is simple

EFS is elastic

EFS is scalable

1 2 3

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EFS is simple

•  Fully managed –  No hardware, network, file layer –  Create a scalable file system in seconds!

•  Seamless integration with existing tools and apps –  NFS v4—widespread, open –  Standard file system semantics –  Works with standard OS file system APIs

•  Simple pricing = simple forecasting

1

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EFS is elastic

•  File systems grow and shrink automatically as you add and remove files

•  No need to provision storage capacity or performance

•  You pay only for the storage space you use, with no minimum fee

2

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•  File systems can grow to petabyte scale

•  Throughput and IOPS scale automatically as file systems grow

•  Consistent low latencies regardless of file system size

•  Support for thousands of concurrent NFS connections

EFS is scalable 3

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Why does this matter?...

… to app owners and developers?

… to your business?

•  Easy to move existing code, applications, and tools used today with existing NFS servers to the AWS cloud

•  Simple shared file storage solution for new cloud-native applications

•  Predictable pricing with no up-front investment •  Increased agility •  Spend less time managing file storage and more

time focusing on your business

… to IT administrators?

•  Eliminates need to manage and maintain file system storage at scale

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Diving In

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Some key AWS concepts to understand

•  Region •  Availability Zone (AZ) •  Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC)

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Region

•  Geographic area where AWS services are available

•  Customers choose region(s) for their AWS resources

•  Eleven regions worldwide

REGION

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Availability Zone (AZ)

•  Each region has multiple, isolated locations known as Availability Zones

•  Low-latency links between AZs in a region

•  When launching an EC2 instance, a customer chooses an AZ AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

EC2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

EC2 EC2

EC2

REGION

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Virtual Private Cloud (VPC)

•  Logically isolated section of the AWS cloud, virtual network defined by the customer

•  When launching instances and other resources, customers place them in a VPC

•  All new customers have a default VPC

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

REGION

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

EC2

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What is a file system?

•  The primary resource in EFS •  Where you store files and directories •  Can create unlimited file systems per account

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How to access a file system from an instance

•  You “mount” a file system on an EC2 instance (standard command) — the file system will appear like a local set of directories and files

•  An NFS v4 client is standard on Linux distributions

mount –t nfs4 [file system DNS name]:/ /[user’s target directory]

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What is a mount target?

•  To access your file system from instances in a VPC, you create mount targets in the VPC

•  A mount target is an NFSv4 endpoint in your VPC

•  A mount target has an IP address and a DNS name you use in your mount command

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

REGION

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

EC2

Mount target

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How does it all fit together?

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

REGION

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

EC2

Customer’s file system

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There are three ways to set up and manage a file system

•  AWS Management Console •  AWS Command Line Interface (CLI) •  AWS Software Development Kit (SDK)

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The AWS Management Console, CLI, and SDK each allow you to perform a variety of management tasks

•  Create a file system •  Create and manage mount targets •  Tag a file system •  Delete a file system •  View details on file systems in your AWS account

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Setting up and mounting a file system takes under a minute

1.  Create a file system 2.  Create a mount target in each AZ from which

you want to access the file system 3.  Enable the NFS client on your instances 4.  Run the mount command

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Setting up a file system

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Securing Your File System

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Several security mechanisms •  Control network traffic to and from file systems (mount

targets) by using VPC security groups and network ACLs

•  Control file and directory access by using standard OS directory-/file-level permissions

•  Control administrative access (API access) to file systems by using AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)

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Only EC2 instances in the VPC you specify can access your EFS file system

Customer’s file system

VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

EC2

VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

EC2

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VPC EC2

EC2

Security groups control which instances in your VPC can connect to your mount targets

Customer’s file system

Security group: sg-allowed

Security group: Permit inbound traffic

from “sg-allowed”

Security group: sg-not-allowed

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EFS supports user-level file and directory access permissions

•  Set file/directory permissions to specify read-write-execute permissions for users and groups

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Integration with IAM provides administrative security

•  Use IAM policies to control who can use the administrative APIs to create, manage, and delete file systems

•  EFS supports action-level and resource-level permissions

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Regional Availability and Durability

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In what regions can I use EFS?

•  US-West (Oregon) •  US-East (Northern Virginia) •  EU (Ireland)

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Data is stored in multiple AZs for high availability and durability

•  Every file system object (directory, file, and link) is redundantly stored across multiple AZs in a region

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

REGION

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

Amazon EFS

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Data can be accessed from any AZ in the region while maintaining full consistency •  Your EC2 instances

can connect to your EFS file system from any AZ in a region

•  All reads and writes will be fully consistent in all AZs—that is, a read in one AZ is guaranteed to have the latest data, even if the data is being written in another AZ

AVAILABILITY ZONE 1

REGION VPC

EC2 EC2

EC2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 2

AVAILABILITY ZONE 3

EC2 Write

Read

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Wrapping Up

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Simple and predictable pricing

•  With EFS, you pay only for the storage space you use –  No minimum commitments or up-front fees –  No need to provision storage in advance –  No other fees, charges, or billing dimensions

•  EFS price: $0.30/GB-month

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What to do next?

•  Learn more at aws.amazon.com/efs •  Request an invite for our Preview •  Stop by our booth if you have questions

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LONDON

@danilop