news4geeks.net
13Jun/120

Amazon pitches MySQL in the cloud for $19 a month

Amazon Web Services has introduced a micro version of its cloud-based database service RDS running MySQL and priced from $19 a month, the company said on Monday.

Just like Amazon's other cloud services, RDS (Relational Database Service) takes care of set-up, operations and scaling. For example, the service automatically patches the database software and backs up data.

Code, applications, and tools that IT staff already use with their existing on-premise databases can also be used with RDS, according to Amazon.

The micro RDS instance or virtual server is designed for Web applications with lower traffic demands, test applications and small projects, Amazon said.


For that users pay $0.025 per hour if the database is hosted in Amazon's U.S. East (Virginia) or U.S. West (Oregon) regions. In the company's other regions the cost goes up to $0.035 per hour, according to Amazon's price list.

Users that are willing to pay extra for higher availability can turn on a feature called Multi-AZ Deployments. It is used to create a primary database in one availability zone -- which has independent power, cooling, and network connectivity -- and a hot standby in a second zone in the same region, according to a blog post from the company.

Data written to the primary database will be synchronously replicated to the standby. If the primary fails, the standby becomes the primary and a new standby is created automatically, the blog post said.

Turning on Multi-AZ Deployments doubles the hourly rate.

The micro RDS instance can also be used as a read replica, which offloads the main database when it's used for read-heavy workloads.

Besides MySQL, Amazon RDS can also be used to run Oracle's database and Microsoft's SQL Server. The most expensive standard instance is the Quadruple Extra Large DB Instance, which costs from $2,340 per hour when running MySQL.

(Source: infoworld.com)

 

Python has become the newest language welcomed into the Amazon’s cloud fold, through the Amazon Web Services' Elastic Beanstalk. The cloud giant today announced that Python applications are now supported on ...
READ MORE
Migration tools come and go in the turf wars between the enterprise vendors. Over the years we’ve had Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange migration tools and tools to swap one ...
READ MORE
To generate interest from developers, Boston-based Akiban Technologies has released as open source its flagship database software, called Akiban Server. The company also released a connector for ...
READ MORE
5 tips for surviving a cloud outage
"Everything fails, all the time," so says Amazon.com CTO Werner Vogels. Amazon Web Services itself experienced a much publicized four-day service disruption last April, another outage in August and it had ...
READ MORE
Private cloud company Eucalyptus got a much-needed boost yesterday when public cloud giant Amazon announced it will support interoperability between Amazon Web Services and the startup's own open ...
READ MORE
Python slithers up Amazon’s Beanstalk
Oracle hurls MySQL at Microsoft database wobblers
OSCON: Akiban targets MySQL users with its new
5 tips for surviving a cloud outage
Amazon deal alone can’t save Eucalyptus from OpenStack

Comments (0) Trackbacks (0)

No comments yet.


Leave a comment

Trackbacks are disabled.