00:44 Get started 02:17 VPC Concepts & Fundamentals 02:27 Choosing an IP address range 04:30 Creating subnets in a VPC 06:28 Routing in a VPC 11:21 Network Security: Security groups 14:27 Network Security: Network Access Control List (NACL) 15:32 Network Security: Flow logs 18:23 DNS in a VPC 18:26 Connectivity options in VPC (VPC peering and Transit Gateway) 24:47 Connecting to on-premises networks: VPN and Direct Connect 25:18 AWS VPN 26:38 AWS Direct Connect 30:33 What about DNS? (Amazon Route 53 Resolver) 34:15 VPC endpoints 36:11 AWS PrivateLink: VPC endpoint services 37:34 Amazon Global Accelerator
One of the best videos I have ever watched. Clear English and concise without much jargon. I watched the video end to end and did not want it to end. Great Job!!
This video is incredible. I was wondering for so long about reasons VPCs were typically 10.0.0.0/16, 10.1.0.0/16 etc... This has helped massively, thank yuo so much!
An excellent and relatively quick talk. One important thing worth mentioning while comparing VPC peering to Transit gateway is- VPC peering works inter-region, while transit gateway requires the candidate VPCs to be in the same region.
THs is a amazing video! One of the best I have seen. These guys are spot on with their delivery and knowledge of the delivery. Everyone doing this in AWS should watch this video.
Brilliant lecture and amazingly explained and understood by me - brief and yet detailed and covering the essential concepts. Kudos to this guy and AWS.
This material is top-notch. A similar book I read was a breakthrough for me. "AWS Unleashed: Mastering Amazon Web Services for Software Engineers" by Harrison Quill
What does it mean when the ranges overlap? The CIDR IPv4/v6 is difficult to configure in the labs because I can get past understanding how to chose ranges. Help please.
Curious, if you've build something / VPC (network design, with IGW, NACL's SG's etc, is there the ability to export/Save As a Terraform or Ansible script, so that you can the replicate, recreate the source or other environments using the same structure, of course under either a different account, or inside same account, but after changing the IP ranges etc ?
I made a Windows Server 2019, ec2 with an AD DC, DNS, VPN, etc. I created a user in AD allowing permissions. When trying to access that user from a remote host (VM), I can't connect. The free tier ec2 instance requires more VPC settings in order for me to connect, right?
Can anyone tell me are there any Entry level IT jobs that you can do working from home? Ive always wanted to work in the IT industry but my disability prevents me from traveling.