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Serverless Etl Aws Glue

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Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Prescriptive Guidance

Copyright © 2024 Amazon Web Services, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Prescriptive Guidance: Getting started with serverless ETL on


AWS Glue
Copyright © 2024 Amazon Web Services, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Amazon's trademarks and trade dress may not be used in connection with any product or service
that is not Amazon's, in any manner that is likely to cause confusion among customers, or in any
manner that disparages or discredits Amazon. All other trademarks not owned by Amazon are
the property of their respective owners, who may or may not be affiliated with, connected to, or
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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Table of Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
AWS Glue ETL .................................................................................................................................. 2
Authoring in AWS Glue ............................................................................................................................... 2
Data processing units .................................................................................................................................. 2
Using Python shell ....................................................................................................................................... 3
Comparing worker types ............................................................................................................................. 3
Data Catalog .................................................................................................................................... 4
AWS Glue databases and tables ................................................................................................................ 4
AWS Glue crawlers and classifiers ............................................................................................................ 5
AWS Glue connections ................................................................................................................................ 5
AWS Glue Schema Registry ........................................................................................................................ 5
Features and concepts ..................................................................................................................... 6
Logging and monitoring ............................................................................................................................. 6
Automation .................................................................................................................................................... 6
Job bookmarks .............................................................................................................................................. 7
DataBrew .......................................................................................................................................... 8
Best practices ................................................................................................................................... 9
Develop locally first ..................................................................................................................................... 9
Use AWS Glue interactive sessions ........................................................................................................... 9
Use partitioning to query exactly what you need ................................................................................. 9
Optimize memory management ............................................................................................................... 9
Use efficient data storage formats ......................................................................................................... 10
Use the appropriate type of scaling ...................................................................................................... 10
FAQ ................................................................................................................................................. 12
When should I use Python shell instead of Apache Spark for AWS Glue jobs? ............................. 12
What is the recommended AWS Glue version for my project? ......................................................... 12
Next steps ...................................................................................................................................... 13
Understanding AWS Glue transformations ........................................................................................... 13
Authoring your first ETL job .................................................................................................................... 13
Pricing ........................................................................................................................................................... 13
Additional resources ...................................................................................................................... 14
References .................................................................................................................................................... 14
Blog posts .................................................................................................................................................... 14
Examples ...................................................................................................................................................... 14

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Patterns ........................................................................................................................................................ 15
Document history .......................................................................................................................... 16
Glossary .......................................................................................................................................... 17
# ..................................................................................................................................................................... 17
A ..................................................................................................................................................................... 18
B ..................................................................................................................................................................... 21
C ..................................................................................................................................................................... 23
D ..................................................................................................................................................................... 26
E ..................................................................................................................................................................... 30
F ..................................................................................................................................................................... 32
G ..................................................................................................................................................................... 33
H ..................................................................................................................................................................... 34
I ...................................................................................................................................................................... 35
L ..................................................................................................................................................................... 37
M .................................................................................................................................................................... 38
O .................................................................................................................................................................... 42
P ..................................................................................................................................................................... 45
Q .................................................................................................................................................................... 47
R ..................................................................................................................................................................... 48
S ..................................................................................................................................................................... 50
T ..................................................................................................................................................................... 54
U ..................................................................................................................................................................... 55
V ..................................................................................................................................................................... 56
W .................................................................................................................................................................... 56
Z ..................................................................................................................................................................... 57

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue


Dheer Toprani and Adnan Alvee, Amazon Web Services (AWS)

March 2024 (document history)

On the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Cloud, AWS Glue is a fully managed serverless environment
where you can extract, transform, and load (ETL) data at scale. With AWS Glue, you can categorize
data, clean it, enrich it, and move it reliably across various data stores and streams in a cost-
effective manner.

AWS Glue is serverless, so you don’t have to worry about provisioning or managing servers. With
AWS Glue, you pay only for the resources you use, and you can scale up or down as needed.

AWS Glue consists of the following components:

• AWS Glue ETL – AWS Glue ETL provides batch and streaming options to extract, transform, and
load data from one source to another.
• AWS Glue Data Catalog – Data Catalog is a central repository for organizing the metadata of all
your data assets. Data Catalog provides a unified interface where you can search, discover, and
share data assets across data analytics services.
• AWS Glue DataBrew – DataBrew is a no-code data preparation tool that you can use to visually
explore, clean, and transform data. You can choose from more than 250 prebuilt transformations
to automate data preparation tasks without writing any code.

This guide provides a high-level introduction to AWS Glue, including how it works and how
you can get started using it. It covers the key concepts that you need to know before authoring
AWS Glue jobs, such as automation, monitoring, and integrating with other AWS services. The
Next steps section will get you up to speed with writing code in AWS Glue. If you already have
some experience using AWS Glue, the Best practices section will help you fill in any gaps in your
knowledge. By the end of this guide, you will be equipped with the knowledge and resources you
need to start using AWS Glue effectively.

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue ETL


AWS Glue ETL supports extracting data from various sources, transforming it to meet your business
needs, and loading it into a destination of your choice. This service uses the Apache Spark engine
to distribute big data workloads across worker nodes, enabling faster transformations with in-
memory processing.

AWS Glue supports a variety of data sources, including Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon
S3), Amazon DynamoDB, and Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS). To learn more
about supported data sources, see Connection types and options for ETL in AWS Glue.

Authoring in AWS Glue


AWS Glue provides multiple ways to author ETL jobs, depending on your experience and use-case:

• Python shell jobs are designed for running basic ETL scripts written in Python. These jobs run on
a single machine, and are better suited for small or medium-sized datasets.
• Apache Spark jobs can be written in either Python or Scala. These jobs use Spark to horizontally
scale workloads across many worker nodes, so that they can handle large datasets and complex
transformations.
• AWS Glue streaming ETL uses the Apache Spark Structured Streaming engine to transform
streaming data in micro-batch jobs using exactly-once semantics. You can author AWS Glue
streaming jobs in either Python or Scala.
• AWS Glue Studio is a visual boxes-and-arrows style interface to make Spark-based ETL accessible
to developers who are new to Apache Spark programming.

Data processing units


AWS Glue uses data processing units (DPUs) to measure the compute resources allocated to an
ETL job and calculate cost. Each DPU is equivalent to 4 vCPUs and 16 GB memory. DPUs should
be allocated to your AWS Glue job depending on its complexity and data volume. Allocating the
appropriate amount of DPUs will allow you to balance performance needs with cost constraints.

AWS Glue provides several worker types that are optimized for various workloads:

• G.1X or G.2X (for most data transforms, joins, and queries)

Authoring in AWS Glue 2


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

• G.4X or G.8X (for more demanding data transforms, aggregations, joins, and queries)
• G.025X (for low-volume and sporadic data streams)
• Standard (for AWS Glue versions 1.0 or earlier; not recommended for later versions of AWS Glue)

Using Python shell


For a Python shell job, you can use either 1 DPU to use 16 GB of memory or 0.0625 DPU to use 1
GB of memory. Python shell is intended for basic ETL jobs with small or medium-sized datasets (up
to approximately 10 GB).

Comparing worker types


The following table shows the different AWS Glue worker types for batch, streaming, and AWS
Glue Studio ETL workloads using the Apache Spark environment.

G.1X G.2X G.4X G.8X G.025X Standard

vCPU 4 8 16 32 2 4

Memory 16 GB 32 GB 64 GB 128 GB 4 GB 16 GB

Disk space 64 GB 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB 64 GB 50 GB

Executor 1 1 1 1 1 2
per worker

DPU 1 2 4 8 0.25 1

The Standard worker type is not recommended for AWS Glue version 2.0 and later. The G.025X
worker type is available only for streaming jobs using AWS Glue version 3.0 or later.

Using Python shell 3


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue Data Catalog


The AWS Glue Data Catalog is a centralized metadata repository for all your data assets across
various data sources. It provides a unified interface to store and query information about data
formats, schemas, and sources. When an AWS Glue ETL job runs, it uses this catalog to understand
information about the data and ensure that it is transformed correctly.

The AWS Glue Data Catalog is composed of the following components:

• Databases and tables


• Crawlers and classifiers
• Connections
• Schema Registry

AWS Glue databases and tables


The AWS Glue Data Catalog is organized into databases and tables to provide a logical structure for
storing and managing metadata. This structure supports precise data access control at a table or
database level by using AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) policies.

An AWS Glue database can contain many tables, and each table must be associated with a single
database. These tables contain references to the actual data, which can be stored in any of the
various data sources that AWS Glue supports. AWS Glue tables also store essential metadata such
as column names, data types, and partition keys.

There are several different methods for creating a table in AWS Glue:

• AWS Glue crawler


• AWS Glue ETL job
• AWS Glue console
• CreateTable operation in the AWS Glue API
• AWS CloudFormation template
• AWS Cloud Development Kit (AWS CDK)
• A migrated Apache Hive metastore

AWS Glue databases and tables 4


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue crawlers and classifiers


An AWS Glue crawler automatically discovers and extracts metadata from a data store, and then
it updates the AWS Glue Data Catalog accordingly. The crawler connects to the data store to infer
the schema of the data. It then creates or updates tables within the Data Catalog with the schema
information that it discovered. A crawler can crawl both file-based and table-based data stores. To
learn more about supported data stores, see Which data stores can I crawl?

The crawler uses classifiers to accurately recognize the format of data and determine how it should
be processed. By default, the crawler uses a set of common built-in classifiers provided by AWS
Glue, but you can also write custom classifiers to handle specific use-cases.

AWS Glue connections


You can use AWS Glue connections to define connection parameters that enable AWS Glue to
connect to various data sources. Adding connections centralizes and simplifies the configuration
required to connect to these sources.

When defining a connection, you specify the connection type, the connection endpoint, and any
required credentials. After a connection is defined, it can be reused by multiple AWS Glue jobs
and crawlers. Using connections with AWS Glue reduces the need to repeatedly enter the same
connection information, such as login credentials or virtual private cloud (VPC) IDs.

AWS Glue Schema Registry


The AWS Glue Schema Registry provides a centralized location for managing and enforcing data
stream schemas. It enables disparate systems, such as data producers and consumers, to share a
schema for serialization and deserialization. Sharing a schema helps these systems to communicate
effectively and avoid errors during transformation.

The Schema Registry ensures that downstream data consumers can handle changes made
upstream, because they are aware of the expected schema. It supports schema evolution, so that
a schema can change over time while maintaining compatibility with previous versions of the
schema.

The Schema Registry integrates with many AWS services, including Amazon Kinesis Data Streams,
Firehose, and Amazon Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka. For examples of use cases and
integrations, see Integrating with AWS Glue Schema Registry.

AWS Glue crawlers and classifiers 5


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Important features and concepts

Logging and monitoring


AWS Glue has several logging and monitoring options. By default, AWS Glue sends logs to the
aws-glue log group in Amazon CloudWatch. These logs include information such as start and end
time, configuration settings, and any errors or warnings that might have occurred.

Additionally, AWS Glue Spark ETL jobs provide the following options, which must be enabled for
advanced monitoring:

• Job metrics report job-specific metrics to the AWS Glue namespace in CloudWatch every 30
seconds. These job-specific metrics, such as processed records, total input/output data size,
and runtime, provide insights into a job’s performance. They can help identify bottlenecks or
opportunities to optimize configurations.
• Continuous logging streams real-time Apache Spark job logs to the /aws-glue/jobs/logs-v2
log group in CloudWatch. By using real-time logs, you can dynamically monitor AWS Glue jobs
while they are running.
• Spark UI provides a Spark history server web interface for viewing information about the Spark
job, such as the event timeline of each stage, a directed acyclic graph, and job environment
variables. The persisted Spark UI event logs are stored in Amazon S3, and you can use them in
real time or after the job is complete.
• Job run insights simplifies job debugging and optimization by listening for common Spark
exceptions, performing root cause analysis, and providing recommended actions to fix issues.
The insights are stored in CloudWatch.

Automation
AWS Glue provides two main ways for you to automate ETL jobs: triggers and workflows.

AWS Glue triggers

When fired, AWS Glue triggers start specified jobs and crawlers. A trigger can be fired on demand,
based on a predefined schedule, or based on specific events. You can use triggers to design a chain
of dependent jobs and crawlers. For more information, see AWS Glue triggers.

Logging and monitoring 6


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue workflows

For more complex workloads, you can use AWS Glue workflows to create directed acyclic graphs
and to build dependencies between separate AWS Glue entities (triggers, crawlers, and jobs).
Workflows also provide a unified interface where you can share parameters, monitor progress, and
troubleshoot issues across associated entities.

Setting up many associated entities within AWS Glue workflows can grow increasingly complex.
Developers can create AWS Glue blueprints for sharing complex data pipelines with data scientists
and business analysts. These templates allow for the consistent and repeatable creation of AWS
Glue workflows, abstracting away the technical details.

To learn more about AWS Glue blueprints and workflows, see Performing complex ETL activities
using blueprints and workflows in AWS Glue.

Orchestrating AWS Glue jobs with other AWS services

For more automation options, AWS Glue integrates with other AWS services, such as AWS Lambda,
AWS Step Functions, and Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (Amazon MWAA).

To compare the different orchestration methods for AWS Glue ETL jobs, see Building an
operationally excellent data pipeline.

Job bookmarks
Job bookmarks in AWS Glue are used to keep track of the progress of ETL jobs, which prevents
the need to reprocess data in subsequent job runs. When job bookmarks are enabled, AWS Glue
maintains a record of data that has already been processed. Then with each run, it processes only
the new data in the data source. For more information, see Tracking processed data using job
bookmarks.

Job bookmarks 7
AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue DataBrew


AWS Glue DataBrew is a fully managed visual data preparation service for cleaning, normalizing,
and transforming data. It differs from AWS Glue ETL in that you don't have write code to work
with it. DataBrew provides more than 250 built-in transformations, with a visual point-and-click
interface for creating and managing data transformation jobs.

DataBrew is available in a separate console view from AWS Glue. It is natively integrated with
several AWS services and supports many different file formats. For more information, see Product
and service integrations.

DataBrew is based on the following six core concepts:

• Project – The entire data preparation workspace in DataBrew


• Dataset – A collection of structured or semi-structured data
• Recipe – A set of data transformation steps; each step can contain many actions
• Job – A set of instructions to run a recipe or a data profile job
• Data lineage – The tracking of data in a visual interface to identify its origin
• Data profile – A summary view of the shape of your data

AWS Glue DataBrew is integrated with AWS Glue Studio, so you can orchestrate DataBrew recipes
within your AWS Glue ETL jobs and workflows. DataBrew recipes can also take advantage of AWS
Glue features such as job bookmarks, automatic retries, and automatic scaling. To get started with
DataBrew, use the AWS Glue DataBrew sample project tutorial.

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Best practices
When developing with AWS Glue, consider the following best practices.

Develop locally first


To save on cost and time while building your ETL jobs, test your code and business logic locally
first. For instructions on setting up a Docker container that can help you test AWS Glue ETL jobs
both in a shell and in an integrated development environment (IDE), see the blog post Develop and
test AWS Glue jobs locally using a Docker container.

Use AWS Glue interactive sessions


AWS Glue interactive sessions provide a serverless Spark backend, coupled with an open-source
Jupyter kernel that integrates with notebooks and IDEs such as PyCharm, IntelliJ, and VS Code.
By using interactive sessions, you can test your code on real datasets with the AWS Glue Spark
backend and the IDE of your choice. To get started, follow the steps in Getting started with AWS
Glue interactive sessions.

Use partitioning to query exactly what you need


Partitioning refers to dividing a large dataset into smaller partitions based on specific columns
or keys. When data is partitioned, AWS Glue can perform selective scans on a subset of data that
satisfies specific partitioning criteria, rather than scanning the entire dataset. This results in faster
and more efficient query processing, especially when working with large datasets.

Partition data based on the queries that will be run against it. For example, if most queries filter
on a particular column, partitioning on that column can greatly reduce query time. To learn more
about partitioning data, see Work with partitioned data in AWS Glue.

Optimize memory management


Memory management is crucial when writing AWS Glue ETL jobs because they run on the Apache
Spark engine, which is optimized for in-memory processing. The blog post Optimize memory
management in AWS Glue provides details on the following memory management techniques:

Develop locally first 9


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

• Amazon S3 list implementation of AWS Glue


• Grouping
• Excluding irrelevant Amazon S3 paths and storage classes
• Spark and AWS Glue read partitioning
• Bulk inserts
• Join optimizations
• PySpark user-defined functions (UDFs)
• Incremental processing

Use efficient data storage formats


When authoring ETL jobs, we recommend outputting transformed data in a column-based data
format. Columnar data formats, such as Apache Parquet and ORC, are commonly used in big data
storage and analytics. They are designed to minimize data movement and maximize compression.
These formats also enable splitting data to multiple readers for increased parallel reads during
query processing.

Compressing data also helps reduce the amount of data stored, and it improves read/write
operation performance. AWS Glue supports multiple compression formats natively. For more
information about efficient data storage and compression, see Building a performance efficient
data pipeline.

Use the appropriate type of scaling


Understanding when to scale horizontally (change the number of workers) or scale vertically
(change the worker type) is important for AWS Glue because it can impact the cost and
performance of the ETL jobs.

Generally, ETL jobs with complex transformations are more memory-intensive and require vertical
scaling (for example, moving from the G.1X to the G.2X worker type). For compute-intensive ETL
jobs with large volumes of data, we recommend horizontal scaling because AWS Glue is designed
to process that data in parallel across multiple nodes.

Closely monitoring AWS Glue job metrics in Amazon CloudWatch helps you determine whether a
performance bottleneck is caused by a lack of memory or compute. For more information about

Use efficient data storage formats 10


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Glue worker types and scaling, see Best practices to scale Apache Spark jobs and partition
data with AWS Glue.

Use the appropriate type of scaling 11


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Serverless ETL on AWS Glue FAQ


This section provides answers to commonly raised questions about serverless ETL on AWS Glue.

When should I use Python shell instead of Apache Spark for


AWS Glue jobs?
Use Python shell when you have basic ETL jobs or small datasets that don’t require the distributed
computing capabilities of Apache Spark. Use Apache Spark for more complex ETL jobs or large
datasets that require the high processing power that Spark is optimized to handle.

What is the recommended AWS Glue version for my project?


We generally recommend using the latest version of AWS Glue. The AWS Glue versions page lists
the differences between versions, along with their compatibility with various versions of Python
and Spark.

When should I use Python shell instead of Apache Spark for AWS Glue jobs? 12
AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Next steps

Understanding AWS Glue transformations


For more efficient data processing, AWS Glue includes built-in transformation functions. The
functions pass from transform to transform in a data structure called a DynamicFrame, which is an
extension to an Apache Spark SQL DataFrame. A DynamicFrame is similar to a DataFrame, except
that each record is self-describing, so no schema is required initially.

To get acquainted with several AWS Glue PySpark built-in functions, see the blog post Building an
AWS Glue ETL pipeline locally without an AWS account.

Authoring your first ETL job


If you haven't written an ETL job before, you can get started by using the Three AWS Glue ETL job
types for converting data to Apache Parquet pattern.

If you have experience writing ETL jobs, you can use the AWS Glue GitHub examples to explore
more deeply.

Pricing
For pricing information, see AWS Glue pricing. You can also use the AWS Pricing Calculator to
estimate your monthly cost for using different AWS Glue components.

Understanding AWS Glue transformations 13


AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Additional resources

References
• AWS Glue Developer Guide
• AWS Glue DataBrew Developer Guide
• AWS Glue API
• AWS Glue streaming ETL
• AWS Glue Studio AWS Glue Studio
• Python shell jobs in AWS Glue
• Apache Spark jobs
• AWS Glue PySpark transforms reference
• Data Catalog and crawlers in AWS Glue
• AWS Glue Schema Registry
• Logging and monitoring in AWS Glue
• AWS Glue versions

Blog posts
• Develop and test AWS Glue jobs locally using a Docker container
• Optimize memory management in AWS Glue
• Best practices to scale Apache Spark jobs and partition data with AWS Glue
• Building an AWS Glue ETL pipeline locally without an AWS account
• Work with partitioned data in AWS Glue

Examples
• AWS Glue DataBrew sample project
• Getting started with AWS Glue interactive sessions
• AWS Glue ETL Code Samples repository

References 14
AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Patterns
• Build an ETL service pipeline to load data incrementally from Amazon S3 to Amazon Redshift
using AWS Glue
• Deploy and manage a serverless data lake on the AWS Cloud by using infrastructure as code
• Three AWS Glue ETL job types for converting data to Apache Parquet

Patterns 15
AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

Document history
The following table describes significant changes to this guide. If you want to be notified about
future updates, you can subscribe to an RSS feed.

Change Description Date

Updated We added information about March 13, 2024


worker types to the AWS Glue
ETL section.

Updated Content updated throughout March 15, 2023


the guide.

Added a best practice We added information about February 4, 2021


using partitioning to query
for specific data.

Initial publication — January 29, 2021

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

AWS Prescriptive Guidance glossary


The following are commonly used terms in strategies, guides, and patterns provided by AWS
Prescriptive Guidance. To suggest entries, please use the Provide feedback link at the end of the
glossary.

Numbers
7 Rs

Seven common migration strategies for moving applications to the cloud. These strategies build
upon the 5 Rs that Gartner identified in 2011 and consist of the following:
• Refactor/re-architect – Move an application and modify its architecture by taking full
advantage of cloud-native features to improve agility, performance, and scalability. This
typically involves porting the operating system and database. Example: Migrate your on-
premises Oracle database to the Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL-Compatible Edition.
• Replatform (lift and reshape) – Move an application to the cloud, and introduce some level
of optimization to take advantage of cloud capabilities. Example: Migrate your on-premises
Oracle database to Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) for Oracle in the AWS
Cloud.
• Repurchase (drop and shop) – Switch to a different product, typically by moving from
a traditional license to a SaaS model. Example: Migrate your customer relationship
management (CRM) system to Salesforce.com.
• Rehost (lift and shift) – Move an application to the cloud without making any changes to
take advantage of cloud capabilities. Example: Migrate your on-premises Oracle database to
Oracle on an EC2 instance in the AWS Cloud.
• Relocate (hypervisor-level lift and shift) – Move infrastructure to the cloud without
purchasing new hardware, rewriting applications, or modifying your existing operations.
You migrate servers from an on-premises platform to a cloud service for the same platform.
Example: Migrate a Microsoft Hyper-V application to AWS.
• Retain (revisit) – Keep applications in your source environment. These might include
applications that require major refactoring, and you want to postpone that work until a later
time, and legacy applications that you want to retain, because there’s no business justification
for migrating them.

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

• Retire – Decommission or remove applications that are no longer needed in your source
environment.

A
ABAC

See attribute-based access control.


abstracted services

See managed services.


ACID

See atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability.


active-active migration

A database migration method in which the source and target databases are kept in sync (by
using a bidirectional replication tool or dual write operations), and both databases handle
transactions from connecting applications during migration. This method supports migration in
small, controlled batches instead of requiring a one-time cutover. It’s more flexible but requires
more work than active-passive migration.
active-passive migration

A database migration method in which in which the source and target databases are kept in
sync, but only the source database handles transactions from connecting applications while
data is replicated to the target database. The target database doesn’t accept any transactions
during migration.
aggregate function

A SQL function that operates on a group of rows and calculates a single return value for the
group. Examples of aggregate functions include SUM and MAX.
AI

See artificial intelligence.


AIOps

See artificial intelligence operations.

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

anonymization

The process of permanently deleting personal information in a dataset. Anonymization can help
protect personal privacy. Anonymized data is no longer considered to be personal data.
anti-pattern

A frequently used solution for a recurring issue where the solution is counter-productive,
ineffective, or less effective than an alternative.
application control

A security approach that allows the use of only approved applications in order to help protect a
system from malware.
application portfolio

A collection of detailed information about each application used by an organization, including


the cost to build and maintain the application, and its business value. This information is key to
the portfolio discovery and analysis process and helps identify and prioritize the applications to
be migrated, modernized, and optimized.
artificial intelligence (AI)

The field of computer science that is dedicated to using computing technologies to perform
cognitive functions that are typically associated with humans, such as learning, solving
problems, and recognizing patterns. For more information, see What is Artificial Intelligence?
artificial intelligence operations (AIOps)

The process of using machine learning techniques to solve operational problems, reduce
operational incidents and human intervention, and increase service quality. For more
information about how AIOps is used in the AWS migration strategy, see the operations
integration guide.
asymmetric encryption

An encryption algorithm that uses a pair of keys, a public key for encryption and a private key
for decryption. You can share the public key because it isn’t used for decryption, but access to
the private key should be highly restricted.
atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability (ACID)

A set of software properties that guarantee the data validity and operational reliability of a
database, even in the case of errors, power failures, or other problems.

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AWS Prescriptive Guidance Getting started with serverless ETL on AWS Glue

attribute-based access control (ABAC)

The practice of creating fine-grained permissions based on user attributes, such as department,
job role, and team name. For more information, see ABAC for AWS in the AWS Identity and
Access Management (IAM) documentation.

authoritative data source

A location where you store the primary version of data, which is considered to be the most
reliable source of information. You can copy data from the authoritative data source to other
locations for the purposes of processing or modifying the data, such as anonymizing, redacting,
or pseudonymizing it.

Availability Zone

A distinct location within an AWS Region that is insulated from failures in other Availability
Zones and provides inexpensive, low-latency network connectivity to other Availability Zones in
the same Region.

AWS Cloud Adoption Framework (AWS CAF)

A framework of guidelines and best practices from AWS to help organizations develop an
efficient and effective plan to move successfully to the cloud. AWS CAF organizes guidance
into six focus areas called perspectives: business, people, governance, platform, security,
and operations. The business, people, and governance perspectives focus on business skills
and processes; the platform, security, and operations perspectives focus on technical skills
and processes. For example, the people perspective targets stakeholders who handle human
resources (HR), staffing functions, and people management. For this perspective, AWS CAF
provides guidance for people development, training, and communications to help ready the
organization for successful cloud adoption. For more information, see the AWS CAF website and
the AWS CAF whitepaper.

AWS Workload Qualification Framework (AWS WQF)

A tool that evaluates database migration workloads, recommends migration strategies, and
provides work estimates. AWS WQF is included with AWS Schema Conversion Tool (AWS SCT). It
analyzes database schemas and code objects, application code, dependencies, and performance
characteristics, and provides assessment reports.

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bad bot

A bot that is intended to disrupt or cause harm to individuals or organizations.


BCP

See business continuity planning.


behavior graph

A unified, interactive view of resource behavior and interactions over time. You can use a
behavior graph with Amazon Detective to examine failed logon attempts, suspicious API
calls, and similar actions. For more information, see Data in a behavior graph in the Detective
documentation.
big-endian system

A system that stores the most significant byte first. See also endianness.
binary classification

A process that predicts a binary outcome (one of two possible classes). For example, your ML
model might need to predict problems such as “Is this email spam or not spam?" or "Is this
product a book or a car?"
bloom filter

A probabilistic, memory-efficient data structure that is used to test whether an element is a


member of a set.
blue/green deployment

A deployment strategy where you create two separate but identical environments. You run the
current application version in one environment (blue) and the new application version in the
other environment (green). This strategy helps you quickly roll back with minimal impact.
bot

A software application that runs automated tasks over the internet and simulates human
activity or interaction. Some bots are useful or beneficial, such as web crawlers that index
information on the internet. Some other bots, known as bad bots, are intended to disrupt or
cause harm to individuals or organizations.

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botnet

Networks of bots that are infected by malware and are under the control of a single party,
known as a bot herder or bot operator. Botnets are the best-known mechanism to scale bots and
their impact.
branch

A contained area of a code repository. The first branch created in a repository is the main
branch. You can create a new branch from an existing branch, and you can then develop
features or fix bugs in the new branch. A branch you create to build a feature is commonly
referred to as a feature branch. When the feature is ready for release, you merge the feature
branch back into the main branch. For more information, see About branches (GitHub
documentation).
break-glass access

In exceptional circumstances and through an approved process, a quick means for a user to
gain access to an AWS account that they don't typically have permissions to access. For more
information, see the Implement break-glass procedures indicator in the AWS Well-Architected
guidance.
brownfield strategy

The existing infrastructure in your environment. When adopting a brownfield strategy for a
system architecture, you design the architecture around the constraints of the current systems
and infrastructure. If you are expanding the existing infrastructure, you might blend brownfield
and greenfield strategies.
buffer cache

The memory area where the most frequently accessed data is stored.
business capability

What a business does to generate value (for example, sales, customer service, or marketing).
Microservices architectures and development decisions can be driven by business capabilities.
For more information, see the Organized around business capabilities section of the Running
containerized microservices on AWS whitepaper.
business continuity planning (BCP)

A plan that addresses the potential impact of a disruptive event, such as a large-scale migration,
on operations and enables a business to resume operations quickly.

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CAF

See AWS Cloud Adoption Framework.


canary deployment

The slow and incremental release of a version to end users. When you are confident, you deploy
the new version and replace the current version in its entirety.
CCoE

See Cloud Center of Excellence.


CDC

See change data capture.


change data capture (CDC)

The process of tracking changes to a data source, such as a database table, and recording
metadata about the change. You can use CDC for various purposes, such as auditing or
replicating changes in a target system to maintain synchronization.
chaos engineering

Intentionally introducing failures or disruptive events to test a system’s resilience. You can use
AWS Fault Injection Service (AWS FIS) to perform experiments that stress your AWS workloads
and evaluate their response.
CI/CD

See continuous integration and continuous delivery.


classification

A categorization process that helps generate predictions. ML models for classification problems
predict a discrete value. Discrete values are always distinct from one another. For example, a
model might need to evaluate whether or not there is a car in an image.
client-side encryption

Encryption of data locally, before the target AWS service receives it.

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Cloud Center of Excellence (CCoE)

A multi-disciplinary team that drives cloud adoption efforts across an organization, including
developing cloud best practices, mobilizing resources, establishing migration timelines, and
leading the organization through large-scale transformations. For more information, see the
CCoE posts on the AWS Cloud Enterprise Strategy Blog.
cloud computing

The cloud technology that is typically used for remote data storage and IoT device
management. Cloud computing is commonly connected to edge computing technology.
cloud operating model

In an IT organization, the operating model that is used to build, mature, and optimize one or
more cloud environments. For more information, see Building your Cloud Operating Model.
cloud stages of adoption

The four phases that organizations typically go through when they migrate to the AWS Cloud:
• Project – Running a few cloud-related projects for proof of concept and learning purposes
• Foundation – Making foundational investments to scale your cloud adoption (e.g., creating a
landing zone, defining a CCoE, establishing an operations model)
• Migration – Migrating individual applications
• Re-invention – Optimizing products and services, and innovating in the cloud

These stages were defined by Stephen Orban in the blog post The Journey Toward Cloud-First
& the Stages of Adoption on the AWS Cloud Enterprise Strategy blog. For information about
how they relate to the AWS migration strategy, see the migration readiness guide.
CMDB

See configuration management database.


code repository

A location where source code and other assets, such as documentation, samples, and scripts,
are stored and updated through version control processes. Common cloud repositories include
GitHub or AWS CodeCommit. Each version of the code is called a branch. In a microservice
structure, each repository is devoted to a single piece of functionality. A single CI/CD pipeline
can use multiple repositories.

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cold cache

A buffer cache that is empty, not well populated, or contains stale or irrelevant data. This
affects performance because the database instance must read from the main memory or disk,
which is slower than reading from the buffer cache.
cold data

Data that is rarely accessed and is typically historical. When querying this kind of data, slow
queries are typically acceptable. Moving this data to lower-performing and less expensive
storage tiers or classes can reduce costs.
computer vision (CV)

A field of AI that uses machine learning to analyze and extract information from visual formats
such as digital images and videos. For example, AWS Panorama offers devices that add CV to
on-premises camera networks, and Amazon SageMaker provides image processing algorithms
for CV.
configuration drift

For a workload, a configuration change from the expected state. It might cause the workload to
become noncompliant, and it's typically gradual and unintentional.
configuration management database (CMDB)

A repository that stores and manages information about a database and its IT environment,
including both hardware and software components and their configurations. You typically use
data from a CMDB in the portfolio discovery and analysis stage of migration.
conformance pack

A collection of AWS Config rules and remediation actions that you can assemble to customize
your compliance and security checks. You can deploy a conformance pack as a single entity in
an AWS account and Region, or across an organization, by using a YAML template. For more
information, see Conformance packs in the AWS Config documentation.
continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD)

The process of automating the source, build, test, staging, and production stages of the
software release process. CI/CD is commonly described as a pipeline. CI/CD can help you
automate processes, improve productivity, improve code quality, and deliver faster. For more
information, see Benefits of continuous delivery. CD can also stand for continuous deployment.
For more information, see Continuous Delivery vs. Continuous Deployment.

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CV

See computer vision.

D
data at rest

Data that is stationary in your network, such as data that is in storage.


data classification

A process for identifying and categorizing the data in your network based on its criticality and
sensitivity. It is a critical component of any cybersecurity risk management strategy because
it helps you determine the appropriate protection and retention controls for the data. Data
classification is a component of the security pillar in the AWS Well-Architected Framework. For
more information, see Data classification.
data drift

A meaningful variation between the production data and the data that was used to train an ML
model, or a meaningful change in the input data over time. Data drift can reduce the overall
quality, accuracy, and fairness in ML model predictions.
data in transit

Data that is actively moving through your network, such as between network resources.
data mesh

An architectural framework that provides distributed, decentralized data ownership with


centralized management and governance.
data minimization

The principle of collecting and processing only the data that is strictly necessary. Practicing
data minimization in the AWS Cloud can reduce privacy risks, costs, and your analytics carbon
footprint.
data perimeter

A set of preventive guardrails in your AWS environment that help make sure that only trusted
identities are accessing trusted resources from expected networks. For more information, see
Building a data perimeter on AWS.

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data preprocessing

To transform raw data into a format that is easily parsed by your ML model. Preprocessing data
can mean removing certain columns or rows and addressing missing, inconsistent, or duplicate
values.

data provenance

The process of tracking the origin and history of data throughout its lifecycle, such as how the
data was generated, transmitted, and stored.

data subject

An individual whose data is being collected and processed.

data warehouse

A data management system that supports business intelligence, such as analytics. Data
warehouses commonly contain large amounts of historical data, and they are typically used for
queries and analysis.

database definition language (DDL)

Statements or commands for creating or modifying the structure of tables and objects in a
database.

database manipulation language (DML)

Statements or commands for modifying (inserting, updating, and deleting) information in a


database.
DDL

See database definition language.

deep ensemble

To combine multiple deep learning models for prediction. You can use deep ensembles to
obtain a more accurate prediction or for estimating uncertainty in predictions.

deep learning

An ML subfield that uses multiple layers of artificial neural networks to identify mapping
between input data and target variables of interest.

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defense-in-depth

An information security approach in which a series of security mechanisms and controls are
thoughtfully layered throughout a computer network to protect the confidentiality, integrity,
and availability of the network and the data within. When you adopt this strategy on AWS,
you add multiple controls at different layers of the AWS Organizations structure to help
secure resources. For example, a defense-in-depth approach might combine multi-factor
authentication, network segmentation, and encryption.
delegated administrator

In AWS Organizations, a compatible service can register an AWS member account to administer
the organization’s accounts and manage permissions for that service. This account is called the
delegated administrator for that service. For more information and a list of compatible services,
see Services that work with AWS Organizations in the AWS Organizations documentation.
deployment

The process of making an application, new features, or code fixes available in the target
environment. Deployment involves implementing changes in a code base and then building and
running that code base in the application’s environments.
development environment

See environment.
detective control

A security control that is designed to detect, log, and alert after an event has occurred.
These controls are a second line of defense, alerting you to security events that bypassed the
preventative controls in place. For more information, see Detective controls in Implementing
security controls on AWS.
development value stream mapping (DVSM)

A process used to identify and prioritize constraints that adversely affect speed and quality in
a software development lifecycle. DVSM extends the value stream mapping process originally
designed for lean manufacturing practices. It focuses on the steps and teams required to create
and move value through the software development process.
digital twin

A virtual representation of a real-world system, such as a building, factory, industrial


equipment, or production line. Digital twins support predictive maintenance, remote
monitoring, and production optimization.

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dimension table

In a star schema, a smaller table that contains data attributes about quantitative data in a
fact table. Dimension table attributes are typically text fields or discrete numbers that behave
like text. These attributes are commonly used for query constraining, filtering, and result set
labeling.
disaster

An event that prevents a workload or system from fulfilling its business objectives in its primary
deployed location. These events can be natural disasters, technical failures, or the result of
human actions, such as unintentional misconfiguration or a malware attack.
disaster recovery (DR)

The strategy and process you use to minimize downtime and data loss caused by a disaster. For
more information, see Disaster Recovery of Workloads on AWS: Recovery in the Cloud in the
AWS Well-Architected Framework.
DML

See database manipulation language.


domain-driven design

An approach to developing a complex software system by connecting its components to


evolving domains, or core business goals, that each component serves. This concept was
introduced by Eric Evans in his book, Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of
Software (Boston: Addison-Wesley Professional, 2003). For information about how you can use
domain-driven design with the strangler fig pattern, see Modernizing legacy Microsoft ASP.NET
(ASMX) web services incrementally by using containers and Amazon API Gateway.
DR

See disaster recovery.


drift detection

Tracking deviations from a baselined configuration. For example, you can use AWS
CloudFormation to detect drift in system resources, or you can use AWS Control Tower to detect
changes in your landing zone that might affect compliance with governance requirements.
DVSM

See development value stream mapping.

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E
EDA

See exploratory data analysis.

edge computing

The technology that increases the computing power for smart devices at the edges of an IoT
network. When compared with cloud computing, edge computing can reduce communication
latency and improve response time.

encryption

A computing process that transforms plaintext data, which is human-readable, into ciphertext.

encryption key

A cryptographic string of randomized bits that is generated by an encryption algorithm. Keys


can vary in length, and each key is designed to be unpredictable and unique.

endianness

The order in which bytes are stored in computer memory. Big-endian systems store the most
significant byte first. Little-endian systems store the least significant byte first.

endpoint

See service endpoint.

endpoint service

A service that you can host in a virtual private cloud (VPC) to share with other users. You can
create an endpoint service with AWS PrivateLink and grant permissions to other AWS accounts
or to AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) principals. These accounts or principals
can connect to your endpoint service privately by creating interface VPC endpoints. For more
information, see Create an endpoint service in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC)
documentation.

enterprise resource planning (ERP)

A system that automates and manages key business processes (such as accounting, MES, and
project management) for an enterprise.

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envelope encryption

The process of encrypting an encryption key with another encryption key. For more
information, see Envelope encryption in the AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS)
documentation.
environment

An instance of a running application. The following are common types of environments in cloud
computing:
• development environment – An instance of a running application that is available only to the
core team responsible for maintaining the application. Development environments are used
to test changes before promoting them to upper environments. This type of environment is
sometimes referred to as a test environment.
• lower environments – All development environments for an application, such as those used
for initial builds and tests.
• production environment – An instance of a running application that end users can access. In a
CI/CD pipeline, the production environment is the last deployment environment.
• upper environments – All environments that can be accessed by users other than the core
development team. This can include a production environment, preproduction environments,
and environments for user acceptance testing.
epic

In agile methodologies, functional categories that help organize and prioritize your work. Epics
provide a high-level description of requirements and implementation tasks. For example, AWS
CAF security epics include identity and access management, detective controls, infrastructure
security, data protection, and incident response. For more information about epics in the AWS
migration strategy, see the program implementation guide.
ERP

See enterprise resource planning.


exploratory data analysis (EDA)

The process of analyzing a dataset to understand its main characteristics. You collect or
aggregate data and then perform initial investigations to find patterns, detect anomalies,
and check assumptions. EDA is performed by calculating summary statistics and creating data
visualizations.

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fact table

The central table in a star schema. It stores quantitative data about business operations.
Typically, a fact table contains two types of columns: those that contain measures and those
that contain a foreign key to a dimension table.
fail fast

A philosophy that uses frequent and incremental testing to reduce the development lifecycle. It
is a critical part of an agile approach.
fault isolation boundary

In the AWS Cloud, a boundary such as an Availability Zone, AWS Region, control plane, or data
plane that limits the effect of a failure and helps improve the resilience of workloads. For more
information, see AWS Fault Isolation Boundaries.
feature branch

See branch.
features

The input data that you use to make a prediction. For example, in a manufacturing context,
features could be images that are periodically captured from the manufacturing line.
feature importance

How significant a feature is for a model’s predictions. This is usually expressed as a numerical
score that can be calculated through various techniques, such as Shapley Additive Explanations
(SHAP) and integrated gradients. For more information, see Machine learning model
interpretability with :AWS.
feature transformation

To optimize data for the ML process, including enriching data with additional sources, scaling
values, or extracting multiple sets of information from a single data field. This enables the ML
model to benefit from the data. For example, if you break down the “2021-05-27 00:15:37”
date into “2021”, “May”, “Thu”, and “15”, you can help the learning algorithm learn nuanced
patterns associated with different data components.
FGAC

See fine-grained access control.

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fine-grained access control (FGAC)

The use of multiple conditions to allow or deny an access request.


flash-cut migration

A database migration method that uses continuous data replication through change data
capture to migrate data in the shortest time possible, instead of using a phased approach. The
objective is to keep downtime to a minimum.

G
geo blocking

See geographic restrictions.


geographic restrictions (geo blocking)

In Amazon CloudFront, an option to prevent users in specific countries from accessing content
distributions. You can use an allow list or block list to specify approved and banned countries.
For more information, see Restricting the geographic distribution of your content in the
CloudFront documentation.
Gitflow workflow

An approach in which lower and upper environments use different branches in a source code
repository. The Gitflow workflow is considered legacy, and the trunk-based workflow is the
modern, preferred approach.
greenfield strategy

The absence of existing infrastructure in a new environment. When adopting a greenfield


strategy for a system architecture, you can select all new technologies without the restriction
of compatibility with existing infrastructure, also known as brownfield. If you are expanding the
existing infrastructure, you might blend brownfield and greenfield strategies.
guardrail

A high-level rule that helps govern resources, policies, and compliance across organizational
units (OUs). Preventive guardrails enforce policies to ensure alignment to compliance standards.
They are implemented by using service control policies and IAM permissions boundaries.
Detective guardrails detect policy violations and compliance issues, and generate alerts

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for remediation. They are implemented by using AWS Config, AWS Security Hub, Amazon
GuardDuty, AWS Trusted Advisor, Amazon Inspector, and custom AWS Lambda checks.

H
HA

See high availability.

heterogeneous database migration

Migrating your source database to a target database that uses a different database engine
(for example, Oracle to Amazon Aurora). Heterogeneous migration is typically part of a re-
architecting effort, and converting the schema can be a complex task. AWS provides AWS SCT
that helps with schema conversions.

high availability (HA)

The ability of a workload to operate continuously, without intervention, in the event of


challenges or disasters. HA systems are designed to automatically fail over, consistently deliver
high-quality performance, and handle different loads and failures with minimal performance
impact.

historian modernization

An approach used to modernize and upgrade operational technology (OT) systems to better
serve the needs of the manufacturing industry. A historian is a type of database that is used to
collect and store data from various sources in a factory.

homogeneous database migration

Migrating your source database to a target database that shares the same database engine
(for example, Microsoft SQL Server to Amazon RDS for SQL Server). Homogeneous migration
is typically part of a rehosting or replatforming effort. You can use native database utilities to
migrate the schema.

hot data

Data that is frequently accessed, such as real-time data or recent translational data. This data
typically requires a high-performance storage tier or class to provide fast query responses.

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hotfix

An urgent fix for a critical issue in a production environment. Due to its urgency, a hotfix is
usually made outside of the typical DevOps release workflow.
hypercare period

Immediately following cutover, the period of time when a migration team manages and
monitors the migrated applications in the cloud in order to address any issues. Typically, this
period is 1–4 days in length. At the end of the hypercare period, the migration team typically
transfers responsibility for the applications to the cloud operations team.

I
IaC

See infrastructure as code.


identity-based policy

A policy attached to one or more IAM principals that defines their permissions within the AWS
Cloud environment.
idle application

An application that has an average CPU and memory usage between 5 and 20 percent over
a period of 90 days. In a migration project, it is common to retire these applications or retain
them on premises.
IIoT

See industrial Internet of Things.


immutable infrastructure

A model that deploys new infrastructure for production workloads instead of updating,
patching, or modifying the existing infrastructure. Immutable infrastructures are inherently
more consistent, reliable, and predictable than mutable infrastructure. For more information,
see the Deploy using immutable infrastructure best practice in the AWS Well-Architected
Framework.
inbound (ingress) VPC

In an AWS multi-account architecture, a VPC that accepts, inspects, and routes network
connections from outside an application. The AWS Security Reference Architecture recommends

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setting up your Network account with inbound, outbound, and inspection VPCs to protect the
two-way interface between your application and the broader internet.
incremental migration

A cutover strategy in which you migrate your application in small parts instead of performing
a single, full cutover. For example, you might move only a few microservices or users to the
new system initially. After you verify that everything is working properly, you can incrementally
move additional microservices or users until you can decommission your legacy system. This
strategy reduces the risks associated with large migrations.

Industry 4.0

A term that was introduced by Klaus Schwab in 2016 to refer to the modernization of
manufacturing processes through advances in connectivity, real-time data, automation,
analytics, and AI/ML.

infrastructure

All of the resources and assets contained within an application’s environment.

infrastructure as code (IaC)

The process of provisioning and managing an application’s infrastructure through a set


of configuration files. IaC is designed to help you centralize infrastructure management,
standardize resources, and scale quickly so that new environments are repeatable, reliable, and
consistent.

industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)

The use of internet-connected sensors and devices in the industrial sectors, such as
manufacturing, energy, automotive, healthcare, life sciences, and agriculture. For more
information, see Building an industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) digital transformation strategy.

inspection VPC

In an AWS multi-account architecture, a centralized VPC that manages inspections of network


traffic between VPCs (in the same or different AWS Regions), the internet, and on-premises
networks. The AWS Security Reference Architecture recommends setting up your Network
account with inbound, outbound, and inspection VPCs to protect the two-way interface
between your application and the broader internet.

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Internet of Things (IoT)

The network of connected physical objects with embedded sensors or processors that
communicate with other devices and systems through the internet or over a local
communication network. For more information, see What is IoT?

interpretability

A characteristic of a machine learning model that describes the degree to which a human
can understand how the model’s predictions depend on its inputs. For more information, see
Machine learning model interpretability with AWS.

IoT

See Internet of Things.

IT information library (ITIL)

A set of best practices for delivering IT services and aligning these services with business
requirements. ITIL provides the foundation for ITSM.

IT service management (ITSM)

Activities associated with designing, implementing, managing, and supporting IT services for
an organization. For information about integrating cloud operations with ITSM tools, see the
operations integration guide.

ITIL

See IT information library.


ITSM

See IT service management.

L
label-based access control (LBAC)

An implementation of mandatory access control (MAC) where the users and the data itself are
each explicitly assigned a security label value. The intersection between the user security label
and data security label determines which rows and columns can be seen by the user.

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landing zone

A landing zone is a well-architected, multi-account AWS environment that is scalable and


secure. This is a starting point from which your organizations can quickly launch and deploy
workloads and applications with confidence in their security and infrastructure environment.
For more information about landing zones, see Setting up a secure and scalable multi-account
AWS environment.
large migration

A migration of 300 or more servers.


LBAC

See label-based access control.


least privilege

The security best practice of granting the minimum permissions required to perform a task. For
more information, see Apply least-privilege permissions in the IAM documentation.
lift and shift

See 7 Rs.
little-endian system

A system that stores the least significant byte first. See also endianness.
lower environments

See environment.

M
machine learning (ML)

A type of artificial intelligence that uses algorithms and techniques for pattern recognition and
learning. ML analyzes and learns from recorded data, such as Internet of Things (IoT) data, to
generate a statistical model based on patterns. For more information, see Machine Learning.
main branch

See branch.

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malware

Software that is designed to compromise computer security or privacy. Malware might disrupt
computer systems, leak sensitive information, or gain unauthorized access. Examples of
malware include viruses, worms, ransomware, Trojan horses, spyware, and keyloggers.
managed services

AWS services for which AWS operates the infrastructure layer, the operating system, and
platforms, and you access the endpoints to store and retrieve data. Amazon Simple Storage
Service (Amazon S3) and Amazon DynamoDB are examples of managed services. These are also
known as abstracted services.
manufacturing execution system (MES)

A software system for tracking, monitoring, documenting, and controlling production processes
that convert raw materials to finished products on the shop floor.
MAP

See Migration Acceleration Program.


mechanism

A complete process in which you create a tool, drive adoption of the tool, and then inspect the
results in order to make adjustments. A mechanism is a cycle that reinforces and improves itself
as it operates. For more information, see Building mechanisms in the AWS Well-Architected
Framework.
member account

All AWS accounts other than the management account that are part of an organization in AWS
Organizations. An account can be a member of only one organization at a time.
MES

See manufacturing execution system.


Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT)

A lightweight, machine-to-machine (M2M) communication protocol, based on the publish/


subscribe pattern, for resource-constrained IoT devices.
microservice

A small, independent service that communicates over well-defined APIs and is typically
owned by small, self-contained teams. For example, an insurance system might include

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microservices that map to business capabilities, such as sales or marketing, or subdomains,


such as purchasing, claims, or analytics. The benefits of microservices include agility, flexible
scaling, easy deployment, reusable code, and resilience. For more information, see Integrating
microservices by using AWS serverless services.
microservices architecture

An approach to building an application with independent components that run each application
process as a microservice. These microservices communicate through a well-defined interface
by using lightweight APIs. Each microservice in this architecture can be updated, deployed,
and scaled to meet demand for specific functions of an application. For more information, see
Implementing microservices on AWS.
Migration Acceleration Program (MAP)

An AWS program that provides consulting support, training, and services to help organizations
build a strong operational foundation for moving to the cloud, and to help offset the initial
cost of migrations. MAP includes a migration methodology for executing legacy migrations in a
methodical way and a set of tools to automate and accelerate common migration scenarios.
migration at scale

The process of moving the majority of the application portfolio to the cloud in waves, with
more applications moved at a faster rate in each wave. This phase uses the best practices and
lessons learned from the earlier phases to implement a migration factory of teams, tools, and
processes to streamline the migration of workloads through automation and agile delivery. This
is the third phase of the AWS migration strategy.
migration factory

Cross-functional teams that streamline the migration of workloads through automated, agile
approaches. Migration factory teams typically include operations, business analysts and owners,
migration engineers, developers, and DevOps professionals working in sprints. Between 20
and 50 percent of an enterprise application portfolio consists of repeated patterns that can
be optimized by a factory approach. For more information, see the discussion of migration
factories and the Cloud Migration Factory guide in this content set.
migration metadata

The information about the application and server that is needed to complete the migration.
Each migration pattern requires a different set of migration metadata. Examples of migration
metadata include the target subnet, security group, and AWS account.

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migration pattern

A repeatable migration task that details the migration strategy, the migration destination, and
the migration application or service used. Example: Rehost migration to Amazon EC2 with AWS
Application Migration Service.
Migration Portfolio Assessment (MPA)

An online tool that provides information for validating the business case for migrating to
the AWS Cloud. MPA provides detailed portfolio assessment (server right-sizing, pricing, TCO
comparisons, migration cost analysis) as well as migration planning (application data analysis
and data collection, application grouping, migration prioritization, and wave planning). The
MPA tool (requires login) is available free of charge to all AWS consultants and APN Partner
consultants.
Migration Readiness Assessment (MRA)

The process of gaining insights about an organization’s cloud readiness status, identifying
strengths and weaknesses, and building an action plan to close identified gaps, using the AWS
CAF. For more information, see the migration readiness guide. MRA is the first phase of the AWS
migration strategy.
migration strategy

The approach used to migrate a workload to the AWS Cloud. For more information, see the 7 Rs
entry in this glossary and see Mobilize your organization to accelerate large-scale migrations.
ML

See machine learning.


modernization

Transforming an outdated (legacy or monolithic) application and its infrastructure into an agile,
elastic, and highly available system in the cloud to reduce costs, gain efficiencies, and take
advantage of innovations. For more information, see Strategy for modernizing applications in
the AWS Cloud.
modernization readiness assessment

An evaluation that helps determine the modernization readiness of an organization’s


applications; identifies benefits, risks, and dependencies; and determines how well the
organization can support the future state of those applications. The outcome of the assessment
is a blueprint of the target architecture, a roadmap that details development phases and

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milestones for the modernization process, and an action plan for addressing identified gaps. For
more information, see Evaluating modernization readiness for applications in the AWS Cloud.
monolithic applications (monoliths)

Applications that run as a single service with tightly coupled processes. Monolithic applications
have several drawbacks. If one application feature experiences a spike in demand, the
entire architecture must be scaled. Adding or improving a monolithic application’s features
also becomes more complex when the code base grows. To address these issues, you can
use a microservices architecture. For more information, see Decomposing monoliths into
microservices.
MPA

See Migration Portfolio Assessment.


MQTT

See Message Queuing Telemetry Transport.


multiclass classification

A process that helps generate predictions for multiple classes (predicting one of more than
two outcomes). For example, an ML model might ask "Is this product a book, car, or phone?" or
"Which product category is most interesting to this customer?"
mutable infrastructure

A model that updates and modifies the existing infrastructure for production workloads. For
improved consistency, reliability, and predictability, the AWS Well-Architected Framework
recommends the use of immutable infrastructure as a best practice.

O
OAC

See origin access control.


OAI

See origin access identity.


OCM

See organizational change management.

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offline migration

A migration method in which the source workload is taken down during the migration process.
This method involves extended downtime and is typically used for small, non-critical workloads.
OI

See operations integration.


OLA

See operational-level agreement.


online migration

A migration method in which the source workload is copied to the target system without being
taken offline. Applications that are connected to the workload can continue to function during
the migration. This method involves zero to minimal downtime and is typically used for critical
production workloads.
OPC-UA

See Open Process Communications - Unified Architecture.


Open Process Communications - Unified Architecture (OPC-UA)

A machine-to-machine (M2M) communication protocol for industrial automation. OPC-UA


provides an interoperability standard with data encryption, authentication, and authorization
schemes.
operational-level agreement (OLA)

An agreement that clarifies what functional IT groups promise to deliver to each other, to
support a service-level agreement (SLA).
operational readiness review (ORR)

A checklist of questions and associated best practices that help you understand, evaluate,
prevent, or reduce the scope of incidents and possible failures. For more information, see
Operational Readiness Reviews (ORR) in the AWS Well-Architected Framework.
operational technology (OT)

Hardware and software systems that work with the physical environment to control industrial
operations, equipment, and infrastructure. In manufacturing, the integration of OT and
information technology (IT) systems is a key focus for Industry 4.0 transformations.

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operations integration (OI)

The process of modernizing operations in the cloud, which involves readiness planning,
automation, and integration. For more information, see the operations integration guide.
organization trail

A trail that’s created by AWS CloudTrail that logs all events for all AWS accounts in an
organization in AWS Organizations. This trail is created in each AWS account that’s part of the
organization and tracks the activity in each account. For more information, see Creating a trail
for an organization in the CloudTrail documentation.
organizational change management (OCM)

A framework for managing major, disruptive business transformations from a people, culture,
and leadership perspective. OCM helps organizations prepare for, and transition to, new
systems and strategies by accelerating change adoption, addressing transitional issues, and
driving cultural and organizational changes. In the AWS migration strategy, this framework is
called people acceleration, because of the speed of change required in cloud adoption projects.
For more information, see the OCM guide.
origin access control (OAC)

In CloudFront, an enhanced option for restricting access to secure your Amazon Simple Storage
Service (Amazon S3) content. OAC supports all S3 buckets in all AWS Regions, server-side
encryption with AWS KMS (SSE-KMS), and dynamic PUT and DELETE requests to the S3 bucket.
origin access identity (OAI)

In CloudFront, an option for restricting access to secure your Amazon S3 content. When you
use OAI, CloudFront creates a principal that Amazon S3 can authenticate with. Authenticated
principals can access content in an S3 bucket only through a specific CloudFront distribution.
See also OAC, which provides more granular and enhanced access control.
ORR

See operational readiness review.


OT

See operational technology.


outbound (egress) VPC

In an AWS multi-account architecture, a VPC that handles network connections that are
initiated from within an application. The AWS Security Reference Architecture recommends

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setting up your Network account with inbound, outbound, and inspection VPCs to protect the
two-way interface between your application and the broader internet.

P
permissions boundary

An IAM management policy that is attached to IAM principals to set the maximum permissions
that the user or role can have. For more information, see Permissions boundaries in the IAM
documentation.

personally identifiable information (PII)

Information that, when viewed directly or paired with other related data, can be used to
reasonably infer the identity of an individual. Examples of PII include names, addresses, and
contact information.

PII

See personally identifiable information.

playbook

A set of predefined steps that capture the work associated with migrations, such as delivering
core operations functions in the cloud. A playbook can take the form of scripts, automated
runbooks, or a summary of processes or steps required to operate your modernized
environment.

PLC

See programmable logic controller.

PLM

See product lifecycle management.

policy

An object that can define permissions (see identity-based policy), specify access conditions (see
resource-based policy), or define the maximum permissions for all accounts in an organization
in AWS Organizations (see service control policy).

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polyglot persistence

Independently choosing a microservice’s data storage technology based on data access patterns
and other requirements. If your microservices have the same data storage technology, they can
encounter implementation challenges or experience poor performance. Microservices are more
easily implemented and achieve better performance and scalability if they use the data store
best adapted to their requirements. For more information, see Enabling data persistence in
microservices.
portfolio assessment

A process of discovering, analyzing, and prioritizing the application portfolio in order to plan
the migration. For more information, see Evaluating migration readiness.
predicate

A query condition that returns true or false, commonly located in a WHERE clause.
predicate pushdown

A database query optimization technique that filters the data in the query before transfer. This
reduces the amount of data that must be retrieved and processed from the relational database,
and it improves query performance.
preventative control

A security control that is designed to prevent an event from occurring. These controls are a first
line of defense to help prevent unauthorized access or unwanted changes to your network. For
more information, see Preventative controls in Implementing security controls on AWS.
principal

An entity in AWS that can perform actions and access resources. This entity is typically a root
user for an AWS account, an IAM role, or a user. For more information, see Principal in Roles
terms and concepts in the IAM documentation.
Privacy by Design

An approach in system engineering that takes privacy into account throughout the whole
engineering process.
private hosted zones

A container that holds information about how you want Amazon Route 53 to respond to DNS
queries for a domain and its subdomains within one or more VPCs. For more information, see
Working with private hosted zones in the Route 53 documentation.

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proactive control

A security control designed to prevent the deployment of noncompliant resources. These


controls scan resources before they are provisioned. If the resource is not compliant with the
control, then it isn't provisioned. For more information, see the Controls reference guide in the
AWS Control Tower documentation and see Proactive controls in Implementing security controls
on AWS.

product lifecycle management (PLM)

The management of data and processes for a product throughout its entire lifecycle, from
design, development, and launch, through growth and maturity, to decline and removal.

production environment

See environment.

programmable logic controller (PLC)

In manufacturing, a highly reliable, adaptable computer that monitors machines and automates
manufacturing processes.

pseudonymization

The process of replacing personal identifiers in a dataset with placeholder values.


Pseudonymization can help protect personal privacy. Pseudonymized data is still considered to
be personal data.

publish/subscribe (pub/sub)

A pattern that enables asynchronous communications among microservices to improve


scalability and responsiveness. For example, in a microservices-based MES, a microservice can
publish event messages to a channel that other microservices can subscribe to. The system can
add new microservices without changing the publishing service.

Q
query plan

A series of steps, like instructions, that are used to access the data in a SQL relational database
system.

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query plan regression

When a database service optimizer chooses a less optimal plan than it did before a given
change to the database environment. This can be caused by changes to statistics, constraints,
environment settings, query parameter bindings, and updates to the database engine.

R
RACI matrix

See responsible, accountable, consulted, informed (RACI).


ransomware

A malicious software that is designed to block access to a computer system or data until a
payment is made.
RASCI matrix

See responsible, accountable, consulted, informed (RACI).


RCAC

See row and column access control.


read replica

A copy of a database that’s used for read-only purposes. You can route queries to the read
replica to reduce the load on your primary database.
re-architect

See 7 Rs.
recovery point objective (RPO)

The maximum acceptable amount of time since the last data recovery point. This determines
what is considered an acceptable loss of data between the last recovery point and the
interruption of service.
recovery time objective (RTO)

The maximum acceptable delay between the interruption of service and restoration of service.
refactor

See 7 Rs.

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Region

A collection of AWS resources in a geographic area. Each AWS Region is isolated and
independent of the others to provide fault tolerance, stability, and resilience. For more
information, see Specify which AWS Regions your account can use.
regression

An ML technique that predicts a numeric value. For example, to solve the problem of "What
price will this house sell for?" an ML model could use a linear regression model to predict a
house's sale price based on known facts about the house (for example, the square footage).
rehost

See 7 Rs.
release

In a deployment process, the act of promoting changes to a production environment.


relocate

See 7 Rs.
replatform

See 7 Rs.
repurchase

See 7 Rs.
resiliency

An application's ability to resist or recover from disruptions. High availability and disaster
recovery are common considerations when planning for resiliency in the AWS Cloud. For more
information, see AWS Cloud Resilience.
resource-based policy

A policy attached to a resource, such as an Amazon S3 bucket, an endpoint, or an encryption


key. This type of policy specifies which principals are allowed access, supported actions, and any
other conditions that must be met.
responsible, accountable, consulted, informed (RACI) matrix

A matrix that defines the roles and responsibilities for all parties involved in migration activities
and cloud operations. The matrix name is derived from the responsibility types defined in the

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matrix: responsible (R), accountable (A), consulted (C), and informed (I). The support (S) type
is optional. If you include support, the matrix is called a RASCI matrix, and if you exclude it, it’s
called a RACI matrix.
responsive control

A security control that is designed to drive remediation of adverse events or deviations from
your security baseline. For more information, see Responsive controls in Implementing security
controls on AWS.
retain

See 7 Rs.
retire

See 7 Rs.
rotation

The process of periodically updating a secret to make it more difficult for an attacker to access
the credentials.
row and column access control (RCAC)

The use of basic, flexible SQL expressions that have defined access rules. RCAC consists of row
permissions and column masks.
RPO

See recovery point objective.


RTO

See recovery time objective.


runbook

A set of manual or automated procedures required to perform a specific task. These are
typically built to streamline repetitive operations or procedures with high error rates.

S
SAML 2.0

An open standard that many identity providers (IdPs) use. This feature enables federated
single sign-on (SSO), so users can log into the AWS Management Console or call the AWS API

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operations without you having to create user in IAM for everyone in your organization. For more
information about SAML 2.0-based federation, see About SAML 2.0-based federation in the IAM
documentation.
SCADA

See supervisory control and data acquisition.


SCP

See service control policy.


secret

In AWS Secrets Manager, confidential or restricted information, such as a password or user


credentials, that you store in encrypted form. It consists of the secret value and its metadata.
The secret value can be binary, a single string, or multiple strings. For more information, see
What's in a Secrets Manager secret? in the Secrets Manager documentation.
security control

A technical or administrative guardrail that prevents, detects, or reduces the ability of a threat
actor to exploit a security vulnerability. There are four primary types of security controls:
preventative, detective, responsive, and proactive.
security hardening

The process of reducing the attack surface to make it more resistant to attacks. This can include
actions such as removing resources that are no longer needed, implementing the security best
practice of granting least privilege, or deactivating unnecessary features in configuration files.
security information and event management (SIEM) system

Tools and services that combine security information management (SIM) and security event
management (SEM) systems. A SIEM system collects, monitors, and analyzes data from servers,
networks, devices, and other sources to detect threats and security breaches, and to generate
alerts.
security response automation

A predefined and programmed action that is designed to automatically respond to or remediate


a security event. These automations serve as detective or responsive security controls that help
you implement AWS security best practices. Examples of automated response actions include
modifying a VPC security group, patching an Amazon EC2 instance, or rotating credentials.

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server-side encryption

Encryption of data at its destination, by the AWS service that receives it.
service control policy (SCP)

A policy that provides centralized control over permissions for all accounts in an organization
in AWS Organizations. SCPs define guardrails or set limits on actions that an administrator can
delegate to users or roles. You can use SCPs as allow lists or deny lists, to specify which services
or actions are permitted or prohibited. For more information, see Service control policies in the
AWS Organizations documentation.
service endpoint

The URL of the entry point for an AWS service. You can use the endpoint to connect
programmatically to the target service. For more information, see AWS service endpoints in
AWS General Reference.
service-level agreement (SLA)

An agreement that clarifies what an IT team promises to deliver to their customers, such as
service uptime and performance.
service-level indicator (SLI)

A measurement of a performance aspect of a service, such as its error rate, availability, or


throughput.
service-level objective (SLO)

A target metric that represents the health of a service, as measured by a service-level indicator.
shared responsibility model

A model describing the responsibility you share with AWS for cloud security and compliance.
AWS is responsible for security of the cloud, whereas you are responsible for security in the
cloud. For more information, see Shared responsibility model.
SIEM

See security information and event management system.


single point of failure (SPOF)

A failure in a single, critical component of an application that can disrupt the system.

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SLA

See service-level agreement.


SLI

See service-level indicator.

SLO

See service-level objective.

split-and-seed model

A pattern for scaling and accelerating modernization projects. As new features and product
releases are defined, the core team splits up to create new product teams. This helps scale your
organization’s capabilities and services, improves developer productivity, and supports rapid
innovation. For more information, see Phased approach to modernizing applications in the AWS
Cloud.

SPOF

See single point of failure.

star schema

A database organizational structure that uses one large fact table to store transactional or
measured data and uses one or more smaller dimensional tables to store data attributes. This
structure is designed for use in a data warehouse or for business intelligence purposes.

strangler fig pattern

An approach to modernizing monolithic systems by incrementally rewriting and replacing


system functionality until the legacy system can be decommissioned. This pattern uses the
analogy of a fig vine that grows into an established tree and eventually overcomes and replaces
its host. The pattern was introduced by Martin Fowler as a way to manage risk when rewriting
monolithic systems. For an example of how to apply this pattern, see Modernizing legacy
Microsoft ASP.NET (ASMX) web services incrementally by using containers and Amazon API
Gateway.

subnet

A range of IP addresses in your VPC. A subnet must reside in a single Availability Zone.

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supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA)

In manufacturing, a system that uses hardware and software to monitor physical assets and
production operations.
symmetric encryption

An encryption algorithm that uses the same key to encrypt and decrypt the data.
synthetic testing

Testing a system in a way that simulates user interactions to detect potential issues or to
monitor performance. You can use Amazon CloudWatch Synthetics to create these tests.

T
tags

Key-value pairs that act as metadata for organizing your AWS resources. Tags can help you
manage, identify, organize, search for, and filter resources. For more information, see Tagging
your AWS resources.
target variable

The value that you are trying to predict in supervised ML. This is also referred to as an outcome
variable. For example, in a manufacturing setting the target variable could be a product defect.
task list

A tool that is used to track progress through a runbook. A task list contains an overview of
the runbook and a list of general tasks to be completed. For each general task, it includes the
estimated amount of time required, the owner, and the progress.
test environment

See environment.
training

To provide data for your ML model to learn from. The training data must contain the correct
answer. The learning algorithm finds patterns in the training data that map the input data
attributes to the target (the answer that you want to predict). It outputs an ML model that
captures these patterns. You can then use the ML model to make predictions on new data for
which you don’t know the target.

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transit gateway

A network transit hub that you can use to interconnect your VPCs and on-premises
networks. For more information, see What is a transit gateway in the AWS Transit Gateway
documentation.

trunk-based workflow

An approach in which developers build and test features locally in a feature branch and then
merge those changes into the main branch. The main branch is then built to the development,
preproduction, and production environments, sequentially.

trusted access

Granting permissions to a service that you specify to perform tasks in your organization in AWS
Organizations and in its accounts on your behalf. The trusted service creates a service-linked
role in each account, when that role is needed, to perform management tasks for you. For more
information, see Using AWS Organizations with other AWS services in the AWS Organizations
documentation.

tuning

To change aspects of your training process to improve the ML model's accuracy. For example,
you can train the ML model by generating a labeling set, adding labels, and then repeating
these steps several times under different settings to optimize the model.

two-pizza team

A small DevOps team that you can feed with two pizzas. A two-pizza team size ensures the best
possible opportunity for collaboration in software development.

U
uncertainty

A concept that refers to imprecise, incomplete, or unknown information that can undermine the
reliability of predictive ML models. There are two types of uncertainty: Epistemic uncertainty
is caused by limited, incomplete data, whereas aleatoric uncertainty is caused by the noise and
randomness inherent in the data. For more information, see the Quantifying uncertainty in
deep learning systems guide.

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undifferentiated tasks

Also known as heavy lifting, work that is necessary to create and operate an application but
that doesn’t provide direct value to the end user or provide competitive advantage. Examples of
undifferentiated tasks include procurement, maintenance, and capacity planning.
upper environments

See environment.

V
vacuuming

A database maintenance operation that involves cleaning up after incremental updates to


reclaim storage and improve performance.
version control

Processes and tools that track changes, such as changes to source code in a repository.
VPC peering

A connection between two VPCs that allows you to route traffic by using private IP addresses.
For more information, see What is VPC peering in the Amazon VPC documentation.
vulnerability

A software or hardware flaw that compromises the security of the system.

W
warm cache

A buffer cache that contains current, relevant data that is frequently accessed. The database
instance can read from the buffer cache, which is faster than reading from the main memory or
disk.
warm data

Data that is infrequently accessed. When querying this kind of data, moderately slow queries
are typically acceptable.

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window function

A SQL function that performs a calculation on a group of rows that relate in some way to the
current record. Window functions are useful for processing tasks, such as calculating a moving
average or accessing the value of rows based on the relative position of the current row.
workload

A collection of resources and code that delivers business value, such as a customer-facing
application or backend process.
workstream

Functional groups in a migration project that are responsible for a specific set of tasks. Each
workstream is independent but supports the other workstreams in the project. For example,
the portfolio workstream is responsible for prioritizing applications, wave planning, and
collecting migration metadata. The portfolio workstream delivers these assets to the migration
workstream, which then migrates the servers and applications.
WORM

See write once, read many.


WQF

See AWS Workload Qualification Framework.


write once, read many (WORM)

A storage model that writes data a single time and prevents the data from being deleted or
modified. Authorized users can read the data as many times as needed, but they cannot change
it. This data storage infrastructure is considered immutable.

Z
zero-day exploit

An attack, typically malware, that takes advantage of a zero-day vulnerability.


zero-day vulnerability

An unmitigated flaw or vulnerability in a production system. Threat actors can use this type of
vulnerability to attack the system. Developers frequently become aware of the vulnerability as a
result of the attack.

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zombie application

An application that has an average CPU and memory usage below 5 percent. In a migration
project, it is common to retire these applications.

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