End of support notice: On June 30, 2027, AWS will end support for AMS Advanced. After June 30, 2027, you will no longer be able to access the AMS Advanced console or AMS Advanced resources. For more information, see AMS Advanced end of support.
AMS application deployments
AMS Application Developer's guide provides detailed descriptions and walkthroughs for the following deployments:
The AMS workload ingest CT allows you and an AMS cloud migration partner to easily move your existing workloads into an AMS-managed VPC. Using AMS workload ingest, you can create an AMS AMI by submitting an RFC with the Deployment | Ingestion | Stack from migration partner migrated instance | Create CT (ct-257p9zjk14ija). You must have an instance migrated from your on-premises to AWS by a migration partner, as well as a target AMS VPC and subnet, into which the instance will be ingested.
For details, see the AMS Application Developer's guide at Workload Ingest.
The CloudFormation ingest change type (ct-36cn2avfrrj9v) feature allows you to easily use an existing CloudFormation template to deploy custom stacks in an AMS-managed VPC.
For details, see the AMS Application Developer's guide at CloudFormation Template Ingest.
You can import your on-premises database into a new database to your AMS-managed Amazon S3 bucket or Amazon RDS instance. You do this using a Deployment | Advanced stack components | Database Migration Service (DMS) change types, including Create replication instance (ct-27apldkhqr0ol), Create replication subnet group (ct-2q5azjd8p1ag5), Create replication task (ct-1d2fml15b9eth), Create source endpoint (ct-0attesnjqy2cx) or Create source endpoint (S3) (ct-2oxl37nphsrjz), and Create target endpoint (ct-3gf8dolbo8x9p) or Create target endpoint (S3) (ct-05muqzievnxk5).
For details, see the AMS Application Developer's guide at Database Migration Service.
You can import your on-premises MS SQL database into a new database on your AMS-managed RDS SQL instance. You do this using a variety of AMS change types, and the Amazon RDS API, plus AWS consoles.
For details, see the AMS Application Guide at Database (DB) Import to MS SQL RDS.