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Document history for the AWS Resilience Hub User Guide

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Document history for the AWS Resilience Hub User Guide - AWS Resilience Hub

The following table describes the documentation for this release of AWS Resilience Hub.

  • API version: latest

  • Latest documentation update: December 17, 2024

ChangeDescriptionDate

AWS Resilience Hub integrates already implemented Amazon CloudWatch alarms

AWS Resilience Hub now automatically detects and integrates already configured Amazon CloudWatch alarms into its resilience assessments, providing a more comprehensive view of your application’s resilience posture. This new capability combines AWS Resilience Hub recommendations with your current monitoring setup to streamline alarm management and enhance assessment accuracy.

For more information, see Managing alarms.

December 17, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub has enabled additional capabilities to provide simplified resilience testing with tailored AWS Fault Injection Service experiments

AWS Resilience Hub now supports an enhanced integration with AWS Fault Injection Service (AWS FIS) to offer tailored recommendations using AWS FIS actions and scenarios based on the specific application context to improve the resilience posture. Running the recommended experiments or your own tests will improve your resilience score, allowing you to track changes over time.

December 17, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub introduces a summary view

AWS Resilience Hub's new summary view offers a high-level, visual representation of the applications' resilience through clear charts and graphs, allowing you to visualize the state of your application portfolio and efficiently manage and improve your applications' ability to withstand and recover from disruptions. In addition to the new summary view, you can export the data powering the summary view to create custom reports for stakeholder communication.

For more information, see AWS Resilience Hub summary.

November 21, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub introduces the Resiliency widget in the myApplications dashboard

The new Resiliency widget in the myApplications dashboard streamlines assessing and monitoring your applications’ resilience posture. It enables you to quickly evaluate the resilience of applications defined in myApplications without having to manually replicate them in the AWS Resilience Hub.

For more information, see the following topics:

October 22, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for Amazon ElastiCache (Redis OSS) Serverless

AWS Resilience Hub now assesses applications that use Amazon ElastiCache (Redis OSS), including Amazon ElastiCache (Redis OSS) Serverless and Global Datastores, and provides enhanced resilience recommendations. These include guidelines for Region and multi-Region setups, as well as strategies for Multi-AZ deployments, resource grouping, and backup. Additionally, to provide improved control over the resilience posture of the applications, AWS Resilience Hub offers Amazon CloudWatch alarms that are tailored for Amazon ElastiCache (Redis OSS).

For more information, see the following topics:

September 25, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub introduces grouping recommendations

AWS Resilience Hub introduces a new smart-grouping option to group resources into Application Components (AppComponents) while onboarding your applications. When you run resilience assessments on AWS Resilience Hub, it is important that your resources are accurately grouped into appropriate AppComponents to receive optimised and actionable recommendations. This option is ideal for complex or cross-Region applications to reduce the time taken to onboard your applications, and it complements the existing application onboarding workflow that is available today.

For more information, see the following topics:

August 1, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub introduces a new assessment summary widget

AWS Resilience Hub introduces a new assessment summary widget that uses Amazon Bedrock generative AI capabilities to transform complex resilience data into highly actionable insights. These assessment summaries extract the critical findings, prioritize risks, and recommend steps to improve resilience. By focusing on the most impactful elements, you can understand the assessments much easier, which helps you with high-impact information that focuses on the most critical elements of your resilience posture.

For more information, see Assessment Summary.

August 1, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for Amazon DocumentDB

This AWS Resilience Hub policy allows you to grant Describe permissions to allow you to access resources and configurations on Amazon DocumentDB, Elastic Load Balancing, and AWS Lambda while running assessments.

For more information about the AWS managed policy, see AWSResilienceHubAsssessmentExecutionPolicy.

August 1, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub expands application resilience drift-detection capabilities

AWS Resilience Hub has expanded its drift detection capabilities by introducing a new type of drift detection – Application resource drift. This enhancement detects changes, such as addition or deletion of resources within the application's input sources. You can enable the AWS Resilience Hub scheduled assessment and drift notification services and be notified whenever a drift occurs. The latest resiliency assessment identifies the drifts and presents remediation actions to bring the application back into compliance with your resilience policy.

For more information, see the following topics:

May 8, 2024

AWS Trusted Advisor enhancements

AWS Resilience Hub has expanded support for AWS Trusted Advisor by adding a check to identify unrecoverable Application Components (AppComponents).

For more information, see AWS Trusted Advisor.

March 28, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for recommended alarms

AWS Resilience Hub has updated the README.md template file with values that allow you to create alarms recommended by AWS Resilience Hub within AWS (such as Amazon CloudWatch) or outside AWS.

For more information, see Managing alarms.

March 26, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for Amazon FSx for Windows File Server

AWS Resilience Hub extends assessment support for Amazon FSx for Windows File Server resources while assessing your application’s resiliency. For applications using Amazon FSx for Windows File Server, AWS Resilience Hub provides a new set of resilience recommendations, covering Availability Zone (AZ) and Multi-AZ deployments, and backup plans, as well as data replication. AWS Resilience Hub supports Amazon FSx for Windows File Server, including filesystem dependency on Microsoft Active Directory, for both in-Region and cross-Region deployments.

For more information, see the following topics:

March 26, 2024

AWS Resilience Hub provides additional information about Resiliency score

AWS Resilience Hub has updated the Resiliency score user experience to help you easily navigate and understand the actions needed to improve the resilience posture of your applications.

For more information, see Understanding resiliency scores.

November 9, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for applications that include Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) resources

AWS Resilience Hub extends the support for applications that include Amazon EKS resources to include new operational recommendations. While running an assessment that includes resources from Amazon EKS clusters, we will now recommend tests and alarms to be executed to help improve the resilience posture of the applications.

For more information, see Managing AWS Fault Injection Service experiments.

November 9, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub provides additional information at the application level

AWS Resilience Hub provides additional information at the application level about estimated workload RTO and estimated workload RPO. This additional information indicates the maximum possible estimated workload RTO and estimated workload RPO of your application from the latest successful assessment. This value is the maximum estimated workload RTO and estimated workload RPO of all the disruption types.

For more information, see Describing and managing AWS Resilience Hub Applications.

October 30, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub extends assessment support for AWS Step Functions resources

AWS Resilience Hub extends assessment support for AWS Step Functions resources while assessing your application’s resiliency. AWS Resilience Hub analyzes the AWS Step Functions configuration including the state machine type (either Standard or Express workflows). In addition, AWS Resilience Hub will also provide recommendations that help you to meet the estimated workload Recovery Time Objectives (RTO) and estimated workload Recovery Point Objectives (RPO). To assess the applications including AWS Step Functions resources, you must set up the necessary permissions, either by using AWS managed policy or by manually adding the specific permission to allow AWS Resilience Hub to read the AWS Step Functions configuration.

For more information about the associated permissions, see AWSResilienceHubAsssessmentExecutionPolicy.

October 30, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub allows Excluding Operational Recommendations

AWS Resilience Hub adds the ability for you to exclude operational recommendations including alarms, standard operating procedures (SOPs), and AWS Fault Injection Service (AWS FIS) tests. While running an assessment on AWS Resilience Hub, you are provided estimated recovery times and recommendations on ways to increase the resilience of the application that was assessed. Using the exclude recommendations workflow, you will now have the ability to exclude recommended alarms, SOPs, and AWS FIS tests that are not relevant for them. The exclude workflow is beneficial if you are using a platform outside of one suggested, or have already implemented the recommendation in alternative method.

For more information, see the following topics:

August 9, 2023

Improving permissions design for AWS Resilience Hub

AWS Resilience Hub introduces a new permission design to provide flexibility while configuring AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles for AWS Resilience Hub. It also consolidates permissions into a single role, with the ability to create custom role names that are meaningful to you and your teams. A new managed policy in AWS Resilience Hub will allow you to have the appropriate permissions for the supported services. If you are comfortable with the current method of setting permissions, we will continue to support the manual configuration.

For more information about the AWS managed policy, see AWSResilienceHubAsssessmentExecutionPolicy.

August 2, 2023

Application Resilience Drift Detection with AWS Resilience Hub

AWS Resilience Hub allows you to proactively detect and understand the necessary actions to resolve application resilience. Enabling Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) to receive notifications when the estimated workload recovery time objective (RTO) or estimated workload recovery point objective (RPO) has moved from meeting the target to no longer satisfying your organization’s business objectives. Moving from reactively finding resilience issues while manually running an assessment to proactively being notified through Amazon SNS topics will allow you to anticipate potential disruptions earlier, and provide additional confidence that recovery objectives will be achieved.

For more information, see the following topics:

August 2, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub improves support for Amazon Relational Database Service and Amazon Aurora

AWS Resilience Hub extends assessment support for Amazon Relational Database Service proxy, and headless and Amazon Aurora DB database configurations. In addition, while assessing applications that include Amazon RDS, we will now distinguish between different database engines to provide more precise estimated workload recovery time objectives (RTOs). AWS Resilience Hub will also provide additional actions to implement resilience best practices within your AWS environment. The best practices can include performance insights with DevOps Guru for Amazon RDS, enhanced monitoring, and blue/green deployment automation on supported database engines.

To learn more about the permissions required for AWS Resilience Hub to include resources from all the supported services in your assessment, see AWSResilienceHubAsssessmentExecutionPolicy.

August 2, 2023

AWS Resilience Hub extends support for Amazon Elastic Block Store snapshots

AWS Resilience Hub extends assessment support for Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) to recognize Amazon EBS snapshots, which are taken within the same Amazon EBS Region using direct APIs. The extended support is in addition to current support for customers using Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager (Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager) or AWS Backup.

For more information, see Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS).

August 2, 2023

Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud enhancements

AWS Resilience Hub has expanded support for Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2). For Applications of different sizes, AWS allows its customers using Amazon EC2 to select the configuration that is appropriate for their use case. AWS Resilience Hub supports assessment on the following Amazon EC2 configurations:

  • On-demand instances.

  • Instances backup by AWS Backup and AWS Elastic Disaster Recovery.

  • Support for auto-scaling groups with Amazon Application Recovery Controller (ARC) (ARC)

Going forward, assessment support will extend to include spot instances, dedicated hosts, dedicated instances, placement groups, and fleets.

For more information, see AWS Resilience Hub access permissions reference.

June 27, 2023

AWS managed policy updates

Added a new policy that provides access to other AWS services for executing assessments.

For more information, see AWSResilienceHubAsssessmentExecutionPolicy.

June 26, 2023

New Amazon DynamoDB operational recommendation alarms

For applications using Amazon DynamoDB, AWS Resilience Hub now provides a new set of alarms that alert you to resilience risks for on-demand and provisioned capacity modes and global tables. To access the new alarms, you may need to update the AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) policy of the role you are using.

For more information, see AWS Resilience Hub access permissions reference.

May 2, 2023

AWS Trusted Advisor enhancements

AWS Resilience Hub has expanded support for AWS Trusted Advisor and the applications using Amazon DynamoDB. When you use AWS Trusted Advisor with AWS Resilience Hub, you can now receive a notification when an application has not been assessed in the previous 30 days. This notification prompts you to reassess the application to understand if there are any changes that would impact its resiliency.

For more information about AWS Resilience Hub assessment age check, see AWS Trusted Advisor.

May 2, 2023

Additional support for Amazon Simple Storage Service

In addition to the current support of Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) Cross-Region Replication (Amazon S3 CRR)/ Amazon S3 Same-Region Replication (SRR), versioning, and AWS Backup, AWS Resilience Hub will now assess Amazon S3 for multi-Region access point, Amazon S3 Replication Time Control (Amazon S3 RTC), and AWS Backup point-in-time recovery (PITR) configuration.

For more information, see the following topics:

March 21, 2023

Additional support for Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service

AWS Resilience Hub has added Amazon EKS cluster as a supported resource for defining, validating, and tracking application resiliency. Customers can add Amazon EKS clusters to new or existing applications, and receive assessments and recommendations for improving resiliency. Customers can add application resources using AWS CloudFormation, Terraform, AWS Resource Groups, and myApplications. Additionally, customers can add one or more Amazon EKS clusters directly in one or more Regions with one or more namespaces in each cluster. This allows AWS Resilience Hub to provide single and cross-Region assessments and recommendations. In addition to examining deployments, Replicas, ReplicationControllers, and Pods, AWS Resilience Hub will analyze the overall cluster resiliency. AWS Resilience Hub supports stateless Amazon EKS cluster workloads. The new capabilities are available in all the AWS Regions where AWS Resilience Hub is supported.

For more information, see the following topics:

March 21, 2023

Additional support for Amazon Elastic File System

In addition to the current support for Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) backup, AWS Resilience Hub will now assess Amazon EFS for Amazon EFS replication and AZ configuration.

For more information, see the following topics:

March 21, 2023

Support for application input sources

AWS Resilience Hub now provides transparency about your application sources. It helps you to add, delete, and reimport input sources of your application, and publish a new application version.

For more information, see Editing AWS Resilience Hub application resources.

February 21, 2023

Support for application configuration parameters

AWS Resilience Hub now provides an input mechanism to gather additional information about the resources associated with your applications. With this information, AWS Resilience Hub will gain a deeper understanding of your resources and provide better resiliency recommendations.

For more information, see the following topics:

February 21, 2023

Additional support for Amazon Elastic Block Store

In addition to the current support of Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) volumes, AWS Resilience Hub will now asses Amazon EBS snapshots by Amazon Data Lifecycle Manager and Amazon EBS fast snapshot restore (FSR).

For more information, see the following topics:

February 21, 2023

Integration with AWS Trusted Advisor

AWS Trusted Advisor users will be able to view applications associated with their account that have been assessed by AWS Resilience Hub. AWS Trusted Advisor shows the latest resilience score and provides a status that indicates if the targeted resilience policy (RTO and RPO) has been met or not. Each time an assessment is run, AWS Resilience Hub updates AWS Trusted Advisor with the latest results. AWS Trusted Advisor is a service that continuously analyzes your AWS accounts and provides recommendations to help you to follow AWS best practices and AWS Well-Architected guidelines.

For more information, see AWS Trusted Advisor.

November 18, 2022

Support for Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS)

AWS Resilience Hub now assesses applications using Amazon SNS by analyzing Amazon SNS configuration, including subscribers, and provides recommendations to meet the organization’s estimated workload recovery objectives (estimated workload RTO and estimated workload RPO) for the applications. Amazon SNS is a managed service that delivers message from publishers (producers) to subscribers (consumers).

For more information, see the following topics:

November 16, 2022

Additional Support for Amazon Application Recovery Controller (ARC) (Amazon ARC)

AWS Resilience Hub now assesses Amazon ARC for Elastic Load Balancing and Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS), which includes advising when Amazon ARC would be beneficial. Extending AWS Resilience Hub, Amazon ARC assessment support beyond AWS Auto Scaling Group (AWS ASG) and Amazon DynamoDB. Amazon ARC provides high availability for your application, allowing you to quickly failover your entire application to a failover Region.

For more information, see the following topics:

November 16, 2022

Additional Support for AWS Backup

AWS Resilience Hub now assesses Amazon ARC for Elastic Load Balancing and Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS), which includes advising when Amazon ARC would be beneficial. Extending AWS Resilience Hub, Amazon ARC assessment support beyond AWS Auto Scaling Group (AWS ASG) and Amazon DynamoDB. Amazon ARC provides high availability for your application, allowing you to quickly failover your entire application to a failover Region.

For more information, see the following topics:

November 16, 2022

Updated content: Added new Application Component resources

Added Route53 and AWS Backup to the list of supported Application Component resources in the AppComponent grouping section.

July 1, 2022

New content: Application compliance status concept

Added the Changes detected status type.

June 2, 2022

Introducing AWS Resilience Hub

AWS Resilience Hub is now available. This guide describes how to use AWS Resilience Hub to analyze your infrastructure, get recommendations to improve the resiliency of your AWS apps, review resiliency scores, and more.

November 10, 2021

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