![]() Backup administrators can configure a single backup plan for backup configuration consistency, which means less time toggling between Amazon RDS and AWS Backup consoles to manage database backups. In this post, I discuss how administrators can leverage AWS Backup for all their Amazon RDS backup operations. Note that as of this announcement, this feature does not support continuous backup and point-in-time recovery (PITR) for Amazon Aurora clusters. In addition, customers no longer need to coordinate backup windows to leverage both snapshot-based Amazon RDS backups (which were available when AWS Backup launched in January 2019) and continuous backups. Now, customers no longer need to coordinate backup policies between AWS Backup and Amazon RDS to achieve a particular RPO. Previously, administrators had to manage continuous backup and PITR plans in the Amazon RDS console, database by database. This further streamlines administrator effort when managing backups. Today’s launch enables you to initiate continuous backup directly from backup plans in the AWS Backup console, without needing to switch back and forth from the Amazon RDS console. Amazon RDS databases (including Amazon Aurora clusters).Together with AWS Organizations, AWS Backup enables you to centrally deploy data protection (backup) policies to configure, manage, and govern backup activity across your organization’s AWS accounts and resources, including: AWS Backup helps you support your regulatory compliance obligations and meet your business continuity goals. With this feature, database and backup administrators are able to reduce their recovery point objective (RPO) to 5 minutes or under, directly from the AWS Backup console.ĪWS Backup is a cost-effective, fully managed, policy-based service that simplifies protecting and backing up your data at scale. ![]() This feature enables customers to recover Amazon RDS backup data from a specified time within their retention period. Today, AWS Backup is announcing support for continuous backup and point-in-time recovery (PITR) of Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS). ![]()
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