Wow! What a great video that touches upon many topics (security, bastion server, setting bin logs on MySQL, etc.) that many other videos do NOT cover. All these details are important steps that you NEED to know when you actually implement a DMS pipeline. Thank you SO MUCH for taking the time to create this video with so many details and publishing it!
Thank you so much sir!, this video saved my hours and hours of work. Plus I have better understanding of soo many concepts. Really thankful sir. Please create more such videos on vaious AWS topics
Hello Sir. Nice work and it is really helpful! Could you tell me how much will it cost for the mentioned setup? And what will be the cost for keeping it running for 2-3 days?
Hi Soumya, Thank you very much. The running costs are mostly due to (a) DynamoDB tables and (b) DMS replication instance. As mentioned in the tutorial, the DynamoDB tables get created with 200 WCU & 200 RCU by default. Please note that DMS with DynamoDB as target would automatically create at least 3 extra DynamoDB tables each with 200 WCU and 200 RCU provisioned capacity. The table names are : DMSCDC_Controller, awsdms_apply_exceptions and awsdms_full_load_exceptions). You are typically looking at $10-$15/day running costs if you leave these tables as-is. Of course, this depends on your region and the size of DMS instance. You can reduce these costs by change the DynamoDB tables to "OnDemand" instead of Provisioned. That way, you are looking at about a couple of dollars of running costs per day at most. In any case, keep an eye on the AWS billing dashboard and delete unused resources. Hope this helps.
Wow! What a great video that touches upon many topics (security, bastion server, setting bin logs on MySQL, etc.) that many other videos do NOT cover. All these details are important steps that you NEED to know when you actually implement a DMS pipeline. Thank you SO MUCH for taking the time to create this video with so many details and publishing it!
really nice work , detailing of each and every step is appreciated . looking forward for new videos .
Thank you so much sir!, this video saved my hours and hours of work. Plus I have better understanding of soo many concepts. Really thankful sir. Please create more such videos on vaious AWS topics
Thank you so much brother. for detailed explanation
Thank you! It is very useful session. Lovely.
Sir, Excellent Working. Much appreciated. Sir Do you have videos explaining STEP function and Lambda for the same use case?
Hi Sir ..very nice video..could you please share the link of the other video which you said about basic idea of DMS video
Hi Areeb, Thank you for your comments. Here is the link to the other video & please checkout the same. th-cam.com/video/YVIugsV6egQ/w-d-xo.html
Great job ! Appreciated !
awesome, thanks
Hello Sir. Nice work and it is really helpful! Could you tell me how much will it cost for the mentioned setup? And what will be the cost for keeping it running for 2-3 days?
Hi Soumya, Thank you very much. The running costs are mostly due to (a) DynamoDB tables and (b) DMS replication instance. As mentioned in the tutorial, the DynamoDB tables get created with 200 WCU & 200 RCU by default. Please note that DMS with DynamoDB as target would automatically create at least 3 extra DynamoDB tables each with 200 WCU and 200 RCU provisioned capacity. The table names are : DMSCDC_Controller, awsdms_apply_exceptions and awsdms_full_load_exceptions). You are typically looking at $10-$15/day running costs if you leave these tables as-is. Of course, this depends on your region and the size of DMS instance. You can reduce these costs by change the DynamoDB tables to "OnDemand" instead of Provisioned. That way, you are looking at about a couple of dollars of running costs per day at most. In any case, keep an eye on the AWS billing dashboard and delete unused resources. Hope this helps.
While i am connecting to aurora through SQL electron it is showing connection error.
Can u please tell me where I made a mistake