This document shows examples of using the "count" meta-parameter in Terraform configuration to create multiple similar resources from a list, variable, or repeatable block. It demonstrates counting aws_instance servers, aws_s3_bucket objects, and aws_iam_user accounts by looping through a variable list of names.
This document discusses Amazon Web Services (AWS) network architecture including virtual private clouds (VPCs), public and private subnets, internet gateways, and network address translation (NAT) gateways. It shows how EC2 instances can be launched into public or private subnets and connected to clients either directly through an internet gateway or using AWS Systems Manager through a NAT gateway.
This document contains configuration examples for the Nginx web server. It shows how to use different location blocks to route requests based on the URL and return specific content. Location blocks can match the request URL exactly, use regular expressions to match parts of the URL, and specify a root directory to serve files under a specific path. The examples demonstrate how to configure Nginx to return different content based on the request URL and handle image file requests.
This document shows examples of using the "count" meta-parameter in Terraform configuration to create multiple similar resources from a list, variable, or repeatable block. It demonstrates counting aws_instance servers, aws_s3_bucket objects, and aws_iam_user accounts by looping through a variable list of names.
This document discusses Amazon Web Services (AWS) network architecture including virtual private clouds (VPCs), public and private subnets, internet gateways, and network address translation (NAT) gateways. It shows how EC2 instances can be launched into public or private subnets and connected to clients either directly through an internet gateway or using AWS Systems Manager through a NAT gateway.
This document contains configuration examples for the Nginx web server. It shows how to use different location blocks to route requests based on the URL and return specific content. Location blocks can match the request URL exactly, use regular expressions to match parts of the URL, and specify a root directory to serve files under a specific path. The examples demonstrate how to configure Nginx to return different content based on the request URL and handle image file requests.
This document discusses setting up access control on AWS services like Amazon S3 and IAM users. It covers creating IAM users, assigning them to groups, and setting up permissions for AWS Cloud services and Amazon S3 buckets to control private access for development and testing environments.
This document discusses setting up access control on AWS services like Amazon S3 and IAM users. It covers creating IAM users, assigning them to groups, and setting up permissions for AWS Cloud services and Amazon S3 buckets to control private access for development and testing environments.