- 新しい順
- 投票が多い順
- コメントが多い順
Hi Delaney, AWS Backup does support RDS [1]. Furthermore, AWS Backup supports Aurora Snapshots see "Feature availability by resource" [2]. I see in the tag you mentioned Aurora MySQL, therefore it should be supported.
You can use Tag-Based Backup Policies: AWS Backup allows you to create backup plans based on resource tags. This means you can tag your RDS snapshots with a specific label (or tag) and then configure AWS Backup to automatically back up resources with that specific tag. This ensures only the snapshots with the desired label are backed up. [3]
One example of how to implement:
- Tag your RDS snapshots with the desired label.
- In the AWS Backup console, create a backup plan.
- In the backup plan, specify the resource tag as a condition for backup selection.
- AWS Backup will then automatically back up the RDS snapshots with the specified tag.
Now to solve the second part of your problem, lifecycle snapshots[4]:
- In the AWS Backup console, when creating or editing a backup plan, specify the lifecycle settings.
- Set the retention period to 30 days.
- AWS Backup will automatically delete backups after the 30-day retention period.
If my answer is helpful please accept the answer, if you have any other questions, please let me know!
- Dylan
If AWS Backup makes the snapshots (from DBs in your backup plan) then it will manage the lifecycle of them. But you can't include snapshots that were produced in other ways under AWS Backup's management. If you really need to manage the lifecycle of backups like these and you can't just just AWS Backup from the start, then one option may be to export snapshots to Parquet in S3 (if your DB engine & version is supported) and have lifecycle policies there. These and other options are covered in detail here - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/how-ensure-aws-rds-database-backups-remain-usable-steve-kinsman/.
関連するコンテンツ
- AWS公式更新しました 1年前
- AWS公式更新しました 1年前
Great comment and consideration @skinsman!