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Networking in the Cloud Fundamentals: Data Transfer Pricing

Networking in the Cloud Fundamentals: Data Transfer Pricing

FromAWS Morning Brief


Networking in the Cloud Fundamentals: Data Transfer Pricing

FromAWS Morning Brief

ratings:
Length:
17 minutes
Released:
Jan 16, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

About Corey QuinnOver the course of my career, I’ve worn many different hats in the tech world: systems administrator, systems engineer, director of technical operations, and director of DevOps, to name a few. Today, I’m a cloud economist at The Duckbill Group, the author of the weekly Last Week in AWS newsletter, and the host of two podcasts: Screaming in the Cloud and, you guessed it, AWS Morning Brief, which you’re about to listen to.TranscriptCorey: Welcome to the AWS Morning Brief, specifically our 12-part mini series, Networking In The Cloud, sponsored by ThousandEyes. ThousandEyes recently released their state of the cloud benchmark performance report. They raced five clouds together and gave a comparative view of the networking strengths, weaknesses, and approaches of those various providers. Take a look at what it means for you. There's actionable advice hidden within, as well as incredibly useful comparative data, so you can start comparing apples to oranges instead of apples to baseballs. Check them out and get your copy today at snark.cloud/realclouds. That's snark.cloud/realclouds because Oracle cloud was not invited to participate.Now, one thing that they did not bother to talk about in that report, is how much all of that data transfer across different providers costs. Today I'd like to talk about that, which is a bit of a lie because I'm not here to talk about it at all, I'm here to rant like a freaking lunatic for which I make no apologies whatsoever.This episode is about data transfer pricing in AWS. Because honestly I need to rant about something and this topic is entirely too near and dear to my heart, given that I spend most of my time fixing AWS bills for interesting and various sophisticated clients.Let's begin with a simple question. The answer to which is guaranteed to piss you off like almost nothing else. What does it cost to move a gigabyte of data in AWS? Think about that for a second. The correct answer, of course, is that nobody freaking knows. There is no way to get a deterministic answer to that question without asking a giant boatload of other questions.Let me give you some examples, and before I do, I would like to call out that every number I'm about to mention applies only to us-east-1, because of course different regions in different places have varying costs, that every single one of these numbers is different in other places sometimes, but not always. Why? Because things are awful. I told you I was going to rant. I'm not apologizing for it at this point.Let's begin simply and talk about what it takes to just shove a gigabyte of data into AWS. Now in most cases that's free. Inbound bandwidth is always free to AWS usually, until it passes through with load balancer or does something else but we'll get there. What does it cost to move data between two AWS regions? Great. The answer to that is, two cents per gigabyte in the primary regions, except there's one use case which gets slightly less. And that is moving between us-east-1 and us-east-2. One is in Virginia, two is in Ohio. That is half price at one cent per gigabyte. My working theory behind that is that it's because even data wants to get the hell out of Ohio.Let's take it a step further. Let's say you were in an individual region. What does it cost to move data from 1-AZ to another? The documentation was exquisitely unclear, and I had to do some experiments with spinning up a few instances in otherwise empty AWS accounts, and using DD and Netcat to hurl data across various links to find out the answer and then wait till it showed up on my bill. The answer is it also costs 2 cents per gigabyte, the same cost as region to region. It's one cent per gigabyte out of an AZ and one cent per gigabyte in to an AZ. And that's right, it means you get charged twice. If you move 10 gigabytes, you are charged for 20 gigabytes on that particular metric.This also has the fun ancillary side effect of meaning that moving data between Virginia and Ohi
Released:
Jan 16, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The latest in AWS news, sprinkled with snark. Posts about AWS come out over sixty times a day. We filter through it all to find the hidden gems, the community contributions--the stuff worth hearing about! Then we summarize it with snark and share it with you--minus the nonsense.