![]() You can expose SSH on your webservers and you can expose your AWS Relational Database Service (RDS) and Redis/ElastiCache servers to the internet for easy access. It's nice to be able to ssh to do some live code debugging, or psql -U my-user -h my-database-instance to assess the current state of your database. You want to get something – anything – out the door, and you therefore want to be able to write code and debug issues quickly.īecause of that, it's awfully tempting to spin up servers and databases in public subnets so that you can readily connect to them for debugging sessions. When you first develop infrastructure for a new project, you naturally optimize for rapid development. I will be covering just that in my next post.The problem with publicly accessible AWS resources ConclusionĪside from the theory behind SSH Reverse Tunneling, the hardest part is setting up the infrastructure to support it. A super complicated concept that only takes two short alphanumerical lines to put into practice.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |