Tag Archives: Oracle Database@AWS

AWS Weekly Roundup: AWS Builder Center, Amazon Q, Oracle Database@AWS, and more (July 14, 2025)

Post Syndicated from Matheus Guimaraes original https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/aws-weekly-roundup-aws-builder-center-amazon-q-oracle-databaseaws-and-more-july-14-2025/

Summer is well and truly here in the UK! I’m a bit of a summer grinch though so, unlike most people, I’m not crazy about “the glorious sun” scorching me when I’m out and about. On the upside, this provides the perfect excuse to retreat to the comfort of a well-ventilated room where I can focus on coding and curating the latest AWS releases to bring you the highlights.

I also managed to escape the heat for most of yesterday while recording an episode for the AWS Developers Podcast where the wonderful Sebastien Stormaq and Tiffany Souterre interviewed me about games development. If you haven’t discovered it yet, I highly recommend you give it a go as the episodes are full of interesting lessons and insights from not just AWS, but customers and community members who share their stories and expertise in a relaxed conversation.

Alright, ready to discover some of the new things we released last week? Here are the highlights.

AWS Builder Center
There is a new home for AWS builders and community members! AWS Builder Center is a new place where cloud builders can connect, share knowledge, and access resources to enhance their AWS journey. The platform enables users to join community programs, discover trending topics, access AWS Skill Builder courses, participate in technical challenges, and more, using a single Builder ID sign-in.

One the features that I’m personally most excited about is the Wishlist. You can now create wishes and tell AWS directly about ways to improve our products and services or share original ideas that you think could help you and your teams. You can also browse and upvote existing wishes to support any suggestions that you think should be prioritized. The AWS teams will keep an eye on this and if a wish has enough traction it may just be considered!

Read the news blog post for a quick tour through some of the most exciting features or head over to AWS Builder Center and start exploring!

AI
The world of AI keeps moving fast and changing our world, by providing new and exciting ways to do things and become more productive. Here are two releases from last week that caught my attention.

  • Amazon Q chat in the AWS Management Console can now query AWS service data – Amazon Q Developer expands its capabilities by enabling natural language queries of data stored across AWS services like S3, DynamoDB, and CloudWatch, directly from the AWS Console, Slack, Microsoft Teams, and AWS Console Mobile Application. This enhancement streamlines cloud management and troubleshooting by allowing users to access and analyze service data through conversational interfaces, with access controls managed through IAM permissions.
  • Amazon CloudWatch and Application Signals MCP servers for AI-assisted troubleshooting – AWS has released two new Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers – CloudWatch MCP and Application Signals MCP – that enable AI agents to leverage observability data for automated troubleshooting through conversational interfaces. These open-source servers allow AI assistants to analyze metrics, alarms, logs, traces, and service health data across AWS environments, streamlining incident response and root cause analysis without requiring developers to manually navigate multiple AWS consoles.

Oracle Database@AWS
It seems like yesterday when Andy Jassy announced our partnership with Oracle to create Oracle Database@AWS, a jointly offered service that runs Oracle databases on Exadata infrastructure directly within AWS data centers, providing a unified AWS-Oracle experience. Fast forward to last week and Oracle Database@AWS has reached a significant milestone with its general availability release. It is now available in US East (N. Virginia) and US West (Oregon) regions, with plans to expand to 20 additional regions globally.

In addition, VPC Lattice has added support for Oracle Database@AWS enabling seamless connectivity between applications in VPCs and on-premises environments to Oracle database networks. The integration simplifies network management and provides secure access from Oracle Database@AWS to AWS services like Amazon S3 and Amazon Redshift, without requiring complex networking setup.

So if you’re looking to migrate your Oracle database workloads, now is a great time to explore Oracle Database@AWS as it offers a compelling path forward with minimal modifications required.

Additional highlights
Here are some other releases that I think many people will be happy about.

  • AWS Config now supports 12 new resource types – AWS Config has expanded its monitoring capabilities with support for 12 new resource types across services including BackupGateway, CloudFront, EntityResolution, Bedrock, and more. These additions are automatically tracked if you have enabled recording for all resource types, enhancing your ability to discover, assess, and audit AWS resources.
  • Amazon SageMaker Studio now supports remote connections from Visual Studio Code – Amazon SageMaker Studio now supports remote connections from Visual Studio Code, allowing developers to use their familiar VS Code setup while leveraging SageMaker’s scalable compute resources for AI development.
  • AWS Network Firewall: Native AWS Transit Gateway support in all regions – AWS Network Firewall now offers native integration with AWS Transit Gateway across all supported regions, enabling direct attachment and simplified traffic inspection between VPCs and on-premises networks. This integration eliminates the need for managing dedicated VPC subnets and route tables while providing multi-AZ redundancy for improved security and reliability.

Upcoming AWS Events
AWS Summit New York – this is definitely one to watch…literally! Registrations are closed due to capacity but you can tune in to watch live all the announcements and launches! No spoilers, but, trust me, there are a quite a few exciting things in store, so make sure to check it out.

AWS Gen AI LoftsAWS Gen AI Lofts are multi-day events offering hands-on workshops, expert guidance, and networking opportunities for developers and business leaders looking to explore or advance their generative AI journey. These events are hosted across multiple global locations including San Francisco, Berlin, Dubai, Dublin, Bengaluru, Manchester, Paris, and Tel Aviv, providing accessible opportunities to accelerate your generative AI adoption.

And that’s it for this week! Come back next Monday for more highlights and keep your AWS knowledge up to date as we cover the latest releases.

Matheus Guimaraes | @codingmatheus

Introducing Oracle Database@AWS for simplified Oracle Exadata migrations to the AWS Cloud

Post Syndicated from Channy Yun (윤석찬) original https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/introducing-oracle-databaseaws-for-simplified-oracle-exadata-migrations-to-the-aws-cloud/

Today, we’re announcing the general availability of Oracle Database@AWS, a new offering for Oracle Exadata workloads, including Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) within AWS.

In the past 14 years, customers had the choice of self-managing Oracle database workloads in the cloud using Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) or using fully managed Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) for Oracle. Now, you have an additional option for your workloads that require Oracle RAC or Oracle Exadata for quicker and simpler migrations to the cloud. You also get a single invoice through AWS Marketplace, which counts towards AWS commitments and Oracle license benefits, including Bring Your Own License (BYOL) and discount programs such as Oracle Support Rewards.

With Oracle Database@AWS, you can migrate your Oracle Exadata workloads to Oracle Exadata Database Service on Dedicated Infrastructure or Oracle Autonomous Database on Dedicated Exadata Infrastructure within AWS with minimal changes. You can purchase, provision, and manage your Oracle Database@AWS deployments through familiar AWS tools and interfaces such as AWS Management Console, AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI), or AWS APIs for applications running on AWS. The AWS APIs call the corresponding Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) APIs necessary to provision and manage the resources.

Since its preview last December, we’ve improved or added features to help run production workloads at general availability:

  • Regional expansion – You can now use Oracle Database@AWS in the U.S. East (N. Virginia) and U.S. West (Oregon) Regions today. We are also announcing plans to expand to 20 AWS Regions globally. This broader availability supports the diverse needs of our customers across various geographical areas so more enterprises can benefit from this option. You can choose from different Exadata system sizes to match your workload requirements in your AWS Region.
  • Zero-ETL and S3 backups – You can now benefit from zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift for analytics to remove the need to build and manage data pipelines for extract, transform, and load operations. With zero-ETL, you can unify your data on AWS without incurring cross network data transfer costs. We’re providing Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) backups with up to eleven nines of data durability.
  • Autonomous VM cluster – You can now provision an Autonomous VM Cluster in addition to an Exadata VM cluster on the Exadata Dedicated Infrastructure. You can run Oracle Autonomous Database on Dedicated Exadata Infrastructure, a fully managed database environment using committed hardware and software resources.

Oracle Database@AWS also integrates with other AWS services such as Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC) Lattice for configuring network paths to AWS services such as S3 and Redshift directly, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) for authentication and authorization, Amazon EventBridge for monitoring database lifecycle events, AWS CloudFormation for infrastructure automation, Amazon CloudWatch for collecting and monitoring metrics, and AWS CloudTrail for logging API operations.

Getting started with Oracle Database@AWS
Oracle Database@AWS supports two key services: Oracle Exadata Database Service on Dedicated Infrastructure and Oracle Autonomous Database on Dedicated Exadata Infrastructure within AWS data centers.

These services physically reside within an Availability Zone in an AWS Region and logically reside in an OCI region, enabling seamless integration with AWS services through high-speed, low-latency connections.

You create an ODB network, a private, isolated network that hosts Oracle Exadata VM Clusters within an Availability Zone. Then, you use ODB peering accessible to EC2 application servers running in a VPC. To learn more, visit How Oracle Database@AWS works in the AWS documentation.

Request a private offer in AWS Marketplace

To begin your journey with Oracle Database@AWS, visit the AWS console or request the AWS Marketplace private offer. Your AWS and Oracle sales team will receive your request, then contact you to find the best option for your workloads, and activate your account.

When you activate and get access to Oracle Database@AWS, you can use the Dashboard to create an ODB network, Exadata infrastructure, and Exadata VM cluster or Autonomous VM cluster, and ODB peering connection.

To learn more, visit the Onboarding to Oracle Database@AWS and AWS Marketplace buyer private offers in the AWS documentation.

Create an ODB network

An ODB network is a private isolated network that hosts OCI infrastructure on AWS. The ODB network maps directly to the network that exists within the OCI child site, thus serving as the means of communication between AWS and OCI.

In the Dashboard, choose Create ODB network, enter a network name, choose the Availability Zone, and specify a CIDR ranges for client connections established by applications and backup connections used for taking automated backups. You can also enter a name to use as a prefix to your domain fixed as oraclevcn.com. For example, if you enter myhost, the fully qualified domain name is myhost.oraclevcn.com.

Optionally, you can configure ODB network access to perform automated backups to Amazon S3 and zero-ETL for near real-time analytics and ML on your Oracle data using Amazon Redshift.

After you create your ODB network, update your VPC route tables of your EC2 application servers with the client connection CIDR in the ODB network. To learn more, visit ODB network, ODB peering, and Configuring VPC route tables for ODB peering in the AWS documentation.

Create Exadata infrastructure

The Oracle Exadata infrastructure is the underlying architecture of your database servers, storage servers, and networking that run your Oracle Exadata databases.

Choose Create Exadata infrastructure, enter a name, and use the default Availability Zone. In the next step, you can choose Exadata.X11M for the Exadata system model. You can also set a default of 2 or up to 32 database servers and 3 or up to 64 storage servers with 80 TB storage capacity per server.

Finally, you can configure system maintenance preferences, such as scheduling, patching mode, and OCI maintenance notification contacts. You can’t modify an infrastructure after you create it from the AWS console. But, you can navigate to the OCI console and modify it.

To delete an Exadata infrastructure, visit Deleting an Oracle Exadata infrastructure in Oracle Database@AWS in the AWS documentation.

Create an Exadata VM cluster or Autonomous VM cluster

You can create VM clusters on Exadata infrastructure and deploy multiple VM clusters with different Oracle Exadata infrastructures in the same ODB network.

Here are two types of VM clusters:

  • An Exadata VM cluster is a set of virtual machines that has a complete Oracle database installation that includes all features of Oracle Enterprise Edition.
  • An Autonomous VM cluster is a set of fully managed databases that automate key management tasks using AI/ML with no human intervention required.

Choose Create Exadata VM cluster, enter a VM cluster name and a time zone, choose Bring Your Own License (BYOL) or license included for license options. In the next step, you can choose your Exadata infrastructure, grid infrastructure version, and Exadata image version. For database servers, you can choose the CPU core count, memory, and local storage for each VM or accept the defaults.

In the next step, you can configure the connectivity setting by choosing your ODB network and entering a prefix for the VM cluster. You can enter a port number for TCP access to the single client access name (SCAN) listener. The default port is 1521 or you can enter a custom SCAN port in the range 1024–8999. For SSH key pairs, enter the public key portion of one or more key pairs used for SSH access to the VM cluster.

Then, you can choose diagnostics and tags, review your settings, and create a VM cluster. The creation process can take up to 6 hours, depending on the size of the VM cluster.

Create and manage an Oracle database

When the VM cluster is ready, you can create and manage your Oracle Exadata databases in the OCI console. Choose Manage in OCI in the details page of the Exadata VM cluster. You will be redirected to the OCI console.

When you create an Oracle Database in the OCI console, you can select Oracle Database 19c or 23ai. When enabling automatic backups for your provisioned databases, you can use an S3 bucket or OCI Object Storage in the OCI region. To learn more, visit Provision Oracle Exadata Database Service in Oracle Database@AWS in the OCI documentation.

Things to know
Here are a couple of things to know about Oracle Database@AWS:

  • Monitoring – You can monitor Oracle Database@AWS using Amazon CloudWatch metrics in the AWS/ODB namespaces for VM clusters, container databases, and pluggable databases. AWS CloudTrail captures all AWS API calls for Oracle Database@AWS as events. Using CloudTrail logs, you can determine the request that was made to Oracle Database@AWS, the IP address from which the request was made, when it was made, and additional details. To learn more, visit Monitoring Oracle Database@AWS.
  • Security – You can use IAM to assign permissions that determine who is allowed to manage Oracle Database@AWS resources and SSL/TLS encrypted connections to secure data. You can also use Amazon EventBridge for seamless event-driven database operations—all working together to maintain security standards while enabling efficient cloud operations. To learn more, visit Security in Oracle Database@AWS.
  • Compliance – Your compliance responsibility when using Oracle Database@AWS is determined by the sensitivity of your data, your company’s compliance objectives, and applicable laws and regulations. We provides the following compliances with Oracle Database@AWS: SOC 1, SOC 2, SOC 3, HIPAA, C5, CSA STAR Attest, CSA STAR Cert, HDS (France), ISO Series (ISO/IEC 9001, 20000-1, 27001, 27017, 27018, 27701, 22301), PCI DSS, and HITRUST. To learn more, visit Compliance validation for Oracle Database@AWS.
  • Support – Your AWS or Oracle sales account team can help you evaluate your current database infrastructure, determine how Oracle Database@AWS can best serve your organization’s requirements, and develop a tailored migration strategy and timeline. You can also get help from AWS Oracle Competency Partners specialized to architect, deploy, and manage Oracle-based workloads running in the AWS Cloud.

Now available and coming soon
Oracle Database@AWS is now available in the U.S. East (N. Virginia) and U.S. West (Oregon) Regions through the AWS Marketplace. Oracle Database@AWS pricing and any AWS Marketplace private offers are set by Oracle. You can see specific details around pricing on Oracle’s pricing page for the offering.

Oracle Database@AWS will expand to 20 more AWS Regions across the Americas, Europe, and Asia-Pacific including: US East (Ohio), US West (N. California), Asia Pacific (Hyderabad), Asia Pacific (Melbourne), Asia Pacific (Mumbai), Asia Pacific (Osaka), Asia Pacific (Seoul), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Canada (Central), Europe (Frankfurt), Europe (Ireland), Europe (London), Europe (Milan), Europe (Paris), Europe (Spain), Europe (Stockholm), Europe (Zurich), and South America (São Paulo).

You can get started with Oracle Database@AWS with using AWS console. To learn more, visit the Oracle Database@AWS User Guide and OCI documentation and send feedback through your usual AWS Support contacts or OCI support.

Channy