Route Traffic to Multiple Target Groups using Load Balancer Listener Rules | AWS Load Balancing

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  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
  • In a prior video ( • Create an Application ... ), we saw how to create a simple application load balancer that routed traffic to a single target group. But what if you have a more complicated use case? For example, what if you need to route GET and POST requests differently? Or route differently based on the user’s browser? Or the destination path? Or something in the query string?
    For that, you’ll need to work with multiple target groups, setting up listener rules to route traffic to the appropriate place.
    In this hands-on tutorial, I’ll walk you through how set up a load balancer that uses two target groups. The load balancer will route traffic based on listener rules that we’ll define.
    🌟🌟If you’re interested in getting AWS certifications, check out these full courses. They include lots of hands-on demos, quizzes and full practice exams. Use FRIENDS10 for a 10% discount!
    - AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner: academy.zerotomastery.io/a/af...
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    00:00 - Overviewing the load balancer we’ll be building together
    01:49 - Explaining the setup for the EC2 Instances
    02:36 - Viewing the index.html pages for the EC2 instances
    03:39 - Creating two target groups through the AWS Console
    05:04 - Creating the application load balancer with a default HTTP listener
    08:50 - Adding load balancer listener rules to route to a second target group
    10:05 - Overviewing all six listener rule condition types (host-header, path-pattern, http-header, http-request-method, query-string, source-ip), with examples
    11:14 - Creating a listener rule for query-string, forwarding to a second target group
    13:03 - Creating a listener rule for http-header and User-Agent, forwarding to a second target group
    14:40 - Editing and deleting listener rules
    15:05 - Creating a listener rule for my source-ip, returning a fixed response for 403 forbidden
    16:48 - IMPORTANT! Deleting your load balancer, target groups and EC2 instances
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Komentáře • 105

  • @radonspace2098
    @radonspace2098 Před 2 lety +13

    You have no idea how your videos educate and elevate confidence levels. Thanks a million.

  • @jadeedstoresupport8916
    @jadeedstoresupport8916 Před 11 měsíci

    I love videos like these where the creator really cares about the audience enough to go the extra miles and create content which is intuitive and easy-to-understand. Thanks to that Spirit of care. God bless.

  • @muhidrehman5645
    @muhidrehman5645 Před rokem

    Hi Amber. Awesome tutorial. I cannot thank you enough for the work you do. I just love the way you explain in simple manner. Currently, I'm taking your AWS CCP course on ZMT and able to understand all the concepts. Thank you so much!! Keep up the good work!

  • @umcoisas
    @umcoisas Před rokem +1

    i need to say, this was the most incredible way to explain how this works, even after working several time with aws i never got to understand alb like now. tks!

  • @user-el8pn7wb9p
    @user-el8pn7wb9p Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the clear explanation. I really love the way how you enjoy teaching things with a bright smile on your face. Makes the learning process more fun and easy.

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks for such a nice comment! Glad you're enjoying the videos! 🌟🙏😊

  • @romihans
    @romihans Před rokem

    Thanks for a clear and lucid explanation of using target groups with ALBs. Helped me clear up some doubts on using more than one target group

  • @samjones4327
    @samjones4327 Před rokem

    Awesome Awesome Awesome!!! You have a definite gift for explaining and teaching technical subjects! This tutorial is the best I've run across yet in my cloud practitioner studies. This subject could not have been explained and demoed better! Thank you so much once again and I'll see u in the next one!!! Cheers!

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      Sam - You are awesome, awesome, awesome for leaving such a nice comment!! Thanks so much...this made my day! Really glad you're enjoying the videos! :)

    • @samjones4327
      @samjones4327 Před rokem

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials You are very welcome!

  • @lstgeorge7370
    @lstgeorge7370 Před 2 lety +1

    Tiny, your tutorials are awesome you make things look and sound so simple, i love it,,, keep the KISS principal :)

  • @MostafaAhmed-fn1mn
    @MostafaAhmed-fn1mn Před rokem

    Super simple and informative. Thank you!

  • @oluwaseunfashina1690
    @oluwaseunfashina1690 Před rokem

    Teaching made simple ,As a beginners, I struggle to understand some hand on but with Tiny understanding is made simple, Thanks for taking time to make videos.

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      Awww, what a nice comment! Thanks so much, Oluwaseun! Glad you're enjoying the content. :)

  • @nadzhibkuziev8057
    @nadzhibkuziev8057 Před rokem

    Thank you very much. Finnaly I have understood how listenners and target groups work.

  • @ouipro8903
    @ouipro8903 Před rokem

    Extremely well explained and very efficient.

  • @vageeshanvageesh5583
    @vageeshanvageesh5583 Před 6 měsíci

    Great one, clean and pin point information. Thanks Amber :)

  • @m.furkanalperen7712
    @m.furkanalperen7712 Před rokem

    That was very helpful video for me ! I can say from the bottom of my heart that you are awesome, thanks :)

  • @amolsakhare8327
    @amolsakhare8327 Před 6 měsíci

    Your videos are helpful to understand basics and create more interest aws cloud.Thanks

  • @Learner-hg4hj
    @Learner-hg4hj Před rokem

    Awesome and simplistic explanation ! Your teaching is unique and awesome as always , madam !! Appreciate your awesome lecture !

  • @theinnoverse
    @theinnoverse Před rokem

    Beautifully explained!

  • @ramirez368
    @ramirez368 Před rokem

    I found it pretty useful tutorial for getting the hang of ALB, but also liked your voice and how your explain things.

  • @hongli336
    @hongli336 Před rokem

    Extremely well explained.

  • @mirmali2710
    @mirmali2710 Před rokem

    Amazing channel. Subscribed!

  • @cabracareca
    @cabracareca Před rokem

    Awesome tutorial, thanks!

  • @chamupathisaranga1438

    You are the one of the best teacher i have ever met on youtube.. your lessons are very clear and you have attractive voice also.. if you can please make more lessons like this about AWS..

  • @suzanalima9372
    @suzanalima9372 Před rokem

    Thank you, this really help me ❤

  • @kanappilly
    @kanappilly Před rokem

    Awsome tutorial. Looks like i can take AWS SAA C03 exam based on your tutorials.

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      Thanks so much, Antony! 😊 There's definitely some good coverage of topics here on the channel. For full SAA prep, though, you can check out my course on Zero to Mastery: academy.zerotomastery.io/a/aff_464yrtnn/external?affcode=441520_lm7gzk-d. It goes into more depth, and also has lots of practice questions to help you prepare for the exam. Hope that helps! Let me know how the test goes. 😊

  • @Don_Willy
    @Don_Willy Před rokem

    Thank you so much.

  • @atuls4356
    @atuls4356 Před rokem

    Perfect explanation 🙂

  • @DAndrewSaunders
    @DAndrewSaunders Před rokem

    great video👍

  • @harshalchoudhari3767
    @harshalchoudhari3767 Před rokem

    Lab on alb was very clear... thank you

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      You're welcome!

    • @harshalchoudhari3767
      @harshalchoudhari3767 Před rokem +1

      I have question....can we receive http traffic on diff port for different target groups....if yes ..how could we do that ...?

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      Hi Harshal! Yes, you can route traffic to different ports/different target groups. Here are a couple links that might help?
      stackoverflow.com/questions/56877149/aws-load-balancer-to-route-traffic-to-one-target-group-with-multiple-microservic
      stackoverflow.com/questions/61999337/aws-elb-routing-http-https-traffic-to-a-custom-port-of-ec2-instance
      bharathi-batthula6.medium.com/aws-applicationload-balancer-e03f4f386a9d

    • @harshalchoudhari3767
      @harshalchoudhari3767 Před rokem +1

      Very thanks for guidance ☺️..

  • @shomikhan1333
    @shomikhan1333 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks a lot, mam

  • @rasbarbies
    @rasbarbies Před rokem

    nice one...

  • @musabsyd
    @musabsyd Před rokem

    Superb

  • @jitendernegi9074
    @jitendernegi9074 Před 11 měsíci

    lovely

  • @dineshmanogaran5289
    @dineshmanogaran5289 Před rokem

    Time GOD..😍😍😍😍😍😍😍you are saved me

  • @sraj7284
    @sraj7284 Před 7 měsíci

    This is by far the best video I have come across on this topic! Well done, Amber! Thank you for lucidly explaining along.
    two questions:
    1. At 13:00, if you kept hitting refresh, would it toggle the network traffic across the 2 instances in TG-2, or go to just that 1 instance?
    2. How would you set this up so the network will randomly go to any of the instances across both the Target Groups?
    Thanks so much, Happy Holidays! 🙂

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 7 měsíci

      Thanks for the nice comment, @sraj7284, and Happy Holidays to you too! 🎅🎄😊
      1. It would toggle the traffic across the 2 instances in TG-2.
      2. I'm not aware of a way to set it up to randomly distribute traffic across Target Groups. In the rules, you have to specify the % distribution for traffic, so it would adhere to those numbers.
      Hope that helps! 🤓

    • @sraj7284
      @sraj7284 Před 6 měsíci

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials Looks like I did not ask the right question. What I really wanted to ask was, how to distribute load across different AZs, because it appears that the nodes in each AZ will send traffic to just its own target groups. Looks like there is a setting called "Cross Zone Load Balancing" that sends traffic to all AZs. Its enabled by default. You would have to go to each target group to take it out of the Cross Zone load balancing, if you didn't desire this setting.
      Wish you a very happy, healthy, prosperous and fulfuling 2024 ahead! 🙂

  • @praveensequeira1525
    @praveensequeira1525 Před 10 měsíci

    Hi, smooth as always, thank you!
    My questions for you:
    1) If we add route 53 to the mix (referring to your video), will the DNS get resolved to the ip address of the load balancer or the actual instance that processed the incoming request?
    2) My understanding is that we created the ALB nodes in multiple AZs - is this optional and for HA and fault-tolerance reasons. Or we could also choose to create a singular ALB node instance (in one of the AZs where our TGs/instances are running)?
    3) If we chose to create ALBs (node) in multiple AZs, will the incoming traffic gets distributed to ALL of nodes (based on some algorithm) or is it only ONE node that still receives all the traffic and does the distribution to the TGs?

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 10 měsíci

      Hi Praveen! I haven't forgotten about this one! 😊
      1) If you add Route 53, you'll want to create an "A" record/alias that points to the load balancer. While in theory you could point it to a specific instance if you knew the IP, the point of having a load balancer is so that IT can route traffic to the instances, it can do health checks, etc. (you can also set up an SSL certificate, use WAF on it, etc.). So pointing to the load balancer is the way to go.
      2 & 3) For the application load balancer specifically (vs. network load balancer or classic load balancer), you're required to choose at least 2 AZs. There's a pretty good description/diagram here about how routing works across AZs: docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/userguide/how-elastic-load-balancing-works.html
      Hope that helps!

  • @DM-ky4jw
    @DM-ky4jw Před rokem +1

    Hi, can we configure multiple target groups(different lambdas) in a single ALB and route traffic to secondary region for the failed target groups only

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem

      Hi DM! 😊 Load balancers are region-specific, so it's not possible to route to a second region with *just* a load balancer. To go cross-region, you'll need to use Route 53 (which is a global service, and can therefore route across different regions). Here's some more information: docs.aws.amazon.com/whitepapers/latest/real-time-communication-on-aws/cross-region-dns-based-load-balancing-and-failover.html

  • @uzerahmed5163
    @uzerahmed5163 Před rokem

    Thanks for the wonderful video ❤ just curious to know what is your main source of income?

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem

      Thanks so much, Uzer! I'm so glad it helped. 😊 Money comes from the money tree?? 🤑😏

  • @aayush481
    @aayush481 Před rokem +1

    thanks a log for educating on this. One question, just to practice can we use personal aws account ? Wouldn't that cost high

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem +1

      Hi Aayush! Yes, you can use a personal AWS account. If it's a relatively new account, you should still be on the Free Tier for most things, and then some things are always free. Here's more detail if you want to check anything specific: aws.amazon.com/free
      Hope that helps! :)

    • @aayush481
      @aayush481 Před rokem

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials thanks a lot!

  • @lucacapitoli2743
    @lucacapitoli2743 Před 8 měsíci

    Very useful video!! Thanks so much! Is it possible do the same with a Network LB? How? Thanks!

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks for the kind words, Luca! 😊🙏🌟 Glad you liked it! Yes, you can do a similar setup with a network load balancer, though the configuration is a bit more involved (protocols, ports, IPs, etc.). But maybe this will get you started? docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/network/load-balancer-target-groups.html

    • @lucacapitoli2743
      @lucacapitoli2743 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@TinyTechnicalTutorials I mean, How Route UDP Traffic to Multiple Target Groups using Network Load Balancer filtering by host?

  • @kesavanandt1195
    @kesavanandt1195 Před rokem

    I love you.... 🥰

  • @user-in5zt6cc4k
    @user-in5zt6cc4k Před 3 měsíci +1

    i have one doubt can i add more listeners in a load balancer and connect it with different domains under one load balancer because when i try to do that i am getting another error when trying to access the response that the ssl remains to another domain that i have hosted first could you help me!.

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 18 dny

      Hi @user-in5zt6cc4k ! 👋 Sorry for such a slow response. Were you able to figure this out?

  • @alishirdelan9488
    @alishirdelan9488 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Is it possible to create one ALB for all services? I mean using Wildcard ALB with certificate for every services?

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Hi Ali! 👋 It's technically possible to do this, but could make it more difficult to identify and troubleshoot if there are issues. And obviously there would be a single point of failure. There are some good points here in this thread to consider as well: stackoverflow.com/questions/65447698/aws-alb-single-for-all-services. Hope that helps! 😊

    • @alishirdelan9488
      @alishirdelan9488 Před 11 měsíci

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials Thank you very much for taking my question into consideration! I've checked the link you provided and I also want to extend my gratitude to them for sharing their ideas. I agree with you regarding the concern about a single point of failure. However, I also need to consider the trade-off between costs and complexity, as is often the case. Regardless, I greatly appreciate your videos and have learned a lot from them!

    • @alishirdelan9488
      @alishirdelan9488 Před 11 měsíci

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials ‌Hello Amber, another question comes up: Consider this:
      I would like to use a single set of EC2 instances and assign them to two or more target groups for utilization across two or three ALBs. Each ALB would have its corresponding target group, as these instances are meant to be allocated to two or three different target groups. This setup ensures redundancy: if one of the ALBs becomes unavailable, the others can continue functioning. Furthermore, all EC2 instances should remain reachable. Is this scenario reasonable, or are there drawbacks to consider?
      Given that DNS (Route 53) is internet-facing and the ALBs must be positioned behind other ALBs, the question arises of which services or load balancers should be interposed between the ALBs and DNS. Is it advisable to use wildcard DNS? In this context, the query remains: How can incoming traffic from external sources navigate through DNS and then be accurately directed to the correct ALB with its associated target groups?

  • @galleon8129
    @galleon8129 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Do security groups still hang around after deleting the instance using it?

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před 9 měsíci

      Ooh, good question! 🤓 Yes, they'll persist even after deleting the instance. You can have multiple instances using the same security group. So if Instance A and B were both using the same security group, you wouldn't it to be deleted if one of the instances was deleted.

    • @galleon8129
      @galleon8129 Před 9 měsíci

      @@TinyTechnicalTutorials thanks, just remembered to delete them today to remove any confusion

  • @raju-mhds-123
    @raju-mhds-123 Před rokem +1

    Hi Amber,
    You didn't showed the practical way of host & path based routing

    • @TinyTechnicalTutorials
      @TinyTechnicalTutorials  Před rokem

      Hi Raju! You're right...this video doesn't go into the rules for host- and path-based routing. Here are some links that might help instead:
      -Host-based: aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/elb-configure-host-based-routing-alb/
      -Path-based: aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/elb-achieve-path-based-routing-alb/

  • @michaeltse321
    @michaeltse321 Před rokem +1

    This is ok for conceptual understanding but default should be with HTTPS and not HTTP.

  • @joemac84
    @joemac84 Před rokem +2

    Every AWS tutorials seems to focus on the most basic example like HTTP target group on port 80.. Unfortunately not very helpful to the complexity of what needs to be done in real world production apps..

  • @B3T0M4N
    @B3T0M4N Před rokem

    I needed a refresher for ELB and this was exactly what I needed. You rock! AWS Ninja 🥷