Identify any unused Amazon DynamoDB tables available within your AWS account and consider to remove if no need. By default, the tables is consider “unused” if the Item count attribute of Table is equal to 0.Read More
Identify any Amazon Redshift clusters that appear to be underutilized and downsize them to help lower the cost of your monthly AWS bill. By default, an AWS Redshift cluster is considered underutilized when matches the criterias: The average CPU utilization has been less than 60% for the last 7 days and the total number of...Read More
Ensure that all purchased RDS Reserved Instances (RI) applied to AWS billing properly. Verify running On-Demand DB Instances must match the specification of your RI exactly.Read More
Checks for Amazon Route 53 latency record sets that are configured inefficiently. It recommend to create latency resource record sets for a particular domain name (such as example.com) in different regions instead of single region.Read More
Identify idle Elastic Load Balancers, and consider to delete them if unused. By default, an Elastic Load Balancer is considered 'idle' if the sum of the requests made to the load balancer in the past 7 days is less than 100.Read More
Identify unused Elastic Load Balancers, and consider to delete them if no needed. By default, the ELB is consider "unused" if it isn't associated with any EC2 or services.Read More
Check for any unattached Elastic IP (EIP) addresses in your AWS account and release (remove) them if unused. By default, a EIP is consider "unused" if it isn't associated with any EC2 or VPC.Read More
Identify any AWS Elastic Block Store (EBS) volumes that are currently attached to stopped EC2 instances. Consider to remove them if the instances are no longer needed.Read More
Identify any unattached Elastic Block Store (EBS) volumes available in your AWS account and consider to remove them if unused. To avoid any risk, remember to backup all of your data before deleting it. For example, using S3 to store data in the short period of time.Read More
Identify any non-root Amazon EBS volumes that appear to be idle and remove them from your account to help lower the cost of your monthly AWS bill. By default, an EBS volume is considered "idle" when meets the following criteria: The total number of VolumeReadOps and VolumeWriteOps recorded per day for the last 7 days...Read More