AWS Open Source Blog
Category: Database
AWS joins the DocumentDB project to build interoperable, open source document database technology
At AWS, we design cloud services that give customers the freedom to choose technology that best suits their needs. Our commitment to interoperability with open standards and open source technologies is a key reason customers choose AWS. This is one of the reasons why we launched Amazon DocumentDB (with MongoDB compatibility) in 2019. Amazon DocumentDB […]
Deep PostgreSQL Thoughts: Valuing Currency
PostgreSQL currency buys you fewer bugs, higher security, and comes with relatively low risks.
Introducing Amazon Timestream for InfluxDB: A managed service for the popular open source time-series database
With Amazon Timestream for InfluxDB, AWS has built a constructive and reciprocal partnership with InfluxData, the creator of open source InfluxDB.
Why AWS Supports Valkey
AWS is committed to supporting open source Valkey for the long term. We are adding Valkey support to our ElastiCache and MemoryDB managed database services and contributing to the open source Valkey project.
How Onehouse Makes it Easy to Leverage Open Source Data Services on AWS
A new AWS Partner, Onehouse.ai, recently launched its managed lakehouse product for open source Apache Hudi on the AWS Marketplace.
Behind the Scenes on AWS Contributions to Open Source Databases
AWS engineers are significant contributors to the open source databases that our managed services are built on and that our customers depend on. Aurora PostgreSQL and MySQL-compatible editions and Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) for PostgreSQL, MySQL, and MariaDB, are AWS services built on, or compatible with, open source databases.
How Zomato Boosted Performance 25% and Cut Compute Cost 30% Migrating Trino and Druid Workloads to AWS Graviton
Learn the price/performance benefits of adopting AWS Graviton based instances for high throughput, near real-time big data analytics workloads running on Java-based, open source Apache Druid and Trino applications.
Announcing the Simple Database Archival Solution
SDAS is an open source solution available under Apache License 2.0, which you can deploy in your AWS account to archive Oracle, Microsoft SQL, and MySQL databases to AWS.
Supabase Makes Extensions Easier for Developers with Trusted Language Extensions for PostgreSQL
AWS partner Supabase is using Trusted Language Extensions for PostgreSQL to improve the developer experience and make it easier for them to support more extensions.
AWS Now Supports Credentials-fetcher for gMSA on Amazon Linux 2023
In this blog post, we explain the use case for the open source credentials-fetcher daemon and give simple instructions for using an Active Directory domain joined Linux server with a group Managed Service Account (gMSA).