Chapter 7: AWS Infrastructure Intro
AWS Infrastructure Intro (also called AWS Global Infrastructure Introduction).
This is one of the most important foundational topics in all AWS learning — it shows up in every beginner tutorial, every Cloud Practitioner exam question, and every real project discussion. People call it “AWS Infrastructure Intro”, “AWS Global Infrastructure”, “Regions & AZs intro”, etc.
Think of it as understanding the “where” and “how” AWS physically runs your apps worldwide — so you get speed, reliability, low cost, and compliance.
No jargon overload — let’s break it down like we’re drawing on a whiteboard together, with Hyderabad examples and simple analogies.
1. Why does AWS Infrastructure matter? (The “why” first)
Imagine you’re running a food delivery app like Swiggy in Hyderabad:
- Users in Secunderabad want super-fast order loading (low latency).
- During IPL finals, traffic explodes — you can’t afford downtime.
- Data privacy laws (like India’s DPDP Act) might require keeping customer data in India.
- A power cut/flood/fire in one building shouldn’t crash your entire app.
AWS Global Infrastructure solves all this by spreading massive data centers worldwide in a smart, layered way:
- Regions → big geographic areas (country/continent level)
- Availability Zones (AZs) → isolated data centers inside a Region
- Edge Locations → tiny caches close to users (for speed)
This setup gives:
- High availability (99.99%+ uptime)
- Low latency (fast loading)
- Disaster recovery
- Compliance (data stays where laws require)
2. The Main Building Blocks (2026 Current Numbers)
As of February 2026 (from AWS official pages):
- 39 Geographic Regions launched (with 2 more announced: Saudi Arabia & Chile)
- 123 Availability Zones across those Regions (most have 3+, some 4–6)
- 750+ Edge Locations / Points of Presence (PoPs) for CloudFront CDN + 15+ Regional Edge Caches
AWS adds new ones fast — India already has strong coverage.
3. What is an AWS Region? (Level 1 – The Big Map)
Definition: A Region is a separate geographic area (like a country or large part of one) where AWS clusters multiple data centers.
- Each Region is isolated from others (network/power failures in one don’t affect others).
- You choose a Region when creating resources (e.g., EC2 instance, S3 bucket).
- Most services are Region-specific (your S3 bucket in Mumbai can’t be directly accessed from Singapore without setup).
Analogy: Think of Regions as different cities/states in India.
- Mumbai Region = Maharashtra
- Hyderabad Region = Telangana (newer one!)
India Regions (super relevant for us in Hyderabad):
| Region Code | Full Name | Availability Zones | Launch Year | Notes for Hyderabad/India Users |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ap-south-1 | Asia Pacific (Mumbai) | 3 | 2016 | Oldest, most mature, huge ecosystem |
| ap-south-2 | Asia Pacific (Hyderabad) | 3 | 2022 | Newer, lowest latency for Telangana/AP/Karnataka users, growing fast |
Example: Your startup in Gachibowli chooses ap-south-2 (Hyderabad) → data stays in India (compliance), latency <10ms for local users, cheaper transfer costs within India.
4. What is an Availability Zone (AZ)? (Level 2 – Inside the Region)
Definition: An AZ is one or more physically separate data centers inside a Region — isolated for power, networking, cooling.
- Minimum 3 AZs per Region (most have 3–6).
- AZs are connected with super-fast, low-latency, redundant fiber (metro network).
- You spread your app across AZs → if one AZ has fire/flood/power outage, others keep running.
Analogy: AZs are different buildings/neighborhoods in the same city (Hyderabad).
- One AZ in Banjara Hills, another in Hitech City, another in Gachibowli — close but independent.
Naming: ap-south-1a, ap-south-1b, ap-south-1c (the letter = AZ ID).
Real Example (high availability setup):
- Your Zomato-like app runs:
- Web servers on EC2 in AZ a & b
- Database (RDS) with Multi-AZ (primary in a, standby in b)
- Flood hits one data center → traffic auto-fails over → app stays up.
This is why AWS promises high availability — you design for it.
5. What are Edge Locations? (Level 3 – Speed for Users)
Definition: Small AWS points-of-presence (PoPs) worldwide — not full data centers, mainly for Amazon CloudFront (CDN) and other edge services.
- 750+ Edge Locations globally (many in India: Mumbai, Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad area, etc.).
- They cache content (videos, images, websites) close to users → download from nearby instead of far Region.
Analogy: Edge Locations are like local kirana stores stocking popular items — you get fast delivery without going to big warehouse (Region).
Example: User in Hyderabad watches a Telugu movie trailer on your app:
- Original video in S3 (ap-south-2 Hyderabad Region)
- CloudFront caches copy at Hyderabad Edge Location
- User gets video in <1 second instead of 50–100ms round-trip to Region data center
Other edge services: AWS Global Accelerator, Lambda@Edge, etc.
6. Other Related Terms (Quick Intro – Good to Know)
- Local Zones → Extend a Region to specific metro cities (e.g., Delhi, Kolkata Local Zones in India) for even lower latency (milliseconds).
- Wavelength Zones → For 5G ultra-low latency (mobile edge computing).
- Outposts → AWS hardware in your own data center (hybrid).
But for beginners: Focus on Regions + AZs + Edge Locations — 90% of questions/tutorials use these.
7. Quick Hands-On: See It in AWS Console (Do This!)
- Log in to AWS Console (console.aws.amazon.com)
- Top-right → Region dropdown → see list (select ap-south-2 Hyderabad)
- Launch EC2 → see AZ choices (a, b, c)
- Create S3 bucket → note it’s Region-specific
- Search “CloudFront” → create distribution → see Edge Locations map (global view)
Summary Table – AWS Infrastructure Cheat Sheet (2026)
| Component | What it is | Purpose | Count (2026) | Hyderabad Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region | Geographic cluster of data centers | Isolation, compliance, latency | 39 launched | ap-south-2 (Hyderabad) – best for us |
| Availability Zone | Isolated data center(s) in a Region | High availability, fault tolerance | 123 total | Spread app across 3 AZs in Hyderabad |
| Edge Location | Small PoP for caching/CDN | Low latency content delivery | 750+ | Fast video loading for users in Hyd |
Bottom line: AWS Infrastructure Intro teaches you how AWS is built globally to give speed, uptime, and scale — choose right Region (Hyderabad for us!), spread across AZs, use Edge for speed.
Got it? This is the “map” of AWS — everything else sits on top.
Next?
- Want a deeper dive on choosing Region for Indian projects?
- Or how to design Multi-AZ app (with example)?
- Or difference between Region vs AZ failures?
Tell me — next whiteboard ready! 🚀🌍
