An Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) is a service provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) that distributes traffic across multiple targets, such as Amazon EC2 instances, in one or more AWS regions. The primary purpose of an Elastic Load Balancer is to evenly distribute the load among individual servers or resources, ensuring balanced utilization and enhancing the availability and reliability of applications.
There are various types of Elastic Load Balancers in AWS:
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Application Load Balancer (ALB): This load balancer operates at the application layer (Layer 7 of the OSI model) and can distribute traffic based on HTTP and HTTPS requests. An Application Load Balancer is well-suited for modern applications, microservices, and container-based architectures.
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Network Load Balancer (NLB): This load balancer operates at the network layer (Layer 4 of the OSI model) and distributes traffic based on IP addresses and TCP/UDP ports. Network Load Balancers are suitable for applications with high data throughput and require extremely low latency.
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Classic Load Balancer: This is the older version of the Elastic Load Balancer, capable of operating at both the application and network layers. However, Classic Load Balancers are gradually being replaced by Application Load Balancers and Network Load Balancers.
Configuring an Elastic Load Balancer typically involves using the AWS Management Console, AWS Command Line Interface (CLI), or AWS SDKs. The advantages of Elastic Load Balancers lie in scalability, improved application availability, and automatic distribution of traffic to healthy instances or resources.
Elastic Load Balancers can also be integrated with other AWS services to support additional features such as Auto Scaling, security groups, and SSL/TLS termination. Overall, the use of Elastic Load Balancers provides an efficient way to make applications highly available and performant.