Just Amazing, I needed help setting up EFS for one of my Client Projects & you just make it easy. I have completed the task in just 30 mins. Thanks Stephane :)
AWESOME video straight to the point, nicely shot, nice sound. Very cool that you added the use of security groups and showed their power Feedback: Came here looking for an option to EBS multi-attach. When you do EBS multi-attach you mount the drives on multiple instances, you see the files, but if you make changes they don't occur. I imagine that with EFS this works, but it would've been really cool if you had shown on the second machine writing more to the test file, and then cat the file on machine one and seeing the changes. With EBS multi-attach you have to mount and unmount to see changes, which is not practical.
Hi Stephane, I have one query. If suppose the NFS went down, then do we need to mount a new EFS on the EC2 instances or in the background automatically can we mount it? Could you please clear my query.
Nice video, nice explanation. Thanks. One question, in which cases you would prefer to use EFS than EBS? Just when you want to share the storage between 2 instances?
Most of it is still the same, you just need to hop around a bit to find it. The only part that is missing is the pop up instructions, which you will have to look up in the documentation separately, unfortunately.
EFS can be very costly and sluggish for AI/ML/HPC datasets and workloads. flexFS is a much faster and cheaper solution with insanely high throughput. It's basically a 1:1 replacement for EFS and mounts on AWS S3 and many other object storages. Anyone looking into using EFS and even FSx should def check it out. 😎
Just Amazing, I needed help setting up EFS for one of my Client Projects & you just make it easy. I have completed the task in just 30 mins. Thanks Stephane :)
AWESOME video straight to the point, nicely shot, nice sound. Very cool that you added the use of security groups and showed their power
Feedback: Came here looking for an option to EBS multi-attach. When you do EBS multi-attach you mount the drives on multiple instances, you see the files, but if you make changes they don't occur.
I imagine that with EFS this works, but it would've been really cool if you had shown on the second machine writing more to the test file, and then cat the file on machine one and seeing the changes.
With EBS multi-attach you have to mount and unmount to see changes, which is not practical.
Thank you !! you made it so easy to understand. appreciate posting this. I am grateful to you my friend !!
Wouldn’t it be better to put EFS in the Fstab file in case one day you might want to reboot your ec2 instance?
Sharp explanation as usual. Thanks mate!
Best Tutorial i ever seen.. simple and short.. Easy to understand, thanks for the video
Bro! Thank you for the simple video.
Much appreciate explaining the way it should be explained.
Hi Stefan if is it possible to launch an ASG and bootstrap the efs tools installation part instead off ssh and manual install?
Smooth explanation 🤍 & your smile ❤️
Thanks for this video, it also saves our time to understand the EFS in just 10 mins.:)
The only thing I forgot to do was the Security Group rules to allow NFS traffic from EC2 instances.
Thankyou, nice tutuorial. Easy to understand
Always a big thank you ^^
Pretty nice tip! Thanks!
Excellent video and very well explained
Neat, to the point -> Great !
Hi Stephane,
I have one query. If suppose the NFS went down, then do we need to mount a new EFS on the EC2 instances or in the background automatically can we mount it? Could you please clear my query.
Thanks for the video, made my work easy.
how can we get this little popup for mount instructions? help suggest please
Awesome tutorial you're the best. I have a question can we ping the efs somehow will you post a tutorial to make efs with a dns and then ping it?
Excellent, thank you!!
Nice video, nice explanation. Thanks. One question, in which cases you would prefer to use EFS than EBS? Just when you want to share the storage between 2 instances?
Well you’re gonna need EBS to store your operating system on, soooo.... and you’ll need that to tell the CPU how to mount EFS. Think of EBS as NFS
very clear. thank you!
How to do this for custom subnets?? It only lets me select the default one.
i love love your videos helped me alot
you saved my life
Thanks for the explanation of the video , but now , interface EFS change and is different , can you upload the video.
A side note
When you right-click, select Image and Templates and click Launch more like this
very cool video. I think you forget to mention that efs only works with linux instances.
thank you bro
This video is now outdated. AWS console has changed. Could you please upload with the up to date AWS console and instructions.
Most of it is still the same, you just need to hop around a bit to find it. The only part that is missing is the pop up instructions, which you will have to look up in the documentation separately, unfortunately.
@@writershard5065 I see a completely different interface as well. No option to Create Mount Targets. It's a one-step process.
@@jeffsulman3558 it's called 'attach' now
@@jeffsulman3558 customize
AuthFailure: An error occurred authenticating arn:aws:iam::140489413575:root for ec2:DescribeVpcs. Creating the EFS
Using the Root Account
EFS can be very costly and sluggish for AI/ML/HPC datasets and workloads. flexFS is a much faster and cheaper solution with insanely high throughput. It's basically a 1:1 replacement for EFS and mounts on AWS S3 and many other object storages. Anyone looking into using EFS and even FSx should def check it out. 😎
sos crack esteban
Nooo!
Use /mnt/root/efs