
1. Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS)
1.1. Block
1.1.1. iSCSI
1.1.1.1. SAN
1.1.1.1.1. Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) provides persistent block storage volumes for use with Amazon EC2 instances in the AWS Cloud.
1.1.1.1.2. Although an EBS Volume can be attached to multiple EC2 instances, you can only do so on instances within an availability zone.
2. Amazon Elastic File System (EFS)
2.1. Files
2.1.1. NFS
2.1.1.1. NAS
2.1.1.1.1. Shared File System
2.1.1.1.2. Multiple Amazon EC2 instances can access an Amazon EFS file system at the same time, allowing Amazon EFS to provide a common data source for workloads and applications running on more than one Amazon EC2 instance.
3. Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3)
3.1. Objects
3.1.1. IP Addressable
3.1.1.1. Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) is an object storage service that offers industry-leading scalability, data availability, security, and performance.
3.1.1.2. Amazon S3 forms the storage layer for Lake Formation.
3.2. Storage Classes
3.2.1. S3 Intelligent-Tiering
3.2.1.1. Automatic cost savings for data with unknown or changing access patterns
3.2.2. S3 Standard
3.2.2.1. Frequently accessed data
3.2.3. S3 Standard-Infrequent Access (S3 Standard-IA)
3.2.3.1. Less frequently accessed data
3.2.4. S3 One Zone-Infrequent Access (S3 One Zone-IA)
3.2.4.1. Less frequently accessed data
3.2.5. S3 Glacier Instant Retrieval
3.2.5.1. For archive data that needs immediate access
3.2.5.1.1. Compliance
3.2.6. S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval
3.2.6.1. For rarely accessed long-term data that does not require immediate access
3.2.7. Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive
3.2.7.1. For long-term archive and digital preservation with retrieval in hours at the lowest cost storage in the cloud