For anyone using AWS and looking to simplify overall governance and administration, this is a good product. Anyone with coding experience can create their own documents, and build their own custom automation playbooks. It's capable of integrating with a lot of other automation tools. I rate this solution eight out of 10.
Senior Development Engineer at a marketing services firm with 51-200 employees
Real User
2021-09-28T09:59:00Z
Sep 28, 2021
I would rate AWS Services Manager an eight. I say eight because I'm not sure if there's anything better now that there are so many solutions. If you're considering adopting AWS Services Manager, you should consider all the alternatives before deciding on one. Deploy a simple application on all the leading solutions and see which works the best. In addition to looking at performance, you have to evaluate all solutions based on essential features like log analysis and notifications. It would help if you had a table rating every provider according to these criteria and then made that call.
What is configuration management? Configuration management is a type of systems engineering process that helps to achieve consistency of a product through its life cycle. The goal of configuration management processes and tools is to keep computer systems, servers, and software consistently in the desired state.
Managing IT system configurations requires defining what is the system’s desired state and then maintaining it. Since system changes happen frequently across servers, networks,...
Overall, I would rate the solution an eight out of ten.
I rate the overall solution an eight out of ten.
I would surely recommend this solution. Overall, I would rate the solution an eight out of ten.
For anyone using AWS and looking to simplify overall governance and administration, this is a good product. Anyone with coding experience can create their own documents, and build their own custom automation playbooks. It's capable of integrating with a lot of other automation tools. I rate this solution eight out of 10.
I would rate AWS Services Manager an eight. I say eight because I'm not sure if there's anything better now that there are so many solutions. If you're considering adopting AWS Services Manager, you should consider all the alternatives before deciding on one. Deploy a simple application on all the leading solutions and see which works the best. In addition to looking at performance, you have to evaluate all solutions based on essential features like log analysis and notifications. It would help if you had a table rating every provider according to these criteria and then made that call.