Every day, people visit forums like Reddit and Stack Overflow seeking expert advice about cloud networking and security. We comb through those posts and curate a list of discussions and questions that you – the experts – might find interesting or solvable. Less time searching, more time making connections.
If you’re new to Reddit or Stack Overflow, some starting tips are below. And if you do respond to any of these threads, share the link to your responses back to this post so others in the community can follow you!
Here are today’s queries:
- July 18 Connect many sites on many clouds. What are my options? (My company is planning to deploy a solution that spans AWS and Azure and on prem sites…)
- July 18 Terraform Code Migration (His team recently got handed ownership of our terraform code for our azure landing zone.)
- July 18 vNet Design Question – Subnetting and Load Balancer placement
- July 17 How granular do you get with your TF files?
- July 17 Next job: a medium company vs a large one
- July 17 Network admin looking to get into the cloud industry
Stack Overflow
- July 18 How to route non-local IPs through VPC connected via Site-to-Site VPN
- July 18 How to share an AWS Virtual Private Gateway via Transit Gateway
- July 18 Can't connect to a recently created, publicly accessible RDS instance
- July 18 Terraform Multi-Region Deployment using Modules
- July 18 How do I reference an existing VPC from AWS CDK code when declaring Lambda in VPC without the need to access internet during the ‘synth’ step?.
- July 17 What can developers do to increase serverless security?
- July 17 Crossplane create complete stack best practices
Tips:
- If posting something self-promotional, be sure to disclose the organization you work for or other relevant connections. (For example: “Full disclosure: I work for secure cloud networking company Aviatrix”)
- Company subreddits (particularly r/AWS) often do not allow specific company/product mentions. If you do post them, they may be removed by moderators.
- Share the link to your responses back to this thread on The Cloud Network so others in the community can follow you.
- Keep up with Aviatrix at r/Aviatrix!