A. Use AWS CloudFormation StackSets to create the stacks in both Regions with Auto Scaling groups for the web and application tiers. Asynchronously replicate static content between Regions using Amazon S3 cross-Region replication. Use an Amazon Route 53 DNS failover routing policy to direct users to the secondary site in us-west-1 in the event of an outage. Use Amazon DynamoDB global tables for the database tier. Most Voted
B. Use AWS CloudFormation StackSets to create the stacks in both Regions with Auto Scaling groups for the web and application tiers. Asynchronously replicate static content between Regions using Amazon S3 cross-Region replication. Use an Amazon Route 53 DNS failover routing policy to direct users to the secondary site in us-west-1 in the event of an outage Deploy an Amazon Aurora global database for the database tier.
C. Use AWS Service Catalog to deploy the web and application servers in both Regions Asynchronously replicate static content between the two Regions using Amazon S3 cross-Region replication. Use Amazon Route 53 health checks to identify a primary Region failure and update the public DNS entry listing to the secondary Region in the event of an outage. Use Amazon RDS for MySQL with cross-Region replication for the database tier.
D. Use AWS CloudFormation StackSets to create the stacks in both Regions using Auto Scaling groups for the web and application tiers. Asynchronously replicate static content between Regions using Amazon S3 cross-Region replication. Use Amazon CloudFront with static files in Amazon S3, and multi-Region origins for the front-end web tier. Use Amazon DynamoDB tables in each Region with scheduled backups to Amazon S3.
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