Inform, optimise, operate with AWS storage services
The three steps for optimising storage align well with the three iterative phases of FinOps, which are 1) inform, 2) optimise and 3) operate. For storage, this means 1) becoming informed about your storage usage and spending, 2) finding ways to improve your usage through optimisation and 3) implementing those improvements and automating where you can, then repeating the whole process to keep continuously improving.
Amazon S3 Storage Lens helps with the first step – inform – by providing data about what storage you’re using, how you’re using it and how much you’re paying for it. Introduced in late 2020, Amazon S3 Storage Lens is a powerful tool for understanding how your organisation uses and pays for storage on Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3). There’s a free-of-charge version that provides insights into 15 usage-related metrics to help optimise your cloud storage usage, but the paid Storage Lens option provides 35 additional advanced metrics across four categories, along with other features. With the insights gained from Storage Lens, you can optimise and improve your storage usage in a continuous cycle.
For example, you can use Storage Lens to view something called percent retrieval rate, which shows how often data stored is retrieved from each storage bucket. It’s common to set up different S3 storage buckets for specific purposes, but when that purpose has been fulfilled – say, a project is completed – the bucket can remain forgotten and unused, but it still stores data and thus incurs charges. If you find objects like this in storage using Storage Lens, you can either delete them or move them to a less costly storage tier. Storage Lens can also help you identify other unused or duplicate resources, such as data files that were saved during an incomplete multipart upload or older versions of current resources.
S3 Storage Lens lets you create dashboards that focus on different accounts, users and storage buckets. This makes it possible to sort metrics in a variety of ways and view storage trends. By sharing these insights with different people across your organisation, you can identify how often storage resources must be accessed or whether they’re needed at all.