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Home/ Questions/Q 8067795
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T12:26:48+00:00 2026-06-05T12:26:48+00:00

How is state managed between sessions? I know that in Azure, client-specific states are

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How is state managed between sessions? I know that in Azure, client-specific states are stored in SQL Azure. I’m wondering if this is done similarly in AWS?

Do the various instances of your application all access a DB somewhere where the state is stored? Is state management much different depending on which technologies you are using?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T12:26:52+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 12:26 pm

    At a ‘homework’ level, Amazon Web Services is loosely comprised of two different sets of things:

    • infrastructure services (EC2, EBS), which you manage yourself
    • higher level services (S3, DynamoDB, ELB), which Amazon manage for you

    When you upload a file to S3, it is stored across a number of machines in a number of different data centers, and Amazon is responsible for finding and returning the file when you request it (as well as making sure it doesn’t get erased by a machine failure.)

    With something built on top of one of the infrastructure services, such as an application running on EC2, you are on your own as to how you store and synchronize state:

    • One server, state in memory (bad)
    • Load balancing with no state handling (very bad!)
    • Load balancing with sticky sessions (sensible, but not enough by itself; if that server falls out of the pool, the other servers have no idea of who you are)
    • Load balancing with servers with a common state server

    How do you store state? Traditionally a database (possibly Amazon RDS) with a memory cache (such as Elasticache – Amazon’s managed memcached-compatible cache). Amazon’s new DynamoDB service is a good fit for this use, as a fast, redundant, key-value store.

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