Try the new console experience in Amazon Bedrock, optimized for Anthropic- and OpenAI-compatible APIs

This post was originally published on this site

Today, we’re announcing a new console experience in Amazon Bedrock for you to experiment, iterate, and scale with the latest AI models on Amazon Bedrock’s next-generation inference engine built for high performance, reliability, and security. This console has a refreshed workflow optimized for bedrock-mantle endpoint, which supports the latest GPT, Claude, and open-weight models with the OpenAI Responses API, OpenAI Chat Completions API, and the Anthropic Messages API.

The new console experience makes it simple to find the right model and move quickly from evaluation to production.

  • New model card – You can browse the full model catalog, compare them side by side on capabilities, modality support, context window, and applicable service quotas in a single view, removing the need to stitch together documentation, and limit calculators.
  • Project-based work – You can make a project to run evaluations and review usage insights in one streamlined workflow that mirrors the lifecycle of building a generative AI application.
  • Live documentation – You can use project-aware live documentation: code samples, SDK snippets, and API references are automatically prefilled with your project variables. You can copy a snippet straight from the console into your application and run it without modification.

How to get started
You can try a new experience by choosing Try the Bedrock Mantle Console from within the Amazon Bedrock console, or by using the new console link directly.

You can find a project-based dashboard to show inference requests and error by range of recent dates, recently used models, and the project list. You can create a project, assign models, configure API keys, and start making inference requests in minutes.

A new model catalog shows the latest GPT, Claude, and open-weight models that are supported on the bedrock-mantle engine. You can see the details of features, tokens, pricing, input/output, pricing information, and Regional availability. You can also compare up to 3 models in a single view.

When you choose the project dashboard, you can see the models used in the project, the distribution of your token usage such as total token usage, token usage per minute, inference requests per minute, and tokens per inference request. This can inform your model selection, prompt optimization, and workload consistency decisions.

You can select up to 3 models to start evaluating to compare responses side by side with the same prompt.

To build your application in the project, choose Getting started. You can migrate existing code, build a new app with the Anthropic or OpenAI SDK, or connect an AI coding assistant to Bedrock.

Choose the API & SDK, your SDK (either Anthropic or OpenAI), your preferred programming language, and your authentication method. It shows your environment code to run these in your terminal for a quick test, or save to a .env file for your application. You can also send your first request with sample code snippets to verify your setup.

When you choose Clients, you can select the AI coding agent source such as Claude Code, Cline, Codex, Cursor, or OpenCode that you want to connect to the bedrock-mantle engine. It provides instructions on how to install the AI agent, use your AWS IAM credentials or use a Bedrock API key, set environment variables, and route requests from each AI agent through Bedrock.

To learn about Anthropic- and OpenAI-compatible APIs, choose Live API docs. You can choose Anthropic API Protocol for access to Claude model features like the Messages API or OpenAI API Protocol for access to features like Responses API.

For example, when you choose OpenAI Response API, it retrieves a model response with the given model ID. These API references are automatically prefilled with the project’s selected model ID, Region, bedrock-mantle endpoint URL, and API key reference, and they update in place as you change models or settings.

You can also choose the existing Bedrock console to manage fully-managed features such as Agents, Knowledge Bases, Guardrails, fine-tuning, or the InvokeModel and Converse APIs to run on the bedrock-runtime endpoint.

Now available
The new console experience is available in all AWS Regions where the bedrock-mantle endpoint is offered: US East (N. Virginia, Ohio), US West (Oregon), Asia Pacific (Jakarta, Mumbai, Sydney, Tokyo), Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, London, Milan, Stockholm), and South America (São Paulo). Check the full list of Regions for future updates.

Give the new console experience a try in the new Amazon Bedrock console and send feedback to AWS re:Post for Amazon Bedrock or through your usual AWS Support contacts.

Channy

Continuing Scans for swagger.json, (Wed, Jun 3rd)

This post was originally published on this site

Enterprise applications often still use complex standards like SOAP for web services. The big advantage of SOAP is its tight and extensive standards, which enable interoperability across an enterprise governed by web services. The disadvantage of SOAP: First, while it is de facto usually used over HTTP, it does not leverage HTTP, leading to unnecessary complexity. Secondly, kids don't RTFM, and developers these days tend not to appreciate the art of careful system design; they rather throw code at an IDE to see what sticks, if they don't vibe code it anyway. 

New Wave Of Phishing Emails with SVG Files, (Tue, Jun 2nd)

This post was originally published on this site

For a few days, my SANS ISC mailbox is flooded with emails that delivers SVG files. An SVG ("Scalable Vector Graphic") is a web-friendly vector file format used for graphics and icons. No URL in the body, just “an image”, that’s the perfect way to deliver some malicious content. This isn’t the first time that we see this technique used by threat actors[1].

Get started with OpenAI GPT-5.5, GPT-5.4 models, and Codex on Amazon Bedrock

This post was originally published on this site

As we previewed in What’s Next with AWS 2026, we’re announcing the general availability of OpenAI GPT-5.5, GPT-5.4 models, and Codex on Amazon Bedrock, giving you access to frontier models and a coding agent for software development.

According to OpenAI, GPT-5.5 and GPT-5.4 models are excellent for coding, reasoning, agentic workflows, and complex professional work. You can use GPT-5.5 for the hardest customer workloads and GPT-5.4 for the best price-performance. You can call them through Responses API on Amazon Bedrock’s next-generation inference engine built for high performance, reliability, and security.

Codex is the OpenAI coding agent for AI-powered software development. According to OpenAI, more than 4 million developers use Codex every week to write, refactor, debug, test, and validate code across large codebases. With GPT-5.5 powering inference, Codex introduces a new class of intelligence optimized for complex, long-horizon developer workflows. You can use the Codex App, the Codex CLI, and IDE integrations with Visual Studio Code, JetBrains, and Xcode, with all model inference routed through the Responses API on Amazon Bedrock.

For customers with data residency requirements, all processing stays within the Bedrock Region you select. You pay per token with no seat licenses and no per-developer commitments.

GPT-5.5 and GPT-5.4 models on Bedrock in action
You can access the model programmatically using the OpenAI Responses API to call the bedrock-mantle endpoints through the OpenAI SDK, command-line tools such as curl.

Let’s start with OpenAI SDK for Python. Install OpenAI SDK.

pip install -U openai

Set the environment variables for authentication.

export OPENAI_BASE_URL="https://bedrock-mantle.us-east-2.api.aws/openai/v1"
export OPENAI_API_KEY="<BEDROCK_API_KEY>"
export BEDROCK_OPENAI_MODEL_ID="openai.gpt-5.5"

Here is a sample Python code to call GPT-5.5 model on Bedrock:

import os
from openai import OpenAI
 
client = OpenAI(
    base_url=os.environ["OPENAI_BASE_URL"],
    api_key=os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"],
)
 
response = client.responses.create(
    model=os.environ["BEDROCK_OPENAI_MODEL_ID"],
    input=[
        {
            "role": "developer",
            "content": "You are a software engineer with excellent AWS cloud knowledge. Be concise and practical.",
        },
        {
            "role": "user",
            "content": "Design a distributed architecture on AWS in Python that should support 100k requests per second across multiple geographic regions.",
        },
    ],
    reasoning={"effort": "medium"},
    text={"verbosity": "low"},
)
 
print(response.output_text)

You can call directly the model endpoint using curl.

curl "$OPENAI_BASE_URL/responses" 
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" 
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $OPENAI_API_KEY" 
  -d '{
    "model": "openai.gpt-5.5",
    "input": [
      {
        "role": "developer",
        "content": "You are a software engineer with excellent AWS cloud knowledge."
      },
      {
        "role": "user",
        "content": "Design a distributed architecture on AWS in Python that should support 100k requests per second across multiple geographic regions."
      }
    ],
    "reasoning": {"effort": "medium"},
    "text": {"verbosity": "low"}
  }'

You can use the Responses API when you want to use model-managed multi-turn state, need hosted tools, function tools, or richer tool orchestration, and run background or long-running work. To learn more, visit the OpenAI Cookbook Responses examples.

Using OpenAI Codex with GPT-5.5 on Amazon Bedrock
You can download Codex CLI, Codex App or Codex VS Code extension and get started with the Bedrock for model inference. Codex supports two Bedrock authentication pathways: Amazon Bedrock API key or AWS SDK credential chain. If you set AWS_BEARER_TOKEN_BEDROCK, Codex uses it first; otherwise Codex falls back to AWS SDK credential chain.

Set AWS_BEARER_TOKEN_BEDROCK in the environment that Codex will read:

export AWS_BEARER_TOKEN_BEDROCK=<your-bedrock-api-key>

Then, configure your preferred Region and set the model ID to openai.gpt-5.5 in ~/.codex/config.toml, which is required for Bedrock API-key authentication. You can also choose openai.gpt-5.4, openai.gpt-oss-120b, or openai.gpt-oss-20b. For the desktop app or VS Code extension, put any environment variables the app needs in ~/.codex/.env.

model = "openai.gpt-5.5"
model_provider = "amazon-bedrock"
[model_providers.amazon-bedrock.aws]
region = "us-east-2"

Restart the desktop app or VS Code extension after changing ~/.codex/config.toml or ~/.codex/.env. In Codex CLI, you should see a /status tab that looks like this:

In Codex App, you can use GPT-5.5 model through Amazon Bedrock inference.

Things to know
Let me share some important technical details that I think you’ll find useful.

  • Model latency: OpenAI model information positions GPT-5.5 as fast and GPT-5.4 as medium speed, but customer-perceived latency depends on reasoning effort, output length, tool calls, background mode, Region, quotas, throttling, prompt size, and cache hits. Start GPT-5.5 at medium effort. Start GPT-5.4 with effort set explicitly rather than relying on its none default.
  • Scaling and capacity: Bedrock’s new inference engine is designed to rapidly provision and serve capacity across many different models. When accepting requests, we prioritize keeping steady state workloads running, and ramp usage and capacity rapidly in response to changes in demand. During periods of high demand, requests are queued, rather than rejected.

Now available
OpenAI GPT models and Codex on Amazon Bedrock are available today: GPT-5.5 model in the US East (Ohio) Region, GPT-5.4 model in the US East (Ohio) and US West (Oregon) Regions. Check the full list of Regions for future updates. To learn more, visit the OpenAI on Amazon Bedrock page and the Amazon Bedrock pricing page.

Give GPT-5.5, GPT-5.4 models, and Codex on Amazon Bedrock a try today and send feedback to AWS re:Post for Amazon Bedrock or through your usual AWS Support contacts.

Channy

AWS Weekly Roundup: Claude Opus 4.8 on AWS, Aurora MySQL with Kiro Powers, and more (June 1, 2026)

This post was originally published on this site

In my last Week in Review post, I shared what I’d been hearing from customers in the AI-Driven Development Lifecycle (AI-DLC) workshops I’ve been delivering. Last week I was back at it, this time in Denver for a two-day AI-DLC workshop, where I helped facilitate 17 teams to deliver nearly 20 separate use cases in just two days. The pace of acceleration that AI-DLC unlocks—especially when paired with tools like Claude Code on Amazon Bedrock—is fundamentally changing how businesses operate. Traditional roles within software development teams are collapsing into smaller, AI-augmented squads, and the paradigm shift is beginning to take place right in front of us. To learn more about how to utilize various AI tools, visit the GitHub repository of AI-DLC workflow.

This shift is also reshaping how AWS account teams (solutions architects, customer solutions managers, and technical account managers) collaborate with customers. It’s becoming less about handing off advisory design documents and more about building alongside them in real time. It’s a genuinely exciting moment to be in the middle of the change, and this week’s headline launch — Anthropic’s most capable model yet, now on AWS — is going to push that pace even further.

Now, let’s get into this week’s AWS news…

Headlines
Claude Opus 4.8 on AWS — Anthropic’s most capable generally available model is now accessible through both Amazon Bedrock and the Claude Platform on AWS. Opus 4.8 is built for agentic coding, knowledge work, and extended autonomous task execution — it sustains longer autonomous sessions with deeper reasoning, recovers from errors, and synthesizes information across lengthy documents. For coding workloads, it reads codebases like an engineer, plans before it edits, and holds context across long sessions. On Amazon Bedrock, you get AWS-managed features like Guardrails, Knowledge Bases, and data residency; on the Claude Platform on AWS, you get Anthropic’s native APIs unified with AWS billing. To learn more, visit the deep-dive blog post.

Last week’s launches
Here are some launches and updates from this past week that caught my attention:

  • Introducing the next generation of AWS Resilience Hub — A reimagined Resilience Hub gives SREs and developers a unified framework to define resilience standards, evaluate applications against them, and demonstrate compliance across an entire portfolio. It introduces modular resilience policies (covering service-level objectives (SLOs), multi-AZ/Region DR, and data recovery), business-oriented application modeling, generative AI-powered assessments aligned with the Well-Architected and Resilience Analysis Frameworks, and automatic dependency discovery via DNS query log analysis. Integration with AWS Organizations enables organization-wide resilience management from a single delegated administrator account.
  • Introducing the next generation of Amazon OpenSearch Serverless for building agentic AI applications — Amazon OpenSearch Serverless is now a fully managed search and vector engine purpose-built for agentic AI applications. It scales from zero to thousands of requests per second—roughly 20x faster than the prior generation—delivers up to 60% cost savings versus peak-provisioned clusters, and adds GPU acceleration plus new SEARCH and VECTORSEARCH collection types. Native integrations with Vercel, Kiro, Claude Code, and Cursor through OpenSearch Agent Skills make it straightforward to plug into your agent stack.
  • New assessment capabilities in AWS Transform — AWS Transform expands with new tools to help you build migration business cases and evaluate TCO before moving workloads to AWS. You can ingest data from RVTools exports, CMDB data, the AWS Transform discovery tool, and third-party discovery tools, then run what-if scenarios across region, utilization, and service mapping for EC2, FSx, S3, SQL Server on EC2, and virtual desktops. The release also adds Agentic Readiness Analysis (ARA) and Modernization Analysis (MODA), which scan code repositories in 5 to 30 minutes per repo to surface severity-tagged findings with file-level evidence and AWS-mapped remediation guidance.
  • Amazon Aurora MySQL with Kiro Powers — Aurora MySQL now integrates with Kiro Powers, drawing from a curated repository of pre-packaged MCP servers, steering files, and hooks validated by Kiro partners. Developers can execute both data plane tasks (queries, schema management) and control plane tasks (cluster management) in natural language, with dynamic guidance for Aurora MySQL Serverless scaling, RDS-to-Aurora migration, and replication setup. The companion Database Blog post explains how the agent produces the API calls, SQL, and configuration for you to review and run — available via one-click install from the Kiro IDE or webpage.
  • Amazon WorkSpaces Applications now supports Windows Desktop OS — You can now bring your own Windows Desktop licenses to Amazon WorkSpaces Applications and stream full Windows desktops and applications from AWS-hosted dedicated hardware. BYOL eliminates OS fees (you pay only for compute and streaming infrastructure), supports eligible Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, and gives users a matching experience between local and remote environments — same workflows, shortcuts, and navigation in both.

For a full list of AWS announcements, be sure to keep an eye on the What’s New with AWS page.

Other AWS news
Here are some additional posts and resources that you might find interesting:

For a full list of AWS blog posts, be sure to keep an eye on the AWS Blogs page.

Learn more about AWS, browse and join upcoming AWS-led in-person and virtual events, startup events, and developer-focused events as well as AWS Summits and AWS Community Days. Join the AWS Builder Center to connect with builders, share solutions, and access content that supports your development.

That’s all for this week. Check back next Monday for another Weekly Roundup!

-Micah

Unidentified RAT pushes NetSupport RAT, (Mon, Jun 1st)

This post was originally published on this site

Introduction

This diary provides indicators from an unidentified RAT infection on Wednesday 2026-05-27 that was followed by a malicious NetSupport Manager RAT package. This originated from the SmartApeSG ClickFix campaign. I still don't know the name of the initial RAT, but it has consistently been generating encoded (not HTTPS/SSL/TLS) traffic to a command and control (C2) server at 89.110.110[.]119 over TCP port 443 since I first noticed it sometime in April 2026.

Images from the infection


Shown above: Fake verification page with ClickFix instructions from the SmartApeSG campaign.


Shown above: Initial RAT malware on an infected Windows host.


Shown above: Follow-up files for NetSupport RAT sent through the initial RAT C2 traffic.


Shown above: NetSupport RAT C2 traffic.

Indicators of Compromise

Example of SmartApeSG URLs seen on Wednesday 2026-05-27:

  • hxxps[:]//hiddenplanetlab[.]top/signin/secure-util.js
  • hxxps[:]//hiddenplanetlab[.]top/signin/private-template?c66kjD5i
  • hxxps[:]//hiddenplanetlab[.]top/signin/legacy-worker.js?18b3825af007e53d

Example of traffic generated by running the associated ClickFix script:

  • hxxp[:]//178.156.165[.]82/
  • hxxp[:]//178.156.173[.]194/
  • hxxps[:]//silverharvestnetwork[.]com/check

Initial RAT C2 traffic:

  • tcp[:]//89.110.110[.]119:443/

IP address for NetSupport RAT C2 server:

  • hxxp[:]//185.163.47[.]217:443

Files from the infection:

SHA256 hash: 1514b1268e9dc6d2f37137aa38c756cb4bf8186ac9235d6863b78e7f8bbbe976

  • File size: 26,555,757 bytes
  • File type: Zip archive data, at least v2.0 to extract
  • File location: hxxps[:]//silverharvestnetwork[.]com/check
  • File description: Zip archive containing software package for the initial RAT.

SHA256 hash: 469bac8e10f50263e8ff0806e6ba126bb4cc660799129a8653eab3f8ec7201e5

  • File size: 109 bytes
  • File type: ASCII text
  • File location: C:ProgramDataprocessor.vbs
  • File description: Initial script that runs token.bat

SHA256 hash: 9c7eda2c4d3aaa8746495741bef57a07de180f0409409faf0f91658e88ba33f5

  • File size: 8,262 bytes
  • File type: DOS batch file text, ASCII text, with very long lines
  • File location: C:ProgramDatatoken.bat
  • File description: Batch scrip that extracts, runs, and makes persistent NetSupport RAT from setub.cab

SHA256 hash: 7ba5481c873bb3081442561f749f590badd72ef249fddfe993e30b28dc0c2112

  • File size: 17,275,805 bytes
  • File type: Microsoft Cabinet archive data
  • File location: C:ProgramDatasetup.cab
  • File description: CAB file containing malicious NetSupport RAT package
  • Contents of this CAB file extracted to: C:ProgramDataUpdateInstaller

Note 1: The files processor.vbs, token.bat, and setup.cab are all deleted by the token.bat script after it installs the malicious NetSupport RAT package and makes it persistent on the infected Windows host.

Note 2: The indicators for this activity (domains, file hashes, etc.) change on a daily basis. For more up-to-date indicators on SmartApeSG and similar campaigns, see the @monitorsg feed on Mastodon.


Bradley Duncan
brad [at] malware-traffic-analysis.net

(c) SANS Internet Storm Center. https://isc.sans.edu Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

Analysis of a Year of Files Uploaded to DShield Sensors, (Wed, May 27th)

This post was originally published on this site

Using the data collected over the past year and using Kibana these two ES|QL query to summarize the data, this shows the list of the most uploaded threat to two DShield sensors (local and cloud) over the past year. I have sorted the activity by months that shows the evolution of files uploaded to the sensors each month. The activity peaked during the winter months (Dec 2025 – Feb 2026) and started decreasing in March 2026 for each sensor.

Introducing the next generation of AWS Resilience Hub for generative AI-based SRE resilience journey

This post was originally published on this site

Today, we’re announcing the next generation of AWS Resilience Hub with a significantly expanded experience that brings together a new application model, dependency discovery assessment, generative AI-powered failure mode analysis, modular resilience policies, and organization-wide reporting.

Organizations running hundreds of applications share a common challenge: availability is a top concern, yet there is no consistent way to set resilience goals, measure progress, or prove compliance across a portfolio. Teams set different standards, use different tools, and struggle to exchange information about whether applications actually meet expectations.

The next generation of AWS Resilience Hub changes this by giving Site Reliability Engineers (SREs) and development teams a structured way to align on resilience policy expectations, help application teams achieve them, and demonstrate compliance through testing. With integration into AWS Organizations, teams can now evaluate resilience at scale, identify failure modes, discover hidden dependencies, and report on progress across the enterprise.

The next generation of Resilience Hub walks you through your resilience journey and to help you there are the following concepts built into it.

  • Resilience policy: You can define your resilience expectations through modular, composable requirements. Rather than choosing a single rigid policy type, you construct policies by selecting the requirements that matter to your application, such as service level objective (SLO), multi-AZ and multi-Region disaster recovery, and data recovery requirements.
  • Business-level understanding: You can use new application modeling through critical end-user paths that map directly to business outcomes. Systems represent a business application, user journeys describe critical business paths, and services are the deployable units comprising AWS resources, code, and observability. Resilience Hub automatically discovers and maps them into a topology showing how resources connect.
  • AI failure mode assessments: You can run generative AI-powered assessments that analyze your services against your defined resilience policies, AWS Well-Architected best practices, and the AWS Resilience Analysis Framework. These assessments identify potential failure modes and provide actionable recommendations.
  • Dependency discovery assessment: You can automatically discover AWS services, internal endpoints, and third-party endpoints that your services depend on. This dependency assessment uses DNS query log analysis to identify dependencies you may not know about—including unexpected cross-region calls or critical third-party dependencies.

The next generation of AWS Resilience Hub in action
To get started, you configure a resilience policy, set up your first system and service, run a failure mode assessment, review the results, and implement the findings.

Before you begin, you should set up the invoker IAM role, which grants Resilience Hub read-only access to your AWS resources, cross-account roles (if not using AWS Organizations), or service-linked roles (SLRs) with AWS Organizations. Resilience Hub also integrates with AWS Organizations to enable organization-wide resilience management from a single delegated administrator account. This eliminates the need to log in to individual accounts to assess resilience posture across your enterprise. To learn more, visit For prerequisite details in the AWS Resilience Hub User Guide.

To configure a resilience policy, choose Create policy in the Policies menu through the AWS Resilience Hub console. Enter a policy name, description, and choose resilience requirements. For example, you can create a reusable policy for multi-Region disaster recovery used in financial applications—including 99.95% availability SLO, 15-minutes RTO, 5-minutes RPO for multi-Region disaster recovery, and disaster recovery approach that aligns with your RTO and RPO requirements.

If you choose data recovery requirements, you can define the data recovery time objective for restoring from backups for each service associated with this policy.

To create your first system representing your business application, choose Create a system in the Systems menu. Optionally, you can enable AWS Organizations account access for this system.

Now you can create a service that represents a deployable unit, like one of your microservices, and associate it with your system, and tell Resilience Hub where to find your resources. Enter a service name, for example, stock-exchange-service, choose your resilience policy and invoker AWS IAM role name. You can choose service Regions, service resources such as your resource tags, AWS CloudFormation stack, Terraform state file location, or Amazon EKS cluster and namespace.

When you enable dependency discovery for this service, AWS examines your VPC query logs for the VPCs associated with the resources in your service. You can disable this feature anytime from the dependency discovery settings in the service details page.

Now, you can run your first assessment with the service creation complete and a policy applied. Choose Run failure mode assessment in your service page and wait for the assessment to complete.

During the assessment, Resilience Hub assumes your invoker role, reads resources from your configured input sources, identifies parent-child relationships, queries the application topology service to map connections between resources, and builds a topology showing data flow, containment, and permissions.

By choosing Service topology, you can see service resources grouped by service functions in the graph, table, or JSON format.

By choosing Failure mode guidance, you can add assertions used to guide the agents while performing the failure mode assessment. Assertions are either generated by the agent or added by users. You can update them to improve assessment accuracy.

Once the assessment is complete, you can review findings and recommendations in the Assessment tab of your service page. Each finding tells you what the failure mode is, why it matters for your architecture, how to fix it, and which policy requirement it relates to.

You can choose Mark as resolved to implement the recommendation or Mark as irrelevant if the finding doesn’t apply to your use case.

If you’re an existing Resilience Hub customer, Resilience Hub provides migration APIs to simplify the transition of your previous applications. These APIs convert your previous assessment policies to new resilience policies, map your previous applications to the new model, such as multiple related applications to one system with multiple services.

For more information about new features, visit the AWS Resilience Hub User Guide.

Now available
The next generation of AWS Resilience Hub is now generally available in AWS commercial Regions where Resilience Hub is available. For Regional availability and the future roadmap, visit the AWS Capabilities by Region.

Resilience Hub uses a new service-based pricing model. Pricing includes two failure mode assessments per month for services, and optionally automated dependency assessment. You can try AWS Resilience Hub free. For pricing details, visit the AWS Resilience Hub pricing page.

Give the new AWS Resilience Hub a try in the Resilience Hub console and send feedback to AWS re:Post for Resilience Hub or through your usual AWS Support contacts.

Channy