Day 30 - Multi-Environment GitOps Drift Detection with Automated Remediation
I ntroduction: To conclude my 30-Day AWS Terraform Challenge , I tackled a critical problem for modern cloud architectures: managing infrastructure drift across multiple environments. The goal was to build a system where the running state in AWS always reflects the desired state in GitHub, automatically healing any manual, unauthorized changes. This final project demonstrates my ability to build scalable, highly available, and compliant infrastructure —proving I’m ready for the role of a Cloud Architect. The Architecture: Highly Available, Highly Isolated My application, a Dockerized Python web server (built in previous days), runs on AWS within a modular VPC. To prepare for production, I implemented environment isolation, state separation, and a professional multi-availability-zone (multi-AZ) layout. Below is the high-level architecture diagram. It illustrates how Terraform Multi-Environment configuration, S3 state backend locking, and GitHub Actions work together ...