AWS App Mesh
Service mesh product listed in "Services in Sunset" with a published sunset date and AWS-provided migration path to Amazon ECS Service Connect.
CloudPath knowledge base
A report-backed catalog of AWS services shaped for quick browsing. The page preserves category, stage, lifecycle status, region and partition limitations, retirement notes, and notable caveats from the research report instead of flattening them into a generic spreadsheet.
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Stage
Generally available according to the research report's normalized lifecycle model.
Public preview or other pre-GA availability called out in the report.
No longer offered as an active AWS service or capability in the report snapshot.
Status
Available for normal use in the report snapshot.
Available, but only in the explicitly listed regions or partitions.
Still available, but AWS guidance in the report points learners toward alternatives.
AWS has published an end date or support cutoff in the report sources.
Already shut down or unavailable to customers in the report snapshot.
Service mesh product listed in "Services in Sunset" with a published sunset date and AWS-provided migration path to Amazon ECS Service Connect.
Networking service that improves availability and performance by routing traffic over the AWS global network to optimal endpoints.
Private 5G offering listed as having reached full shutdown on May 20, 2025.
Private connectivity service enabling access to services across VPCs without traversing the public internet.
Network hub service for connecting VPCs and on-prem networks at scale with centralized routing.
Managed API front door for building and operating APIs with authorization, throttling, and integration to backends.
CDN service with global edge network for content delivery, security, and performance optimization.
DNS and routing service listed as a global AWS service for endpoints purposes (global behavior).
Virtual network service providing isolation, subnets, routing, and security controls for AWS resources.
Managed load balancing across targets for scalable and fault-tolerant application traffic distribution.
Every catalog entry is populated from the uploaded AWS services research report. The page does not invent alternative maturity labels or hide lifecycle exceptions.
When the report flags source conflicts, retirement windows, region limits, or replacement guidance, that note is surfaced directly on the service card so learners can make safer architecture choices.