How AWS Built Its Control Plane for 200 Services episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 5, 2026 · 9 MIN

How AWS Built Its Control Plane for 200 Services

from The CTO Podcast with Fexingo: Technical Leadership, Architecture, and Engineering Org · host Fexingo

Amazon Web Services runs over 200 services, each with its own control plane. In this episode, Lucas and Luna break down how AWS's internal architecture team designed a unified control plane framework that handles millions of API requests per second across regions. They explore the concept of 'control plane as a platform' — a set of reusable primitives for authorization, rate limiting, and state management that lets service teams focus on business logic. Lucas walks through the key design decisions: separating data plane from control plane at the infrastructure level, using eventual consistency for global state, and the 'cell-based architecture' that isolates failures. Luna asks how this affects developers building on AWS today and whether the pattern is reproducible outside of hyperscalers. A specific look at one of the most complex distributed systems ever built, and what it teaches us about scaling engineering orgs. #AWS #ControlPlane #DistributedSystems #CloudArchitecture #EngineeringAtScale #TechLeadership #PlatformEngineering #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast #CTOPodcast #AWSreInvent #CellBasedArchitecture #APIDesign #Authorization #RateLimiting #EventualConsistency #InfrastructureAsCode #Scaling Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

Amazon Web Services runs over 200 services, each with its own control plane. In this episode, Lucas and Luna break down how AWS's internal architecture team designed a unified control plane framework that handles millions of API requests per second across regions. They explore the concept of 'control plane as a platform' — a set of reusable primitives for authorization, rate limiting, and state management that lets service teams focus on business logic. Lucas walks through the key design decisions: separating data plane from control plane at the infrastructure level, using eventual consistency for global state, and the 'cell-based architecture' that isolates failures. Luna asks how this affects developers building on AWS today and whether the pattern is reproducible outside of hyperscalers. A specific look at one of the most complex distributed systems ever built, and what it teaches us about scaling engineering orgs. #AWS #ControlPlane #DistributedSystems #CloudArchitecture #EngineeringAtScale #TechLeadership #PlatformEngineering #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast #CTOPodcast #AWSreInvent #CellBasedArchitecture #APIDesign #Authorization #RateLimiting #EventualConsistency #InfrastructureAsCode #Scaling Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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How AWS Built Its Control Plane for 200 Services

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This episode was published on June 5, 2026.

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Amazon Web Services runs over 200 services, each with its own control plane. In this episode, Lucas and Luna break down how AWS's internal architecture team designed a unified control plane framework that handles millions of API requests per second...

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