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Learn AWS Serverless Computing

Learn AWS Serverless Computing

By : Scott Patterson
4 (5)
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Learn AWS Serverless Computing

Learn AWS Serverless Computing

4 (5)
By: Scott Patterson

Overview of this book

Serverless computing is a way to run your code without having to provision or manage servers. Amazon Web Services provides serverless services that you can use to build and deploy cloud-native applications. Starting with the basics of AWS Lambda, this book takes you through combining Lambda with other services from AWS, such as Amazon API Gateway, Amazon DynamoDB, and Amazon Step Functions. You’ll learn how to write, run, and test Lambda functions using examples in Node.js, Java, Python, and C# before you move on to developing and deploying serverless APIs efficiently using the Serverless Framework. In the concluding chapters, you’ll discover tips and best practices for leveraging Serverless Framework to increase your development productivity. By the end of this book, you’ll have become well-versed in building, securing, and running serverless applications using Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda without having to manage any servers.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Why We're Here
4
Section 2: Getting Started with AWS Lambda Functions
9
Section 3: Development Patterns
12
Section 4: Architectures and Use Cases

Using serverless development pipelines

Let's start with a question. What is a serverless development pipeline and does it differ from traditional patterns? The answer is yes and no, which means we should probably explore patterns to understand their context.

The idea of pipeline patterns comes from the need to perform source, build, test, and deployment tasks as part of the development life cycle of a piece of software. We use a tool called Jenkins, which introduced the idea of creating jobs for each of these stages. From there, we could chain jobs together to create configurable automated pipelines. Jenkins is still widely used today and has strong community support. Thousands of plugins have been developed by the community and support a range of different tasks. Configuration and maintenance are driven through a browser-based user interface, so there is a learning curve...

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