Book Image

Angular 6 for Enterprise-Ready Web Applications

By : Doguhan Uluca
Book Image

Angular 6 for Enterprise-Ready Web Applications

By: Doguhan Uluca

Overview of this book

Angular 6 for Enterprise-Ready Web Applications follows a hands-on and minimalist approach demonstrating how to design and architect high quality apps. The first part of the book is about mastering the Angular platform using foundational technologies. You will use the Kanban method to focus on value delivery, communicate design ideas with mock-up tools and build great looking apps with Angular Material. You will become comfortable using CLI tools, understand reactive programming with RxJS, and deploy to the cloud using Docker. The second part of the book will introduce you to the router-first architecture, a seven-step approach to designing and developing mid-to-large line-of-business applications, along with popular recipes. You will learn how to design a solid authentication and authorization experience; explore unit testing, early integration with backend APIs using Swagger and continuous integration using CircleCI. In the concluding chapters, you will provision a highly available cloud infrastructure on AWS and then use Google Analytics to capture user behavior. By the end of this book, you will be familiar with the scope of web development using Angular, Swagger, and Docker, learning patterns and practices to be successful as an individual developer on the web or as a team in the Enterprise.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

AWS Billing

My highly-available deployment of LemonMart on AWS Fargate cost roughly $45 a month. Here's the breakdown:

Description Cost

Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3)

$0.01

AWS Data Transfer

$0.02

Amazon CloudWatch

$0.00

Amazon EC2 Container Service (ECS Fargate)

$27.35

Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud

(EC2 Load Balancer instances)

$16.21

Amazon EC2 Container Registry (ECR)

$0.01

Amazon Route 53

$0.50

Total

$44.10

Note that the bill is very detailed, but it does accurate all the AWS services we end up using. The major costs are running two instances of our web server on EC2 Container Service (ECS) and running load balances on Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Objectively speaking, $45/month may seem like a lot of money to host one web application. It is possible to get...