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Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

By : Grebe
3.9 (8)
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Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

3.9 (8)
By: Grebe

Overview of this book

React and GraphQL, when combined, provide you with a very dynamic, efficient, and stable tech stack to build web-based applications. GraphQL is a modern solution for querying an API that represents an alternative to REST and is the next evolution in web development. This book guides you in creating a full-stack web application from scratch using modern web technologies such as Apollo, Express.js, Node.js, and React. First, you’ll start by configuring and setting up your development environment. Next, the book demonstrates how to solve complex problems with GraphQL, such as abstracting multi-table database architectures and handling image uploads using Sequelize. You’ll then build a complete Graphbook from scratch. While doing so, you’ll cover the tricky parts of connecting React to the backend, and maintaining and synchronizing state. In addition to this, you’ll also learn how to write Reusable React components and use React Hooks. Later chapters will guide you through querying data and authenticating users in order to enable user privacy. Finally, you’ll explore how to deploy your application on AWS and ensure continuous deployment using Docker and CircleCI. By the end of this web development book, you'll have learned how to build and deploy scalable full-stack applications with ease using React and GraphQL.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Building the Stack
5
Section 2: Building the Application
14
Section 3: Preparing for Deployment

Deploying applications to Amazon ECS

CircleCI executes our build steps each time we push a new commit. Now, we want to build our Docker image and deploy it automatically to a machine that will serve our application to the public.

Our database and uploaded images are hosted on AWS already, so we can also use AWS to serve our application. Setting up AWS correctly is a significant task, and it takes a large amount of time. We will use Amazon ECS to run our Docker image. Still, to correctly set up the network, security, and container registry is too complex to be explained in just one chapter. I recommend that you take a course or pick up a separate book to understand and learn advanced setups with AWS, and the configuration that is needed to get production-ready hosting. For now, we will use ECS to get the container, including the database connection, running.

Before directly going to Amazon ECS and creating your cluster, we need to prepare two services – one is AWS ALB,...

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