Book Image

AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide - Second Edition

By : Vipul Tankariya, Bhavin Parmar
5 (2)
Book Image

AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide - Second Edition

5 (2)
By: Vipul Tankariya, Bhavin Parmar

Overview of this book

This book will focus on the revised version of AWS Certified Developer Associate exam. The 2019 version of this exam guide includes all the recent services and offerings from Amazon that benefits developers. AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide starts with a quick introduction to AWS and the prerequisites to get you started. Then, this book will describe about getting familiar with Identity and Access Management (IAM) along with Virtual private cloud (VPC). Next, this book will teach you about microservices, serverless architecture, security best practices, advanced deployment methods and more. Going ahead we will take you through AWS DynamoDB A NoSQL Database Service, Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS) and CloudFormation Overview. Lastly, this book will help understand Elastic Beanstalk and will also walk you through AWS lambda. At the end of this book, we will cover enough topics, tips and tricks along with mock tests for you to be able to pass the AWS Certified Developer - Associate exam and develop as well as manage your applications on the AWS platform.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Overview of AWS Certified Developer - Associate Certification

Summary

  • Amazon Route 53 is a reliable and scalable DNS web service. DNS is an internet protocol, and translates human-readable names, such as www.example.com, to numeric IP addresses (IPv4 or IPv6) that computers use to connect with each other.
  • A TLD refers to the highest level in the hierarchical domain name system of the internet (that is, .com, .net, .org, and so on).
  • Hosted zones are logical containers for specific domain records (that is, www.example.com), and sub-domains (subdomain.example.com).
  • Public hosted zones contain records set to route internet traffic from the end user to your web application, and emails.
  • Private hosted zones contain record sets to route Amazon VPC traffic within an AWS account.
  • In Route 53, the A record type stores IPv4 addresses with a dotted decimal notation. This record helps traffic to a specific web application server on EC2 or on-premises...