Book Image

Salesforce Lightning Platform Enterprise Architecture - Third Edition

By : Andrew Fawcett
Book Image

Salesforce Lightning Platform Enterprise Architecture - Third Edition

By: Andrew Fawcett

Overview of this book

Salesforce Lightning provides a secure and scalable platform to build, deploy, customize, and upgrade applications. This book will take you through the architecture of building an application on the Lightning platform to help you understand its features and best practices, and ensure that your app keeps up with your customers’ increasing needs as well as the innovations on the platform. This book guides you in working with the popular aPaaS offering from Salesforce, the Lightning Platform. You’ll see how to build and ship enterprise-grade apps that not only leverage the platform's many productivity features, but also prepare your app to harness its extensibility and customization capabilities. You'll even get to grips with advanced application architectural design patterns such as Separation of Concerns, Unit Testing and Dependency Integration. You will learn to use Apex and JavaScript with Lightning Web Components, Platform Events, among others, with the help of a sample app illustrating patterns that will ensure your own applications endure and evolve with the platform. Finally, you will become familiar with using Salesforce DX to develop, publish, and monitor a sample app and experience standard application life cycle processes along with tools such as Jenkins to implement CI/CD. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to develop effective business apps and be ready to explore innovative ways to meet customer demands.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Understanding the different storage types

The storage used by your application records contributes to the most important part of the overall data storage allocation on the platform. There is also storage used by the files uploaded by users and that used by so-called Big Objects. Big Objects are a type of object, allowing you to store billions of records of data in the platform (we will discuss them later in this chapter). By default, in a Scratch org, you can store up to 1 million records in your Big Objects.

From the Storage Usage page under the Setup menu, you can see a summary of the storage used, including those that reside in the Salesforce Standard Objects.

Later in this chapter, we will be creating a Custom Metadata Type object to store configuration data. Storage consumed by this type of object is not reflected on the Storage Usage page and is managed and limited...