Book Image

Implementing Cloud Design Patterns for AWS - Second Edition

By : Sean Keery, Clive Harber, Marcus Young
Book Image

Implementing Cloud Design Patterns for AWS - Second Edition

By: Sean Keery, Clive Harber, Marcus Young

Overview of this book

Whether you're just getting your feet wet in cloud infrastructure or already creating complex systems, this book will guide you through using the patterns to fit your system needs. Starting with patterns that cover basic processes such as source control and infrastructure-as-code, the book goes on to introduce cloud security practices. You'll then cover patterns of availability and scalability and get acquainted with the ephemeral nature of cloud environments. You'll also explore advanced DevOps patterns in operations and maintenance, before focusing on virtualization patterns such as containerization and serverless computing. In the final leg of your journey, this book will delve into data persistence and visualization patterns. You'll get to grips with architectures for processing static and dynamic data, as well as practices for managing streaming data. By the end of this book, you will be able to design applications that are tolerant of underlying hardware failures, resilient against an unexpected influx of data, and easy to manage and replicate.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Introduction to Amazon Web Services
Index

Code


Everything as code is going to be our mantra. Some code will be declarative, for systems automation. Other code will be procedural, having an easily understood flow. Functions will be used in some cases, and objects in others. We will need places to write this code, keep this code, build artifacts from it, then deploy it. Our building blocks will rely on Terraform and we will install that software later in this chapter. We're using Terraform to define our environments because it is becoming a de facto standard—it's fairly easy to pick up, it's capable of targeting multiple cloud providers, and it's open source. We're not going to look at the Terraform resources (code) for all of the AWS components in this chapter, but as we build solutions in later chapters, we'll come across a lot of them.

 

Cloud9

Although we said everything is going to be code, and while it is possible to create our integrated development environment (IDE) as code, we are going to use the AWS console for this exercise...