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Implementing AWS: Design, Build, and Manage your Infrastructure.

You're reading from   Implementing AWS: Design, Build, and Manage your Infrastructure. Leverage AWS features to build highly secure, fault-tolerant, and scalable cloud environments

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Product type Course
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788835770
Length 690 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (4):
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Yohan Wadia Yohan Wadia
Author Profile Icon Yohan Wadia
Yohan Wadia
Lucas Chan Lucas Chan
Author Profile Icon Lucas Chan
Lucas Chan
Udita Gupta Udita Gupta
Author Profile Icon Udita Gupta
Udita Gupta
Rowan Udell Rowan Udell
Author Profile Icon Rowan Udell
Rowan Udell
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Table of Contents (29) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. What is New in AWS? FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing EC2 with Systems Manager 3. Introducing Elastic Beanstalk and Elastic File System 4. Securing Workloads Using AWS WAF 5. Governing Your Environments Using AWS CloudTrail and AWS Config 6. Access Control Using AWS IAM and AWS Organizations 7. Transforming Application Development Using the AWS Code Suite 8. Powering Analytics Using Amazon EMR and Amazon Redshift 9. Orchestrating Data using AWS Data Pipeline 10. Managing AWS Accounts 11. Using AWS Compute 12. Management Tools 13. Database Services 14. Introducing AWS Lambda 15. Writing Lambda Functions 16. Testing Lambda Functions 17. Event-Driven Model 18. Extending AWS Lambda with External Services 19. Build and Deploy Serverless Applications with AWS Lambda 20. Monitoring and Troubleshooting AWS Lambda 21. AWS Lambda - Use Cases 22. Next Steps with AWS Lambda 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Introducing event-driven architectures


Till now we have been working and understanding Lambda using our trusty calculator example code, that simply accepts few parameters and values as inputs, and, when run, provides you with some desired output. What you may not have noticed is that the inputs that we were providing for the code to run were actually part of an event, that would trigger the code into running. Similarly, you can write Lambda functions that get activated or triggered when a particular message or event is generated. This is perhaps one of the biggest reasons why I love Lambda so much and why Lambda is so much better than your traditional EC2 instances! But, before we begin exploring the various triggers and events that Lambda can respond to, let us understand what Event Driven architectures are all about and how are they so useful.

Event-driven architecture (EDA) is basically a software architecture pattern that deals with the generation, detection, consumption, and reaction...

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