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Infrastructure as Code for Beginners

You're reading from   Infrastructure as Code for Beginners Deploy and manage your cloud-based services with Terraform and Ansible

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837631636
Length 222 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Russ McKendrick Russ McKendrick
Author Profile Icon Russ McKendrick
Russ McKendrick
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Foundations – An Introduction to Infrastructure as Code
2. Chapter 1: Choosing the Right Approach – Declarative or Imperative FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Ansible and Terraform beyond the Documentation 4. Chapter 3: Planning the Deployment 5. Part 2: Getting Hands-On with the Deployment
6. Chapter 4: Deploying to Microsoft Azure 7. Chapter 5: Deploying to Amazon Web Services 8. Chapter 6: Building upon the Foundations 9. Part 3: CI/CD and Best Practices
10. Chapter 7: Leveraging CI/CD in the Cloud 11. Chapter 8: Common Troubleshooting Tips and Best Practices 12. Chapter 9: Exploring Alternative Infrastructure-as-Code Tools 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing Amazon Web Services

AWS is a cloud infrastructure platform owned and operated by the e-commerce giant Amazon, which you probably already guessed, given the name.

The company began experimenting with cloud services in 2000, developing and deploying application programming interfaces (APIs) for their internal and external retail partners to consume. As more and more of the Amazon retail partners consumed more of the software services and grew at an exponential rate, they realized they would need to build a better and more standardized infrastructure platform to not only host the services they had been developing but also ensure that they could quickly scale as well.

Off the back of this requirement, Amazon engineers Chris Pinkham and Benjamin Black wrote a white paper, which Jeff Bezos personally approved in early 2004. The paper described an infrastructure platform where the compute and storage elements could all be deployed programmatically.

The first public acknowledgment...

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