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Serverless Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   Serverless Design Patterns and Best Practices Build, secure, and deploy enterprise ready serverless applications with AWS to improve developer productivity

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788620642
Length 260 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Brian Zambrano Brian Zambrano
Author Profile Icon Brian Zambrano
Brian Zambrano
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. A Three-Tier Web Application Using REST 3. A Three-Tier Web Application Pattern with GraphQL 4. Integrating Legacy APIs with the Proxy Pattern 5. Scaling Out with the Fan-Out Pattern 6. Asynchronous Processing with the Messaging Pattern 7. Data Processing Using the Lambda Pattern 8. The MapReduce Pattern 9. Deployment and CI/CD Patterns 10. Error Handling and Best Practices 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

Securing sensitive configuration


Throughout this book, and in the previous section about managing environments, we've relied heavily on environment variables. One very nice feature of pulling a configuration from the environment is that sensitive information never needs to be checked into the source control. All of our application code and any framework code (such as the Serverless Framework) can look up variable values from the environment when needed.

Configuration via environment variables is all well and good, but our usage of these variables is not perfect. The problem with our usage of environment variables and Lambda is that the data pulled from the deployment environment is uploaded and stored in AWS Lambda functions as plain text. For example, take a look at serverless.yml from the previous section about error handling using either Sentry or Rollbar:

provider:
  name: aws 
  runtime: python3.6
  region: ${env:AWS_REGION}
  state: ${env:$ENV}
  environment:
    SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT:...
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