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AWS CDK in Practice

You're reading from   AWS CDK in Practice Unleash the power of ordinary coding and streamline complex cloud applications on AWS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801812399
Length 196 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Leo Lam Leo Lam
Author Profile Icon Leo Lam
Leo Lam
Mark Avdi Mark Avdi
Author Profile Icon Mark Avdi
Mark Avdi
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: An Introduction to AWS CDK
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with IaC and AWS CDK FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: A Starter Project and Core Concepts 4. Part 2: Practical Cloud Development with AWS CDK
5. Chapter 3: Building a Full Stack Application with CDK 6. Chapter 4: Complete Web Application Deployment with AWS CDK 7. Chapter 5: Continuous Delivery with CDK-Powered Apps 8. Chapter 6: Testing and Troubleshooting AWS CDK Applications 9. Part 3: Serverless Development with AWS CDK
10. Chapter 7: Serverless Application Development with AWS CDK 11. Chapter 8: Streamlined Serverless Development 12. Part 4: Advanced Architectural Concepts
13. Chapter 9: Indestructible Serverless Application Architecture (ISAA) 14. Chapter 10: The Current CDK Landscape and Outlook 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

The CDK monorepo model

You are probably familiar with the concept of monorepos. The details are outside the scope of this book, but essentially, monorepos point to all code and assets of a certain project, client, or company being in a single GitHub repo as opposed to logically separating the code by, for example, separating the frontend and the backend of the code base into different repositories.

There are many upsides and downsides to using monorepos, and developers use them at varying levels for code organization, from keeping the entire company code within a repo to just storing project-specific code in a single repository. For example, at Westpoint, we like to keep each client’s code in a separate monorepo within a separate GitHub organization. This way, we keep things secure and easier to configure.

But if you have different levels of developer access to different bits of your organization’s code, it’s best to use other methods. We aim to keep things...

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