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AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide

You're reading from   AWS Certified Developer - Associate Guide Your one-stop solution to passing the AWS developer's 2019 (DVA-C01) certification

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789617313
Length 812 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Bhavin Parmar Bhavin Parmar
Author Profile Icon Bhavin Parmar
Bhavin Parmar
Vipul Tankariya Vipul Tankariya
Author Profile Icon Vipul Tankariya
Vipul Tankariya
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Toc

Table of Contents (30) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of AWS Certified Developer - Associate Certification FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding the Fundamentals of Amazon Web Services 3. Identity and Access Management (IAM) 4. Virtual Private Clouds 5. Getting Started with Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) 6. Handling Application Traffic with ELB 7. Monitoring with CloudWatch 8. Simple Storage Service, Glacier, and CloudFront 9. Other AWS Storage Options 10. AWS Relational Database Service 11. AWS DynamoDB - A NoSQL Database Service 12. Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS) 13. Simple Notification Service (SNS) 14. AWS Simple Workflow Service (SWF) 15. CloudFormation Overview 16. Understanding Elastic Beanstalk 17. Overview of AWS Lambda 18. Key Management Services 19. Working with AWS Kinesis 20. Working with AWS CodeBuild 21. Getting Started with AWS CodeDeploy 22. Working with AWS CodePipeline 23. CI/CD on AWS 24. Serverless Computing 25. Amazon Route 53 26. ElastiCache Overview 27. Mock Tests 28. Assessments 29. Another Book You May Enjoy

The version life cycle

Elastic Beanstalk creates a newer application version upon uploading a newer source code bundle. Creating a newer version and not deleting the old unwanted application version leads to hitting the application version limit. As a result, it does not allow us to create any newer web application versions.

The default Elastic Beanstalk limits are as follows:

Resource Default limit
Applications 75
Application versions 1,000
Environments 200

With the help of the application version life cycle policy for an application, hitting an application version limit can be avoided. Consequently, it will manage the number of available application versions at any given time. Once the life cycle policy is enabled, it will keep either the total count of recent versions (that is, the last 200 versions of the application) or the versions that are not older than the...

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