Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
Serverless sending and receiving e-mails using AWS is not fun in my opinion. AWS offers Simple Email Service (SES) to achieve this. But the UI and also Infrastructure as Code (IaC) support is lacking. You often need to manually change settings which is error prone.
Running cloud services on your local machine is often a problem because there is no local version available. Thankfully DynamoDB provides a local version of their database. This makes unit testing cloud services a lot easier if you’re relying on DynamoDB.
In the past years, technology made huge progress and automating your processes is more important than ever. Documenting your REST APIs is not an exception here.
From monoliths to microservices and containers to serverless functions: the software engineering world is changing fast. Popular technologies from today will be outdated tomorrow and it isn’t easy to follow them all. The same is true for taking the first step when going serverless.
After working for more than three years with AWS Lambda and other serverless services, I’ve came across various best practices to improve your way of going serverless. Let me share with you how you can successfully develop your software using serverless functions from a technical perspective.
In every software application, there are usually two main reasons to cache data: a) to improve performance and b) to reduce costs. Caching in AWS Lambda is not different. Instead, the reasons for caching might be even more important in this context.
Last week I have attended JavaLand 2019 which was a great experience for me.
Nomad 1.3 includes built-in service discovery, improved edge compute support, Container Storage Interface (CSI) general availability, and more. In previous versions of Nomad, service discovery could be accomplished only through Nomad’s integration with Consul or via third-party tools.
A key draw of the cloud is that it can help enterprises simplify their IT operations, especially with SaaS (software-as-a-service) offerings that eliminate the legwork and headaches of provisioning and housekeeping.
Guy Mast Guy Mast is a Product Manager at Varada, an autonomous data lake acceleration platform, where he works on combining Varada's indexing technology with the Trino OSS project.
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