amazon-timestream-tools
mic-cloudformation-hub
amazon-timestream-tools | mic-cloudformation-hub | |
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2 | 4 | |
230 | - | |
0.4% | - | |
8.5 | - | |
6 days ago | - | |
Java | ||
MIT No Attribution | - |
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amazon-timestream-tools
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Integrating Amazon Timestream in you Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow v2.x
This is a simple demo application called the flink_connector is used to take sample load data and then stream it into the Timestream database. This project uses Amazon Kinesis to stream that data, so we need to create a stream which we can do using the following command:
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AWS open source news and updates No. 38
Store and Access Time Series Data at Any Scale with Amazon Timestream – Now Generally Available great post from Danilo Poccia that introduces Amazon Timestream. Amazon Timestream is a time series database that makes it easy to collect, store, and process trillions of time series events per day up to 1,000 times faster and at as little as to 1/10th the cost of a relational database. Time series are a very common data format that describes how things change over time. Some of the most common sources are industrial machines and IoT devices, IT infrastructure stacks (such as hardware, software, and networking components), and applications that share their results over time. Time series information is often integrated with open source tools, and in the past I have used tools like Grafana or Kibana to dashboard this data in a way that you can begin to use to provide actionable insights. In this post, Danilo shows how you can integrate this with open source dashboard tools like Grafana, and provides a bunch of open source tools to get you going. GitHub repository here.
mic-cloudformation-hub
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AWS open source news and updates No. 38
Microtica is an open source automation platform that helps accelerate the configuration of your cloud environments whilst maintaining consistency by using templates that are then executed via AWS Cloud Formation. There are a number of samples components provided, and the project is looking for more. Sara Miteva has also written a very clear post on dev.to on how to get started, so make sure you check out Microtica—the DevOps automation platform with open-source components
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Microtica—the DevOps automation platform with open-source components
An example template can be found here.
What are some alternatives?
projen - A new generation of project generators [Moved to: https://github.com/projen/projen]
aws-workflows-on-github - Workflows for automation of AWS services setup from Github CI/CD
amictl - Because you need to control your AMIs
dynamoquery - Python AWS DynamoDB ORM
kms-issuer - KMS issuer is a cert-manager Certificate Request controller that uses AWS KMS to sign the certificate request.
fargate-game-servers - This repository contains an example solution on how to scale a fleet of game servers on AWS Fargate on Elastic Container Service and route players to game sessions using a Serverless backend. Game Server data is stored in ElastiCache Redis. All resources are deployed with Infrastructure as Code using CloudFormation, Serverless Application Model, Docker and bash/powershell scripts. By leveraging AWS Fargate for your game servers you don't need to manage the underlying virtual machines.
kconnect - Kubernetes Connection Manager CLI
tagger - Tagger provides an easy way to manage AWS tags
component-aws-serverless-mysql