aws-codedeploy-agent
aws-codebuild-docker-images
aws-codedeploy-agent | aws-codebuild-docker-images | |
---|---|---|
20 | 9 | |
323 | 1,091 | |
0.6% | 0.9% | |
6.1 | 6.1 | |
22 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Ruby | Dockerfile | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
aws-codedeploy-agent
-
Passing the AWS Certified DevOps Engineer - Professional exam
AWS CodeDeploy is a deployment service that automates application deployments to Amazon EC2 instances, on-premises instances, serverless Lambda functions, or Amazon ECS services. A compute platform is a platform on which CodeDeploy deploys an application. There are three compute platforms:
-
CLI tools at Aha!
When we deploy code at Aha! we kick off a number of AWS CodeDeploy tasks running in parallel. Here's some code to simulate deployment:
-
The best approach to deploy an Application to EC2 on Windows?
AWS has a service named CodeDeploy for this. It does exactly what you describe.
-
Continuous Integration and Deployment on AWS - and a wishlist for CI/CD Tools on AWS
AWS CodeDeploy is a fully managed deployment service that automates software deployments to various compute services, such as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS), AWS Lambda, and your on-premises servers.
-
Automatic AWS CloudFormation rollbacks upon a test failure in your CI pipelines
AWS's developer suite of products includes the AWS CodeDeploy offering, which can help developers deploy AWS Lambda functions and other compute-related services.
-
AWS CodeDeploy Cheat Sheet
Documentation
-
Learnings on Testing & Deployments of UI and BFF in CICD Pipelines for AWS
AWS? Dude, use CodeDeploy green blue with hooks.
-
Top 10 Software Deployment Tools for 2022
AWS CodeDeploy is a service from Amazon Web Services that automates deployments to any instance. It works with any language, platform, or application. AWS CodeDeploy makes it easier to release new features quickly, avoid downtime during application deployment, and handle the complexity of updating applications. Users can also test and track deployments so they're not left guessing or digging through logs when something goes wrong. Our integration with AWS CodeDeploy can be integrated directly into your CI/CD pipeline to improve your AWS DevOps security.
-
The REGAL Architecture
If you have a BFF, that means you have a front-end. If you have a front-end, you gotta host it somewhere. Amplify is an AWS managed service built for hosting Single Page Applications. It abstracts away all the existing serverless tech you’d traditionally use on AWS into a single place, automating most of it. S3 static asses, cache busting on deploy, and it even abstracts it’s own build pipeline using CodeDeploy sourced right from your code repository. Like AppSync, it creates a CloudFront distribution for you, and optionally provides automatic Route53 creation if you want at full URL.
-
DEVOPS AS A SERVICE
Once a fresh build passes via CodePipeline, CodeDeploy distributes the functioning package to each instance based on your predefined settings. This makes it easy to coordinate builds and upgrade or patch simultaneously. CodeDeploy is code-agnostic and includes typical old code with ease. Every deployment instance can be readily monitored using the AWS Management Console, and any mistakes or issues may be rolled back through the graphical user interface.
aws-codebuild-docker-images
-
DevSecOps with AWS- IaC at scale - Building your own platform - Part 1
Based on public repository for Codebuild Image, the image base will be the Ubuntu standard 7.0.
-
Firecracker internals: deep dive inside the technology powering AWS Lambda(2021)
This is basically what CodeBuild does.
The default Docker containers that CodeBuild uses (you can create your own) and the shell script it uses to parse the yaml configuration file (mostly a list of shell scripts) are all open source and the entire process can be run locally.
https://github.com/aws/aws-codebuild-docker-images
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/codebuild/latest/userguide/use-c...
Disclaimer: I work for AWS. But nowhere near the team that developed Firecracker
-
CircleCI says hackers stole encryption keys and customers’ source code
Disclaimer: I work for AWS in Professional Services. All opinions are my own.
The beauty about CodeBuild is that there is no “lock-in”. All it is fundamentally is a Linux or Windows Docker container with popular language runtimes and a shell script that processes a yaml file or you can supply your own Docker container.
You just put a bunch of bash commands or PowerShell commands in the yaml file and it runs anything.
The Docker container and the shell scripts are all open source and you can quite easily run them locally.
I could see outside of AWS keeping your Docker containers for your specific build environments in a local repository and doing all of your builds inside them using Jenkins.
https://github.com/aws/aws-codebuild-docker-images
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/codebuild/latest/userguide/use-c...
For a “batteries included” approach though, I really like Azure DevOps Pipelines.
I’ve even done a couple of integrations between Azure DevOps and AWS when we had clients that are Microsoft shops.
https://aws.amazon.com/vsts/
For AWS, if you use CodeCommit (AWS git service), all access is via IAM and granular permissions. If you integrate with Azure DevOps, the AWS credentials do have to be stored in a separate MS hosted credential storage.
CodeBuild also supports at least Github natively.
I’m not shilling for AWS. I have an MS development background (.Net) and only have “DevOps” experience using AWS and Microsoft tooling.
-
Continuous Integration and Deployment on AWS - and a wishlist for CI/CD Tools on AWS
Docker Images provided by the CodeBuild team should be updated regularly and should support all "modern" toolkits. The open source project has some activity, but an issue for supporting newer Android versions is now open for some time...
-
Building a Flutter application for Web, iOS and Android using a CI/CD pipeline on CodeBuild – #cdk4j
The runtimes available and exposed by CodePipeline support Android runtime 29 – and the Docker images are provisioned using Java 8. Unfortunately, as of July 2021, the Android gradle tools (used by Flutter) require Java 11. I have created an issue in the corresponding Github (see here) but needed to find a workaround to move on – I think I’ve found one, but I hope that anyone reading this might have a better way or idea?
- Is there a way to request a new runtime for codebuild?
-
Run local Graviton2 builds with AWS CodeBuild agent
$ git clone https://github.com/aws/aws-codebuild-docker-images.git $ cd aws-codebuild-docker-images/al2/aarch64/standard/2.0 $ docker build -t codebuild/amazonlinux2-aarch64-standard:2.0 .
-
Build and share Docker images using AWS CodeBuild and Graviton2
This also is the place where we specify this is an AArch64 build. The managed image indicates to use a standard image provided by AWS. The source of the Graviton2 image can be found on GitHub.
-
DevOps tools you should have on your belt
🏗 AWS CodeBuild Local Builds - Simulate a CodeBuild environment locally to quickly troubleshoot the commands and settings located in the BuildSpec file.
What are some alternatives?
aws-cloudformation-coverage-roadmap - The AWS CloudFormation Public Coverage Roadmap
cfn-python-lint - CloudFormation Linter
elastic-beanstalk-roadmap - AWS Elastic Beanstalk roadmap
hello-arm
vsaq - VSAQ is an interactive questionnaire application to assess the security programs of third parties.
saml2aws - CLI tool which enables you to login and retrieve AWS temporary credentials using a SAML IDP
Jenkins - Jenkins automation server
copilot-cli - The AWS Copilot CLI is a tool for developers to build, release and operate production ready containerized applications on AWS App Runner or Amazon ECS on AWS Fargate.
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
aws-extend-switch-roles - Extend your AWS IAM switching roles by Chrome extension, Firefox add-on, or Edge add-on
Vagrant - Vagrant is a tool for building and distributing development environments.
awsume - A utility for easily assuming AWS IAM roles from the command line.