django-step-by-step
aws-cli
django-step-by-step | aws-cli | |
---|---|---|
23 | 48 | |
168 | 14,956 | |
- | 1.0% | |
8.7 | 9.8 | |
17 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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django-step-by-step
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What is your development cycle when using docker and containers? What's the general flow between developing locally and running the containers to test.
Here's an example of a docker-compose file in my reference Django project: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step/blob/main/docker-compose.yml
- My Infrastructure as Code Rosetta Stone - Deploying the same Django application on AWS ECS Fargate with CDK, Terraform and Pulumi
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My Infrastructure as Code Rosetta Stone - Deploying the same web application on AWS ECS Fargate with CDK, Terraform and Pulumi
Mono repo with a sample Django micro blogging app (μblog) and frontend app (Vue SPA written with Quasar), GitHub Action workflows for infrastructure and (separate) application deployment pipelines, IaC code that consumes each of the libraries listed above, VuePress documentation site and miscellaneous items (k6 load testing scripts, Cypress tests, docker-compose, etc.): github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step
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My Django blog website doesn't have a 'like' button. How can I add one?
This project also uses a model manager to make it easy to show how many people like a post as well as if the current user likes the post or not https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step/blob/main/backend/apps/blog/managers.py.
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Need some theoretical clarity on Terraform vs AWS CDK
Here's another repo that consumes these IaC libraries and deploys them through GitHub Actions pipelines: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step
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Decoupling terraform ecs task definition and deployments
By ignoring changes here you don’t have to worry about infra upgrades pushing out application updates. And you can update your app with with a separate pipeline. My code uses AWS CLI to register new task definitions. Here’s an example of my pipeline that deploy the app: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step/blob/main/.github/workflows/ad_hoc_update_backend.yml
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Scenario based question for DevOps Engineers out there
Here are some other questions that would be good to ask about the infrastructure: * What AWS account will this run in? Who has access to that account? Are SSO permission sets used? * What DNS records will be used to access the frontend and the backend? Are these two services accessed via the same record URL? For example, all do you to only send example.com/api/* traffic to the backend and then send all other example.com/* to the Angular frontend? Or do you want to use api.example.com for all API traffic and example.com for the Angular site. What about non-prod environments? Will you use alpha.example.com for a staging environment for a non-prod environment named alpha? * You mentioned that the team will be using Terraform heavily, how will you be splitting up your modules? When you run Terraform's apply command, does it update a single set of infrastructure for your entire application, or do you run terraform apply several times for different groups of resources, such as a networking stack (with VPC), data stack (with RDS) and application stack (for ECS resources), for example? You will probably use terraform remote state to manage these different logical components and the data dependencies they have between each other. * Another related question is how you are running pipelines for Terraform? I would use something like GitHub Actions. When a pipeline runs, you should see the output of a terraform plan stage and then the pipeline should pause for manual approval after the changes have been reviewed. This can be done with GitHub environments, for example, and other CI/CD tools can also do this. * What happens when you need to change an environment variable? This can be a complicated question. Environments that are not secrets might be stored in a terraform.tfvars file, or might be stored in environment variables in your pipeline in the form of TFVAR{name}, so this implies that changing an environment variable is an infrastructure change. You want to keep your infrastructure deployments separate from your application deployments. If you are using ECS, you probably want to use ignore_changes for the task definitions referenced by the services. This will create a new task definition, but it will not be used by the new services. When you do an application update, the service may use this new task definition with the updated environment variable. * Another question: does anyone on the team need direct access to the database? Is there a bastion host used in the infrastructure that can people can connect to the DB with via port forwarding? I hope these questions are helpful. I have thought about a lot of these and have been exploring their answers with an open source project focused on a containerized, database-backed Python web app (made with Django) that I deploy on AWS with ECS Fargate, and I have another repo with Terraform modules for deploying application infrastructure. Here's the application repo: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step and here is the Terraform module repo: https://github.com/briancaffey/terraform-aws-django. Please let me know if you have any questions
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How do you organize your code in Vue 3 composition api?
Here is how I organize my modules for an example microblog app: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step/tree/main/quasar-app/src/modules
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Django templates with DRF and React
Yes, this is possible. There are different ways to do this and it will depend on how and where you host your applications. Here's an example project of mine that I run on AWS that uses some the same URL with some routes for Django template-powered views, some views for a Vue app, some views for REST API and some views for GraphQL: https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step.
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When to implement CI/CD in a brand new project?
Here's an example of how I implement CI and CD with a Django project on AWS using GitHub Actions. I use ECS Fargate. https://github.com/briancaffey/django-step-by-step/blob/main/.github/workflows/backend_linting_and_unit_tests.yml
aws-cli
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Top 10 CLI Tools for DevOps Teams
The AWS CLI is a must-have tool if your team relies on Amazon Web Services. It lets you effortlessly interact with AWS services, orchestrate resource management, and automate tasks from the comfort of your terminal. Once you get used to the tool, you'll notice how convenient and quick it is to fit into your processes – especially compared to going through AWS's web-based user interface.
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My First Impressions of Nix
Just for your consideration, the network effect is very real with package managers, too:
https://search.nixos.org/packages?channel=23.05&show=awscli2 is 2.11.27 (even on the "unstable" channel), versus https://formulae.brew.sh/formula/awscli#default that is 2.12.1, which correctly is the most current (https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/tags)
- It is not possible to install ARM64 AWS CLI
- [Engineering_Stuff] S3FS-FUSE - Permet de monter votre lien de seau S3 / Minio vers votre répertoire local
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s3fs-fuse - allows to mount your s3/minio bucket link to your local directory
s3fs allows Linux, macOS, and FreeBSD to mount an S3 bucket via FUSE(Filesystem in Userspace). s3fs makes you operate files and directories in S3 bucket like a local file system. s3fs preserves the native object format for files, allowing use of other tools like AWS CLI.
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AWS Announces Open Source Mountpoint for Amazon S3
AFAIK it's still a Python package: https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/tree/2.11.6
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AWS S3 storage class invalid - DEEP_ARCHIVE - why?
Check CLI version, it looks like the earliest version that had DEEP_ARCHIVE support was 1.16.133 (https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/commit/55efab102f774ef17bf51ad32e939e4e03a5ff8a)
- Can we run AWS CLI to generate reports for all regions?
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Event Based System with Localstack (Elixir Edition): Uploading files to S3 with PresignedURL's
And this is the init_localstack.sh file content, a unique thing about localstack its that you can move all strings like an aws-cli tool, also the container deletes all the content and config once the container stops, so the script file must create all the resources that you need from Localstack
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You can update phone number using CLI
It can? I created a pull request for this that hasn't been merged yet: https://github.com/aws/aws-cli/pull/6365
What are some alternatives?
homelab
rclone - "rsync for cloud storage" - Google Drive, S3, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, One Drive, Swift, Hubic, Wasabi, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob, Azure Files, Yandex Files
cookiecutter-django-vue-graphql-aws - A highly opinionated Cookiecutter template that fuses together Django, Vue.js, GraphQL, and AWS into one full-stack web application.
boto3 - AWS SDK for Python
todo-app-infra - Repository contains example application with PaaS, SaaS & IaaS
SAWS - A supercharged AWS command line interface (CLI).
scim-examples - 1Password SCIM Bridge deployment examples
httpie - 🥧 HTTPie CLI — modern, user-friendly command-line HTTP client for the API era. JSON support, colors, sessions, downloads, plugins & more.
pulumi-aws-django - A Pulumi package for deploying Django applications to AWS using ECS Fargate and other managed services
thefuck - Magnificent app which corrects your previous console command.
docker-django-example - A production ready example Django app that's using Docker and Docker Compose.
pgcli - Postgres CLI with autocompletion and syntax highlighting