AWS Lambda and Serverless framework: lessons learned while building a serverl...Luciano Mammino
Planet9energy.com is a new electricity company that is building a sophisticated analytics and energy trading platform for the UK market. Since the earliest days of the company we took the unconventional decision to go serverless and finally we are building the product on top of AWS Lambda and the Serverless framework using Node.js. In this talk we will discuss why we took this radical decision, what are the pros and cons of this approach and what are the main issues we faced as a tech team in our design and development experience. We will discuss how normal things like testing and deployment need to be re-thought to work on a serverless fashion but also the benefits of (almost) infinite auto-scalability and the piece of mind of not having to manage hundreds of servers. Finally we will underline how Node.js seems to fit naturally in this scenario and how it makes developing serverless applications extremely convenient.
Thanks to Padraig O'Brien and Luciano Mammino for speaking this month.
Speakers Bio:
Padraig O'Brien
Podge @Podgeypoos79 is a software engineer for over 15 years, most of that was spent developing in .NET and SQL Server, designing and building large scale data intensive applications. Lately he has shifted towards open source technologies and is spending most of his time learning Node.js, Scala and cool data tech like Spark, Cassandra. He is also working on a “super-secret” project called UnicornDB, don’t tell anybody!
In his spare time he helps out with organising some meetups like NodeSchool Dublin, NodeSchool Dun Laoghaire and teaching Kanban via Agile Lean Ireland.
Luciano Mammino
Luciano @loige is a Software Engineer born in 1987, the same year that the Nintendo released “Super Mario Bros” in Europe, which, “by chance” is his favourite game! His primary passion is code and he is extremely fascinated by the web, smart apps and everything that's creative like music, art and design. He started coding at the age of 12 using his father's old i386 provided only with DOS and the qBasic interpreter.He is a senior software developer at Planet9Energy in Dublin and he loves JavaScript (React/Node.js). He is also the co-author of "Node.js design patterns" 2nd edition (Packt, http://amzn.to/1ZF279B).
Hosted by Intercom, sponsored by Nearform and organised by Node.js Dublin (https://www.meetup.com/Dublin-Node-js-Meetup/events/236870576/)
AWS Lambda from the trenches (Serverless London)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Slides for a short presentation I gave on AWS Lambda, which "lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers". Lambda is to running code as Amazon S3 is to storing objects.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key features, a live demonstration, how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you will learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key
features, a live demonstration, how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of AWS Lambda functions.
Speakers:
Dean Bryen, AWS Solutions Architect and
Andrew Wheat, Senior Developer Media Services BBC
AWS Lambda and Serverless framework: lessons learned while building a serverl...Luciano Mammino
Planet9energy.com is a new electricity company that is building a sophisticated analytics and energy trading platform for the UK market. Since the earliest days of the company we took the unconventional decision to go serverless and finally we are building the product on top of AWS Lambda and the Serverless framework using Node.js. In this talk we will discuss why we took this radical decision, what are the pros and cons of this approach and what are the main issues we faced as a tech team in our design and development experience. We will discuss how normal things like testing and deployment need to be re-thought to work on a serverless fashion but also the benefits of (almost) infinite auto-scalability and the piece of mind of not having to manage hundreds of servers. Finally we will underline how Node.js seems to fit naturally in this scenario and how it makes developing serverless applications extremely convenient.
Thanks to Padraig O'Brien and Luciano Mammino for speaking this month.
Speakers Bio:
Padraig O'Brien
Podge @Podgeypoos79 is a software engineer for over 15 years, most of that was spent developing in .NET and SQL Server, designing and building large scale data intensive applications. Lately he has shifted towards open source technologies and is spending most of his time learning Node.js, Scala and cool data tech like Spark, Cassandra. He is also working on a “super-secret” project called UnicornDB, don’t tell anybody!
In his spare time he helps out with organising some meetups like NodeSchool Dublin, NodeSchool Dun Laoghaire and teaching Kanban via Agile Lean Ireland.
Luciano Mammino
Luciano @loige is a Software Engineer born in 1987, the same year that the Nintendo released “Super Mario Bros” in Europe, which, “by chance” is his favourite game! His primary passion is code and he is extremely fascinated by the web, smart apps and everything that's creative like music, art and design. He started coding at the age of 12 using his father's old i386 provided only with DOS and the qBasic interpreter.He is a senior software developer at Planet9Energy in Dublin and he loves JavaScript (React/Node.js). He is also the co-author of "Node.js design patterns" 2nd edition (Packt, http://amzn.to/1ZF279B).
Hosted by Intercom, sponsored by Nearform and organised by Node.js Dublin (https://www.meetup.com/Dublin-Node-js-Meetup/events/236870576/)
AWS Lambda from the trenches (Serverless London)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Slides for a short presentation I gave on AWS Lambda, which "lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers". Lambda is to running code as Amazon S3 is to storing objects.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key features, a live demonstration, how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you will learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key
features, a live demonstration, how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of AWS Lambda functions.
Speakers:
Dean Bryen, AWS Solutions Architect and
Andrew Wheat, Senior Developer Media Services BBC
AWS October Webinar Series - AWS Lambda Best Practices: Python, Scheduled Job...Amazon Web Services
AWS Lambda lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers. We have introduced a few new features this year at re:Invent and would like to share with you some of the best practices.
This webinar will introduce you to scheduled AWS Lambda functions and how to use long running functions to handle large volume data ingestion and processing jobs. We will demonstrate how to use versioning to control which Lambda function version is being executed in your development, testing, and production environments. We will also show you how to run your Python code in AWS Lambda.
AWS is an elastic, secure, flexible, and developer-centric ecosystem that serves as an ideal platform for Docker deployments. AWS offers the scalable infrastructure, APIs, and SDKs that integrate tightly into a development lifecycle and accentuate the benefits of the lightweight and portable containers that Docker offers to its users. This session will familiarize you with the benefits of containers, introduce Amazon EC2 Container Service (ECS), and demonstrate how to use Amazon ECS for your applications.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Asha Chakrabarty, Senior Solutions Architect
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session you’ll learn what you need to quickly begin building applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end. We’ll cover key Lambda features, its programming model, key scenarios, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
Microservice Architecture on AWS using AWS Lambda and Docker ContainersDanilo Poccia
The use of microservices as an architectural pattern, decomposing an application into small, independent components, can improve development, deployment and security. We’ll build a real architecture using AWS Lambda to run event-based functions and Amazon EC2 Container Service and AWS Elastic Beanstalk to manage backend and frontend Docker containers. We’ll evolve from a web based interface to a mobile, cross platform architecture, using a least-privilege approach on security based on AWS Identity and Access Management roles.
Open stack ocata summit enabling aws lambda-like functionality with openstac...Shaun Murakami
Presentation delivered at the OpenStack summit Barcelona 2016.
https://www.openstack.org/videos/video/enabling-aws-s3-lambda-like-functionality-with-openstack-swift-and-openwhisk
Does the concept of server-less architecture intrigue you? OpenWhisk (https://git.io/vKeu3) accelerates innovation through creative chaining of microservices into highly scalable applications. By abstracting away infrastructure, OpenWhisk frees small teams to rapidly work on independent pieces of code simultaneously, keeping development focused solely on creating essential business logic. OpenWhisk allows you to create rules to connect events with actions and compose microservices that get executed independently and in parallel.
With a bit of code, you can have OpenWhisk process events from your Swift Object Storage; similar to what you can do with Lambda functions and AWS S3 storage. As an example, we will demonstrate how you can create an OpenWhisk action to transform an image into a thumbnail whenever a new (larger) image is uploaded into a Swift Container.
AWS August Webinar Series - Building Serverless Backends with AWS Lambda and ...Amazon Web Services
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code in response to triggers and automatically manages the compute resources for you. Amazon API Gateway is a fully managed service that makes it easy for developers to publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale.
This webinar will familiarize you with the basics of AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway and demonstrate how to build web, mobile, and IoT backends using these services. You will learn how to setup API endpoints that trigger AWS Lambda functions to handle mobile, web, IoT, and 3rd party API requests. You will also learn how to use Lambda to read and write to DynamoDB.
Learning Objectives:
Understand key AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway features
Learn how to set up a serverless backend using Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda
Explore sample use cases, best practices and tips on using AWS Lambda with Amazon API Gateway
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages the compute resources for you, making it easy to build applications that respond quickly to new information. AWS Lambda starts running your code within milliseconds of an event such as an image upload, in-app activity, website click, or output from a connected device.
Using AWS Lambda to Build Control Systems for Your AWS InfrastructureAmazon Web Services
Defining infrastructure resource policies in an organized manner can help your company better manage its infrastructure resources.
This session will familiarize you with using AWS Lambda to process data and provide control logic for your infrastructure. You can use Amazon CloudWatch Events to monitor infrastructure resources in real-time, and you can use AWS Lambda to react to events based on a set of rules. We will demonstrate how you can build a rules engine for creating, monitoring, and managing policies.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Bryan Liston, Community Manager, AWS Lambda
AWS' philosophy and recommended best practices for building microservices applications, how AWS services like Lambda and API gateway benefit developers building microservices apps, and how customers are using these two and other AWS services to deliver their microservices apps
Serverless architectures let you build and deploy applications and services with infrastructure resources that require zero administration. In the past, you had to provision and scale servers to run your application code, install and operate distributed databases, and build and run custom software to handle API requests. Now, AWS provides a stack of scalable, fully-managed services that eliminates these operational complexities.
In this session, you will learn about the benefits of serverless architectures and the basics of the serverless stack AWS provides. We will also walk through how you can use serverless architectures for everything from data processing to mobile and web backends.
The AWS Lambda is now available in Singapore and we are excited to invite you to participate in a webinar to learn more about the service and ask questions live throughout the webinar and receive responses during the Q&A session. In this one hour session, you will get to understand key AWS Lambda features, learn the AWS Lambda programming model and get tips on getting the most out of AWS Lambda.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this webinar you’ll learn what you need to quickly begin building mobile, tablet, or IoT applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end. You’ll also hear about Amazon Web Service’s Event-Driven Compute strategy and see demonstrations that use Lambda to respond to events from Amazon S3 notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams.
This presentation is from the AWS Lambda session of Container Days Conference in NYC. AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically and dynamically manages infra resources for you. Tara will talk about AWS's event-driven compute strategy and explain how Lambda works to respond to events from various Amazon services.
Tara will describe what you need to easily build scalable microservices for mobile, web, and IoT applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end, how you can expose these services using Amazon API Gateway, and how to extend both AWS and third party services by triggering Lambda functions. She'll also cover the updated Lambda features announced at reInvent 2015, its programming model, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key features, a live demonstration, guidelines on how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Building Complex Serverless Applications (GPST404)Amazon Web Services
Provisioning, scaling, and managing physical or virtual servers—and the applications that run on them—has long been a core activity for developers and system administrators. The expanding array of managed AWS cloud services, including AWS Lambda, Amazon DynamoDB, Amazon API Gateway and more, increasingly allows organizations to focus on delivering business value without worrying about managing the underlying infrastructure or paying for idle servers and other fixed costs of cloud services. In this session, we discuss the design, development, and operation of these next-generation solutions on AWS. Whether you're developing end-user web applications or back-end data processing systems, join us in this session to learn more about building your applications without servers.
Building Serverless Backends with AWS Lambda and Amazon API GatewayAmazon Web Services
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code without provisioning or managing servers. Amazon API Gateway is a fully managed service that makes it easy for developers to publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale.
This session will familiarize you with the basics of AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway and demonstrate how to build web, mobile, and IoT backends using these services. You will learn how to setup API endpoints that trigger AWS Lambda functions to handle mobile, web, IoT, and 3rd party API requests. You will also learn how to use Lambda to read and write to Amazon DynamoDB. We will run through a demo of setting up a simple serverless blogging web application that allows user authentication and the ability to create posts and comments.
AWS re:Invent 2016: All Your Chats are Belong to Bots: Building a Serverless ...Amazon Web Services
Bots are eating the world! Wild Rydes (www.wildrydes.com), a new startup that is building the world’s leading mobile/VR/AR unicorn transportation system, has decided to use serverless chatbots to staff its customer service department. As it scales to millions of users, Wild Rydes needed a scalable way to meet the customer service needs of its customers instead of relying on human customer service agents. Wild Rydes needs your help to implement its vision.
In this workshop, you will help Wild Rydes launch the future of customer service. You will build a customer service bot for Facebook that runs on AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway. You’ll enable the bot to respond intelligently to customers by building in Natural Language Processing (NLP). The bot will use an event-driven architecture in which Lambda functions trigger workflows that pull customer responses from a Knowledge Base of Q&A. You’ll also write a function to trigger a manual approval request to a Slack channel, so that Wild Rydes’ technical staff can approve or reject messages from the bot to the customer. Finally, you’ll also learn to use Amazon S3, Amazon DynamoDB, and Amazon Elasticsearch Service to log all incoming requests and create live analytical dashboards, such as for sentiment analysis, to track customer satisfaction.
Lambda is the next stage in the evolution of the AWS platform. It allows you to build reactive, event-driven systems that are easy to deploy, update and scale. Amazon manages all the undifferentiated heavy-lifting for you so you can focus on delivering value to your customers with even greater speed and cost efficiency.
Join Yan in this talk as we take a deep dive through AWS Lambda and the Serverless framework.
We'll see how to start building reactive systems using AWS Lambda, Kinesis and API Gateway, without having to manage any servers. And, you only pay for your services when they are used. We'll discuss lessons learned, best practices and current limitations with AWS Lambda.
We'll also get to know the Serverless framework, which helps automate both deployment and versioning so that you can better focus on the things that matter to your customers.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Monitoring, Hold the Infrastructure: Getting the Most fro...Amazon Web Services
Just as we got a hang of monitoring our server-based applications, they take away the server. How do you monitor something that doesn’t exist? Which metrics matter most in a serverless world? In this session, we will look at how applications are different in an AWS Lambda-based world and how to monitor them. Join us as we work our way through the stack and demonstrate how to capture the health and performance of your services.
The focus of this session is not tool-specific. Attendees will learn production-tested lessons and leave with frameworks they can implement with their serverless workloads, no matter which platforms and tools they use. This session sponsored by Datadog.
AWS Competency Partner
AWS October Webinar Series - AWS Lambda Best Practices: Python, Scheduled Job...Amazon Web Services
AWS Lambda lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers. We have introduced a few new features this year at re:Invent and would like to share with you some of the best practices.
This webinar will introduce you to scheduled AWS Lambda functions and how to use long running functions to handle large volume data ingestion and processing jobs. We will demonstrate how to use versioning to control which Lambda function version is being executed in your development, testing, and production environments. We will also show you how to run your Python code in AWS Lambda.
AWS is an elastic, secure, flexible, and developer-centric ecosystem that serves as an ideal platform for Docker deployments. AWS offers the scalable infrastructure, APIs, and SDKs that integrate tightly into a development lifecycle and accentuate the benefits of the lightweight and portable containers that Docker offers to its users. This session will familiarize you with the benefits of containers, introduce Amazon EC2 Container Service (ECS), and demonstrate how to use Amazon ECS for your applications.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Asha Chakrabarty, Senior Solutions Architect
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session you’ll learn what you need to quickly begin building applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end. We’ll cover key Lambda features, its programming model, key scenarios, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
Microservice Architecture on AWS using AWS Lambda and Docker ContainersDanilo Poccia
The use of microservices as an architectural pattern, decomposing an application into small, independent components, can improve development, deployment and security. We’ll build a real architecture using AWS Lambda to run event-based functions and Amazon EC2 Container Service and AWS Elastic Beanstalk to manage backend and frontend Docker containers. We’ll evolve from a web based interface to a mobile, cross platform architecture, using a least-privilege approach on security based on AWS Identity and Access Management roles.
Open stack ocata summit enabling aws lambda-like functionality with openstac...Shaun Murakami
Presentation delivered at the OpenStack summit Barcelona 2016.
https://www.openstack.org/videos/video/enabling-aws-s3-lambda-like-functionality-with-openstack-swift-and-openwhisk
Does the concept of server-less architecture intrigue you? OpenWhisk (https://git.io/vKeu3) accelerates innovation through creative chaining of microservices into highly scalable applications. By abstracting away infrastructure, OpenWhisk frees small teams to rapidly work on independent pieces of code simultaneously, keeping development focused solely on creating essential business logic. OpenWhisk allows you to create rules to connect events with actions and compose microservices that get executed independently and in parallel.
With a bit of code, you can have OpenWhisk process events from your Swift Object Storage; similar to what you can do with Lambda functions and AWS S3 storage. As an example, we will demonstrate how you can create an OpenWhisk action to transform an image into a thumbnail whenever a new (larger) image is uploaded into a Swift Container.
AWS August Webinar Series - Building Serverless Backends with AWS Lambda and ...Amazon Web Services
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code in response to triggers and automatically manages the compute resources for you. Amazon API Gateway is a fully managed service that makes it easy for developers to publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale.
This webinar will familiarize you with the basics of AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway and demonstrate how to build web, mobile, and IoT backends using these services. You will learn how to setup API endpoints that trigger AWS Lambda functions to handle mobile, web, IoT, and 3rd party API requests. You will also learn how to use Lambda to read and write to DynamoDB.
Learning Objectives:
Understand key AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway features
Learn how to set up a serverless backend using Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda
Explore sample use cases, best practices and tips on using AWS Lambda with Amazon API Gateway
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages the compute resources for you, making it easy to build applications that respond quickly to new information. AWS Lambda starts running your code within milliseconds of an event such as an image upload, in-app activity, website click, or output from a connected device.
Using AWS Lambda to Build Control Systems for Your AWS InfrastructureAmazon Web Services
Defining infrastructure resource policies in an organized manner can help your company better manage its infrastructure resources.
This session will familiarize you with using AWS Lambda to process data and provide control logic for your infrastructure. You can use Amazon CloudWatch Events to monitor infrastructure resources in real-time, and you can use AWS Lambda to react to events based on a set of rules. We will demonstrate how you can build a rules engine for creating, monitoring, and managing policies.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Bryan Liston, Community Manager, AWS Lambda
AWS' philosophy and recommended best practices for building microservices applications, how AWS services like Lambda and API gateway benefit developers building microservices apps, and how customers are using these two and other AWS services to deliver their microservices apps
Serverless architectures let you build and deploy applications and services with infrastructure resources that require zero administration. In the past, you had to provision and scale servers to run your application code, install and operate distributed databases, and build and run custom software to handle API requests. Now, AWS provides a stack of scalable, fully-managed services that eliminates these operational complexities.
In this session, you will learn about the benefits of serverless architectures and the basics of the serverless stack AWS provides. We will also walk through how you can use serverless architectures for everything from data processing to mobile and web backends.
The AWS Lambda is now available in Singapore and we are excited to invite you to participate in a webinar to learn more about the service and ask questions live throughout the webinar and receive responses during the Q&A session. In this one hour session, you will get to understand key AWS Lambda features, learn the AWS Lambda programming model and get tips on getting the most out of AWS Lambda.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this webinar you’ll learn what you need to quickly begin building mobile, tablet, or IoT applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end. You’ll also hear about Amazon Web Service’s Event-Driven Compute strategy and see demonstrations that use Lambda to respond to events from Amazon S3 notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams.
This presentation is from the AWS Lambda session of Container Days Conference in NYC. AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically and dynamically manages infra resources for you. Tara will talk about AWS's event-driven compute strategy and explain how Lambda works to respond to events from various Amazon services.
Tara will describe what you need to easily build scalable microservices for mobile, web, and IoT applications that use AWS Lambda as a serverless back-end, how you can expose these services using Amazon API Gateway, and how to extend both AWS and third party services by triggering Lambda functions. She'll also cover the updated Lambda features announced at reInvent 2015, its programming model, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda.
AWS Lambda is a new compute service that runs your code in response to events and automatically manages compute resources for you. In this session, you learn what you need to get started quickly, including a review of key features, a live demonstration, guidelines on how to use AWS Lambda with Amazon S3 event notifications and Amazon DynamoDB streams, and tips on getting the most out of Lambda functions.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Building Complex Serverless Applications (GPST404)Amazon Web Services
Provisioning, scaling, and managing physical or virtual servers—and the applications that run on them—has long been a core activity for developers and system administrators. The expanding array of managed AWS cloud services, including AWS Lambda, Amazon DynamoDB, Amazon API Gateway and more, increasingly allows organizations to focus on delivering business value without worrying about managing the underlying infrastructure or paying for idle servers and other fixed costs of cloud services. In this session, we discuss the design, development, and operation of these next-generation solutions on AWS. Whether you're developing end-user web applications or back-end data processing systems, join us in this session to learn more about building your applications without servers.
Building Serverless Backends with AWS Lambda and Amazon API GatewayAmazon Web Services
AWS Lambda is a compute service that runs your code without provisioning or managing servers. Amazon API Gateway is a fully managed service that makes it easy for developers to publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale.
This session will familiarize you with the basics of AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway and demonstrate how to build web, mobile, and IoT backends using these services. You will learn how to setup API endpoints that trigger AWS Lambda functions to handle mobile, web, IoT, and 3rd party API requests. You will also learn how to use Lambda to read and write to Amazon DynamoDB. We will run through a demo of setting up a simple serverless blogging web application that allows user authentication and the ability to create posts and comments.
AWS re:Invent 2016: All Your Chats are Belong to Bots: Building a Serverless ...Amazon Web Services
Bots are eating the world! Wild Rydes (www.wildrydes.com), a new startup that is building the world’s leading mobile/VR/AR unicorn transportation system, has decided to use serverless chatbots to staff its customer service department. As it scales to millions of users, Wild Rydes needed a scalable way to meet the customer service needs of its customers instead of relying on human customer service agents. Wild Rydes needs your help to implement its vision.
In this workshop, you will help Wild Rydes launch the future of customer service. You will build a customer service bot for Facebook that runs on AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway. You’ll enable the bot to respond intelligently to customers by building in Natural Language Processing (NLP). The bot will use an event-driven architecture in which Lambda functions trigger workflows that pull customer responses from a Knowledge Base of Q&A. You’ll also write a function to trigger a manual approval request to a Slack channel, so that Wild Rydes’ technical staff can approve or reject messages from the bot to the customer. Finally, you’ll also learn to use Amazon S3, Amazon DynamoDB, and Amazon Elasticsearch Service to log all incoming requests and create live analytical dashboards, such as for sentiment analysis, to track customer satisfaction.
Lambda is the next stage in the evolution of the AWS platform. It allows you to build reactive, event-driven systems that are easy to deploy, update and scale. Amazon manages all the undifferentiated heavy-lifting for you so you can focus on delivering value to your customers with even greater speed and cost efficiency.
Join Yan in this talk as we take a deep dive through AWS Lambda and the Serverless framework.
We'll see how to start building reactive systems using AWS Lambda, Kinesis and API Gateway, without having to manage any servers. And, you only pay for your services when they are used. We'll discuss lessons learned, best practices and current limitations with AWS Lambda.
We'll also get to know the Serverless framework, which helps automate both deployment and versioning so that you can better focus on the things that matter to your customers.
AWS re:Invent 2016: Monitoring, Hold the Infrastructure: Getting the Most fro...Amazon Web Services
Just as we got a hang of monitoring our server-based applications, they take away the server. How do you monitor something that doesn’t exist? Which metrics matter most in a serverless world? In this session, we will look at how applications are different in an AWS Lambda-based world and how to monitor them. Join us as we work our way through the stack and demonstrate how to capture the health and performance of your services.
The focus of this session is not tool-specific. Attendees will learn production-tested lessons and leave with frameworks they can implement with their serverless workloads, no matter which platforms and tools they use. This session sponsored by Datadog.
AWS Competency Partner
In this session, you'll learn what’s new and hot with AWS Lambda. Come on a tour with Dr. Tim Wagner, General Manager of AWS Lambda, to learn what we’ve been working on and what we are planning for the future. You'll get a hands-on demonstration of some our newest features which will provide you with a launching pad for some of the later sessions in the day.
In this session, you'll learn what’s new and hot with AWS Lambda. Come learn about what we’ve been working on and what we are planning for the future. You'll get a hands-on demonstration of some our newest features.
Real-time data processing serverless architecture can eliminate the need to provision and manage servers required to process files or streaming data in real time. In this session, we will cover the fundamentals of using AWS Lambda to process data in real-time from push sources such as AWS Iot and pull sources such as Amazon DynamoDB Streams or Amazon Kinesis. We'll also discuss best practices and do a deep dive into AWS Lambda real-time stream processing.
Getting started with AWS Lambda and the Serverless CloudIan Massingham
Slides from the MongoDB user group meetup talk that I did in March 2017.
https://gist.github.com/ianmas-aws/ce847270ecedf9a58cbcc1ed736cf541
^^ Gist containing (a very simple) code sample is here
JustGiving – Serverless Data Pipelines, API, Messaging and Stream ProcessingLuis Gonzalez
What to Expect from the Session
• Recap of some AWS services
• Event-driven data platform at JustGiving
• Serverless computing
• Six serverless patterns
• Serverless recommendations and best practices
AWS re:Invent 2016: Real-time Data Processing Using AWS Lambda (SVR301)Amazon Web Services
Serverless architecture can eliminate the need to provision and manage servers required to process files or streaming data in real time.
In this session, we will cover the fundamentals of using AWS Lambda to process data in real-time from push sources such as AWS Iot and pull sources such as Amazon DynamoDB Streams or Amazon Kinesis. We will walk through sample use cases and demonstrate how to set up some of these real-time data processing solutions. We'll also discuss best practices and do a deep dive into AWS Lambda real-time stream processing.
You also hear from speakers from Thomson Reuters, who discuss how the company leverages AWS for its Product Insight service. The service provides insights to collect usage analytics for Thomson Reuters products. The speakers walk through its architecture and demonstrate how they leverage Amazon Kinesis Streams, Amazon Kinesis Firehose, AWS Lambda, Amazon S3, Amazon Route 53, and AWS KMS for near real-time access to data being collected around the globe. They also outline how applying AWS methodologies benefited its business, such as time-to-market and cross-region ingestion, auto-scaling capabilities, low-latency, security features, and extensibility.
Building a Machine Learning App with AWS LambdaSri Ambati
Ludi Rehaks' meetup on 03.17.16
- Powered by the open source machine learning software H2O.ai. Contributors welcome at: https://github.com/h2oai
- To view videos on H2O open source machine learning software, go to: https://www.youtube.com/user/0xdata
AWS re:Invent 2016: The State of Serverless Computing (SVR311)Amazon Web Services
Join us to learn about the state of serverless computing from Dr. Tim Wagner, General Manager of AWS Lambda. Dr. Wagner discusses the latest developments from AWS Lambda and the serverless computing ecosystem. He talks about how serverless computing is becoming a core component in how companies build and run their applications and services, and he also discusses how serverless computing will continue to evolve.
With AWS Lambda, you can easily build scalable microservices for mobile, web, and IoT applications or respond to events from other AWS services without managing infrastructure. In this session, you’ll see demonstrations and hear more about newly launched features. We’ll show you how to use Lambda to build web, mobile, or IoT backends and voice-enabled apps, and we’ll show you how to extend both AWS and third party services by triggering Lambda functions. We’ll also provide productivity and performance tips for getting the most out of your Lambda functions and show how cloud native architectures use Lambda to eliminate “cold servers” and excess capacity without sacrificing scalability or responsiveness.
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
As businesses strive to innovate while aiming to reduce risk, IT has become more critical to the success of the business than ever before. In this session, Nick Barcet, Senior Director of Product Management for OpenStack at Red Hat, explains the importance of an IT evolution to modernize data center infrastructure through a culture, process, and technology transformation. Learn what’s driving customer success around OpenStack and how Red Hat is collaborating within the community to provide businesses with the modernized infrastructure they need
Lambda and serverless - DevOps North East Jan 2017Mike Shutlar
Introduction to AWS Lambda, serverless architectures, & the new AWS Serverless Application Model.
Source code for demo serverless application available here:
https://github.com/infectedsoundsystem/lambda-refarch-webapp
Serverless in production, an experience report (codemotion milan)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but the serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems: How do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
Yan Cui shares solutions to these challenges, drawing on his experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Yan Cui - Serverless in production, an experience report - Codemotion Milan 2017Codemotion
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures? In this talk Yan will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (microservices london)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but the serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems: How do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
Yan Cui shares solutions to these challenges, drawing on his experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production (O'Reilly Software Architecture)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but the serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems: How do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
Yan Cui shares solutions to these challenges, drawing on his experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (NDC London, 31 Jan 2018)Domas Lasauskas
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Domas will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Event: https://ndc-london.com/talk/serverless-in-production-an-experience-report/
Video: https://vimeo.com/254635750
Serverless in production, an experience report (NDC London 2018)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Domas will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (BuildStuff)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but the serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems: How do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
Yan Cui shares solutions to these challenges, drawing on his experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (Going Serverless, 28 Feb 2018)Domas Lasauskas
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Domas will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from their real-world experience running AWS Lambda in production and migrating an existing monolithic architecture for a social network to run on AWS Lambda.
Event: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/going-serverless-tickets-41866816776
Serverless in production, an experience report (London js community)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Diana will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (Going Serverless)Yan Cui
In this talk Yan Cui shares his experience of migrating an existing monolithic architecture for a social network to AWS Lambda, and how it empowered a small team to deliver features quickly and how they address operational concerns such as CI/CD, logging, monitoring and config management.
Serverless in production, an experience report (JeffConf)Yan Cui
In this talk Yan Cui shares his experience of migrating an existing monolithic architecture for a social network to AWS Lambda, and how it empowered a small team to deliver features quickly and how they address operational concerns such as CI/CD, logging, monitoring and config management.
Serverless in production, an experience report (CoDe-Conf)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Scott will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (linuxing in london)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Scott will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience report (FullStack 2018)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Scott will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in Production, an experience report (AWS UG South Wales)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Scott will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Serverless in production, an experience reportYan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Scott will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Lambda is the next stage in the evolution of the AWS platform. It allows you to build reactive, event-driven systems that are easy to deploy, update and scale. Amazon manages all the undifferentiated heavy-lifting for you so you can focus on delivering value to your customers with even greater speed and cost efficiency.
Join Yan in this talk as we take a deep dive through AWS Lambda and the Serverless framework.
We'll see how to start building reactive systems using AWS Lambda, Kinesis and API Gateway, without having to manage any servers. And, you only pay for your services when they are used. We'll discuss lessons learned, best practices and current limitations with AWS Lambda.
We'll also get to know the Serverless framework, which helps automate both deployment and versioning so that you can better focus on the things that matter to your customers.
Software release cycles are now measured in days instead of months. Cutting edge companies are continuously delivering high-quality software at a fast pace. In this session, we will cover how you can begin your DevOps journey by sharing best practices and tools used by the engineering teams at Amazon. We will showcase how you can accelerate developer productivity by implementing continuous Integration and delivery workflows. We will also cover an introduction to AWS CodeStar, AWS CodeCommit, AWS CodeBuild, AWS CodePipeline, AWS CodeDeploy, AWS Cloud9, and AWS X-Ray the services inspired by Amazon's internal developer tools and DevOps practice.
Level: 200
Speaker: Nick Brandaleone - Solutions Architect, AWS
Serverless architectures let you build and deploy applications and services with infrastructure resources that require zero administration. In the past, you had to provision and scale servers to run your application code, install and operate distributed databases, and build and run custom software to handle API requests. Now, AWS provides a stack of scalable, fully-managed services that eliminates these operational complexities.
In this session, you will learn about the benefits of serverless architectures and the basics of the serverless stack AWS provides. We will also walk through how you can use serverless architectures for everything from data processing to mobile and web backends.
AWS DevDay San Francisco, June 21, 2016.
Presenter: Jeremy Edberg, Co-Founder, CloudNative, & AWS Community Hero
Serverless in production, an experience report (IWOMM)Yan Cui
AWS Lambda has changed the way we deploy and run software, but this new serverless paradigm has created new challenges to old problems - how do you test a cloud-hosted function locally? How do you monitor them? What about logging and config management? And how do we start migrating from existing architectures?
In this talk Yan and Domas will discuss solutions to these challenges by drawing from real-world experience running Lambda in production and migrating from an existing monolithic architecture.
Delivered at the Serverless Summit 2022. Learn how to design serverless systems and tip the balance of trade-offs in your favour.
To learn how to build production-grade serverless applications, check out my upcoming workshops at productionreadyserverless.com and get 15% off with the code "serverlesssummit22".
At the heart of every event-driven architecture is a conduit for messages to flow through. AWS offers many services that can act as such conduit - EventBridge, SNS, SQS, Kinesis, DynamoDB streams, MSK, IOT Core and Amazon MQ just to name a few! These services have different characteristics and trade-offs around performance, scalability and cost. Picking the right service for your workload is not always easy. In this talk, let’s talk about how to pick the right messaging service to use in your event-driven architecture and play the game of trade-offs to your advantage.
How to choose the right messaging service for your workloadYan Cui
At the heart of every event-driven architecture is a conduit for messages to flow through. AWS offers many services that can act as such conduit - EventBridge, SNS, SQS, Kinesis, DynamoDB streams, MSK, IOT Core and Amazon MQ just to name a few! These services have different characteristics and trade-offs around performance, scalability and cost. Picking the right service for your workload is not always easy. In this talk, let’s talk about how to pick the right messaging service to use in your event-driven architecture and play the game of trade-offs to your advantage.
Patterns and practices for building resilient serverless applications.pdfYan Cui
Lambda gives you multi-AZ out-of-the-box, but still, things can go wrong in production. There are region-wide outages, and performance degradation in services your function depends on can cause it to time out or error. And what if you're dealing with downstream systems that just aren't as scalable and can't handle the load you put on them? The bottom line is many things can go wrong and they often do at the worst of times. The goal of building resilient systems is not to prevent failures, but to build systems that can withstand these failures. In this talk, we will look at a number of practices and architectural patterns that can help you build more resilient serverless applications. Such as multi-region, active-active, employing DLQs and surge queues. We'll also see how we can use chaos experiments to help us identify failure modes before they manifest in production.
Serverless observability - a hero's perspectiveYan Cui
Yan Cui, an AWS Serverless Hero, will talk about the learnings from using serverless at scale.
He will cover the challenges for observability in serverless asynchronous workloads and the patterns to address those challenges, like using centralized logging, correlation IDs, tracing, lambda extensions.
How to ship customer value faster with step functionsYan Cui
Learn all about AWS Step Functions and how to use them to model business workflows and ship customer values quickly. In this session, we will talk about what is Step Functions, how to model business workflows as state machines, real-world case studies, and design patterns. By the end of this webinar, you should have a good idea of where Step Functions fit into your application and why you should use them (and why not!) to model workflows instead of building a custom solution yourself.
One of the key characteristics of serverless components is the pay-per-use pricing model. For example, with AWS Lambda, you don’t pay for the uptime of the underlying infrastructure but for the no. of invocations and how long your code actually runs for.
This important characteristic removes the need for many premature micro-optimizations as your cost is always tightly linked to usage and minimizes waste. As a result, many applications would run at a fraction of the cost if they were moved to serverless.
The pay-per-use pricing model also enables more accurate cost prediction and monitoring based on your application’s throughput. This gives rise to the notion of FinDev, where finance and development can intersect and allows optimization to be targeted to give the optimal return-on-invest on the engineering efforts.
And by building your application on serverless components, you can also leverage it as a business advantage and offer a more competitive, usage-based pricing to your customers. Which is going to be crucial at a time when businesses all around the world are affected by COVID and are looking for better efficiencies.
In this webinar, we will cover topics such as:
- How does the cost of serverless differ from serverful applications?
- How to predict and monitor cost in serverless applications?
- When should you optimize for cost?
- How can you leverage usage-based pricing as a business advantage?
Why your next serverless project should use AWS AppSyncYan Cui
In this webinar, Yan Cui and Lumigo Software Engineer Guy Moses will discuss some of the power of GraphQL and AppSync and why AppSync + Lambda + DynamoDB should be your stack of choice in 2021 and beyond!
Serverless technologies drastically simplify the task of building modern, scalable APIs in the cloud, and GraphQL makes it easy for frontend teams to consume these APIs and to iterate quickly on your product idea. Together, they are a perfect combination for a product-focused, full-stack team to deliver customer values quickly.
In this talk, see how we built a new social network mobile app in under 4 weeks using Lambda, AppSync, DynamoDB and Algolia. How we approached CI/CD, testing, authentication and lessons we learnt along the way.
Real-world serverless podcast: https://realworldserverless.com
Learn Lambda best practices: https://lambdabestpractice.com
Blog: https://theburningmonk.com
Consulting services: https://theburningmonk.com/hire-me
Production-Ready Serverless workshop: https://productionreadyserverless.com
Patterns and practices for building resilient serverless applicationsYan Cui
Lambda gives you multi-AZ out-of-the-box, but still, things can go wrong in production. There are region-wide outages, and performance degradation in services your function depends on can cause it to time out or error. And what if you're dealing with downstream systems that just aren't as scalable and can't handle the load you put on them? The bottom line is many things can go wrong and they often do at the worst of times. The goal of building resilient systems is not to prevent failures, but to build systems that can withstand these failures. In this talk, we will look at a number of practices and architectural patterns that can help you build more resilient serverless applications. Such as multi-region, active-active, employing DLQs and surge queues. We'll also see how we can use chaos experiments to help us identify failure modes before they manifest in production
How to bring chaos engineering to serverlessYan Cui
You might have heard about chaos engineering in the context of Netflix and Amazon, and how they kill EC2 servers in production at random to verify that their systems can stay up in the face of infrastructure failures. But did you know that the same ideas can be applied to serverless applications? Yes, despite not having access to the underlying servers, we can still apply principles of chaos engineering to uncover failure modes in our system (and there are plenty!) so we can build a defence against them and make our serverless applications more robust and more resilient!
Migrating existing monolith to serverless in 8 stepsYan Cui
Refactoring a monolith to serverless can be intimidating, but there are discrete steps that you can take to simplify the process. In this talk, AWS Serverless Hero Yan Cui outlines 8 steps to successfully refactor your monolith and highlight key decision points such as language and tooling choices.
Building a social network in under 4 weeks with Serverless and GraphQLYan Cui
Serverless technologies drastically simplify the task of building modern, scalable APIs in the cloud, and GraphQL makes it easy for frontend teams to consume these APIs and to iterate quickly on your product idea. Together, they are a perfect combination for a product-focused, full-stack team to deliver customer values quickly.
In this talk, see how we built a new social network mobile app in under 4 weeks using Lambda, AppSync, DynamoDB and Algolia. How we approached CI/CD, testing, authentication and lessons we learnt along the way.
Real-world serverless podcast: https://realworldserverless.com
Learn Lambda best practices: https://lambdabestpractice.com
Blog: https://theburningmonk.com
Consulting services: https://theburningmonk.com/hire-me
Production-Ready Serverless workshop: https://productionreadyserverless.com
FinDev as a business advantage in the post covid19 economyYan Cui
The impact COVID19 has had on consumer economy, ripples out to other service providers - analytics tools, etc because everyone is going to be squeezed. And the variable-cost (or pay-as-you-use) pricing model will be more appealing as companies tighten up their budgets for non-essential services/tools.
AWS has improved Lambda cold starts by leaps and bounds in the last year. But for performance-sensitive applications such as user-facing APIs, Lambda cold starts are still a thorn in one’s side, especially when working with languages such as Java and .Net Core.
In this webinar, we will dive into strategies for improving cold start latency and how to mitigate them altogether with Provisioned Concurrency, and how Lumigo helps you optimize your use of Provisioned Concurrency.
In this session, we will look at 10 common use cases for AWS Lambda such as REST APIs, WebSockets, IoT and building event-driven systems. We will also touch on some of the latest platform features such as Provisioned Concurrency, EFS integration and Lambda Destinations and when and where we should use them.
A chaos experiment a day, keeping the outage awayYan Cui
Presented at ServerlessDays Warsaw
Recording: https://youtu.be/21HprKZQczs
You might have heard about chaos engineering in the context of Netflix and Amazon, and how they kill EC2 servers in production at random to verify that their systems can stay up in the face of infrastructure failures. But did you know that the same ideas can be applied to serverless applications? Yes, despite not having access to the underlying servers, we can still apply principles of chaos engineering to uncover failure modes in our system (and there are plenty!) so we can build defence against them and make our serverless applications more robust and more resilient!
One of the most common performance issues in serverless architectures is elevated latencies from external services, such as DynamoDB, ElasticSearch or Stripe.
In this webinar, we will show you how to quickly identify and debug these problems, and some best practices for dealing with poor performing 3rd party services.
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
52. “…We find that tests that mock external
libraries often need to be complex to
get the code into the right state for the
functionality we need to exercise.
The mess in such tests is telling us that
the design isn’t right but, instead of
fixing the problem by improving the
code, we have to carry the extra
complexity in both code and test…”
Don’t Mock Types You Can’t Change
53. “…The second risk is that we have to be
sure that the behaviour we stub or mock
matches what the external library will
actually do…
Even if we get it right once, we have to
make sure that the tests remain valid
when we upgrade the libraries…”
Don’t Mock Types You Can’t Change
55. “…Wherever possible, an acceptance
test should exercise the system end-to-
end without directly calling its internal
code.
An end-to-end test interacts with the
system only from the outside: through
its interface…”
Testing End-to-End
57. Legacy Monolith Amazon Kinesis Amazon Lambda
Amazon CloudSearchAmazon API Gateway Amazon Lambda
Test Input
58. Legacy Monolith Amazon Kinesis Amazon Lambda
Amazon CloudSearchAmazon API Gateway Amazon Lambda
Test Input
Validate
59. “…We prefer to have the end-to-end
tests exercise both the system and the
process by which it’s built and
deployed…
This sounds like a lot of effort (it is), but
has to be done anyway repeatedly
during the software’s lifetime…”
Testing End-to-End
60. Jenkins build config deploys and tests
unit + integration tests
deploy
acceptance tests
120. “…If the invocation for one record
times out, is throttled, or
encounters any other error,
Lambda will retry until it
succeeds (or the record reaches
its 24-hour expiration) before
moving on to the next record…”
http://aws.amazon.com/lambda/faqs