Tag: aws
All the articles with the tag "aws".
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Master Dapr Microservices: Ultimate Guide to Dapr, Kubernetes, and OpenTelemetry Tracing
Adaptability is a critical characteristic of software systems that developers and architects constantly strive to achieve. However, it's a delicate balance between productivity, performance, maintaina
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Linkerd Service Mesh on AWS EKS
I've been writing for a while now on setting up Kubernetes specifically with AWS' EKS. I love how EKS gives me the flexibility to install the standard and custom Kubernetes resources that I need and w
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KEDA to build Event-Driven Applications on EKS
Event-driven applications aren't new, but the patterns and discussion in the context of the cloud are hard to miss these days. It's hard to argue with the patterns and practices because with events, I
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Establishing Datadog on Kubernetes with EKS
Over the past few years I've spent a great deal of time writing and building with Datadog. I find that their platform gives me as a builder the right insight and tools to diagnose things quickly, make
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Building an API Gateway with Istio and EKS
Working with Kubernetes opens a world of possibilities in a software project. That's one of its biggest appeals to me as a developer. And when building with distributed systems, one of the components
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4 Benefits to using a Service Mesh
I've been spending a great deal of time lately working with Service Meshes and after having a few of the same conversations over and over (in a good way), I wanted to codify some of the reasons why th
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Connecting Rust Lambda Functions with OpenTelemetry and Datadog
Tracing Lambda Functions with observability code is the basement level of instrumentation that should exist when writing Serverless Applications. So many times, even in Lambda Functions, there are tim
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Momento Token Vending Machine with Rust, Lambda, and Datadog
Working with browser hosted code (UI) requires a developer to be cautious about exposing secrets and tokens. A less than trustworthy person could take these secrets and do things that the user doesn't