Run code samples directly in the Google Cloud documentation google.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from google.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Have you ever wanted to learn how tools like Terraform and Ansible complement each other? Perhaps you’d like to see an example of how to automate the Microsoft Azure infrastructure to prepare a complete web app deployment. Or maybe, you just need to know how to deploy a web application using Visual Studio to an Azure virtual machine (VM).
If any of the above topics interest you, you’re in luck. In this project, you’re going to learn how to build (from the ground up) a complete Azure infrastructure with a deployed web application.
A Glance At What You ll Be Using
Plus: Managed Grafana service for observability
Tim Anderson Wed 16 Dec 2020 // 16:28 UTC Share
Copy
re:Invent Amazon Web Services CTO Dr Werner Vogels has opened up on CloudShell, a Linux environment accessed through the browser which gives users a command-line and scripting environment for all AWS services.
At a re:Invent keynote yesterday, the exec also described Fault Injection Simulator - chaos engineering as a service, intended to help customers build resilient applications.
Dr Werner Vogels expounding the benefits of observability at an ancient food processing factory near his home town of Amsterdam, NL
Vogels’ keynote was a welcome relief from the relentless marketing that has characterised many other re:Invent keynotes, focusing mainly on technology and software engineering. Speaking from a 19th century sugar beet processing plant in Haarlem in the Netherlands, he used the industrial background to discuss matters such as operations, observab
AWS launches CloudShell, a web-based shell for command-line access to AWS
AWS today launched CloudShell, a new, fully featured web-based shell environment, based on Amazon Linux 2, for developers who want to be able to use some of their favorite command-line tools and scripts right inside the AWS Console.
CloudShell, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels explained in his announcement today, is a new browser-based service that will give developers access to a Linux console. When users start a new CloudShell session, it will automatically be pre-configured to have the same API permissions as your user in the AWS Console.
Image Credits: AWS