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Developing Modern Database Applications with PostgreSQL

You're reading from   Developing Modern Database Applications with PostgreSQL Use the highly available and object-relational PostgreSQL to build scalable and reliable apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838648145
Length 440 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Marcelo Diaz Marcelo Diaz
Author Profile Icon Marcelo Diaz
Marcelo Diaz
Quan Ha Le Quan Ha Le
Author Profile Icon Quan Ha Le
Quan Ha Le
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 - Introducing PostgreSQL Development and Administration
2. Introduction to PostgreSQL Development and Administration FREE CHAPTER 3. Section 2 - Development in PostgreSQL
4. Setting Up a PostgreSQL RDS for ATMs 5. Using PostgreSQL and Node.js for Banking Transactions 6. Managing Bank ATM Locations Using PostgreSQL and Django 7. Creating a Geospatial Database Using PostGIS and PostgreSQL 8. Managing Banking Transactions using PostgREST 9. Section 3 - Administration in PostgreSQL
10. PostgreSQL with DevOps for Continuous Delivery 11. PostgreSQL High Availability Clusters 12. High-Performance Team Dashboards Using PostgreSQL and New Relic 13. Testing the Performance of Our Banking App with PGBench and JMeter 14. Test Frameworks for PostgreSQL 15. Other Books You May Enjoy APPENDIX - PostgreSQL among the Other Current Clouds

Setting up a Node.js project

In Chapter 2, we used Amazon Web Services (AWS) to set up a PostgreSQL RDS. In this chapter, we will use an AWS EC2 instance to create an API from Node.js to PostgreSQL.

An EC2 instance is a virtual server in Elastic Compute Cloud (or EC2) for executing our applications on the cloud infrastructure. Hence EC2 is a service evolving cloud computing platform and there are a variety of types of EC2 instances with different configurations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources to suit user needs. Each type is also available in two different sizes to address workload requirements.

In order to launch our EC2 instance for Node.js, we need to select an Amazon Machine Image (AMI), which is a special type of virtual appliance to deploy for services delivered to our EC2 instance. For our Node.js project in this chapter, we will use a good AWS AMI: ami-7d579d00, as seen in Figure 3.1.

We decide to use a CentOS image because CentOS is a very stable Linux version...

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