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AWS Lambda Quick Start Guide

You're reading from   AWS Lambda Quick Start Guide Learn how to build and deploy serverless applications on AWS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789340198
Length 184 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Markus Klems Markus Klems
Author Profile Icon Markus Klems
Markus Klems
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Toc

AWS Management Console

After reading the previous section, you will be familiar with Lambda usage and pricing models. Now we are going to explore the AWS Management Console.

In this section, we are going to take a look at how to navigate the Management Console, how to switch between services, and what Amazon Web Service regions are. Get onto the landing page of AWS, aws.amazon.com. Sign in to the Management Console by clicking on the button in the upper-right corner. Once signed in, you will see a navigation bar on the top. On the left-hand side, there's a Services dropdown. You can see all the Amazon Web Services that are available to us, as shown in the following screenshot:

These services are all clustered by service category; for example, compute services such as EC2-Lambda are also in this category. We also have storage services, such as S3, the simple storage service. We also have database services, such as DynamoDB, a database service that we will use later. Finally, there are also application services, such as API Gateway. You can also pin certain services to your navigation bar to access them more quickly. Click on the little pin button and you can drag down a service or drag up a certain service. Click the little pin button again; now it's stuck to your navigation bar.

Regions

One concept that is important to know about is the concept of regions. I'm currently in the North Virginia, or US East 1, region. This is the default region for all Amazon Web Services. If I click on this drop-down menu, I can see other regions, such as Ohio, Northern California, Ireland, Frankfurt, and so on. Each region corresponds to an Amazon Web Services data center, and most services are specific to a certain region, so if you create resources, they are bound to the particular region that they were created in. If you switch region, you won't see resources that you created in another region. Moreover, not all services are available in all regions. If we click, for example, on Lambda, then we can see that Lambda is available in Northern Virginia, but it is not available in Canada Central, in Asia Pacific Mumbai, or in South America, at least not at the time of writing. So it will typically take some time before all regions catch up and support all services. In this tutorial, I will use the EU Frankfurt region, and I would advise that you use the same region so that what I show you is consistent with what you are doing.

So if you use a service in a certain region, it typically has a region-specific endpoint. You can find more information about regions and endpoints at docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html.

The following screenshot shows regions where Lambda is available:

In the next section, we are going to create our first Lambda function. Let's get on with that!

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