A client interface to various AWS services
solve node AWS lambda EMFILE issue
A configuration contract for Node + AWS projects
Node AWS SSO Credentials Helper
Lightweight Firebase/Supabase alternative built to run anywhere — incl. Next.js, React Router, Astro, Cloudflare, Bun, Node, AWS Lambda & more.
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/util-user-agent-node) [](https://www.npmjs.com/
AWS credential provider that sources credentials from a Node.JS environment.
Provides a way to make requests
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/eventstream-handler-node) [](https://ww
A module help you automate AWS lambda function deployment.
OpenTelemetry instrumentation for `aws-sdk` and `@aws-sdk/client-*` clients for various AWS services
A Node.JS UTF-8 string <-> UInt8Array converter
OpenTelemetry instrumentation for AWS Lambda function invocations
AWS X-Ray SDK for Javascript
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/url-parser-node) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sd
Tool to automatically load AWS secret to environment variable
AWS RDS SSL certificates bundles.
The *client-node* module includes all of the modules you need to use the AWS Encryption SDK for JavaScript with Node.js.
node-aws-sdk is a utility library for connecting a node js application to Ansible AWX using ReST APIs.
AWS X-Ray SDK for Javascript
The AWS Encryption SDK for JavaScript is a client-side encryption library designed to make it easy for everyone to encrypt and decrypt data using industry standards and best practices. It uses a data format compatible with the AWS Encryption SDKs in other
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/s3-request-presigner) [](https://www.npmjs.com/
The AWS Encryption SDK for JavaScript is a client-side encryption library designed to make it easy for everyone to encrypt and decrypt data using industry standards and best practices. It uses a data format compatible with the AWS Encryption SDKs in other
The AWS Encryption SDK for JavaScript is a client-side encryption library designed to make it easy for everyone to encrypt and decrypt data using industry standards and best practices. It uses a data format compatible with the AWS Encryption SDKs in other
Cleans up nodes not found in provided AWS accounts
This gem provides an interface for fetching cluster information from an AWS ElastiCache AutoDiscovery server and configuring a Dalli client to connect to all nodes in the cache cluster.
Create an AWS EC2 node and restore a MongoDB dump to it from an AWS S3 bucket
Simple "node" configuration solution for Rails applications
Deploys from current Git repo to AWS EB or S3 (via node)
This gem provides an interface for fetching cluster information from an AWS ElastiCache AutoDiscovery server and configuring a Dalli client to connect to all nodes in the cache cluster.
Delete Route53 record associated to the EC2 node when destroying Vagrant VM using AWS provider.
Finds the public IP of a random node on a CodeOS cluster running in AWS, and sets the FLEETCTL_TUNNEL variable to allow dev-ops engineers a simple workflow of controlling CoreOS cluster without delving into the AWS console each time
StratoEnv populates ENV from one or more AWS SSM Parameter Store paths. Multiple paths form layers, with later paths overriding earlier ones, so you can split common config from node-specific or environment-specific overrides. No Rails dependency; works in Rails, Sinatra, Lambda, scripts, or any Ruby boot process.
http://www.engineyard.com/blog/2010/extending-rails-3-with-railties/ http://www.igvita.com/2010/08/04/rails-3-internals-railtie-creating-plugins/ h1. Morning Glory Morning Glory is comprised of a rake task and helper methods that manages the deployment of static assets into an Amazon CloudFront CDN's S3 Bucket, improving the performance of static assets on your Rails web applications. _NOTE: You will require an Amazon Web Services (AWS) account in order to use this gem. Specially: S3 for storing the files you wish to distribute, and CloudFront for CDN distribution of those files._ This version of Morning Glory works with Rails 3.x and Ruby 1.9.x h2. What does it do? Morning Glory provides an easy way to deploy Ruby on Rails application assets to the Amazon CloudFront CDN. It solves a number of common issues with S3/CloudFront. For instance, CloudFront won't automatically expire old assets stored on edge nodes when you redeploy new assets (the Cloudfront expiry time is 24 hours minimum). To fix this Morning Glory will automatically namespace asset releases for you, then update all references to those renamed assets within your stylesheets ensuring there are no broken asset links. It also provides a helper method to rewrite all standard Rails asset helper generated URLs to your CloudFront CDN distributions, as well as handling switching between HTTP and HTTPS. Morning Glory was also built with SASS (Syntactically Awesome Stylesheets) in mind. If you use Sass for your stylesheets they will automatically be built before deployment to the CDN. See http://sass-lang.com/ for more information on Sass.s h2. What it doesn't do Morning Glory cannot configure your CloudFront distributions for you automatically. You will manually have to login to your AWS Management Console account, "https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudfront/home":https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudfront/home, and set up a distribution pointing to an S3 Bucket. h2. Installation <pre> gem 'morning_glory' </pre> h2. Usage Morning Glory provides it's functionality via rake tasks. You'll need to specify the target rails environment configuration you want to deploy for by using the @RAILS_ENV={env}@ parameter (for example, @RAILS_ENV=production@). <pre> rake morning_glory:cloudfront:deploy RAILS_ENV={YOUR_TARGET_ENVIRONMENT} </pre> h2. Configuration h3. The Morning Glory configuration file, @config/morning_glory.yml@ You can specify a configuration section for every rails environment (production, staging, testing, development). This section can have the following properties defined: <pre> --- production: enabled: true # Is MorningGlory enabled for this environment? bucket: cdn.production.foo.com # The bucket to deploy your assets into s3_logging_enabled: true # Log the deployment to S3 revision: "20100317134627" # The revision prefix. This timestamp automatically generateed on deployment delete_prev_rev: true # Delete the previous asset release (save on S3 storage space) </pre> h3. The Amazon S3 authentication keys configuration file, @config/s3.yml@ This file provides the access credentials for your Amazon AWS S3 account. You can configure keys for all your environments (production, staging, testing, development). <pre> --- production: access_key_id: YOUR_ACCESS_KEY secret_access_key: YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY </pre> Note: If you are deploying your system to Heroku, you can configure your Amazon AWS S3 information with the environment variables S3_KEY and S3_SECRET instead of using a configuration file. h3. Set up an asset_host For each environment that you'd like to utilise the CloudFront CDN for you'll need to define the asset_host within the @config/environments/{ENVIRONMENT}.rb@ configuration file. As of June 2010 AWS supports HTTPS requests on the CloudFront CDN, so you no longer have to worry about switching servers. (Yay!) h4. Example config/environments/production.rb @asset_host@ snippet: Here we're targeting a CNAME domain with HTTP support. <pre> ActionController::Base.asset_host = Proc.new { |source, request| if request.ssl? "#{request.protocol}#{request.host_with_port}" else "#{request.protocol}assets.example.com" end } </pre> h3. Why do we have to use a revision-number/namespace/timestamp? Once an asset has been deployed to the Amazon Cloudfront edge servers it cannot be modified - the version exists until it expires (minimum of 24 hours). To get around this we need to prefix the asset path with a revision of some sort - in MorningGlory's case we use a timestamp. That way you can deploy many times during a 24 hour period and always have your latest revision available on your web site. h2. Dependencies h3. AWS S3 Required for uploading the assets to the Amazon Web Services S3 buckets. See "http://amazon.rubyforge.org/":http://amazon.rubyforge.org/ for more documentation on installation. h2. About the name Perhaps not what you'd expect; a "Morning Glory":http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_Glory_cloud is a rare cloud formation observed by glider pilots in Australia (see my side project, "YourFlightLog.com for flight-logging software for paraglider and hang-glider pilots":http://www.yourflightlog.com, from which the Morning Glory plugin was originally extracted). Copyright (c) 2010 "@AdamBurmister":http://twitter.com/adamburmister/, released under the MIT license
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