@cloudkitect/components
v1.4.1
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CloudKitect freemium components are scaled down versions of CloudKitect enhanced components offered as monthly or yearly subscription. These are well architected components that offer out of the box monitoring, alerting and compliance to various standards
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About CloudKitect
CloudKitect revolutionizes the way technology organizations adopt cloud computing by providing innovative, secure, and cost-effective turnkey solution that fast-tracks the AWS Adoption. Think of CloudKitect as Cloud Architect as a Service.
About CloudKitect Components.
This repository includes freemium version of CloudKitect components. They are available under a freemium model and meet a subset of compliance requirements in contrast to CloudKitect Enhanced components, which conform to a broader range of compliance standards including CIS, PCI, MAS, NIST-800, ARP, GDPR, and others.
Developer Workstation Setup
Primarily, CloudKitect prioritizes enhancing the developer experience, thus all our products are designed with the developer community at the forefront. Consequently, to utilize the product, developers need to initially set up their workstations with the necessary development tools. You can either follow the steps below or watch this Video
Step 1: Install NPM
NPM is a package manager for javascript and typescript based projects. Depending on your OS, install NPM.
Step 1a: Mac Users
Mac users can use homebrew to install node which will also install npm
brew upgrade
brew install node
Step 1b: Windows Users
Windows users can download the installer from Here
After the download of the installer package, follow these steps.
- Double-click on the downloaded file (.msi file).
- During installation, make sure to check the option "Add Node.js to Path". This will allow you to access npm commands from any directory in your command prompt.
- Make sure you choose npm package manager , not the default of Node.js runtime.
- This way, we can install Node and NPM simultaneously. Finally, click on install
Windows users can also use Chocolatey package manager, and install using the following command
chco install nodejs
For other Operating Systems follow the instructions Here
Step 1c: Verify Installation
Open a new terminal on your workstation and run the following commands to verify the installation:
node -v
npm -v
Step 2: Install NVM (Optional)
It is recommended to install nvm, for managing various versions of nodejs. For Mac
brew install nvm
For other OS
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.7/install.sh | bash
OR
wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.7/install.sh | bash
Step 2a: Install Node via nvm
Install node version 18 or later, using nvm
nvm install 18
nvm use 18
Step 3: Install AWS CLI
Install AWS cli to interact with your AWS account using terminal
Step 3a: Mac Users
Mac users can use homebrew to install node which will also install npm
brew upgrade
brew install awscli
Step 3b: Windows Users
- Visit the AWS CLI to download the installer Download Page
- Double-click the downloaded .msi file and follow the instructions.
Follow other OS follow instructions Here
Step 3c: Verify Installation
Open a new terminal on your workstation and run the following commands to verify the installation:
aws --version
Step 4: Install AWS CDK
Step 4a: Mac and Windows Users
Run the following command in your terminal.
npm install -g aws-cdk
Step 4b: Verify Installation
Open a new terminal on your workstation and run the following commands to verify the installation:
cdk --version
Step 5: Install typescript
Step 5a: Mac and Windows Users
Run the following command in your terminal.
npm -g install typescript
Step 5b: Verify Installation
Open a new terminal on your workstation and run the following commands to verify the installation:
tsc --version
Step 6: AWS Account Setup
Your AWS account needs to be setup and bootstrapped for CDK deployment
Step 6a: Create a user with Admin privileges
Create a user named "deployer" (you can give it any name) with Admin permissions in the AWS account where application will be deployed.
6b: Create Access key
Create Access Keys for the deployer user.
6c: Configure AWS CLI
Run the following command and follow the instructions by providing your access key and secret key
aws configure --profile deployer
6d: Route53 Hosted Zone
These components assume that there is a Route53 Hosted zone present in the AWS account where the application is deployed. So create a hosted zone for a domain you own. e.g. example.com and update the nameservers to point to this hosted zone.
6e: Bootstrap AWS Account for CDK Deployment
cdk bootstrap aws://ACCOUNT_ID/us-east-1 --profile deployer
Step 7: Create CDK project
NOTE: DEPLOYING THESE APPLICATIONS IN YOUR AWS ACCOUNT WILL INCUR COST THAT YOU WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR, SO MAKE SURE YOU SHUT DOWN YOUR APPLICATION ONCE YOU ARE DONE.
Step 7a: Create and initialize CDK project
Run the following commands to scaffold a CDK project
mkdir my-project
cd my-project
cdk init app --language typescript
Step 7b: Open Project in IDE of your choice
For example Visual Studio or IntelliJ etc.
Step 7c: Add CloudKitect Dependencies
Open package.json file in your project and under dependencies add the following two dependencies, check for the current released version and use that version instead of "0.0.0"
{
"dependencies": {
"@cloudkitect/components": "0.0.0",
"@cloudkitect/patterns": "0.0.0",
...
}
}
Step 7d: Install dependencies
npm install
Step 8: Build Your App
Step 8a:
Open the my-project.ts file under lib directory, and add the following lines to it, replace 'AWS_ACCOUNT_ID' with your AWS account Id. You can also change the 'ckApplication' and 'ckCompany' names.
#!/usr/bin/env node
import 'source-map-support/register';
import * as cdk from 'aws-cdk-lib';
import { MyProjectStack } from '../lib/my-project-stack';
import {CkAccountType} from "@cloudkitect/components";
const app = new cdk.App();
const devEnv = { account: "AWS_ACCOUNT_ID", region: "us-east-1" };
const stackProps = {
ckAccountType: CkAccountType.DEVELOPMENT,
ckApplication: "TestApp",
ckCompany: "CloudKitect",
};
new MyProjectStack(app, 'MyProjectStack', {
...stackProps,
env: devEnv
});
Step 8b: Create Website Infrastructure
Under lib directory, open the file named. my-project-stack.ts. Then copy and paste the following code Change 'ckDomainName' to match the domain name that is currently setup in Route53. .
import { Construct } from 'constructs';
import {CkStack, CkStackProps} from "@cloudkitect/components";
import {CkServerlessWebsite} from "@cloudkitect/patterns"
export class MyProjectStack extends CkStack {
constructor(scope: Construct, id: string, props: CkStackProps) {
super(scope, id, props);
new CkServerlessWebsite(this, 'TestSite', {
ckDomainName: 'socalstartups.net',
ckPathToContent: './site-content',
});
}
}
Step 8c: Create website code.
Create a directory site-content under the directory my-project and add index.html. In real project this directory will contain your angular, reactjs etc. app. You can also change 'ckPathToContent' to point to the location where your existing web application artifacts are present, such as react/angular app dist folder
cd my-project
mkdir site-content
cd site-content
echo "CloudKitect is Awesome" >> index.html
Step 8d: Deploy the stack.
Let's deploy the stack to our AWS account.
cdk deploy --require-approval never --profile deployer
Step 8e: Verify Deployment
Once the deployment completes it will output the url for your website, copy and paste it in your browser. The website should display the message "CloudKitect is Awesome".
Step 9: Container App Deployment
Next we will deploy a containerized app.
Step 9a: Create an ECR Repository
Login to your AWS account, goto ECR repository and create a new repository. You can name anything but in this example we are using name "addressbook"
Step 9b: Push your docker image to ecr
Login to ecr repository, replace AWS_ACCOUNT_ID with your aws account id.
aws ecr get-login-password --region us-east-1 --profile deployer | docker login --username AWS --password-stdin AWS_ACCOUNT_ID.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com
Step9c: Build your docker images
docker build -t APP_NAME .
Tag your image and give it a version 1.0
docker tag APP_NAME:latest AWS_ACCOUNT_ID.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/APP_NAME:1.0
Push your image
docker push AWS_ACCOUNT_ID.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/APP_NAME:1.0
Step 9d: Update your stack
Add the following code to your stack. Change the 'ckDomainName' to match your Route53 Hosted zone
import { Construct } from 'constructs';
import {CkStack, CkStackProps} from "@cloudkitect/components";
import {CkServerlessContainerApps, CkServerlessWebsite} from "@cloudkitect/patterns"
import {Repository} from "aws-cdk-lib/aws-ecr";
import {Aws} from "aws-cdk-lib";
import {ContainerImage} from "aws-cdk-lib/aws-ecs";
export class MyProjectStack extends CkStack {
constructor(scope: Construct, id: string, props: CkStackProps) {
super(scope, id, props);
new CkServerlessWebsite(this, 'TestSite', {
ckDomainName: 'socalstartups.net',
ckSubdomain: 'test',
ckPathToContent: './site-content',
});
const repo = Repository.fromRepositoryAttributes(this, 'Repo', {
repositoryArn: `arn:aws:ecr:${Aws.REGION}:${Aws.ACCOUNT_ID}:repository/addressbook`,
repositoryName: 'addressbook',
});
const container = new CkServerlessContainerApps(this, 'NodeApp', {
ckDomainName: 'socalstartups.net',
ckSubDomain: 'app',
});
container.addService({
ckServiceName: 'NodeAppService',
ckImage: ContainerImage.fromEcrRepository(repo, '1.0'),
ckContainerPort: 8080,
});
}
}
Step 9e: Deploy our updated stack
Let's deploy the updated stack to our AWS account.
cdk deploy --require-approval never --profile deployer
Step 9f: Verify Application
Once deployed it will output the endpoint of your application. Copy and paste it in your browser.
Step 10: Destroy Application
Once you have verified clean up resources by destroying your stack and avoid further cost.
cdk destroy --profile deployer