AWS Developer Tools Blog
Category: Programing Language
Introducing AWS Common Runtime HTTP Client in the AWS SDK for Java 2.x
We are pleased to announce the preview release of AWS Common Runtime (CRT) HTTP Client – a new HTTP client supported in the AWS SDK for Java 2.x. AWS CRT HTTP Client is an asynchronous, non-blocking HTTP client built on top of the Java bindings of the AWS Common Runtime. You can use the CRT […]
Automatically deploy a Serverless REST API from GitHub with AWS Chalice
AWS Chalice lets you quickly create serverless applications in Python. When you first start using Chalice, you can use the chalice deploy command to deploy your application to AWS without any additional setup or configuration needed other than AWS credentials. As your application grows and you add additional team members to your project, you’ll want […]
Introducing Paginators in AWS SDK for .NET v3.5
We are happy to introduce Paginators in the latest release of AWS SDK for .NET v3.5! Many AWS operations return paginated results when the response object is too large to return in a single response. Paginators can help you navigate through paginated responses from services. Basic Usage Typically, a service will return a truncated response when […]
AWS SDK for .NET v3.5 Now Generally Available
Today, we have released version 3.5 of the AWS SDK for .NET! The primary objective of this version is to transition support for all non-Framework versions of the SDK to .NET Standard 2.0. We are doing this to accelerate feature development and offer newer functionality to a greater set of customers going forward. This is […]
Using AWS Lambda Layers with AWS Chalice
AWS Chalice is a framework for writing serverless applications in Python that provides familiar, declarative APIs to help you write your application. From the first version of this framework, we’ve provided a deployment packager that handles the details of how to package your application for AWS Lambda. This lets you specify third-party package dependencies using […]
Client-Side Metrics for the AWS SDK for Java v2 is now generally available
We are excited to announce the general availability (GA) of the client-side metrics module for the AWS SDK for Java v2. On July 7th, 2020, we announced a preview release of client-side metrics. With release version 2.14.0 of the SDK, client-side metrics can now be used in production environments. Client-side metrics enable you to collect […]
Introducing the AWS Chalice test client
The latest release of AWS Chalice, v1.17.0, now includes a test client that enables you to write tests for your Chalice applications using a concise and simplified API. The test client handles all the boilerplate setup and teardown logic that you’d previously have to write yourself when testing your Chalice applications. This new test client […]
Run Blazor-based .NET Web applications on AWS Serverless
Blazor WebAssembly is a new client-side web development framework that lets developers to use C# to create application front end. Blazor can run client-side C# code directly in the browser, using WebAssembly. Blazor WebAssembly runs on .NET Core and it is an open source and cross-platform web framework for building single-page application using .NET and […]
Configuring custom domain names with AWS Chalice
Version 1.16.0 of AWS Chalice, a framework for writing serverless applications in Python, adds support for custom domain names when creating REST and WebSocket APIs. In this post, we’ll show how to associate your own domain name with a REST API we create. When deploying REST APIs with Chalice, Amazon API Gateway automatically generates the […]
A new, more simplified setup for X-Ray tracing of .NET applications
AWS X-Ray is a service that helps developers analyze and debug distributed applications. Customers use X-Ray to monitor application traces, including the performance of calls to other downstream components or services, in either cloud-hosted applications or from their own machines during development. Until now, setting up this trace capability for .NET applications required that customers […]