7:44 The file name specified in the terminal is not the filename you're pointing your mouse at in the directory. And then you file you uploaded was the ORIGINAL file, and not the SHADED one that replaced it. It's stuff like this that confuses me. Aren't those two different files? If the file names are intentionally different, that seems like something to mention. Why is the filename in the terminal different from the ones in the directory? If the point was to replace the ORIGINAL jar with the SHADED jar, why did you then upload the ORIGINAL jar instead?
In the 1st example, i don't understand when you 'test' using empty string, and 'test' succeed. what test is it? is the lambda running the junit test you write earlier, because it's also packed in the jar? or it's just calling the handler deployed in aws and see that SOME response is coming back (but not verifying the value of response)?
Superb. Thank you Do you know if there is a way to configure your AWS lambda account, to tell Amazon a max dollar amount you want to spend, and then if you accidentally exceed that amount with your resources, they either immediately notify you, or just simply shut down your site? I'd prefer it works that way. I'd hate to get a big surprise bill from amazon, because I didn't know my code was very inefficient, and the code was spending too much time during a function invocation.
Great video! I guess maven shade plugin is meant to be used to create uber jar for non Spring Boot apps, because Spring Boot uses spring-boot-maven-plugin, is that correct? Also just as a food for thought, why is maven shade not used by default for Spring? Any advantages of the spring-boot-maven plugin? Or it is built on top of maven shade plugin?
Lambda is a serverless compute service, or a Function as a Service (FaaS) offering, that runs code in response to events and automatically manages the underlying compute resources for you. This makes it a great choice for hosting microservices, data processing jobs, and event-driven applications. A real-world example of Lambda is an image processing application. For example, you can set up a Lambda function to automatically resize user-uploaded images for different platforms. When a user uploads an image, the function is triggered and automatically resizes the image to the specific dimensions required for the platform. The Lambda function can also store the resized images in an S3 bucket. This type of application would be difficult to build and manage on a traditional server, but is easily achievable with Lambda.
Thanks for adding the repo in the description @Dan Vega. Great tutorial (whole series). I was just frustrated with the practice of not including source code in the tutorial. I saw that too many times and I'm guessing that motivation comes from the fact that source code significantly accelerates the learning process which leads to less time spent on the video.
@@DanVega maybe that should be “go ahead” and add that. Loved the video but lost count of the number of times you say “I’m going to [go ahead and] [do thing]…”. But hey, still a good intro! 👏
7:44 The file name specified in the terminal is not the filename you're pointing your mouse at in the directory. And then you file you uploaded was the ORIGINAL file, and not the SHADED one that replaced it. It's stuff like this that confuses me. Aren't those two different files? If the file names are intentionally different, that seems like something to mention.
Why is the filename in the terminal different from the ones in the directory?
If the point was to replace the ORIGINAL jar with the SHADED jar, why did you then upload the ORIGINAL jar instead?
how to install maven shade plugin for intelliJ?
Love these videos Dan, keep em coming! Doing the community a favour. big time.
Thank you for the kind words James.
In the 1st example, i don't understand when you 'test' using empty string, and 'test' succeed. what test is it? is the lambda running the junit test you write earlier, because it's also packed in the jar? or it's just calling the handler deployed in aws and see that SOME response is coming back (but not verifying the value of response)?
Superb. Thank you
Do you know if there is a way to configure your AWS lambda account, to tell Amazon a max dollar amount you want to spend, and then if you accidentally exceed that amount with your resources, they either immediately notify you, or just simply shut down your site? I'd prefer it works that way.
I'd hate to get a big surprise bill from amazon, because I didn't know my code was very inefficient, and the code was spending too much time during a function invocation.
I can't understand why your jar is sno small (2.5KB). My Jar is 16.
Thumbs up for making the tests!
Great video! I guess maven shade plugin is meant to be used to create uber jar for non Spring Boot apps, because Spring Boot uses spring-boot-maven-plugin, is that correct?
Also just as a food for thought, why is maven shade not used by default for Spring? Any advantages of the spring-boot-maven plugin? Or it is built on top of maven shade plugin?
Very good! Let's see more advances java lambda function video.
I love you Dan, maximum useful video. Thanks.
This is great Dan! Please make more JAVA/AWS Lambda vids.
Dan Vega's video = upvote. Thanks man!
good video Dan! Thanks for sharing
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
This is superb, Dan! Crystal clear and right to the point!
Thanks for the video. This helps a lot.
Thank you very much! Great tutorial!!!
Nice
* link to the repo included. Great tutorial!
I'd like to see more like this great tutorial thanks dear
Great video! Would love to know more about Lambda, perhaps a bit complicated, or a real-world example will greatly help.
Lambda is a serverless compute service, or a Function as a Service (FaaS) offering, that runs code in response to events and automatically manages the underlying compute resources for you. This makes it a great choice for hosting microservices, data processing jobs, and event-driven applications.
A real-world example of Lambda is an image processing application. For example, you can set up a Lambda function to automatically resize user-uploaded images for different platforms. When a user uploads an image, the function is triggered and automatically resizes the image to the specific dimensions required for the platform. The Lambda function can also store the resized images in an S3 bucket. This type of application would be difficult to build and manage on a traditional server, but is easily achievable with Lambda.
Thank you very much Dan!
Very clean explanation. Thanks
Very useful content Dan..
Glad it was helpful!
Appreciated. Very useful.
Thanks Dan!
Thank you very much!!!!
Awesome! Thank you!
Good job well done :)
❤ this is awesome one
Great tutorial. Thanks
11th...Thanks Dan.
🫶🇲🇽
Keep going Dan!
how can i enable msp autocomplete?
Were you able to activate MSP autocomplete? How do this ? help me pls
@@JhoseBieel Hi, did not configure it.
Amazing! Thank you!
Thank you!
You cant imagine how much I grateful to you for this videos. Thank you a lot for your amazing job!
There is no link to the repo (as promised in the video). Don't waste time here.
or... Dan it seems like you missed putting the link to the Github Repository in the description. Can you please add that? 🤦♂
Thanks for adding the repo in the description @Dan Vega. Great tutorial (whole series).
I was just frustrated with the practice of not including source code in the tutorial. I saw that too many times and I'm guessing that motivation comes from the fact that source code significantly accelerates the learning process which leads to less time spent on the video.
what to add actullay complete description ?
@@DanVega
@@DanVega maybe that should be “go ahead” and add that. Loved the video but lost count of the number of times you say “I’m going to [go ahead and] [do thing]…”. But hey, still a good intro! 👏