AWS Elastic Beanstalk explained

AWS Elastic Beanstalk
Developer:Amazon Web Services
Released:January 19, 2011[1]
Genre:Web development
License:Proprietary

AWS Elastic Beanstalk is an orchestration service offered by Amazon Web Services for deploying applications which orchestrates various AWS services, including EC2, S3, Simple Notification Service (SNS), CloudWatch, autoscaling, and Elastic Load Balancers.[2] Elastic Beanstalk provides an additional layer of abstraction over the bare server and OS; users instead see a pre-built combination of OS and platform, such as "64bit Amazon Linux 2014.03 v1.1.0 running Ruby 2.0 (Puma)" or "64bit Debian jessie v2.0.7 running Python 3.4 (Preconfigured - Docker)". Deployment requires a number of components to be defined: an 'application' as a logical container for the project, a 'version' which is a deployable build of the application executable, a 'configuration template' that contains configuration information for both the Beanstalk environment and for the product.[3] Finally an 'environment' combines a 'version' with a 'configuration' and deploys them. Executables themselves are uploaded as archive files to S3 beforehand and the 'version' is just a pointer to this.

Name

The name "Elastic beanstalk" is a reference to the beanstalk that grew all the way up to the clouds in the fairy tale Jack and the Beanstalk.

Applications and software stacks

Supported applications and software stacks include:[4]

Alternative AWS technologies

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Release: AWS Elastic Beanstalk. 2013-05-06.
  2. Web site: What Is AWS Elastic Beanstalk and Why Do I Need It?. 2013-05-27.
  3. Web site: AWS Elastic Beanstalk: deployment options. 5 January 2022 .
  4. Web site: AWS Elastic Beanstalk FAQ. 2020-03-17.