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Implementing Cloud Design Patterns for AWS

You're reading from   Implementing Cloud Design Patterns for AWS Create highly efficient design patterns for scalability, redundancy, and high availability in the AWS Cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2015
Last Updated in Feb 2025
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782177340
Length 228 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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 Young Young
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Young
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Basic Patterns 3. Patterns for High Availability 4. Patterns for Processing Static Data 5. Patterns for Processing Dynamic Data 6. Patterns for Uploading Data 7. Patterns for Databases 8. Patterns for Data Processing 9. Patterns for Operation and Maintenance 10. Patterns for Networking 11. Throw-away Environments Index

Write proxy pattern

The first method we will discuss for handling uploaded data will be quite different than any method thus far. Instead of uploading through the HTTP front-end as before, we will handle the data through a different protocol. It is not often to see a web server as the only means for sending data into a server. Legacy systems, systems that wish to support extremely large files, or even systems that need the transfer to be as optimized as possible would typically not interact via the HTML POST method.

Some examples of protocols used for file uploads that one might typically find, are:

  • FTP or SFTP
  • FTPS or SCP
  • HTTP PUT/POST
  • UDP optimized transfers such as Tsunami UDP

Note

More information on Tsunami can be found at http://tsunami-udp.sourceforge.net/.

For this example, we will use FTP as it is a bit easy to demonstrate and requires little overhead. This pattern allows the end user to anonymously upload the data via FTP into a proxy server, whose only purpose is to move the uploaded...

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