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Full-Stack Item tracker application utilizing LocalStack and deployed via Shipyard's Ephemeral Environments

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Item Tracker application with LocalStack & Shipyard

Key Value
Environment LocalStack, AWS
Services SES, DynamoDB
Integrations Shipyard, AWS CLI, CDK
Categories Web Application
Level Basic
GitHub Repository link

Introduction

This application demonstrates how to build a simple item tracker application using React & Flask with LocalStack provisioning AWS resources, such as DynamoDB and SES. The application uses Shipyard to create ephemeral environments for each pull request, and it uses Docker Compose to deploy the application services.

This application uses the AWS SDK for Python (Boto3) to establish a REST service, while performing the following actions:

  • Develop a Flask-based REST service that seamlessly integrates with a React client & AWS services.
  • Manage operations such as reading, writing, and updating work items stored in an DynamoDB table.
  • Send email reports containing work item details using Simple Email Service (SES) from the React client.

Prerequisites

Start LocalStack on your local machine using the following command:

DEBUG=1 localstack start

Running the application locally

You can run the application locally using docker-compose. The docker-compose.yml file contains the configuration for the Flask REST service, the React client, and the LocalStack services. Run the following command to start the application:

docker-compose up

The below sections provide the manual steps to create the AWS resources and start the Flask REST service and React client.

Create a DynamoDB table

You can use LocalStack to create a local DynamoDB table. Run the following command to create a table named doc-example-work-item-tracker:

awslocal dynamodb create-table \
    --table-name doc-example-work-item-tracker \
    --attribute-definitions AttributeName=iditem,AttributeType=S \
    --key-schema AttributeName=iditem,KeyType=HASH \
    --provisioned-throughput ReadCapacityUnits=5,WriteCapacityUnits=5

In addition, we need to verify an email identity to send emails using SES. Run the following command to verify an email identity:

awslocal ses verify-email-identity --email hello@example.com

You can run the following command to list the email identities:

awslocal ses list-identities

Start the Flask REST service

Before starting the Flask REST service, install the required Python packages using the following command:

cd backend
virtualenv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate # macOS/Linux; use .venv\Scripts\activate on Windows
pip install -r requirements.txt

You can start the Flask REST service using the following command in the backend directory:

python app.py

The backend service will start on http://localhost:8080. To test the service, you can use the following curl command:

curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/api/items \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"name":"Me","guide":"python","description":"Show how to add an item","status":"In progress","archived":false}'

Start the React client

Before starting the React client, install the required Node.js packages using the following command:

cd frontend
npm install

You can start the React client using the following command in the frontend directory:

npm start

The following command will start the React client on http://localhost:3000/item_tracker. You can use the client to add, update, and delete work items.

React application

Running the application with Shipyard

WIP

Learn more

The application is based on a public AWS tutorial.