![]() ![]() These AWS services provide simple ways to ensure that your application is protected from common vulnerabilities, which means your developers can spend less time worrying about them and more time building valuable product features. However, everything here can also be used for traditional, server-bound applications. WAF and CloudFront are managed services provided by AWS with no infrastructure for you to manage, so they’re an obvious extension of your serverless stack. ![]() Read the last installment: Best Practices for Serverless Endpoints on AWS In this entry, we’ll wrap up endpoint security with a look at how to use AWS Web Application Firewall (WAF) and CloudFront to mitigate common attacks like SQL Injection, Cross-Site Scripting, and Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS). The last installment in this series on serverless best practices on AWS covered Transport Layer Security with Certificate Manager and some strategies for implementing custom authorizers. Using WAF and CloudFront with Serverless Applications ![]()
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