2.0
Anyone who tried to set up a production application on AWS knows the struggle: it’s just not built for people with less than quite some years of experience. Platform providers like Heroku work great until your app becomes very popular and the bill grows huge. Or you want to be GDPR-compliant. In a nutshell, SetOps is a service to run applications in your own AWS account. Developers interact with the CLI to manage applications, services like databases or storage, and functionalities like monitoring, alerting, and many more. SetOps is production-ready and is used by companies to deploy their web applications. It comes with a lot of features that are required to run applications in production:
Worry-free container deployments Interactive commands for debugging, migrations, DB queries, etc. Managed services like databases Integrated service discovery Backup, Monitoring, and Alerting
SetOps was built by experienced DevOps experts who used their knowledge to create a high-quality product that’s easy and enjoyable to use. There’s no lock-in because SetOps manages all resources inside your own AWS account. All components are designed to be self-healing, so it’s reliable by design. It provides cost-efficient deployments on every scale – from a few hundred requests per day to many thousands.
Codesphere provides efficient collaboration, trivial deployments, and global scaling in one platform. Transitioning to cloud-native infrastructure has never been easier, no DevOps experience required.
Amazon Lightsail is the fast and simple VPS hosting service from Amazon, the easy way to launch a virtual private server. You can have a VPS up and running with just a few clicks.
Qovery is the first Container as a Service (CaaS) platform that allows any developer to deploy an application in just a few seconds.
Cloud Hosting Service
Cloud Computing Service
Deploy to the most powerful serverless platform in the world with just one command.
An all-in-one workflow that combines global deployment, continuous integration, and automatic HTTPS. And that’s just the beginning.