.NET on AWS Blog
Category: Uncategorized
Implement a Custom Authorization Policy Provider for ASP.NET Core Apps using Amazon Verified Permissions
Amazon Verified Permissions is a managed authorization service for custom applications. You can use Verified Permissions to define fine-grained authorization policies based on principals, resources, roles, and attributes. Verified Permissions enables developers to build secure applications faster by externalizing authorization and centralizing policy management and administration. In this blog post, I use Verified Permissions to […]
AWS Microservice Extractor for .NET AI-Powered Recommendations
Introduction When we launched AWS Microservice Extractor for .NET, the goal was to give customers an easy-to-use tool to extract microservices from their monolithic applications. To achieve this goal, we have created multiple ways for you to locate candidate code for microservices to extract. In this post, we are going to talk about the latest […]
Find Your Pathway to .NET Modernization on AWS
This post mentions AWS products that have reached end of support. Refer to AWS for Microsoft workloads for current Windows modernization services from AWS. AWS has supported .NET workloads since 2008. Over the years, .NET has changed from a less flexible, Windows-only framework to a modular, cross-platform runtime. Today, you can run legacy .NET Framework […]
Moving from Jenkins to Amazon CodeCatalyst
At AWS re:Invent 2022 we launched Amazon CodeCatalyst, the new DevOps service for software development teams. CodeCatalyst is currently in public preview and available to developers. CodeCatalyst provides one place where you and your team can plan, work, collaborate on code, build, test and deploy applications. You can use CodeCatalyst to build your entire continuous […]
Get started with .NET development on AWS
This post explains 3 important areas to set up in order to begin your journey with .NET development on AWS. First, create an AWS account and configure a developer user with an appropriate level of access. Second, install and configure command line tools. Lastly, download and configure the toolkit for your IDE. Many of the […]




