Why Use AWS App Runner?

Why Use AWS App Runner?

In today’s fast-paced tech environment, developers and DevOps teams are constantly looking for ways to streamline application deployment and reduce the complexity of managing infrastructure. AWS offers a wide array of services …


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Ernesto Herrera Salinas

Why Use AWS App Runner?

In today’s fast-paced tech environment, developers and DevOps teams are constantly looking for ways to streamline application deployment and reduce the complexity of managing infrastructure. AWS offers a wide array of services to help achieve this, but with so many options, it can be challenging to decide which one is best for your needs. AWS App Runner is a relatively new service designed to simplify the deployment of containerized and web applications. But what makes it stand out, and why should you consider it over other options like Elastic Beanstalk, AWS Lambda, or ECS?

1. Introduction: The Struggle with Infrastructure Complexity

If you're feeling overwhelmed by the plethora of AWS services available for application deployment, you're not alone. Developers and DevOps professionals often face the frustration of managing complex infrastructures, ensuring scalability, and constantly monitoring their services. AWS App Runner aims to eliminate these pain points by offering a managed service that simplifies the deployment process while handling the infrastructure for you.

2. What is AWS App Runner?

AWS App Runner is a fully managed service that allows you to build, deploy, and run containerized applications and web services at scale without worrying about the underlying infrastructure. It supports deploying applications directly from a container registry like ECR or a GitHub repository, making it incredibly easy to set up and manage.

Key Features:

  • Ease of Use: With App Runner, you don’t need to manage infrastructure. AWS automatically provisions, scales, and monitors your application.
  • Scaling: Your application automatically scales based on incoming traffic, and it can scale down to zero when there’s no traffic, saving costs.
  • Deployment Automation: App Runner integrates easily with CI/CD pipelines, enabling automatic deployments when new code or container images are pushed.

3. How AWS App Runner Simplifies App Deployment

App Runner removes much of the complexity associated with traditional infrastructure management. For example, when deploying an application with AWS ECS, you need to configure task definitions, clusters, load balancers, autoscaling policies, and VPC configurations. With App Runner, you can skip all of these steps. The service automatically provisions these resources and manages them for you.

Additionally, App Runner offers:

  • Built-in Load Balancing: No need to manually configure ALB/NLB for your web applications.
  • Health Monitoring and Auto Recovery: App Runner ensures your app stays healthy and automatically recovers it if something goes wrong.

For small teams or startups without a dedicated DevOps team, this can be a game changer.

4. AWS App Runner vs. Other AWS Services

When deciding between AWS App Runner and other AWS services like Elastic Beanstalk, AWS Lambda, or ECS, it’s important to understand the trade-offs.

AWS App Runner vs. ECS/Fargate

  • App Runner: Great for simple, containerized apps with minimal operational overhead. AWS handles the scaling and infrastructure, making it easy for teams with limited AWS expertise.
  • ECS/Fargate: Offers more control and flexibility, especially for complex, multi-container applications. However, it requires more expertise and effort to set up and manage infrastructure.

AWS App Runner vs. AWS Lambda

  • App Runner: Ideal for containerized applications and microservices with stateful components.
  • AWS Lambda: Perfect for event-driven, stateless applications. It’s also serverless but doesn’t handle long-running processes or stateful applications as well as App Runner.

AWS App Runner vs. Elastic Beanstalk

  • App Runner: More specialized for containerized apps, with simplified scaling and deployment.
  • Elastic Beanstalk: Better for applications that need a more customized environment, supporting multiple programming languages and frameworks.

5. The Benefits of AWS App Runner

Here are the key benefits of AWS App Runner:

  • Simplicity: App Runner abstracts the complexity of infrastructure management, enabling developers to focus on coding and building features.
  • Automatic Scaling: The service scales your application based on demand, and scales to zero when there’s no traffic, reducing unnecessary costs.
  • Cost-Efficiency: You only pay for the compute and memory your app uses, with no additional costs for load balancers or infrastructure management.
  • Security: App Runner provides built-in security features, including automatic SSL certificates and integrations with IAM roles.

6. Potential Drawbacks and Limitations

While AWS App Runner is a powerful service, it does come with some limitations:

  • Limited Control: Compared to ECS or EKS, App Runner gives you less control over the underlying infrastructure. This might not be ideal for applications that require custom networking configurations or advanced scaling policies.
  • Cost for High-Traffic Applications: App Runner’s simplicity might come with a higher price tag for large-scale applications that require optimized resource usage.

7. Is AWS App Runner Right for You?

If you're a small team, startup, or business looking for a simple, scalable, and low-maintenance solution for deploying containerized applications, AWS App Runner is an excellent choice. It allows you to focus on your application without worrying about the underlying infrastructure.

However, if you have more complex needs, such as custom scaling, service meshes, or advanced VPC configurations, ECS or EKS might be a better fit.

8. Example: Deploying a Simple Containerized Application with AWS App Runner

Let’s walk through a step-by-step example of how to deploy a simple containerized web application using AWS App Runner.

Prerequisites:

  • You should have an AWS account.
  • AWS CLI should be installed and configured with appropriate permissions.
  • Docker installed on your local machine.
  • A code repository (like GitHub) or a container image stored in AWS Elastic Container Registry (ECR).

Step 1: Create a Simple Web Application

For this example, we will create a simple Node.js web application.

// app.js
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
const port = process.env.PORT || 3000;

app.get('/', (req, res) => {
  res.send('Hello from AWS App Runner!');
});

app.listen(port, () => {
  console.log(`App is running on port ${port}`);
});

Create a Dockerfile to containerize this application:

# Use the official Node.js image from Docker Hub
FROM node:14

# Create and set the working directory
WORKDIR /usr/src/app

# Copy the package.json and install dependencies
COPY package*.json ./
RUN npm install

# Copy the source code
COPY . .

# Expose the application's port
EXPOSE 3000

# Start the application
CMD ["node", "app.js"]

Step 2: Build and Push the Docker Image to ECR

You need to push the Docker image of your application to AWS Elastic Container Registry (ECR). Let’s create a repository and push the image:

  1. Create a repository in ECR:
aws ecr create-repository --repository-name my-app-runner-repo --region us-west-2
  1. Login to ECR:
aws ecr get-login-password --region us-west-2 | docker login --username AWS --password-stdin <AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com
  1. Build and tag your Docker image:
docker build -t my-app-runner-app .
docker tag my-app-runner-app:latest <AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/my-app-runner-repo:latest
  1. Push the image to ECR:
docker push <AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/my-app-runner-repo:latest

Step 3: Deploy the Application with AWS App Runner

Now, let’s deploy the container using AWS App Runner.

  1. Create an App Runner service using the AWS CLI:
aws apprunner create-service \
  --service-name my-app-runner-service \
  --source-configuration ImageRepository={ImageIdentifier=<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/my-app-runner-repo:latest,ImageConfiguration={Port=3000},ImageRepositoryType=ECR} \
  --region us-west-2

This command does the following:

  • Specifies the service name (my-app-runner-service).
  • Points to the Docker image stored in your ECR repository.
  • Defines the port on which your application will run (Port=3000).
  1. Verify your deployment:

You can check the status of your App Runner service by running:

aws apprunner describe-service --service-arn <SERVICE_ARN> --region us-west-2

Once the status shows as ACTIVE, AWS App Runner will automatically handle the scaling, load balancing, and monitoring of your containerized app.

Step 4: Access Your Application

Once deployed, AWS App Runner assigns a unique URL to your application. You can find this in the output of the describe-service command or from the AWS Management Console. Simply open the URL in your browser to access your application:

https://<your-app-runner-url>.awsapprunner.com

You should see:

Hello from AWS App Runner!

Step 5: Continuous Deployment (Optional)

To enable continuous deployment, you can integrate App Runner with your CI/CD pipeline or directly from GitHub or GitLab. This ensures that any code changes are automatically built, containerized, and deployed without manual intervention.

To set this up via GitHub, modify the create-service command to use a GitHub repository instead of an ECR image.

aws apprunner create-service \
  --service-name my-app-runner-service \
  --source-configuration CodeRepository={RepositoryUrl=https://github.com/username/my-app-repo,SourceCodeVersion={Type=BRANCH,Value=main},CodeConfiguration={ConfigurationSource=API,CodeConfigurationValues={Runtime=NODEJS_14,Port=3000}}} \
  --region us-west-2

This will automatically deploy the code from the main branch of your GitHub repository.

9. Conclusion

AWS App Runner offers a simplified, scalable solution for deploying containerized applications without the overhead of managing infrastructure. It's ideal for teams that want to focus on development and minimize operational complexity. However, for those needing more control and flexibility, other AWS services like ECS or EKS might be more suitable.

If you’re looking for a managed service that streamlines deployment while offering scalability, security, and ease of use, AWS App Runner is worth exploring.


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Ernesto Herrera Salinas


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