AWS Step Functions is a low-code visual workflow service. This repository includes detailed examples that will help you unlock the power of serverless workflow.
In this example, you use AWS Step Functions to build an application that uses parallel processing to complete four hours of work in around 60 seconds.
Blog Post: Accelerating workloads using parallelism in AWS Step Functions
In this example, you use AWS Step Functions to control concurrency in your distributed system. This helps you avoid overloading limited resources in your serverless data processing pipeline or reduce availability risk by controlling velocity in your IT automation workflows.
Blog Post: Controlling concurrency in distributed systems using AWS Step Functions
In this example, you use AWS Step Functions' Local to test a state machine by mocking the service calls. You can find details in the example's README file.
Blog Post: Mocking service integrations with AWS Step Functions Local
In this example, you use AWS Step Functions to orchestrate restoration of S3 objects from S3 Glacier Deep Archive. You can find details in the example's README file.
Blog Post: [Orchestrating S3 Glacier Deep Archive object retrieval using Step Functions](Blog Link Here)
Demo Step Functions Local testing with Mock service integrations using Java testing frameworks (JUnit and Spock)
In this demo, you can learn how to use JUnit or Spock to run Step Functions Local tests. This is helpful if your current serverless applications are built around Java. With this approach you can leverage the existing Java testing tools.
This demo illustrates capabilities of ASL and AWS Step Functions including Intrinsic Functions and JSON Path Processing.
You can deploy this using SAM or independently as a CloudFormation template in AWS Console
In this demo, you learn how to use AWS SDK Service Integrations to build a video transcription workflow.
Blog Post: Now — AWS Step Functions Supports 200 AWS Services To Enable Easier Workflow Automation
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This library is licensed under the MIT-0 License. See the LICENSE file.