Yes but those are really not secrets. It's a front-end application. Whatever env variable you would eventually use, it would be plaintext for the client-browser anyway.
So what I'm asking is basically - why wouldn't you store these variables (which are not secrets tho) in the SSM Parameter store? Why did you choose S3?
I am a Senior Software Engineer with a demonstrated history of working in the financial services industry designing and architecting scalable software applications
Great.. I thought you suggested SSM because of security. It is absolutely fine to store the variables anywhere. As long as you can extract the variables at build time from your build process and inject to the code
I am a Senior Software Engineer with a demonstrated history of working in the financial services industry designing and architecting scalable software applications
For me, it was simplicity. I can easily manage the the folders and environment files in S3. I guess with the SSM param store you will have to write the logic of reading the parameters from a path in your store and then create your environment files on the fly and also write the parameters to the created file.
with the s3, we just have to copy.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
Yes but those are really not secrets. It's a front-end application. Whatever env variable you would eventually use, it would be plaintext for the client-browser anyway.
So what I'm asking is basically - why wouldn't you store these variables (which are not secrets tho) in the SSM Parameter store? Why did you choose S3?
Great.. I thought you suggested SSM because of security. It is absolutely fine to store the variables anywhere. As long as you can extract the variables at build time from your build process and inject to the code
Is there any critical reason you chose S3 over SSM?
For me, it was simplicity. I can easily manage the the folders and environment files in S3. I guess with the SSM param store you will have to write the logic of reading the parameters from a path in your store and then create your environment files on the fly and also write the parameters to the created file.
with the s3, we just have to copy.