When it comes to productivity, developer experience is more than just a buzzword. Creating an intuitive developer experience could help you get more out of LocalStack by democratizing access, cutting out manual tasks, and making environments more easily interchangeable between LocalStack and AWS.On a day-to-day basis, this could mean fewer tickets, less time spent creating environments, and more time on the important work that your environments support.This demo session will show how LocalStack’s new integration with Quali Torque can accelerate deployment on both LocalStack and AWS by:* Using generative AI to create reusable environment templates that can be deployed to LocalStack and AWS interchangeably in just a few clicks.( Providing a self-service catalog for your teams to find and provision environments quickly and easily—and without access to create or modify resource configurations.* Simplifying the deployment experience by eliminating complexity and security requirements to run environments on AWS.* Tracking all activity to identify performance issues for LocalStack deployments and wasted cloud costs for AWS deployments proactively.

In this talk, Teja explore the intricacies of the software supply chain and discuss strategies for protecting your software against supply chain attacks. He look sinto the risks associated with these threats, offer mitigation measures, and covers recommended practices for managing open-source software and Software Bills of Materials (SBOMs). This session aims to equip the audience with the knowledge and tools needed to enhance the security of their software supply chain.

LocalStack's core cloud emulator lets you emulate various cloud services on your own computer. This means you can develop and test your cloud-based solutions without connecting to a remote cloud.However, there are times when you need to seamlessly switch between your local setup and actual cloud resources, especially in hybrid situations. For instance, you might want to share a database with your local Lambda function or access S3 files stored remotely while running a Glue ETL job locally.With LocalStack's AWS Replicator extension, your local environment can replicate AWS cloud resources at the API level, allowing direct interaction with cloud services. The Replicator extension enables you to forward specific requests from LocalStack to AWS without complex proxy setups, and create test scenarios that involve a mix of local and cloud resources.Check out our tutorial — https://docs.localstack.cloud/tutorials/replicate-aws-resources-localstack-extension/

LocalStack's cloud emulator lets you run Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) clusters and tasks on your local computer. It's sometimes useful to mount code from the host filesystem directly into the ECS container. This helps quickly test changes without needing to rebuild and redeploy the ECS Task's Docker image each time.This video explains how to use code mounting with the ECS bind mounts feature. Here are the links to the resources mentioned in the video:• Sample repository: https://github.com/localstack-samples/ecs-code-mounting-python-cdk• LocalStack Docs: https://docs.localstack.cloud/user-guide/aws/ecs/#mounting-local-directories-for-ecs-tasks• AWS Docs: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonECS/latest/developerguide/bind-mounts.html