You have your domain (Route 53) and your fast content (CloudFront). Something essential is still missing: your site must be secure, using HTTPS. For that, you need an SSL/TLS certificate, and AWS gives them to you for free with ACM (AWS Certificate Manager). In this subchapter, you'll understand what they are and how they simplify security.
What is HTTPS and Why Does It Matter
You may have noticed that websites start with http:// or https://, and that browsers show a padlock for secure ones. The difference:
- HTTP: communication between the user and the server travels unencrypted. Anyone "listening" to the network (on public wifi, for example) could read what's being sent: passwords, card data, messages...
- HTTPS: communication is encrypted. Even if someone intercepts it, they only see unreadable data. It's HTTP + encryption.
HTTP: User ──[password in plain text]──► Server ⚠️ anyone can read it HTTPS: User ──[xK9#mP2$vL... encrypted]──────► Server ✓ unreadable to third parties
Today HTTPS is not optional. Browsers mark HTTP sites as "not secure," Google penalizes their ranking, and users distrust a site without a padlock. Every website must use HTTPS.
What Makes HTTPS Possible: The SSL/TLS Certificate
For HTTPS to work, the server needs an SSL/TLS certificate. This certificate serves two purposes:
- Enables encryption: allows the encrypted connection between user and server.
- Verifies identity: proves that the site is who it claims to be (that
mybank.comis really the bank, not an impostor). It's issued by a trusted authority.
Analogy: an SSL certificate is like your website's official ID card, issued by a recognized authority. When the browser sees it, it trusts that you're talking to the real site and opens a "private channel" (encrypted) for the conversation. Without a certificate, there's no padlock or secure channel.
The Traditional Problem with Certificates
In the past, obtaining and maintaining certificates was a hassle:
- You had to buy them (they cost money).
- Install them manually on the server (a technical and error-prone process).
- Renew them periodically (they expire), and if you forgot, your site would stop working with a security warning! This has taken down big company websites due to a simple oversight.
The Solution: ACM (AWS Certificate Manager)
ACM eliminates all those problems. It's the AWS service that issues and manages SSL/TLS certificates, with three major advantages:
- Free
ACM certificates for use with AWS services are completely free. You pay nothing for the certificate.
- Automatic Renewal
ACM automatically renews certificates before they expire. You'll never have to worry about your site losing its padlock due to forgetfulness. This is perhaps the biggest relief: goodbye to scares from expired certificates.
- Automatic Integration with AWS Services
ACM integrates directly with services that face the internet:
- CloudFront (subchapter 16.2).
- Application Load Balancer (Chapter 13).
- API Gateway (Chapter 14).
You associate the certificate with these services with a couple of clicks (or a few lines of Terraform), and they handle the encryption. You don't touch servers or install anything manually.
Users ──HTTPS──► CloudFront / Load Balancer ──► your application
(with ACM certificate,
automatic encryption and renewal)How It's Used, In Broad Strokes
The typical flow is very simple:
- Request a certificate in ACM for your domain (e.g.
mywebsite.com). - Validate that the domain is yours (usually by adding a DNS record in Route 53; ACM and Route 53 integrate to make this almost automatic).
- Associate the certificate with your CloudFront, load balancer, or API Gateway.
- Done: your site serves HTTPS, and ACM renews the certificate by itself forever.
Detail to remember: certificates for CloudFront must be created in the Northern Virginia region (us-east-1), due to a technical peculiarity of how CloudFront works. It's a common oversight: if your certificate doesn't appear when configuring CloudFront, check that you created it in that region.
What You Should Remember
- HTTPS is encrypted HTTP: it protects data (passwords, payments) from prying eyes and shows the padlock. Today it's mandatory for any serious website.
- HTTPS needs an SSL/TLS certificate, which encrypts the connection and verifies the site's identity.
- ACM (AWS Certificate Manager) issues and manages certificates with three advantages: free, automatic renewal (no more scares from expiration), and automatic integration with CloudFront, load balancers, and API Gateway.
- Flow: request → validate the domain (via DNS/Route 53) → associate the certificate with the service → ACM renews it automatically.
- For CloudFront, create the certificate in the us-east-1 (Northern Virginia) region.
In the last subchapter of the chapter, we'll add a layer of protection to your site: the WAF application firewall, integrated with CloudFront.
Cloud, AWS & Terraform — From Zero to Expert
Chapter 1 · What is cloud computing
- 1.1 The traditional client-server model
- 1.2 Problems the cloud came to solve
- 1.3 On-premise vs cloud vs hybrid
- 1.4 The three service models: IaaS, PaaS, SaaS
- 1.5 The five pillars of cloud (according to NIST)
- 1.6 Real advantages: elasticity, pay-as-you-go, global availability
Chapter 2 · The cloud market and major providers
- 2.1 AWS, Azure and GCP: differences and market share
- 2.2 Why learn AWS first
- 2.3 Concepts that are universal among providers
Chapter 3 · Regions, availability zones and edge
- 3.1 What is an AWS region and how to choose it
- 3.2 Availability Zones: high availability by design
- 3.3 Edge locations and CloudFront
- 3.4 Latency, resilience and data sovereignty
Chapter 4 · Compute: EC2
- 4.1 Instances: types, families and when to choose each
- 4.2 AMIs, key pairs and Security Groups
- 4.3 Instance lifecycle
- 4.4 Elastic IPs and Placement Groups
- 4.5 Savings Plans vs Reserved vs On-Demand vs Spot
Chapter 5 · Storage: S3
- 5.1 Buckets, objects and keys
- 5.2 Storage classes (Standard, IA, Glacier…)
- 5.3 Versioning and object lifecycle
- 5.4 Bucket policies and ACLs
- 5.5 Static website hosting
Chapter 6 · Networking: VPC
- 6.1 What is a VPC and why you need it
- 6.2 Public and private subnets
- 6.3 Internet Gateway and NAT Gateway
- 6.4 Route Tables and Network ACLs
- 6.5 VPC Peering and endpoints
Chapter 7 · Identity and access: IAM
- 7.1 Users, groups, roles and policies
- 7.2 The principle of least privilege
- 7.3 Identity-based vs resource-based policies
- 7.4 MFA and temporary credentials (STS)
- 7.5 IAM security best practices
Chapter 8 · Managed databases
- 8.1 RDS: engines, Multi-AZ and read replicas
- 8.2 Aurora and its advantages over vanilla RDS
- 8.3 DynamoDB: key-value / document model
- 8.4 ElastiCache for in-memory cache
- 8.5 When to use each type of database
Chapter 9 · Why Infrastructure as Code
- 9.1 Problems with manual provisioning
- 9.2 Declarative vs imperative IaC
- 9.3 Terraform vs CloudFormation vs Pulumi vs CDK
- 9.4 The plan → apply → destroy cycle
Chapter 10 · HCL: the Terraform language
- 10.1 Resource, variable, output, locals blocks
- 10.2 Data types: string, number, bool, list, map, object
- 10.3 Expressions, references and built-in functions
- 10.4 Conditionals and loops (count, for_each, for)
Chapter 11 · Providers and state
- 11.1 How the AWS provider works
- 11.2 The terraform.tfstate file and its importance
- 11.3 Local state vs remote state (S3 + DynamoDB)
- 11.4 Essential commands: init, plan, apply, destroy, fmt, validate
Chapter 12 · Your first real infrastructure in Terraform
- 12.1 Create a VPC with subnets from scratch
- 12.2 Launch a public EC2 instance
- 12.3 Associate a Security Group and an Elastic IP
- 12.4 Outputs and references between resources
- 12.5 Team workflow: PR review of plans
Chapter 13 · Load balancing and auto scaling
- 13.1 Application Load Balancer vs Network Load Balancer
- 13.2 Target Groups, listeners and rules
- 13.3 Auto Scaling Groups: policies and metrics
- 13.4 Warm pools and lifecycle hooks
Chapter 14 · Serverless with Lambda
- 14.1 The Lambda execution model
- 14.2 Triggers: API Gateway, S3, DynamoDB Streams, SQS
- 14.3 Dependency management and layers
- 14.4 Cold starts and strategies to reduce them
- 14.5 Limits and anti-patterns
Chapter 15 · Messaging and events
- 15.1 SQS: standard vs FIFO queues, DLQ
- 15.2 SNS: topics, subscriptions, fan-out
- 15.3 EventBridge: event buses and rules
- 15.4 Patterns: pub/sub, decoupling, saga
Chapter 16 · Content delivery and DNS
- 16.1 Route 53: record types and routing policies
- 16.2 CloudFront: distributions, caches and origins
- 16.3 ACM: free SSL/TLS certificates
- 16.4 WAF integrated with CloudFront
Chapter 17 · Containers on AWS
- 17.1 Docker: quick review of key concepts
- 17.2 ECR: private image registry
- 17.3 ECS: task definitions, services, Fargate vs EC2
- 17.4 EKS: when Kubernetes and when not
Chapter 18 · Modules: reuse and composition
- 18.1 Anatomy of a Terraform module
- 18.2 Input variables, outputs and dependencies
- 18.3 Local modules vs Terraform Registry modules
- 18.4 Module versioning with Git tags
- 18.5 Design of generic vs domain-specific modules
Chapter 19 · Workspaces and environment management
- 19.1 Terraform workspaces: use cases and limitations
- 19.2 Directory strategy per environment (dev/stg/prod)
- 19.3 Terragrunt: DRY for environment configurations
- 19.4 Environment variables and .tfvars files
Chapter 20 · Remote backends and locking
- 20.1 Configure S3 + DynamoDB as backend
- 20.2 State locking: avoiding team corruption
- 20.3 State migration between backends
- 20.4 terraform import: bring existing resources into state
Chapter 21 · Infrastructure testing
- 21.1 Terraform validate and fmt in CI
- 21.2 Checkov and tfsec: static security analysis
- 21.3 Terratest: integration tests in Go
- 21.4 Contract testing between modules
Chapter 22 · Terraform in CI/CD
- 22.1 Basic pipeline: lint → plan → apply in GitHub Actions
- 22.2 Atlantis: GitOps for Terraform
- 22.3 Terraform Cloud / HCP Terraform
- 22.4 Drift detection and automatic reconciliation
Chapter 23 · Defense in depth
- 23.1 AWS Organizations and Service Control Policies
- 23.2 AWS Config: continuous compliance
- 23.3 GuardDuty: threat detection
- 23.4 Security Hub: centralized view
- 23.5 KMS: key management and rotation
- 23.6 Secrets Manager vs Parameter Store
Chapter 24 · Observability: logs, metrics and traces
- 24.1 CloudWatch Logs, metrics and alarms
- 24.2 CloudWatch Dashboards and Contributor Insights
- 24.3 X-Ray: distributed tracing
- 24.4 OpenTelemetry on AWS
- 24.5 Managed Grafana and Managed Prometheus
Chapter 25 · Cost optimization
- 25.1 AWS Cost Explorer and budgets with alerts
- 25.2 Trusted Advisor and Compute Optimizer
- 25.3 Rightsizing: how to detect overprovisioning
- 25.4 Savings Plans vs Reserved Instances: strategic decision
- 25.5 FinOps: culture and processes to control spending
Chapter 26 · High availability and disaster recovery
- 26.1 RTO and RPO: defining objectives
- 26.2 Strategies: backup/restore, pilot light, warm standby, multi-site
- 26.3 Route 53 health checks and automatic failover
- 26.4 AWS Backup: centralized backup policy
Chapter 27 · AWS Well-Architected Framework
- 27.1 The six pillars: operational excellence, security, reliability, performance efficiency, cost optimization, sustainability
- 27.2 Well-Architected Tool: formal reviews
- 27.3 How to apply the framework in design decisions
Chapter 28 · Serverless architectures at scale
- 28.1 Event-driven architecture with Lambda + EventBridge
- 28.2 Saga pattern for distributed transactions
- 28.3 Step Functions: orchestration of complex workflows
- 28.4 Lambda@Edge and CloudFront Functions
Chapter 29 · Data platforms on AWS
- 29.1 Data Lake with S3, Glue and Athena
- 29.2 Kinesis Data Streams and Firehose for streaming
- 29.3 Redshift: data warehousing at scale
- 29.4 Lake Formation: data governance
Chapter 30 · Multi-account and landing zones
- 30.1 Why separate workloads into different accounts
- 30.2 AWS Control Tower and Account Factory
- 30.3 Centralized log and security management
- 30.4 Terraform at multi-account scale with shared modules
Chapter 31 · Platform Engineering and Internal Developer Platform
- 31.1 Golden paths and abstractions over Terraform
- 31.2 AWS Service Catalog
- 31.3 Backstage as a developer portal
- 31.4 Terraform modules as internal product
Chapter 32 · Relevant AWS certifications
- 32.1 Cloud Practitioner: is it worth it?
- 32.2 Solutions Architect Associate → Professional
- 32.3 DevOps Engineer Professional
- 32.4 Specialty: Security, Database, Networking
- 32.5 HashiCorp Terraform Associate
Chapter 33 · Projects to consolidate what you've learned
- 33.1 Project 1: serverless blog (S3 + CloudFront + Lambda + DynamoDB)
- 33.2 Project 2: REST API with ECS Fargate + RDS + ALB
- 33.3 Project 3: data platform with Glue + Athena + Redshift
- 33.4 Project 4: multi-account landing zone with Terraform and Control Tower
