This repository has been archived and is now in read-only mode. The reason for this archival is that the content is currently being updated in a new workshop.
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New Workshop Location: The updated version of this workshop can be found at: https://iot-device-management.workshop.aws/en/
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Read-Only Status: As this repository is archived:
- No new issues or pull requests can be opened
- Existing issues and pull requests are now read-only
- The code, wiki, and all other repository content are read-only
- No new collaborators or teams can be added
- The repository can still be forked and starred
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Limited Functionality:
- You cannot make any changes to this repository
- Commits, branches, tags, and releases are all read-only
- Comments and reactions on issues, pull requests, and commits are disabled
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Searchability: This repository will still appear in search results and can be referenced
We encourage you to visit the new workshop link for the most up-to-date content and interactive experience. Thank you for your understanding and continued interest in AWS IoT Device Management.
AWS IoT Device Management makes it easy to securely onboard, organize, monitor, and remotely manage IoT devices at scale. With this workshop your will learn hands-on the features from AWS IoT Device Management like several onboarding options, jobs, fleet indexing, thing groups and fine grained logging.
- AWS_IoT_Device_Management_Workshop.md: Workshop instructions.
- bin, job-agent, lambda: Directories containing scripts that are copied onto an Amazon EC2 instance
- cfn: Directory for CloudFormation template
- dm-ws.tar: tar file that is used to bootstrap an EC2 instance
- mk-dm-ws-tar.sh: Shell script to create dm-ws.tar. In case you change something use this script to create a new tar file
- templateBody.json: template for IoT provisioning options
This library is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.