A. Create two Amazon Lightsail virtual private servers for Node.js; one for test and one for production. Build the Node.js application using existing processes and upload it to the new Lightsail test server using the AWS CLI. Test the application, and if it passes all tests, upload it to the production server. During the trial, monitor the production server usage, and if needed, increase performance by upgrading the instance type.
B. Develop an AWS CloudFormation template to create an Application Load Balancer and two Amazon EC2 instances with Amazon EBS (SSD) volumes in an Auto Scaling group with rolling updates enabled. Use AWS CodeBuild to build and test the Node.js application and store it in an Amazon S3 bucket. Use user-data scripts to install the application and the MySQL database on each EC2 instance. Update the stack to deploy new application versions.
C. Configure AWS Elastic Beanstalk to automatically build the application using AWS CodeBuild and to deploy it to a test environment that is configured to support auto scaling. Create a second Elastic Beanstalk environment for production. Use Amazon RDS to store data. When new versions of the applications have passed all tests, use Elastic Beanstalk ‘swap cname’ to promote the test environment to production. Most Voted
D. Modify the application to use Amazon DynamoDB instead of a local MySQL database. Use AWS OpsWorks to create a stack for the application with a DynamoDB layer, an Application Load Balancer layer, and an Amazon EC2 instance layer. Use a Chef recipe to build the application and a Chef recipe to deploy the application to the EC2 instance layer. Use custom health checks to run unit tests on each instance with rollback on failure.

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