Microsoft has done a lot of work to make Azure a great place for Node and Node-enabled frameworks like Express. In part one of this two-part blog, I will focus on the “EAN” in the MEAN stack. Node, Express and Angular on Azure – the IaaS approach Also, the MEAN framework (see figure 1) understands JSON from end to end, making it easier for a modern application to “talk” to other applications – especially in this mobile-first cloud-first world that we live in. Its NoSQL structure, as opposed to the relational nature of MySQL, brings in native support for big data. MEAN is modern – MongoDB is built for the cloud. Because Node is event-based and asynchronous, it can also scale seamlessly with the right architecture. Simplified server management – Apache and Nginx are extremely powerful, but Node.js trumps them with simplicity and quicker learning curve. This also means that more can be accomplished by JavaScript experts – both front and back ends can potentially leverage a single pool of developers. Isomorphism of the ubiquitous JavaScript – it is easy, and it makes clients and servers look and feel the same. LAMP has been a traditional favorite for website developers for good reasons. I won’t spend much time discussing the pros and cons of MEAN and LAMP. Both LAMP (or LEMP, if you replace Apache with Nginx) and MEAN have their own strengths and certain situations demand one over the other. Microsoft Azure is a great choice of platform for both the LAMP and MEAN stacks. Configuring bitnami mean stack how to#In this two-part blog, I’ll detail why and how to use Microsoft Azure to host a Linux-based MEAN stack, leveraging Azure’s enterprise features like high availability, scalability and fault tolerance to run web applications at hyperscale. Many customers are choosing the MEAN (Mongo, Express, Angular, and Node) stack as an efficient and powerful approach to building web applications.
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