From deploy-on-aws
Deploys web and worker applications to AWS Elastic Beanstalk with full lifecycle management. Useful when users want a Heroku-like managed platform on AWS, migrating from Heroku/Render/Railway, or want AWS to handle patching, scaling, and health monitoring.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/deploy-on-aws:elastic-beanstalkThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Deploy web and worker applications to production on AWS with full lifecycle
Deploy web and worker applications to production on AWS with full lifecycle management. Elastic Beanstalk is an application management service: the user provides application code, AWS manages everything underneath (deployment, scaling, patching, monitoring, health response).
Elastic Beanstalk is the right choice when:
Elastic Beanstalk is NOT the right choice when:
ECS and EKS are infrastructure management services: the user defines and operates the deployment infrastructure (task definitions, services, clusters, scaling policies) and owns ongoing operational decisions. Elastic Beanstalk is an application management service: the user provides source code or a Docker image, and AWS provisions and operates the production environment on an ongoing basis. The result is the same reliability, but with lower ongoing maintenance cost because operational responsibility stays with the provider.
Both models support IaC (CDK, CloudFormation, Terraform). The distinction is not about tooling — it is about who manages the lifecycle after deployment.
Lambda/serverless is a different axis entirely. "Don't want to manage servers" does not mean "wants serverless" — Elastic Beanstalk also eliminates server management while preserving the standard application programming model (long-running processes, persistent connections, threads, local state). Serverless imposes a specific programming model: stateless functions, cold starts, event-driven invocation, and a 15-minute execution ceiling. Route to Lambda only when the user explicitly asks for serverless or the workload is natively event-driven (e.g., S3 triggers, API Gateway request/response with no session state).
This skill is invoked after the deploy skill selects Elastic Beanstalk as the deployment target. The deploy skill handles codebase analysis and cost estimation. This skill handles EB-specific configuration:
| Setting | Dev | Production |
|---|---|---|
| Environment type (web) | Load-balanced (min=1, max=1) | Load-balanced, Multi-AZ |
| Environment type (worker) | Auto Scaling group (min=1, max=1) | Auto Scaling group (min=2, max=4) |
| Instance | t3.small | t3.medium or larger |
| Deployments | All-at-once | Rolling with additional batch |
| Health reporting | Enhanced | Enhanced |
| Managed updates | Enabled (weekly) | Enabled (maintenance window) |
| HTTPS (web only) | ACM certificate + ALB | ACM certificate + ALB |
Default to dev unless user says "production" or "prod".
Always use load-balanced environments for web server types. This ensures instances stay in private subnets behind an ALB, HTTPS terminates via ACM automatically, and scaling up later is a config change rather than an environment type migration. Dev deployments with min=max=1 cause brief downtime on deploy (single instance, all-at-once). If zero-downtime dev is needed, use min=1 max=2 with rolling.
Worker environments do not have load balancers — they receive work from SQS and are scaled via Auto Scaling group settings.
| Signal in Codebase | Environment Type |
|---|---|
| HTTP listener, web framework, API routes | Web server |
| Queue-based consumer, SQS processing, no HTTP serving | Worker |
| HTTP serving + queue-based background processing | Web server + separate Worker environment |
Worker environments receive work via an SQS queue managed by Elastic Beanstalk.
EB's SQS daemon sends HTTP POST requests to the application at a configurable
path (default: POST /). The application must expose this HTTP endpoint to
process each message — no SQS SDK integration required.
Worker environments also support periodic tasks via cron.yaml for scheduled
jobs (alternative to EventBridge + Lambda when the user is already using EB).
If the app uses in-process background threads or async tasks (not queue-based), a single web server environment is sufficient — do not create a separate Worker.
Default: AWS CLI — no extra tooling to install. The agent orchestrates the multi-step workflow:
aws elasticbeanstalk create-storage-location → returns the S3 bucket
(idempotent — returns existing bucket if already created)aws elasticbeanstalk create-applicationaws elasticbeanstalk create-application-versionaws elasticbeanstalk create-environment with --option-settings (web:
--tier Name=WebServer,Type=Standard, worker: --tier Name=Worker,Type=SQS/HTTP)aws elasticbeanstalk wait environment-updatedupdate-environmentResolve the --solution-stack-name by running
aws elasticbeanstalk list-available-solution-stacks and filtering for the
detected platform (e.g., ".NET" + "Amazon Linux 2023"). Alternatively, use
--platform-arn from aws elasticbeanstalk list-platform-versions.
Use .ebextensions/ and platform hooks for customization.
See AWS CLI EB reference for full command documentation.
Override: CDK (TypeScript) when the user has an existing CDK project, wants repeatable IaC, or explicitly requests it:
CfnApplication, CfnEnvironment, CfnConfigurationTemplateOverride: Terraform when the user's repo already has Terraform:
aws_elastic_beanstalk_application, aws_elastic_beanstalk_environmentCDK and Terraform templates are scannable by cfn-nag/checkov pre-deploy.
Apply these automatically:
AmazonBedrockRuntimeClient → bedrock:InvokeModel,
AmazonS3Client → s3:GetObject/s3:PutObject on specific buckets)See the deploy skill's security defaults for encryption, VPC placement, and IAM patterns.
Elastic Beanstalk has no service fee. Cost = underlying AWS resources. Query the awspricing MCP server for region-accurate estimates. Approximate us-east-1 pricing:
| Configuration | Estimated Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| Dev web (1x t3.small + ALB) | ~$35-40 |
| Dev worker (1x t3.small, no ALB) | ~$15-20 |
| Production web (4x t3.medium + ALB, Multi-AZ) | ~$150-200 |
Add RDS/Aurora costs separately if database is included.
npx claudepluginhub awslabs/agent-plugins --plugin deploy-on-awsDeploys applications to AWS by analyzing the codebase, recommending optimal services, estimating costs, and generating infrastructure-as-code with security defaults.
Generates deployment configurations for hosting providers like Vercel, Railway, AWS, covering env vars, domains, SSL, strategies, rollback plans, and health checks. Useful for production deploys.
Deploys and operates containerized workloads on AWS ECS, Fargate, and ECR. Covers task definitions, services, debugging with ECS Exec, scaling, load balancers, and image management for AWS container optimization.