Dursunlutfu:
HotRod10's cross braces in wood or as HDG stl. straps will work just fine, assuming normally proportioned decks, except their flat surfaces hold water for some time. I’ve also used light cable with appropriate fittings and turnbuckles. You really shouldn’t need some grand reference for this, it is pretty basic statics and engineering judgement and design. Take a look at some Wood Design Texts, at the NDS and IBC or IRC. AFPA has a design guide for decks, #6, “Prescriptive Residential Wood Deck Construction Guide” and USP/MiTek or Simpson have some hardware and details for some of this. Then, you take the gravity loads into the ext. wall of the bldg. through joist hangers and a ledger properly bolted to the rim jst. and you take the lateral loads through the rim jst. and several joist bays into the int. floor diaphragm, as required by the loads. The rim jst. should be properly/adequately nailed to the sub-flooring along the diaphragm edge, and some blocking perpendicular to the int. joists should also be used to get the concentrated lateral load reactions into the int. fl. diaphragm. The floor jsts. in this region should have some extra nailing too. These lateral reactions should not be bolted just to the rim jst., that is generally not adequate. The ledger should be thru bolted to solid ext. wall sheathing and the rim jst., not thru insul. board or siding. And, this entire ledger pocket should be very well flashed, behind and under the ledger, and the also over the top of the ledger and deck, to keep water out of the wall.
Edit: The flashing behind and under the ledger, that is, the flashing of the ledger pocket, should also include end dam flashing to direct water out of the pocket at the ends. Many of these quality details and proper nailing, blocking, connections, etc. are fairly easy to do on the original design and construction, and almost impossible to fix after the fact, or on a deck installed at a later date.