Using Amazon Webservices
Revision as of 04:19, 7 January 2020 by old>Admin (→Maintaining the solution)
Getting started with EC2
The following images are quite suitable as base images
- amazon/amzn-ami-pv-2013.09.0.i386-ebs
- amazon/amzn-ami-pv-2013.09.0.x86_64-ebs
Note the above images require that you use ec2-user for SSH access.
Instance type recommendations
- Normal systems: small or medium
- Test or development: micro
Storage options
Two scenarios exist
- Simple setup data and application in one
- Confidential data in an separate encrypted storage
For a separate storage you should do the following
- Create a new EBS partition
- Mount to suitable point
- Encrypt and login using LUKS
Note that LUKS partitions may contain multiple passwords, and do not need to be at rest when copy/backup operations are active.
Stuff to do in Amazon linux
After booting images
- Set your timezone
- Enable routing: Port 80 to 8080
- Activate SMTP service [option]
- Install MySQL
- Install Tomcat
- Deploy connection pool drivers
- Deploy MySQL JDBC driver
After that just follow the normal install procedure for webapplications
- Deploy the war file
- Set up connection pool for the application
Maintaining the solution
Tips for maintaing you solution
- Consider instance termination protection
- Backup: Can be taken as EBS snapshots
- Monitor: Activate CloudWatch for the instance
Increasing storage on running instance
Increase the volume by editing the size
From the econsole run
lsblk
Check that the partitions match "nvme0n1" and "nvme0n1p1"
Now grow the partition an dupdate the file system
sudo growpart /dev/nvme0n1 1 sudo resize2fs /dev/nvme0n1p1
Check size is incresed with
df -h