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Amazon EC2
Table of Contents
- 1. Create AWS Account
- 2. Create Instance
- 3. Install Sahana
- 4. Configure Sahana
- 5. Add a Test site (Optional)
- 6. Add a Demo site (Optional)
- Optional Instance Adjustments
- Install using 'Sahana Setup'
- CLI Tools
- Building AMIs for easier deployment
- Troubleshooting
Amazon's Cloud provides a flexible platform to deploy Eden scalably.
The costs aren't fixed & can be difficult to predict, despite their calculator, but are competitive, especially in Singapore, which is a good base for the Asia Pacific region. Users who are using the free tier: Remember - after 750 hours, your trial will end and the credit card on file will be charged based on the rates shown in EC2. You can prevent these charges by closing the AWS account from the AWS account management page.
1. Create AWS Account
If you haven't already, create an Amazon AWS account through their site.
2. Create Instance
1: Log in to the Management Console
2: Select a Region
Amazon supports multiple Regions in order to provide a service closest to your users.
- Namespaces of Instances, Volumes & Snapshots are unique only within a Region.
- Within each Region, there are a couple of Availability Zones to allow spreading the risk across different facilities.
- Volumes are located within a specific Availability Zone
- Bandwidth transfers are free within an Availability Zone
3: Launch a new Instance
4: Choose an Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
- Recommend using the AWS Marketplace Debian 64-bit image (as this has a sufficiently large HDD to start with & is EBS-backed, so has persistent storage even whilst powered down)
- In time we may provide pre-built "Sahana Eden" AMIs (some old unmaintained ones may be available in some regions)
- The normal production 'small' instance can only run 32-bit.
- Larger production instances can only run 64-bit, so can't have the exact same image used.
5: Choose an Instance Type
- The free starter 'micro' instance is flexible as it can run both 32-bit & 64-bit Operating Systems.
6: Configure Instance Details
Default settings are fine
7: Create KeyPair
Ensure that you keep the generated private key safe...save as private.pem
8: Associate Elastic IP
Each time you start an instance up, it will be assigned a new IP ('Public DNS') although this can be overcome using an Elastic IP:
- NETWORK & SECURITY > Elastic IPs
- Allocate New Address
- Associate Address. Set the instance to your new instance
Remember to set up Reverse DNS for your Elastic IP to be able to send emails reliably:
NB If you have a free EC2 instance, be sure to release your Elastic IP if you shut down your instance. IPv4 addresses are a "scarce resource" so Amazon will charge you for wasting one if you keep it assigned to your instance while you are not using it.
9: Configure Security Group
NETWORK & SECURITY > Security Groups
You will need to set the following Inbound Rules:
- HTTP | TCP |80
- SSH | TCP | 22
Restricting the source will add further security, but obviously also restricts your ability to administer
10: Gain SSH access
In order to get the public key (needed by SecureCRT for instance) then you need to login using CLI & retrieve it (username 'admin' for the AWS MarketPlace Debian, username 'root' for some other Images):
ssh -l admin -i private.pem <hostname> cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
On Windows, you can use Cygwin to get a CLI SSH client.
SecureCRT needs the private key storing as <filename> & the public as <filename.pub> (all on one line)
Recovering From a Lost Keypair
If you lose your keypair then you need to:
- Create a new keypair in the AWS console & download the generated private key
- Stop the instance
- Create an AMI from this instance
- Wait for the AMI to be ready
- Launch a new instance using this AMI
- Re-associate the Public IP
- Delete the old instance
- Deregister the AMI
- Delete the snapshot used to create the AMI
Thanks to: http://itkbcentral.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/replace-lost-key-pair-existing-aws-ec2.html
11: Add Swapfile
You should add swap from a swap file in order to improve performance (especially on a Micro instance):
sudo su - dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile1 bs=1024 count=524288 mkswap /swapfile1 chown root:root /swapfile1 chmod 0600 /swapfile1 swapon /swapfile1 # Make persistent across reboots cat << EOF >> "/etc/fstab" /swapfile1 swap swap defaults 0 0 EOF
3. Install Sahana
- Copy the installation and configuration scripts into the launched instance (assuming Cherokee & PostgreSQL):
wget http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/raw-attachment/wiki/InstallationGuidelines/Linux/Server/CherokeePostgreSQL/install-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh chmod a+x install-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh wget http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/raw-attachment/wiki/InstallationGuidelines/Linux/Server/CherokeePostgreSQL/configure-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh chmod a+x configure-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh
- Run the install-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh script. [Note: This step takes about 10min - grab a coffee]
sudo su - ./install-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh
If you wish to update your site from an alternate github repo this can be done using:
4. Configure Sahana
Run configure-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh to configure the instance:
sudo su - ./configure-eden-cherokee-postgis.sh
- Add your FQDN to
/etc/hosts
to ensure emails are accepted by all remote mailers:vim /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 host.domain host localhost /etc/init.d/exim4 restart
See Admin Guide - especially read how to set the sender & approver emails
5. Add a Test site (Optional)
This script requires at least 4Gb on the main disk
sudo su - wget http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/raw-attachment/wiki/InstallationGuidelines/Linux/Server/CherokeePostgreSQL/add_test_site.sh chmod a+x add_test_site.sh ./add_test_site.sh
NB This script has an issue & the file /etc/cherokee/cherokee.conf needs to be manually edited to fix the lines wrapping for Source 1 (fix welcomed!)
6. Add a Demo site (Optional)
This script requires at least 6Gb on the main disk.
This script assumes that a Test site has already been installed
sudo su - wget http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/raw-attachment/wiki/InstallationGuidelines/Linux/Server/CherokeePostgreSQL/add_demo_site.sh chmod a+x add_demo_site.sh ./add_demo_site.sh
NB This script has an issue & the file /etc/cherokee/cherokee.conf needs to be manually edited to fix the lines wrapping for Source 1 (fix welcomed!)
Optional Instance Adjustments
Add Swap partition
You can add a swap partition in order to improve performance further:
- Create Volume in AWS Console (e.g. 4Gb)
- Attach as /dev/sdf
sudo su - swapoff -a mkswap /dev/xvdf swapon -a # Make persistent across reboots cat << EOF >> "/etc/fstab" /dev/xvdf swap swap defaults 0 0 EOF rm -f /swapfile1
Grow the Diskspace
The initial disk space on some images is just 1GB. If you have this, then this should be grown to 4Gb (don't just size the volume to 4Gb to start with as the image only uses 1Gb of it!)
- this is still within the 10Gb free tier.
- 4Gb is needed for Prod & Test instances. If you just need a test then 3Gb is sufficient.
Add Storage
If you need an additional disk for Storage then configure a volume in the AWS console, attach as /dev/sdb1, then in Linux:
sudo su - fdisk /dev/xvdb1 n (accept defaults) w mkfs.ext4 /dev/xvdb1 tune2fs -m 0 /dev/xvdb1 # Remove 5% reservation for reserved blocks mkdir /data cat << EOF >> "/etc/fstab" /dev/xvdb1 /data ext4 defaults,barrier=0 1 1 EOF mount /data
Disk Striping
For DB I/O performance increase can stripe multiple EBS
- monitoring data is available to see if this is the issue
Install using 'Sahana Setup'
See: InstallationGuidelines/Amazon/Setup
CLI Tools
You can do this using the AWS EC2 Console or else you can do it via the CLI To use any of the AWS CLI tools on your own machine to remotely manage instances, then you need to generate a unique X.509 Certificate per account. This can be done from the 'Security Credentials' page within your account.
CLI Management
There are extensive CLI tools available to manipulate your instances.
- Java CLI for Windows/Linux
- Python: http://libcloud.apache.org
CLI Script
Edit the settings as-indicated as you proceed through the script
# Settings for Instance set EC2_URL=https://ec2.us-east-1.amazonaws.com set ZONE=us-east-1c set DEV=i-950895f1 set OLD=vol-31f5a35d # Stop Host ec2stop %DEV% # Create a snapshot ec2-create-snapshot %OLD% # Record the snapshot ID set SNAPSHOT=snap-63f89d08 # Create new volume from snapshot ec2-create-volume -z %ZONE% --size 4 --snapshot %SNAPSHOT% # Record the new Volume ID set NEW=vol-a9c2a3c4 # Attach new volume as secondary ec2-attach-volume -i %DEV% %NEW% -d /dev/sdb1 # Delete Snapshot (if no data in yet) ec2-delete-snapshot %SNAPSHOT% # Start Host ec2start %DEV% # Re-attach the Public IP # Login mkdir /mnt/data echo '/dev/xvdb1 /mnt/data ext3 defaults,noatime 0 0' >> /etc/fstab mount /mnt/data resize2fs /dev/xvdb1 umount /mnt/data shutdown -h now # Unattach volumes ec2-detach-volume -i %DEV% %OLD% ec2-detach-volume -i %DEV% %NEW% # Attach volume as boot ec2-attach-volume -i %DEV% %NEW% -d /dev/sda1 # Attach old volume for /var/log ec2-attach-volume -i %DEV% %OLD% -d /dev/sdb1 # OR Delete old volume #ec2-delete-volume %OLD% # Start Host ec2start %DEV% # Re-attach the Public IP # Login df -h # Use the old partition for /var/log (to avoid DoS) vi /etc/fstab /dev/xvdb1 /var/log ext3 noatime 0 0 mv /var/log /var/log_old mkdir /var/log mount /var/log mv /var/log_old/* /var/log rm -rf /var/log/bin/ rm -rf /var/log/boot/ rm -rf /var/log/dev/ rm -rf /var/log/etc/ rm -rf /var/log/home/ rm -rf /var/log/initrd.img rm -rf /var/log/lib/ rm -rf /var/log/mnt/ rm -rf /var/log/media/ rm -rf /var/log/opt/ rm -rf /var/log/proc/ rm -rf /var/log/root/ rm -rf /var/log/sbin/ rm -rf /var/log/selinux/ rm -rf /var/log/srv/ rm -rf /var/log/tmp/ rm -rf /var/log/usr/ rm -rf /var/log/var/ rm -rf /var/log/vmlinuz rm -rf /var/log_old
Building AMIs for easier deployment
See: InstallationGuidelines/Amazon/AMI
Troubleshooting
To troubleshoot any errors in installation of EC2 visit its documentation. If you encounter problems installing eden on the EC2 instance, you can contact us via IRC or the mailing list.
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