Amazon has excellent Windows support these days. Many time you’d like a larger C: drive than the 30 GB that come standard with the Amazon images. Here is how you enlarge the boot drive to 100 GB.
Entries Tagged 'Cloud' ↓
How-to get a large C: drive for Windows on Amazon
March 31st, 2010 by Adam Skogman — Cloud, Testing, Tips & Tricks
Tags: amazon, ebs, ec2, windows
Blogging Among the Clouds
May 7th, 2009 by Henrik Bernström — Cloud, Tips & Tricks
Up until now this WordPress blog has been hosted by DreamHost, a company with a good reputation and a solid knowledge in hosting. Unfortunately, the server we’ve been located on, Trafficante, have lately had some problems with stability and performance and DreamHost have also had some MySQL stability issues. This, plus the fact that we’ve [...]
Tags: amazon, dreamhost, ebs, ec2, linux, mysql, open source, php, s3, scripting, ssl, tools, web, wordpress
Testing Among the Clouds, Part 2
October 20th, 2008 by Mattias Hellborg Arthursson — Cloud, Java, Testing
In a recent post I wrote about the particular problems we’ve been having with integration testing the Spring LDAP project and the use we’ve made of Amazon EC2 for solving these problems. In this post I’ll present the implementation details. Prerequisites In order to keep this reasonably brief I’ll have to refer to the getting [...]
Tags: automated testing, ec2, junit, spring, spring ldap, tdd, typica
Testing Among the Clouds
September 11th, 2008 by Mattias Hellborg Arthursson — Cloud, Java, Testing
One of the major challenges we’ve been facing in the Spring LDAP project is to make certain that the library works together with different LDAP servers. Different servers behave differently in certain situations; some functionality might only be supported on select servers, etc. In the ideal situation we would run our automated test suite against [...]
Tags: automated testing, continuous integration, ec2, junit, spring, spring ldap, tdd, typica
Using Amazon S3 for backup
September 2nd, 2007 by Ulrik Sandberg — Cloud, Tips & Tricks
Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) is cheap on-line storage with a Web Service interface. You just log in with your Amazon id, sign up for S3, designate a credit card, and that’s it. You now have access to pretty much unlimited storage space, managed by Amazon. The price is $0.15 per GB-Month of storage used [...]
