Table of Contents

Getting Started Part 1: Amazon EC2

Setting up your Amazon EC2 instance

Visit Amazon Web Services and create an account https://aws.amazon.com/ You will have to put credit card details in, but you won't be charged for your first year if you select a product in the free tier (the free tier has an adequate server for what we'll need, just don't create a second one).
I have a video here that takes you through it. Only the first 3 minutes or so are relevant. Remember to change your server location to Europe/London.
Get logged in to the AWS site to you see your username beside the bell icon. Hit the orange button “Sign in to console”

It may take a few minutes for Amazon to approve your launch request
You'll be asked to set up a key pair and save it to your machine. Select Create a new pair and hit Continue. It's important you don't lose this file or you'll lose whatever is in your EC2 instance and will have to launch a new one.

Now we should add security rules so when we make the web pages they will be accessible by anyone with a browser.

Security

In the navigation pane choose Security Groups. Select Create Security Group.
Give it a name and a description.
Click Add Rule.
Enter the following rule settings:

Type HTTP
Protocol TCP
Port range 80
Source anywhere

Click Create.

Then we need to assign that rule to our server instance.
Back in the side menu select Instances.
Tick your instance.
Go to Actions > Networking > Change Security Groups.
Tick your security group and Apply.

You should now be able to connect to your instance.

Make sure you DON'T disable the existing ticked Security Groups (those are the ones that let you SSH into the server) i.e. install-wizard.

On Mac/Linux

Mac and Linux systems have builtin OpenSSH tools to connect to your server:

ssh -i youridentifyfile.pem ubuntu@your_server_ip

Having trouble with permissions or accessing the PEM file? Further information is here

On Windows

There are some extra steps needed to convert your PEM file to something compatible with PuTTY if you are using Windows. There are some instructions for that here

Download putty here: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
For simplicity, download the executables under “Alternative binary files”
The main program “putty.exe” 32-bit
And the key converter utility “puttygen.exe”
The MSI installer is more customisable but fiddly.
Another video guide to both converting and connecting


Now move on to the next set of instructions to set up a web and database server.