Hosting Wordpress in a EC2 Load Balanced InstanceSimple Backup Strategy for Amazon EC2 instances /...
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Hosting Wordpress in a EC2 Load Balanced Instance
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Whenever my ec2 instance is stopped or rebooted, a new instance is made with an AMI.
This normally is fine for applications that are managed with a service like puppet but our Wordpress site is not. I have to do a manual restore/upgrade to the latest wordpress from daily backups.
Is there a way to host wordpress on an amazon instance with some kind of persistence storage for the wordpress files?
I know about EBS volumes but I'm not sure how to get /var/app/current to "store there".
amazon-ec2 wordpress
add a comment |
Whenever my ec2 instance is stopped or rebooted, a new instance is made with an AMI.
This normally is fine for applications that are managed with a service like puppet but our Wordpress site is not. I have to do a manual restore/upgrade to the latest wordpress from daily backups.
Is there a way to host wordpress on an amazon instance with some kind of persistence storage for the wordpress files?
I know about EBS volumes but I'm not sure how to get /var/app/current to "store there".
amazon-ec2 wordpress
add a comment |
Whenever my ec2 instance is stopped or rebooted, a new instance is made with an AMI.
This normally is fine for applications that are managed with a service like puppet but our Wordpress site is not. I have to do a manual restore/upgrade to the latest wordpress from daily backups.
Is there a way to host wordpress on an amazon instance with some kind of persistence storage for the wordpress files?
I know about EBS volumes but I'm not sure how to get /var/app/current to "store there".
amazon-ec2 wordpress
Whenever my ec2 instance is stopped or rebooted, a new instance is made with an AMI.
This normally is fine for applications that are managed with a service like puppet but our Wordpress site is not. I have to do a manual restore/upgrade to the latest wordpress from daily backups.
Is there a way to host wordpress on an amazon instance with some kind of persistence storage for the wordpress files?
I know about EBS volumes but I'm not sure how to get /var/app/current to "store there".
amazon-ec2 wordpress
amazon-ec2 wordpress
edited 1 hour ago
bobber205
asked 1 hour ago
bobber205bobber205
1711415
1711415
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1 Answer
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You should be using EFS volumes for shared storage, like the wp-content folder, and RDS for the database. EBS won't help you for this.
AWS has a good pattern available here. It links to templates and such on Github here.

There's another pattern available here as well that gives you a full deployment guide.
Lightsail
AWS is great for Wordress if you need high availability or have a very high load. AWS Lightsail makes Wordpress easy, though not highly available, and it can be much cheaper than EC2 especially if you use a lot of bandwidth.
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1 Answer
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active
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You should be using EFS volumes for shared storage, like the wp-content folder, and RDS for the database. EBS won't help you for this.
AWS has a good pattern available here. It links to templates and such on Github here.

There's another pattern available here as well that gives you a full deployment guide.
Lightsail
AWS is great for Wordress if you need high availability or have a very high load. AWS Lightsail makes Wordpress easy, though not highly available, and it can be much cheaper than EC2 especially if you use a lot of bandwidth.
add a comment |
You should be using EFS volumes for shared storage, like the wp-content folder, and RDS for the database. EBS won't help you for this.
AWS has a good pattern available here. It links to templates and such on Github here.

There's another pattern available here as well that gives you a full deployment guide.
Lightsail
AWS is great for Wordress if you need high availability or have a very high load. AWS Lightsail makes Wordpress easy, though not highly available, and it can be much cheaper than EC2 especially if you use a lot of bandwidth.
add a comment |
You should be using EFS volumes for shared storage, like the wp-content folder, and RDS for the database. EBS won't help you for this.
AWS has a good pattern available here. It links to templates and such on Github here.

There's another pattern available here as well that gives you a full deployment guide.
Lightsail
AWS is great for Wordress if you need high availability or have a very high load. AWS Lightsail makes Wordpress easy, though not highly available, and it can be much cheaper than EC2 especially if you use a lot of bandwidth.
You should be using EFS volumes for shared storage, like the wp-content folder, and RDS for the database. EBS won't help you for this.
AWS has a good pattern available here. It links to templates and such on Github here.

There's another pattern available here as well that gives you a full deployment guide.
Lightsail
AWS is great for Wordress if you need high availability or have a very high load. AWS Lightsail makes Wordpress easy, though not highly available, and it can be much cheaper than EC2 especially if you use a lot of bandwidth.
answered 30 mins ago
TimTim
17.9k41949
17.9k41949
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