2011

JUL

20

Setting Up A Cloud Server - Part One!

First of all, welcome to Geekycoders.com - the online home of our application development company.

This is the first entry to our very own development blog.

Over the next few months we will be focusing mainly upon iOS development as we begin giving life to a few game ideas we have.

But first, let's take a look at how this website was created!

In part one - we will talk about setting up a cloud server.

Server

We created a new server instance using Rackspace's brilliant cloud hosting facility - opting for a 256mb RAM, 10GB HDD Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx starter image. At a cost of $0.015 per hour - and a GBP exchange rate of about $1.66 to £1 - it is fairly cheap, oh and some small bandwidth costs too - check out their offering.

With such as small amount of ram, and the primary use of this 'cloud slice' being the hosting of this blog, we didn't want to install the full blown wordpress or [insert other blog cms] software, but rather create our own lightweight blog front and backend - something that has just the right amount of features. Not only that, but we can also take pride that as an application development company, we created our own software for our website!

When you sign up to rackspace and create your first server instance you are given and later emailed the IP for the server and root passwords.

If you want to you a domain name to access the server, you have the ability to edit DNS settings from within your control panel. At time of writing, all you need to do with your domain provider is change the nameservers for the domain to the following:


dns1.stabletransit.com

dns2.stabletransit.com

Then in rackspace go to cloud servers overview screen and from the dns tab for each domain

Server Software

The linux based server had the normal configuration done as per usual barebones installations:

Now the basic server is set up, you have created users, allowed super user privileges using the sudo command, updated application repositories and set up firewalls.

In the next article, we will do a run through on installing and setting up FTP, setting time zones and installing postfix to enable outgoing email from this server.

1 comment

Cloud Server

Tags:dns, apt-get, aptitude, iptables, ubuntu, cloud server, rackspace

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1 comment on: Setting Up A Cloud Server - Part One!

12 Mar '12 23:16 Steve.H

Awesome write up, even if its a little old most of the code is still good. Thanks Geeky! :P

Steve.H

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