The other day, I came across a great writeup by
Thomas Brox Røst on how to set up persistent storage for a Django environment with Amazon's EC2. It's an excellent and informative article, but I preferred to set up my environment with a number of differences, such as Ubuntu and MySQL instead of Fedora and PostgreSQL, as well as an apache2/mod_wsgi environment. The instructions are very similar, and I mostly recorded them for the sake of personal repetition, but I figured I'd share them in case anyone else finds them useful.
System Administration
HOWTO: Set up a Persistent Django Environment in Ubuntu on Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2)
Submitted by Ben Sarsgard on Sun, 10/18/2009 - 10:05Solutions for Running Django in Cloud Computing Environments
Submitted by Ben Sarsgard on Wed, 10/14/2009 - 13:03I've lately been paying a lot of attention to the cloud computing offerings from Google and Amazon, but the more you learn about them the more it seems like you really have to program for them. My dilemma is that I've developed a mostly complete application that I'd like to explore migrating into one of these solutions.
Distributed Ticket Sales System
Submitted by Ben Sarsgard on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 14:50Running the ticket sales system for Playa del Fuego has presented some peculiar challenges I don't face in most products. Primarily, there's the issue of dealing with a thousand or more simultaneous users during opening sales but very little traffic over the rest of the year.
