Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 8 years ago.
Improve this question
I launched a t2.micro instance which at the time of launch clearly stated free tier eligible.
It is a RHEL7 system on which I then installed some usual software such as Java, Tomcat, nginx etc.
In the billing section, I see that I am being charged for this instance. So far I have been charged $2.36 at the rate of $0.073 for 36 hours.
How do I explain this?
The free period only lasts 12 months from the time you first created your AWS account - is your account new?
Related
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 2 years ago.
Improve this question
recently I found that a process is keep running on one of our company's windows EC2(Windows server 2012 R2).
It takes up lot of resources from CPU. however, it disappear after I open the task manager for a few seconds.
Anyone has knowledge of what it is.
It seems that your instance has been compromised and is mining cryptocurrency, explaining high CPU and magically disappearing when you want to look at its process.
More about the process SystemManagement.exe is in the link.
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
Does anyone know how to limit MikroTik Hotspot trial user bandwidth limit? I need to make a limit (e.g. 10M) for all trial users so they can't use more than 10M together (e.g. 4 trial users together and each can use only 2,5M from 10M, so 10M/trial_users).
You should use queues, or in more complicated situations queue trees.
You can find details of using queues here, at Mikrotik Wiki:
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Queue
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 9 years ago.
Improve this question
I have bought Amazon Reserved Instance(HighCPU-Medim).
And I don't see any dns information to connect with SSH.
While using On Demand Instance there was this information, but in reserved I don't see.
What should I do?
I appreciate any help
Reserved instances don't instantiate a server instance. They are just a book-keeping entry that indicates to Amazon billing that any instance you have running that matches the reservation should have a lower billing rate.
See the How Billing Works section here: http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/reserved-instances/buyer/
Closed. This question is not about programming or software development. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 8 days ago.
Improve this question
I am curious how is this even possible. An instance is either healthy or unhealthy, it can't be partially healthy, no?
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about a specific programming problem, a software algorithm, or software tools primarily used by programmers. If you believe the question would be on-topic on another Stack Exchange site, you can leave a comment to explain where the question may be able to be answered.
Closed 7 years ago.
Improve this question
I havent had extensive use of vps before. I was wondering, if I purchase one node from Linode, can I run deploy multiple instances? Similar to Amazon EC2? Or would I have to purchase another Linode separately?
Thanks!
Yes, you will—you're paying for guaranteed resources in a particular location, so another Linode it is.
I understand what you trying to say, under single VPS linode instance multiple deployment not possible as of now.