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upgrade

How to upgrade a Digital Ocean Ubuntu VM and increase the vCPU or memory

February 6, 2018 by Simon

This blog post will show you how you can increase the memory and CPU allocation of an Ubuntu Server (Droplet) on Digital Ocean.

If you don’t have an Ubuntu server on Digital Ocean use this link ( https://m.do.co/c/99a5082b6de5 ) and get $10 free credit (2 months free). Read my guide here on setting it up.

Before you begin, ensure you have backed up your server.  You can read here about setting up a new server on Digital Ocean from scratch, connecting to your server via SCP or automatically syncing files away from your server to another server with rsync .

In Jan 2018 Digital Ocean doubled the ram of $5/m servers from 512MB to 1GB so it’s time for me to get the free upgrade.

Connect to your server (via SSH or Web Console) and shut it down

shutdown -h now

After the server has shut down login to digital Ocean GUI and click (open) the server you want to upgrade.

resize-droplet-002

Click Resize and choose the new upgraded server capacity

resize-droplet-003

Click Resize (if the resize button is disabled you need to power off the server (via command line or via the power menu in Digital Ocean for the Droplet))

resize-droplet-004

Click the Power On button under the Access tab when the resize is completed to restart the VM.

resize-droplet-005

Congratulations, you will now have an upgraded server 🙂 Thank You Digital Ocean for the free RAM.

If you don’t have an Ubuntu server on Digital Ocean use this link ( https://m.do.co/c/99a5082b6de5 ) and get $10 free credit (2 months free). Read my guide here on setting it up.

Hope this helps someone.

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v1.0 Initial Post

Filed Under: Upgrade VM Tagged With: a, and, Digital, How, increase, memory, Ocean, or, the vCPU, to, ubuntu, upgrade, vm

How to upgrade an AWS free tier EC2 t2.micro instance to an on demand t2.medium server

July 9, 2017 by Simon

Amazon Web Services have a great free tier where you can develop with very little cost. The free tier Linux server is a t2.micro server (1 CPU, low to moderate IO, 1GB memory with 750 hours or CPU usage). The free tier limits are listed here. Before you upgrade can you optimize or cache content to limit usage?

When you are ready to upgrade resources you can use this cost calculator to set your region (I am in the Sydney region) and estimate your new costs.

awsupgrade001

You can also check out the ec2instances.info website for regional prices.

Current Server Usage

I have an NGINX Server with a NodeJS back powering an API that talks to a local MySQL database and Remote MongoDB Cluster ( on AWS via http://www.mongodb.com/cloud/ ). The MongoDB cluster was going to cost about $120 a month (too high for testing an app before launch).  The Free tier AWS instance is running below the 20% usage limit so this costs nothing (on the AWS free tier).

You can monitor your instance usage and credit in the Amazon Management Console, keep an eye on the CPU usage and CPU Credit and CPU Credit Balance.  If the CPU usage grows and balance drops you may need to upgrade your server to prevent usage charges.

AWS Upgrade

I prefer the optional htop command in Ubuntu to keep track of memory and processes usage.

Basic information from AWS t1.micro (idle)

AWS Upgrade

Older htop screenshot of a dual CPU VM being stressed.

CPU Busy

Future Requirements

I plan on moving a non-cluster MongoDB database onto an upgraded AWS free tier instance and develop and test there and when and if a scalable cluster is needed I can then move the database back to http://www.mongodb.com/cloud/.

First I will need to upgrade my Free tier EC2 instance to be able to install MongoDB 3.2 and power more local processing. Upgrading will also give me more processing power to run local scripts (instead of hosting them in Singapore on Digital Ocean).

How to upgrade a t2.micro to t2.medium

The t2.medium server has 2 CPU’s, 4 GB of memory and Low to Moderate IO.

  1. Backup your server in AWS (and manual backup).
  2. Shutdown the server with the command sudo shutdown now
  3. Login to your AWS Management Console and click Instances (note: Your instance will say it is running but it has shut down (test with SSH and connection will be refused)).
  4. Click Actions, Image then Create Image
  5. Name the image (select any volumes you have created) and click Create Image.
  6. You can follow the progress o the snapshot creation under the Snapshots menu.AWS Upgrade
  7. When the volumes have been snapshoted you can stop the instance.
  8. Now you can change the instance type by right clicking on the stopped instance and selecting Instance Settings then Change Instance Type  AWS Upgrade
  9. Choose the new desired instance type and click apply (double check your cost estimates) AWS Upgrade
  10. Your can now start your instance.
  11. After a few minutes, you can log in to your server and confirm the cores/memory have increased.AWS Upgrade
  12. Note: Your servers CPU credits will be reset and your server will start with lower CPU credits. Depending on your server you will receive credits every hour up to your maximum cap.AWS Upgrade
  13. Note: Don’t forget to configure your software to use more RAM or Cores if required.

Misc

Confirm processors via the command line:

grep ^processor /proc/cpuinfo | wc -l 
>2

My NGINX configuration changes.

worker_processes 2;
worker_cpu_affinity auto;
...
events {
	worker_connections 4096;
	...
}
...

Find the open file limit of your system (for NGINX worker_connections maximum)

ulimit -n

That’s all for now.

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