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08:54
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A: Using AWS services to create subdomains on the fly to host a site on S3

dcroI researched a similar scenario some time ago but I was unable to use S3 for this because of a S3 limitation. To host a static website on S3 on a custom domain or subdomain, you need to create a bucket with a name that matches that domain. And because each S3 account is limited to 100 buckets, y...

Thank you for pointing out the limitation!As you said I need to do a proxy,but can you please elaborate on how exactly I can achieve it?I am still a newbie working on the cloud and aws stuff!
I updated my original answer to include links to the nginx docs as you could use this server to proxy the requests. This setup is not specific to the cloud or aws, it would be the same to proxy and rewrite requests to any backend server. Those docs will help you get started but you will probably need to do more research on this and post other specific questions, either here or on serverfault if you get stuck on a specific point.
Just to make sure if I am going the right way,earlier I used cpanel and its services(API's) to create subdomains(on the fly) and transfer files via FTP.Is the approach highlighted by you better or I can go with this one?Offcourse I don't yet have a cpanel on Amzon,bt thats a different problem probably!
The approach I suggested is not necessarily better in your case. It really depends on your needs and experience. Each method has advantages and disadvantages. As advantages in storing the data directly to S3 and using this proxy method I would mention that your EC2 instance will not need a persistent storage attached to it (EBS), S3 has great data durability and reliability, the load on your server will probably be smaller than when using cPanel so you might use a cheaper instance and it is easier to load balance the load between multiple servers than it is with cPanel.
I am going through your suggestions,but would the functionality work fast in terms of speed?As subdomain creation will take time and I don't want the user to wait for the results to propagate!!Do you say its the best way to go while using AWS and amazon EC2? I have accepted your answer and will post any specific questions when help needed(I believe I will definitely need it)
08:54
Speed wise, you can set this up so any changes propagate instantly, without any delay caused by DNS. To do this you could use a wildcard DNS entry, something like *.abc.com that points to your proxy server on EC2. This way, if someone tries to access subdomain.abc.com there won't be any DNS delay and the changes will be instantly visible.
Just to confirm is the limit of 100 buckets applicable to paid accounts also or is it default for all? The other concern is when the user asks for his own domain(Once he has his template he can switch to his own domain),so will it be easy to do that?
All AWS accounts have a limit of 100 buckets - docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/BucketRestrictions.html. As for moving to their own domain, it's possible to do that as long as their domain points to your proxy server.
I just thought of a hack or trick whatever you call it.I will have a single bucket pointing to a subdomain say sites.abc.com and have the templates as multiple folders inside a bucket like sites.abc.com/site-1,sites.abc.com/site-2.Is this a valid use case to go ahead.Sorry,I believe I am irritating you but,I am just trying to identify the possibilities!
Don't worry, I'm happy to help you out. Although using subdirectories instead of subdomains does work, it's not always a good idea to go down that path as it has implication on security (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting) and possibly SEO. It really depends on the type of content that you plan to host in those locations.
Yes I thought about SEO,but as far as its a subdomain I believe we are not much worried about the SEO,only once the user has a custom domain I want to have it SEO compliant.Also,when the user switches to a custom domain do you switch the bucket as AWS says bucket name and domain name has to be same or you just change the pointing for that entry? I visited your site Sitedity.com and its really very cool! :)
08:54
Thanks :) As long as you're using the EC2 proxy server to handle custom domains, when one of your user switches to custom domains you just need to point their domain to your proxy. You could host their files in sites.abc.com/custom-domain.com and your proxy can forward any requests for www.custom-domain.com and custom-domain.com to that location.
Does route53 come into picture anywhere?do we need to use those API's for Route 53?I have started working and will post as and when I get stuck!Please keep checking AWS section for answering those! :P Thanks a ton for the guidance!
You don't necessarily need to use Route 53. This also depends on how you plan to handle custom domains for your customers. If you want to handle the DNS settings for them, then you will need a DNS server and Route 53 is a very good option (although not very cheap). But you could also ask your customers to manage their DNS settings themselves.
Currently we are not planning to handle the DNS setting,but if we just want them to enter the custom domain and go ahead using it,we will need to just change the cname and it will work right?
also it will take some time to propagate!
Correct, if your customer uses custom-domain.com you will need to ask them to point www.custom-domain.com to a CNAME that in turns points to your EC2 proxy: sites-cname.abc.com. You will also need to instruct them to redirect custom-domain.com to www.custom-domain.com as the root domain (zone APEX) can not point to a CNAME because of how DNS works.
09:10
Also,if I follow the folder approach,I will need to move the site to a new bucket when the user wants to publish it on his own domain otherwise the same SEO issue would exist.. right?
You could use the same bucket, but, to make it easier for your proxy to work with it, you will probably need to rename the subdirectory. Let's say that they initially published to sites.abc.com/my-website/. When they move to custom-domain.com, you can rename that folder to sites.abc.com/custom-domain.com/
That way is very easy to configure nginx to rewrite any requests for custom-domain.com and www.custom-domain.com and forward them to sites.abc.com as sites.abc.com/custom-domain.com/
ok!But would that cause the SEO bots t spam it?It will have two access url's right?
1) 1st of the domain and
2) 2nd the bucket endpoint
yes, you basically have two URLs, but bots will probably only discover the one in (1)
if you want to make 100% sure that is the case you could block the one in (2) with a robots.txt
and deliver a different robots.txt for the one that passes through the proxy
Cool! got your point !!That means I can have a robot.txt in the site folder itself! right?
yes.. just make sure you override it trough nginx, otherwise both sites will be blocked
09:24
Now I am still bit confused where will nginx fit in my requirement?do I need to have it on an independent EC2 instance or I can install it on my current instance?
sorry I am still reading about it,if you can just give me an over view it would be fine!
you can have it on your existing instance.. as the only thing it does is proxy requests, it's CPU usage and memory footprint are pretty low so it shouldn't be a problem to run it on the same instance as your app (which I understood will be a PHP app)
also, when you think about your app's architecture, do plan to support multiple servers & load balancing
even if you start with a single instance if your app is successful, at one point you will need to scale
that will bring you both scalability and higher availability (if one of your instances go down, the others will still handle requests)
What different do I need to do for supporting multiple servers?I mean I can set the threshold values for one instance and when the requests increase or due to failure my sever is not available Amazon does it automatically .. right?
Anything else in the APP LOGIC that I need to take care of?
it will most certainly involve changes to your APP logic.. think of load balancing this way: each request that goes to your app can hit any one of your servers, usually in a round robin algorithm
if you haven't developed a load balanced app before, you'll need to do some experimenting before you get it right
in PHP for example, it's internal session storage (for $_SESSION) is not shared between multiple servers by default
so you will need to adjust its configuration (e.g. share session data using a common database or shared file system)
and your app will most likely need other adjustments aswell
ohh..I haven't worked on an laod balanced app earlier,if you can point me to any GIT repo or example it will be of great help!
09:40
see static.zend.com/topics/… .. it has some info to get you started
Also,I will have to use nginx for custom domains only right?As I have folders,I can jsut have the subdomain pointed like sites.abc.com
and append the user given name like custom-domain.com to the subdomain in this way "sites.abc.com/custom-domain.com"
yes.. nginx will only handle custom domains.. anyone else will go directly to S3 on sites.abc.com/some-username
ok!cool!I believe I have a basic idea to go ahead!!
Does stack overflow use nginx...the URL of our chat shows "discussion-between-dcro-and-killabug" ;)
THanks a ton for your help till now!
I would like to know if I an try to reach you if i need any help in my course!
if you can share your email address I can rach you with my problem
I assure you I won't bombard you but if I have a genuine issue!!I know you must be busy with a lot of work!
static.zend.com/topics/… for some reason it doesn't work!! not sure if its broken!
10:13
anyways,not a problem if you don't want to share it!I am very grateful to you for the help and it is for you that forums are a great source of knowledge and info!Have a great day!Thank you.Have a look at the AWS section for my sections :P
11:02
A lot of websits in top 1000 use nginx :) - wpengine.com/2013/07/…
The URL to the zend.com pdf works fine here
I prefer not to post my full email address here but you can reach me on my Sitedity email address - dan@...
11:16
ok thank you!!Great to have a conversation with you!I owe you a something for this! :)
yes Stack should have a private message to share such information!
So apache and nginx(on a different port offcourse) can run in parallel as I already have apache as the php server.And apache cannot do the stuff that nginx can.Is it that?

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