Creating your own Personal Elasticsearch Cluster
This is a quick rundown of the guides I wrote about running a small Elasticsearch. Partly for my own sake to remember everything I have done, but also just in case someone else is looking at making a small cluster for their own purposes. Here is a summary of each part if you want to…
Setting up Security Groups for AWS CloudFront to an EC2 Instance
This guide will show you how to secure your CloudFront connection to your instances by only allowing the two to talk to each other, restricting the EC2 instances from the outside world. This could also apply to other resources like a Load Balancer This guide is based off a solution provided by the AWS team.…
Creating an Internet Accessible Kibana With CloudFront
This is originally part 6 in a series on setting up a personal Elasticstack. It can also be applied to any similar setup. It does not even have to be a Kibana dashboard you are setting it up for! You can check out the other parts in the series below. Building Your Environment in AWSSetting…
Setting up Security and Password Authentication for Small Elasticsearch Clusters
Now that you have a cluster, you are going to want to add some security to it. This is part 5 of a series on creating a personal Elasticstack. You can check the others out here: Building Your Environment in AWSSetting up and Installing ElasticsearchSetting up KibanaUsing a Proxy for Kibana with HAProxyEnabling Security and…
Using a Proxy Server for Your Kibana Dashboard with HAProxy
This guide will work anywhere, but was originally written as part 4 of a series of guides on setting up an Elasticstack. Building Your Environment in AWSSetting up and Installing ElasticsearchSetting up KibanaUsing a Proxy for Kibana with HAProxyEnabling Security and Using Password AuthenticationMaking Kibana Internet Accessible with CloudfrontSecuring Cloudfront with Security GroupsInserting Data into…
Setting up a Small Kibana Dashboard for Elasticsearch
This is part 3 in a series of guides I have written about running a personal Elasticstack. You can check out the other parts in the series here: Building Your Environment in AWSSetting up and Installing ElasticsearchSetting up KibanaUsing a Proxy for Kibana with HAProxyEnabling Security and Using Password AuthenticationMaking Kibana Internet Accessible with CloudfrontSecuring…
Installing and Configuring a Micro Elasticsearch Cluster in the Cloud
This is part 2 of a series detailing some of the ways you can setup your own Elasticstack in the cloud for your own personal use. Building Your Environment in AWSSetting up and Installing ElasticsearchSetting up KibanaUsing a Proxy for Kibana with HAProxyEnabling Security and Using Password AuthenticationMaking Kibana Internet Accessible with CloudfrontSecuring Cloudfront with…
Setting up an AWS Environment for a Personal Elasticstack
This is Part 1 of a series of guides about setting up a personal Elasticstack. Building Your Environment in AWSSetting up and Installing ElasticsearchSetting up KibanaUsing a Proxy for Kibana with HAProxyEnabling Security and Using Password AuthenticationMaking Kibana Internet Accessible with CloudfrontSecuring Cloudfront with Security GroupsInserting Data into Elasticsearch with Logstash In order to actually…
Adding Swap Memory to Centos/RHEL/Amazon Linux Servers
A quick guide on adding swap memory. Particularly useful if you run very small servers that crash due to lack of memory. Typically you only want to use swap to buffer against memory spikes, not to run your application out of. If you consistently use too much memory, get a bigger server. This guide is…
Mounting Disk Drives to Centos/RHEL/Amazon Linux
Just a short step by step guide to add extra disk drives to Centos/RHEL/Amazon Linux. Applicable for when you add extra EBS to an AWS instance, but also useful for adding drives to any RHEL family of hosts. See here for official AWS documentation this was originally from. While logged onto the server, perform the…
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