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Home/ Questions/Q 6352657
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T22:16:04+00:00 2026-05-24T22:16:04+00:00

Background: I’m an ASP.NET developer with not much of experience when it comes to

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Background: I’m an ASP.NET developer with not much of experience when it comes to server administration.

I researched high and low on Amazon AWS and I think we are going to go with the “Reserved Small Instance”. My questions are the following

  1. Due to pricing of MS SQL server is too expensive, we are going to use MySQL. Now, do you install Mysql yourself, on the same instance or a different one, on EBS or not EBS? Is there a windows AMI with mysql for free? I can’t seem to find any.

  2. It seems, if you install MySQL yourself, you will have to handle all the backup, load balancing yourlsef correct? Any tutorials out there that teach you that? and what’s your experience with Amazon RDS for a fee? How is the price of RDS working out for you?

  3. Given I have very little experiences when it comes to server administration, dumb question. Is there a need for me to order load balancing even if I just buy “Small Instance”? You would need at least two machines to load balance as I understand it right? Or “Small Instance”, buy one plan, you can create as many “machine” as you need? A bit confused.

  4. Could someone give me an estimate of how much 1GB bandwidth is in terms of traffic, mostly text, non graphic intensive (like Google plus ish)? Each page have a max of 100kb (with compressed javascript and all that)

  5. Lastly, I have search functions using Lucene.NET, which stores search indexes as text on hard drive. From what I’ve read so far, if the instance is gone, your files are gone, so should I store that on EBS? or S3?

Thanks a lot for having the patience to read through the load of dumb questions. I really appreciate you taking the time to answer them.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T22:16:05+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 10:16 pm

    1 . Yes you can set it up yourself or go with their Amazon RDS setup like you mentioned. The downside of setting it up yourself is that you have to manage it all by yourself.

    1. There’s a bunch of tutorials out there on how to use Amazon RDS. But really all you need to do is go through the console and you can use the website to build the database. You also will need to define the correct security groups. Checkout the amazon developer site for instructions. The price is pretty expensive if your bootstrapping.

    2. You would need to set up load balancing and trigger points yourself. However if you use the new ElasticBeanStalk service a lot of this is done for you and you can just add new trigger points on when to scale up and down and the instances will be added and removed from the load balancer accordingly.

    3. hmmm don’t know.

    4. Not sure just based on that but ya you can store files on S3.

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