Specifications
RUNNING COMSOL MULTIPHYSICS® WITH AMAZON™ ELASTIC COMPUTE CLOUD™ | 17
(Memory Optimized) category. To find more information, please refer to http:/
/aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types/.
h KeyDir - Specify the local directory where your key file is residing. Observe that
you need to include a trailing backslash if you are using Windows, and a trailing
slash if you are using Linux
®
or Mac.
i KeyName - Specify the name of the key pair that you want to use.
j LicenseSecurityGroup - Specify the name of the security group created with the
COMSOL license server.
k LicenseServerIP - Specify the IP address of the COMSOL license server.
l LicenseServerPort - Specify the first TCP/IP port of the license server.
m LicenseServerPort2 - Specify the second TCP/IP port of the license server.
n LoginBucketID - Specify the ID of the Amazon S3™ bucket created with the
COMSOL license server. This option is only necessary if you chose to create a
login bucket when creating the license server.
o Name - Specify your name.
p PlacementGroupName - Specify a name for the placement group where the
instances will be launched—for example, COMSOL-mphsrv-placementgroup. A
placement group is a logical collection of Amazon instances (please refer to the
Amazon EC2™ User Guide for more information: http://aws.amazon.com/
documentation/ec2/). This input is optional.
q RestrictIP - Specify an IP or UP range to restrict access to the Amazon EC2™
license server. The IP address must be specified in the format x.x.x.x/x. As an
example, if your external IP address is 192.168.0.1 and you want to allow the
access for this IP address only, write 192.168.0.1/32 in the parameter field. To
find your external IP address, use your preferred search engine and search for My
IP Address.
7 Click Next.
8 At the bottom of the page, mark the check box at the text “I acknowledge that this
template might cause AWS CloudFormation to create IAM resources.”
9 Click Next.
For a new user, Amazon™ provides micro instances free of charge (Free
Usage Tier). These are useful for experimenting and verifying that
everything works as expected.