Only one slight oddity when the Installer progress bar got to the end on the script it sat there for the longest time. Then I followed Willem Redelijkheid’s post on installing on CENTOS for directions on installing Coldfusion 9 and it worked like a charm. So I downloaded it and put it on a private S3 Bucket then used curl to download it to my new instance It’s kinda silly you can’t get to it with curl, wget, or lynx. Then you need to get the Linux 64bit Coldfusion 9 off the Adobe Site. This makes Apache start when the Image starts or you reboot it if you are on an EBS instance
![running coldfusion on aws running coldfusion on aws](https://miro.medium.com/max/1200/1*AgO8XuFCzT9Xd0ZRsAmiiw.png)
The httpd-devl and libstdc++.so.5 are required by the Coldfusion installer
RUNNING COLDFUSION ON AWS INSTALL
Once you have the instance launched and you are connected you use yum to install Apache: yum install httpd Setting up launching and connecting to the instance is a bit out of reach for this post, but I just used the AWS console and followed the instructions to create my key-pair to SSH in.
![running coldfusion on aws running coldfusion on aws](https://redblink.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Run-Kubernetes-On-AWS.png)
I used Basic 64-bit Amazon Linux AMI 1.0 on a Micro T1 instance for my test. Since Amazon Linux is based on CENTOS I figured it shouldn’t be too hard to get it to work so why not… I’ll make the disclaimer now that CENTOS and Amazon Linux are not officially supported, but we have been running Coldfusion 7/8 on CENTOS for a couple years now and it seems to work great once you get the installer and Apache connector to work. For fun this weekend I was playing with the Amazon Linux on EC2 with Coldfusion 9.