![]() And right now I am in the midst of trying to configure email so the Magento install can email receipts to customers, but I haven't quite figured that out yet. The only small point that seemed to be a characteristic of this Bitnami installation is that the apache httpd is running under user "daemon" but a number of the configuration directories that Magento needs to save files in were owned by user "bitnami" so I was getting errors from Magento not being able to save configuration changes until I ran chown on the appropriate directories in ~bitnami/apps/magento/htdocs to change the owner to daemon. I used this as an upgrade from a previous installation at an outdated level of magento, so I experienced some glitches that were due to the version difference, no skin off Bitnami. The instructions for removing the bitnami corner banner were clear and worked fine. The install behaved as described immediately upon installation. I hope this helps folks who're struggling with the "passwords". Instructions: I will keep updating this review as I get further into it, but so far so good. Instructions: Once you've got these password, now you can change them and login to the Magento Admin interface etc etc. Scroll down and you should see something like this: bitnami: # bitnami: # bitnami: # Setting Bitnami application password to '1GvPd6mWaKZn' # bitnami: # (the default application username is 'user') # bitnami: # bitnami: # Save this "password" and the default username is 'user' NOTE: You have 24 hours to retrieve this password from the system log after the machine FIRST starts, so it quick otherwise the log will be overwritten and the password is lost (you can reset it but it's a PITA). To get this you will need to open your "System log" from the Amazon EC2 instance -> Actions -> Instance Settings -> Get Instance Log. Now you need your "application" password which is used for Magento admin, MySql and PhPAdmin. ![]() This file will be your "password" Login username: bitnami Instructions: 3. PPK file, VERY easy see instructions link). PEM file that you saved in step 1 (you will actually need to convert the. After installing the image, you can login to the SSH console for the server using the PuTTY application (NOTE: there is no "password", only a username and a digital signature file from step 1): Configure PuTTY to use your. PEM file which will be used to login to the server (SSH console), without this file you can't login. Before you install the image, create a Key Pair in Amazon EC2, save the. I've pretty much made every mistake possible while trying to install this image, all were user errors, the image is perfect! So let me explain it to make life easier: 1. It took me quite a while to figure out how to get the password is the reason some else gave 1 star. Very very nicely done, it works just fine out of the box.
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