The only way you can increase AWS limits is by contacting AWS support. Wonder whether there is any other option you found. What’s the restrictions you are getting?
@@cloudopian I asked five times and got no real person responding; they just closed my ticket. My account has no outstanding balance, and there's still over ten thousand dollars in it
As shown in the video you need to contact support. Alternatively go to limits in your console and first increase it to 1 vcpu, use it for sometime until it bills then you can increase the vcpu limits further. You may have more than 1vcpu in other regions like Virginia. Which region you are trying to access AWS?
@@cloudopian I actually found a few hours after posting this that under Service Quotas/AWS services/Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) and then whatever type you want (for example G), you can then ask for vCPUs. my issue was that it was quite easy to find the limits for number of instances but it was hard for me to find the vCPU limits. I saw in earlier tutorials it was much easier to access. thank you for the help though!
chat now option is not showing
The video is of no help and is all nonsense
The only way you can increase AWS limits is by contacting AWS support. Wonder whether there is any other option you found. What’s the restrictions you are getting?
@@cloudopian I asked five times and got no real person responding; they just closed my ticket. My account has no outstanding balance, and there's still over ten thousand dollars in it
how do you increase the vcpu limit? mine is set to zero but most tutorials are not showing how to increase. for example if I wanted 4.
As shown in the video you need to contact support. Alternatively go to limits in your console and first increase it to 1 vcpu, use it for sometime until it bills then you can increase the vcpu limits further. You may have more than 1vcpu in other regions like Virginia. Which region you are trying to access AWS?
@@cloudopian I actually found a few hours after posting this that under Service Quotas/AWS services/Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) and then whatever type you want (for example G), you can then ask for vCPUs.
my issue was that it was quite easy to find the limits for number of instances but it was hard for me to find the vCPU limits. I saw in earlier tutorials it was much easier to access.
thank you for the help though!