1.Fetch data from civicrm and make the drupal nodes 2.For this manually run the below file: - node.php 3.And link is -http://audienceware.com/code/double_day_code/node.php Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.” Getting started with Amazon CloudWatch is easy. If you are signed up for Amazon EC2, you are automatically registered for Amazon CloudWatch. All Amazon EC2 instances are automatically enabled for Basic Monitoring (at no charge). Amazon CloudWatch also automatically collects metrics for Amazon EBS volumes, Elastic Load Balancers, and RDS DB instances at no charge. Using Amazon CloudWatch to Monitor Amazon EC2 Instances For Amazon EC2 instances, Amazon CloudWatch Basic Monitoring collects and reports metrics for CPU utilization, data transfer, and disk usage activity from each Amazon EC2 instance at a five-minute frequency. Amazon CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring provides these same metrics at one-minute intervals, and also enables data aggregation by Amazon EC2 AMI ID and instance type. If you use Auto Scaling or Elastic Load Balancing, Amazon CloudWatch will also provide Amazon EC2 instance metrics aggregated by Auto Scaling group and by Elastic Load Balancer, regardless of whether you have chosen Basic or Detailed Monitoring. Monitoring data is retained for two weeks, even if your AWS resources have been terminated. This enables you to quickly look back at the metrics preceding an event of interest to you. Basic Monitoring is already enabled automatically for all Amazon EC2 instances, and you can access these metrics immediately in either the Amazon EC2 tab or the Amazon CloudWatch tab of the AWS Management Console. Sign in to the AWS Management Console. On the Amazon EC2 tab, click the Launch Instances button. Select an AMI to launch an instance, select the key pair and configure the firewall. On the last step, click the “Enable CloudWatch Detailed Monitoring for this instance” checkbox. Click the Launch button. Within minutes, the instance you just launched will show as running. You can also enable Detailed Monitoring for an existing running instance by right-clicking the instance in the Amazon EC2 tab and selecting “Enable Detailed Monitoring.”