Listing Thumbnail

    CENTOS 7 Desktop - NICE DCV for 3D NVIDIA-GPU based graphics instances

     Info
    Centos 7.9 Remote Desktop with high-end NICE DCV Remote 3D experience - includes NVIDIA 3D performance drivers. Optimized NICE DCV configurations are covered by the charges.
    Listing Thumbnail

    CENTOS 7 Desktop - NICE DCV for 3D NVIDIA-GPU based graphics instances

     Info

    Overview

    NICE DCV is a high performance remote streaming protocol that enables user to securely access remote desktop or application sessions, including 3D graphics applications hosted on servers with high-performance GPUs.

    NICE DCV offers end users a wide range of client devices, including native clients for Windows, Linux, and MacOS operating systems. Native clients support up to 4 monitors at 4K resolution each and the Windows client also supports USB redirection for 3D mice and USB storage devices. In addition, NICE DCV helps customers with remote Linux desktops to reduce session costs by supporting multiple simultaneous full-performant 3D Linux sessions from one high performance GPU server.

    NICE DCV CENTOS 7 Desktop supports high end remote 3D access for e.g. HPC pre-/post-processing applications. Includes support for remote USB devices and file transfer. NVIDIA drivers pre-installed for optimal remote 3D experience.

    On AWS, NICE DCV provides the streaming protocol e.g. used by Amazon Appstream 2.0 and AWS RoboMaker.

    Highlights

    • Remote Performance: Responsive and secure streaming experience allowing customers to run graphics intensive applications remotely removing the need for expensive dedicated workstations or transferring large amounts of data. Based on NICE DCV from AWS.
    • Secure TLS encrypted leading-edge 3D remote desktop connection on high-end NVIDIA based cloud GPUs. Includes remote USB support and file transfer.
    • Centos 7 desktop with full superuser access to add and manage own applications. Supports multiple simultaneous full-performant 3D Linux Desktops.

    Details

    Delivery method

    Delivery option
    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Latest version

    Operating system
    CentOs 7.9

    Typical total price

    This estimate is based on use of the seller's recommended configuration (g4dn.2xlarge) in the US East (N. Virginia) Region. View pricing details

    $0.782/hour

    Features and programs

    Financing for AWS Marketplace purchases

    AWS Marketplace now accepts line of credit payments through the PNC Vendor Finance program. This program is available to select AWS customers in the US, excluding NV, NC, ND, TN, & VT.
    Financing for AWS Marketplace purchases

    Pricing

    CENTOS 7 Desktop - NICE DCV for 3D NVIDIA-GPU based graphics instances

     Info
    Pricing is based on actual usage, with charges varying according to how much you consume. Subscriptions have no end date and may be canceled any time. Alternatively, you can pay upfront for a contract, which typically covering your anticipated usage for the contract duration. Any usage beyond contract will incur additional usage-based costs.
    Additional AWS infrastructure costs may apply. Use the AWS Pricing Calculator  to estimate your infrastructure costs.

    Usage costs (18)

     Info
    Instance type
    Product cost/hour
    EC2 cost/hour
    Total/hour
    g3.4xlarge
    $0.03
    $1.14
    $1.17
    g3.8xlarge
    $0.04
    $2.28
    $2.32
    g3.16xlarge
    $0.06
    $4.56
    $4.62
    g3s.xlarge
    $0.02
    $0.75
    $0.77
    g4dn.xlarge
    $0.02
    $0.526
    $0.546
    g4dn.2xlarge
    Recommended
    $0.03
    $0.752
    $0.782
    g4dn.4xlarge
    $0.04
    $1.204
    $1.244
    g4dn.8xlarge
    $0.04
    $2.176
    $2.216
    g4dn.12xlarge
    $0.06
    $3.912
    $3.972
    g4dn.16xlarge
    $0.06
    $4.352
    $4.412

    Additional AWS infrastructure costs

    Type
    Cost
    EBS General Purpose SSD (gp2) volumes
    $0.10/per GB/month of provisioned storage

    Vendor refund policy

    No refunds

    Legal

    Vendor terms and conditions

    Upon subscribing to this product, you must acknowledge and agree to the terms and conditions outlined in the vendor's End User License Agreement (EULA) .

    Content disclaimer

    Vendors are responsible for their product descriptions and other product content. AWS does not warrant that vendors' product descriptions or other product content are accurate, complete, reliable, current, or error-free.

    Usage information

     Info

    Delivery details

    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.

    Version release notes

    Includes NICE DCV 2023.1-16388 with redirection of in-session WebAuthN requests, other new features and patches. More information can be found here: https://www.ni-sp.com/9-11-2023-nice-releases-dcv-2023-1-including-new-features/ 

    Additional details

    Usage instructions

    1. Make sure the instance security groups allow inbound traffic to TCP port 8443 and 22 (optionally UDP port 8443).
    2. Configure the instance to have the role to access the license file as per https://docs.thinkwithwp.com/dcv/latest/adminguide/setting-up-license.html 
    3. Connect to your remote machine with ssh -i <your-pem-key> centos@<public-dns>
    4. Set the password for the user "centos" with sudo passwd centos. This is the password you will use to log in to DCV.
    5. Create a DCV virtual session using the command 'dcv create-session --storage-root %home% session1' including file transfer support, 'session1' is the session name (https://docs.thinkwithwp.com/dcv/latest/adminguide/managing-sessions.html )
    6. Connect to your remote machine with the NICE DCV native client or web client using https://<public_dns>:8443

    Please note: you can start different concurrent remote desktop sessions for multiple users which makes DCV a very efficient remote desktop technology efficiently sharing the GPU and other resources among user sessions.

    To connect via QUIC/UDP for highly interactive remote desktop experience and in case of difficult network conditions please see our online user guide. With DCV 2021 and later QUIC/UDP will be used by default together with the DCV client. In the DCV client connection settings you can select TCP as well.

    Please be careful with upgrading the kernel as it might cause issues with the nVidia driver.

    Support

    Vendor support

    Free support is available through forums (https://forums.thinkwithwp.com/forum.jspa?forumID=366 ), technical documentation (https://thinkwithwp.com/documentation/dcv/ ) and NI SP Tips and Tricks (https://www.ni-sp.com/nice-dcv-tips-and-tricks/ ). AWS Support customers can open a support case with AWS (https://thinkwithwp.com/premiumsupport/ ).

    AWS infrastructure support

    AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.

    Similar products

    Customer reviews

    Ratings and reviews

     Info
    5
    1 ratings
    5 star
    4 star
    3 star
    2 star
    1 star
    100%
    0%
    0%
    0%
    0%
    1 AWS reviews
    Alex K.

    Works Instantly!

    Reviewed on Mar 15, 2022
    Purchase verified by AWS

    No setup time! We are impressed by the performance running Ansys in the cloud! Great performance with multiple desktops from different users on the same graphics instance!

    View all reviews