
Work with your own AWS account from a cloud VS Code workspace. You bring your AWS access keys at launch, and the workspace connects to your account so you can manage and build on AWS straight from the browser.
Enter your AWS access key and secret at launch and the workspace connects to your account. Resources live in your account, not ours.
The full cloud editor with an integrated terminal, so you can run AWS commands and write code without anything installed locally.
Clone, commit and push from the terminal, or connect a GitHub repo whenever you're ready.
Skip the local install and config. The workspace opens ready to use, with guidance on finding your AWS keys during launch.
AWS is a cloud platform used to host applications, store data and run a wide range of services. To work with it you normally need credentials and a local environment set up with the AWS tooling.
This workspace removes the local setup. It connects to your own AWS account using access keys you provide at launch, and gives you a cloud VS Code editor to work from. Anything you create runs in your account and is billed by AWS, exactly as it would if you worked from your own machine.
When you launch, the form asks for an AWS Access Key Id and a Secret Access Key. There's an instructions dialog to help you locate or create those keys in the AWS console if you're not sure where they are.
Those credentials connect the workspace to your account. Because everything happens against your own AWS account, you keep full ownership and control of whatever you create, and you manage costs through your normal AWS billing.
A cloud VS Code editor with an integrated terminal, wired up to talk to your AWS account. From there you can run commands against AWS, write and edit code, and use Git. The workspace boots in about a minute.
Manage and explore your AWS account from the browser, run quick experiments without configuring your laptop, or pick up work on a shared machine. Since it uses your own credentials, you work with the same access you already have in AWS.
Your own. You provide your AWS access keys at launch, and the workspace connects to your account. Any resources you create belong to you and are billed by AWS.
An AWS Access Key Id and a Secret Access Key from your AWS account. The launch screen includes an instructions dialog to help you find or create them.
No. The workspace runs in the browser with VS Code and a terminal already set up, so there's nothing to install on your machine.
Anything you provision runs in your own AWS account, so AWS bills you for it through your normal account, separate from OneCompiler Studio.
About a minute. Once it's up, the workspace is connected to your account and ready to use.
No, the AWS template is a paid OneCompiler Studio template and needs a paid plan. Templates that are free are marked as such, and you can upgrade from the pricing page. AWS usage is billed separately by AWS.