# Requirements You'll need a machine on which you can run code-server. You can use a physical machine you have, or you can use a VM on GCP/AWS. At the minimum, we recommend: - 1 GB of RAM - 2 CPU cores You can use any Linux distribution, but [our docs](https://coder.com/docs/code-server/v3.11.0/guide) assume that you're using Debian hosted by Google Cloud (see the following section for instructions on setting this up). Your environment must have WebSockets enabled, since code-server uses WebSockets for communication between the browser and the server. ## Set up a VM on Google Cloud The following steps walk you through setting up a VM running Debian using Google Cloud (though you are welcome to use any machine or VM provider). If you're [signing up with Google](https://console.cloud.google.com/getting-started) for the first time, you should get a 12-month trial with $300 of credits. After you sign up and create a new Google Cloud Provider (GCP) project, create a new Compute Engine VM instance: 1. Using the sidebar, navigate to **Compute Engine** > **VM Instances**. 2. Click **Create Instance**. 3. Provide a **name** for new instance. 4. Choose the **region** that's closest to you based on [GCP ping](https://gcping.com/). 5. Choose a **zone** (any option is fine). 6. We recommend choose an **E2 series instance** from the [general-purpose family](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/machine-types#general_purpose). 7. Change the instance type to **custom** and set at least **2 cores** and **2 GB of RAM**. You can add more resources if desired, though you can also edit your instance at a later point. 8. Though optional, we highly recommend switching the persistent disk to an SSD with at least 32 GB. To do so, click **change** under **Boot Disk**. Then, change the type to **SSD Persistent Disk**, and set the size to **32**. (You can also grow your disk at a later date). 9. Go to **Networking** > **Networking Interfaces** and edit the existing interface to use a static internal IP. Click **Done** to save. 10. If you don't have a [project-wide SSH key](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/instances/adding-removing-ssh-keys#project-wide), go to **Security** > **SSH Keys** to add your public key. 11. Click **Create** to proceed. Notes: - To lower costs, you can shut down your server when you're not using it. - We recommend using the `gcloud cli` to avoid using the GCP Dashboard if possible.