Quick n' safe solution:
As you're running the development server, which isn't meant for production. I would say the best way to connect to this app from just your own machine, is with an ssh tunnel:
ssh -L 5000:localhost:5000 ec2_addr
You can then point your web-browser to http://localhost:5000/
on your client machine, which will be tunneled to port 5000 on the EC2 instance. This is a fast way to connect to a Flask (or any) server on a remote Linux box. The tunnel is destroyed when you stop that ssh session.
Longer method:
I'd like to access the exposed routes remotely using my aws ec2's public IP or hostname.
The timeout isn't because it's running in a virtual environment: You'll probably find it's because you need to assign Security Groups to your instance through the EC2 console. These allow you to open certain ports on the public IP.
See this other answer I wrote, regarding EC2 security groups.
However be careful. You shouldn't expose the development server in this manner. There are a number of tutorials like this one from digital ocean which cover deploying a flask app behind gunicorn
and nginx
with a Let's Encrypt
SSL cert. You should find yourself in a position where your security group exposes port 80 and 443, with requests to port 80 being redirected to the https
URL by the nginx configuration.
If this sounds like a whole load of hassle / you don't have Linux skills / you don't want to learn Linux skills, then these are common reasons people pick managed services like AWS Elastic Beanstalk, to which you can deploy your flask app (official guide), without having to worry about server config. Heroku is another (non AWS) service which offers such features.
It really depends on what you require / wish to gain. Stay safe!