C2: Insanely Affordable x86-64 Servers
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@aaronstuder said:
@johnhooks said:
You can run different distros. But I think you need to match systemd and init between host and container though.
How would check that? I am a huge CentOS7 fan
You could always start with CentOS 7 for containers rather than building them on Ubuntu.
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@scottalanmiller Scaleway only offers Ubuntu
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Would you use Scaleway?
For a 2G VM on Vultr I can get 32GB on Scaleway.....
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@aaronstuder said:
Would you use Scaleway?
For a 2G VM on Vultr I can get 32GB on Scaleway.....
I would start out with their starter server for $2.99 a month and see how the interface and reliability is before you commit to a big project.
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@aaronstuder said:
Would you use Scaleway?
Dont really have experience with them. So I can't say one way or the other. For month to month pricing, no reason not to try them out.
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If these are physical boxes, the month-to-month pricing is similar to what I'm paying at another provider for bare metal, but I get 1TB of HDD as opposed to SSD.
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This was insanley affordale - I used to run cc2.8xlarge aws instances for hours and it cost me fractions of a penny.
RAM, ECU, Cores, Storage, Bandwith 60.5, 88, 32, 3360GB, 10Gbit/s
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I've been using Scaleway since they announced the C1 beta platform. I recently tested the new offerings and they all run on Avoton processors - the Atom C2750, to be exact. Disk speed was a bit underwhelming, but I think they use "shared" disks.
Another company that I would recommend for @aaronstuder is impactvps.com, they are running a 50% off sale on their "resource pools". Check out today's post on lowendbox: https://www.lowendtalk.com/discussion/78146/impact-vps-1-year-anniversery-special-50-off-now-with-3-locations-in-a-single-package#latest
You could build 20 VM's with 512mb ram each for $30/month; that's $1.50 per VM
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@papercape Thanks!
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@papercape It says nested virtualization is not allowed. Would containers be considered nested virtualization?
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@aaronstuder said:
@papercape It says nested virtualization is not allowed. Would containers be considered nested virtualization?
Oh, on the VPS? Technically no, not by the book. But they might choose to claim that that is what it means.
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Totally would be nested, I overlooked that detail
Nested in that you'd have a container inside a container. I may be misunderstanding though.
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@papercape said:
Totally would be nested, I overlooked that detail
Not technically. It's not actual virtualization. So neither virtual nor nested.
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@papercape said:
Totally would be nested, I overlooked that detail
Are you sure? As @scottalanmiller points out, it's not technically nested virtualization...
Do you have any affiliation with them?
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Normally you cannot get the IP addresses that you need, though, with these services, making it rather pointless unless you plan to only use ZeroTier and a private LAN with no public access.
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@scottalanmiller Ah, yeah I am just guessing. I'm only just starting with managing my own vm's.
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What is a VDR? VDR stands for Virtual Dedicated Resources. Unlike a standard VPS package, you can split the resources you pay for into as many servers of any size you want. (Per VPS Limits HERE)
Have 12GB of RAM? You can create
- 1 x 12GB server with 4IPs
- 3 x 4GB servers with 1 IP each and 2 with 2 IPs
- 1 x 6GB + 2 x 3GB servers
The combinations are endless
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@aaronstuder No affiliation, I just love their product.
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@aaronstuder I have the VDR20 plan. The VM packages sell out rather quickly.
I have run disk IO tests and some of the results are nearing 600mb/s disk write speed. I don't know if that's with caching though. I can post the code i've used.