this might be a good time to point out that VirMach uses ColoCrossing for almost all of their locations ... (just in case anybody might have missed that important detail).
While I'm inclined to believe that they are not a summerhost or typical CC scam/front company, it may be fair to assume that they do have a significant relationship with CC - and I understand that many people here would like to draw a hard line to make a clean break from the ugly BS coming out of CC for however many years - that being one of the things that lead to this very forum rising up from the ethical hellscape of the old one ...
So I do respect and welcome the comments such as for instance the most recent one from @vpsgeek above. I'm not going to pretend to know so much about the bigger picture, and am just sort of following my gut here (maybe not unlike someone setting up a McDonalds at a vegan cooking teach-in) ... I guess I'd be most interested to read more informed comments to get better insights with regard to VirMach's business practices and whatever philosophical perspective on the ethics of doing business with them, if there is any more nuanced analysis that might emerge. Or not. I'm okay with the commentary, just would prefer that it doesn't get too hyperbolic or repetitive. But Informative or insightful or even cathartically hilarious digs are all good in my book, so please do feel free to chime in if that's what's on your mind.
Anyhoo ... I've been camping on their flash sale page via @FAT32's excellent https://virmach19.fat32.top site. And finally bit on a $48.60 per year deal in Seattle (which I understand may not actually be with CC? Bonus! But still no IPv6.)
I think this was one of their better flash sale deals this year - for my needs at least.
$48.60 got me 10 GB ram / 4 vcores / 30 GB ssd - and SolusVM control panel which made for an easy install of Debian 9 via ISO - no glitches in that process.
The ssd has so far been fairly consistent for sequential write speed in a range between 120 MB/s and 160 MB/s (I am logging a 256 dd every 10 minutes over a 24 hour period to see if any downward trend as the node gets loaded up with new users)
CPU is generic QEMU clocked at 2.1 GHz with very few useful flags enabled.
if I'm remembering correctly, I noticed up to 20% cpu steal when running the multi-core part of the bench. Will be interested to see if that is a persistent condition on this node.
I'm going to idle it for a few days, then start messing around with the system in earnest. Probably will let the dust settle for a couple weeks before checking in with a low-priority support ticket to inquire about enabling aes flag to facilitate full-disk encryption and ssh connections.
And that's where I'm at with it so far - about as expected, getting pretty much what I paid for: a (presumably) stable system with a lot of RAM and generally adequate low-load disk and CPU in a west coast USA location for less than $50 per year.
@uptime said:
The ssd has so far been fairly consistent for sequential write speed in a range between 120 MB/s and 160 MB/s (I am logging a 256 dd every 10 minutes over a 24 hour period to see if any downward trend as the node gets loaded up with new users)
Just so you know, you'll eventually get asked to stop it, or get turned off. That still impacts others, and once the smoke clears, smackdowns for overuse will be noticed on a per-VM basis. Since there's no non-realtime way to monitor your use, I'd figure you were probably torrenting, or lying about running benchmarks every 10 minutes (who the fuck does that?) and bitch you out for it.
@uptime said:
this might be a good time to point out that VirMach uses ColoCrossing for almost all of their locations ... (just in case anybody might have missed that important detail).
While I'm inclined to believe that they are not a summerhost or typical CC scam/front company, it may be fair to assume that they do have a significant relationship with CC - and I understand that many people here would like to draw a hard line to make a clean break from the ugly BS coming out of CC for however many years - that being one of the things that lead to this very forum rising up from the ethical hellscape of the old one ...
So I do respect and welcome the comments such as for instance the most recent one from @vpsgeek above. I'm not going to pretend to know so much about the bigger picture, and am just sort of following my gut here (maybe not unlike someone setting up a McDonalds at a vegan cooking teach-in) ... I guess I'd be most interested to read more informed comments to get better insights with regard to VirMach's business practices and whatever philosophical perspective on the ethics of doing business with them, if there is any more nuanced analysis that might emerge. Or not. I'm okay with the commentary, just would prefer that it doesn't get too hyperbolic or repetitive. But Informative or insightful or even cathartically hilarious digs are all good in my book, so please do feel free to chime in if that's what's on your mind.
Anyhoo ... I've been camping on their flash sale page via @FAT32's excellent https://virmach19.fat32.top site. And finally bit on a $48.60 per year deal in Seattle (which I understand may not actually be with CC? Bonus! But still no IPv6.)
I think this was one of their better flash sale deals this year - for my needs at least.
$48.60 got me 10 GB ram / 4 vcores / 30 GB ssd - and SolusVM control panel which made for an easy install of Debian 9 via ISO - no glitches in that process.
The ssd has so far been fairly consistent for sequential write speed in a range between 120 MB/s and 160 MB/s (I am logging a 256 dd every 10 minutes over a 24 hour period to see if any downward trend as the node gets loaded up with new users)
CPU is generic QEMU clocked at 2.1 GHz with very few useful flags enabled.
if I'm remembering correctly, I noticed up to 20% cpu steal when running the multi-core part of the bench. Will be interested to see if that is a persistent condition on this node.
I'm going to idle it for a few days, then start messing around with the system in earnest. Probably will let the dust settle for a couple weeks before checking in with a low-priority support ticket to inquire about enabling aes flag to facilitate full-disk encryption and ssh connections.
And that's where I'm at with it so far - about as expected, getting pretty much what I paid for: a (presumably) stable system with a lot of RAM and generally adequate low-load disk and CPU in a west coast USA location for less than $50 per year.
I think they don't allocate full threads but who knows
@uptime said:
The ssd has so far been fairly consistent for sequential write speed in a range between 120 MB/s and 160 MB/s (I am logging a 256 dd every 10 minutes over a 24 hour period to see if any downward trend as the node gets loaded up with new users)
Just so you know, you'll eventually get asked to stop it, or get turned off. That still impacts others, and once the smoke clears, smackdowns for overuse will be noticed on a per-VM basis. Since there's no non-realtime way to monitor your use, I'd figure you were probably torrenting, or lying about running benchmarks every 10 minutes (who the fuck does that?) and bitch you out for it.
That said, I do not represent Virmach.
hmmm ... well, alrighty then - thanks for that perspective (I do appreciate it!)
While I have yet to get any complaints from any of the dozen or so providers I may or may not have impacted with this extended intermittent disk test - I will be mindful to check in with support before doing these tests in the future. And - thinking about it some more now - it may make good sense to scale back the size of most of the disk writes to less than 256 MB for the intermittent samples, and maybe also add just a couple larger writes (something like 1 or 2 GB) to see if the filesystem / disk caching is a significant factor.
I do have some vague awareness of the intricacies of benchmarking disk performance - this is certainly one of the simplest (and possibly lamest) things I know how to do to get a rough indication to compare on the different systems I'm evaluating.
For what it's worth - my reasoning for considering this as a relatively gentle benchmark is roughly as follows: cumulative activity is about 1.5 GB per hour - generally taking much less than 3 seconds out of every 600, so under 0.5% utilization - if time spent is any reasonable measure (which it admittedly may not be) ... for a total of 36 GB written in a 24 hour period. Which in this case is a bit more than the 30 GB SSD size .... but a small fraction of the 7 TB bandwich allocation for the month. Not that I want to conflate disk i/o with network activity, just taking into account the relative scale of the activity.
I guess I'd be more concerned if I were doing the disk write tests 24/7 rather than a few times a year. But you're right - it may be pushing acceptable limits. Anyway, some good food for thought and motivation for a less intensive approach going forward - thank you for sharing that insight.
@uptime said:
I guess I'd be more concerned if I were doing the disk write tests 24/7 rather than a few times a year. But you're right - it may be pushing acceptable limits. Anyway, some good food for thought and motivation for a less intensive approach going forward - thank you for sharing that insight.
As well you should. Just keep in mind that they're one of the cheapest options, and I have no idea how they make money.. but before they refined their monitors, I got a nastygram for doing an OS install reformat. It's nowhere near that level now, but common hard writes with implicit flushing several times an hour do affect other users.
Lol, it's wednesday and cyber monday flash sale is still going on. I've had a few of these (thanks WSS) and they have been solid, though cpu speed hasn't been the best. I'm down to just one now, running a lightweight service, so performance isn't an issue and reliability has been great.
If anyone's looking for some fresh hell of the San José flash deal persuasion ... https://virmach19.fat32.top would be a real good place to be right about now
Crap, I could have used some of that. There's some more up now but the current one isn't what I want. Will keep watching. Should set up some way to monitor the bot and alert on istuff of interest.
@willie lol the party is just getting started ... the billing server has apparently caught fire a few times,. captchas and 502s are flowing like cheap wine down the drain on the way to some putrid sewer to slake the thirst of 10,000 PRC zombie bots pitching a fit ....
To mix metaphors a bit more, imagine a fireworks display fueled mainly by low-grade potassium and amyl nitrate, punctuated by occasional bursts of high explosive.
tl;dr - the finale is when it gets interesting - but it can be a wallet-draining guessing game until the porky pig gif appears if you stumble into the action without a full appreciation of that FOMO dynamic
anyhoo - what specs are you looking for? I'll try to keep an eye out for something suitable while I'm dodging the buffaloe stampede
@uhu said:
Sounds like they are happy for me to do it. Sweepstake on when they complain?
Just tell them so they know to set it so you don't kill the hypervisor with spurious logfiles. This really isn't that hard to do, and you'll get hated less when it's tracked back to your VPS.
@uhu said:
Sounds like they are happy for me to do it. Sweepstake on when they complain?
Just tell them so they know to set it so you don't kill the hypervisor with spurious logfiles. This really isn't that hard to do, and you'll get hated less when it's tracked back to your VPS.
@vyas - well okay, $6 is $6 ... that's generally how it starts.
but whatever you do, just be glad you at least will never, ever, ever find yourself spending another 66 hours chasing down some demented egg-laying easter bunny running wild in a buried thread on the old forum ...
@uptime said: @vyas - well okay, $6 is $6 ... that's generally how it starts.
but whatever you do, just be glad you at least will never, ever, ever find yourself spending another 66 hours chasing down some demented egg-laying easter bunny running wild in a buried thread on the old forum ...
lol The Sunny Side Up Two Egg Omelette was too much for me.
Comments
Never used them because they are CC clients. Same applies to every other host which is a CC client.
Recommend: SmallWeb|BuyVM|Linode|RamNode
I played nice and disabled it and asked for permission. I'm getting old in my old age.
Now I have two to sell. :-/
It wisnae me! A big boy done it and ran away.
NVMe2G for life! until death (the end is nigh)
this might be a good time to point out that VirMach uses ColoCrossing for almost all of their locations ... (just in case anybody might have missed that important detail).
While I'm inclined to believe that they are not a summerhost or typical CC scam/front company, it may be fair to assume that they do have a significant relationship with CC - and I understand that many people here would like to draw a hard line to make a clean break from the ugly BS coming out of CC for however many years - that being one of the things that lead to this very forum rising up from the ethical hellscape of the old one ...
So I do respect and welcome the comments such as for instance the most recent one from @vpsgeek above. I'm not going to pretend to know so much about the bigger picture, and am just sort of following my gut here (maybe not unlike someone setting up a McDonalds at a vegan cooking teach-in) ... I guess I'd be most interested to read more informed comments to get better insights with regard to VirMach's business practices and whatever philosophical perspective on the ethics of doing business with them, if there is any more nuanced analysis that might emerge. Or not. I'm okay with the commentary, just would prefer that it doesn't get too hyperbolic or repetitive. But Informative or insightful or even cathartically hilarious digs are all good in my book, so please do feel free to chime in if that's what's on your mind.
Anyhoo ... I've been camping on their flash sale page via @FAT32's excellent https://virmach19.fat32.top site. And finally bit on a $48.60 per year deal in Seattle (which I understand may not actually be with CC? Bonus! But still no IPv6.)
I think this was one of their better flash sale deals this year - for my needs at least.
$48.60 got me 10 GB ram / 4 vcores / 30 GB ssd - and SolusVM control panel which made for an easy install of Debian 9 via ISO - no glitches in that process.
The ssd has so far been fairly consistent for sequential write speed in a range between 120 MB/s and 160 MB/s (I am logging a 256
dd
every 10 minutes over a 24 hour period to see if any downward trend as the node gets loaded up with new users)CPU is generic QEMU clocked at 2.1 GHz with very few useful flags enabled.
geekbench 4: https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/14992890
if I'm remembering correctly, I noticed up to 20% cpu steal when running the multi-core part of the bench. Will be interested to see if that is a persistent condition on this node.
I'm going to idle it for a few days, then start messing around with the system in earnest. Probably will let the dust settle for a couple weeks before checking in with a low-priority support ticket to inquire about enabling
aes
flag to facilitate full-disk encryption and ssh connections.And that's where I'm at with it so far - about as expected, getting pretty much what I paid for: a (presumably) stable system with a lot of RAM and generally adequate low-load disk and CPU in a west coast USA location for less than $50 per year.
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
How about the other way around? Ipv6 to ipv4
I bench YABS 24/7/365 unless it's a leap year.
Just so you know, you'll eventually get asked to stop it, or get turned off. That still impacts others, and once the smoke clears, smackdowns for overuse will be noticed on a per-VM basis. Since there's no non-realtime way to monitor your use, I'd figure you were probably torrenting, or lying about running benchmarks every 10 minutes (who the fuck does that?) and bitch you out for it.
That said, I do not represent Virmach.
My pronouns are like/subscribe.
I think they don't allocate full threads but who knows
I bench YABS 24/7/365 unless it's a leap year.
hmmm ... well, alrighty then - thanks for that perspective (I do appreciate it!)
While I have yet to get any complaints from any of the dozen or so providers I may or may not have impacted with this extended intermittent disk test - I will be mindful to check in with support before doing these tests in the future. And - thinking about it some more now - it may make good sense to scale back the size of most of the disk writes to less than 256 MB for the intermittent samples, and maybe also add just a couple larger writes (something like 1 or 2 GB) to see if the filesystem / disk caching is a significant factor.
I do have some vague awareness of the intricacies of benchmarking disk performance - this is certainly one of the simplest (and possibly lamest) things I know how to do to get a rough indication to compare on the different systems I'm evaluating.
For what it's worth - my reasoning for considering this as a relatively gentle benchmark is roughly as follows: cumulative activity is about 1.5 GB per hour - generally taking much less than 3 seconds out of every 600, so under 0.5% utilization - if time spent is any reasonable measure (which it admittedly may not be) ... for a total of 36 GB written in a 24 hour period. Which in this case is a bit more than the 30 GB SSD size .... but a small fraction of the 7 TB bandwich allocation for the month. Not that I want to conflate disk i/o with network activity, just taking into account the relative scale of the activity.
I guess I'd be more concerned if I were doing the disk write tests 24/7 rather than a few times a year. But you're right - it may be pushing acceptable limits. Anyway, some good food for thought and motivation for a less intensive approach going forward - thank you for sharing that insight.
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
As well you should. Just keep in mind that they're one of the cheapest options, and I have no idea how they make money.. but before they refined their monitors, I got a nastygram for doing an OS install reformat. It's nowhere near that level now, but common hard writes with implicit flushing several times an hour do affect other users.
My pronouns are like/subscribe.
indeed and indubitably - I realize now these day-long assays have been sloppy and gratuitous.
I guess a rule of thumb to estimate impact on the node is simply to consider the possibility of 100 (or more) other users doing the exact same thing.
As an amateur expert in the Dunder-Mifflin effect ... I find myself now beset with much doubt, and rendered (temporarily) insensate.
And I thank you for that.
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Lol, it's wednesday and cyber monday flash sale is still going on. I've had a few of these (thanks WSS) and they have been solid, though cpu speed hasn't been the best. I'm down to just one now, running a lightweight service, so performance isn't an issue and reliability has been great.
Maybe the bot revolted and echoed
Bitch I run this show !
I think they didn't sell enough. Think most of them should be 2660s
I bench YABS 24/7/365 unless it's a leap year.
You mean creating an IPv4 address on IPv6 only VPS? No idea. Probably not.
I wonder if virmach is impound yard of all those deadpooled CC summerhosts' server gear?
boooriiing!!
Hi!
If anyone's looking for some fresh hell of the San José flash deal persuasion ... https://virmach19.fat32.top would be a real good place to be right about now
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Crap, I could have used some of that. There's some more up now but the current one isn't what I want. Will keep watching. Should set up some way to monitor the bot and alert on istuff of interest.
@willie lol the party is just getting started ... the billing server has apparently caught fire a few times,. captchas and 502s are flowing like cheap wine down the drain on the way to some putrid sewer to slake the thirst of 10,000 PRC zombie bots pitching a fit ....
To mix metaphors a bit more, imagine a fireworks display fueled mainly by low-grade potassium and amyl nitrate, punctuated by occasional bursts of high explosive.
tl;dr - the finale is when it gets interesting - but it can be a wallet-draining guessing game until the porky pig gif appears if you stumble into the action without a full appreciation of that FOMO dynamic
anyhoo - what specs are you looking for? I'll try to keep an eye out for something suitable while I'm dodging the buffaloe stampede
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
It's a 502 and captcha hell right now
Get the best deal on your next VPS or Shared/Reseller hosting from RacknerdTracker.com - The original aff garden.
battle of the bots
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Sounds like they are happy for me to do it. Sweepstake on when they complain?
Just tell them so they know to set it so you don't kill the hypervisor with spurious logfiles. This really isn't that hard to do, and you'll get hated less when it's tracked back to your VPS.
My pronouns are like/subscribe.
They replied in a ticket, so that'll do me.
Grrr... guess where I spent 6 dollars. Oh well, that's three beers worth of money .
blog | exploring visually |
@vyas - well okay, $6 is $6 ... that's generally how it starts.
but whatever you do, just be glad you at least will never, ever, ever find yourself spending another 66 hours chasing down some demented egg-laying easter bunny running wild in a buried thread on the old forum ...
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Okay, so now I've got a VM in Piscataway. Going to find out what to do with it.
lol The Sunny Side Up Two Egg Omelette was too much for me.
blog | exploring visually |
Same here, obviously you have to idle it.