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Leaseweb vs Hetzner
Leaseweb €8.99/m
[root@nl ~]# (wget -qO- wget.racing/nench.sh | bash; wget -qO- wget.racing/nench.sh | bash) 2>&1 | tee nench.log
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 01:26:54 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon E312xx (Sandy Bridge)
CPU cores: 4
Frequency: 2199.998 MHz
RAM: 3.7G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-862.14.4.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
vda 80G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
2.561 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
7.016 seconds
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
2.474 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 361.0 us / 756.5 us / 10.3 ms / 437.5 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 1.50 k requests in 5.00 s, 373.8 MiB, 298 iops, 74.7 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 74.77 MiB/s
2nd run: 74.86 MiB/s
3rd run: 74.86 MiB/s
average: 74.83 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 37.48.78.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 69.57 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 111.66 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 13.79 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 58.37 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 15.29 MiB/s
No IPv6 connectivity detected
-------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 01:28:33 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon E312xx (Sandy Bridge)
CPU cores: 4
Frequency: 2199.998 MHz
RAM: 3.7G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-862.14.4.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
vda 80G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
2.614 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
7.227 seconds
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
1.960 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 293.7 us / 654.4 us / 201.2 ms / 2.33 ms
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 1.53 k requests in 5.00 s, 382.8 MiB, 306 iops, 76.5 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 74.86 MiB/s
2nd run: 75.05 MiB/s
3rd run: 74.86 MiB/s
average: 74.93 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 37.48.78.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 76.17 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 111.49 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 14.65 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 54.26 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 15.23 MiB/s
-------------------------------------------------
Hetzner €4.90/m
[root@centos-4gb-nbg ~]# (wget -qO- wget.racing/nench.sh | bash; wget -qO- wget.racing/nench.sh | bash) 2>&1 | tee nench.log
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 01:26:01 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon Processor (Skylake, IBRS)
CPU cores: 2
Frequency: 2100.000 MHz
RAM: 3.6G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
sda 38.2G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
1.952 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
1.334 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 46.6 us / 78.0 us / 10.4 ms / 129.8 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 19.2 k requests in 5.00 s, 4.69 GiB, 3.84 k iops, 959.6 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 254.63 MiB/s
2nd run: 300.41 MiB/s
3rd run: 270.84 MiB/s
average: 275.29 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 116.203.50.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 100.80 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 109.29 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 6.43 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 43.58 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 7.40 MiB/s
IPv6 speedtests
your IPv6: 2a01:4f8:1c1c:xxxx
Leaseweb (NL): 116.35 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 0.00 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 47.87 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 3.59 MiB/s
-------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 01:27:15 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon Processor (Skylake, IBRS)
CPU cores: 2
Frequency: 2100.000 MHz
RAM: 3.6G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
sda 38.2G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
1.858 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
1.206 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 42.2 us / 73.4 us / 6.91 ms / 89.1 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 18.3 k requests in 5.00 s, 4.47 GiB, 3.66 k iops, 915.0 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 245.09 MiB/s
2nd run: 292.78 MiB/s
3rd run: 279.43 MiB/s
average: 272.43 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 116.203.50.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 131.98 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 110.99 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 9.04 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 44.23 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 7.75 MiB/s
IPv6 speedtests
your IPv6: 2a01:4f8:1c1c:xxxx
Leaseweb (NL): 110.47 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 0.00 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 46.23 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 4.01 MiB/s
-------------------------------------------------
Hetzner €2.49/m
[root@centos-2gb-nbg ~]# (curl -s wget.racing/nench.sh | bash; curl -s wget.racing/nench.sh | bash) 2>&1 | tee nench.log
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 02:19:09 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon Processor (Skylake, IBRS)
CPU cores: 1
Frequency: 2099.998 MHz
RAM: 1.7G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
sda 19.1G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
2.068 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
1.249 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 46.1 us / 75.2 us / 11.7 ms / 107.5 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 14.2 k requests in 5.00 s, 3.47 GiB, 2.84 k iops, 709.9 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 274.66 MiB/s
2nd run: 368.12 MiB/s
3rd run: 312.81 MiB/s
average: 318.53 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 116.203.50.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 142.35 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 74.03 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 7.78 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 42.57 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 7.52 MiB/s
IPv6 speedtests
your IPv6: 2a01:4f8:1c1c:xxxx
Leaseweb (NL): 114.00 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 0.00 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 45.97 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 3.42 MiB/s
-------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------
nench.sh v2018.04.14 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
benchmark timestamp: 2019-01-14 02:20:23 UTC
-------------------------------------------------
Processor: Intel Xeon Processor (Skylake, IBRS)
CPU cores: 1
Frequency: 2099.998 MHz
RAM: 1.7G
Swap: -
Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 x86_64
Disks:
sda 19.1G HDD
CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
2.142 seconds
CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
1.277 seconds
ioping: seek rate
min/avg/max/mdev = 42.8 us / 74.0 us / 5.85 ms / 71.2 us
ioping: sequential read speed
generated 15.4 k requests in 5.00 s, 3.75 GiB, 3.07 k iops, 767.7 MiB/s
dd: sequential write speed
1st run: 305.18 MiB/s
2nd run: 351.91 MiB/s
3rd run: 371.93 MiB/s
average: 343.00 MiB/s
IPv4 speedtests
your IPv4: 116.203.50.xxxx
Cachefly CDN: 142.77 MiB/s
Leaseweb (NL): 71.24 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 7.46 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 42.91 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 6.10 MiB/s
IPv6 speedtests
your IPv6: 2a01:4f8:1c1c:xxxx
Leaseweb (NL): 78.77 MiB/s
Softlayer DAL (US): 0.00 MiB/s
Online.net (FR): 48.18 MiB/s
OVH BHS (CA): 2.95 MiB/s
-------------------------------------------------
What do you think?
Thanked by 1eol
Comments
I don't need to say more.
I will simply call @eol.
Wait, ur still using leaseweb vps?
I am hungry.
yes, I'm using leaseweb for a network and much loyal NL law
probably nginx's proxy_pass will save me some bucks)
Hetzner €2.49/m
Ok. poll is bugged and Vanilla is outdated. Somebody is sorry!
EDIT: the poll was deleted, it's not working as it should
Leaseweb Amsterdam still is one of my favourite locations for VPS. Yes, they are more expensive, but from my experience it's worth the extra money sometimes. Hetzner rocks! Leaseweb rocks!
In terms of quality of network (worldwide) clouvider beats both.
Sometimes I observe weird routings in Leaseweb.
No. Check this by ping.pe. I think they are using the same network
Aruba €1 Slough, Berkshire, UK
These tests are useless and unreliable since you test from datacenters targeted for hosting.
Just take a random "consumer" network like this one in the UAE
http://lg.emix.net.ae/lg/
Enter mirror.ams1.nl.leaseweb.net and select traceroute. You will see that route from the UAE to NL goes through the US. The route crosses the ocean twice
I think this is a big mistake, all traffic should go through Thailand as Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun did from SA
Agreed.
Furthermore I only accept secure NSA inspected packets.
Shutdown, bro, they do not inspect anything. Disconnect from the Internets immediately!
Of course not.
Now?
only women or men too?
Discriminating post reported to Interpol.
In my country we say to let a woman use the Internets is like to let a monkey fly a plane, very dangerous.
i don't think you can be proud of your country!
I am very proud of my country. Thanks to the latest reforms, women can now travel on inside of the bus, homosexuals no longer have to wear blue hats, and age of consent has been raised to eight years old.
Disneyland?
you are the monkeys!
Remember megaupload were on leaseweb !
@uxtvdl is this pro or con leaseweb?
con as leaseweb deleted all of their data and backups
Im pretty sure they wouldnt have done so without being forced by feds.
You have to look at two sides of the story. MegaUpload leases servers from a provider, then MegaUpload gets into trouble, MegaUpload doesn't pay their bills, to keep the servers online or even available in storage, LeaseWeb then does, as they do with every customer (just giving MegaUpload a lot more time), and cancel their servers, wipe them clean and make them ready for other people to order.
If MegaUpload continued to pay their bills, it would be no problem.
oh damn Wikipedia didn't mentioned it ! shit my bad
Ain't got no problem being a monkey.
Depending on your use case (read: needing bandwidth) and how well you configure the Lewaseweb server in the control panel, Hetzner can be a much better deal here. Hetzner provides 20TB of data and I don't believe they charge you any overages. Where as with Lewasweb, if you go over the included bandwidth they are quick to start charging you $0.10 per GB you use and they don't notify you or shutdown your server unless you have this set up manually, meaning you set it up, in their control panel.
Try going 1-2TB over your bandwidth usage just once at Leaseweb, you'll quickly decide Hetzner is the better offer when you get a $100-$200 bandwidth bill attached to your $5.00 / month server on your next invoice.
Of course, if you take the time to setup the limitations as stipulated, either can be a good host to use.
my 2 cents.
Cheers!