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Dat's like asking women's 3 sizes.
Better ask them privately.
Most hosts have it at 3-5mb/s
BUT any ssd host should increase the default IO
I'm asking because I just got a Shared hosting from a company on here with 1 MB/s I/O limit.
Never used hostgator, but I've seen screenshots people's panel where they only allow 25% CPU
since OP ask i/o limit, any script to benchmark shared/reseller hosting?
im planning to try one of provider here, than ask via support i will just buy and benchmark it.
1mb/sec is the CL default limit.
Francisco
Should the host provider increase the default limit if they use SSD?
Even if the host is overselling, I don't see any reason to leave it at 1mb/s.
Ponny boy is filling nodes with tons of people and last time I checked the limit was 20mb/s (if I'm not mistaken)
So...the most reliable course of action is to open Support ticket request to increase the I/O limit to 5mb/s?
You could try that, otherwise move to another provider. Make sure you ask the questions you have before ordering anything.
So somebody with a 1mbps internet connection and a 486 won't be disadvantaged. That's nice.
The provider said: "We can't increase it from our end. It's default limit set by Cloudlinux os."
Is this for real?
They should edit the "DEFAULT" user and then it'll apply to everyone.
That's how we do it.
Francisco
They can create a new profile, and set it to your account. This way it would only influence one account and not all of them.
Guess they just dont want to do it.
That works too
It's possible they're on spinning rust so it could be a problem if they're having iowait spikes.
Francisco
@Francisco , @vovler
I screenshot both of your posts and Ticket it to the Host provider.
This was their answer: "we can't change default value from our end."
Your provider is possibly a reseller, they hence can't make changes.
They also have RESELLER plans.
How the heck I'm supposed to burn through 5TB Bandwidth/month and "Unlimited Domains" with 1 MB/s I/O limit ?
@Chuck "Master reseller" then
They don't have Master reseller plan.
I see... The I/O limit only applies to processes started by your account. It does not seem apply when someone visits your website.
I may be mistaken, but try to run a loader.io stress test on your website, to see how much you can actually handle.
https://docs.cloudlinux.com/index.html?io_limits.html
“Rust”
pfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffft. I guess I have to get my hard drives into the shop for a new coat of paint!
Clients per test 500; Duration 1minute
http://bit.ly/2wdEoWS
=================
Maintain client load 500 ; Duration 1minute
http://bit.ly/2vPxQ1z
note: it's a Blank website. I haven't built anything. Just bought the domain name and the shared hosting yesterday.
Blank pages defeats the purpose of testing it.
Upload a 1MB image and link to it in a index .html file and test it again with 50 mantained users. Assuming that the port on the node is 1Gbps, you'd be using about 400mbps which is nice
EDIT__________________
If your website is behind cloudflare, disable it, as it would serve the image from their cache
There's even an option to set such limits per user.
haha, brilliant way to put it!
Spinning Sata disks are to be known as rusters from here on out.
The whole thing doesn't make sense.
They are able to sell: Reseller hosting plan. It means that they should have access to root account of Master reseller.
Why do they keep saying: ""we can't change default value from our end."??
Just because they can sell resellers accounts dose not mean they got root level access on server.
Most likely they are just reselling accounts via their master reseller account.