New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
Comments
are the prices just for one year or stable for the future?
It's recurring - they stay the same for the future.
Does it have domain forwarding?
ok now I`m connected and install apache2 but at external ip not showing any page.
You have to put the webserver at one of the ports assigned to you instead of the normal port 80.
A good port to choose is your ssh port +1
so if your ssh port is 2020 put the webserver at port 2021 and you can connect to it
with: http://your-ip-address:2021
Do you know how the change the port apache uses ?
No. Not at this time
Is the 125GB traffic limit per month or per year? Also are both incoming and outgoing traffic counted or is the limit only for outgoing traffic?
Traffic will reset every month. Both incoming and outgoing is counted.
Spent a few hours peeking under the hood. Started with the smallest 128 MB plan, now ready to upgrade. This thread has been helpful!!
@Cam Is it possible to buy traffic upgrades for the smallest packages?
Hit and run operation ? $2/year, do you even have insurance?
Yes! I charge $1/year per 125GB. Bw will reset on the 1st of every month
where I can find my assign port? is the ssh port is my webserver posr?
Read the email you got. The port assignment is well documented on it. The ssh port is the port you use to connect your VM via ssh (forwarded to port 22 of your instance). The other 20 ports are the ones you can utilize (webserver, etc.)
Concur with the documentation. Short but relevant. Even for those like me who still swim in the shallow end if the pool, figuratively speaking. Email is the key.
(Somehow I never received it, but logging on to my account and looking for it solved the problem)
If there would be one change I could make on Cam's system it would have the ability to tell people their external IP address and specifically list the 20 ports they can use in the initial account created email.
Start here using the 10.10.x.x address you received in the account creation email:
https://hosting.gullo.me/plugin/support_manager/knowledgebase/view/8/start-here/5/
You are assigned 20 ports. You have to move any webserver you install from the default webserver port (80) to one of the 20 free ports in the port-range you are assigned.
In looking at the port ranges I was assigned for my Gullo VPS's I see they are directly below the SSH port. So for example if your ssh port is 20820 the available ports you have will be 20800 to 20819.
I suspect that would require some significant amount of code munging in the outgoing email generation. I've had about a dozen of these NAT vps from all the different providers and iirc the emails were like that from all of them. You either had to look on a separate page to find the address, or the email included a list of addresses along with instructions how to find the one for your particular server.
NAT vps is a little bit more complicated to use than conventional VPS but they're fine if you're able to chase down this sort of info. As the email says about the service, "It is not intended for novice users or those who are unwilling to learn new things."
thanks, I got it. but how to access the website without these ports. i mean if i make a virtual host in apache for abc.com then how could i access this website without my port assign at port 80.
You would need to access it at http://abc.com:port
So if you have put your apache server at port 20800 it would be:
http://abc.com:20800
What port is your apache server listening on ?
Use the IPv6 address of the VM and port 80 for httpd. Cloudflare provides IPv4 to IPv6 reverse proxy.
I don't know about Gullo but some of the other NAT hosts have a HAProxy setup so they can forward port 80 (non SSL) from the public port to one of your NAT or ipv6 ports, basically giving you a vhost on the public address.
I don't think anyone got that working for SSL because of the hassle of making new SNI certificates all the time. But you could certainly have a non-SSL url that redirects to one of your NAT ports. If you're worried about client side firewalls or whatever, you basically have the wrong product. These servers are great for testing and experimenting and non-critical services but they are very basic.
You might hang out on forum.lowendspirit.com and look at some of the tutorials there. That site (thanks @AnthonySmith) is basically how these NAT servers got started.
Read the Frequently Asked Questions from the New Service Activated email
3. How can I setup a website? (With no port) <-- this part
Which says:
Personally I think just moving apache to one of your assigned ports is better.
its: 25231 where i can access through ip an port like this: http://xx.xx.xx.xxx:25231
but i need to access at http://xx.xx.xx.xxx:80 or http://xx.xx.xx.xxx:8080.
is this possible?
I hear you. Not everyone can or is comfortable with explore fail and learn.
The objective or end goal may provide some more ways to skin this cat
NO. Not unless you proxy through cloudflare as someone posted. If you don't want to do that then you have bought the wrong product.
Cannot reset the password, wanted to order new services. I have an account with you from 2017
Virtualizor has a working setup for this.
Install the certificate on the NAT box, no need for any certificates on the haproxy node.
As long as you keep the protocol to HTTPS.