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Since they started playing dicks with their price model. "Your 4.99 Special Deal from 2 years ago is now 15.99 because well, hard disks have become more expensive to make"
That's fair, but in all fairness and I think someone mentioned it here as well. Given the low end spectrum. I expect support to suck ass. But HW failure will be interesting to see what happens. For the price I go for 3 months and see what happens. Worst case they suck go bad I go back to hetzner vps. But fingers crossed that doesn't happen :-) For this case it's a couple of mastodon sites so nothing revenue generating. :-)
Xactly for hobby sites, I'm good :-)
If anything I can be assured it's a 1000x's better than the beating I took form LEB provider. Couldn't keep anything online longer than a few hours.
those OP servers are fine for non-critical use, just don't expect fast replacements or data recovery. don't abuse the network and don't use the cripple atoms.
Thanks for the information. Anyone who is abusing something should be kicked out anyhow.
I will abuse it for sure with my 5 servers. Welcome to my rack people.
Are you connected to "s103-j4.dc2"?
That would explain the (expected) high jitter and bandwidths between 100 and 900 Mbit/s.
Connected switch can be determined with LLDP:
tcpdump -nvi eno1 -s 1500 ether proto 0x88cc
Great tip!
Apparently my 2 dedis at Online are on two different switches, even though same rack.
I'm on Rack: D38, Block: X with all of my servers.
There is a online sale at https://console.online.net/en/order/server_kiredechire
kind of make those deals suck, however i suspect that the OP has lower price than online deals.
Another difference between OneProvider and Online.net Flash Sale might be that chances should be slightly higher for OneProvider not to increase prices.
(edited) Oh I see you were saying the same already. Still, it seems that even if Online would betray their multiple promises they give this time, very unlikely that they would increase the 1.99 price past 5.99, which is what OneProvider asking for the same server.
Yes, that might be true for those small Atom boxes.
When looking for a 'real' (non-Atom) server, deals like the 15 EUR Xeon offered by OneProvider might be the cheaper choice as Online.net did not have a Xeon in that price range.
That's at least my theory and what I concluded after these two promos.
Anyone managed to get IPv6 working on these OneProvider servers? Online.net has this weird IPv6 DHCP system set up, which usually requires you to assign a subnet to the server, but it doesn't look like the OneProvider panel gives this option.
Edit: okay, I missed it on the page:
I got an atom in NL for testing purposes, network is ok for the moment (seems to be 2.5Gbit shared), but SSD Power_On_Hours is 27762, which is 3.1 years.
This is their response when i asked it for AMS location :
That's the usual procedure.
With Online.net every customer gets a /48 assigned to his account and you can create as many /56 assignments as you have servers with them. Every /56 (as well as the /48) will be associated with a unique DUID. You can now request each of your IPv6 network to be routed to any of your servers by using dhclient. Which in my opinion is a very good implementation as it is a properly routed /56 so you do not have to fiddle arround with proxying ndp or other hacks and you can "announce" each /56 to every of your servers in your own without involving support.
With OneProvider they create a /56 and DUID for you. That's all.
With Debian 10 you need to install
wide-dhcpv6-client
, edit/etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6c.conf
:And write your DUID into
/var/lib/dhcpv6/dhcp6c_duid
:Add the IPv6 address(es) you want to use to your
/etc/network/interfaces
:RA are used to determine default gateway.
Additional IPs can be marked with preferred lifetime 0 so they won't be used as source address for outgoing connections.
Restart service wide-dhcpv6-client and your IPv6 subnet will be routed to your server. Done.
Or just use the good ol' ISC DHCP client.
And the worst kept secret here is that most likely you can just use DUIDs from your Online.net account (if you have one) on your OneProvider dedi, even not asking OP for any IPv6, and regaining rDNS control via NS delegation in the Online panel.
Online.net will let you split the /48 into a /56 per each server that you have, but when you cancel the servers, the /56s are not deleted. So as "some of us" have had 10 dedis at Online at some point in the past, we now get to keep 10 DUIDs with the associated /56s to use within their network. :)
Update:
Yesterday my server (Atom 2750) started to behave weirdly. Today it freezes even before I can login (via IPMI. SSH doesn't work any more).
I've just created a ticket. Let's see how long their support takes to (a) respond at all, and (b) solve the problem (an old battery it seems).
Please do let us know as I am interested in the response times based on this thread. Thanks for posting!
@MPG
Here is the timeline and story so far:
Sept. 28, ca 4:30 pm -> Ticket opened, told them what seems to be the problem according to IPMI Health.
Sept. 29, ca 5:30 am -> Response from western Europe support saying that DC has been asked to look into it.
Sept. 29, afternoon -> I tell them that I've powered down the server so that they can work on it. (Just to be sure that we don't lose time over that).
Sept. 30. ca 9:30 am -> Support north America tells me it's a hardware issue (Gosh, who would have thought that ?!) and that I should back up my data - which is utterly ridiculous considering that the server is dead.
Some minutes ago my response -> How about putting my current disk into the replacement server?
Short version: Shifting the ticked around and canned partly nonsensical responses so far. I'm not delighted and I'd expect support even during weekends from a large international provider. Actually I myself probably contributed more sensibly to solving the problem than they did.
Sad story so far, but hey, it's a very cheap server, so let's see how the saga continues ...
@jsg If you have an Online acc, drop them a ticket.
They will reply with "bla bla bla Reseller bla bla bla cannot do anything" but behind the scenes they punched OneProvider.
Result: Fixed + Salty response = Profit.
I do not have an Online account.
Plus I should also say that
Again, let's see. If I have a server up and running by sometimes tomorrow I won't complain.
@jsg do share us if they replaced your hw. I couldn't cope with 1 provider's generic answers which could be worse than online directly from time to time.
Don't worry, I'll keep you updated. As of right now I haven't got an answer yet.
Based on my current experience I would hesitate to recommend oneprovider, mainly based on their confused (jumping all over the globe), sometimes ignorant, and anyway seriously slow support.
Update:
This morning at about 9:30, something like NYC time it seems, I got a response from the north american support (the same person).
I'll quote a particularly sad part of the response:
Hmmm. A provider who can't get at the servers he provides because they are in racks? Astonishing.
Anyway, I told them to please provide me a replacement server asap.
FOUR days have passed. Let's see what day 5 brings ...
Oh my too bad I went 3 months I was lured into the cheap server with raid. I mean the price was sooo good. Oh boy!
I also took a server from the flash server ... Pretty bad experience until now ... Support is slow (at best)