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Black Friday 2020 - NVMe and Storage deals - deploy worldwide

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Comments

  • hosthatchhosthatch Patron Provider, Top Host, Veteran

    @noexittv said: Do you think a HH machine will have a better consistent CPU performance compared to other providers running more modern CPU's, like some AMD Epyc variant?

    I explained this earlier but I will do it again.

    When you buy a more expensive processor, you need to (over)sell more VMs on that CPU, to make the same amount of money.

    We will likely update this page sometime soon - https://hosthatch.com/benchmarks since it's from 2017 and no longer as valid as it was then.....but you get the idea.

    I can only say this: if you care about seeing that latest EPYC or Gold in your /proc/cpuinfo, then sure, we lose. But if you care about actual real, consistent CPU performance (that you can measure by GB4/5 for example), then we will likely win when you run the same benchmark 3, 6 or 12 months down the road, and compare it with the provider running EPYC, who might have a great benchmark today, but not as much in 6 months when the node is 100% full of customers. I obviously mean the LE providers here. Not only the CPU, but we will also likely compare better on NVMe performance, network performance (transits/peerings) and datacenters. This excludes large companies (for example Hetzner) who can burn as much cash as they want and have lower operating costs since they own their DCs.

    When the time comes, we will upgrade everyone to EPYC/Gold, simply be moving over the drives to the new servers. It's ~15 minutes of downtime per node. But for the moment, we deliver as good, or better performance than most LE providers running those CPUs.

  • elliotcelliotc Member
    edited December 2020

    Old model CPU is unbelievable cheap if you do a bulk buy. I used to work in Arrow. This is probably most LET providers' magic.
    It is a good idea to start upgrading the cpu at the moment. In the foreseeable future, there is probably no cpu that can match this generation of ryzen in performance/money.
    But the new hardware will put huge pressure on HH financially. Stable cash flow, which is more important than anything for a company.
    HH received good amounts of hot money duing black friday, there is 100% sure they will put it into new investment(new location).
    My guess is that HH may upgrade the hardware for some higher value customers, but unlikely to happen in promotional deals.

    Edit: HostHatch's response faster than me. :#

  • @luissousa said:
    Only didn't order 3x more due to trust issues - I have this rational fear of having too many stuff on a single provider :tongue:

    So do I, maybe trust is gained for next year's even more fire bf offers.

  • @hosthatch, your VPS are very premm..

    Thanked by 1RedSox
  • hosthatchhosthatch Patron Provider, Top Host, Veteran
    edited December 2020

    https://browser.geekbench.com/v5/cpu/search?utf8=✓&q=digitalocean is an example of what I am trying to explain above.

    It will be easier to understand my above essay if you compare performance to performance in numbers, rather than CPU models.

  • orion504orion504 Member
    edited December 2020

    @luissousa said:
    Only didn't order 3x more due to trust issues - I have this rational fear of having too many stuff on a single provider :tongue:

    @webcraft said:

    So do I, maybe trust is gained for next year's even more fire bf offers.

    That's fair point. Even AWS and Google can be down sometime. The best bet is to have backup somewhere else, to put a watchdog/monitoring outside DC of the main provider, and to prepare some script to do fail safe if the main route is down. Like: Auto fire up a temporary on demand node (minute/hourly billing), point domain/route to the temporary node, and redirect back when the main route is restored. All these action items can be done via API, so we can sleep well :joy:

  • brueggusbrueggus Member, IPv6 Advocate
    edited December 2020

    @Daniel15 said: Now I just need to figure out what to use them all for :sweat_smile:

    Same here... let me know when you figured something out.

    Btw: I opened a ticket to enable IPv6 for my bundle and got a reply 8 minutes after. I heard people like statistics, so: That's not even a minute per server. :P

  • SpeedTestSpeedTest Member
    edited December 2020

    Finally mine main server in EU is up. The CPU is not the E5-2690 v2 but still decent, especially for that price! $54/y

    Thank you!

    Waiting for the last one in HK)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     OS           : Debian GNU/Linux 10 (64 Bit)
     Virt/Kernel  : KVM / 4.19.0-13-amd64
     CPU Model    : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2680 v2 @ 2.80GHz
     CPU Cores    : 3 @ 2799.998 MHz x86_64 16384 KB Cache
     CPU Flags    : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Disabled
     Load Average : 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
     Total Space  : 78G (2.7G ~4% used)
     Total RAM    : 16042 MB (389 MB + 581 MB Buff in use)
     Total SWAP   : 1023 MB (0 MB in use)
     Uptime       : 0 days 2:15
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     ASN & ISP    : AS63473, HostHatch
     Organization : HostHatch LLC
     Location     : Vienna, Austria / AT
     Region       : Vienna
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
     ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:
    
      Single Core : 2714  (GOOD)
       Multi Core : 7319
    
     ## IO Test
    
     CPU Speed:
        bzip2     :  96.1 MB/s
       sha256     : 165 MB/s
       md5sum     : 473 MB/s
    
     RAM Speed:
       Avg. write : 1843.2 MB/s
       Avg. read  : 5222.4 MB/s
    
     Disk Speed:
       1st run    : 865 MB/s
       2nd run    : 912 MB/s
       3rd run    : 876 MB/s
       -----------------------
       Average    : 884.3 MB/s
    
     ## Europe Speedtest.net
    
     Location                         Upload           Download         Ping   
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Nearby                           1835.70 Mbit/s   2696.92 Mbit/s   1.373 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     UK, London (toob Ltd)            421.34 Mbit/s    827.15 Mbit/s    31.457 ms
     Netherlands, Amsterdam (MaxiTEL) 129.94 Mbit/s    1463.68 Mbit/s   18.054 ms
     Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET)        656.73 Mbit/s    1101.16 Mbit/s   29.178 ms
     Germany, Munich (InterNetX)      710.93 Mbit/s    1290.50 Mbit/s    5.915 ms
     Denmark, Copenhagen (Fiberby)    134.58 Mbit/s    1314.73 Mbit/s    5.921 ms
     Sweden, Stockholm (SUNET)        213.59 Mbit/s    69.03 Mbit/s     34.551 ms
     Norway, Oslo (NextGenTel)        153.61 Mbit/s    127.13 Mbit/s   180.121 ms
     France, Lyon (SFR)               242.31 Mbit/s    1076.56 Mbit/s   36.911 ms
     Spain, Madrid (MasMovil)         174.82 Mbit/s    50.49 Mbit/s     40.164 ms
     Portugal, Lisbon (Evolute)       236.49 Mbit/s    348.83 Mbit/s    52.797 ms
     Italy, Rome (Unidata)            3.09 Mbit/s      80.68 Mbit/s     52.333 ms
     Czechia, Prague (Dial Telecom)   1708.86 Mbit/s   2344.21 Mbit/s    5.066 ms
     Austria, Vienna (Magenta)        1550.96 Mbit/s   1828.76 Mbit/s    0.984 ms
     Poland, Warsaw (Orange)          1219.36 Mbit/s   2128.68 Mbit/s   10.159 ms
     Slovakia, Kosice (TUKe)          1227.03 Mbit/s   358.19 Mbit/s   ping error!
     Ukraine, Kyiv (KyivStar)         777.12 Mbit/s    1592.34 Mbit/s   22.767 ms
     Latvia, Riga (Bite)              494.91 Mbit/s    760.29 Mbit/s    29.657 ms
     Russia, Moscow (Rostelecom)      255.03 Mbit/s    508.87 Mbit/s    72.544 ms
     Romania, Bucharest (DOTRO Tel)   551.57 Mbit/s    856.61 Mbit/s    15.780 ms
     Greece, Athens (GRNET)           78.57 Mbit/s     1223.38 Mbit/s   29.381 ms
     Turkey, Istanbul (Radore)        124.96 Mbit/s    610.40 Mbit/s    66.483 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
     Finished in : 8 min 31 sec
     Timestamp   : 2020-12-15 18:45:39 GMT
     Saved in    : /root/speedtest.log
    
     Share results:
     - https://www.speedtest.net/result/10595120981.png
     - https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15940644
     - https://clbin.com/fW6s8
    
    Thanked by 1RedSox
  • luilui Member
    edited December 2020

    @orion504 said:

    @luissousa said:
    Only didn't order 3x more due to trust issues - I have this rational fear of having too many stuff on a single provider :tongue:

    @webcraft said:

    So do I, maybe trust is gained for next year's even more fire bf offers.

    That's fair point. Even AWS and Google can be down sometime. The best bet is to have backup somewhere else, to put a watchdog/monitoring outside DC of the main provider, and to prepare some script to do fail safe if the main route is down. Like: Auto fire up a temporary on demand node (minute/hourly billing), point domain/route to the temporary node, and redirect back when the main route is restored. All these action items can be done via API, so we can sleep well :joy:

    I actually just run a docker swarm cluster so I don't have to do any of that :tongue:
    Just to ensure I have enough managers online to reach consensus

  • I'm just wondering...we see what processors a particular provider uses, starting from this we see what kind of RAM a particular provider uses DDR3 or DDR4 but we don't understand what kinda HDD or NVMe a particular provider uses. I'm really wondering, maybe someone heard any gossips about what kinda of disks local providers use? Are they enterprise or not? Are they 7200 RMP or 5400 RMP? If someone has any info about any LET provider just let me know, I'd like to extinguish my curiosity :D

  • DPDP Administrator, The Domain Guy

    @RedSox said:
    I'm just wondering...we see what processors a particular provider uses, starting from this we see what kind of RAM a particular provider uses DDR3 or DDR4 but we don't understand what kinda HDD or NVMe a particular provider uses. I'm really wondering, maybe someone heard any gossips about what kinda of disks local providers use? Are they enterprise or not? Are they 7200 RMP or 5400 RMP? If someone has any info about any LET provider just let me know, I'd like to extinguish my curiosity :D

    You can always ask the providers directly :D

  • @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Thanked by 1skorous
  • Daniel15Daniel15 Veteran
    edited December 2020

    @yolo_me said:
    @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Install Netdata and it'll warn you if CPU usage is high for a long period of time. It sends emails like this:

    You can adjust the thresholds - By default it'll raise a warning if CPU usage is above 85% for 10 minutes, and a critical alert if above 95% for 10 minutes.

    Make sure you modify /etc/aliases to forward root's email to an address you actually check, since it just sends the emails to the server's local root@ address. On Debian you may also need to run dpkg-reconfigure -plow exim4-config and configure it to actually send emails rather than only deliver them locally.

  • @yolo_me said:
    @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Good that you check it, by all means. But they won’t ban you. They’ll throttle your cpu and might get in touch with you to ask what’s going on and/or offer a higher plan.

  • @sgheghele said:

    @yolo_me said:
    @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Good that you check it, by all means. But they won’t ban you. They’ll throttle your cpu and might get in touch with you to ask what’s going on and/or offer a higher plan.

    how do i know if my CPU gets throttled?

  • @kzed said:
    @swat4, yup grabbed the 1G bundle for all 10 locations. it all already provisioned. the last one just provisioned few mins ago. it really was worth the waiting.!!

    :'( This thread was too hot so I missed the deals in between - plus the page was flooded with offers during BF week.

    Now I am waiting for the Hong Kong one and see how it goes... never have one before in this location :p

  • @Falzo said:

    @swat4 said: Anyone here was lucky enough to grab the bundle sale that includes many small boxes in many locations?

    you bet!

    :# you do!

  • @Daniel15 said:

    @swat4 said: Anyone here was lucky enough to grab the bundle sale that includes many small boxes in many locations?

    I got two bundles, a 10x bundle and the new locations 3x bundle. The 10x one has been fully deployed now - I just got the last two VPSes, New York and Vienna this morning. The 3x one was a preorder with a delivery date of December 31.

    Now I just need to figure out what to use them all for :sweat_smile: I've added a few to dnstools.ws, but I've already got servers in some of the locations so I'll need to figure out something else to do with them.

    Lucky you :D Would you mind reminding me where the 10 locations are?

  • @swat4 said: Would you mind reminding me where the 10 locations are?

    Amsterdam, Stockholm, Los Angeles, Chicago, London, Vienna, Oslo, Warsaw, New York, and Zurich. The 3x bundle is Sydney, Milan and Madrid.

  • swat4swat4 Member
    edited December 2020

    @Daniel15 said:

    @swat4 said: Would you mind reminding me where the 10 locations are?

    Amsterdam, Stockholm, Los Angeles, Chicago, London, Vienna, Oslo, Warsaw, New York, and Zurich. The 3x bundle is Sydney, Milan and Madrid.

    Stockholm, Vienna, Warsaw, Zurich, Milan and Madrid - rarely I saw offers here - love these exotic locations though I don't know what to do with the boxes even if I had them :# simply for collection

    Nice purchase! :)

  • @swat4 said:

    @Daniel15 said:

    @swat4 said: Would you mind reminding me where the 10 locations are?

    Amsterdam, Stockholm, Los Angeles, Chicago, London, Vienna, Oslo, Warsaw, New York, and Zurich. The 3x bundle is Sydney, Milan and Madrid.

    Stockholm, Vienna, Warsaw, Zurich, Milan and Madrid - rarely I saw offers here - love these exotic locations though I don't know what to do with the boxes even if I had them :# simply for collection

    Nice purchase! :)

    I run a site that lets you do pings, traceroutes and DNS lookups from all around the world (https://dnstools.ws/), so the extra locations will be pretty useful for my use case! I just haven't had time to set them all up yet. At least I've scripted most of the setup using Ansible so it's quite fast to spin up new servers :smile:

  • @Daniel15 said:

    I run a site that lets you do pings, traceroutes and DNS lookups from all around the world (https://dnstools.ws/), so the extra locations will be pretty useful for my use case! I just haven't had time to set them all up yet. At least I've scripted most of the setup using Ansible so it's quite fast to spin up new servers :smile:

    Good stuff! I just ran an IP with your website. Loading speed was fast.

  • @yolo_me said:

    @sgheghele said:

    @yolo_me said:
    @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Good that you check it, by all means. But they won’t ban you. They’ll throttle your cpu and might get in touch with you to ask what’s going on and/or offer a higher plan.

    how do i know if my CPU gets throttled?

    @yolo_me said:

    @sgheghele said:

    @yolo_me said:
    @hosthatch can you guys give us a warning if we use too much CPU? I didn't know being able to downlaod at 50MB/s will eat too much CPU.I don't want to be banned as it's a really great product.

    Good that you check it, by all means. But they won’t ban you. They’ll throttle your cpu and might get in touch with you to ask what’s going on and/or offer a higher plan.

    how do i know if my CPU gets throttled?

    There are several ways to throttle speed. You see reduced performance for a while and that’s it. But they are limiting to your package worth, not less than that. If you have a 50% core package, they throttle you to that.

  • Invoice #69777 please double cpu throttling.

  • hosthatchhosthatch Patron Provider, Top Host, Veteran

    @randomq said:
    Invoice #69777 please double cpu throttling.

    You bet :)

    Thanked by 1Falzo
  • @hosthatch

    Eagerly waiting for the HK deployment... home sweet home... :p can give a heads-up on which part of HK it would be?

  • Does hosthatch have a tutorial on using a custom iso? I uploaded a windows iso, but it didn’t work. I asked the technical department for help, but he has not responded to me for five days.

  • hosthatchhosthatch Patron Provider, Top Host, Veteran

    @swat4 said:
    @hosthatch

    Eagerly waiting for the HK deployment... home sweet home... :p can give a heads-up on which part of HK it would be?

    https://hosthatch.com/features - you can see the datacenter :)

    @aibook said:
    Does hosthatch have a tutorial on using a custom iso? I uploaded a windows iso, but it didn’t work. I asked the technical department for help, but he has not responded to me for five days.

    Unfortunately our ISO upload feature is not very bug free for the moment due to the large number of people uploading ISOs. We are going to make it more efficient in January.

    But here are a few basic points:

    • Upload an ISO that is with a direct URL, and the URL has .iso in the end
    • Do not try to test uploading other files or redirecting URLs (even for fun)
    • Again, do not try that, as that will likely break the feature for your server for the future
    • For Windows, make sure the VirtIO drivers are included in the same ISO

    More importantly:

    • It needs to be uploaded from a fast source. If the connection breaks, then you are going to have a lot of problems;

    • And to be able to achieve this the best way, you can simply install your VPS with any OS first, download the ISO to it instead, put it on a webserver, and use your own URL to upload it to the control panel. Since it will be uploading to the same node where your VPS is, the likelihood of any connection problems during the upload is very low to none.

  • @aibook said:
    Does hosthatch have a tutorial on using a custom iso? I uploaded a windows iso, but it didn’t work. I asked the technical department for help, but he has not responded to me for five days.

    Did you read this note in the control panel: "For Windows, please make sure you add the VirtIO drivers on to the ISO. The official ISOs from Microsoft do not include VirtIO drivers by default"?

  • @hosthatch said:

    https://hosthatch.com/features - you can see the datacenter :)

    Thanks. I obviously have missed this page.

    Wow! Basically the best datacentre here. 15km away from home :) good stuff! look forward to seeing it going live!

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