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Massive hardware upgrades to NameCrane Shared & Resellers!

245678

Comments

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @Protocol903 said: Also a note for Fran - I never received this email. Is it perhaps in WHMCS queue?

    Good chance :) When I posted it here we just kicked it off in the WHMCS queue. New WHMCS sends 50 emails every few minutes. I've scripted it to hopefully go faster and can confirm its hitting inboxes.

    @edrebe said: Las Vegas is updated with AMD EPYC✔️. Excellent work 🏆

    Glad you're enjoying it.

    @JasonM said: same for me. redis hiccup. I've to keep eye if it is running or not. And then ticket it. IDK why would it stop and can't be started by clicking the button! The node seems up since 60+ days though.

    I intend to completely rewrite the redis handler. At the moment we have it wired through systemd, but its systemDeezNutz sometimes. I think moving it into our own process handler would be more sane, and would mean we can catch when to auto restart.

    Francisco

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @default said: What about Luxembourg?

    NameCrane moved LUX to The Netherlands at the start of June. Completely live, maybe ~10 seconds of downtime while it did final RAM syncs. Our tech is going to be onsite in the next hour or so to rack up at least half the new nodes.

    We'll kick off live migrations which will take ~6 hours to complete.

    Francisco

  • @Francisco said:

    @default said: What about Luxembourg?

    NameCrane moved LUX to The Netherlands at the start of June. Completely live, maybe ~10 seconds of downtime while it did final RAM syncs. Our tech is going to be onsite in the next hour or so to rack up at least half the new nodes.

    We'll kick off live migrations which will take ~6 hours to complete.

    Francisco

    I liked Luxembourg; it was special; it felt exotic. Netherlands is so... common.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @default said: I liked Luxembourg; it was special; it felt exotic. Netherlands is so... common.

    Yeah, I know, I liked it too. It became untenable and with BuyVM pulling out, it was too difficult for Crane to justify being there. For shared it doesn't really matter as much, "exotic chickens" isn't really a thing like it is on the VPS side.

    Francisco

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran
    edited August 2025

    @xpreboun said: But nonetheless, congrats and love NameCrane shared hosting! Hoping the users on existing plans could be grandfathered in (if other option is a more expensive plan).

    There's no price/feature changes to active users or any sort of sunsetting planned. Any changes will come in the form of new plans and people can shift over if they'd like.

    Everyones getting upgraded, we're not leaving any nodes on Ryzen's. It now means I have a massive pile of Ryzen's all over the world that I have to find a use for (or sell I guess?).

    @abangnoob said:
    Hopefully with this, Namecrane on the Singapore node will be better, because for the past 2 months the server has been less stable even though it is still acceptable.

    Singapore has cost Mike & I many nights of sleep. It and a couple of the NL nodes get rampaged by AI crap. SG is currently in "shared colocation" since it was mostly testing the waters. Its not possible to put the Genoa's in there though, they're too power hungry.

    Getting our own rack is the only way of getting things upgraded, so that's what we're doing.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1Hudafullstack
  • luilui Member
    edited August 2025

    @Francisco said:

    @fmxm said:
    When managed Redis

    We have managed redis at home (on the shared hosting plans!)

    For anyone thinking about using using it, I wouldn't if your application stops working when redis is down. I've had numerous downtimes caused by this issue when Namecrane restarted servers and redis wouldn't restart. I reported it on 31/01/2025 and it was still happening as of 11/05/2025 (with no answer on the ticket for months). I've since moved away from redis given it's instability.

  • @Francisco said: Everyones getting upgraded, we're not leaving any nodes on Ryzen's. It now means I have a massive pile of Ryzen's all over the world that I have to find a use for (or sell I guess?).

    @Francisco said: Singapore has cost Mike & I many nights of sleep. It and a couple of the NL nodes get rampaged by AI crap. SG is currently in "shared colocation" since it was mostly testing the waters. Its not possible to put the Genoa's in there though, they're too power hungry.

    Hey Fran -
    So if nodes are moved from Ryzen to EPYC which has a bit lower boost clock(from 5GHz advertised to 3.7GHz), don't you think there would be a performance hit? Especially since most of starter web hosting packages are singlecored.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran
    edited August 2025

    @luissousa said:
    For anyone thinking about using using it, I wouldn't if your application stops working when redis is down. I've had numerous downtimes caused by this issue when Namecrane restarted servers and redis wouldn't restart. I reported it on 31/01/2025 and it was still happening as of 11/05/2025 (with no answer on the ticket for months). I've since moved away from redis given it's instability.

    The current redis system is a bit derpy and auto restarts don't work at all. If you change a users plan in any way (resources, suspend, unsuspend, etc) then redis is killed every time, and it never restarts.

    Handling the processes on our own is the way to go and its something I'll be coding one of these days.

    @Protocol903 said:
    Hey Fran -
    So if nodes are moved from Ryzen to EPYC which has a bit lower boost clock(from 5GHz advertised to 3.7GHz), don't you think there would be a performance hit? Especially since most of starter web hosting packages are singlecored.

    The Ryzen's better if the node is empty/quiet and you can hit a full thread all the time. Problem is, thats rarely the case in shared/reseller hosting so you're in contention with other users, system tasks, backups, etc.

    When backups run or things get busy we have Ryzen's that have < 5% idle CPU. Everyone on there, including system tasks, are all getting capped down to whatever cycles it can get (read: jack diddly squat).

    The genoa's give so much breathing room for everything to run w/o a care in the world. We have so much spare CPU we gave Jetbackup 10 cores for shits/giggles, that's why its completing in 1 1/2 hours, and not 6h~18h.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1lui
  • @Francisco said: I think moving it into our own process handler would be more sane, and would mean we can catch when to auto restart.

    okay. except this "redis" the servers are good. i hope it can get auto-started in coming future.

  • @Protocol903 said: don't you think there would be a performance hit? Especially since most of starter web hosting packages are singlecored.

    i don't think that would be a performance hit when loading a wordpress page as many people use caching these days. But, the php is singlecored and to build a page it may take some mini-seconds more (its just a guess as of now) if we compare 4+ Ghz speed with the new 2.5+Ghz speed. But again, it seem not viewable to eyes while browsing. May be it can affect a bit to internal cache preloading or querring a huge size database and then building a page. Still my node is not epyc but within a week I will check the performance.

  • @Francisco said: The genoa's give so much breathing room for everything to run w/o a care in the world

    hope we crane luvers get some extra love from genoa's in terms of resources. <3

  • Congratulations @Francisco

    Always great to see providers like Francisco who truly care about their clients and keep an eye on both hardware and software performance. That AMD EPYC 9654 setup with 96 cores, 192 threads, and 384GB RAM is absolute monster territory.

    I appreciate that our hosting industry is moving towards better hardware; we’re no longer stuck with E3, E5, or underpowered Ryzen setups. After RackNerd's recent upgrade, it’s awesome to see you stepping up even further.

    Honestly, your hardware is well ahead of the competition. Hats off, Francisco.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @JasonM said: if we compare 4+ Ghz speed with the new 2.5+Ghz speed.

    These CPU's run more like 3.5~3.7Ghz. Again, in our case, everyone wanting CPU is going to eat into that '5Ghz'. There's only so much CPU to go around.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1Hudafullstack
  • zedzed Member

    @Francisco said: Old Hardware Specifications:

    AMD Ryzen 7900 (12 cores, 24 threads)
    128GB RAM
    2 x 7.68TB NVMe

    New Hardware Specifications:

    AMD EPYC 9654 (96 cores, 192 threads)
    384GB RAM
    4 x 7.68TB NVMe

    wow that's huge, namecrane++

  • @Francisco said:

    @default said: I liked Luxembourg; it was special; it felt exotic. Netherlands is so... common.

    Yeah, I know, I liked it too. It became untenable and with BuyVM pulling out, it was too difficult for Crane to justify being there. For shared it doesn't really matter as much, "exotic chickens" isn't really a thing like it is on the VPS side.

    Francisco

    Will there be IP changes upon completed migration in Netherlands?

  • @Francisco Can you tell me the exact specifications of the AMD Ryzen 7900 server? I mean, what motherboard, RAM, and hard drive model? I'm curious if you've had any problems with this processor, which is typically a consumer processor.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @default said: Will there be IP changes upon completed migration in Netherlands?

    Nope. We own all of our IP's. For NL there'll be maybe a couple minutes of downtime to apply new RAM/CPU limits, but past that itll be painless.

    Even SG/NY/UK shouldn't require more than that reboot to finish as we'll keep the Ryzen's running and just live migrate over the wire.

    Francisco

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @Hotmarer said: @Francisco Can you tell me the exact specifications of the AMD Ryzen 7900 server? I mean, what motherboard, RAM, and hard drive model? I'm curious if you've had any problems with this processor, which is typically a consumer processor.

    B650D4U.

    Servers are great, works well. It just doesn't have enough CPU threads for the work loads they're dealing with.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1Hotmarer
  • Great news! Thanks Fran, this is an amazing upgrade. I’m confident it will solve the random timeouts for things that need to connect to the database.

    @Francisco said:
    It now means I have a massive pile of Ryzen's all over the world that I have to find a use for (or sell I guess?).

    Hmm, interesting… I’ll slide into your DMs.

  • @Francisco said:

    @Hotmarer said: @Francisco Can you tell me the exact specifications of the AMD Ryzen 7900 server? I mean, what motherboard, RAM, and hard drive model? I'm curious if you've had any problems with this processor, which is typically a consumer processor.

    B650D4U.

    Servers are great, works well. It just doesn't have enough CPU threads for the work loads they're dealing with.

    Francisco

    What cooler did you use? They are in 1U chassis? On the Frantech discord, several people wrote that these Asrock boards can burn CPUs and M2 drives.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @Hotmarer said: What cooler did you use? They are in 1U chassis? On the Frantech discord, several people wrote that these Asrock boards can burn CPUs and M2 drives.

    We had a few x470's go nuclear and fry some PCI devices. The B650's have been good for me but there was a batch of bad boards that just randomly died for many people.

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1Hotmarer
  • Shared web hosting is so funny. Hardware cycles repeat. I remember moving to the high-frequency E3s, which crushed everything in single-threaded performance. The problem was stability and handling spikes, especially as they started showing age. It eventually led to moving to slower Dual E5-2600 series CPUs with higher core counts, which improved stability and, for the average user, provided a much better experience.

    Ryzens could run circles around our Dual E5-2600s, but at that point, we had just moved to the high-core-count EPYC/Xeon Gold CPUs. Sure, if the server is really underloaded, a user could get faster loading times on that 5Ghz Ryzen. However, you couldn't match the stability of a 40+ core system when it's fully loaded. We've been using the 9654s lately, and at 3.7GHz, they pack a punch. The 96 cores are a lot, but you can always split them into two good-sized 48-core shared hosting servers, providing a way better experience than most.

    I'm sure some users will be unhappy with the change, but overall, most users will be happy with the consistent performance, as opposed to the performance peaks and valleys that were undoubtedly happening before.

    Thanked by 3Francisco Marx JasonM
  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @TonyB said:
    Shared web hosting is so funny. Hardware cycles repeat. I remember moving to the high-frequency E3s, which crushed everything in single-threaded performance. The problem was stability and handling spikes, especially as they started showing age. It eventually led to moving to slower Dual E5-2600 series CPUs with higher core counts, which improved stability and, for the average user, provided a much better experience.

    Ryzens could run circles around our Dual E5-2600s, but at that point, we had just moved to the high-core-count EPYC/Xeon Gold CPUs. Sure, if the server is really underloaded, a user could get faster loading times on that 5Ghz Ryzen. However, you couldn't match the stability of a 40+ core system when it's fully loaded. We've been using the 9654s lately, and at 3.7GHz, they pack a punch. The 96 cores are a lot, but you can always split them into two good-sized 48-core shared hosting servers, providing a way better experience than most.

    I'm sure some users will be unhappy with the change, but overall, most users will be happy with the consistent performance, as opposed to the performance peaks and valleys that were undoubtedly happening before.

    Very much what we've seen :)

    All but 1 node has been swapped over to the Genoa's in NL. That one will be completed next week.

    Feedback is always welcome!

    Francisco

  • Can't wait for the update. Since the migration to The Netherlands I saw the load got double most of the time but still everything works great and fast till now. I am to curious how it's gonna be with the new upgrade 🤔.

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @Mrfly said: Can't wait for the update. Since the migration to The Netherlands I saw the load got double most of the time but still everything works great and fast till now. I am to curious how it's gonna be with the new upgrade 🤔.

    >

    Only DA03 is left to do, everything else has been migrated :)

    Francisco

    Thanked by 1Mrfly
  • @Francisco what happened to the plans to offer shared/crates in Switzerland?

  • FranciscoFrancisco Top Host, Host Rep, Veteran

    @Chalipa said: @Francisco what happened to the plans to offer shared/crates in Switzerland?

    I'm not in a rush to do it, we have all of this to sort, domains, etc.

    Francisco

  • advinserversadvinservers Member, Patron Provider
    edited August 2025

    @TonyB said:
    Shared web hosting is so funny. Hardware cycles repeat. I remember moving to the high-frequency E3s, which crushed everything in single-threaded performance. The problem was stability and handling spikes, especially as they started showing age. It eventually led to moving to slower Dual E5-2600 series CPUs with higher core counts, which improved stability and, for the average user, provided a much better experience.

    Ryzens could run circles around our Dual E5-2600s, but at that point, we had just moved to the high-core-count EPYC/Xeon Gold CPUs. Sure, if the server is really underloaded, a user could get faster loading times on that 5Ghz Ryzen. However, you couldn't match the stability of a 40+ core system when it's fully loaded. We've been using the 9654s lately, and at 3.7GHz, they pack a punch. The 96 cores are a lot, but you can always split them into two good-sized 48-core shared hosting servers, providing a way better experience than most.

    I'm sure some users will be unhappy with the change, but overall, most users will be happy with the consistent performance, as opposed to the performance peaks and valleys that were undoubtedly happening before.

    Agreed.

    We've basically never had to worry about CPU utilization on our EPYC 96 or 128 core hypervisors, compared to our Ryzen's where it can be a constant worry. Performance is so much more consistent and stable on EPYC, we've basically never had to worry about them. There are just too little cores on the Ryzen's.

    I expect NameCrane clients to have a much better experience with the EPYCs than the Ryzen, even if on paper, the clock speed is lower. Zen4 Genoa still offers great single threaded performance while offering a boat load of cores.

    Thanked by 1Francisco
  • labzelabze Member, Patron Provider

    Seems like my package got migrated, can confirm major improvement :)

    Thanked by 2HuiW Francisco
  • @labze said: Seems like my package got migrated, can confirm major improvement

    @Francisco I can also confim improvment in loading wp-admin pages (non-cached) too fast in comparison to ryzen. system load is 5. cached ram is 243 GB.

    btw, can you tell what data this ram caches? It seems opcache/apcu data and what else? im wondering.

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