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I want one of those Vultrs, but I only deposited $5 and got $20 in credit. I would feel bad knowing shipping to the UK probably costs more than $5 lol
How did you get $20 out of $5?
$10 promo code (GIVEME10) + double first payment.
Must have missed that promotion. Still, very happy with the service and double initial payment I've received.
Which locations have IPv6?
@1e10, yes I can :-)
You can download System Rescue CD from:
http://www.sysresccd.org
One of the tools it has is partimage, a tool for making backup of partitions. This copies the used blocks of the partition to a file.
To copy the MBR (partimage does not do it) you can use dd:
dd if=/dev/sda of=/mnt/target/sda-MBR-backup bs=512 count=1
Here is a guide on how to do it:
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/How_To_Backup_Operating_Systems
The following locations have beta IPv6 support: NJ, Chicago, LA, Atlanta, France, Japan
AFAIK - DO allows you to add keys before you first login via PW, Vultr doesn't.
It may look dank [ I'm not web designer ] but it's the features that count, right?
actually, qemu supports cpu hotplug (obviously the guest must support it too) and memory ballooning. not sure if the former is available on intel x86 though.
see above, also dynamic memory ballooning (maybe available in qemu soon?)
what?
sort of, you can add CONTEXT files and if the VM supports contextualization according to the "standard" it should run them automatically.
Basically every one except the one I use (London), yeah? dammit :P
I've never played with either DO or Vultr so I want to get some feedback from you on a comparison point:
High Availability No No
Storage Method Direct Attached (No SAN) Direct Attached (No SAN)
You said that neither offer HA and none of them use SAN. So lets say a node fails, how do you spin up your data on another node?
You accept it and start over.
And you can take snapshots...
Snapshots are irrelevant. Your data will be assimilated.
So, nodes are just regular VPS, no self-healing?
Correct.
That's true that it's basically a VPS but it's unlikely your snapshot will disappear along with your node so it's a step up from a lot of providers. I am aware DO and Vultr aren't "true cloud"s though.
Well, Amazon claim to have "self-healing" and still needs to reboot your VPSes?
@serverian - what a pile of the proverbial then. Thats just per hour billing VPS, not very impressive. I thought with all their 'cloud' hype it maybe at least possible to have the most fundamental function which is that you can reload your container on another node in the event of failure.
First, the fact Amazon provides or does not provide self-healing, doesn't make the two pay-per-hour providers look better or worse. They just do not provide means to recover node, if hardware failure happens.
Second, I have never lost information on Amazon due to hardware failures. Yes, they notified me I should reboot my instance. So what?
Third, I do backups. I do many backups of backups, so, forgive me my Martian, I don't care a &^$&#$@# about hardware failures. If I value data I own, I'll take measures to make their irreversible loss very, very, very unlikely.
They probably want some sort of self-heal tool for convenience, not data protection. Everyone should take backups, I keep all my data on a server with a single drive (no raid) because I have it sync over to a secondary server real-time and take the occasional backup too.
Thanks for the matrix. Didn't know they allow the custom kernel which I am assuming also means you can alter the boot config. DO doesn't allow either which was a surprise to us and ended up being show stoppers
ipv6 on DO no longer beta for SG location.
https://www.digitalocean.com/company/blog/announcing-ipv6-support-in-singapore/
Looks like assignment is a /64. Puts it up with Vultr now.
Nnnnope, the assignment is actually a /124 (sixteen consecutive IPs 0...f). I thought it was a /64 too, from some of the screenshots. Also seems to be no way to define rDNS for any of the IPs except for the first one. At least I can't find any mention of this and don't want to spend my credit with them creating a droplet just to verify how much their IPv6 setup actually sucks.
Great
Still no promised DDoS protection though and you're still ignoring it every time it gets posted.
DO got now IPv6 in singapore.
A comment from Vultr's discussion board (https://discuss.vultr.com/discussion/35/no-price-rounding-per-instance)
@DaveA, I've deployed a couple of 768mb instances for a short period of time and I've been charged more because of this rounding off issue.