Sunday, June 01, 2008

Frequently asked questions about cnet web hosting review

Understanding cnet web hosting review

Systems Administrator - Windows - Linux

Wed, 28 May 2008 11:21:51 EST

This position requires solid knowledge and experience with TCP/IP, SMTP, HTTP, FTP, DNS, and Mail. Operating system experience with Windows, Linux (Red Hat, Debian, etc) and Solaris.

Comfortable with building a server and administration in multiple platforms. Ability to add users, groups, hosts, and devices to systems/environments. Ability to translate functional requirements into technical project specifications. Ability to work in a 24/7 environment.

Web servers/application servers, and/or messaging services functionality in a multi-tier distributed application architecture. Extensive knowledge of enterprise software products. Experience working in a multi-operating system environment. Working knowledge of MS-SQL Server, MySQL, DB2 and Oracle. Working knowledge of JBoss, Tomcat, WebSphere.

Will be responsible for configuration and on-going management of Windows, Linux, and Solaris systems. Will maintain network and system security, ensure redundancy and fault tolerance into a variety of architectures for production, QA, and development environments.

Proactively monitor environments and respond to alerts of system and application issues. Closely control production environments to ensure stability and security. Work with customers to implement system changes and resolve issues.

Ability to articulate technical concepts to a variety of audiences including clients, developers, engineers, and sales representatives.

What NeoSpire Has To Offer?

Employee benefits package (includes, Medical, Dental, Vision, Prescription Plan, 401K, Holiday Pay, Paid Time Off, etc.)

Business Casual Dress (jeans for technical positions)

Covered Parking (we pay a majority of the cost)

Growth opportunities

Monthly employee events

Great Environment and a talented group of team members





Moved from Web24 to Linode

Fri, 02 May 2008 16:28:28 +1000

(Note: This is a review of VPS hosting services provided by Web24 and Linode, and a migration of one of my sites from one to the other at the end of March 2008.)



Web24 — Virtuozzo VPS in Australia



Back in early this year I talked about writing a review on Web24.com.au, which I used to replace a VPS I got from GPLHost, which I terminated last December as I was using too much bandwidth (and was too cheap to pay :) The VPS I got from Web24 was their Silver package, a Virtuzzo Linux VPS running Ubuntu Linux, with 384MB guaranteed memory, over 6+GB of privvmpages (burstable memory), 50GB/month data transfer, and was located in Fujitsu data centre in Melbourne (see their profile on VPSAU). All these for under AUD$50/month — very affordable for my little sites.





Great Network, Great Uptime, Great Customer Service



Other than the Web24-wide connectivity issue back in February, their network has been rock solid. I am getting around 35ms from my home ADSL2+ to my VPS, and have used 30-40GB a month without issue.



My VPS there also had great uptime. It was up for the entire period — almost 120 days without rebooting. It has certainly demonstrated the stability of Virtuozzo. Hardware wise Web24 was using a 2.4Ghz Xeon with 4x physical core and 8GB of physical memory. However, cpulimit of my VPS has been set to 160% so I can only use around 960Mhz of each CPU core (and 4 cores at the same time), which is not bad at all. Web applications are rarely constrained by CPU power anyway.



Customer service wise — top notch, all the way from pre-sale to support. I have sent in a few support tickets and all of them have been answered in timely manner. GPLHost still has a better service though in my opinion because they are not only solving your problems, reporting back their progress, but also following up after the issues have been resolved.



Then There was Performance Issue



The main reason I am moving away from Web24 is performance, or lack of it. As I have said previously that the server CPUs have more than enough power, but my website over there has suffered much degraded performance throughout February and March, due to large amount of I/O wait.



AWstats for site at Web24 First of all, what am I hosting there? A small-medium sized Drupal-based community site with around 5,000-7,000 visits per day, 800+k page views and 7.5 million hits per month. Lots of customisation and optimisation, and lots of fragment caching. Lighty on the front-end with 5x PHP+xcache/FastCGI processes (which is more than enough). MySQL 5 with a fat key buffer and query_cache_size to optimise on read requests. I am also trying to stay way below the memory limitation just to be on the safe side. In fact I usually use no more than 200MB under privvmpages. And I thought I was safe.



Not really.



Unfortunately I am not able to reproduce all the communications between Web24 support and myself (as I have a bad habit of deleting old emails), but most support issues I raised were performance related.



Swapping Swapping and Constantly Swapping



20 December 2007 evening, my VPS suddenly stopped responding. Yes it still responded to ICMP pings. Yes you can still connect to port 80, but PHP/FastCGI backend won’t load. SSH in took forever, and once I was in I checked the loadavg it went skyrocket. Type in free -m and I was shocked to discover that all the swap space has been exhausted. free, buffers and cached are all on single digit. Note that on Virtuozzo 3 UBC this is from meminfo of the host server, and has nothing to do with my own VPS. The host server was breathlessly swapping to cope with memory shortage. I cannot remember how long it lasted but it did resolve itself at the end, probably with OOM and some process slaughtering. It wasn’t pretty.



So in the middle of my panicking, I fired a support request. It was escalated and a few hours later someone responded saying it was a CPU issue rather than memory issue, and was caused by someone else’s VPS getting compromised. The swap space on the host server then got increased from 2GB to 12GB. I was trying to argue that it WAS a memory/swapping issue, and my processes cannot get enough CPU time because everyone was busy paging in and out! Nope. Web24 denied about it. The problem was with the CPU they said, which was definitely not what vmstat told me.



I/O Wait Issue Got Worse



Performance irregularity continued, and got worse around February and March. During peak hours (which for my site is 9am-11pm AEST), the 15-minute load average might go up to 4-5 for a period of 5-10 minutes every now and then, and my site would completely stall. 15-minute load average doesn’t drop back down below 0.5 during peak hours, and simple commands line ls feels sluggish — a sure sign of I/O wait issue. Swap usage on the host server has been ranging from 4GB-6GB (out of 12GB total swap space), and sometimes some of my key processes got swapped out even though I am only using half the guaranteed memory.



So I posted this question at WebHostingTalk (without mentioning who the provider was), and asked for opinions.



The question I would like to ask is — is it possible to pin-point why the VPS is slow? My apps are obviously not CPU bounded, and as iostat is not really working in Virtuozzo I cannot tell whether it is IO-bounded inside my VPS either. Is it possible to find out whether it is due to excessive paging on the physical server, so I can go to my provider and say, “hey you are overselling and you should not pack that many VE into a physical server”.



And the responses I’ve got:




… when a VPS node is using ANY swap at all that’s your first warning sign that the server is being pushed to its extremes.
seankoons at Zone.net



My take: It’s vastly oversold…
TheWiseOne at TekTonic



If 5GB of SWAP is being used, I’d say they are overselling…
devonblzx at Reseller3k




Well. I guess I got te message. Despite claims that “We do not overcommit on our VPS infrastructure”, looks like Web24 has just jammed too many people onto that host node. Or maybe my hypothesis with UBC-based VPS hosting is true — by providing 6+GB of burstable memory, you are basically inviting everyone to use as much as they want, and OOM won’t kick in until swap space has been exhausted — which would be probably too late. In that case they might not be overselling if they calculated with the amount of guaranteed memory, but poor UBC settings can still make you look bad. Not that I am going to be hosted with another UBC-based VPS provider anyway.



Moved to Linode



As traffic to my website has also been slowly growing, I was facing two choices — move up to the next plan, or move elsewhere (again). With the performance issues at Web24, I do not think moving up to the 512MB guaranteed plan will do any wonder. AUD$50/month is all I am willing to pay anyway, which means I won’t be able to find any virtual servers in Australia that will fit in my budget. With over 85% of traffic coming from Down Under, it makes sense to also host my site in Australia. But when budget becomes a constraint — well I guess I can live with a bit of latency.



As I still kept a Xen VPS at Linode after my review in January (yes, I actually became a customer), it is at Fremont CA which is “close enough” to Australia for me, I decided to make a migration from Web24 to Linode at the end of March.



So one evening I changed the DNS TTL to 15 minutes, put up a maintenance notice on my website, copy all the files across (which was less than 200MB), set everything up at Linode, make sure everything works, and update the DNS records to let them propagate. The next morning — traffic as usual, and everything “just works”. You do feel the lag typing inside a SSH session, but you cannot actually tell much difference with page serving. I guess the poor performance at Web24 sort of cancels out the benefit of low latency.



My community site has now been running for a month now at Linode and the performance has been great. In April it has been 8,000+ visitors/day and used around 62GB of data. Linode Platform Manager shows 4% of average CPU utilisation last month, and my Linode 360 uses little swap and always has 200+MB of (free + buffers + cached). 15 minute loadavg rarely goes above 0.1… 200GB/month of data transfer means it will probably last me a while.



Verdict



A few concluding points:




  • Don’t always believe what the support says. Gather your own evidence. Even a vmstat dump can point out roughly where the bottleneck is.



  • Xen >> Virtuozzo. Yes I know Matt is advertising here, but personally I still much prefer Xen than Virtuozzo. At least you get a virtualised block device where iostat can tell you how much I/O you are doing.




  • When you have high load on a Virtuozzo/OpenVZ VPS, adding more memory have no value by itself (despite many have suggested this at WHT). If you are CPU-bound (not likely) — check whether there’s a cpulimit on your VPS and ask your provider to remove it. If you are IO-bound (very likely), then you can go and get more memory PLUS implement aggressive caching throughout the stack so hopefully there is less load on the database, if you are the trouble maker.



    If you are not the one causing the problem, or maybe optimisation is not your cup of tea, then prepare to jump ship.




  • Oversold VPS exists.






Hostican uptime for January 2008: 99.762% (Over the Internet)

Webberco review

Tue, 11 Mar 2008 01:53:40 +0000
One thing when you are looking for SEO web hosting hosting you sometimes find deals on the various online forums that deal with website designs and domains names.
Unfortunately the people offering these deals might not deliver the goods. Case in point was my web hosting from Webberco. Last year I bought two hosting accounts from ...]

During this st. patricks week, hostican hosting is running a small promotion where you can get extra discount of 15% off on your hostican order. This is a limited time offer, and will ends by this weekend. Use the hostican coupon for st. patricks day luckyyou-12 . Other than this hostican coupon, you can use the $50 dollars hostican coupon code: BestHosting-12 (more saving!)

How to Migrate Your Linux Website to Another Hosting Company

Wed, 07 May 2008 12:48:34 GMT
A complete migration involves transferring the site data itself, meaning all the HTML and possibly PHP and MySQL files and CGI programs. You also need to modify the Domain Name System (DNS) information for the site and for the routing of the site email. DNS holds information that translates IP addresses to human-readable domain names. For Web site migration, the two important DNS records are the address (A) record, which tells the browser the IP address of the Web server, and the mail exchange (MX) record, which tells mail servers how to route the email.

HostGator vs. HostICan

Thu, 17 Apr 2008 12:39:09 +0000
If the phrase, "the devil is in the details" applies to anything, it applies to web hosting. HostGator and HostICan are two popular web hosts reviewed at Clickfire. The two hosts certainly have similarities. Kyle J. Summers looks at what sets HostGator and HostICan apart: plans, bandwidth, support, and even money back guarantees.

Today`s suggestion:



General Impression

Founded in 2002, hostgator.com, LLC has quickly grown from its humble beginnings
in Boca Raton, Florida into one of the most respected names in the web hosting
industry. Renowned for exceptional customer support and unrivaled in terms of
customer satisfaction, Host Gator is poised to take the lead in the highly
competitive and densely populated world of web hosting providers.



The Host Gator philosophy is simple: Provide reliable service, superior support,
and affordable pricing to businesses and individuals seeking quality shared,
reseller, or dedicated web hosting solutions.



Host Gator is committed to helping its clients succeed in a highly competitive
marketplace. By offering unmatched levels of customer support together with the
essential tools that today's successful web hosts require, Host Gator should be
your #1 choice for exceptional private label web hosting. As your business
grows, you can rest easily knowing that we will be with you every step of the
way.





Reliability

Choosing Host Gator means that your sites will be accessible via a fully meshed
and redundant Certified Cisco Network featuring 10 backbone providers. These
providers include:



* UUNet (GigE)

* Sprint (GigE)

* Level 3 (GigE)

* Global Crossing (GigE)

* Verio (GigE)

* AT&T (GigE)

* Time Warner (GigE)

* Allegiance Telecom (2 x GigE)

* Broadwing (GigE)

* AboveNet (2 x GigE)





Data Center (toured)

Host Gator has chosen The Planet to provide its customers with superior network
connectivity with minimal required downtime. Located in Dallas, Texas, The
Planet's Data Center boasts over 35,000 square feet of raised floor space
featuring state-of-the-art security, safety, and cooling systems and is
second-to-none in the industry



* (21) 26-ton Data Air AC units

* Pre-action dry pipe sprinkler system

* Over 500 smoke detectors in an integrated system

* Simplex security badge entry/exit on all doors to facility

* Multiple TXU electrical grids

* 4800 volts of input power

* 3 main transfer switches

* 1-megawatt generator (2000-gallon tank)

* 1.5-megawatt generator (2200-gallon tank)

* DataTrax monitoring software for all data center infrastructure



Contact Information and Support

E-mail

sales@hostgator.com

billing@hostgator.com

support@hostgator.com

Phone

We have 24/7 sales and support available.

1-866-96-GATOR (1-866-964-2867) 24/7 sales and support line 1-561-353-1164

Fax

1-703-797-1837

Office

23123 State rd 7 Suite 105 Boca Raton, Fl 33428

Mail

hostgator.com

9964 Robins Nest rd

Boca Raton, Fl 33496

United States of America



Click Here to go to hostican website.


This article on cnet web hosting review is supposed to be very useful to one seeking more information on cnet web hosting review. Do you think so?
#






host gator coupon codes
host gator coupons
host gator cpanel
host gator cupon
|

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home