Sunday, June 08, 2008

Short Review on dedicated file server

dedicated file server web sites

WebHostingPad

Tue, 12 Feb 2008 14:35:21 +0000
At Web Hosting Pad, we are very confident in our products and services. We provide a fast, reliable and comprehensive service that we believe you will be completely satisfied with. Webhostingpad.com a divison of Omnis networks, was formed in 2005 with a team of very successful and proven industry veterans, intent on delivering the best ...]

Plesk, Virtuozzo, PEM, HSPcomplete and SiteBuilder by SWsoft

Sun, 13 Mar 2005 00:00:00 EST
SWsoft is the recognized leader in automation and server virtualization software for Web hosting companies, communications providers and enterprises. SWsoft's products deliver industry-leading performance, stability and manageability.





On the Wal-Mart-ized Web...

Fri, 16 Mar 2007 17:39:00 -0400

Liam says this week's most important trend is web hosting providers' continued expansion of data center footprints. The strong demand for hosting facilities seems like a good sign. At the same time, there are a number of outside-world developments that folks in the hosting business ought to keep an eye on.



1. On Wednesday, in addition to officially releasing RHEL5, Red Hat announced that it will soon launch an open source marketplace called Red Hat Exchange (RHX). As Business Week reports, Red Hat will guarantee the compatibility of RHX products with its platform AND provide tech support for each and every 3rd party product on the exchange. In addition, RHX will allow end users to submit ratings, read reviews and compare notes.



2. Later that afternoon, Microsoft said it will buy Tellme Networks. The Associated Press thinks the deal is worth $800 million to $1 billion.



3. Less than a day later, Cisco announced that it has agreed to acquire WebEx for $3.2 billion (or $2.9 billion, if you deduct WebEx's $300 million cash balance).



4. And last but not least Google sort of confirmed that it's working on a mobile phone.



It's a Wal-Mart-ized web; every Big Co wants to assemble a broader range of more seamlessly integrated products for a wider and better networked audience. This leaves less and less of a market for old school vendors who sell standalone widgets to isolated prospects.



For instance, consider 1&1's recent survey of 765 small business owners. Andreas says 100% of the respondents agree that the absence of a company website is bad for sales, but there's much more to these customers' operations beyond setting up a web presence. Might they not benefit from Zoho or ThinkFree powered productivity apps? SharePoint based collaboration? CRM?



More importantly, Andreas counts "hundreds of thousands of US small businesses" among his customers. As such, one super valuable feature that he's uniquely positioned to deliver is a 1&1 social network through which customers can connect with potential vendors, partners and buyers. I feel like 1&1 is really missing out by amassing a sizable community without leveraging it for its members' benefit.



As SWSoft CEO Serguei Beloussov likes to point out, 1&1 and its competitors have sold tens of millions of "web hosting 1.0" accounts, which collectively generate billions in annual revenue. He's absolutely right - but as you see above, the world's not standing still...





But what I really wanted to see was what results the Godaddy domain suggestion tool would offer as alternatives. Here’s what came up:

datacenter-truck.jpg

Crucial Paradigm Sydney Xen VPS Review

Sun, 01 Jun 2008 23:48:43 +1000

Crucial Paradigm Australia (Disclaimer: Aaron W. from Crucial Paradigm emailed me early last week asking for a review on their re-launched Xen VPS plans. So here we go — a review on their Xen VPS after playing with one for a few days.)



Crucial Paradigm is a web hosting/web design company in Sydney, Australia that have both Australian and US based operations (just realised that their office is around 400 metres to where I work). They have been in business for 5 years now, and early this year they launched their virtual dedicated servers service, providing fully managed Xen VPS hosted at the Equinix data centre in Sydney (which is on the same road where I live!)





They have recently re-launched their Xen VPS service. Instead of being fully managed, Crucial Paradigm is now offering them unmanaged with full-management option at extra A$50/month. That has driven down the cost of their base packages. The VPS I am testing now, which is the cheapest on their plan page, has




  • 256MB memory + 256MB swap partition

  • 25GB RAID-10 storage

  • 10GB data transfer/month



All that for AUD$29/month, which makes it one of the cheapest virtual dedicated server plans in Australia. I know 10GB of data transfer per month is nothing and some sites can zap through that in a day. AUD$3.50 per excessive GB of transfer is not particular cheap either — but then again this is Australia we are talking about, unfortunately.



Signing Up and Deployment



You can sign up a Xen VPS account from the plan page, which is integrated with their WHMCS hosting billing system (why oh why do you want a domain name for unmanaged VPS service?!) Anyway, signing up is a breeze after putting in example.com. I think all sign ups are manually provisioned so there is no instant VPS deployment (although I think WHMCS does have HyperVM provisioning module). My VPS was deployed within an hour anyway as Crucial Paradigm has staff on support 24/7. Pretty good so far.



Note that at the point of signing up, you can choose from a list of available Linux distributions — CentOS 4/5, Debian 3/4, Ubuntu 7.10/8.04, Gentoo 2006 and Fedora Core 6. You can also choose a control panel, some with extra cost — cPanel, DirectAdmin and LxAdmin. More about this later — but for a start I chose a Debian 4 template.



CPU & I/O Performance



According to Crucial Paradigm’s VPS page, they have pretty impressive physical hardware running the dom0. At the time of writing they are deploying new VPS onto hardware with the following spec:





  • 2 x Xeon Quad Core 5410 (8 x 2.33Ghz, 24MB Cache)

  • 32GB DDR2 FB-DIMM RAM

  • 8+ Enterprise Drives RAID-10

  • Dual Redundant Power Supplies




While the physical server has access to 8 CPU cores, the low-end 256MB VPS I’ve got has only access to one according to /proc/cpuinfo. I think higher plans might have access to more cores. It is not a big issue for me as the bottleneck of most websites is usually not on CPU (if the scripts and database have been tuned properly). Disk I/O performance is usually more critical.



I used methods detailed in this LinuxInsignt article to measure the linear read and seek performance of the hard disk (tested at 9:30pm on Sunday):




# hdparm -tT /dev/sda1

/dev/sda1:
Timing cached reads: 23060 MB in 2.00 seconds = 11555.72 MB/sec
Timing buffered disk reads: 948 MB in 3.01 seconds = 315.39 MB/sec

# seeker /dev/sda1
Seeker v2.0, 2007-01-15, http://www.linuxinsight.com/how_fast_is_your_disk.html
Benchmarking /dev/sda1 25000MB], wait 30 seconds..............................
Results: 141 seeks/second, 7.05 ms random access time


Result is pretty good. However I do personally find “performance testing” under the VPS environment is a bit less than useful because it all depends on how much resource your neighbours are using at the same time. Take disk read test for example, the result is different everytime, although it is usually between 200MB/sec to 315MB/sec.



I am happy to say that Crucial Paradigm is offering a very solid virtual dedicated server.



Network Connectivity



Crucial Paradigm’s Xen VPS is connected to a 100mbps port with pretty good connectivity. First of all it peers with PIPE networks which means pretty good speed for many broadband users in NSW. I also get quick downloads from inter-state mirrors. For example 3.5MB/sec from mirror.aarnet.edu.au in Queensland.



Best of all, it has very sweet latency for NSW users. 20ms average from my ADSL-connected home to my testing VPS, consider the first hoop is already 18 milliseconds!



Revolutionary?



There are now over 30+ hosting companies providing virtual private/dedicated servers in Australia. The question is — what sets Crucial Paradigm apart?





  • Xen LogoXen VPS. You’ll find most Australian VPS providers go with Virtuozzo-based service, and those that use Xen are few, although Xen itself is free (whereas Virtuozzo costs). I have nothing against Parallels but I do personally prefer Xen as it is more dedicated-like.



    Check my previous article on Xen vs. OpenVZ on why I prefer one rather than the other.




  • Affordable entry cost. What attracts me first to VPS is its price tag — it costs way less than a full brown dedicated server and yet it feels and behaves like one. Looking at the list of providers in Australia, not many of them can offer you a VPS for less than AUD$30 per month, so that Aussie Linux geeks can have a “cheap root” somewhere Down Under.



    Crucial Paradigm, GPLHost, and Labyrinth Data are the only ones I can find so far. Interestingly they are all Xen providers. Crucial Paradigm and Labyrinth Data’s low-end plans are pretty much on-par. CP’s one has more memory and offers plans scale all the way to 4GB RAM, but LD’s has more disk space, free WAIX traffic, etc.





  • HyperVMHyperVM VPS Management. I won’t say HyperVM is revolutionary, but it is indeed unique amongst Australian VPS providers. If you check out the VPS hosting offers section at WHT, you will find around 1/2 of the new providers are using HyperVM and OpenVZ. The reason is simple — you don’t have to code your own VPS management suite and at 50 cents/VPS/month it is probably the most economical solution for new providers.



    HyperVM is actually not too bad. I do prefer custom panels from SliceHost and Linode and found HyperVM too cluttered (icons everywhere giving you too much information). However it is powerful and it gives customers everything to shoot themselves in the foot. You can manage multiple nodes from a single installation.



    Why there’s no other Australian providers offering HyperVM-based solution is really beyond me. At least Crucial Paradigm is taking the lead here.





LxAdmin Screenshot Another point related to HyperVM is LxAdmin, LxLabs’ light weight web hosting control panel that is free with HyperVM-powered VPS, that I have reviewed here. LxAdmin has evolved since I last reviewed it last June. Instead of 100 free domains you now only get to host 40 domains, but it has also added a lot more functionality that makes it a more complete end-to-end web hosting package. It even integrates with WHMCS that Crucial Paradigm says is “free” on their plan page.



Why am I bringing LxAdmin up? In fact after a few hours my Debian VPS was up, I wiped it clean and installed CentOS 5 + LxAdmin template. The LxAdmin template has everything you need to get web hosting up and running — web server, DNS server, mail server, IMAP server, control panel, etc. Basically you can start hosting your sites or your clients’ sites straight away — why needs cPanel and DirectAdmin? You might swap out Lighttpd for Apache though for compatibility, and 256MB RAM is more than sufficient to run Apache + LxAdmin.



This is again something I have been wondering, as due to abundant budget VPS over there in US, LxAdmin/Host-In-A-Box has raised in popularity due to its cost and memory usage. No one in Australia seems to care about it but I am glad that Crucial Paradigm brought it in as the low-cost solution to run your own small hosting shop.



Conclusion



After playing around with a testing VPS for a few days, I can say that Crucial Paradigm has launched some very solid Xen VPS packages. While VPS providers are getting crowded in Australia, Crucial Paradigm managed to differentiate itself from the competitions by providing a low entry-level price tag plus a powerful server management control panel (HyperVM). By offering a free web hosting control panel (LxAdmin) and a free billing system (WHMCS), I think this VPS will be very appealing to small hosting shops or web design/publishing shops.



Will I host with Crucial Paradigm? Maybe, but definitely not at this stage. Bandwidth in Australia is still way too expensive. Unless you are a big bandwidth buyer, you usually have to pay $3-$4 per gigabyte transferred. Crucial Paradigm also lacks a community feeling on its site — where do their customers hang out?! I guess most individual/small business customers won’t care, but as a developer I do look out for signs of forums and active blogs to see how lively the community is (which usually reflects how good the service is).



All the best to Aaron and team.





dedicated file server Products we recommend



About anhosting



anhosting was founded in early 2001. Its growth has been wonderful & in a quite
short time it has become a multi-million dollar web hosting company out of a
small company. Even now it has three offices in two countries but it is hosting
sites for thousands of customers over a hundred countries. They aim at total
customer satisfaction. If you are switching on to them after having a bad
hosting experience then they profess to keep your website smiling & so as you.







Unique Hosting Features



The company provides all inclusive hosting where there are no hidden charges or
set-up fees. If you are new to web hosting & don�t have much idea then anhosting
provides you total help to build & run your website effectively. If you are
switching from another host they will help you to transfer your domains, files,
databases, etc. all for free. The company also offers free domain name renewal
for life.







Benefits of Hosting with anhosting



The company�s flagship plan: MegaPlan is one of the best packages available. For
$6.95/ month it offers 250,000 MB personal disk storage and 2500 GB bandwidth.
You can host 10 domains on one account. It also offers free domain for life
along with unlimited sub-domains, emails accounts 7 Auto Responders. Other
features included in the packages offered by the company are MySQL databases,
IMAP, POP3, SMTP support, web mail support, Spam Assassin, PHP, Ruby On Rails
(RoR), Python, CGI-BIN, CGI Library, full.htaccess Control, IP Banning,
Fantastico; Wordpress & Mambo (Blogging tools), OS Commerce Shopping cart, SCSI,
RAID-5 Technology, & many more such features.







Support Options



anhosting has a special customer service cell MPCustomer. This customer service
offers support to the customers & also manages the billing system. It features
advanced reporting, easy email & ticket based interaction with skilled staff.
The service is fast & is the best option to upgrade your account or ask queries.
The service connects users to the best data center. The company offers �Live
Chat� also; this helps in quick resolution of customer queries.







Reliability



anhosting is a reliable service provider. It is certified by BBB OnLine
Reliability Program. The company has one of the best reputations on the net from
professional and leaders in the web hosting trade organizations. It offers its
customers value added services. It also has to its credit many of the industry
awards which stress the level of its service.







Money Back Guarantee



The company offers 30 days money back guarantee. If you don�t find the services
provided by the company up to the mark then you can easily get the refund.







Conclusion



anhosting is a very reliable service provider which provides all the best
features that help the customers to smoothly operate their web sites. All the
packages are provided with security & spam control. The company provides quick
services that are understood & easy to use. The staffs are quick & provide fast
solutions to all the kinds of queries or problems posted by the customers. Thus,
anhosting is a user friendly service-provider which provides its customers all
the facilities needed by them.



Click Here to go to
anhosting
website.



Please don't treat this as an average piece of writing on dedicated file server. A lot of effort and hard work has been put to get this end product!
#







Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions (Kaptest.com)
Download Bioshock at Windows Marketplace and find out how much of your humanity you will sacrifice...to save your own life


free web design
free web host
free web host review
| | |

Labels:

1 Comments:

Anonymous Brisbane Cloud Solution said...

Interesting overview! I'm surprised you haven't covered any of the higher end providers in Australia. Are you familiar with ESX / vmware? That's what ATech run for their managed Brisbane VPS.

5:04 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home