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I noticed godaddy was not mentioned on the domain registrar discussion. Their support was knowledgeable on the one occasion I interacted with them,
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# ? Jun 22, 2014 01:54 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:26 |
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godaddy is also the worst.
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# ? Jun 22, 2014 21:33 |
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Yea, don't go with Godaddy.
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# ? Jun 22, 2014 21:41 |
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Please don't use godaddy.
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# ? Jun 26, 2014 12:42 |
I've had a dedicated server through Future Hosting for years in their Chicago DC and it's been great. Up until recently that is, when my download speed will slow to a 32KB/s crawl for hours on end. During the slowness I can speedtest my connection and get 3MB/s. I was also able to download a test file on the server from an AWS machine and it hit 10MB/s. So both me and the server have plenty of bandwidth to spare, is it just my routing that is hosed or something? Too many people around here watching Netflix?
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 00:49 |
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fletcher posted:I've had a dedicated server through Future Hosting for years in their Chicago DC and it's been great. Up until recently that is, when my download speed will slow to a 32KB/s crawl for hours on end. During the slowness I can speedtest my connection and get 3MB/s. I was also able to download a test file on the server from an AWS machine and it hit 10MB/s. So both me and the server have plenty of bandwidth to spare, is it just my routing that is hosed or something? Too many people around here watching Netflix? Does it happen continuously during set intervals or sporadically? If so, network congestion somewhere along the path between your connection and the data center (most likely data center). You could use something like webpagetest.org with a simple page stuffed of data to ascertain download speeds from other places across the globe - or - just do a traceroute (mtr/winmtr) and look for congestion via high pings. If sporadically, it's probably a Broadcom NIC
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 03:32 |
nem posted:Does it happen continuously during set intervals or sporadically? If so, network congestion somewhere along the path between your connection and the data center (most likely data center). You could use something like webpagetest.org with a simple page stuffed of data to ascertain download speeds from other places across the globe - or - just do a traceroute (mtr/winmtr) and look for congestion via high pings. It seems to be fairly set intervals when I would expect congestion to be fairly high (evenings and sundays). I did a mtr report and it looked like this: code:
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 05:38 |
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fletcher posted:
If they said that as a conclusive thing, then yeah, I'd say maybe look elsewhere. if they asked you for more information to help troubleshoot, then see where the ticket goes.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 05:49 |
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ICMP drops in the middle of a path don't mean poo poo. Also look at the reverse path when troubleshooting end to end connectivity problems.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 07:24 |
Comradephate posted:If they said that as a conclusive thing, then yeah, I'd say maybe look elsewhere. It sounded pretty conclusive. I've been able to reproduce the slowness from a completely different locations in California now. They asked for the mtr report and I provided it, and they said there's no indication the issue is with something they control. doomisland posted:ICMP drops in the middle of a path don't mean poo poo. Also look at the reverse path when troubleshooting end to end connectivity problems. What causes that anyways? And for the reverse path, that's just running mtr from the server to me right? At any rate, Future Hosting offered to make an exception and give me a server in their Santa Clara data center (with double the disk and ram) so I'm gonna take them up on it. Hopefully that will resolve my issue!
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:01 |
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fletcher posted:It sounded pretty conclusive. I've been able to reproduce the slowness from a completely different locations in California now. They asked for the mtr report and I provided it, and they said there's no indication the issue is with something they control. Yes, it's just a mtr from the server to your IP. Dropped ping replies are caused by network policies that throttle or filter echo replies out entirely. There could be QoS implemented somewhere upstream in the network. That would be evident in your reduced bandwidth throughput during peak hours, but not necessarily ping times.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:30 |
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Also if a busy router gets a lot of pings there is rate limiting built in to the control plane/linecard cpu which is usually answering the ICMP TTL exceeded packets. So while your ping is dropped the forwarding plane can be happily humming along not dropping anything.
doomisland fucked around with this message at 21:35 on Jun 27, 2014 |
# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:19 |
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I killed off an EC2 instance with 550 days of uptime today. That thing deserves some kind of medal.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:32 |
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There's a Mac Mini (cheapest one, not the server) in our colo that runs four virtual machines, a Mumble server, and most importantly my own personal instances of cookie clicker and a Minecraft server. It's at 306 days. My MBPr can't go a week without needing a force restart for one reason or another. I wonder if I can downgrade to 10.8.3?
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 01:16 |
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Google are starting to offer domain registrations https://domains.google.com/about/ Looks like they're aiming at the amateur / first-time buyer market though
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 01:36 |
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I see a lot of you choose VPS' from Linode, Digital Ocean and etc and I wonder why you guys pick them over something like AWS? I'm really new to all this VPS stuff, so I'm just curious.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 02:07 |
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Lord Windy posted:I see a lot of you choose VPS' from Linode, Digital Ocean and etc and I wonder why you guys pick them over something like AWS? AWS is not the same thing as DO. AWS means you can quite literally lose entire countries of datacentres and remain online (with a price to match), and can't be treated the same as Linode/DO. Basically, if you are using AWS, your application should be able to bootstrap itself to a ready state, expecting no data to persist on the OS disk between reboots.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 02:39 |
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Comradephate posted:I killed off an EC2 instance with 550 days of uptime today. That thing deserves some kind of medal.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 04:56 |
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Misogynist posted:Imagine the box it's running on. It was rocking some fatty X5550 Xeons, state of the art 2009. Lord Windy posted:I see a lot of you choose VPS' from Linode, Digital Ocean and etc and I wonder why you guys pick them over something like AWS? Cloud instance =/= VPS. DO is something of a middle ground, but basically the discussion is cattle vs. pets. It's like this: If you're in AWS (or whatever) and there's a single instance anywhere in your environment that you can't handle losing without any warning, you are setting yourself up for failure. The same is true to some extent with any multi-tenant environment, but with a VPS there is some expectation that you're going to be pissed off of your VPS goes down. If an instance on AWS goes down Amazon is not going to give a poo poo. If it's EBS backed then you can reboot it somewhere else, but if it's instance store backed, it's just gone now.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 07:35 |
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Oh, I had some expectation that my instance would keep going for as long as I was willing to pay for it. Is it common for instances to turn off? Is there a way for me to launch a new instance immediately (and automatically) if one dies. It's all very new to me, but if my website or database went down I would be kinda pissed.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 10:52 |
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Lord Windy posted:Oh, I had some expectation that my instance would keep going for as long as I was willing to pay for it. Is it common for instances to turn off? Is there a way for me to launch a new instance immediately (and automatically) if one dies. It's not common or normal, but things break. It's your responsibility to set up redundancy at AWS. You could pay less to run a single server, or more to set up load balancing, a separate database server and whatever else you might need. Not that you shouldn't keep redundancy in mind at DO and elsewhere. I think you could set up Auto Scaling in AWS to spin up a new server if your single instance breaks in the middle of the night or something. Or use it to always keep (at least) two working web servers behind a load balancer.
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# ? Jun 28, 2014 15:53 |
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Lord Windy posted:Oh, I had some expectation that my instance would keep going for as long as I was willing to pay for it. Is it common for instances to turn off? Is there a way for me to launch a new instance immediately (and automatically) if one dies. AWS: Your database should not be stored in EBS. Your database should be stored in RDS, with guaranteed IOPS. Your website should not be on a single EC2 instance, but multiple, behind ELB. Basically, stop thinking LAMP stack on a single machine or anything like that. EC2 -> compute. nothing else. Impotence fucked around with this message at 03:54 on Jun 29, 2014 |
# ? Jun 29, 2014 03:46 |
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NOTinuyasha posted:There's a Mac Mini (cheapest one, not the server) in our colo that runs four virtual machines, a Mumble server, and most importantly my own personal instances of cookie clicker and a Minecraft server. It's at 306 days. My MBPr can't go a week without needing a force restart for one reason or another. I wonder if I can downgrade to 10.8.3? Haha I started to do the same for my cookie clicker. How many life time cookies are you at?
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# ? Jun 29, 2014 09:43 |
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Any reason not to use https://pointhq.com/ ? Anyone got a better DNS host to recommend? I've been handling all my DNS stuff directly through DigitalOcean for a while. I want to dissociate it so that if I ever change host I won't have to redo all the MX records and stuff.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 14:33 |
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I've personally used dns.he.net for a very long time with no problems what so ever. A lot of other people have as well. It's worth looking into at least
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 14:46 |
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eightysixed posted:I've personally used dns.he.net for a very long time with no problems what so ever. A lot of other people have as well. It's worth looking into at least Hurricane's free DNS hosting is excellent. If your site isn't revenue-generating then HE is the way to go, though it's run by professionals and is reliable enough that you could run a business website on it. If nothing else, they'll also act as secondary nameservers for your zone, and you can have the primary anywhere you want. If you want fancy features like vanity nameservers, HTTP redirects, wildcard CNAMEs, DNS-based failover, zone templates, or an SLA and you're willing to pay a little, DNS Made Easy is worth a look.
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 15:25 |
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Thanks guys. I love how minimal and 90s that HE site is (makes me feel like a professional), but I think I do need some of those "fancy features" so I'll probably go for DNS Made Easy (whose name makes me feel like the opposite of a professional).
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 17:02 |
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I've got what is undoubtedly a stupid question for the wise denizens of the thread. I recently started at a new job and one of the projects my boss wants to have at least presentable by October is a web startup that shall remain nameless--not least for which that it has virtually nothing beyond the concept fleshed out. What I've been tasked with is bringing the little assets we have back to our control from the partner who put together the tech aspects, but is now distancing himself from the project. The company is unfortunate enough to have purchased hosting and a domain name from GoDaddy, whether at the behest of another partner or the tech guy, I don't know. Thing is, he misspelled what he purchased and had to go back and buy the correct domain name. Now the misspelled one and the correctly-spelled are up, the latter with content, but I cannot for the life of me find how to access it. Admittedly, this is where my competencies flag and I may simply be missing something abundantly obvious. We have the password to the GoDaddy account home to the host (misspelled) and the domain (correctly spelled), but the former appears to hold none of the latter. He asserts it simply redirects, but I can't find any indication of this in GoDaddy and the Joomla login info he provided us only works for the content-less site. If any of all that makes sense, what make you all of it?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 17:16 |
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Amazon R53 or bust for DNS. It barely costs anything per month. I've noticed that domains and DNS are two common questions. Can we get that info added to the OP?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 18:31 |
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Cugel the Clever posted:I've got what is undoubtedly a stupid question for the wise denizens of the thread. I recently started at a new job and one of the projects my boss wants to have at least presentable by October is a web startup that shall remain nameless--not least for which that it has virtually nothing beyond the concept fleshed out. What I've been tasked with is bringing the little assets we have back to our control from the partner who put together the tech aspects, but is now distancing himself from the project. The GoDaddy Customer account login should show all of the stuff in their control panel. Did they go out of their way to purchase both domains under separate accounts or some such?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 18:42 |
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Rawrbomb posted:The GoDaddy Customer account login should show all of the stuff in their control panel. Did they go out of their way to purchase both domains under separate accounts or some such?
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# ? Jul 1, 2014 19:10 |
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Hi there, looking for a bit of guidance. A customer of mine has decided to try his hand at selling products which I find dubious at best (legal highs) and I said while I didn't want to do the site for him I'd find out about where to host it and what payment processor to use. I think he'd just get suspended using traditional hosts and banned by the Paypals of this world? Thanks in advance.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 16:29 |
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peter gabriel posted:Hi there, looking for a bit of guidance. Can you tell us exactly what he's selling? If its legal to sell, it's legal to host the site selling it. I for one would have no issues hosting a site that sells legal stuff, even if people consider it morally wrong. I think Skrill and Moneybookers are used more than Paypal for things that Paypal frowns on.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 18:41 |
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SWIM has heard that "Freedom Hosting" is good for this kind of thing. As for the payment processor: how about Bitcoin? It's easy to use, there are no fees, and it's 100% anonymous.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 18:45 |
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Rufus Ping posted:SWIM has heard that "Freedom Hosting" is good for this kind of thing.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 18:49 |
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The products are legal, as far as I understand it it's the stuff that is chemically altered so as not to be 'quite' cocaine anymore (for example) - stuff like this: http://www.iceheadshop.co.uk/Gogaine_1g_p/2.htm I don't mind helping them out but want to be a bit hands off more than anything, it's not something that sits well with me and they are cool with that. I'll look into the payment processors mentioned as well, thanks Darklotus I amy just go with you at https://lithiumhosting.com/hosting - it all looks good. Is WHOIS hiding possible from you if we register the domain? Thanks again all.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 19:38 |
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peter gabriel posted:Darklotus I amy just go with you at https://lithiumhosting.com/hosting - it all looks good. Lithium Hosting offers free WHOIS Protection when you register/transfer domains with them
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 19:57 |
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eightysixed posted:Lithium Hosting offers free WHOIS Protection when you register/transfer domains with them Sweet! The reason for all this secrecy is because they have pretty much stumbled across an opportunity to sell some of these things, their day to day business is whiter than white so they don't want to really be associated with this.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 20:07 |
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peter gabriel posted:The products are legal, as far as I understand it it's the stuff that is chemically altered so as not to be 'quite' cocaine anymore IANAL but this doesn't seem legal at least in the US [and therefore paypal] (S. 3190 (IS) - SYNTHETIC DRUG ABUSE PREVENTION ACT OF 2012) which kind of is an across the board ban on any of the 'modifiers' no matter what they are because DEA got sick of individually banning substances/chemicals
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 20:27 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:26 |
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Biowarfare posted:IANAL but this doesn't seem legal at least in the US [and therefore paypal] (S. 3190 (IS) - SYNTHETIC DRUG ABUSE PREVENTION ACT OF 2012) which kind of is an across the board ban on any of the 'modifiers' no matter what they are because DEA got sick of individually banning substances/chemicals Yeah it's a grey area kind of thing at best from here in the UK - The govt basically says that a substance is only legal because the ban hasn't gone through yet, I think they are looking at speeding up that process as well as closing other loopholes soon. They are labelled usually as 'research chemicals' and not to be used by humans and things like that, which is the big loophole at the moment. So technically, yes they are legal here until they are officially banned. Odd situation really.
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# ? Jul 2, 2014 20:58 |