johnk
johnk
Comments
-
New Relic is pretty simple and nice - if you disabled the non-needed items, you should be able to cover basic resource + network monitoring under their free tier.
-
It's not like Yoast was anything but a bunch of bloat in the first place anyways.
-
Yeah. It's built in the kernel and pretty frequently used I'd imagine. Just need to be aware that some things need an exclusion (ie, polkitd/nagios/zabbix)
-
Have you considered mounting /proc with hidepid?
-
Interesting...thanks for sharing - if you don't mind elaborating, what issues did you hit with them?
-
Thank you for everyone's replies! I think we're going to > @chimichurri said: Yeah, you're right. I was looking at the wrong section for transfer. That's a top contender right now. They've got the E4's for $20/m or so and the free tier covers everything else. 99.99% durability, live migrations. Doesn't work for the same…
-
I appreciate the response! But, that's probably a bit far from what I'm looking for. I know the above experience would be far from the only one about network outages/storage failures, though I wouldn't expect much more given the price
-
I see! Yeah, that (performance, network, storage) was pretty much our experience too with the couple hundred dollars in credit they were kind enough to give us for some in-depth evaluation. We didn't get a chance to evaluate their reliability over a long term though, and I've been hard pressed to find any review about that…
-
So I've heard...Assuming no issues on their side, support (or lack of thereof) shouldn't be an issue, though I'd probably rather pay $10-20 more for someone to speak to if something does happen.
-
Thanks! Their pricing is unbeatable for what they offer (as a semi-big provider). Do you happen to know what their storage is backed by? I recall reading ceph somewhere, but that could just be their object storage.
-
Thanks! That's on my short list too - we actually had a long chat with them when looking for a primary provider, though that dropped out. Have you had any experiences with them?
-
Google is actually the one that's out of budget. LOL Compute + storage would be ~ $20/m. Bandwidth @ standard rate is $40/m or so alone. I guess it's only a bit over, but there are much better options elsewhere
-
Yeah, I've looked at them too. Unfortunately, no US location (yet), otherwise they'd fit the bill perfectly. Forgot to mention that in initial post - I've amended it to add that.
-
Yeah, you're right. My numbers were as of 2 months ago. Insane how they've increased.
-
It's almost like they're charging how much it takes to acquire the subnet. 5k Euro or so works out to $22/ip, which is a tad below the current going for a /24.
-
I'm a month late, but any "Pull" CDN acts like a giant reverse proxy (Cloudflare), though most don't offer DNS or offer it via a separate service. For the former, you've got a ton of options: Cloudfront, StackPath, Fastly, etc.