But why should a client demand the whole resources if he/she needs it only between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. CET?
Seriously, that's what some of you are sounding like right now.With our OpenVZ package, you might sometimes get what we advertised! Sure, there will likely be a slow time of day when you can use your full resources.. what's that, you need them available some other time too? HAHA, well that's too bad, you'll have to fight everyone else for first use because we weren't up front about what we were actually selling you. But you're the client, it's YOUR responsibility to know what assumptions we make about the tech we use that we don't bother to tell you about.
Will you warn/discipline/suspend/kick me if I pad my OVZ disk space upto 80% with random data, and run a custom app to consume 90% of my RAM? Assuming I'm not hitting I/O and CPU. Maybe 0.1 load average.Seriously, that's what some of you are sounding like right now.
No, this is not the point.Will you warn/discipline/suspend/kick me if I pad my OVZ disk space upto 80% with random data, and run a custom app to consume 90% of my RAM? Assuming I'm not hitting I/O and CPU. Maybe 0.1 load average.
i understand. but i am actually asking Aldryic's standNo, this is not the point.
I mean, the customer paid and should be able to use resources at any time, but if he wastes them in purpose to do harm, then probably doesnt like the host (us) and I will make sure they understand the feeling is mutual. We go to great lenghts for customers, but, if they are jerks, we can make exceptions and treat them the same they treat us and our other customers.
Pretty much this. If everyone legitimately used 100% of their resources tomorrow, we'd be forced to migrate some users to a new node at our expense and compensate for any inconvenience. Every business has a risk factor. We, as hosts, know our job and we know what we've sold. It's economical and extremely reliable within reasonable parameters.No, this is not the point.
I mean, the customer paid and should be able to use resources at any time, but if he wastes them in purpose to do harm, then probably doesnt like the host (us) and I will make sure they understand the feeling is mutual.
We go to great lenghts for customers, but, if they are jerks, we can make exceptions and treat them the same they treat us and our other customers.
Neither do I, but "uses" is the key word there.I don't mind if any of our customers uses 100% of their resources all the time - every hour, every day, every month, etc. This includes the RAM, HDD and bandwidth.
About the CPU it's different and we specify in the ToS what's acceptable long time contention ratio of the CPU.
Nope. You're paying for the resources, use them. (But if you have 95% random data, don't ask for a migration )Will you warn/discipline/suspend/kick me if I pad my OVZ disk space upto 80% with random data, and run a custom app to consume 90% of my RAM? Assuming I'm not hitting I/O and CPU. Maybe 0.1 load average.
I'm not real sure what Aldryic is going on about.
That's a very, very slippery slope. You'd best have some public smoking gun before you go after a client, otherwise people are going to start wondering why you're using vzctl enter and digging through their VPS. Sure, it's obvious to everyone here that OpenVZ is insanely insecure, and that a provider can rifle through your personal stuff at any time... but the vast majority of clients don't know this. And if you get caught? Heh.nor did I see anyone doing this yet, however, if I will, then will be added to my blacklist and at slightest tos breach will get terminated directly
I agree 100%. And don't misunderstand, I'm not being supportive of these "use all the resources" scripts (personally, that sounds pretty damn abusive to me). Nor am I hating on providers that take advantage of OpenVZ's capacity for over-commitment and wisely (key word there) balancing the line between efficient use and oversell. But every provider that I see say "Of course it's oversold, they're not supposed to be able to use it all"... they need to get out of this business. They're the ones that give the rest of us (and OpenVZ as a platform) a bad name.But give me a client who casually mentions somewhere that he just likes to watch the resource bars in solusvm cap at 100% to see if it'll hurt me and I'll give you someone looking for a new host.
I cannot agree more. Whilst the idea behind what the topic seems wrong to me, technically you are well within your rights to use your resources. We run a transparency policy on overselling for a reason -- while we don't expect clients to use all of their resources and provide cost-effective solutions as a result of overselling, we do monitor nodes and balance accordingly for those that DO use their resources. If you want to buy a VPS from us and use all of the disk space and ram, by all means feel free to do so. Any host that looks at a client and goes "oh you want to use your resources? Well we have a 'we can kick you for any reason' clause in our TOS, bye!" needs to seriously re-evaluate what they are doing.I agree 100%. And don't misunderstand, I'm not being supportive of these "use all the resources" scripts (personally, that sounds pretty damn abusive to me). Nor am I hating on providers that take advantage of OpenVZ's capacity for over-commitment and wisely (key word there) balancing the line between efficient use and oversell. But every provider that I see say "Of course it's oversold, they're not supposed to be able to use it all"... they need to get out of this business. They're the ones that give the rest of us (and OpenVZ as a platform) a bad name.
+100. Time for a great purging."Of course it's oversold, they're not supposed to be able to use it all"... they need to get out of this business. They're the ones that give the rest of us (and OpenVZ as a platform) a bad name.
+100. Time for a great purging.
I hope everyone with "reserving resources" thinking can read this whole topic. Happy ending+100. Time for a great purging.
Valuable topic and conversation for sure.I hope everyone with "reserving resources" thinking can read this whole topic. Happy ending