[mrVM] - Bundle TopUP * or * 6 x 256MB VPS for $18 p/YEAR! * or * 3 x 256MB for $9 !! ONLY 20 availa
A merry Christms to all of you!
Every now and then I'm asked about a bundle topup, some way to add additional locations at the same bundle price and this christmas I will give you a special deal! All Topup orders placed before 2019-12-31 @ midnight are eligble for this deal.
- No setup fee
- No requirement to add additional year(s) to service(s) you already have.
I'm in the christmas spirit and will keep the requirements to a minimum. And I'll even throw in a step-by-
step guide
- You have ordered a bundle previously.
- You must add ALL missing locations. A bundle is a bundle
- Renewal date on new locations will be set to the same as your current bundle renewal date.
- You must place the order BUT do NOT pay at this point!!!!
- Open a ticket requesting a bundle topup and your order number
- I will update the price on your order to MATCH your bundle order!
- You pay the updated invoice and get fresh new idle servers
As the Black Friday/Cyber monday deal was so popular, I've restocked Singapore, added a sixth location to the Europe and USA bundles and opened this offer up again for an additional 20 orders.
All servers below are NAT IPv4 + IPv6 enabled.
All servers come with:
- 1 vCPU (See FUP in terms)
- 256 MB RAM
- 5GB HDD
- 500 GB BW
EUROPE
- Bulgaria
- Norway
- Germany
- France
- Italy
- Romania
That is 6 VPS for just $18 in TOTAL for a whole YEAR!
Order Link: https://clients.mrvm.net/cart.php?a=add&bid=17
USA
- New York
- West Virginia
- Kansas City
- Lenoir
- Las Vegas
- Seattle
That is 6 VPS for just $18 in **TOTAL **for a whole YEAR!
Order Link: https://clients.mrvm.net/cart.php?a=add&bid=18
ASIA Pacific
- Sydney
- Perth
- Singapore
That is 3 VPS for just $9 in TOTAL for a whole YEAR!
Order Link: https://clients.mrvm.net/cart.php?a=add&bid=19
IMPORTANT: Due to the ridiculously low pricing I am unable to entertain any change or variation under any circumstances, asking simply hurts my ability to be able to bring offers like this to the community. I appreciate your understanding.
It should go without saying but just in case, these are none refundable.
Features:
All locations have HAproxy front ends fully automated so you can host your site including https
Tun/TAP available
Fuse available
NFS available
All IPv4 are NAT
You get 20 ports forwarded + 1 special port for ssh access over IPv4
All locations come with a routed IPv6 subnet
You will get access to the Virtualizor control panel for server management.
Bandwidth resets monthly
Common uses are:
- Teamspeak Servers
- VPN Servers
- Proxy Servers
- Web Servers
- Distributed database master<>master/slave setups
- Scrapers
- Cheap HA using Cloudflare and round-robin DNS
- IRC clients (IPv6 only)
Simple terms overview:
- No torrenting
- NO TOR
- TOR is not allowed!
- No crypto mining/wallets
- No bulk mailing
- No IRC Servers
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Comments
Question I have been meaning to ask: is there any on 100mbps ports? I have some servers and I think most are 1gbps ports but some seem to be 100mbits. Just curious.
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France is 100mbit.
I've been told that a couple of other locations are locked down to 100mbit but I have managed to get higher speeds. I don't dare to say which locations in case someone is reading
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Would be really interested to know how this works?
Any tutorial or something I could follow?
My Personal Blog | Currently Building LoadMyCode
In the control panel, click on domain forwarding, select http/https and enter your domain name.
Make an A record in your dns and add the external ipv4.
Shortest tutorial I’ve ever written, probably missing some steps. ??♂️
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Sorry I meant how did you make this happen? How did you automate this process yourself
Normally when I setup a VPS it is a lot of work to setup Certbot, Nginx etc etc.
My Personal Blog | Currently Building LoadMyCode
Virtualizor
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
I'm curious if you have considered a world wide bundle like 2 in the states, 2 somewhere in europe, 1 in an asian country?
If you set up a lot of VPSes, it's definitely worth learning how to use Ansible. You can automate everything so you can just run one command and it sets everything up
Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
I have, as WHMCS works, I have to create one bundle package for each combination.
Haven’t counted, but it is a lot of bundle packages to create.
On the other hand, there has always been a discount when adding 4 or more locations to the cart at one time.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Curious about this rule! After all, isn't impossible to use NAT ports for mailing, without having access to the node to use mail ports?
• If a program actually fits in memory and has enough disk space, it is guaranteed to crash.
• If such a program has not crashed yet, it is waiting for a critical moment before it crashes.
There is always sending, even though smtp (outbound) is blocked over ipv4, there is always ipv6 (not blocked)
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
But using ipv6 for mail, is like gambling. You never know if the recipient has ipv6 capability to receive the mail, don't you?
• If a program actually fits in memory and has enough disk space, it is guaranteed to crash.
• If such a program has not crashed yet, it is waiting for a critical moment before it crashes.
Still, the rule is there for a reason.
It’s better this way around then the other?
Instead of waiting for it to happen and then try to take action.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
The rule is fine, I'm asking more as a learning curve. I run some non mail needed services with you, but i use heavily NAT on my own dedicated servers for some services. I haven't search a lot, mailing from those NAT instances, but from time to time there is a need of mail sending capability - not to be used as a mail server for normal mails, but more of alerts or verifications (e.g. a contact form in a website that sends the info in a mail).
Of course, in a situation like this, it is rather easy to use ipv6 and a gmail account to receive them, I guess!
• If a program actually fits in memory and has enough disk space, it is guaranteed to crash.
• If such a program has not crashed yet, it is waiting for a critical moment before it crashes.
@jvnadr
Unless you block outbound smtp on the node, it wont be a problem sending the occasional email from a nat container.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
@jvnadr
Or use a service like mailgun with their alternative email ports for sending.
With some thinking ”out of the box”, you might even use them for incomming emails.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
I did that, it works. I am now searching if I can use services like mailgun to send via ipv6 and ending (thru transcactional email) be sent from their shared ipv4
• If a program actually fits in memory and has enough disk space, it is guaranteed to crash.
• If such a program has not crashed yet, it is waiting for a critical moment before it crashes.
Suggestion: Please make a popular bundle with the following 6 locations
Anyone know which images work consistently across all europe?
During order Debian 7 chosen but resulted in 4 instances with no OS installed and not available as a re-install option.
Ticket opened but asking here for the benefit of others to avoid same question being asked.
Debian 8 was released in 2015... Debian 7 is ridiculously old now.
For all the OpenVZ7-based services, the Debian 10 image works very well. It's likely you're not seeing Debian 7 for the OpenVZ7 services as Debian 7 images only exist for OpenVZ6.
Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
That and Centos-6 were the only options allowed when ordering.
Just tried Debian 10 (thanks). It has worked in 2 locations out of 6 and 1 location did not have it so used Debian 9 which has worked.
@mikho
1. I bought BF bundle before, they are really good. The Seattle location was not included in the BF bundle. I have opened a ticket (#73420) a day ago requesting a bundle topup, could you update the invoice so I can pay it.
2. I think US-LAS node is down, not sure if it is a known issue.
1. Having family over for christmas, will take care of it when there is time.
2. Known issue, no response from the Provider I use there.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Merry Christmas!
I'd order one of those bundles
All bundles gone.
For locations that are on OpenVZ6, Debian 9 is the latest version that you can use. Debian 10 doesn't work on OpenVZ6. For OpenVZ7, if any locations don't have a Debian 10 image, you should be able to install Debian 9 then upgrade to Debian 10. Easy way to tell is to check the kernel version using
uname -a
; a 2.6.xxx kernel means it's OpenVZ 6.Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
In OpenVZ 7 there was a bug with libc.so.1 or something causing Debian 10 not to boot if you tried to upgrade. Not sure if that applies to v6.
As for
uname -a
, it reports 4.19 in my OVZ7 VPS'es, so I guess it fakes/emulates something.It’s all fake in the virtual reality.
“Technology is best when it brings people together.” – Matt Mullenweg
Christmas gone.