NatVPS Migration to KVM Platfrom
received an email from NatVPS about 3 days ago:
Embracing KVM: A Leap Forward for Your Hosting Experience!
We're thrilled to announce that we're transitioning our hosting platform from OpenVZ-7 to KVM virtualization. This significant upgrade will bring a host of benefits to your hosting experience.
The reason for this migration is not only the numerous benefits of KVM virtualization but also the fact that OpenVZ-7 is no longer maintained and is practically an End-Of-Life platform. As you probably have experienced, we have had numerous issues with OpenVZ virtualization platform which include but not limited to: frequent VM corruption, IPv6 connectivity issues, broken server rebuilds, limited client side controls, ... . Migration to KVM virtualization will provide a stable platform that not only resolves the aforementioned issues but also in conjunction with much more modern VirtFusion control panel, provides a feature-rich interface that provides access to a plethora of features including superior performance due to direct hardware access and minimal overhead, much more secure servers because of isolated kernels, complete server monitoring and statistics interface, domain/port forwarding, IPv6 address management, hostname control, ... .
As part of this migration process, a number of changes will be applied:
• All the current OpenVZ-7 services will be transitioned to KVM virtualization.
• All the clients with 128MB RAM services will be migrated to 256MB RAM service for free.
• Some locations will need to be discontinued because of feasibility concerns as KVM virtualization takes much more resources. These locations include: South Africa, Chile, Hong Kong, Poland, and Switzerland. The active services in these locations will be recreated on one of our other locations.
• Los Angeles & New York will be consolidated to a single location within US for feasibility.
• Clients will get at least 10 days to move their data or make backups of them.
Estimated start date for KVM plans implementation: 4th October 2024
Estimated finish date: 20th November 2024
We're committed to providing you with the best possible hosting experience, and this transition to KVM is a major step in that direction. More details and exact schedule for each location will be communicated later on.
Best regards,
what a pity thing is HongKong will no longer exist.
Comments
I've been one of Web Horizon's customers since 2021 and very satisfied with the service. NAT VPS in most locations like Japan, Canada are extremely stable ( > 99% uptime). In the meantime many providers discontinued their products or even businesses, but Web Horizon at least survived or even expanded.
There were some problems as the email mentioned, but @Abdullah swiftly responded to my tickets, effectively solved some, as for those needed extra efforts he explained clearly and recorded carefully.
Wish Web Horizon continue to flourish.
MicroLXC is lovable. Uptime of C1V
it is correct.I have 7~8 tiny servers with NatVPS and three of them are HongKong Servers.these servers are very decent with rare low prices.it seems that the upstream in HongKong is Hosthatch.I don't know whether it is possible to keep these servers @Abdullah ,but upgrade to KVM is a huge leap definitely.
its been almost a year i m offering similar offers but Upgrade to KVM its a big challange for every provider on Lowend with 3-4$/Year price @Abdullah you did your best mate
KhanWebHost Cheap Shared Hosting | Cheap KVM VPS (DE,UK,US,FR) | KVM Sale - LES Offers
Update on Migration:
France KVM services are ready and clients who have service(s) in that location, can now open a ticket and request for creation of France KVM service(s).
KVM services for other locations will become online in coming days.
I'm a host rep for WebHorizon [AS149020] - VPS, Dedicated Servers, Web & Email Hosting
Singapore, Japan, India, Netherlands & Norway
I've been one of many @Abdullah / Web Horizon / NatVPS's customers for many years and enjoying all my services.
I'm just starting to play with that new KVM in France and I'm facing a box with 205M as memory and no swap: strange and kinda difficult to install anything. Anyone else in the same situation?
Since KVM servers run with an independent kernel, they use up resources directly from your allocation. I’m looking into ways to improve things, and there’s a chance I could bump the minimum RAM to 512MB for everyone in EU locations, depending on how feasible it is.
If we go ahead with this, we might need to adjust the pricing for promotional accounts to bring them closer to the standard rate, around $7 per year.
Is anyone else in a similar situation? I’d love to hear more feedback to help make things better for everyone.
https://webhorizon.net
No, it's not strange. You should check assigned memory size with
$ sudo dmidecode --type memory
As for the "205M", @Abdullah has explained well.
I know this is a difficult decision, is that compulsory or a proposal to be discussed?
I had run qb, cloudflared, and darkhttpd on a KVM VPS with 256 MB memory, archlinux OS stably, the only problem is all user programs must be stopped when
locale-gen
. If switch to Alpine Linux, more programs could be run.So I think paid upgrade of memory should be optional, accordingly you should limit or lower the resources quota used by those who refuse upgrade to prevent swap abuse. For example stop the VPS if load is more than 0.5 for a few hours.
MicroLXC is lovable. Uptime of C1V
@Abdullah I believe I somehow understand the memory logic and I should have no trouble running the set of little app I usually need on these kind of endpoint.
But it seems - once again I'm far from a knowledgeable guy - that I can't find a way to run an ISO install as your "minimal" debian templates are not my "cup of tea".
I'm not against an increase of the price, but for a box which is basically only my own wireguard vpn, I will have to check
But don't misunderstand me, as much as I could say my new box is quite fast and responsive!