Review of Netcup ARM G11 VPS in Manassas, VA USA! -- Does @imok have the world's best VPS?
@imok and I each got Netcup ARM G11 VPSes for Black Friday! Yaaay!
@imok's VPS is bigger than mine!
I finally was able to order mine as a result of seeing and following the link in @Blembim's post on December 20. Thanks again @Blembim!
CPU
Both @imok's and my new VPSes run on ARM CPUs. They also are Netcup's "11th generation" VPSes. So, @imok and I got Netcup "ARM G11 Netcup VPSes."
@imok has 10 cores, but I only have 6.
Nested virtualization (VM-x/AMD-V) to set up more fast KVM VPSes inside the main VPS is not enabled.
RAM
@imok has 15.6 GiB RAM, but I only have 7.7.
Disk
Our Netcup Holiday bargains have double the disk size above the non-Holiday, standard offers.
@imok has 1007.9 GiB SSD (not NVMe) disk, and I only have 503.9.
Network
2.5 Gbit/s; temporarily throttled to 200 Mbits/sec if previous 24 hrs average traffic exceeds 2 TB
1 x IPv4/32; 1 x IPv6/64
Location
Both @imok's VPS and mine are located in Manassas, VA, USA.
Pricing
My VPS costs €5.26 per month. No VAT for me because I ordered from the Mexico location where I currently am visiting.
There was an annual pricing option, which provided, in effect, two months free, but I prefer monthly pricing.
I used a $5 Netcup coupon ($5.00 = €4.20) for the first month. So my first month is costing only €1.06 = $1.11.
@imok posted that his VPS costs "$9/m."
Operating Systems
Netcup offers the expected Linux and FreeBSD images. One thing I really like is that the Netcup Server Control Panel ("SCP") makes it possible to upload custom images and ISOs via sftp. No support ticket and no waiting for support is needed to upload and use a custom image or ISO.
Account Setup and Ordering
Here is a list of links to my previous posts about the ordering process. The overall process seemed lengthy and painful. Product availability seemed intermittent. I had to try repeatedly. I had difficulty navigating the order and payment processes where I had to co-ordinate between email and web pages on my phone and on my Chromebook. The terms of service and all the notices seem like long and complicated walls of text.
Yabs
A yabs from my VPS is posted in the Pit.
@imok also posted his VPS's yabs.
Performance Decreases
I haven't analyzed the data carefully, but it looks like my VPS' disk I/O and Geekbench 6 performance have been descreasing, maybe as the Node filled up or as new users added their workloads -- or maybe both.
root@manassas:~# uptime
18:48:36 up 12 days, 20:23, 2 users, load average: 0.03, 0.19, 0.27
root@manassas:~#
20241222:
Geekbench 6 Benchmark Test:
---------------------------------
Test | Value
|
Single Core | 1056
Multi Core | 4726
Full Test | https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/9565111
20250104:
Geekbench 6 Benchmark Test:
---------------------------------
Test | Value
|
Single Core | 994
Multi Core | 4351
Full Test | https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/9766934
Steal
I have been keeping an eye on top
to see what it says about steal. Mostly the steal says 0.1 or 0.2. Rarely, once or twice, I have seen a slightly higher steal.
Discussion
So far, after upgrading to Debian sid, I only have used my new Netcup ARM VPS for storing a few backups. It's performance has seemed great. Certainly, if I hadn't been rerunning yabs from time to time, I wouldn't have noticed the performance decreases. The Netcup ARM VPS gives the impression of being very well connected. It's fast, and snappy.
Eventually I will try a few processor-intensive tasks, such as compiling. Also, it would be fun to install NetBSD and Plan 9, which should be easier to do because I don't have to contact support to upload ISOs.
I think these Netcup ARM VPSes in Manassas USA seem great! Especially when we consider the combination of the USA location; the reliability expected due to Netcup's reputation; the generous CPU, RAM, and disk provisioning; and the low pricing. My VPS costs only approximately $5/mo. That's less than $7! What more could a Low Ender ask!? Plus, for more cores, RAM, and disk space, anyone can get the bigger, slightly more expensive machine, like @imok did.
Of course there are trade offs. Ryzen cores are faster than ARM. NVMe disks are faster than SSD. 10 Gbps is faster than 1 Gbps. But, so far, my Netcup VPS has been reliable. Everything at Netcup seems very well organized, and, once one naviagtes through the account setup and ordering processes, hassle free.
The combination of the US location, generous resource allocation, and low price makes me wonder -- despite the trade offs -- whether these Netcup Gen 11 ARM machines are the best Low End VPSes. The fact that @imok and @Blembim also got them makes me feel good about my purchase.
Is anyone aware of a better or cheaper USA VPS deal --
from a well known provider and
with equivalent or better CPU, RAM, disk, and network?
@imok @Blembim How are your new Netcup ARM VPSes doing?
Did anyone else get one of these for Black Friday? How is it doing?
Thanks and best wishes!
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
Comments
Lol
Thanks for the review, it express the same way I feel.
Not the fastest disk, but speed seems fine for a SSD.
This is going to be a PBS server if I manage to run it on ARM.
I already let mine go, since they no longer provide SVM flag for their services.
thank you for your inquiry.
Please excuse our late reply due to the current very high volume of inquiries.
In our experience, nested virtualization via the SVM flag can lead to technical problems at processor level. Since the servers we rent out are fully virtualized, such problems affect all customers on the same node equally. For this reason, as well as for security reasons, we can no longer offer you the activation of the SVM flag for any of our products.
Thanks for the write-up!
@imok , please do report your experiences with (the after all these years still unofficial) Proxmox on ARM!
From the YABS posted, the disk seems a bit underwhelming.
Oracle Free Tier isn't far off. Taking into account ARM. 4CPU, 24GB RAM, 200GB.
(#)imentionedimok13times Discount coupon soon?
I am using VPS ServaRica, some times CPU overload, please help me compare VPS 3000 ARM G11 and ServaRica - UniFied Slim ($14/month). Thanks you.
As for how @imok got the better server at the higher price, I think I can guess!
Even though the Advent Calendar only mentioned the 6 core version, there was a link at the bottom of the text that took you to the bigger one and a similar discount had been applied. I can't remember exactly, but it probably was around the €9 he got it for.
I regret not grabbing this server as I really want some ARM servers that aren't at risk of just disappearing like my free Oracle instances might. I wasted too much time trying to figure out if the price was for IPv6 only or not, as it didn't mention IPv4 in the specs and had an option to add "Extra IPv4". In the end it was 1am, and I decided to go to bed and buy it in the morning, but of course I slept past the cut-off time.
Yes, that's exactly how it happened.
@ralf Looks like our experiences are similar both with Oracle and with Netcup!
After many months of enjoying my Oracle free VPS, there came one week when, due to switching laptops to facilitate 2FA, I went an extra day or maybe two without logging in. Haha, I received the termination notice email, so I deleted everything and gave up on Oracle.
Again, haha, exactly what happened to me, several times, when I was trying to buy from Netcup. IMHO, Netcup's product selection, ordering, and new account initialization process is too complicated. But, in general, they seem to know very well what they are doing, and their VPS works great.
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
Thanks for mentioning Oracle Free Tier! I had forgotten about them. You certainly are right that Oracle Free Tier ARM is similar to Netcup. Hetzner Cloud has ARM too.
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
You have been visiting MX for a loooooooooong time, @Not_Oles!
The all seeing eye sees everything...
It’s not that it’s not enabled, it’s that hardware support for nested virtualisation was only really added in ARMv8.4+, and the Altra Max CPU used by Netcup is only ARMv8.2 compatible.
are the cores dedicated?
No, that’s their other, slightly more expensive product: https://www.netcup.com/en/server/root-server
I've been trying to understand. It's complicated. For example, how should I understand "really added"?
At https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102142/0100/Nested-virtualization it says, "Before the release of Armv8.3-A, it was possible to run a Guest Hypervisor in a VM by running the Guest Hypervisor in EL0."
At [2017] it says "ARM recently introduced nested virtualization support in the latest ARMv8.3 revision of the architecture." [I haven't watched the video yet.]
So nested virtualization on ARM was supported prior to ARMv8.3-A by ELO, but was "introduced in ARMv8.3", but was "only really added in ARMv8.4+."
Checking https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102142/0100/Nested-virtualization seems not to explain how to check exactly which processor features are available in a given, running Linux instance.
Here is the beginning of the
lscpu
output on my Netcup ARM VPS:What do the Flags say when nested virtualization is enabled? [I tried searching Google for '"lscpu" "Flags" "arm" "nested virtualization"' and other more simple queries, but those searches did not seem to give useful results.]
How should we understand the seemingly bumpy "implementation and reimplementation" of nested virtualization on ARM?
Thanks!
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
I had a 258 line discussion with Google Gemini on the basis of which I think I might have received a few helpful hints about the answers to the questions I asked above. Here it is, in case anybody might be interested:
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
ok then maybe it's not a good idea to use it as a Plex server
Here is a page about the Neoverse N-1 CPU used in the Netcup G11 VPS:
https://developer.arm.com/Processors/Neoverse N1
Quoting from the linked page, it seems like this CPU includes some 8.3+ extensions, but apparently not all the extensions needed for the most efficient nested virtualization:
I hope everyone gets the servers they want!
However, Netcup disables nested virtualization, even when hardware supports it.
With this enabled, netcup would be the perfect choice for most workloads.
In terms of “really added” - KVM added basic support for nested virtualisation with ARMv8.3 (FEAT_NV), which was extended with ARMv8.4 (FEAT.NV2); prior to this it involved software emulation. However, it seems very few (if any) CPUs actually implemented FEAT_NV, but there are some with FEAT_NV2 support (Apple M2+, for example).
imok may have you bested on a couple stats, but you won the monthly cost war!