GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers
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@emad-r not bad, a little better than average (median).
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Topic like this should be pinned and done every year or so. No one keeps alot of track about this.
What else we can test efficiently...
RAM Speed ? but who cares about this.
How we can test VM Cloud Download/Upload
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@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Topic like this should be pinned and done every year or so. No one keeps alot of track about this.
Its' true. A regular survey of what is out there would be very nice. Or even a weekly one!
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This is my Vultr 5$ 1 vCPU, 1GB RAM.
Yours has an extra 200 Mhz due to bigger package.
I think Vultr is the best for CPU and IO speed from what I feel
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@emad-r yeah, if you go up to 2GB of RAM, you also move up to the SkyLake processors.
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Amazing that Vultr's low end systems also outperform everyone else! That's crazy how big the gap is between them and basically everyone else.
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@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
I think Vultr is the best for CPU and IO speed from what I feel
I agree, and Price too
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@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Topic like this should be pinned and done every year or so. No one keeps alot of track about this.
What else we can test efficiently...
RAM Speed ? but who cares about this.
How we can test VM Cloud Download/Upload
Thought about Network testing and came up with this:
iperf3 -c bouygues.iperf.fr -t 30 = upload iperf3 -Rc bouygues.iperf.fr -t 30 = download
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@pete-s said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
As you said it might be the best cost performance ratio for cloud deployment.
ehhhhhhh. It's the best cost for selling someone a modernish core for hosting that lacks any real scaling issues, or licensing per core/socket concerns.
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@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Thought about Network testing and came up with this:
That's just a testing of peering.
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@storageninja said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Thought about Network testing and came up with this:
That's just a testing of peering.
Help us out then, I think we at ML need to come up with standard for testing Cloud.
And how is it peering ? cause peering means:
the exchange of data directly between Internet service providers, rather than via the Internet.I am using the same separate server of iperf on both nodes and both nodes are located in the same geolocation.
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@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@storageninja said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Thought about Network testing and came up with this:
That's just a testing of peering.
Help us out then, I think we at ML need to come up with standard for testing Cloud.
And how is it peering ? cause peering means:
the exchange of data directly between Internet service providers, rather than via the Internet.I am using the same separate server of iperf on both nodes and both nodes are located in the same geolocation.
The point is you cannot test certain things. Such as network throughput and disk speed when it comes to cloud.
You can test throughput to your office. But again based on peering agreements, you could get get hugely varying results compared to someone on another ISP to the same cloud service.
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Right, the base problem is that because you can't control everything, you really can't test cloud servers in a super meaningful way.
To some extent, this goes far beyond cloud servers and kind of applies to all systems that are shared or cross the Internet. It's a more general problem.
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does vultr also needs to create root account with your instances ? i dont think i ever saw this.
Like Vultr secondary root cloud account ? with your installed system ? Btw the image below is from OVH
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@emad-r can't need to as you can remove them. It doesn't even need to control root itself.
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@scottalanmiller said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@emad-r can't need to as you can remove them. It doesn't even need to control root itself.
It is locked account actually, seems like it is only needed the first time
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@jaredbusch said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers: @StorageNinja
@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@storageninja said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
@emad-r said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Thought about Network testing and came up with this:
That's just a testing of peering.
Help us out then, I think we at ML need to come up with standard for testing Cloud.
And how is it peering ? cause peering means:
the exchange of data directly between Internet service providers, rather than via the Internet.I am using the same separate server of iperf on both nodes and both nodes are located in the same geolocation.
The point is you cannot test certain things. Such as network throughput and disk speed when it comes to cloud.
You can test throughput to your office. But again based on peering agreements, you could get get hugely varying results compared to someone on another ISP to the same cloud service.
Will speedtest-cli test also wont count as an effective test ? wont it show you some of your limitations of your DL/UL
[root@centos ~]# ./speedtest-cli Retrieving speedtest.net configuration... Testing from ************************* etrieving speedtest.net server list... Selecting best server based on ping... Hosted by Vodafone DE (Frankfurt) [143.90 km]: 5.199 ms Testing download speed................................................................................ Download: 97.13 Mbit/s Testing upload speed................................................................................................ Upload: 99.50 Mbit/s
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Here's the TurnkeyInternet.net results that I'm using, the T80 plan.
Turnkey Internet, 8 vCPU, 8GB RAM $20 (black friday special)
Single CPU: 1846
Multi-Core: 6715 -
Horrible results compared to Vultr, but for $20 a month...
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@obsolesce said in GeekBench Results for Cloud Servers:
Horrible results compared to Vultr, but for $20 a month...
The "for $20" only means so much if you get less. The RAM is good for that price, but the CPU is mediocre for that price. If you are RAM bound, this might be a "deal", if CPU bound, likely it isn't. Eight cores to get less performance than two elsewhere is bad, faster, fewer threads gives better overall performance.
No wonder their "standard" deal is 65% off!