Did you pick up a Mouse Storage box from Servarica ?

if so, how are they now ? since the bench marking mania may have ended.

Btw the specs were

1 CPU cores shared
1GB RAM
500gb disk
100mbps with 2TB limit
/64 IPv6 included
12$/year
Montreal, Canada ( Not OVH)

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«1

Comments

  • no, they dont have an ipv4 unfortunately

  • uptimeuptime OG
    edited December 2019

    Great deal, so far seems pretty nice - seeing 200 to 300 MB/s write speeds.

    A teeny bit of CPU steal while idling (maybe up to 1%, more often around 0.3-0.7)

    model name      : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU           E5620  @ 2.40GHz
    
    cpu MHz         : 2400.274
    cache size      : 12288 KB
    
    flags           : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush
                      acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht syscall nx pdpe1gb rdtscp lm constant_tsc rep_good nopl
                      pni pclmulqdq ssse3 cx16 pcid sse4_1 sse4_2 x2apic popcnt aes hypervisor lahf_lm
                      ssbd ibrs ibpb stibp kaiser amd_ibpb flush_l1d
    

    Have not pushed the network but it feels snappy enough via ssh from 4000 kilometers away

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    HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))

  • Looks good so far. Not sure what I'll do with it yet, maybe set up Nextcloud or Minio on it.

    -------------------------------------------------
     nench.sh v2019.07.20 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
     benchmark timestamp:    2019-12-03 16:35:38 UTC
    -------------------------------------------------
    
    Processor:    Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU           E5620  @ 2.40GHz
    CPU cores:    1
    Frequency:    2399.980 MHz
    RAM:          974M
    Swap:         -
    Kernel:       Linux 4.9.0-8-amd64 x86_64
    
    Disks:
    xvda    500G  SSD
    
    CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
        4.563 seconds
    CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
        7.539 seconds
    CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
        1.904 seconds
    
    ioping: seek rate
        min/avg/max/mdev = 93.7 us / 153.6 us / 46.5 ms / 385.3 us
    ioping: sequential read speed
        generated 11.3 k requests in 5.00 s, 2.76 GiB, 2.26 k iops, 564.6 MiB/s
    
    dd: sequential write speed
        1st run:    314.71 MiB/s
        2nd run:    346.18 MiB/s
        3rd run:    350.95 MiB/s
        average:    337.28 MiB/s
    
    No IPv4 connectivity detected
    
    IPv6 speedtests
        your IPv6:    xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx
    
        Leaseweb (NL):        13.92 MiB/s
        Softlayer DAL (US):   4.74 MiB/s
        Online.net (FR):      11.82 MiB/s
        OVH BHS (CA):         32.47 MiB/s
    -------------------------------------------------
    
  • Here the benchmark..

    -------------------------------------------------
     nench.sh v2019.07.20 -- https://git.io/nench.sh
     benchmark timestamp:    2019-12-03 16:45:42 UTC
    -------------------------------------------------
    
    Processor:    Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU           E5620  @ 2.40GHz
    CPU cores:    1
    Frequency:    2400.284 MHz
    RAM:          974M
    Swap:         190M
    Kernel:       Linux 4.9.0-8-amd64 x86_64
    
    Disks:
    xvda    500G  SSD
    
    CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
        4.557 seconds
    CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
        7.593 seconds
    CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
        2.073 seconds
    
    ioping: seek rate
        min/avg/max/mdev = 99.2 us / 161.3 us / 30.2 ms / 316.9 us
    ioping: sequential read speed
        generated 10.6 k requests in 5.00 s, 2.59 GiB, 2.12 k iops, 531.3 MiB/s
    
    dd: sequential write speed
        1st run:    287.06 MiB/s
        2nd run:    358.58 MiB/s
        3rd run:    343.32 MiB/s
        average:    329.65 MiB/s
    
    No IPv4 connectivity detected
    
    IPv6 speedtests
        your IPv6:    2602:ffd5:1:xxxx
    
        Leaseweb (NL):        6.51 MiB/s
        Softlayer DAL (US):   10.45 MiB/s
        Online.net (FR):      10.50 MiB/s
        OVH BHS (CA):         11.25 MiB/s
    -------------------------------------------------
    

    A simple uptime dashboard using UptimeRobot API https://upy.duo.ovh
    Currently using VPS from BuyVM, GreenCloudVPS, Gullo's, Hetzner, HostHatch, InceptionHosting, LetBox, MaxKVM, MrVM, VirMach.

  • Processor: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz
    CPU cores: 1
    Frequency: 2399.853 MHz
    RAM: 970M
    Swap: 307M
    Kernel: Linux 3.10.0-862.el7.x86_64 x86_64

    Disks:
    xvda 500G SSD

    CPU: SHA256-hashing 500 MB
    3.237 seconds
    CPU: bzip2-compressing 500 MB
    CPU: AES-encrypting 500 MB
    1.789 seconds

    ioping: seek rate
    min/avg/max/mdev = 107.4 us / 1.85 ms / 295.3 ms / 10.0 ms
    ioping: sequential read speed
    generated 5.85 k requests in 5.00 s, 1.43 GiB, 1.17 k iops, 292.6 MiB/s

    dd: sequential write speed
    1st run: 144.96 MiB/s
    2nd run: 119.21 MiB/s
    3rd run: 148.77 MiB/s
    average: 137.65 MiB/s

    No IPv4 connectivity detected

    IPv6 speedtests
    your IPv6: 2602:ffd5:1:xxxx

    Leaseweb (NL):        8.96 MiB/s
    Softlayer DAL (US):   10.17 MiB/s
    Online.net (FR):      9.36 MiB/s
    OVH BHS (CA):         11.33 MiB/s
    

    >
    I can't get the code format to work, but there it is with Centos.

  • I didn't get it, but would be great to have one (to idle, again).

    Someone on Chinese forum claims that he got one with IPv4 (I don't know how, maybe there's a loophole somewhere)

    "Humanity is f*cked up" - Jay

  • @FAT32 said:
    I didn't get it, but would be great to have one (to idle, again).

    Someone on Chinese forum claims that he got one with IPv4 (I don't know how, maybe there's a loophole somewhere)

    IPv4 was an extra option for $18/yr IIRC.

  • @debaser said:
    IPv4 was an extra option for $18/yr IIRC.

    Yup, but seems like some of them got it for free, if I understand correctly: https://www.hostloc.com/thread-616752-1-1.html

    "Humanity is f*cked up" - Jay

  • Speaking of free, you @FAT32 need to pick the next winner of a @cociu special. We're past 400 accounts.

  • I got one for replace my hosthatch box.
    I am a data hamster that collect every youtube video I have watch

    Action and Reaction in history

  • yesss!! i got one.

  • NeoonNeoon OG
    edited December 2019

    Well, I was hyped at first, but afterwards, after SOMEONE started digging, because it sounded to good to be true.
    I decided that I likely just let it on idle or only put not important data on it.

    He does post since 2010, but his company is only 1 year old, he did XX changes in the company name for unknown reasons.
    If you google his name, you find stuff, you do not expect to find.

    Same goes for Stockservers, if you bought that, you better start digging.

  • souensouen OG
    edited December 2019

    Neoon said: He does post since 2010, but his company is only 1 year old, he did XX changes in the company name for unknown reasons.
    If you google his name, you find stuff, you do not expect to find.

    Can you share more of what you found concerning, in another unindexed thread if you prefer?

    Quebec's Enterprise Register shows the company was registered in 2010-09-23 as "RICA WEB HOSTING SERVICES" / "LES SERVICES D'HÉBERGEMENT DE PAGES WEB RICA". The address in the entry (ID 2266846825) matches the one in the IP range. The one registered in 2018-03-20 (ID 2266846825), "Rica Web Services Inc." / "Les Services Web Rica Inc." looks to be an IT consulting company headed by the same person with a different address.

    This looks to me like the company got its start by offering shared hosting/whmcs module, changing its name slightly a few times, then expanded from there. They were selling VPS back around 2014, so they are not a newbie to the hosting business even though the inc. is a bit over a year old.

    I didn't find anything in particular while searching the founder's name, or resoundingly negative reviews about the company?

    Asking as a first-time customer, no affiliation with them.

    Thanked by (1)Ouji
  • @souen said:

    Neoon said: He does post since 2010, but his company is only 1 year old, he did XX changes in the company name for unknown reasons.
    If you google his name, you find stuff, you do not expect to find.

    Can you share more of what you found concerning, in another unindexed thread if you prefer?

    Quebec's Enterprise Register shows the company was registered in 2010-09-23 as "RICA WEB HOSTING SERVICES" / "LES SERVICES D'HÉBERGEMENT DE PAGES WEB RICA". The address in the entry (ID 2266846825) matches the one in the IP range. The one registered in 2018-03-20 (ID 2266846825), "Rica Web Services Inc." / "Les Services Web Rica Inc." looks to be an IT consulting company headed by the same person with a different address.

    This looks to me like the company got its start by offering shared hosting/whmcs module, changing its name slightly a few times, then expanded from there. They were selling VPS back around 2014, so they are not a newbie to the hosting business even though the inc. is a bit over a year old.

    I didn't find anything in particular while searching the founder's name, or resoundingly negative reviews about the company?

    Asking as a first-time customer, no affiliation with them.

    When you search for the company mentioned in the footer, you get one hit:
    Created: 2018-03-20, I see no registration from 2010.

    He is listed apparently on the No Fly List, which does not seem trustworthy to me.
    Someone made me aware of it, can be a sign or not.

  • souensouen OG
    edited December 2019

    Neoon said: When you search for the company mentioned in the footer, you get one hit:
    Created: 2018-03-20, I see no registration from 2010.

    Try searching for "rica web" in the Quebec Enterprise Register, there should be 2 registry IDs in the results. The federal one only shows a partial result.

    Neoon said: He is listed apparently on the No Fly List, which does not seem trustworthy to me.
    Someone made me aware of it, can be a sign or not.

    Yeah, I saw the news articles. Supposing for a moment it is the same person, the Office of Reconsideration has since concluded he is not a threat to passengers and shouldn't have been on the list. Cut to some vague definition of "immediate" threat (which included people who might be considered as such in the future), also browsing certain "extremist" websites can land a person on a secret list with little to no oversight. While opinions may differ on this, such lists seem dubious to me at best.

    All that said, backups, backups. Same goes for providers you trust as well.

    Thanked by (1)vimalware
  • Didn't get because haven't figured out how to tunnel through HE to access the box. I do have some NATs with @mikho that has IPv6 so I should try and figure it out.

    Thanked by (1)dedicados

    Deals and Reviews: LowEndBoxes Review | Avoid dodgy providers with The LEBRE Whitelist | Free hosting (with conditions): Evolution-Host, NanoKVM, FreeMach, ServedEZ | Get expert copyediting and copywriting help at The Write Flow

  • souensouen OG
    edited December 2019

    @poisson Fwiw, you could also install OpenVPN (or other VPN server) on one of the NATs to get ipv6. Any of the popular OpenVPN install scripts on GitHub with ipv6 support will do the job. (Enable tun and assign an ipv6 address to the box from the CP, run the script. I've tried it on a LES box and it works nicely.)

  • vyasvyas OGRetired

    @uptime said:

    Have not pushed the network but it feels snappy enough via ssh from 4000 kilometers away

    Had you not given me a fair idea about where you live, I would have guessed you lived at one (or maybe more?) of the following places that are about 4,000 kilometers from Montreal :

    a. Just west off the Irish Coast
    b. Somewhere north of the arctic circle
    c. Somehere near the Caribbeans- close to Barbados
    d. Somewhere in the Seattle area

    I don't know about you, but I prefer (b) or (c)

    Thanked by (1)uptime
  • Got one. Pushed me to finally turn on IPv6 on my home network, so that's nice. I'll move my nextcloud install from my home server to it.

    Thanked by (1)uptime

    It's pronounced hacker.

  • @Neoon said:
    Well, I was hyped at first, but afterwards, after SOMEONE started digging, because it sounded to good to be true.
    I decided that I likely just let it on idle or only put not important data on it.

    He does post since 2010, but his company is only 1 year old, he did XX changes in the company name for unknown reasons.
    If you google his name, you find stuff, you do not expect to find.

    Same goes for Stockservers, if you bought that, you better start digging.

    he keeps changing, but the name is still bad

  • the plot thickens

    Thanked by (1)poisson
  • @FAT32 said:
    Someone on Chinese forum claims that he got one with IPv4 (I don't know how, maybe there's a loophole somewhere)

    They noticed their mistake :( Got an email today:

    We have added the below IPv6 address to your VM and removed the IPv4 address that was assigned incorrectly.

    dnscry.pt - Public DNSCrypt resolvers hosted by LowEnd providers • Need a free NAT LXC? -> https://microlxc.net/

  • @souen said:
    Yeah, I saw the news articles. Supposing for a moment it is the same person, the Office of Reconsideration has since concluded he is not a threat to passengers and shouldn't have been on the list. Cut to some vague definition of "immediate" threat (which included people who might be considered as such in the future), also browsing certain "extremist" websites can land a person on a secret list with little to no oversight. While opinions may differ on this, such lists seem dubious to me at best.

    All that said, backups, backups. Same goes for providers you trust as well.

    Well, well, Well, I used the "new new new " Interface, that just gave me one result.

  • This server is not trustworthy enough for important data, but is not great for development either (possible summer host). It could be nice as backup, or seedbox for Linux iso.

  • FreeBSD said: seedbox

    Are they torrent friendly ?

  • FreeBSD said: (possible summer host).

    If they're a summer host it's a pretty long con.

  • @Rahul said:
    Are they torrent friendly ?

    https://servarica.com/terms-of-service/

    tl;dr Doesn't specifically forbid torrent software. No illegal activities (by Canadian law), no copyright or intellectual property right infringement. The sort of thing most TOS say, don't get the host in trouble, use your own discretion.

    FreeBSD said: (possible summer host)

    What makes you say that? Some providers have come and gone, less time than this provider has been around, and they don't get downplayed as summerhosts.

    The Mouse offer was probably a limited-quantity loss-leader for them (and now they let people who accidentally got ipv4 keep them, which wasn't advertised with the plan). If the boxes turned out to have even 99% uptime, it would be a decent deal for the price, if only because it's a bit like AU, offers by CA companies with a CA location tend to cost more.

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  • souen said: tl;dr Doesn't specifically forbid torrent software. No illegal activities (by Canadian law), no copyright or intellectual property right infringement. The sort of thing most TOS say, don't get the host in trouble, use your own discretion.

    Since @servarica_hani is here

    Could you enlighten us on

    Rahul said: torrent friendly

  • servarica_haniservarica_hani Hosting ProviderOG

    @Rahul said:

    souen said: tl;dr Doesn't specifically forbid torrent software. No illegal activities (by Canadian law), no copyright or intellectual property right infringement. The sort of thing most TOS say, don't get the host in trouble, use your own discretion.

    Since @servarica_hani is here

    Could you enlighten us on

    Rahul said: torrent friendly

    we are ok with torrents but not with copyright issues
    So if what you are doing does not generate copyright notices to us do what you want we will not check what you do

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