HostMantis Enterprise Reseller Hosting

2

Comments

  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer
    edited September 2021

    Migration from Reseller Entry to Shared Entry has been taking care of pretty fast and without any issues (so far). At 35$/year with 25GB NVMe and the known high performance that's a plan/price I can live with. Let's see what the future brings. Could've gone even cheaper with DA plan, but I actually enjoy havint at least one website still hosted with cPanel :)

    Thanked by (2)bikegremlin webcraft
  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOG
    edited September 2021

    @Ympker said:
    Migration from Reseller Entry to Shared Entry has been taking care of pretty fast and without any issues (so far). At 35$/year with 25GB NVMe and the known high performance that's a plan/price I can live with. Let's see what the future brings. Could've gone even cheaper with DA plan, but I actually enjoy havint at least one website still hosted with cPanel :)

    Unless they change the prices (and/or resources again) - which seems to happen every few months :)
    my Enterprise Entry Reseller renewal should be under $ 330 per three years (with the discount, cut from 80% to 50%, but still a lot better than no discount). That's very acceptable price-wise if the quality remains the same.

    I'll see in the following months whether the new given resource limits are enough to keep my websites running. I have an uneven load on the websites, and I was in fact looking for reseller hosting that allows me to provide more resources for the few "more demanding" ones, without paying the price of a managed VPS, or pay for separate, high-resource shared hosting accounts (hassle for automating backups, management etc, it's easier having them all under one reseller account).

    Over the next month, I'll know whether this change was for the better, or worse.

    I'd be surprised if policies and prices don't change a few more times before my renewal is due. :)

    Thanked by (2)Ympker boka003

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • vyasvyas OGRetired

    Response from Host mantis when I enquired about moving to DA shared basic (Singapore) from my current plan

    We can optionally migrate your account to a new location and/or change server type / control panel for a one time fee of $9.95 per account.

    To order, please use the following link:

    https://my.hostmantis.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=274

  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer

    @vyas said:
    Response from Host mantis when I enquired about moving to DA shared basic (Singapore) from my current plan

    We can optionally migrate your account to a new location and/or change server type / control panel for a one time fee of $9.95 per account.

    To order, please use the following link:

    https://my.hostmantis.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=274

    For a reseller plan that can get expensive, for a shared hosting, I think it is fair. Other companies charge you like 10$ to restore a backup like Hostens or Netcup(?!) and granted you'll save a lot by switching to DA, I think that's a fair price to ask. Ofc others would do it for free, but..

    Thanked by (1)vyas
  • vyasvyas OGRetired
    edited September 2021

    I agree it is fair, probably with future escalation in hosting (as has been past trend with them)
    30 dollars/year could be a procepoint to look at. (current 19.95 + 9.90),

    For Singapore, and their overall stability, not much to complain.

    I am seriously pitting that against 30.55 dollars/year Shock Hosting shared, same location, CPanel for single domain/ no upper limit on storage. Dedicated ip

    Interesting tradeoffs!

    Maybe this calls for some deep dive into shared hosting in Singapore at these price levels .

    Extravm, Rnerd, etc…

  • What is the difference between entry reseller and entry shared hosting?
    Yes, there is a price difference, but resources are the same?

    At shared, we can add unlimited domains for host unlimited websites.
    At reseller, we can create separate cpanel accounts, but still, there is a big price change, and resources are still the same.

  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer
    edited September 2021

    @boka003 said:
    What is the difference between entry reseller and entry shared hosting?
    Yes, there is a price difference, but resources are the same?

    At shared, we can add unlimited domains for host unlimited websites.
    At reseller, we can create separate cpanel accounts, but still, there is a big price change, and resources are still the same.

    Resources appeer to be the same minus the storage (25GB NVMe Shared vs 50GB NVMe Reseller). You can create unlimited addon domains under shared imho. And since reseller now counts the resources as total for all subaccounts it is not more than shared entry (before it was per cPanel subaccoint).

    Thanked by (1)boka003
  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOG
    edited September 2021

    @vyas said:
    Response from Host mantis when I enquired about moving to DA shared basic (Singapore) from my current plan

    We can optionally migrate your account to a new location and/or change server type / control panel for a one time fee of $9.95 per account.

    To order, please use the following link:

    https://my.hostmantis.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=274

    If you are moving to a cheaper plan, double-check > @Ympker said:

    @boka003 said:
    What is the difference between entry reseller and entry shared hosting?
    Yes, there is a price difference, but resources are the same?

    At shared, we can add unlimited domains for host unlimited websites.
    At reseller, we can create separate cpanel accounts, but still, there is a big price change, and resources are still the same.

    Resources appeer to be the same minus the storage (25GB NVMe Shared vs 50GB NVMe Reseller). You can create unlimited addon domains under shared imho. And since reseller now counts the resources as total for all subaccounts it is not more than shared entry (before it was per cPanel subaccoint).

    Yes, but if one website gets hacked, or has any other problems - every other website is likely to have problems.
    Again, related to viruses and hacks - fixing one website is hassle enough. Fixing several... ufff.

    Also, I've had a website go "crazy," taking 100% of its provisioned (allotted) CPU resources.
    With reseller hosting, since it was limited to roughly 66% of my total CPU resources at the time, I didn't even notice any problems with the other websites.
    If they were all under one shared account, all of my websites would have been down.

    Briefly put: if you are hosting more than one website, reseller hosting is a lot less trouble in the long run.

    For more details, I wrote the article Reseller hosting explained

    I'll update it (and maybe add a separate article just for HostMantis - sort of a review), with this latest reseller hosting resource distribution (so far I've seen Knownhost do it that way).

    Thanked by (1)Ympker

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • Now whole reseller (and all sub accounts) share 30 entry processes ?

  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOG
    edited September 2021

    @boka003 said:
    Now whole reseller (and all sub accounts) share 30 entry processes ?

    I'm testing and playing with the limits. Will post an extensive report ("review").
    From the preliminary results - CPU is by far the greatest bottleneck for WordPress and forums (the stuff running on PHP).

    The rest are less critical. 2EP per website can do it. 5 if you want to be on the safe side. :)
    (my cycling website has thousands of daily visitors and EP usage doesn't go over 2! :) )

    Similar goes for the other resources - apart from I/O for WooCommerce websites where, depending on the size and how busy (and well-optimized) they are, you might need to go as high as 5 MB/s, or more.

    With that in mind, HM Enterprise Entry reseller with 2.5 vCPU makes a lot more sense than their Advanced Reseller.
    The Advanced has more cPanels, more storage, but only 1.5 vCPU. While Ent. Entry has it a lot more balanced (more CPU and RAM, a bit less of everything else), and it costs less! :)

    Reseller entry can be fine. 1 vCPU per website is OK. But if you are using WordPress, I'd look for at least 1.5, especially if there's more than one website hosted sharing the resources.

    My total reseller account usage doesn't go over 1.5 vCPU, some 20 websites, out of which 3 are active, plus some small WooCommerce stores, a moderately busy forum, and a few low-visit count presentation websites + my dev/testing playgrounds.

    It worked fine with 1.5 vCPU before I "upgraded."

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • edited September 2021

    Agree,

    I have a simple web analytics website, with just 50 users online now, and CPU usage is at 20%

    It will make a sense if they allow us to make custom configurations (as on VPS), buy more RAM, more CPU etc...
    (UPGRADE).

  • @boka003 said:
    Agree,

    I have a simple web analytics website, with just 50 users online now, and CPU usage is at 20%

    It will make a sense if they allow us to make custom configurations (as on VPS), buy more RAM, more CPU etc...
    (UPGRADE).

    See the historical resource usage graph - for a day, or two. See what the peaks are.

    As for the upgrades - it's a shared hosting environment. You can upgrade to a more powerful plan.
    I did that - switching from the Advanced, to Ent. Entry reseller. More CPU, less storage and cPanels.

    I'd prefer to have the Ent. Advanced have 2x CPU of the Etnry, because it's more than twice as expensive, but it's their pricing policy. I can see if something fits, or move on.

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer

    @bikegremlin said:

    @vyas said:
    Response from Host mantis when I enquired about moving to DA shared basic (Singapore) from my current plan

    We can optionally migrate your account to a new location and/or change server type / control panel for a one time fee of $9.95 per account.

    To order, please use the following link:

    https://my.hostmantis.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=274

    If you are moving to a cheaper plan, double-check > @Ympker said:

    @boka003 said:
    What is the difference between entry reseller and entry shared hosting?
    Yes, there is a price difference, but resources are the same?

    At shared, we can add unlimited domains for host unlimited websites.
    At reseller, we can create separate cpanel accounts, but still, there is a big price change, and resources are still the same.

    Resources appeer to be the same minus the storage (25GB NVMe Shared vs 50GB NVMe Reseller). You can create unlimited addon domains under shared imho. And since reseller now counts the resources as total for all subaccounts it is not more than shared entry (before it was per cPanel subaccoint).

    Yes, but if one website gets hacked, or has any other problems - every other website is likely to have problems.
    Again, related to viruses and hacks - fixing one website is hassle enough. Fixing several... ufff.

    Also, I've had a website go "crazy," taking 100% of its provisioned (allotted) CPU resources.
    With reseller hosting, since it was limited to roughly 66% of my total CPU resources at the time, I didn't even notice any problems with the other websites.
    If they were all under one shared account, all of my websites would have been down.

    Briefly put: if you are hosting more than one website, reseller hosting is a lot less trouble in the long run.

    For more details, I wrote the article Reseller hosting explained

    I'll update it (and maybe add a separate article just for HostMantis - sort of a review), with this latest reseller hosting resource distribution (so far I've seen Knownhost do it that way).

    I agree there is a higher security risk with multiple domains/websites on shared entry compared to isolated reseller sub accounts, however, in my case, I only host 1 website and subdomain there, so I don't really mind. For reseller&sub accounts I have @MikePT MyW lifetime anyway ;P

    Thanked by (2)boka003 bikegremlin
  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer
    edited September 2021
  • Right now, croc web give more resources hmmm

    I hope that they will upgrade the CPU at all packages for resellers.
    a single account is fine with this limmits.

  • I'm nearing my first 1 month subscription on Hostmantis entry reseller DA plan, i have around 20 clients accounts in it.

    With this new policy on reseller limit, should i keep continue to add more accounts to it or should i find another provider? any thoughts?

  • @asaljeplak said:
    I'm nearing my first 1 month subscription on Hostmantis entry reseller DA plan, i have around 20 clients accounts in it.

    With this new policy on reseller limit, should i keep continue to add more accounts to it or should i find another provider? any thoughts?

    If it's of any help, here's my "preliminary" (until I get a few more months of experience) HostMantis Reseller Hosting review.

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • @bikegremlin said:

    @asaljeplak said:
    I'm nearing my first 1 month subscription on Hostmantis entry reseller DA plan, i have around 20 clients accounts in it.

    With this new policy on reseller limit, should i keep continue to add more accounts to it or should i find another provider? any thoughts?

    If it's of any help, here's my "preliminary" (until I get a few more months of experience) HostMantis Reseller Hosting review.

    I just read your review (awesome one), thanks!

    Well, luckily those 20 accounts are small wp sites with low traffic, but i guess i shouldn't add more to it unless i 100% sure that the new account will use very small resources (kinda bad wish lol).

    so now I'll be looking for a new reseller, i guess

    Thanked by (1)Ympker
  • bikegremlinbikegremlin ModeratorOG
    edited September 2021

    @asaljeplak said:

    >

    Keep an eye on the total resource usage (in LVM).

    Enterprise Entry Reseller for example lets you host a few larger websites that might otherwise have required a separate, “Enterprise Shared” account.

    That flexibility is a plus.

    The downside is having to keep an eye on the clients’ resource usage.

    So far, I am pleasantly how little resources all my sites take. Seems like I could easily add at least 10 more to the same reseller account.

    It’s all a shared hosting environment. I discussed the CloudLinux vCPU here:

    https://io.bikegremlin.com/23107/what-is-vcpu/

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • johnkjohnk Hosting Provider

    @bikegremlin said:

    @asaljeplak said:

    >

    Keep an eye on the total resource usage (in LVM).

    Enterprise Entry Reseller for example lets you host a few larger websites that might otherwise have required a separate, “Enterprise Shared” account.

    That flexibility is a plus.

    The downside is having to keep an eye on the clients’ resource usage.

    So far, I am pleasantly how little resources all my sites take. Seems like I could easily add at least 10 more to the same reseller account.

    It’s all a shared hosting environment. I discussed the CloudLinux vCPU here:

    https://io.bikegremlin.com/23107/what-is-vcpu/

    I love the analogies for the components - that is really awesome!

    One suggestion:

    Let’s take the above-mentioned 4-core (4 workers) CPU with 2 threads per core for an example:
    4 cores with 2 threads each = 8 threads.
    8 threads time 4 cores (again!) = 32 vCPU

    A vCPU is pretty much universally accepted as a (1) logical processor. You can pin/provision 4 (or 8, or 12, or whatever) users to a vCPU, the actual amount of vCPUs don't change (so you can't really "make" another vCPU). LVE/CGroups work by limiting the number of cycles you can run on a vCPU/CPU versus creating virtual "processors" for each user to run tasks on.

    That was just the part that stuck out to me as confusing.

    Thanked by (1)bikegremlin
  • @johnk said:

    @bikegremlin said:

    @asaljeplak said:

    >

    Keep an eye on the total resource usage (in LVM).

    Enterprise Entry Reseller for example lets you host a few larger websites that might otherwise have required a separate, “Enterprise Shared” account.

    That flexibility is a plus.

    The downside is having to keep an eye on the clients’ resource usage.

    So far, I am pleasantly how little resources all my sites take. Seems like I could easily add at least 10 more to the same reseller account.

    It’s all a shared hosting environment. I discussed the CloudLinux vCPU here:

    https://io.bikegremlin.com/23107/what-is-vcpu/

    I love the analogies for the components - that is really awesome!

    One suggestion:

    Let’s take the above-mentioned 4-core (4 workers) CPU with 2 threads per core for an example:
    4 cores with 2 threads each = 8 threads.
    8 threads time 4 cores (again!) = 32 vCPU

    A vCPU is pretty much universally accepted as a (1) logical processor. You can pin/provision 4 (or 8, or 12, or whatever) users to a vCPU, the actual amount of vCPUs don't change (so you can't really "make" another vCPU). LVE/CGroups work by limiting the number of cycles you can run on a vCPU/CPU versus creating virtual "processors" for each user to run tasks on.

    That was just the part that stuck out to me as confusing.

    Thanks. :)

    For a(n absolute) beginner, which explanation do you think is less confusing to get the hang of the basic concept?

    My idea is to use "iteration." At the cost of the first explanation being less correct/accurate, in order to relay the basic meaning/idea.

    Thanked by (1)johnk

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • johnkjohnk Hosting Provider

    @bikegremlin said:

    @johnk said:

    @bikegremlin said:

    @asaljeplak said:

    >

    Keep an eye on the total resource usage (in LVM).

    Enterprise Entry Reseller for example lets you host a few larger websites that might otherwise have required a separate, “Enterprise Shared” account.

    That flexibility is a plus.

    The downside is having to keep an eye on the clients’ resource usage.

    So far, I am pleasantly how little resources all my sites take. Seems like I could easily add at least 10 more to the same reseller account.

    It’s all a shared hosting environment. I discussed the CloudLinux vCPU here:

    https://io.bikegremlin.com/23107/what-is-vcpu/

    I love the analogies for the components - that is really awesome!

    One suggestion:

    Let’s take the above-mentioned 4-core (4 workers) CPU with 2 threads per core for an example:
    4 cores with 2 threads each = 8 threads.
    8 threads time 4 cores (again!) = 32 vCPU

    A vCPU is pretty much universally accepted as a (1) logical processor. You can pin/provision 4 (or 8, or 12, or whatever) users to a vCPU, the actual amount of vCPUs don't change (so you can't really "make" another vCPU). LVE/CGroups work by limiting the number of cycles you can run on a vCPU/CPU versus creating virtual "processors" for each user to run tasks on.

    That was just the part that stuck out to me as confusing.

    Thanks. :)

    For a(n absolute) beginner, which explanation do you think is less confusing to get the hang of the basic concept?

    My idea is to use "iteration." At the cost of the first explanation being less correct/accurate, in order to relay the basic meaning/idea.

    IMHO, since you gloss over the idea if "threads" anyways ("hands") it makes sense to just use that and talk about provisioning users to threads. (eg, "# of jobs assigned to a worker")

    Thanked by (1)bikegremlin
  • Here are the stats, and my impressions, after some more testing. TL/DR - Reseller Entry is probably useless because of only 1 vCPU, but the Reseller Enterprise Entry looks surprisingly good.

    https://io.bikegremlin.com/23094/hostmantis-enterprise-reseller-hosting-review/#8

    Detailed info about providers whose services I've used:
    BikeGremlin web-hosting reviews

  • @bikegremlin
    Sorry I'm confused: I thought Hostmantis' Enterprise plans are only shared (and not reseller) ?

  • edited October 2021

    Webpros own HostMantis too.

    As a client, we know the last thing you want to hear is anything regarding changes in pricing.

    However, as a business we try to be as transparent as possible and each year we must re-evaluate our costs and our pricing structure and make any necessary changes.

    Due to recent increased vendor costs, we will be increasing our pricing on all hosting plans by approximately 25% effective: January 1, 2022.

    Our goal is to remain sustainable and continue providing our clients with the highest level of service possible, without sacrificing features and/or quality.

    We thank you for your continued business!

    If you have any questions, we are always here to answer them.

    If they give more resources at shared resellers, i will support price increases.

  • YmpkerYmpker OGContent Writer

    Yup, also received the price increase mail @Lee @bikegremlin @vyas

    Thanked by (1)Lee
  • @Outdoor said: If they give more resources at shared resellers, i will support price increases.

    That's not going to happen.

    Thanked by (1)webcraft
  • edited October 2021

    @Outdoor said:
    Webpros own HostMantis too.

    As a client, we know the last thing you want to hear is anything regarding changes in pricing.

    However, as a business we try to be as transparent as possible and each year we must re-evaluate our costs and our pricing structure and make any necessary changes.

    Due to recent increased vendor costs, we will be increasing our pricing on all hosting plans by approximately 25% effective: January 1, 2022.

    Our goal is to remain sustainable and continue providing our clients with the highest level of service possible, without sacrificing features and/or quality.

    We thank you for your continued business!

    If you have any questions, we are always here to answer them.

    If they give more resources at shared resellers, i will support price increases.

    That suggests pricing of their DA plans will also be increased which is unjustified.

    Recommend: MyRoot.PW|BuyVM|Inception Hosting|Prometeus

  • vyasvyas OGRetired
    edited October 2021

    In a previous post I had mentioned HM will charge $10 to change my Cpanel account to DA basic. The DA basic plan is abt $20.

    i.e. I pay total of $30. But wait, since new plan kicks in June, pricing is actually $25+10 = $35.

    Instead if I simply cancel cPane account and sign up for DA Basic, I pay $25 and save in transfer fees

    Even if I get a comparable service for a slightly higher amount, I would still opt for that

    Such dumb logic only works with hosts like @HostMantis

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