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Re: How to prevent total unavailability due Unable to fork [message #51220 is a reply to message #51212] |
Tue, 11 March 2014 15:51 |
Paparaciz
Messages: 302 Registered: August 2009
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postcd wrote on Sun, 09 March 2014 22:38
Let me please know why in case of example shared hosting no one need to worry about memory, they just hit the barrier and nnothing happens and in case of openvz one must be scared of ram limit.. i dont understand why damage happens, it appears to me like a bug..
in shared hosting server admins worries about resources usage and in case client tries to run heavy applications or sites with high load than they just offer for client to move to dedicated server or virtual server nowadays. If client doesn't agree with such offer, than contract is just terminated.
with virtual servers, provider is responsible to create a reasonable resource limitations for some price. there comes some issues. looking to spam messages in this forum from you, personaly I don't understand what service provider you are and even who can use your service. you don't understand how things works, how linux works, and you requesting spoon feeding very much.
So, if virtual server provider don't understand what limitations to set, how this affects applications, than what we can talk about?
speaking about damaging data- what do you think will happen with data in database if half of data was written to file, and than suddenly application is terminated. think about it like pulling power cable from dedicated server.
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Re: How to prevent total unavailability due Unable to fork [message #51224 is a reply to message #51204] |
Wed, 12 March 2014 01:44 |
Ales
Messages: 330 Registered: May 2009
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Senior Member |
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I would advise you to learn more about linux and system administration in general, as promptly as you can.
This forum is not the best place for it. Some perseverance, howto's on the Internet, forums with a wider audience (a Fedora or a CentOS forum, perhaps?) and possibly some good books, that's mostly what it takes.
Linux Foundation is giving a course (regular price is $2400) for free: edx.org, LFS101x. It's not advanced, but will certainly give you a sound foundation upon which to build further.
If you do continue to learn hands-on, well... you don't have anyone else to blame for *anything* that happens to your customers, but yourself. As long as you understand this... well, good luck.
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Re: How to prevent total unavailability due Unable to fork [message #51226 is a reply to message #51221] |
Wed, 12 March 2014 07:05 |
Paparaciz
Messages: 302 Registered: August 2009
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Senior Member |
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postcd wrote on Tue, 11 March 2014 18:42So it is technically impossible to prevent data loss on OpenVZ?
I did not listen that there was ever an data loss on shared hosting because of unsufficient memory, so on OpenVZ data loss can happen anytime if memory usage reach 100%? i never thought this system is so bad..
openvz doesn't have any problems about this.
btw there is not only memory usage
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