Colocation: Difference between revisions

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m New page: Colocation means that your computer resides at an ISP and you pay a monthly fee for this with or without traffic charges. Colocations usually require you to have a 1U rackmount server ...
 
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== Colocation ==
Colocation means that your computer resides at an [[ISP]] and you pay a monthly fee for this with or without traffic charges.
Colocation means that your computer resides at an [[ISP]] and you pay a monthly fee for this with or without traffic charges.
Colocations usually require you to have a 1U rackmount server so that you get 2 inches of rackspace for it, a desktop server is likely too big for the ISP to house.  Some ISP's offer root-servers, meaning they provide the hardware to you from the start and you manage the Operating System when you have to.  In Germany a root server costs around 30 to 40 dollars a month.  A cheaper alternative is running a vserver on ISP hardware.  They use [[vmware]] or similar virtual engines to give about 8 people a server a host.  A Vserver in germany costs around 7 dollars a month.
Colocations usually require you to have a 1U rackmount server so that you get 2 inches of rackspace for it, a desktop server is likely too big for the ISP to house.   
 
 
== Root Server ==
 
Some ISP's offer root-servers, meaning they provide the hardware to you from the start and you manage the Operating System when you have to.  In Germany a root server costs around 30 to 40 dollars a month.  
 
 
== VServer ==
 
  A cheaper alternative is running a vserver on ISP hardware.  They use [[vmware]] or similar virtual engines to give about 8 people a server a host.  A Vserver in germany costs around 7 dollars a month.

Revision as of 10:11, 31 January 2008

Colocation

Colocation means that your computer resides at an ISP and you pay a monthly fee for this with or without traffic charges. Colocations usually require you to have a 1U rackmount server so that you get 2 inches of rackspace for it, a desktop server is likely too big for the ISP to house.


Root Server

Some ISP's offer root-servers, meaning they provide the hardware to you from the start and you manage the Operating System when you have to. In Germany a root server costs around 30 to 40 dollars a month.


VServer

A cheaper alternative is running a vserver on ISP hardware.  They use vmware or similar virtual engines to give about 8 people a server a host.  A Vserver in germany costs around 7 dollars a month.