|
Credit Articles
~ Start
Your Own Homebased Business
Virtual Private Server (VPS) Web Hosting
Shared hosting allows thousands of people to host
their own sites at a very reasonable cost. It has
some drawbacks, however. Since hundreds of sites
can be hosted on a single server resources such
as CPU, disk space, and bandwidth have to be shared
with your virtual neighbours.
Shared resources are usually not a problem for
small to medium sized sites. Your main limitation
is the lack of control over system level software
– http servers, mail servers etc. You don't
have any choice of operating system and you cannot
compile programs or do administrative tasks such
as setting up Spam filters or firewalls.
Many people would say 'So what? I don't want to
do that stuff anyway!' It's true that the majority
of website owners have no interest or ability to
handle this kind of work and are happy to leave
it to the hosting company. Those who desire more
control over their server environment or wish to
experiment with new software, however, can get access
to this level of management with a Virtual Private
Server.
A virtual private server (VPS) is a physical server
that has been divided (using software) into several
virtual machines, each acting as an independent
dedicated server. The physical resources such as
RAM, CPU and disk space are still shared, but each
VPS acts independently of the others. Each VPS can
have a different operating system and can be configured
in any way possible.
The key advantage of VPS is allowing each VPS administrator
access to the root level of his virtual server.
This kind of access allows the administrator to
install and delete software, set permissions, create
accounts – in short, do everything that the
administrator of a 'real' sever can.
As well as providing more control over your hosting
environment, a VPS is more secure than shared hosting.
Websites on a shared server all have the same operating
system, so if a hacker were to find access to the
root of the server he could damage any or all of
the websites on that server. A VPS, on the other
hand, is divided in such a way that even if a hacker
were to gain entry through one account, there is
no way to access the others. Each VPS is invisible
to the others and there is no way to set up root
level access from one VPS to another.
Virtual Private Servers can be set up in various
ways so be sure to understand how the hosting company
has allocated resources. The most common configuration
is to divide all the physical resources evenly by
the number of accounts. Thus, if there are 10 virtual
servers, each would receive 10% of the total bandwidth,
CPU, memory and disk space.
What Are The Disadvantages of VPS?
The disadvantages of VPS are almost the same as
the advantages. The control that a VPS account provides
can be dangerous if you don't know what you are
doing. You have the ability to delete files, set
permissions improperly, allow virus-laden software
on the system and, in general, really screw things
up. If you don't have the knowledge to administer
a server, or are not willing to learn, VPS is not
for you.
Questions To Ask Before You Choose Your Virtual Private Server
If your website has outgrown shared hosting, however,
VPS offers an affordable alternative to dedicated
hosting. When shopping for a VPS host, be sure to
find out how system resources are divided up, the
number of VPS accounts on each physical server,
the method for upgrading, and the choices of operating
systems.
About the Author
Liz Roberts is a loan consultant
with NewHorizon
Finance and has been running an online finance
company since 1989. Bad Credit? Join our mailing
list for tips on building and repairing
your credit yourself, without hiring a credit
repair service. Click here for a list of bad
credit unsecured credit cards
Free reprint rights with full credit to the
author. Please reprint everything within this
box.
Copyright 2005 |
|