All About Virtual Private Server (VPS)
What is VPS Hosting?
A virtual private server (VPS) is a single server partitioned into multiple sections that each function as an independent server. It gives you the freedom to configure your server any way you want and costs less than buying your own server. Consider a VPS if you need to:
- Host and manage multiple Web sites on one server
- Get better control over your hosting environment
- Support resellers and multiple levels of access
- Install the applications you need for your Web sites
- Visually manage your server with an automation control panel
What is it?
Well, I am sure I will not cover every inch of what a VPS hosting account is, but let me go through the basics so we don’t need a degree to understand what it will and will not give you.
VPS stands for virtual private server. It is sometimes also referred to as a virtual server or a virtual dedicated server. It takes one big server and partitions it off into several smaller servers. Each VPS hosting account can have its own operating system and can be rebooted without effecting the other accounts on the machine.
Now that you know what it is, what is it good for?
These types of hosting accounts are usually used as a stepping stone between your basic shared hosting accounts and dedicated hosting accounts. You get all of the benefits of having your own dedicated machine, but you still have some limitation as to what you can do with it. If shared hosting is a light snack, and dedicated hosting is a three course meal, you can consider VPS hosting a regular sized dinner.
Now where with a dedicated machine, your RAM and CPU usage would be a little less limited, with VPS hosting you are more in the boat with shared hosting. You will be limited by your Web host in disk space, bandwidth, CPU and RAM usage. Now where a VPS is helpful is when you need the benefits of dedicated hosting such as certain types of script setups and account access.
So as I said before, this is a much needed plan in between your shared and dedicated hosting. It allows you a little more flexibility than a shared hosting account, but limits you more than a dedicated account would.
A Virtual Private Server (VPS) is a hosting environment that combines the benefits of both shared hosting and dedicated hosting. It does this by creating a virtual server that runs inside a hardware server via a specially designed partition.
Each Virtual Private Server partition runs its own operating system in a secure and private environment and cannot be accessed or interrupted by its neighbours.
This system gives you the same level of root access as a dedicated server whilst sharing the cost of the hardware. With a VPS you are virtually running your own server but at a fraction of the cost.
The flexibility of a dedicated server
Users share system resources, such as the CPU and memory, but unlike shared hosting (a virtual host on a shared hardware server ) the file system is fully partitioned. This means you get a guaranteed share of the server's resources, while full root access allows you to completely customise the virtual server, adding or changing modules and installing your own software.
Highly cost effective
Because a single physical server is shared between several users, the cost of a virtual server is small when compared to the price of a dedicated server. But the level of flexibility is similar (although you'll still need a dedicated server for really demanding applications or high-traffic sites).
How much technical knowledge do I need?
All our VPS options include the Plesk control panel, which makes it easier to administer your websites and services.
However, because a VPS gives you root-level access, allowing you to install whatever software you like, you will need some technical knowledge and understanding of how servers work to run a VPS effectively.
The inclusion of the very latest range of software and control panels for Windows and Linux is accompanied by price reductions across the range so we're increasing performance, features and value at exactly the same time.
What is a VPS?
VPS stands for Virtual Private Server. Sometimes it is also referred as Virtual Dedicated Server.
When you take a server and part it into smaller independent servers where each of these smaller server runs on its own operating system and private environment but shares the same hardware – that’s what we called as VPS. A VPS is a hosting environment that combines both benefits of shared and dedicated hosting. It looks, feels, and acts like a dedicated server; but it cost a fraction of the cost of a dedicated hosting package.
VPS is most suitable for website owners that need an isolated hosting environment (for safety and performance purpose) and special hostingfeatures (such as custom firewalls, SSH access, dedicated IP addresses).
Benefits of VPS
The best things about VPS are its dedicated-server-alike features and affordable pricing.
Isolation Each private server has its unique file system and gets a guaranteed fraction of the server’s disk space, CPU power, bandwidth, and memory. Hence, a website hosted on a VPS runs on an isolated environment where its performance will not be affected by other websites. Also, a VPS does not share web application and services with other websites thus it eliminates the risk of downtime or hacks due to other’s mistakes.
Customization VPS users get full root access. This allows server customization – you get to install your own software/application and manage your server as you would on a dedicated server.
Affordable VPS is cheap. You’ll get features like dedicated servers but cost a lot more cheaper (in most of the case, 50% less) than a dedicated hosting plan. You can compare the pricing different between a dedicated server and VPS hosting below.
What to look for when choosing a VPS?
Besides pricing, there are a few other important points that you should look at when it comes to VPS shopping. Choosing a VPS provider that’s easy to communicate is very important. A web host who’s willing to listen and accommodate your specific needs is very important.
Also, getting a flexible VPS provider that allows hardware customization is very important. Avoid web hosts who offer only ’standard’ plans as this will creates troubles in your future upgrades. Each website has different needs, maybe you need lower CPU speeds, or larger storage, or less bandwidth, or more RAM – you’ll never know what kind of upgrades you need in the future. Do you want to upgrade your entire hosting plan everytime you need a minor upgrades? No, of course. If all you need is just some extra RAM, why should you upgrade the entire hosting plan and pay for all the unnecessary storage and bandwidth?
Is VPS right for you?
When your website has outgrown your shared hosting plan and you couldn’t afford the price of a dedicated server, then VPS is your answer. Most webmasters see VPS as the stepping stone to dedicated or self-managed private server.
VPS: More than Shared, Cheaper than Dedicated!
Virtual private servers (VPS) are an interesting middle-ground for those who need a little more than a shared hosting plan but don't want to pay the cost or need the power of a dedicated server. It is a virtual machine which operates on the same hardware as other virtual machines, yet it acts as an independent server would act. They were often used in mainframe systems to allow multiple users to harness the power at the same time, and they are experiencing an uptake in popularity as VPS technology advances.
How Does VPS Works?
The way a virtual private server works is this: a single server has multiple hard drives or partitions of a drive which are set aside for a user. Limits may be placed on the amount of processing power per user to eliminate the shared hosting problem of lag caused by the other users. A major advantage to the VPS is that each user can have an operating system that is independent of the other users, and the user can reboot their partition without harming the other users.
A virtual private server has many of the same options that a dedicated server would have including managed and unmanaged hosting plans, control panels, and tech support for upgrades and assistance. They are often used to help with the stability of a system by running a live, working version of a program or website while a secondary copy of the code is being worked on in a partition. That allows the developer to keep a website up until the secondary code has been improved and stabilized for release without endangering the primary. They are also used as honey pots to distract hackers from secure data by storing incorrect data on a VPS with intentionally lax security.
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