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We heard you have a thing for AMD.... Maybe we have a 3950X inside? Also now accepting CRYPTO! - Page 2
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We heard you have a thing for AMD.... Maybe we have a 3950X inside? Also now accepting CRYPTO!

2

Comments

  • seriesnseriesn Member
    edited December 2019

    @MikeA said:

    @cybertech said:
    The new Ryzens support RAID 10 NVMe so it's plus point. And the I/O is great.

    I may be wrong, but there is no good way to do RAID-10 NVMe on Ryzen for servers. If you use a desktop motherboard with a lot of PCIe sure, but any of the workstation/server boards currently will be bottlenecked since there aren't enough PCIe slots and onboard M.2 isn't full speed, so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe. I don't know about U.2, but I don't think that'll end out well.

    Performance between 3900X and 3950X for single core is nothing. It's just better to have more cores so less chance of steal, unless you hand out the whole CPU.

    Well with all that CPU power, fake raid still an option and does the job decently, but no where near what you would imagine raid 10 would do with 4 nvme. I would argue the biggest benefit would be data security at this point.

    Agreed with that PCI slots. Unless one is building a sloppy box, it is not possible to fit in raid card with the asrock mobos. Not yet atleast.

  • MikeAMikeA Member, Patron Provider
    edited December 2019

    @seriesn said:

    @MikeA said:

    @cybertech said:
    The new Ryzens support RAID 10 NVMe so it's plus point. And the I/O is great.

    I may be wrong, but there is no good way to do RAID-10 NVMe on Ryzen for servers. If you use a desktop motherboard with a lot of PCIe sure, but any of the workstation/server boards currently will be bottlenecked since there aren't enough PCIe slots and onboard M.2 isn't full speed, so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe. I don't know about U.2, but I don't think that'll end out well.

    Performance between 3900X and 3950X for single core is nothing. It's just better to have more cores so less chance of steal, unless you hand out the whole CPU.

    Well with all that CPU power, fake raid still an option and does the job decently, but no where near what you would imagine raid 10 would do with 4 nvme. I would argue the biggest benefit would be data security at this point.

    Agreed with that PCI slots. Unless one is building a sloppy box, it is not possible to fit in raid card with the asrock mobos. Not yet atleast.

    Most raid cards suck balls anyway don't they, at least for NVMe? mdadm has worked fine for me, uses no resources on any modern CPU. Still can't do it on a Ryzen with a server board though without speed limits.

    Anyway, it's cool to see others doing stuff with Ryzen now. They're great, and not Epyc-ly expensive.

  • iTDaveiTDave Member
    edited December 2019

    MikeA said: so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe

    Heard alot of peopling using NVMe drives finding even when they do put them in a RAID style configuration in a 1RU case the drives under heavy load seem to overheat pretty badly and cause the NVMe drives to under perform. Still think putting a 4-8 SSD's in a Raid10 Array will give over all better performance IMO.. :smile:

  • @MikeA said:

    @seriesn said:

    @MikeA said:

    @cybertech said:
    The new Ryzens support RAID 10 NVMe so it's plus point. And the I/O is great.

    I may be wrong, but there is no good way to do RAID-10 NVMe on Ryzen for servers. If you use a desktop motherboard with a lot of PCIe sure, but any of the workstation/server boards currently will be bottlenecked since there aren't enough PCIe slots and onboard M.2 isn't full speed, so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe. I don't know about U.2, but I don't think that'll end out well.

    Performance between 3900X and 3950X for single core is nothing. It's just better to have more cores so less chance of steal, unless you hand out the whole CPU.

    Well with all that CPU power, fake raid still an option and does the job decently, but no where near what you would imagine raid 10 would do with 4 nvme. I would argue the biggest benefit would be data security at this point.

    Agreed with that PCI slots. Unless one is building a sloppy box, it is not possible to fit in raid card with the asrock mobos. Not yet atleast.

    Most raid cards suck balls anyway don't they, at least for NVMe? mdadm has worked fine for me, uses no resources on any modern CPU. Still can't do it on a Ryzen with a server board though without speed limits.

    Anyway, it's cool to see others doing stuff with Ryzen now. They're great, and not Epyc-ly expensive.

    Lol I mean, we are dealing with cutting edge technology that has barely been out for 2 years (nvme and the new ryzen evolution).

  • MikeAMikeA Member, Patron Provider

    @iTDave said:

    MikeA said: so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe

    Heard alot of peopling using NVMe drives finding even when they do put them in a RAID style configuration in a 1RU case the drives under heavy load seem to overheat pretty badly and cause the NVMe drives to under perform. Still think putting a 4-8 SSD's in a Raid10 Array will give over all better performance IMO.. :smile:

    I have heat problems in one of my older ones with RAID NVMe, now I use copper heatsinks on the NVMe drives and have good airflow on them and it's not a problem, without it they would basically burn your finger.

    Anyway, this is off topic, hope all goes well for the Bandito.

  • @iTDave said:

    MikeA said: so you won't get full performance of RAID-10 NVMe

    Heard alot of peopling using NVMe drives finding even when they do put them in a RAID style configuration in a 1RU case the drives under heavy load seem to overheat pretty badly and cause the NVMe drives to under perform. Still think putting a 4-8 SSD's in a Raid10 Array will give over all better performance IMO.. :smile:

    That's what I read too and experience in many NVMe vps i tried, sometimes the IO really bad , until ryzen came, I thought they did Raid 10 that's why

  • @Delong said:

    @schilton said:

    @gtxr said:
    I grab Ryzen-L-VPS
    The CPU is very good.

    Region: Global https://bench.monster v.1.4.9 2019-12-24
    Usage : curl -LsO bench.monster/speedtest.sh; bash speedtest.sh -Global


    OS : CentOS 7.7.1908 (64 Bit)
    Virt/Kernel : KVM / 3.10.0-1062.1.1.el7.x86_64
    CPU Model : AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core Processor
    CPU Cores : 4 @ 3493.434 MHz x86_64 512 KB Cache
    CPU Flags : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Enabled
    Load Average : 0.00, 0.01, 0.05
    Total Space : 50G (7.7G ~17% used)
    Total RAM : 3789 MB (286 MB + 3312 MB Buff in use)
    Total SWAP : 4095 MB (0 MB in use)

    Uptime : 0 days 14:53

    ASN & ISP : AS18450, WebNX, Inc.
    Organization : WebNX, Inc.
    Location : Los Angeles, United States / US

    Region : California

    ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:

    Single Core : 5964 (EXCELLENT)
    Multi Core : 18378

    ## IO Test

    CPU Speed:
    bzip2 : 146 MB/s
    sha256 : 975 MB/s
    md5sum : 572 MB/s

    RAM Speed:
    Avg. write : 3754.7 MB/s
    Avg. read : 10752.0 MB/s

    Disk Speed:
    1st run : 1.1 GB/s
    2nd run : 1.0 GB/s
    3rd run : 1.1 GB/s


    Average : 1092.3 MB/s

    ## Global Speedtest

    Location Upload Download Ping

    Speedtest.net 901.58 Mbit/s 935.36 Mbit/s 10.092 ms
    USA, New York (AT&T) 171.07 Mbit/s 263.87 Mbit/s 79.754 ms
    USA, Chicago (Windstream) 229.48 Mbit/s 373.52 Mbit/s 39.506 ms
    USA, Dallas (Frontier) 195.38 Mbit/s 509.25 Mbit/s 44.413 ms
    USA, Miami (Frontier) 206.52 Mbit/s 289.24 Mbit/s 73.746 ms
    USA, Los Angeles (Spectrum) 374.00 Mbit/s 722.60 Mbit/s 22.802 ms
    UK, London (Community Fibre) 173.63 Mbit/s 257.75 Mbit/s 119.128 ms
    France, Lyon (SFR) 58.71 Mbit/s 17.17 Mbit/s 137.483 ms
    Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET) 117.13 Mbit/s 188.15 Mbit/s 159.144 ms
    Spain, Madrid (MasMovil) 125.51 Mbit/s 7.43 Mbit/s 140.433 ms
    Italy, Rome (Unidata) 122.62 Mbit/s 222.55 Mbit/s 156.736 ms
    Russia, Moscow (MTS) 57.91 Mbit/s 150.87 Mbit/s 195.841 ms
    Israel, Haifa (013Netvision) 26.50 Mbit/s 167.02 Mbit/s 188.909 ms
    India, New Delhi (GIGATEL) 24.93 Mbit/s 87.66 Mbit/s 274.753 ms
    Singapore (FirstMedia) 51.48 Mbit/s 29.99 Mbit/s 191.865 ms
    Japan, Tsukuba (SoftEther) 174.48 Mbit/s 313.60 Mbit/s 104.110 ms
    Australia, Sydney (Yes Optus) 105.94 Mbit/s 75.36 Mbit/s 166.598 ms
    RSA, Randburg (Cool Ideas) 11.68 Mbit/s 14.85 Mbit/s 283.529 ms

    Brazil, Sao Paulo (Criare) 67.33 Mbit/s 204.87 Mbit/s 161.033 ms

    Timestamp : 2019-12-27 14:52:23 GMT

    how much per month..!??

    Hey @schilton it is normally $18.99/m but with the 20% promo it comes out to $15.19. If you pay annually and use the promo code it comes out to a little under $13 a month.

    Promo code is XMAS-NYE2020

    CPU cores are dedicated or virtual ??

    i have $10 budget for that.. is it possible, you can reduce disk to 30gb , gonna use window os

  • @schilton said:
    CPU cores are dedicated or virtual ??

    i have $10 budget for that.. is it possible, you can reduce disk to 30gb , gonna use window os

    You clearly have no idea what you are buying.

  • @poisson said:

    @schilton said:
    CPU cores are dedicated or virtual ??

    i have $10 budget for that.. is it possible, you can reduce disk to 30gb , gonna use window os

    You clearly have no idea what you are buying.

    i know, but i am poor :smiley:

  • JordJord Moderator, Host Rep

    I couldn't resist, so I ordered one and then proceeded to install my own ISO and then benchmarked it. :D

    Here is the benchmark:

    nixbench v0.6.6 - https://github.com/jgillich/nixbench
    
    cpu
    ---
    Sha256 (1x) :  243.38 MB/s
    Gzip (1x)   :   89.35 MB/s
    AES (1x)    : 1625.67 MB/s
    
    Sha256 (2x) :  485.57 MB/s
    Gzip (2x)   :  179.62 MB/s
    AES (2x)    : 2055.20 MB/s
    
    
    disk
    ----
    1. run   : 982 MB/s
    2. run   : 1007 MB/s
    3. run   : 1030 MB/s
    4. run   : 1015 MB/s
    5. run   : 1050 MB/s
    Average  : 1017 MB/s
    
    
    geekbench
    ---------
    Single-Core Score  : 2684
    Multi-Core Score   : 4814
    Result URL         : https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15085407
    
    
    host
    ----
    OS        : linux
    Platform  : centos 7.7.1908
    CPU       : AMD EPYC 7551P 32-Core Processor
    Cores     : 2
    Clock     : 1996 Mhz
    RAM       : 1837 MB
    
    net
    ---
    CDN                           : 102.64 MB/s
    Amsterdam, The Netherlands    :  10.12 MB/s
    Dallas, USA                   :  29.61 MB/s
    Frankfurt, Germany            :   1.07 MB/s
    Hong Kong, China              :   7.14 MB/s
    London, United Kingdoms       :  11.70 MB/s
    Melbourne, Australia          :   8.68 MB/s
    Oslo, Norway                  :   9.38 MB/s
    Paris, France                 :   9.53 MB/s
    Queretaro Mexico              :  21.41 MB/s
    San Jose, USA                 :  55.12 MB/s
    Sao Paulo, Brazil             :   9.56 MB/s
    Seoul, Korea                  :   6.18 MB/s
    Singapore, Singapore          :   8.34 MB/s
    Tokyo, Japan                  :  14.14 MB/s
    Toronto, Canada               :  20.02 MB/s
    Washington, USA               :  19.73 MB/s
    
    
    Thanked by 1uptime
  • @Jord said:
    I couldn't resist, so I ordered one and then proceeded to install my own ISO and then benchmarked it. :D

    Here is the benchmark:

    nixbench v0.6.6 - https://github.com/jgillich/nixbench
    
    cpu
    ---
    Sha256 (1x) :  243.38 MB/s
    Gzip (1x)   :   89.35 MB/s
    AES (1x)    : 1625.67 MB/s
    
    Sha256 (2x) :  485.57 MB/s
    Gzip (2x)   :  179.62 MB/s
    AES (2x)    : 2055.20 MB/s
    
    
    disk
    ----
    1. run   : 982 MB/s
    2. run   : 1007 MB/s
    3. run   : 1030 MB/s
    4. run   : 1015 MB/s
    5. run   : 1050 MB/s
    Average  : 1017 MB/s
    
    
    geekbench
    ---------
    Single-Core Score  : 2684
    Multi-Core Score   : 4814
    Result URL         : https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15085407
    
    
    host
    ----
    OS        : linux
    Platform  : centos 7.7.1908
    CPU       : AMD EPYC 7551P 32-Core Processor
    Cores     : 2
    Clock     : 1996 Mhz
    RAM       : 1837 MB
    
    net
    ---
    CDN                           : 102.64 MB/s
    Amsterdam, The Netherlands    :  10.12 MB/s
    Dallas, USA                   :  29.61 MB/s
    Frankfurt, Germany            :   1.07 MB/s
    Hong Kong, China              :   7.14 MB/s
    London, United Kingdoms       :  11.70 MB/s
    Melbourne, Australia          :   8.68 MB/s
    Oslo, Norway                  :   9.38 MB/s
    Paris, France                 :   9.53 MB/s
    Queretaro Mexico              :  21.41 MB/s
    San Jose, USA                 :  55.12 MB/s
    Sao Paulo, Brazil             :   9.56 MB/s
    Seoul, Korea                  :   6.18 MB/s
    Singapore, Singapore          :   8.34 MB/s
    Tokyo, Japan                  :  14.14 MB/s
    Toronto, Canada               :  20.02 MB/s
    Washington, USA               :  19.73 MB/s
    
    

    You should have ordered the Ryzen lol.

  • @poisson said:

    @Jord said:
    I couldn't resist, so I ordered one and then proceeded to install my own ISO and then benchmarked it. :D

    Here is the benchmark:

    nixbench v0.6.6 - https://github.com/jgillich/nixbench
    
    cpu
    ---
    Sha256 (1x) :  243.38 MB/s
    Gzip (1x)   :   89.35 MB/s
    AES (1x)    : 1625.67 MB/s
    
    Sha256 (2x) :  485.57 MB/s
    Gzip (2x)   :  179.62 MB/s
    AES (2x)    : 2055.20 MB/s
    
    
    disk
    ----
    1. run   : 982 MB/s
    2. run   : 1007 MB/s
    3. run   : 1030 MB/s
    4. run   : 1015 MB/s
    5. run   : 1050 MB/s
    Average  : 1017 MB/s
    
    
    geekbench
    ---------
    Single-Core Score  : 2684
    Multi-Core Score   : 4814
    Result URL         : https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15085407
    
    
    host
    ----
    OS        : linux
    Platform  : centos 7.7.1908
    CPU       : AMD EPYC 7551P 32-Core Processor
    Cores     : 2
    Clock     : 1996 Mhz
    RAM       : 1837 MB
    
    net
    ---
    CDN                           : 102.64 MB/s
    Amsterdam, The Netherlands    :  10.12 MB/s
    Dallas, USA                   :  29.61 MB/s
    Frankfurt, Germany            :   1.07 MB/s
    Hong Kong, China              :   7.14 MB/s
    London, United Kingdoms       :  11.70 MB/s
    Melbourne, Australia          :   8.68 MB/s
    Oslo, Norway                  :   9.38 MB/s
    Paris, France                 :   9.53 MB/s
    Queretaro Mexico              :  21.41 MB/s
    San Jose, USA                 :  55.12 MB/s
    Sao Paulo, Brazil             :   9.56 MB/s
    Seoul, Korea                  :   6.18 MB/s
    Singapore, Singapore          :   8.34 MB/s
    Tokyo, Japan                  :  14.14 MB/s
    Toronto, Canada               :  20.02 MB/s
    Washington, USA               :  19.73 MB/s
    
    

    You should have ordered the Ryzen lol.

    I reckon he will after he's experienced the network and service quality, it's an experience I would recommend to all thrill seekers. The Ryzen is powerful beyond what I personally imagined the difference to be.

    Thanked by 1poisson
  • After moving to ryzen 3950X, The load average is almost zero compared with old vps

    Thanked by 2dahartigan poisson
  • @gtxr said:
    After moving to ryzen 3950X, The load average is almost zero compared with old vps

    All the Ryzen 39XX series are exothermic potassium. If you ask me, for personal basic use, one core Ryzen 39XX will probably outperform two-core older Xeons at a lower price.

    Thanked by 2dahartigan uptime
  • JordJord Moderator, Host Rep

    poisson said: You should have ordered the Ryzen lol.

    Hey I'm happy hahah it's only for a small test box. Working great so far. Bloody quick.

  • JordJord Moderator, Host Rep

    dahartigan said: I reckon he will after he's experienced the network and service quality, it's an experience I would recommend to all thrill seekers. The Ryzen is powerful beyond what I personally imagined the difference to be.

    Happy with this sir, I don't need anything that will blow my socks off :joy: oh wait I'm a panda hmmmm......

    Thanked by 1dahartigan
  • I hope I can win the new year’s prize

  • Welp, looks like only two people said they picked something up? Everyone wins then, @gtxr @Jord shoot me a PM with your order numbers and I'll get it hooked up!

  • @Delong said:
    Welp, looks like only two people said they picked something up? Everyone wins then, @gtxr @Jord shoot me a PM with your order numbers and I'll get it hooked up!

    Congrats @gtxr and @Jord :-)

    Thanked by 1gtxr
  • Posting this for reference. Check out the geekbench score and RAM speed. This is what computing power looks like lol

     Virt/Kernel  : KVM / 4.9.0-4-amd64
     CPU Model    : AMD Ryzen 3950x
     CPU Cores    : 4 @ 3493.434 MHz x86_64 512 KB Cache
     CPU Flags    : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Disabled
     Load Average : 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
     Total Space  : 50G (869M ~2% used)
     Total RAM    : 3955 MB (52 MB + 297 MB Buff in use)
     Total SWAP   : 0 MB (0 MB in use)
     Uptime       : 0 days 17:7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     ASN & ISP    : AS18450, WebNX, Inc.
     Organization : WebNX, Inc.
     Location     : Los Angeles, United States / US
     Region       : California
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
     ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:
    
      Single Core : 5972  (EXCELLENT)
       Multi Core : 18463
    
     ## IO Test
    
     CPU Speed:
        bzip2     : 143 MB/s
       sha256     : 289 MB/s
       md5sum     : 683 MB/s
    
     RAM Speed:
       Avg. write : 4130.1 MB/s
       Avg. read  : 11639.5 MB/s
    
     Disk Speed:
       1st run    : 1.0 GB/s
       2nd run    : 1.0 GB/s
       3rd run    : 1.0 GB/s
       -----------------------
       Average    : 1024.0 MB/s
    
     ## Global Speedtest
    
     Location                       Upload           Download         Ping
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Speedtest.net                  902.02 Mbit/s    930.85 Mbit/s    10.075 ms
     USA, New York (AT&T)           181.07 Mbit/s    246.09 Mbit/s    76.909 ms
     USA, Chicago (Windstream)      207.36 Mbit/s    398.30 Mbit/s    39.474 ms
     USA, Dallas (Frontier)         156.89 Mbit/s    348.12 Mbit/s    42.913 ms
     USA, Miami (Frontier)          232.81 Mbit/s    379.89 Mbit/s    71.908 ms
     USA, Los Angeles (Spectrum)    392.93 Mbit/s    366.78 Mbit/s    23.106 ms
     UK, London (Community Fibre)   167.55 Mbit/s    217.03 Mbit/s   118.568 ms
     France, Lyon (SFR)             106.60 Mbit/s    215.24 Mbit/s   137.778 ms
     Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET)      112.54 Mbit/s    216.25 Mbit/s   159.355 ms
     Spain, Madrid (MasMovil)       109.86 Mbit/s    4.86 Mbit/s     140.343 ms
     Italy, Rome (Unidata)          111.99 Mbit/s    194.10 Mbit/s   159.885 ms
     Russia, Moscow (MTS)           84.27 Mbit/s     149.16 Mbit/s   195.402 ms
     Israel, Haifa (013Netvision)   77.15 Mbit/s     183.15 Mbit/s   185.542 ms
     India, New Delhi (GIGATEL)     21.44 Mbit/s     82.19 Mbit/s    275.457 ms
     Singapore (FirstMedia)         43.08 Mbit/s     24.50 Mbit/s    193.774 ms
     Japan, Tsukuba (SoftEther)     158.28 Mbit/s    252.93 Mbit/s   104.469 ms
     Australia, Sydney (Yes Optus)  100.50 Mbit/s    67.87 Mbit/s    170.489 ms
     RSA, Randburg (Cool Ideas)     12.22 Mbit/s     27.62 Mbit/s    284.697 ms
     Brazil, Sao Paulo (Criare)     80.00 Mbit/s     173.68 Mbit/s   161.191 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
     Finished in : 9 min 31 sec
     Timestamp   : 2019-12-27 10:37:05 GMT
     Saved in    : /root/speedtest.log
    
     Share results:
     - http://www.speedtest.net/result/8891543856.png
     - https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15077758
     - https://clbin.com/RXocz
    
    Thanked by 1schilton
  • @dahartigan said:

    @Delong said:
    Welp, looks like only two people said they picked something up? Everyone wins then, @gtxr @Jord shoot me a PM with your order numbers and I'll get it hooked up!

    Congrats @gtxr and @Jord :-)

    DAMN. I should have picked something up.

    Thanked by 1gtxr
  • @poisson said:

    @dahartigan said:

    @Delong said:
    Welp, looks like only two people said they picked something up? Everyone wins then, @gtxr @Jord shoot me a PM with your order numbers and I'll get it hooked up!

    Congrats @gtxr and @Jord :-)

    DAMN. I should have picked something up.

    I got the EPYC and the Ryzen but I didn't enter so that someone else had a better chance of winning :-)

    The 4 core Ryzen is next level impressive and the 12 core EPYC is an insanely epic deal which I'm pretty sure will never happen again for the price.

    Combined they reach a critical mass of superior potassium and release unfathomable amounts of premium energy, which is then applied to the plow, very strongly.

  • @dahartigan said:
    I got the EPYC and the Ryzen but I didn't enter so that someone else had a better chance of winning :-)

    Correction. You got the EPYC and Ryzen 3950X. Where is the 3900X potassium?

  • @dahartigan said:
    Posting this for reference. Check out the geekbench score and RAM speed. This is what computing power looks like lol

    Virt/Kernel : KVM / 4.9.0-4-amd64
    CPU Model : AMD Ryzen 3950x
    CPU Cores : 4 @ 3493.434 MHz x86_64 512 KB Cache
    CPU Flags : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Disabled
    Load Average : 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
    Total Space : 50G (869M ~2% used)
    Total RAM : 3955 MB (52 MB + 297 MB Buff in use)
    Total SWAP : 0 MB (0 MB in use)
    Uptime : 0 days 17:7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ASN & ISP : AS18450, WebNX, Inc.
    Organization : WebNX, Inc.
    Location : Los Angeles, United States / US
    Region : California
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:

    Single Core : 5972 (EXCELLENT)
    Multi Core : 18463

    ## IO Test

    CPU Speed:
    bzip2 : 143 MB/s
    sha256 : 289 MB/s
    md5sum : 683 MB/s

    RAM Speed:
    Avg. write : 4130.1 MB/s
    Avg. read : 11639.5 MB/s

    Disk Speed:
    1st run : 1.0 GB/s
    2nd run : 1.0 GB/s
    3rd run : 1.0 GB/s
    -----------------------
    Average : 1024.0 MB/s

    ## Global Speedtest

    Location Upload Download Ping
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Speedtest.net 902.02 Mbit/s 930.85 Mbit/s 10.075 ms
    USA, New York (AT&T) 181.07 Mbit/s 246.09 Mbit/s 76.909 ms
    USA, Chicago (Windstream) 207.36 Mbit/s 398.30 Mbit/s 39.474 ms
    USA, Dallas (Frontier) 156.89 Mbit/s 348.12 Mbit/s 42.913 ms
    USA, Miami (Frontier) 232.81 Mbit/s 379.89 Mbit/s 71.908 ms
    USA, Los Angeles (Spectrum) 392.93 Mbit/s 366.78 Mbit/s 23.106 ms
    UK, London (Community Fibre) 167.55 Mbit/s 217.03 Mbit/s 118.568 ms
    France, Lyon (SFR) 106.60 Mbit/s 215.24 Mbit/s 137.778 ms
    Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET) 112.54 Mbit/s 216.25 Mbit/s 159.355 ms
    Spain, Madrid (MasMovil) 109.86 Mbit/s 4.86 Mbit/s 140.343 ms
    Italy, Rome (Unidata) 111.99 Mbit/s 194.10 Mbit/s 159.885 ms
    Russia, Moscow (MTS) 84.27 Mbit/s 149.16 Mbit/s 195.402 ms
    Israel, Haifa (013Netvision) 77.15 Mbit/s 183.15 Mbit/s 185.542 ms
    India, New Delhi (GIGATEL) 21.44 Mbit/s 82.19 Mbit/s 275.457 ms
    Singapore (FirstMedia) 43.08 Mbit/s 24.50 Mbit/s 193.774 ms
    Japan, Tsukuba (SoftEther) 158.28 Mbit/s 252.93 Mbit/s 104.469 ms
    Australia, Sydney (Yes Optus) 100.50 Mbit/s 67.87 Mbit/s 170.489 ms
    RSA, Randburg (Cool Ideas) 12.22 Mbit/s 27.62 Mbit/s 284.697 ms
    Brazil, Sao Paulo (Criare) 80.00 Mbit/s 173.68 Mbit/s 161.191 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finished in : 9 min 31 sec
    Timestamp : 2019-12-27 10:37:05 GMT
    Saved in : /root/speedtest.log

    Share results:
    - http://www.speedtest.net/result/8891543856.png
    - https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15077758
    - https://clbin.com/RXocz

    shut up - and take my money... :smiley:
    give it to me.. haha

  • dahartigandahartigan Member
    edited January 2020

    @poisson said:

    @dahartigan said:
    I got the EPYC and the Ryzen but I didn't enter so that someone else had a better chance of winning :-)

    Correction. You got the EPYC and Ryzen 3950X. Where is the 3900X potassium?

    Coming soon :-)

    @schilton said:

    @dahartigan said:
    Posting this for reference. Check out the geekbench score and RAM speed. This is what computing power looks like lol

    Virt/Kernel : KVM / 4.9.0-4-amd64
    CPU Model : AMD Ryzen 3950x
    CPU Cores : 4 @ 3493.434 MHz x86_64 512 KB Cache
    CPU Flags : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Disabled
    Load Average : 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
    Total Space : 50G (869M ~2% used)
    Total RAM : 3955 MB (52 MB + 297 MB Buff in use)
    Total SWAP : 0 MB (0 MB in use)
    Uptime : 0 days 17:7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ASN & ISP : AS18450, WebNX, Inc.
    Organization : WebNX, Inc.
    Location : Los Angeles, United States / US
    Region : California
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:

    Single Core : 5972 (EXCELLENT)
    Multi Core : 18463

    ## IO Test

    CPU Speed:
    bzip2 : 143 MB/s
    sha256 : 289 MB/s
    md5sum : 683 MB/s

    RAM Speed:
    Avg. write : 4130.1 MB/s
    Avg. read : 11639.5 MB/s

    Disk Speed:
    1st run : 1.0 GB/s
    2nd run : 1.0 GB/s
    3rd run : 1.0 GB/s
    -----------------------
    Average : 1024.0 MB/s

    ## Global Speedtest

    Location Upload Download Ping
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Speedtest.net 902.02 Mbit/s 930.85 Mbit/s 10.075 ms
    USA, New York (AT&T) 181.07 Mbit/s 246.09 Mbit/s 76.909 ms
    USA, Chicago (Windstream) 207.36 Mbit/s 398.30 Mbit/s 39.474 ms
    USA, Dallas (Frontier) 156.89 Mbit/s 348.12 Mbit/s 42.913 ms
    USA, Miami (Frontier) 232.81 Mbit/s 379.89 Mbit/s 71.908 ms
    USA, Los Angeles (Spectrum) 392.93 Mbit/s 366.78 Mbit/s 23.106 ms
    UK, London (Community Fibre) 167.55 Mbit/s 217.03 Mbit/s 118.568 ms
    France, Lyon (SFR) 106.60 Mbit/s 215.24 Mbit/s 137.778 ms
    Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET) 112.54 Mbit/s 216.25 Mbit/s 159.355 ms
    Spain, Madrid (MasMovil) 109.86 Mbit/s 4.86 Mbit/s 140.343 ms
    Italy, Rome (Unidata) 111.99 Mbit/s 194.10 Mbit/s 159.885 ms
    Russia, Moscow (MTS) 84.27 Mbit/s 149.16 Mbit/s 195.402 ms
    Israel, Haifa (013Netvision) 77.15 Mbit/s 183.15 Mbit/s 185.542 ms
    India, New Delhi (GIGATEL) 21.44 Mbit/s 82.19 Mbit/s 275.457 ms
    Singapore (FirstMedia) 43.08 Mbit/s 24.50 Mbit/s 193.774 ms
    Japan, Tsukuba (SoftEther) 158.28 Mbit/s 252.93 Mbit/s 104.469 ms
    Australia, Sydney (Yes Optus) 100.50 Mbit/s 67.87 Mbit/s 170.489 ms
    RSA, Randburg (Cool Ideas) 12.22 Mbit/s 27.62 Mbit/s 284.697 ms
    Brazil, Sao Paulo (Criare) 80.00 Mbit/s 173.68 Mbit/s 161.191 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finished in : 9 min 31 sec
    Timestamp : 2019-12-27 10:37:05 GMT
    Saved in : /root/speedtest.log

    Share results:
    - http://www.speedtest.net/result/8891543856.png
    - https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15077758
    - https://clbin.com/RXocz

    shut up - and take my money... :smiley:
    give it to me.. haha

    https://clients.bandithost.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=24 that's the order link :-)

  • @dahartigan said:

    @poisson said:

    @dahartigan said:
    I got the EPYC and the Ryzen but I didn't enter so that someone else had a better chance of winning :-)

    Correction. You got the EPYC and Ryzen 3950X. Where is the 3900X potassium?

    Coming soon :-)

    @schilton said:

    @dahartigan said:
    Posting this for reference. Check out the geekbench score and RAM speed. This is what computing power looks like lol

    Virt/Kernel : KVM / 4.9.0-4-amd64
    CPU Model : AMD Ryzen 3950x
    CPU Cores : 4 @ 3493.434 MHz x86_64 512 KB Cache
    CPU Flags : AES-NI Enabled & VM-x/AMD-V Disabled
    Load Average : 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
    Total Space : 50G (869M ~2% used)
    Total RAM : 3955 MB (52 MB + 297 MB Buff in use)
    Total SWAP : 0 MB (0 MB in use)
    Uptime : 0 days 17:7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ASN & ISP : AS18450, WebNX, Inc.
    Organization : WebNX, Inc.
    Location : Los Angeles, United States / US
    Region : California
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ## Geekbench v4 CPU Benchmark:

    Single Core : 5972 (EXCELLENT)
    Multi Core : 18463

    ## IO Test

    CPU Speed:
    bzip2 : 143 MB/s
    sha256 : 289 MB/s
    md5sum : 683 MB/s

    RAM Speed:
    Avg. write : 4130.1 MB/s
    Avg. read : 11639.5 MB/s

    Disk Speed:
    1st run : 1.0 GB/s
    2nd run : 1.0 GB/s
    3rd run : 1.0 GB/s
    -----------------------
    Average : 1024.0 MB/s

    ## Global Speedtest

    Location Upload Download Ping
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Speedtest.net 902.02 Mbit/s 930.85 Mbit/s 10.075 ms
    USA, New York (AT&T) 181.07 Mbit/s 246.09 Mbit/s 76.909 ms
    USA, Chicago (Windstream) 207.36 Mbit/s 398.30 Mbit/s 39.474 ms
    USA, Dallas (Frontier) 156.89 Mbit/s 348.12 Mbit/s 42.913 ms
    USA, Miami (Frontier) 232.81 Mbit/s 379.89 Mbit/s 71.908 ms
    USA, Los Angeles (Spectrum) 392.93 Mbit/s 366.78 Mbit/s 23.106 ms
    UK, London (Community Fibre) 167.55 Mbit/s 217.03 Mbit/s 118.568 ms
    France, Lyon (SFR) 106.60 Mbit/s 215.24 Mbit/s 137.778 ms
    Germany, Berlin (DNS:NET) 112.54 Mbit/s 216.25 Mbit/s 159.355 ms
    Spain, Madrid (MasMovil) 109.86 Mbit/s 4.86 Mbit/s 140.343 ms
    Italy, Rome (Unidata) 111.99 Mbit/s 194.10 Mbit/s 159.885 ms
    Russia, Moscow (MTS) 84.27 Mbit/s 149.16 Mbit/s 195.402 ms
    Israel, Haifa (013Netvision) 77.15 Mbit/s 183.15 Mbit/s 185.542 ms
    India, New Delhi (GIGATEL) 21.44 Mbit/s 82.19 Mbit/s 275.457 ms
    Singapore (FirstMedia) 43.08 Mbit/s 24.50 Mbit/s 193.774 ms
    Japan, Tsukuba (SoftEther) 158.28 Mbit/s 252.93 Mbit/s 104.469 ms
    Australia, Sydney (Yes Optus) 100.50 Mbit/s 67.87 Mbit/s 170.489 ms
    RSA, Randburg (Cool Ideas) 12.22 Mbit/s 27.62 Mbit/s 284.697 ms
    Brazil, Sao Paulo (Criare) 80.00 Mbit/s 173.68 Mbit/s 161.191 ms
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finished in : 9 min 31 sec
    Timestamp : 2019-12-27 10:37:05 GMT
    Saved in : /root/speedtest.log

    Share results:
    - http://www.speedtest.net/result/8891543856.png
    - https://browser.geekbench.com/v4/cpu/15077758
    - https://clbin.com/RXocz

    shut up - and take my money... :smiley:
    give it to me.. haha

    https://clients.bandithost.com/cart.php?a=add&pid=24 that's the order link :-)

    haha, just kidding....

  • JordJord Moderator, Host Rep

    Wow thanks @Delong I've sent a DM :)

  • @Jord said:
    Wow thanks @Delong I've sent a DM :)

    Are we going to see Bandit powered Bamboo hosting soon?

    Thanked by 1Jord
  • JordJord Moderator, Host Rep

    @poisson said:

    @Jord said:
    Wow thanks @Delong I've sent a DM :)

    Are we going to see Bandit powered Bamboo hosting soon?

    Ooo good point, could get a DA license, and spin up some US hosting :joy:

  • @Jord said:

    @poisson said:

    @Jord said:
    Wow thanks @Delong I've sent a DM :)

    Are we going to see Bandit powered Bamboo hosting soon?

    Ooo good point, could get a DA license, and spin up some US hosting :joy:

    Denied, service is for idling only lol.

    Thanked by 3Jord poisson dahartigan
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