Did anyone else land on an E5-2630L in Fremont?
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz
And on the second:
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2630L 0 @ 2.00GHz
From Linode's blog, "Powering our NextGen hosts are two Intel Sandy Bridge E5-2670 processors. The E5-2670 is at the high end of the power-price-performance ratio."
Did they forget to mention that this is not entirely true for some of you unlucky SOB's in Fremont?
16 Replies
@obs:
…so I moved to 2670's now they fly!
Care to share how you did this? Is there a deterministic way other than luck of the draw?
@dffdce:
@obs:…so I moved to 2670's now they fly!
Care to share how you did this? Is there a deterministic way other than luck of the draw?
You should be able to request a migration to 2670 hardware via a ticket if needed.
I was able to, and I did so because I was having issues with single threaded tasks on the 2630L.
The 2670 did indeed solve my problems though!
I offered to upgrade to a larger node to see if there was a host with a 2670 for that plan size. I was informed there was one. I confirmed I wanted to migrate. Over half an hour later, no response.
At this point I give up. The server's sticking with the crap 2630L until it can be moved to another provider.
Linode you're support and service have degraded a lot lately. I miss the good old days when you were small and your support was second to none.
@obs:
I've just upgraded a server in London and specifically asked (twice) for a 2670 since I know the 2630L's perform poorly. I was told the migration was configured so I migrated. Turns out I was dumped on a 2630L I asked Linode why, they said because they had no 2670's left. Why on earth would you say you can migrate to a 2670 when you don't have any.
Linode you're support and service have degraded a lot lately. I miss the good old days when you were small and your support was second to none.
Agreed! my London 2048 was on a L5630 node before the upgrade and I was landed on L5520 after the upgrade. I asked politely to migrate to the new E5-2670 nodes and support replied with a generic response saying sorry for the issue and my migration has been configured.
I have did it and landed on 2630L even though I asked for 2670. And performance was horrible and I was seeing CPU steal 20% or more on any given time. I just went to a new provider. Didn't bothered to ask again.
@tasaro:
E5-2630Ls, among other processors, exist in all Linode locations. If you feel like you would benefit, feel free to open a support ticket and we can move you to a server with E5-2670s.
Any other suggestions? Opened a ticket but was quickly denied and then engulfed in "Not simple because of issues with newer versions of Xen…" etc.
I'm not ready to jump ship but so far this experience is VERY "un-linode like". It's starting to smell like tactics others use, you know, sling technical jargon at 'em until they acquiesce.
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 0 @ 2.60GHz
Don't know if it was simply 'cause I tried this ticket on a Sunday or what, but eventually we got there…
> We’ve begun a refresh of 3/4 of our entire fleet to a new “NextGen” host hardware specification.
Is the E5-2670 the minimum CPU we can expect on servers? What are the remaining 1/4 of servers running? Is this referring to the fact that you've got to upgrade 3/4 of the servers, or that you intended to leave 1/4 of the servers on older hardware?
I assume these upgrades are still ongoing? What's the status of each datacentre for upgraded servers? Any timeframe estimate for remaining upgrades?
For our nodes the L5*'s were noticeably faster than any 2630 we landed on. Keep in mind, the 2650's do not seem to be plagued by the same terrible performance.
I hope that these servers performing badly are the exception and not something to expect as standard. I've currently got another 2 servers still on servers with the same CPU - both are still running fine, but I don't think I'll hesitate to switch if the performance drops on them.
Neato.