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June 19, 2010

Virtual Server Hosting – What Is It?

Virtual Service Hosting allows thousands of individuals to host their own personal web-sites at a affordable cost. It has some disadvantages, nevertheless. 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 neighbors.

Shared resources usually are no problem for small to moderate sized web sites. Your main restriction 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 correct that the majority of website owners have no interest or ability to handle this kind of work and are very happy to leave it to the hosting company. Those who desire more control over their server environment or want to experiment with new software, however, could obtain access to this level of management with a Virtual Server Hosting.

A virtual private server (VPS) is a physical server that was partitioned (using software) into several virtual machines, each one acting as an independent dedicated server. The physical resources such as Random access memory, CPU and disk space are still shared, but each VPS acts independently of the others. Each VPS may have a different operating-system and can be configured in in whatever way possible.

The key advantage of Virtual Server Hosting is enabling each manager use of the root level of his virtual server hosting. 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.

In addition to offering more control over your hosting environment, a Virtual Server Hosting is much more protected than shared hosting. Websites on a shared server all have the exact same operating system, so if a hacker were to find access to the root of the server this individual can damage any or all of the websites on that server. A Virtual private server, on the other hand, is split in a way that even if a hacker were to gain entry through one account, there is no way to gain access to the others. Each virtual server hosting account is invisible to the others and it’s impossible to set up root level access from one VPS to another.

Virtual server hosting may be setup in various ways so be sure to know the way the web hosting company has allocated resources. The most typical configuration is to partition all of the physical resources evenly by the quantity of accounts. As a result, if there are 10 virtual servers, each would get 10% of the total bandwidth, CPU, storage and disk space.

The cons of virtual server hosting are almost the same as the advantages. The control that a Virtual private server account offers may be hazardous unless you know what you really are doing. You are able to delete files, set permissions improperly, allow virus-laden software on the system and, generally, genuinely mess things up. If you do not have the expertise to administer a server, or are not ready to learn, virtual server hosting isn’t for you.

In case your web site has outgrown shared hosting, however, virtual server hosting offers an reasonably priced option to dedicated hosting. When researching a virtual server host, be certain to discover how system resources are partitioned up, the volume of virtual server hosting accounts on each physical server, the manner for upgrading, as well as the choices of operating systems.

Want to find out more about Virtual Server Hosting, then visit Author Name’s site on how to choose the best VPS Hosting for your needs.

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Filed under Web Hosting by Scott Ankner

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