What is a VPS and How Does It Work? Print

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A virtual private server (VPS) allows users to set up their own virtual machine without the need to pay for using the whole capacity of a bare metal server (i.e., vps hosting in a nutshell). Studying the technology behind a VPS is a good start towards understanding the cloud as a whole because VPS instances are the building blocks of every cloud.

Most people who use the cloud are somewhat familiar with the term VPS, virtual machine, or compute instance. But, very few understand VPS servers on a technical level. This guide will help you understand the nuances of VPS, its underlying technology, and the differences between VPS and other server infrastructure like virtual dedicated servers and dedicated servers.

What is a VPS?

VPS is an abbreviation for Virtual Private Server. VPS is a virtual environment which runs on a physical server usually located somewhere in a data center. Thanks to technology called virtualization, a VPS behaves like a virtual computer with its own virtual CPU cores, RAM, storage and network interfaces.

Virtualization. The Technology Behind VPS

What is Virtualization?

Virtualization is the process of creating a virtual operating system on top of a physical server. On one physical computer, multiple users can run different operating systems all of them separated from each other. For instance, user A may utilize CentOS, while user B sticks to Debian on their virtual machine, on the same physical server.

Hypervisors

A hypervisor is software that makes virtualization possible. Hypervisors (connected to the server hardware) allocate computing resources (e.g., RAM and CPU) to each VPS.

From the end users’ perspective, each VM is a fully operational environment. And from the server providers’ perspective, each VM is a single data file that can be moved around as needed.

Figure 1: Diagram showing virtualization using a hypervisor. Several virtual instances are created (e.g., VM 1, 2, and 3) with all of them sharing the same hardware resources on a VPS.

Key Benefits of VPS

Independence and Safety

One of the main advantages of VPS is that the instances usually come with the root access and hence unlimited access to modify the operating system, install and run any apps and packages.

Not only does it allow a high level of customization of each VPS independently, but it also ensures full separation between each environment. For example, one VPS becoming unresponsive won’t affect other VPS. This independence is very beneficial in terms of risk reduction – when one element fails, the rest of the environment remains intact. And that also makes VPS the perfect sandbox for developing and testing new things.

“One VPS becoming unresponsive won’t affect other VPS.”

Customization and Affordability

The rise of VPS has also contributed to the growing popularity of microservices. If you look at dedicated servers, implementing a “one server : one task” approach would be inefficient: most of the server’s capacity and resources would go unused. But, VPS is much more affordable as you can create a small instance with resources just for that one task.

VPS vs Other Compute Products

VPS vs Virtual Machine vs Cloud Instances

It’s basically just a different name for the same technology. As you might have noticed in this article, we have been using the term VPS, virtual machine and cloud instance interchangeably. In general, they are a virtual environment using a hypervisor. Virtual machines run on top of a physical server. Some companies even use custom names like “droplet” or “ec2”, but they all are referring to a VPS.

VPS vs Dedicated Servers (Bare Metal Servers)

The main difference between a VPS and a bare metal server is the price and computing power available. You can run the same Operating System on both VPS and dedicated server, but dedicated servers will usually come with more computing power and a higher price tag.

“VDS is a slice of a dedicated server for a fraction of the cost, but with a hearty amount of computing power.”

VPS vs Virtual Dedicated Servers (VDS)

Virtual Dedicated Server is a virtual machine like VPS. But, VDS has much more computing power assigned to it, and it uses both virtual and dedicated resources. And like a dedicated server, all of the resources (e.g., CPU, memory) in a VDS are 100% dedicated to you. VDS is a great solution for users who need the portability of VPS and the power of dedicated servers.

VPS vs Shared Web Hosting

Some people compare VPS to shared web hosting. Both VPS and shared web hosting can be used to host websites or email servers, but shared hosting doesn’t offer root access and it is limited to just the eponymously named website hosting. If your website performance constantly suffers because of high-traffic and your customers complain about it being slow, it’s about time to switch to VPS.

How to Choose VPS Hosting for Your Needs

Now that you know how a VPS works, you’re probably wondering what kind of VPS and from which hosting provider should you should select from.

Long story short, it really depends on your needs and use cases / projects. And most importantly, shop around to see which vendor really fits your needs. For example, many customers have echoed the sentiment that we have the best price-to-performance ratio VPS plans (i.e., lot of RAM, CPU, and traffic for cheap).

And for the curious, our customers typically buy VPS for:

  • Back-end Software-as-a-Solution (SaaS) applications.
  • Self-hosted Bitwarden and other self-hosting apps and services like Nextcloud.
  • Back-end Software-as-a-Solution (SaaS) applications.
  • Microservices infrastructure.
  • Email server hosting.
  • Website hosting.
  • Game server hosting (if you need more powerful dedicated game servers, then check out our sister brand GPORTAL).
  • Databases.
  • Torrent seedboxes.
  • Crypto mining (e.g., staking Ethereum and farming Chia).

 


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