Hi,
I have a small website that probably won't generate much interest, which until now has simply run on my Debian machine at home, over a DSL link, using a dyndns.org domain name. The DSL connection isn't very reliable, so I'm considering moving it to a proper hosted machine.
Since I'm used to running my own machine, I'm probably going to want a lot of control over whatever managed host I end up using. And the wacky part is that I wrote my application in Lisp (thanks Paul Graham, that's the last time I take you seriously), so I'm going to want to constantly install and upgrade CMUCL, Apache's mod_perl, and other obscure bits and pieces.
Nevertheless, I really don't want to have my own dedicated machine. This is partly because I surely won't be generating enough load to justify an entire machine, and partly because I'm worried about what would happen when I inevitably crash the thing. So I'm thinking about VPS.
From what I've seen of VPS hosts, they only talk about providing "Linux", which I guess means they set up the machine for you, and there's only a limited extent to which you can screw with that. The fact that they don't even mention which distribution they use is a bit of a worry. Presumably this is all geared towards the standard LAMP crowd, who don't want to worry about operating systems, they just want to chuck their PHP files in a directory and go. (Kids nowadays! Wouldn't've stood for it in my day...)
The way I imagine it working, if the world made sense, would be that I'd sign up with my hosting company, and then I could upload a VMWare image containing whatever operating system I wanted, which they would then set running. I'd be able to go to their self-service page and it would allow me to virtually shut down and restart my image, and possibly show me the console output. So it would be just like having a real computer in front of me. I could then set up ssh and use that to do the real administration. If the system crashed in such a catastrophic way that I couldn't get it running again, I would at least be able to download the VMWare image of its last state so that I could try and recover the data from it.
Are there services that would do that for me? And would they be in the "amateur" price range, let's say less than $30 a month? If not (and I'm assuming probably not, given that I must be in a pretty tiny niche market here), what's my next best compromise?
Thanks for any advice,
Mat
Bookmarks