https://joshtronic.com/2019/09/02/vps-showdown-digitalocean-...
DigitalOcean is by far the most popular. Personally, I like Vultr because they also have $2.50 IPv6 only instances and you can upload your own ISO file if you want to try a less popular Linux distribution. Both services have similar user interfaces that are pretty good.
That being said, $60/year is still a lot. If you can get away with just a static site, try GitHub pages https://pages.github.com/. You only get one (unless you create GitHub organizations) but it's free. You can still have your own domain pointing to it with TLS (free through Let's Encrypt). You miss out on the fun of managing a Linux server unfortunately.
Check out the Black Hat SEO forums - the people there generally are running all manner of sketchy services, bots, crawlers, etc. that need the cheapest compute available.
The old hosting providers often have deals that can get you more power than the equivalent Amazon machine for the same price. If you're looking to be able to host something that other people might use, this is a solid way to go; just make sure you build something that it's easy for you to re-deploy elsewhere (i.e. at the very least have all your code in a separate revision control system, and some mechanism to back up any databases / locally created files to your home machine).
If you're really just looking for something dirt cheap for personal projects that won't see use beyond yourself, the free / up to $5/mo tier of the big cloud providers is a reasonable thing to check out. https://vncoupon.com/5-usd-vps-compare-linode-vs-vultr-vs-di... is a bit old now, maybe there's a newer article helping you sort that out.
Oracle promised 2 instances but got an error 'out of capacity' error instead. Support staff confirmed they dont have hardware in my region.
They offer VMs with 1 vCPU and 2GB RAM for 3€/month. Quite a deal.
But nowadays you can get servers for free. AWS, Google, and even Oracle have free triers:
Not because they are cheap but because they are great. It just so happens they have a $5 / month plan for a 1 CPU core / 1GB of memory / 25GB SSD server.
It's also really pleasant because you deploy by just pushing your code; no SSHing or cron jobs. You do code an entire server process; you just don't manage it. So it's like halfway-serverless.
The downside, other than being $7 instead of $5, is that that's only for a single process; you can't run multiple low-compute servers within that $7. The file system also gets wiped whenever you deploy, so it's not appropriate for a database.
https://education.github.com/pack
vultr, hetzner, and OVH have sub-$5/month VPS plans
Personally, I use digitalocean.
https://www.vultr.com/products/cloud-compute/
For webpages, I have been using https://1mb.site (free custom domain and TLS) and https://netlify.com
Very cheap but don't be surprised if a supplier goes out of business/disappears so strategize accordingly.
Plus then of course all the major cloud provide a intro credit. So that should cover about 3 years worth of basic VPS
If fiber is offered for your home then you can host your server in your bedroom. This is what I do for my websites, and this is really liberating. Hell, you could serve from a RaspberryPi or if you think this is too extreme, from a mini PC like Gigabyte Brix.
If fiber is not offered, but you plan to relocate anyway, try to optimize for FFTH. This is what I have done, I moved more than a year ago and specifically looked for FTTH.
I have been using their VPSs for about 10 years: it's one of the best services I've ever had the pleasure to use.
- https://bytemark.co.uk (VPS, colo and leased physical by competent & responsive folks (in Manchester IIRC))
- https://linode.com (more than just Linux)
- https://pair.com (24/7 phone support in North America, has FreeBSD offerings too, been in business a long time)
Bonus: And physical servers: https://unixsurplus.com
Lightsail is like swimming in the shallow end of the AWS pool. Doesn’t have a drop down with 50 services like AWS, but has enough to run a small or medium sized web app.
Virmach seems to have comparable prices, but I haven't used them.
Even when you run out of credits, all cloud providers have a pretty generous free tier.
For example see haveibeenpwn.com's cost breakdown for running a hugely popular api for less than a dollar a month: https://www.troyhunt.com/serverless-to-the-max-doing-big-thi...
Europe => Hetzner, Scaleway
USA => Digital Ocean, Vultr, Linode