| ▲ | christophilus 5 days ago |
| True, but the cores on a dedicated Hetzner box obliterate the cores on an EC2 machine every time I’ve tested them. So, if anything, it understates the massive performance gap. |
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| ▲ | andersmurphy 5 days ago | parent [-] |
| Hetzner also tends to have more modern SSDs with the latest nvme. Which can make a massive difference for your DB. |
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| ▲ | Nextgrid 5 days ago | parent [-] | | It's less about the modernity of SSDs and more about a fundamental difference: all persistent storage on AWS is actually networked - it's exposed to you as NVME but it's actually on a SAN and all IO requests go over the network. You can get actual direct-attached SSDs on EC2 (and I'd expect performance to be on-par with Hetzner), but those are ephemeral and you lose them on reboot. | | |
| ▲ | andersmurphy 4 days ago | parent [-] | | Wow, that's crazy, I was wondering why the numbers I were seeing on AWS were so much worse. I assumed it was the drive modernity. But network makes a lot more sense. Thanks for the insight! |
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