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I have a few VM images in the azure gallery. (not VMs just an image)
Each image has a different cost per day (USD)
for example:
0.5834592
0.45153
0.678912
At least 2 of them I know for sure were captured from VMs with the same properties on the same day:
OS disk: Premium SSD LRS 30 GiB
Data disk: Premium SSD LRS, 1024 GiB
Western Europe, Linux, Standard_NC6s_v3
And their prices are different: 0.8360976 and 0.678912
I am trying to understand what is the pricing methodology?
Does it depend on the size or the type of storage? If so where can I find these details for each image?
In addition, there were 2 images, then on 01/31/2023 I added 2 new ones
The 2 old ones, which I did not change - their price increased by 0.1071%
1 image from 0.5834592 to 0.6459732
and the second image from 0.45153 to 0.49990548
why did this happen?
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In my azure cluster, I know that my service is deployed in 5 vms. Now, I get to know the cost of the whole vm in last year. And all vms have 5-7 services. I just want to know the cost of my service in each (or all vms) in the cluster. I get to know the public ip address cost, but I want to know how much is the cost on that vm ? Is that possible ?
I want to turn off the service and see how much I can save the money ?
Please let me know if I am unclear. I dont have much experience with azure and cloud.
I can see prices for resources but that includes just ip address cost and monitor cost. I get to know the VM cost, but how much would be my service cost on that vm ? Is that possible ?
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I have one website with below configurations:
2 Web Servers with Load Balance enabled (Each Server having - OS: Linux, Storage: 30GB [20% Used] and RAM: 10GB [44% Used])
1 Database Servers (Storage: 30GB [20% Used] and RAM: 10GB [44% Used])
And with current configuration its able to handle 5000 concurrent users without any problem but in future more users (1000 to 1500) are supposed to access the website.
So to handle more user volume I figured out two options:
Increase capacity of current infrastructure by 25%
Add new web server same as current capacity
But I'm little bit confused about what is the difference between point# 1 and point# 2 irrespective of the cost.
Points #1 & #2 represent Vertical & Horizontal scaling of resources respectively.
Vertical scaling (Increasing of resources) is useful whenever your application needs more computing resources to process the request - Mostly used while running resource-intensive workloads.
Horizontal scaling (Adding identical servers) is useful for handling more requests because requests are distributed across available servers also this will be useful for the High Availability (HA) setup.
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I have Proxmox environment where I create my virtual machines. I want to install the product Citrix Netscaler VPX Platinium. I downloaded the product and put it in the content of my server storage:
The file is stored as well in tgz format into the foler /usr/src of my server.
My question is : How to create a new VM from this file ?
I only know how to create it from an ISO so ..
For example, when I click on Create new VM button it only gives to choose an Iso file, not a raw one.
Thank you for your help.
Virtual Machine 100 ('Netscaler' ) on node 'proxmox
It basically needs to be hacked into
100.conf
/etc/pve/nodes/proxmox/proxmox
bootdisk: virtio0
cores: 2
memory: 4000
name: Netscaler
net0: virtio=46:98:00:3A:BD:3C,bridge=vmbr0
numa: 0
onboot: 1
ostype: linux
smbios1: uuid=6c68ed9b-3939-4152-b8e9-b5c69a500d01
sockets: 1
unused0: W500:vm-100-disk-1
vga: std
virtio0: local:100/vm-100-disk-1.raw,format=raw,cache=writeback,size=250G
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Suppose I have two identical virtual machines in Azure, one is constantly running cpu at 100% and the other at 50%. Will the cost for them be the same or will the other be twice the price? This excluding bandwidth and storage.
No, CPU usage doesn't affect the cost you'll pay for the virtual machines. It will be the same for both of them.
Note that if you are using the Free or Shared tiers of Azure Web Sites you have a CPU usage limit.
Please, refer to this links:
Pricing - Web Sites
Pricing - Cloud Services
Pricing - Virtual Machines
NO. You pay for the timespan your VM is running.
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I want a virtual system Large (A3) and I am going to use it occasionally. Pricing says $0.308/hr. Does this mean if the system is shutdown, then I don' play anything? What about the storage? I pay extra for that? How much storage I get along with OS?
You need to shutdown the VM (either in the Azure Portal or via PowerShell). It will show as "Stopped (deallocated)". At this point the only charges you would incur would be for the VHD disk images sitting in Azure Blob Storage.
The default VHD sizes are listed on MSDN under "Virtual Machines". These are "thin provisioned" which means you only pay for the actual data contained on the disk image and not the entire size (i.e. you can create a 1TB VHD but if it contains only 10GB of data you would only pay for 10GB).