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What is the difference between EC2 and Linode? Based on my findings, I realize there are a million things that can go wrong. Where do I start?

I have been timing requests to my blog landing page (via Apache Benchmark). It has about 22 sql queries and a fair amount of html. I setup the exact same site on two server.

Web1 - Hosted at Linode (512 Size VPS).

Web2 - Hosted at Amazon (micro VPS).

Then I tested making 100 concurrent connections to both. I ran the test first to warm up the database then really ran it.

Web1 - 33 Requests per second.

Web2 - 5 Requests per second.

Then I installed page caching. This is where it stores the complete html return in a file. So instead of going through the PHP controller and making database connections it just returns the static html file.

Web1 - 32 Requests per second.

Web2 - 88 Requests per second.

You will notice file caching does not really do much on Web1. Seems the database / PHP returns as fast and just opening one file and returning it. You will notice on Web2 it got crazy fast compared to the first request.

I have taken these measurements a bunch of times throughout the day. It is not an issue of a one time thing.


Here is what I know.

  • Both systems are the same. As I configured them both with the same deploy scripts.
  • Web2 (Amazon) is most likely running on a SAN (the filesystem).
  • Web1 (Linode) is most likely running from a local hard drive (the filesystem).
  • Not sure what CPU's are behind it. I would assume they are different CPUs. I can not imagine there is much difference in CPU.

I am really interested in finding out what makes Web2 so slow when there is no caching and pretty fast when there is caching and Web1 is the same both ways.

What are your ideas? CPU, IO?

How can one track down the bottleneck?

I do not see any crazy loads (with "w"). Not 100% what is valuable in "iostat" (as to what I should be looking at).

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  • Correction. Doing tests later in the day gives better results with Web1 when caching is turned on. I am getting close to 130 Requests per second now. So the biggest question is what is holding Web2 back when caching is not turned on. 5 Requests a second is dog slow.
    – spicer
    Aug 31, 2012 at 1:17

3 Answers 3

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So I figured it out.

Lame. But if you have a micro instance at Amazon they will limit your CPU. So when I was trying to connect multiple times with concurrent connections they were limiting my CPU.

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  • This is the main reason with microinstances. CPU is throttled. Anyway, as Peter said, Amazon EBS volumes are really slow compared to others in the cloud.
    – adosaiguas
    Aug 31, 2012 at 22:06
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It seems EC2 is all around slow. Unless you are a big site and need tons of scaling.

I found https://www.digitalocean.com . They seem to be pretty great when comparing an EC2 micro instance.

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One possible factor is that EC2 EBS volumes tend to be quite slow compared with standard HDDs (and even more when compared with SSDs).

See this SO Q&A. And this criticism (that is linked to from the SO link).

This isn't probably the complete reason for the slowness, but it's at least a partial reason if the Linode option is using real HDDs.

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