In fact, this is not an announcement. The main reason is that so far I have found that there are still many friends using the VPS of BuyVM. The official migration announcement was first released a month ago, and the specific time has been determined, so Good VPS is posted here again, which is equivalent to reminding everyone that starting from 9:30 pm on January 19th local time in the United States, BuyVM’s San Jose will move to Las Vegas.

Original email:

Hello zhao!
This is just a friendly reminder about our upcoming move to the Fiberhub datacentre in Las Vegas this weekend.  To refresh:  all San José services will be powered down on 19 January at 2130h PST ( 9:30 PM GMT-8).  IMPORTANT:  IF YOU HAVE A KVM SERVICE, PLEASE INITIATE A MANUAL SHUTDOWN BEFORE 2100h.  WE CANNOT GUARANTEE A CLEAN SHUTDOWN FROM THE NODE. Once all of the gear is offline, we will be de-racking, loading into a cargo truck, and making the drive to Fiberhub.  Barring unforeseen traffic delays, we're expecting to arrive in Las Vegas between 0500h-0600h Sunday morning.  By 0900h-1000h that morning, we should have over 80% of our nodes back online and functional.
There will be an additional network outage on the 20th when we cut over to our new networking setup – we're estimating a max downtime of 10 minutes;  in reality, it should be no more than 1-2 minutes to bring the router online and get the cables swapped over.
To help clear up any potential questions, here's a short FAQ for the affected users.  If you have a question not answered here, please feel free to open a Billing ticket, and we'll clear up any confusion.
  1. Will my IPv4 address change?
    Nope!  We own all of our currently-assigned IPv4 space;  when we bring the gear back online, your VPS will still have the same IP as it did before the move.
  2. Will my IPv6 address change?
    Unfortunately, yes.  While we do have a generous amount of IPv6 space in our name, the majority of the current assignments are actually SWIP'd to us from HE.< x2> Please understand that we will not be able to take requests for specific renumbering simply due to the sheer number of clients and assigned IPv6 addresses.
  3. Is there any risk of data loss?
    Barring a catastrophic incident such as the cargo truck wrecking and catching fire (we promise that we won't let Francisco drive), there is absolutely no risk of data loss for all non-KVM services.  There is only minimal risk of data loss for KVM services – clients with a KVM service are heavily encouraged to issue a full shutdown to their VPS no later than 9PM in order to eliminate this risk ( we cannot guarantee a clean shutdown if we have to issue the halt from node-side).
  4. Will I receive SLA/credit for this downtime?
    Short answer: No.  Long Answer:  This is not unexpected maintenance, routing issues, or other types of failure that are eligible for SLA.  This is a planned downtime announced well in advance (our first notice being more than a month prior to this one).
  5. Will I be able to access the Billing Panel or StallionVM during the move?
    After some consideration, we have decided against setting up a temporary mirror for our billing and management panels.  The StallionVM panel would be next to useless anyways – with over 100 nodes offline, the panel would very likely lock up or cause damaging errors if clients ignoring these emails and unaware of the move repeatedly attempted to boot their VMs.  The same logic applies for our billing panel – we predict that a good number of people have chosen to remain unaware of this move, and we will already be busy enough testing and moving hardware without a flood of questions in our Support Ticket system.  Both panels will be temporarily replaced by a static page explaining the move for the duration of the downtime in order to prevent confusion.
  6. With the panels down, how will we get updates during the move?
    We strongly recommend simply hanging around our IRC channel (irc.frantech.ca / #frantech), as several staff members who will not be involved in the physical move will still be around to answer questions and provide updates.  You are also welcome to follow Francisco (@FrantechCA) and myself (@Aldryic) on Twitter, as we will post updates via this medium as well .
  7. Will New York services be affected?
    All NY services will remain online for the duration of the move, and will not be affected.  With this said, however, please be aware that we do not yet know if our NY deployment of mirrors.buyvm.net will be repaired before the move – as both locations are currently utilizing the San Jose mirror, package managers (Apt, Yum, Emerge, etc) on services in NY using our mirrors may not function correctly until we bring the gear back online in Las Vegas.
  8. Why was the current stock removed?
    This will likely be our last mass-email before the move takes place.  I've pre-emptively removed all current stock to ensure that no new clients sign up after this email is sent and are unaware of the move, and we will not be reloading until 21 January at the very earliest.

Hopefully this covers all major questions that may come up.  Again, if there's anything further we can clear up for you, please feel free to open a support ticket to our Billing department, and we'll get any questions answered for you .  From all of us at Frantech/BuyVM, thank you for your continued support, and for being the type of amazing clients that make us truly love our jobs!

This email mainly talks about several issues.
The first is the issue of migration time. He said that at 21:30 on the evening of January 19th (GMT-8), he would start shutting down, loading the truck, and pulling it to Las Vegas . This The start time seems to be around noon on the 20th, Beijing time.
He also reminded KVM customers to shut down their computers in advance. The car will bring the server to Las Vegas and put it on the shelves. It will be reconnected at about 9-10 am on the 20th (Beijing time is from late night on the 20th to early morning on the 21st).
Normally, there will not be any data loss, unless the truck pulling the server catches fire, which would be a tragedy. In addition, the IP addresses used by all users will not change, because their own IP can be broadcast to anywhere, but IPv6 may not be available to everyone so soon.
The servers in New York will not be affected. Anyway, everyone will try to see if their chicks are online on the morning of the 21st. All original San Jose users will be relocated to the Las Vegas Fiberhub computer room.


Hong Kong/United States/Domestic High Speed ​​VPS

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