|
|
|
|
|
by newaccount74
1495 days ago
|
|
You are twisting my words. I said it's easy to predict storage costs, to counter your claim that you'd need to delete data to stay within budget. The biggest problem are mainly exorbitant bandwidth costs, and those are trivial to cap -- just stop serving requests. Also, billing alarms are not a soft cap. They don't prevent you from waking up in the morning to a 5000€ bill. > You didn't actually provide any solution here. I'm commenting on the internet, I don't need to come up with a way for AWS to implement billing caps, especially since they have designed their service pricing in a way that makes estimates really hard. But for most services, billing caps really aren't that hard, especially since the company we are discussing here (fly.io) apparently already allows billing caps if you prepay (according to other comments here). |
|
You're just repeating this. Predictable is the opposite of surprise.
Even if storage use was very stable, so what? The overall bill is the problem so where the charges come from doesn't matter, only that eventually a limit is crossed. An overage is still an overage and the only way for billing to stop immediately is to delete and drop everything. This is the fundamental issue that you're not considering. It's what happens at the limit, not about how you get there.
> " billing alarms are not a soft cap"
Soft caps that don't actually stop anything are effectively nothing more than billing alarms. What else is their purpose?
> "I don't need to come up with a way for AWS to implement billing caps"
I didn't ask for implementation, I'm inquiring as to what logically is supposed to happen in the scenarios that occur based on your proposed "pretty simple" solution. If you can't answer then it's not so simple is it? You either haven't thought it through entirely to conclude that it's not actually possible to do that way.
> "designed their service pricing in a way that makes estimates really hard"
How so? You also keep repeating this without evidence. How is providing numbers on exactly what they charge for make it difficult? It's as transparent as it gets. They also have a calculator on their site. What more are you expecting?
> "for most services, billing caps really aren't that hard"
The nature of the service changes everything. Fly.io doesn't have billing caps, they just stop the apps when the credits run out and eat the bandwidth cost for now. The economics of scale can change that answer drastically, however even Fly repeats what I've said before: "the majority of people want their stuff to stay up" and "shut it down so you don't get billed" is usually not the preferred solution compared to negotiating a large bill.