VPS Servers#
Piloting a ship powered by the Infinite Improbability Drive can be tricky — but managing a VPS server doesn't have to be. CPU, RAM, disk, operating system: you pick, we deploy in seconds. Everything else — monitoring, backups, console access — is right at your fingertips.
Purchasing a Server#
Configuration#
Go to VPS Servers and click the New Server tab. The configurator opens with these options:
- vCPU — number of processor cores
- RAM — memory in GB
- SSD Storage — NVMe disk space in GB
- IPv4 Address — how many IPs you need
- Extra Disk — additional storage if needed
Each option is a button; click it and the monthly price in the right panel updates instantly. The price shown includes tax.
The right panel also displays a summary of your configuration and a list of included features: DDoS protection, 24/7 support, and more.
Order Steps#
Click Install Now to start the four-step order process:
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Operating System or Application — here's a fork in the road. Install a blank operating system: pick from Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS, and other distributions (version options are listed per distribution). Or switch to the Application tab and choose a ready-to-run application straight from the catalog — it's deployed automatically as the server is provisioned, sitting ready on first boot. You pick exactly one or the other: either a blank planet, or one that already has a civilisation installed on it.
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Hostname — give your server a name (e.g.
web-server-01). Must start with a letter or number, may contain letters, numbers, dots, and hyphens. Minimum 3 characters. -
Morpheus — the step where we ask whether you'd like to switch on the Morpheus AI ops assistant at setup time. It's optional; leave it off and you simply move on, turn it on and a small consent box appears. We cover the details just below.
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Order Summary — your configuration, price breakdown (monthly fee + tax), and contract acceptance. You'll need to review the Service Agreement and SLA Terms links, then check the acceptance box.
Choosing the app at order time, not after
You could always install one-click apps — but previously you had to spin up a bare server first, then reinstall the app on top. Now you can pick your application while placing the order; the server is born running it. Like the Improbability Drive conjuring WordPress out of thin air: you receive a working system, not an empty shell. Installing an app onto a server that already holds data still goes through the reinstall route (see the One-Click Applications section below); at first order, nothing is erased, because there's nothing to erase.
Payment#
If your balance covers the total, the order is confirmed and deducted from your balance immediately.
If your balance is insufficient, a top-up form appears automatically:
- Quick amounts: click 50, 100, 250, 500, or 1,000 TRY — or type any amount
- Saved card: use a previously saved card with One-Click Top-Up for instant balance
- New card: enter card details and pay via 3D Secure. You can save the card for future use
Once your balance is loaded, click Confirm Order and your server is created. It appears in the list as "Provisioning" within seconds, and switches to "Active" when setup is complete.
No setup fee
VPS servers have zero setup fees. Cancel anytime. No Vogon bureaucracy involved.
The Morpheus Step#
The third step of the order wizard asks whether to fit your server with a brain while it's still being born. Morpheus is the AI ops assistant you can talk to in plain language — "reboot the server", "why is the disk full", and so on.
- Leave the toggle off and nothing changes; your server is provisioned without Morpheus. You can switch it on later from the panel whenever you like.
- Turn the toggle on and a small consent box appears: to let Morpheus operate, you accept the CogMem-AI Data Processing Addendum. Only anonymised operational data is processed, it's privacy-compliant, and you can switch it off anytime. You can't move to the next step until you accept — nobody moves into your brain without your say-so.
The full Morpheus guide lives elsewhere
This step is only the "switch it on at setup?" question. What Morpheus can actually do — its channels (panel, Telegram, WhatsApp, phone), permissions, and cognitive memory — is documented in full on the Morpheus AI Assistant page. Like the Guide itself: it has the words "Don't Panic" printed in large, friendly letters on the cover.
Server Management#
Click any server in the list to open its detail page. Eight tabs give you full control over every aspect of your server.
Power Controls#
Three power buttons are available on every server card and detail page:
| Button | Action |
|---|---|
| Start | Boot a stopped server |
| Stop | Shut down a running server |
| Restart | Reboot the server |
Server status is shown with two badges: service status (Active, Suspended, Provisioning, etc.) and power state (Running, Stopped).
Payment-suspended VPS auto-resumes
If a server was suspended for unpaid invoices, it automatically resumes the moment the invoice clears — via any path (card, wire transfer, balance, auto-charge cron, or staff manual mark-paid). You get a notification. Nothing to click. Even Marvin would want this little effort.
General Information#
The first tab shows your server's basic details:
- Network — IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
- Operating system — name and version
- Resources — CPU, RAM, disk, bandwidth
- Dates — creation and provisioning date
Two important actions are also available here:
Password Reset: Generates a new root password. The password is shown once — copy it and store it somewhere safe. It won't be displayed again.
Reinstall OS: Reinstalls the operating system from scratch. This erases all data on the server. A confirmation dialog shows the server name and asks you to confirm.
Reinstall is irreversible
Reinstalling wipes everything on your server. Take a snapshot before you do it — handing your server to the Vogon demolition fleet is essentially the same thing. You can technically get a new house, but your old furniture is gone.
Monitoring#
Track your server's performance with four live charts:
- CPU — processor load average
- Memory — RAM usage in MB
- Network — incoming/outgoing traffic in KB/s
- Disk I/O — read/write speed in KB/s
Charts auto-refresh every 10 seconds. A blinking yellow dot means data is being updated.
IP Addresses#
View all IP addresses assigned to your server:
- IP address and type (Primary, Additional, IPv6)
- rDNS record — reverse DNS hostname (e.g.
mail.yourcompany.com) - Sync status — whether the rDNS change has been applied
To change an rDNS record, click the pencil icon, enter the new hostname, and confirm.
Why rDNS matters
If you're running a mail server, rDNS is mandatory. Many email providers reject mail from IPs without a valid rDNS record. A Babel fish can translate every language — but without rDNS, your emails won't reach their destination.
Domains#
Manage domains associated with your server:
- Associate Domain to link one of your existing domains to this server
- View associated domain status and expiry date
- Remove domains that are no longer linked
Invoices#
This tab shows two things:
Bandwidth usage: A progress bar showing how much of your included quota you've used. Turns amber above 70%, red above 90%.
Invoice history: Lists all invoices for this server with dates and amounts. Status labels: Paid, Sent, Draft, Overdue, Cancelled.
VNC Console#
Access your server directly through your browser — no SSH required. Click Open Console and a noVNC viewer opens right inside the panel.
The console is especially useful when:
- SSH access is lost
- Network configuration is broken
- The OS won't boot properly
- Firewall rules block SSH
You can also open the console in a new tab.
Your emergency tool
The VNC console is the digital equivalent of your server's physical monitor. Even when SSH is down, you can still reach your server. Like a towel — always have it handy.
Snapshots#
Take instant snapshots of your server and restore them when needed.
Rules:
- You can store up to 3 snapshots
- Each snapshot shows its creation date and size
- Restoring returns the server to that point in time
Actions:
- New Snapshot — name it and create. Can be taken while the server is running
- Restore — roll back to the selected snapshot (confirmation required)
- Delete — remove snapshots you no longer need
Restore overwrites current data
Rolling back to a snapshot erases all changes made after it was taken. Consider backing up your current state before restoring. Measure twice, restore once.
Action History#
A chronological log of every operation performed on your server:
- Creation, start, stop, restart
- Reinstall, password reset
- Snapshot creation, restore, deletion
Each action shows the date, time, and status (Completed, In Progress, Failed). Failed actions include an error message.
One-Click Applications#
Sometimes what you want isn't a blank operating system but a running application — WordPress, NextCloud, a database. Rather than trying to build a universe from toothpicks, you pick a ready-made planet: we install the image from scratch and configure the app on first boot.
There are two ways in: while ordering a new server, pick it from the Application tab in the first step (see Order Steps above) — the cleanest route, since there's no data to lose. Or install it onto an existing server via the reinstall route below. Installing onto an existing server wipes everything, so it deserves care:
How it works. On the server detail page, open the Reinstall dialog and switch to the Application tab at the top. Pick an application from the catalog; if it asks for configuration (admin email, password, domain, etc.), fill in the fields. Then — exactly as with an OS reinstall — type the server name to confirm.
This wipes ALL data
Installing an application reinstalls the server from scratch; everything on the current disk is erased. That's fine on an empty or brand-new server, but if the server holds data, make a backup first. The action is irreversible and — for safety — can only be started from the panel; chat channels like Telegram/WhatsApp cannot trigger it.
After installation. Once it's done, the General tab on the server detail shows the application's name and — if the app provides a login link — an Open Application button that takes you straight to its admin panel.
You can also ask Morpheus which applications are available ("what one-click apps are there?"), but the install itself — because it erases data — always waits for your confirmation in the panel.
Deleting a Server & Refunds#
Sometimes a server's mission is complete — it was a test box, the project wrapped, or you simply don't need that Babel fish anymore. Deleting is one click away; but here's how we differ from a Vogon demolition fleet: before anything vanishes, we show you exactly how much you'll get back.
Who can delete? Only account owners and admins. Because deletion means both data loss and a balance movement, technical team members don't hold this permission.
How it works
- Click the trash icon on the server card, or the Danger Zone → Delete Server button on the server detail page.
- The dialog shows the amount that will be refunded to your balance for the unused time.
- To confirm, type the server hostname into the box — so you never delete the wrong one. ("Don't Panic", but do pay attention.)
- Hit Delete Permanently. The server is powered off, removed, and the refund lands in your balance instantly.
How the refund is calculated
VPS is billed monthly in advance. Delete mid-month and you get the remaining days back:
Refund = monthly price × (days remaining ÷ days in the period)
Example: delete a 300 ₺/month server on day 10 of a 30-day period, and 200 ₺ is credited back for the remaining 20 days. Partial days round up in your favour. The setup fee (which we don't charge anyway) is never part of the refund.
The refund goes to your VeriTeknik balance, not your bank account — ready for your next invoice or a new service. If you have open (unpaid) invoices, the refund is applied to those first.
This cannot be undone
When a server is deleted, all data, snapshots, and IP addresses are gone for good. Not even Deep Thought can bring them back. If anything matters, back it up first.
Suspended (unpaid) servers
If you delete a server that was suspended for non-payment, there's no refund — no payment was taken for that period in the first place. Any open invoice is cancelled too.
Need help?
Server management doesn't require Deep Thought to compute for 7.5 million years. But if you get stuck, write to destek@veriteknik.com. Real humans, real answers — unlike Marvin, we actually enjoy this work.