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[parent] [thread] 9 comments
1. fspoet+(OP)[view] [source] 2026-02-03 17:29:10
Yeah I'm in the same boat. I was pretty excited to bring stuff over from Cloudflare but the missing S3 compat. and the communication around that was (and still is) a dealbreaker for me.
replies(3): >>gsande+3d >>dagss+nr >>nbevan+jp2
2. gsande+3d[view] [source] 2026-02-03 18:17:29
>>fspoet+(OP)
I'd like it too. The new docs do refer to it e.g:

> When S3 compatibility is enabled (currently in beta), the number of available replication points is reduced

I assume it's a private beta.

https://docs.bunny.net/storage/storage-tiers#s3-compatibilit...

replies(1): >>fspoet+4H
3. dagss+nr[view] [source] 2026-02-03 19:11:16
>>fspoet+(OP)
Why do you want to move from Cloudflare?

Asking because I was looking at both Cloudflare and Bunny literally this week...and I feel like I don't know anything about it. Googling for it, with "hackernews" as keyword to avoid all the blogspam, didn't bring up all that much.

(I ended up with Cloudflare and am sure that for my purposes it doesn't matter at all which I choose.)

replies(1): >>fspoet+Az
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4. fspoet+Az[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-03 19:47:04
>>dagss+nr
A couple of reasons:

- The free CDN is basically unusable with my ISP Telekom Germany due to a long-running and well documented peering dispute. This is not necessarily an issue with Cloudflare itself, but means that I have to pay for the Pro plan for every domain if I want to have a functioning site in my home country. The $25 per domain / project add up.

- Cloudflare recently had repeated, long outages that took down my projects for hours at a time.

- Their database offering (D1) had some unpredictable latency spikes that I never managed to fully track down.

- As a European, I'm trying to minimize the money I spent on US cloud services and am actively looking for European alternatives.

replies(1): >>tpetry+sP
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5. fspoet+4H[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-03 20:19:48
>>gsande+3d
It indeed is. Support answer:

> This feature is currently in the closed beta stage. It is not available for use currently, but it's expected to be in the near future. We appreciate your interest in it and will mark your ticket so we can notify you when it's available.

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6. tpetry+sP[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-03 20:58:55
>>fspoet+Az
You don‘t have to get the Pro plan to solve the Deutsche Telekom issues. You can also use their Argo product for $5/month - but only makes sense if your egress costs wouldn‘t exceed the pro plans pricing.
replies(1): >>js4eve+HR
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7. js4eve+HR[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-03 21:12:34
>>tpetry+sP
Pro plan without argo give you better peering on Cloudflare?
replies(1): >>tpetry+gY1
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8. tpetry+gY1[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-04 04:53:10
>>js4eve+HR
The reverse. Argo gives better peering than any paid plan. Its the reason for the product‘s existence. They can use more costly peering that they couldn‘t use with their free egress model.
replies(1): >>fspoet+842
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9. fspoet+842[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-04 05:53:56
>>tpetry+gY1
Thanks for the pointer, not doubting that is true. My egress is unfortunately too large for it to make financial sense.

However, at the time I did plenty of trace routes to confirm that the Pro plans peering is at least better than the Free plan for the Telekom problem. Free plan would route traffic to NYC and back, while Pro plan traffic terminates in Frankfurt.

10. nbevan+jp2[view] [source] 2026-02-04 08:52:59
>>fspoet+(OP)
Why would you move from Cloudflare to this shady company?
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