An option for a single site is http://www.pingdom.com/

They can 'ping' your site every hour thereby keeping it awake. It's
free for one site.

On Feb 21, 8:38 am, Sejensen <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Neil and others
>
> These recommandations for Rails apps looks very good,
>
> But in my case i use Scala and the netty server and spin-up time is
> not good at all. And I am not sure it can be tuned so much as the
> sinatra case when the platform is java.
>
> Do anyone have any suggestions for my combo?
>
> Kind regards
> Steffen
>
> On Feb 20, 11:15 pm, Neil Middleton <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > To be brutally honest, there is no hard and fast rule, but I have found the 
> > following:
>
> > - Rails is really fast at slowing down, so ensure that your dependencies 
> > and initialisers are at an absolute minimum.
>
> > - Keep things small and lightweight, break your application up into lots of 
> > smaller applications. Sinatra, for instance, spins up almost instantly on 
> > Heroku and can take you a fair distance in terms of simple functionality
>
> > - Generally speaking, the newer the Rails version, the quicker the spinup 
> > time, especially if you're not using ActiveRecord
>
> > - If you're feeling beta-y, try running on Ruby 1.9.3, this makes a massive 
> > difference to Rails.
>
> > Other than this, I'm not really aware of any silver bullet, but I do know 
> > that lots of smaller more focused applications spin up better than one 
> > monolithic Rails app, which is why Unix is so good I guess.
>
> > -Neil
>
> > On Monday, 20 February 2012 at 21:56, Ed Jones wrote:
> > > Neil said:
> > > > I host loads of apps on 1 web dyno and just make sure that the spin up 
> > > > time is short enough that it's not a problem.
>
> > > Neil and others, thanks.
>
> > > I just launched a new (beta) app, and the response time is just
> > > horrible.
>
> > > Could you pass a few tips on how to "make sure that the spin up time
> > > is short enough"?
> > > Thanks!!!
>
> > > ed
>
> > > On Feb 17, 7:48 am, Neil Middleton <[email protected] 
> > > (http://gmail.com)> wrote:
> > > > I'm confused here.
>
> > > > The 'starter' package is only ~$35/mo which isn't exactly monumentally 
> > > > expensive.  Are you suggesting something between that and free?
> > > > What you're suggesting sounds like your charged by the CPU cycle rather 
> > > > than the hours?
>
> > > > To be brutally honest, I host loads of apps on 1 web dyno and just make 
> > > > sure that the spin up time is short enough that it's not a problem.  If 
> > > > I ever need to run more than 1 web dyno it's generally because the 
> > > > traffic levels require it, in which case $35 becomes less of a problem.
>
> > > > Personally, I think that having a single dyno, which can still serve 
> > > > hundreds of thousands of requests a day /for free/ is a pretty good 
> > > > deal.  I'm happy to pay $35 to double it.
>
> > > > Neil
>
> > > > On Friday, 17 February 2012 at 12:44, Nick wrote:
> > > > > Peter,
>
> > > > > I take your points well. I don't mean to try and 'do one over' on
> > > > > Heroku. I appreciate the service you offer very much. My thinking
> > > > > behind it was that you would never exceed the 450 hours of dyno time
> > > > > allocated to each app so there wouldn't be a problem and if you did
> > > > > you would be charged anyway.
>
> > > > > Is there a paid for solution from Heroku to achieve the same result?
> > > > > The cost jump between 1 free dyno and paying for a dyno is quite large
> > > > > for small applications. So perhaps you could offer a $10 package which
> > > > > essentialy works the same way? If i'm honest I don't feel I pay Heroku
> > > > > enough but I have too many small apps (10 or so) to pay for each one
> > > > > to have a dedicated dyno.
>
> > > > > ?
> > > > > On Feb 16, 8:39 pm, Peter van Hardenberg <[email protected] 
> > > > > (http://heroku.com)> wrote:
> > > > > > As a database guy at Heroku, I'm not one to speak authoritatively on
> > > > > > this, so please take this as the personal thoughts of someone and 
> > > > > > not
> > > > > > an official statement.
>
> > > > > > We idle apps in order to avoid having to charge for them. The more
> > > > > > people who prevent this behaviour, the more expensive our "free" 
> > > > > > apps
> > > > > > become to run, and the more likely we are to have to change our
> > > > > > policies about what we can offer in a free app.
>
> > > > > > While I admire the ingenuity in this post, I would suggest that you
> > > > > > reduce the amount of time your application takes to boot, or simply
> > > > > > accept that a few seconds of lag on the first request after a period
> > > > > > of idleness is a reasonable trade-off for free web hosting.
>
> > > > > > Peter
>
> > > > > --
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>
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