Hi Ian,
I've also been using PHP at HostPro. They are using PHP 4.0.1pl1
on our NT server, which is really old.
What version do you have on your server?
I definitely recommend you switch over to Linux or get HostPro to upgrade
their PHP to a newer more stable version if possible. The config mentioned
below looks cool, the only concern is backups as you don't have mirroring
with only 1 EIDE hard disks.
The reason we are using HostPro is because the site was originally ASP,
and we moved some pages to PHP because we had a large library of PHP
code (phpLens stuff -- see http://phplens.com) that we could reuse for the
site.
Regards, john
Ian Evans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I'd really like to move our site to a dedicated server, but I'm not
> ready to lay down the monthly cash for a multi-SCSI drived 1gig ram
> beast -- yet.
>
> Right now we're hosted by the oxymoronically named HostPro. We're on a
> shared NT server with a SQL Server ODBC connection and we use PHP to do
> a lot of the stuff on the site.
>
> There's stuff that just doesn't work. For example, I have better odds
> rolling the dice than hoping that my databse insert form for our
> entertainment news will work. Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't
> and "Support" (they had to name it something I guess) has never been
> able to figure out why.
>
> Covering the world of entertainment, we can average 10,000 pageviews a
> day but will swing up to 200,000+ on days like the Oscars. We've seen
> our bandwidth usage swing from 80meg a day to 3gig.
>
> I'd just like to get into an entry-level dedicated linux server, running
> apache, PHP and MySQL. I've looked at Rackspace as other contacts have
> recommended them and their entry level system consists of:
>
> 750 Mhz Processor
> 256MB RAM
> 20GB EIDE Drive
> 10GB/Month Burstable Bandwidth
>
> I'm looking for input on that configuration. The way I see it, if we're
> surviving on a shared server now, we'll still be able to stretch our
> feet and grow a bit (as well as being able to do things that we can't in
> our shared NT server) before we need to add memory and go to SCSI, etc.
>
> Do you concur?
>
> Thanks!
> --
> Ian Evans
> Digital Hit Entertainment - News and Information
> http://www.digitalhit.com
>
>
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