Any web hosting companies running on Linode?
I recently installed WHM/cPanel on a temporary node and it ran like a dream.
Without wanting to start a flame-war, the only thing that makes me hesitate is the disk-space to price ratio. Apart from that I think linode is fantastic.
So I was wondering are there any hosting companies currently using linode?
15 Replies
@Mr Nod:
I've been investigating moving my web hosting company over to linode, at least start a cPanel cluster here.
I recently installed WHM/cPanel on a temporary node and it ran like a dream.
Without wanting to start a flame-war, the only thing that makes me hesitate is the disk-space to price ratio. Apart from that I think linode is fantastic.
So I was wondering are there any hosting companies currently using linode?
I'm not sure of the TOS here, but I'm wondering where you think you could get a better deal on disk space, for a VPS?
I'm not looking to leave Linode (I love the service here) but maybe test some other services (with a good reputation) just to expand my horizons, gain knowledge, experience, etc. In my ever-elusive spare time.
Actually Lamecheap just sent me a coupon for VPS and I looked at their plans and wow, Linode blows them away, even with the coupon, no comparison. Nothing against Lamecheap though, all my domains are registered there.
Probably this is not the place to discus other VPS options. I'll have to snoop around some other forums.
You too, honestly, can oversell. Nobody is going to eat up your linode's bandwidth. If they do, do what everyone else does: Claim account abuse, terminate their account or make them move to another cluster and pay more.
Some will think I'm joking.
@ferodynamics:
I'm not sure of the TOS here, but I'm wondering where you think you could get a better deal on disk space, for a VPS?
There are lots of places - I'll not name competitors on a Linode forum though
> Every "unlimited disk space, unlimited bandwidth" company out there oversells.
True, but I'm not an "unlimited" provider
@iml:
It's not a bad idea. That said, shared hosts usually have physical machines of 4gb or more of ram. Depending on how many clients you have you might find better deals and a faster machine going dedicated. If you go with linode consider purchasing big node(s) to start with.
You can always up the linode depending on usage (with outage).
If you know HA methods, you can add an extra IP for $1/month so you can failover between machines to do maintenance with no downtime.
From what I've seen, if you offer web hosting, get a really good setup for web server & php - e.g. nginx & php5-fpm so that you have low, predictable usage of cpu and memory. That should help you scale, too.
At least it's easy to upgrade in the future
@Mr Nod:
Thanks for the replies. I'm not sure what you chaps consider a beefy node, but I've got a Linode1024 in London with WHM/cPanel and WHMCS up and running to see how it goes.
At least it's easy to upgrade in the future
:wink:
For what its worth, I'm sure you'll manage on a 1024 for quite awhile…assuming certain traffic patterns. It may not last long though….
Best of luck!
@Mr Nod:
So I was wondering are there any hosting companies currently using linode?
Guess I qualify
We're a specialty company providing a fully-managed service to local clients. Domain registration, website development, web/email hosting, tech support of every kind. All websites operate in our in-house CMS. Clients can manage their site content, if they need anything else they contact me. There's no control panel (cPanel, Plesk, etc.)
This works well for us… our clientele would much rather pop me an email than bother with a control panel. With one CMS across all websites I can fix/change/update things in minutes without really thinking
Linode has been a fantastic provider. Can't say enough good stuff.
@taylorsummer:
sorry to post Linux on here, but I have had good experience with them!
Bwahahahahahahahahahaha
Spammers are so pathetically stupid.
Sometimes I feel guilty that I am squeezing enough juice from this poor 512.. but all times it beats me ….
I use ISPConfig … fine tuned apache and mysql … that's all you need
Good luck
Richard