LookingForHost
Guppy
HSPHERE Accounts:
1) Do you allow subftp?
2) What type of email redundancy do you have in place? If the mail server were to crash, would email bounce or is there a relay in place that would capture mail until a secondary server kicked in?
Here is a response I got from DIY:
<< The primary mail server can handle approx. 24k emails per day, without breaking a 0.2 load because of it's write-speed. When it gets to the point where the mail server starts breaking past 30k emails per day, we'll add another duplicate mail server (mail2.)
The moment the main mail server becomes unresponsive, traffic immediately goes to the backup(s).
It's done at router level, so it's rather easy to do. If one block becomes unresponsive, the router/firewall/balancer will realise it has to reroute the calls to the backup mail server, which has all settings from the primary, sent there three times a day.
>>
Do you do something like this???
3) Is Hard disk space based on usage or allocation?
4) Do you have clients that utilize DotNetNuke? And if so how does it run on your windows servers?
5) Do you have any limits on the number of emails that can be sent at a time or during the day? I don't ask because I plan to spam, but I have a customer that on occasion sends out 1000 emails as a part of our church newsletter. Everyone has agreed to receive the email.
6) Several hosts I have been at routinely have to reset IIS or restart the web server saying that there is bad code on one of the clients domains.
Is this something has to be dealt with regularly at JodoHost?
How do you handle these types of problems?
7) What applications / objects do you have installed on each of your servers? Do you have a script that we can run to see what exists?
Thanks
1) Do you allow subftp?
2) What type of email redundancy do you have in place? If the mail server were to crash, would email bounce or is there a relay in place that would capture mail until a secondary server kicked in?
Here is a response I got from DIY:
<< The primary mail server can handle approx. 24k emails per day, without breaking a 0.2 load because of it's write-speed. When it gets to the point where the mail server starts breaking past 30k emails per day, we'll add another duplicate mail server (mail2.)
The moment the main mail server becomes unresponsive, traffic immediately goes to the backup(s).
It's done at router level, so it's rather easy to do. If one block becomes unresponsive, the router/firewall/balancer will realise it has to reroute the calls to the backup mail server, which has all settings from the primary, sent there three times a day.
>>
Do you do something like this???
3) Is Hard disk space based on usage or allocation?
4) Do you have clients that utilize DotNetNuke? And if so how does it run on your windows servers?
5) Do you have any limits on the number of emails that can be sent at a time or during the day? I don't ask because I plan to spam, but I have a customer that on occasion sends out 1000 emails as a part of our church newsletter. Everyone has agreed to receive the email.
6) Several hosts I have been at routinely have to reset IIS or restart the web server saying that there is bad code on one of the clients domains.
Is this something has to be dealt with regularly at JodoHost?
How do you handle these types of problems?
7) What applications / objects do you have installed on each of your servers? Do you have a script that we can run to see what exists?
Thanks