Difference between revisions of "FAQ"

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Q: What should I look for in a hosting company?
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== Q: What should I look for in a hosting company? ==
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A: Stable, Consistent bandwidth.
 
A: Stable, Consistent bandwidth.

Revision as of 11:33, 23 September 2007

FAQ


Contents

Q: Does Plesk install PHP4, or PHP5?

A: Plesk doesn't really distribute, or create core packages like httpd, php, mysql, bind, etc. It is designed to use whatever the vendor of that OS distributes. So in the case of CentOS 4, that would be PHP 4.3. Plesk does mirror core OS components from the vendor, which will install the vendors packages required to support Plesk.


Q: Why doesn't Plesk distribute these packages?

A: In 2000, we made the design decision to leverage linux vendors packages where we could, rather than distribute our own. This was indended to both open the product to 3rd party enhancements, and reduce the training overhead required to manage plesk servers in a hosting environment.


Q: What versions of PSA are compatible with Mysql 5.0?

A: PSA 8.1 and above.


Q: Can I get PHP 5.2 and MySQL 5 on Plesk if I'm using CentOS 4, or RHEL 4?

A: Yes, however it cannot be installed through the plesk autoinstaller. CentOS 4 users can install PHP 5.1 and Mysql 5 from the centosplus channel. RHEL4 users can also use the CentOS channel, by adding it to their up2date configuration. PHP 5.2, and Mysql 5.0 are available in the [atomic] channel.


Q: What Operating System do you recommend, and Why?

A: CentOS 4 or CentOS 5. They have 7 year support cycles, and the largest community focusing on server packages. For a business environment, this is ideal.


Q: What should I look for in a hosting company?

A: Stable, Consistent bandwidth.

Good hardware SLAs, the manufacturer doesn't especially matter. You just want to know your hardware will be quickly replaced when it goes bad.

Serial console access, *not* an IP KVM. Serial consoles have a lot less that will go wrong, and you can access them from anything (including PDAs, or even a Sidekick II phone). IP KVM's are generally java based, which limits your access options. You can also automate things over serial consoles (like forensic tools, or logging) that you can't over an IP KVM.

PXE based provisioning and rescue.

2 or more disks in the server, so you can create soft RAID mirrors. The is your most likely hardware failure.

Personal tools