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Is memcached applicable to my cPanel specs?

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12 comments

  • cPanelMichael
    Hello, I've moved this post to our Workarounds/Optimization forum. It's difficult to estimate the amount of memory required based on website visits alone. I recommend reaching out to a qualified system administrator for assistance, or posting to a website such as StackOverflow, if you are unable to gather additional user-feedback here. You may also find this resource helpful: ProgrammingFAQ " memcached/memcached Wiki " GitHub Thank you.
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  • googol8080
    Hello, I've moved this post to our Workarounds/Optimization forum. It's difficult to estimate the amount of memory required based on website visits alone. I recommend reaching out to a qualified system administrator for assistance, or posting to a website such as StackOverflow, if you are unable to gather additional user-feedback here. You may also find this resource helpful: ProgrammingFAQ " memcached/memcached Wiki " GitHub Thank you.

    I already asked to StackOverFlow, but no answers or comments either that's why I directly goes here. My I/OKB/s often times, hits it's limit.
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  • cPanelMichael
    You can find a list of system administration services at the below URL if you do not receive additional user-feedback: System Administration Services | cPanel Forums Thank you.
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  • googol8080
    You can find a list of system administration services at the below URL if you do not receive additional user-feedback: System Administration Services | cPanel Forums Thank you.

    How can I contact them?
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  • Infopro
    How can I contact them?

    All listings have links to company websites, you'd contact them thru their website.
    My I/OKB/s often times, hits it's limit.

    You should speak with your Hosting Provider about this.
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  • googol8080
    All listings have links to company websites, you'd contact them thru their website. You should speak with your Hosting Provider about this.

    They said either Upgrade my resources or optimize my codes.
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  • Infopro
    Sounds reasonable to me. One costs money, the other, your time. A website on a VPS with only 100 visits a day running out of resources does seem a bit odd, don't you think? Caching might help load the site faster, but will surely use resources to do it. You could hire someone to look into this for you, as suggested, but that costs money. If it's a wordpress site for instance, disabling all plugins and custom themes might be a nice place to start when looking for things causing resource issues and doesn't cost you a penny. Figuring out what's using up your resources is going to be more valuable to you than throwing more money at the problem. If the resources used are needed and acceptable to you, congratulations, it's time to upgrade your account, you've grown out of this one. Only you (and your Hosting Provider) know what that site is doing. If I was you I'd start there.
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  • googol8080
    Sounds reasonable to me. One costs money, the other, your time. A website on a VPS with only 100 visits a day running out of resources does seem a bit odd, don't you think? Caching might help load the site faster, but will surely use resources to do it. You could hire someone to look into this for you, as suggested, but that costs money. If it's a wordpress site for instance, disabling all plugins and custom themes might be a nice place to start when looking for things causing resource issues and doesn't cost you a penny. Figuring out what's using up your resources is going to be more valuable to you than throwing more money at the problem. If the resources used are needed and acceptable to you, congratulations, it's time to upgrade your account, you've grown out of this one. Only you (and your Hosting Provider) know what that site is doing. If I was you I'd start there.

    Let me correct you, I am using a shared hosting plan not a VPS, sorry for confusion. My site quite not optimized yet. I have functions that eating the time more for example, making an function to echo html elements, using of password_hash() for Csrf Token, etc, and I working on it now. And I just want to share to you my upgraded shared hosting plan: Entry Process = 15 Number of Processes = 100 Physical Memory Usage = 512M.00M
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  • Infopro
    I working on it now.

    Good luck with this!
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  • googol8080
    Good luck with this!

    Thank you, is memcached applicable to my shared hosting package?
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  • Infopro
    That's another question for your Hosting Provider. As a Website owner, you wouldn't be able to install anything on the server like that. If they'll do it for you, sure you could make use of it.
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  • googol8080
    That's another question for your Hosting Provider. As a Website owner, you wouldn't be able to install anything on the server like that. If they'll do it for you, sure you could make use of it.

    Yes, thank you.
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