Best Hosting for vbulletin forum?

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  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by savyes
    Hi,
    For sure any shared hosting will not work for you. Just look for the web host that will help you to host your forum and parallelly they will provide the best resources, like php, database( avoid bottleneck) and etc.

    thanks.
    More shared hosting providers are offering these features.
    I think I need a dedicated server but its price is not cheap.

    Leave a comment:


  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by savyes
    Hi,
    For sure any shared hosting will not work for you. Just look for the web host that will help you to host your forum and parallelly they will provide the best resources, like php, database( avoid bottleneck) and etc.

    thanks.
    Thanks for your advice, It's exact, my forum could not run on a shared hosting because sometimes its traffic... It always is better to have VPS or dedicated servers for better resources.

    Leave a comment:


  • napy8gen
    commented on 's reply
    forget hostgator. they are stupid.

  • savyes
    replied
    Hi,
    For sure any shared hosting will not work for you. Just look for the web host that will help you to host your forum and parallelly they will provide the best resources, like php, database( avoid bottleneck) and etc.

    thanks.

    Leave a comment:


  • JerryBrain
    replied
    What you need is :
    • PHP version 5.3.7 or greater
    • MySQL version 5.1.5 or greater
    • A pre-registered domain name
    • 1 Gigabyte of hard drive space
    • Rewrite Engine – A rewrite engine is needed for vBulletin’s Friendly URL routing to work. Popular rewrite engines include mod_rewrite on Apache and “URL Rewrite” for IIS 7 or greater.
    Latest PHP 5.4.x release
    • MySQL 5.5 or greater.
    • cURL or OpenSSL support – Allows secure connections to third-party services like Facebook Connect.
    • MySQLi support – MySQLi is a more robust software library to connect to the database that vBulletin uses.
    • Iconv support – A library that provides extra language and character set support.
    • OpCode Cache – An OpCode Cache like APC or XCache will enhance the performance of your vBulletin software. An OpCode Cache is a caching mechanism that can significantly increase the performance of vBulletin by pre-parsing the PHP files and keeping commonly used data in memory for rapid retrieval.

      So a VPS with : 1 CPU, 1024MB MEMORY , 20 GB STORAGE, 2000 GB TRANSFER will do the trick.I'm using those guys https://www.tmdhosting.com/vbulletin-hosting.html for the last 5 years and don't have any problem with approximately 200 visits per day.
    Last edited by JerryBrain; Wed 30 Sep '15, 6:01am.

    Leave a comment:


  • fionix
    replied
    Originally posted by webmastersun
    I tried to visit NimbusHosting but it even is running slower than my forum

    I need a recommendation about VPS or dedicated server, not Share. For shared hosting, it couldn't accommodate my forum traffic now
    They are slower than your current hosting? May I ask where are you hosted and where are you located?

    Leave a comment:


  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by fionix
    Just to follow up, I have been looking for some great Joomla and Vbulletin host for the last 4 years, just for 2 weeks we finally found a hosting company that is going an extra mile for helping you to get your forum up and run stable. We have tried everything from Liquidweb, FirstHosting(one man show, con artist), Site5 (run by 600 studens) to finally have found NimbusHosting.co.uk, they are awesome, migration went through in 5 minutes and they were just helpful, cool.
    I tried to visit NimbusHosting but it even is running slower than my forum

    I need a recommendation about VPS or dedicated server, not Share. For shared hosting, it couldn't accommodate my forum traffic now

    Leave a comment:


  • fionix
    replied
    Just to follow up, I have been looking for some great Joomla and Vbulletin host for the last 4 years, just for 2 weeks we finally found a hosting company that is going an extra mile for helping you to get your forum up and run stable. We have tried everything from Liquidweb, FirstHosting(one man show, con artist), Site5 (run by 600 studens) to finally have found NimbusHosting.co.uk, they are awesome, migration went through in 5 minutes and they were just helpful, cool.

    Leave a comment:


  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by gnatster
    I've been using URLJet for years and find them awesome to work with. They are not the least expensive, however, they do provide incredible service. There is more to having a server than just price.
    I checked the site but price for VPS is high for me

    Thanks for your recommendation

    Leave a comment:


  • gnatster
    replied
    I've been using URLJet for years and find them awesome to work with. They are not the least expensive, however, they do provide incredible service. There is more to having a server than just price.

    Check them out at http://www.urljet.com/

    Leave a comment:


  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by TheXboxCloud
    Yes, you will need a virtual private server. Linux is most likely your calling.

    If you are still in the creation of your site, I would start with a small shared plan to do testing and make sure your site is ready to go. Then I would do what Wayne Luke suggests.

    You can get shared plans for as low as $1.99 a month with a fair amount of space and bandwidth on the right host. Just remember, you don't need a lot of bandwidth starting out and it's best not to spend your money until you do.

    Now what Joe says is right. Be careful of this. This is the reason you should "never" go with an unlimited host.

    Truthfully, there is no such thing because once you reach a certain point, they will either shut the service down or require you to upgrade. A server can only handle so much. For instance if you had 10 TB of bandwidth you were using on an unlimited host, if they even allowed you to go that far, I can guarantee once you start getting to this volume of activity they would ask you to upgrade and I doubt they would even let you get to 1 TB.

    Plus keep in mind, if you were on a shared host versus vps, there is only so much bandwidth even possible. You might have 500 GB on a shared but once you get on up there, shared plans don't even support a high amount like this. Which is why they advertise shared plans being unlimited. The reason is because they are offering, say 500 GB of bandwidth. That basically what unlimited would be.

    Hope that helped you.
    That's great information

    Do you know some names of good VPS hosting providers?
    I have more websites thus I need to host on different hosting (IP address) for SEO purpose and decrease cpu usage for any packages.

    Leave a comment:


  • phudu25
    replied
    Visit now Hostgator sale of 75% to buy hosting hostgator with 75% sale off. That is very great.

    Leave a comment:


  • Brad Padgett
    replied
    Yes, you will need a virtual private server. Linux is most likely your calling.

    If you are still in the creation of your site, I would start with a small shared plan to do testing and make sure your site is ready to go. Then I would do what Wayne Luke suggests.

    You can get shared plans for as low as $1.99 a month with a fair amount of space and bandwidth on the right host. Just remember, you don't need a lot of bandwidth starting out and it's best not to spend your money until you do.

    Now what Joe says is right. Be careful of this. This is the reason you should "never" go with an unlimited host.

    Truthfully, there is no such thing because once you reach a certain point, they will either shut the service down or require you to upgrade. A server can only handle so much. For instance if you had 10 TB of bandwidth you were using on an unlimited host, if they even allowed you to go that far, I can guarantee once you start getting to this volume of activity they would ask you to upgrade and I doubt they would even let you get to 1 TB.

    Plus keep in mind, if you were on a shared host versus vps, there is only so much bandwidth even possible. You might have 500 GB on a shared but once you get on up there, shared plans don't even support a high amount like this. Which is why they advertise shared plans being unlimited. The reason is because they are offering, say 500 GB of bandwidth. That basically what unlimited would be.

    Hope that helped you.

    Leave a comment:


  • webmastersun
    replied
    Originally posted by Wayne Luke
    You would need a VPS with a dedicated 2 Gigabytes Memory and decent CPU allocations for your site at the minimum. Having access to memcached and an SSD OS drive would help as well. Best bet is something that allows you a decent level of burst usage on the CPU per month. A dedicated machine would give you the most flexibility but there are hosts out there with auto-scaling VMs that come close.

    With your current host, you can probably speed things up a little using Cloudflare. However since vBulletin is dynamic, it might not amount to much and won't relieve any database related speed issues.
    Thanks for your ideas, I will consider to update to a VPS soon.
    It's necessary for my site at this time

    Leave a comment:


  • sitefocuz
    replied
    Cheap oversellers are going to offer more or less same quality. They crowd the server with thousands of sites, promise unlimited resources to each of them and you know they can't be fast. If you want a fast hosting, be prepared to pay well and don't expect unlimited anything. Hosts like URLJet and Nimbus hosting will offer you premium hosting at premium price.

    Leave a comment:

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