Most of us go for a shared hosting plan as it's cheaper when compared to the expensive dedicated hosting servers and these hosting companies promise an uptime of 99.9 percent. Shared hosting servers will have many websites like yours hosted on the same hosting servers. You can find websites hosted on a Web Hosting Server [link] by using reverse IP. The problem with shared hosting is, when there is huge traffic to some other website hosted on the same server as yours, then there will some times be downtime to other websites or a performance hit to other or your websites. Most of the hosting companies promise that there won't be a performance hit but as per my experience when I call up technical support for a help that's the common reason given by them.
But how to monitor your website performance as to when exactly was your website down and for how long. There are various website monitoring services available in the market. Here is what I have done. I have registered my website with few free website monitoring sites like FreeWebMonitoring and Internet Seer. There are many such web monitoring tools and websites available in the market both paid and free. The most basic or free version of these tools only monitor your website and report in case of any downtime. Paid versions monitor your website in a detailed manner. Below are some of the types of error messages and downtime alerts that I received.
The best thing is as soon as your website is down even when you are away, alert will be sent to you in an email if there is a downtime along with the error details. Once the issue is fixed there will be another alert sent to you with the total downtime. So, you will be completely aware of your website as you get alerts even when you are away. As soon as you get your first alert the best thing is to call up hosting service company and report them that your website is down and this will at-least bring down the total downtime.
Really nice service. As soon as some problem occurs with the site it will sent us mail. Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteYes. You are right. Also, it gives the exact outage time.
ReplyDeleteI would additionally stress the idea that a slow web site is a severe deterrent for your potential visitors. So although "slow" is not technically down it can be considered effectively down. Given that concept, web site owners should ensure their web site monitoring service that has the ability to notify them not only when the site is not responding, but when it responding too slowly. If the degraded performance occurs too often, it may be a sign for you to shop for another hosting provider. Additionally, as was mentioned, it could be the result of overloaded servers on shared hosting plans, or it is not uncommon for a web site to become the target of a denial of service attacks. So the slow performance alert often times doubles as a security alert.
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