Midnight Commander file manager now available

We have installed Midnight Commander on all of our servers. Midnight Commander is a file manager program which runs in a shell window and lets you manage the files on your Web site. Midnight Commander splits the screen in two, letting you select different directories on each side. You can then move, copy, and rename files and directories, and perform many other operations.

Midnight Commander is designed for users who connect to the shell but may not be fully comfortable with typing commands on the command line.

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Bandwidth doubled for all Web sites!

We’re happy to announce that the monthly bandwidth allowance for all Web hosting plans has been at least doubled — at no additional cost. (Bandwidth is simply how much data your Web site sends to visitors. As your Web site gets larger or becomes more popular, bandwidth usage increases.)

The Web hosting plans have had their bandwidth increased as follows:

  • Silver plan: increased from 100GB to 250GB per month
  • Gold plan: increased from 200GB to 500GB per month
  • Platinum plan: increased from 500GB to 1TB per month

This change is effective immediately (in fact, it’ll be applied retroactively to the start of June).

Our pricing remains the same. We’re glad to be able to help you grow your sites without extra fees!

phpMyAdmin Updated

Our Web-based MySQL interface, phpMyAdmin, has been updated to version 2.10.2. This version includes some security and general bug fixes. Customers should not notice any major changes.

Elzar server restarted

The “elzar” Web server stopped responding a few minutes ago under a heavy load on the MySQL database server, and had to be restarted. This resulted in an interruption of service for Web sites on that server.

We apologize for this problem; we’ll be investigating the issue further and monitoring the server closely to make sure it doesn’t recur.

Update 10:00 PM: The NFS network connection between ftp.tigertech.net and elzar wasn’t working properly even after the Web server was restarted, causing additional problems for customers publishing files. This problem has also been corrected.

Brief scheduled maintenance for mail servers May 9

Tonight at 11 PM Pacific time (2 AM Eastern time May 10) we’ll be performing brief scheduled maintenance on our mail servers. (We’ll be adding more RAM and adding more disk space to make sure that our mail servers continue to keep up with the growth in our service.) This requires restarting, which takes about five minutes, so you will see a brief period of about five minutes where you are unable to connect to our mail servers. No mail will be lost, of course; it will be queued and available after the maintenance.

We apologize for the inconvenience this causes. We schedule this kind of maintenance for late Saturday night/early Sunday morning (the least busy time of the week) to minimize the impact.

Updates: PHP 4, PHP 5, ClamAV, XFree86, WordPress

We’ve installed several security updates recently. We’ve updated PHP 4, PHP 5, the ClamAV antivirus scanner, and some XFree86 libraries. In addition, we’ve updated our own blog to use WordPress 2.2 — if you use WordPress, make sure you’ve done the same.

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Ruby on Rails updated to version 1.2.3

We’ve updated the default version of Ruby on Rails on our servers to version 1.2.3.

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A defense against some MySQL connection problems

A couple of times in the last week, we’ve seen one of our MySQL database servers have an unusually high number of connections. That’s a serious issue: If there are too many connections to a MySQL server, customer scripts won’t be able to connect to a database, so we’ve spent some time looking at the cause and fixing it.

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Mailman monthly password reminders: not recommended

One of the features of our service is the industrial-strength Mailman mailing list manager. Mailman is a very good program in some ways (it’s built like a tank and reliably handles very large volumes of list mail, and it removes much of the drudgery of managing large lists), but it has a couple of undesirable “features”.

The most obvious is that the interface is terribly ugly (the Mailman developers are working on a big improvement to this, thankfully; just so it’s clear, we didn’t create the program, and we’re as horrified by the circa-1996 appearance as everyone else). Another problem with the program, though, is the option for “monthly password reminders”. This is a design flaw that’s being removed from Mailman, and although most of the lists on our servers don’t use password reminders, customers who do should probably turn them off now in preparation for that change.

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