View Single Post
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 05-12-2005, 12:55 PM
Lord Brar's Avatar
Lord Brar  Lord Brar is offline Status: Offline
CEO
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 1,309
Why do hosts put a Cap on Database Size?

I've been researching a lot into hosts for some time now and today I was talking to the Folks at Site5.com about their plans.

I was ready to purchase their plan when I stumbled across this question - I've seen companies like Pair, SmarterLinux, NetFirms etc. (there are the ones who I have asked this question directly ) putting a cap on the maximum size of database allowed, so I thought that I should ask these folks too if they have any such Cap.

Yes, they have a max cap of 200 MB per database on all of their shared plans!

From vBulletin FAQ -

For example, one installation we have seen had 5,800+ members, 40,000
threads, 662,000 posts, 70,000 private messages and 8,000 attachments.
The total MySQL database size was 940MB - which comes to around 140MB
per 100,000 posts. Please note that it does vary from forum to forum,
so your mileage may vary.

This means that I would be able to have about 143,000 posts with
them... even if I upgrade to their largest plan.

Now, I'd be paying them annually... so I'd be really stuck.

I am just wondering that why do these people have this cap? Does it have to do something with performance issue? If yes, then why do some of the other finer hosts don't have it?
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote