Tell HN: took full slashdot effect to my 4$/mo server no problems
I am using cheap shared no traffic limits web server and I got a link through to slashdot, which was quite an exciting thing to happen. I got 20k pageviews in a day, and 15k unique visitors. The web server worked just fine with no evident lags - or complaints from the hosting company. So it can be cheap, and scalable. Here's the slashdot article: http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/03/16/192211
25 comments
[ 2.1 ms ] story [ 67.0 ms ] threadThen again, how much traffic I really received I'll never know. If you're doing more than 50 connections/sec, they shut down your account so their other clients "don't suffer".
I promptly moved. And I don't recommend them.
Still don't like it though, but my main requirement is root access. :)
In any case, details on how you did it would be most interesting. What kind of changes(if any) did you make to your "hot" page?
The top story on slashdot is there for about a hour so I would expect that they would come in as big spike at the start and then drop off.
Give your hosting company a heads up that you got slashdotted and they were more than capable of handling it and send them your thanks. They should appreciate it! :)
For the record, danieltenner.com has had 50k visitors in a day from just reddit + HN...
The problem also usually comes up when comments start to add up (another reason why disqus rocks). http://inter-sections.net/2007/11/13/how-to-recognise-a-good... had a couple of hundred comments within a day, and since Wordpress (it was on WP at the time) didn't cache them, the page load got excruciating.
That's not a problem for http://danieltenner.com anymore, since comments are now served by disqus, and the pages themselves are static html. I suspect I could take several "full" slashdottings at the same time now and still stand. Nginx is pretty good at serving static files.
Shame they totally screwed up a few months down the line and I was forced to move host.