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View Full Version : What's causing such a huge server load?


Joey Link
11-12-2008, 05:35 AM
Hello everyone. I'm running VB 3.7.2 (about to upgrade, but afraid of breaking something) with 347 members, and only six mods:

Banner Rotator
Flashchat Integration
Flashchat: Admin Panel Integration
vBadvanced CMPS
vBSEO :: Sitemap Generator
Welcome Headers

I've been exceeding my CPU usage limit set by my host for almost as long as my forum has been running. I'm now on and exceeding the final shared plan and my next and only option is to go to a dedicated plan. This seems quite unreasonable for only having 347 members. Here are my current usage stats:

Current / Allowed (period average) / Percentage (%)
Traffic (MB) 300.40/85333.33/0.35%
CPU (Mins) 59.60/64.00/93.12%
SQL (Conqueries) 996593/1048576/95.04%

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Digital Jedi
11-12-2008, 07:04 AM
From several second hand reports I've heard, FlashChat is supposed to be intensive resource hog.

Joey Link
11-12-2008, 07:20 AM
Oh no! My users love it :(

Videx
11-12-2008, 05:55 PM
Any chat is a resource hog. You may want to try a shoutbox instead. A well written shoutbox will log users out after only a minute of inactivity, thus sparing server load.

Simple enough to test; just disable the chat and see if your cpu goes down.

Joey Link
11-13-2008, 02:05 AM
Will the Java chat's use less resources than the Flash-based chats?

DieselMinded
11-13-2008, 02:08 AM
Sure you dont have an image resizer installed?

Joey Link
11-13-2008, 04:39 AM
To be honest, I'm a noob when it comes to vBulletin admin. I haven't installed any image resizer that didn't come with vBulletin, I know that much.

Digital Jedi
11-13-2008, 06:21 AM
If the FlashChat integration is that important to your members, I would recommend shopping around for better hosting options. These days there are some very good deals out there with better bandwidth and space options then what is commonly used.

Joey Link
11-13-2008, 01:29 PM
My problem isn't the bandwidth or space, it's the load on the CPU. Is migration a forum based website to another host fairly straight-forward or is it pretty complicated?

Digital Jedi
11-13-2008, 02:44 PM
But fundamentally, we're talking about your server's performance and it's ability to cope with things.

Migration is fairly straightforward, though it involves a couple of steps you may have never done before. But the manual explains it pretty simply. Basically, you back up your database using a SSH/Telnet program, download all your hard files, re-upload vBulletin files to the new server and reinstall, re-upload all your old hard files and restore your backup using the same SSH/Telnet program.