Synthetic Monitoring

Simulate visitor interaction with your site to monitor the end user experience.

View Product Info

FEATURES

Simulate visitor interaction

Identify bottlenecks and speed up your website.

Learn More

Real User Monitoring

Enhance your site performance with data from actual site visitors

View Product Info

FEATURES

Real user insights in real time

Know how your site or web app is performing with real user insights

Learn More

Infrastructure Monitoring Powered by SolarWinds AppOptics

Instant visibility into servers, virtual hosts, and containerized environments

View Infrastructure Monitoring Info
Comprehensive set of turnkey infrastructure integrations

Including dozens of AWS and Azure services, container orchestrations like Docker and Kubernetes, and more 

Learn More

Application Performance Monitoring Powered by SolarWinds AppOptics

Comprehensive, full-stack visibility, and troubleshooting

View Application Performance Monitoring Info
Complete visibility into application issues

Pinpoint the root cause down to a poor-performing line of code

Learn More

Log Management and Analytics Powered by SolarWinds Loggly

Integrated, cost-effective, hosted, and scalable full-stack, multi-source log management

 View Log Management and Analytics Info
Collect, search, and analyze log data

Quickly jump into the relevant logs to accelerate troubleshooting

Learn More

6 gotchas about web hosting quality and reliability


If you’re not used to thinking in terms of website availability and reliability, we hope that the insights below may help you to a greater understanding of the factors you should keep in mind when selecting a quality hosting company.
Considering that we specialize in website and server monitoring, we tend to think about these issues all day long, all year long. Several people here at Pingdom also have plenty of experience from having worked in the web hosting industry. This means that we have both the insider’s and outsider’s perspective on web hosting, so we figured we were in a good position to share some insights about web hosting that many people aren’t aware of.

  • No web hosting company will have 100% uptime in the long run. It simply doesn’t happen. They may have zero downtime (100% uptime) for a few months, but sooner or later something will happen. There are simply too many factors involved (networks, power, equipment failure, software issues, human errors, etc), and not all of them are under the control of the hosting company.
  • Maintenance isn’t included in uptime numbers. When hosting companies calculate uptime, they usually don’t include downtime caused by planned maintenance. This means that if a web hosting company says it guarantees a 99.9% uptime, it means 99.9% uptime minus the maintenance.
  • 99.8% uptime means DOUBLE the downtime of 99.9%. They look close, but a 99.9% uptime means 8 hours and 45 minutes of downtime in a year, while 99.8% means 17 hours and 30 minutes. A 99.8% uptime is acceptable, but a 99.9% uptime (or better) is preferred if your site is important to you.
  • Your site’s downtime = hosting downtime PLUS your downtime. It may seem strict to demand a 99.9% uptime or higher from a host, but keep the following in mind: Your own site problems and maintenance will add downtime ON TOP of that of the hosting company. This means that your best case scenario will be limited by the hosting company. In other words, your downtime is your downtime combined with that of your host.
  • There is no such thing as unlimited. You see it advertised a lot, with web hosts offering unlimited resources to customers. What it really means is “enough for most users”. However, if you use enough resources to disturb the performance of the other sites on the web server, your account will sooner or later be suspended. Truly unlimited options simply don’t exist. (This only applies to shared hosting, of course.) Another reason unlimited doesn’t exist is pure performance. You can only transfer a limited amount of data, use a limited amount of CPU, and only have a limited amount of active connections to your site.
  • On a shared hosting account, your site shares a server with potentially hundreds of other sites. Just as your site’s use of shared hosting resources can affect other sites on that server, those other sites can affect yours. Keep an eye out for sudden or gradual changes in performance. Shared hosting is a good and affordable entry point into web hosting, but you should be aware that it (in general) has a number of potential performance pitfalls, something we have written about in the past.

There are of course plenty of other factors that you will want to keep in mind. For example the quality of their support, what their track record is, etc. Asking around on forums such as Web Hosting Talk and doing your own research via Google can be helpful here.
Are there other “gotchas” that belong in this list? Let us know in the comments.

SolarWinds Observability SaaS now offers synthetic transaction monitoring

Powerful transaction monitoring now complements the availability and real user [...]

Exit Rate vs Bounce Rate – Which One You Should Improve and Why

Tracking your website’s exit and bounce rates will give you insight into how [...]

Introduction to Observability

These days, systems and applications evolve at a rapid pace. This makes analyzi [...]

Webpages Are Getting Larger Every Year, and Here’s Why it Matters

Last updated: February 29, 2024 Average size of a webpage matters because it [...]

A Beginner’s Guide to Using CDNs

Last updated: February 28, 2024 Websites have become larger and more complex [...]

Monitor your website’s uptime and performance

With Pingdom's website monitoring you are always the first to know when your site is in trouble, and as a result you are making the Internet faster and more reliable. Nice, huh?

START YOUR FREE 30-DAY TRIAL

MONITOR YOUR WEB APPLICATION PERFORMANCE

Gain availability and performance insights with Pingdom – a comprehensive web application performance and digital experience monitoring tool.

START YOUR FREE 30-DAY TRIAL
Start monitoring for free