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When Hosting Goes Bad

January 3, 2008

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Web hosting is not a 100% thing. I tell people that while most reputable hosts legitimately claim 99% up time things do break. It doesn’t matter whether they are mechanical or electronic. Bad things happen from time to time.

That 99% figure is an average. What that means is that during any given month your web host’s server could be down for 7 hours or more and still qualify. Or, say they only had one outage during the whole year. That same 99% up time claim could be true if the server went down for 3 days straight.

Crazy. But true.

A Recent Case Study

Between Christmas and New Years I noticed a friend’s web site was down. Because April is a close friend of the Cree house I shot her an email, asked what’s up and if there was anything I could do to help.

April said she’d initially panicked when she saw the error message but had already contacted her web host and they were performing a server update. They assured her all would be back to normal shortly.

On April’s web site she’s got two different blogs, My Beautiful Chaos and Making Life Work for You. When the server update was done everything looked like it was OK with her second blog.

But there was some lingering Chaos on My Beautiful Chaos. :(

For some reason blog post comments weren’t behaving right. On the front page of the blog there was the usual link that showed how many comments were on the post. But when you clicked on the link it would take you to where the comments should be none were showing.

April and I both double checked the template files to make sure here theme hadn’t somehow gotten corrupted. Everything looked to be correct there. WordPress was calling for the comments but they weren’t getting them from the database.

That meant a corrupted database from the server update was the most likely culprit. So April went back to her web host with that new info.

The best they could do was roll back her database to the previous back up they had - which was a week before the server update.

The good news is that all the comments on the blog before that date were retrieved after the roll back. Fortunately April also had the posts that she’d written since then. But she still lost all the comments that were made in the mean time.

Not an Isolated Incident

Unfortunately April’s not alone in her experience.

I had a similar thing happen myself last December. Only in my case it was a server crash not an update that caused it.

My web host had to roll back to their most recent back-up which was a day or two before the crash. Fortunately like April I had my posts backed up. But also like April I hadn’t backed up any comments so they were lost.

Moral of the Story

The moral of the story is that things break. Computers lock up, need to be reset from time to time. Bad things are probably going to happen at some point.

That age old computer mantra still holds true in the online world, “Save Early. Save Often.”

Back up your web site. Regularly.

If you blog, back up more often. Remember that if the unthinkable happens the most recent back up is all you’ll have. Everything that happened since that time will be lost.

If your site is on WordPress, there is a good WordPress Database Backup plugin available for you. Install it and set to automatically email you a back up of your database once a day or so. Set the frequency based on how much of your data you are willing to loose should the worst happen.

You can also look through the list of WordPress plugins and see if there is another one that might fit your needs better.

When we build in contingency plans to recover from those things are beyond our control we won’t be devastated when the bad things inevitably happen. Sure, nothing offers 100% protection. But we can reduce our risk to an acceptable level with some basic precautions.

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Comments

18 Responses to “When Hosting Goes Bad”

  1. April Groves on January 3rd, 2008 at 11:02 am

    I really appreciate all your help. I will add that the BlueHost guys were very helpful.

    Have to go install that backup plug in now :)

  2. My Beautiful Chaos on January 3rd, 2008 at 12:21 pm

    We’re up…I think…

    The holidays were amazing!

    My sister had my niece 7 weeks early. All are fine, but Phylisa is still in the hospital. She should come home soon. Ain’t she pretty!
    Both of my babies decided to get matching pairs of double ear infections.
    Babies a…

  3. My Web Hosting Site » Blog Archive » When Hosting Goes Bad on January 3rd, 2008 at 2:15 pm

    [...] mitch@mitchkeeler.com (Mitch Keeler) article is brought to you using rss feeds.Here is some of the latest web hosting news.What that means is that during any given month your web host’s server could be down for 7 hours or more and still qualify. Or, say they only had one outage during the whole year. That same 99% up time claim could be true if the server … [...]

  4. ozlady on January 3rd, 2008 at 8:41 pm

    I did a post on this from my blog, and introduced a tool called BlogBackupOnline which you can use for blog migration and backup - it is free for blogs under 50Mb, and has automated backups as well. I used this to migrate from one host to another as well.

    Great case!

  5. New Year’s Nightmare - Make a Resolution | OzLady's Ramblings on January 3rd, 2008 at 8:48 pm

    [...] your blog? Well ready Chris’ case about when hosting goes bad and you could be a few posts shy of a perfect blog before you know [...]

  6. dotservant.com website hostin on January 4th, 2008 at 2:35 am

    Hardware and software failures are beyond control, the only solution that can save you from loosing everything is still a backup, and that has to be a backup done by yourself (web host do perform backup but more towards recovering the configurations, every website owner should always keep a personal copy of an up to date website content), because you know the in and out of your own website better than anyone else.

    Same goes to personal computer, PC, notebook etc.

  7. As the Server Crashes : agentgenius.com on January 4th, 2008 at 11:41 am

    [...] thanks to a comment left on Chris’ post by Ozlady, I have been introduced to BlogBackupOnline. It is free up to 5MB while they are in Beta. [...]

  8. Blog 9-1-1: What To Do When WordPress Breaks on January 4th, 2008 at 2:06 pm

    [...] database regularly, too!! April Groves of Making Life Work for You recently experienced this one when her web hosting went bad. Chris Cree of SuccessCREEations was able to help her restore everything, but she did lose some of [...]

  9. Strive Notes » January 4th: Jo’s PR top five on January 4th, 2008 at 6:22 pm

    [...] because I also had trouble with a website, but because I just found the figures a bit strange. Your web host can fail for seven hours out of every month and is still able to qualify as 99 per cent reliable! As Chris [...]

  10. Michael Beasley on January 5th, 2008 at 10:14 pm

    Try having 600 customers and your having your DNS server crash and your backup was moved. Now that is a nightmare.

  11. Max on January 8th, 2008 at 10:16 am

    “Save Early. Save Often.” - the best solution in this case. I had several crashes before the New Year - and they “ruined” my business for couple days.

  12. John on January 10th, 2008 at 6:40 am

    Well I guess I am a lucky guy. never had a problem with my sites but their support is so slow..Well I can’t have it all right?

  13. Ling on January 11th, 2008 at 9:35 am

    Two things you need to do to get this right:
    1. Backup everything and anything you have on the site.
    2. Experiment with web hosts before your site gets going. Decide on the best one and then stick with them forever. It is really painful if your web host screws you after your site starts showing results…

  14. Bounce Houses on January 14th, 2008 at 3:30 pm

    I never thought of the 99% uptime in that way until now..so true :)

  15. Errors Upgrading WordPress - Troubleshooting Tips | SuccessCREEations by Chris Cree on January 14th, 2008 at 4:03 pm

    [...] When Hosting Goes Bad [...]

  16. Bill on January 14th, 2008 at 4:43 pm

    My advice is to always keep your hosting and domain registration separate. That way you can quickly(ish) point the dns to another host should anything disastrous happen.

  17. oyun on January 23rd, 2008 at 3:28 pm

    really appreciate all your help. I will add that the BlueHost guys were very helpful.

  18. buster on March 19th, 2008 at 4:10 pm

    Well, “Save Early. Save Often.” sounds so easy. But I (almost) never use this simple advise, and one day I wake up without all my WP themes. Some not so nice guys have crack my hoster, and del every thing what they can. Pity. Now this rule is my motto.

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