I'm looking for a good web hosting company to host a Ruby on Rails driven web site. Who do you recommend for hosting your site/app?
I'd like to have SSH access as well as MySQL.
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I'm looking for a good web hosting company to host a Ruby on Rails driven web site. Who do you recommend for hosting your site/app? I'd like to have SSH access as well as MySQL. |
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I asked the same exact question over here. I ended up going with Dreamhost. I've been deploying with no problems using Phusion Passenger and Capistrano. I got a plan for $70 for a year including unlimited band width and disk space as part of a special. Not sure if you can still got the unlimited deal though. Look around the internet for a coupon code. You also get unlimited MySQL databases, Subversion and SSH access (among a ton of other stuff.) I definitely recommend them. EDIT: I signed up 6 weeks ago and got the unlimited data/bandwidth as part of their 11th anniversary special. The first 1,111 users to sign up got the unlimited data/bandwidth. When I signed up the page said less than 30 spots remained. It still says that. Not sure what to make of it but - could still be eligible for it. |
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jRuby On Rail on Google App Engine can be considered as a solution |
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I use Prgmr for personal projects, its great advantage is the price, by far is the cheaper(RAM/US$) vps you can find out there, but in the other hand you can get a better backup service from other vps services, so, if you need to host your own application non-commercial I highly recommend you to use Prgmr. |
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What i've done is signed up with Amazon EC2 and fired up an Debian instance. Configured it myself and got the best environment to host my Rails application. There are quite some tutorials around already to help you get started on managing a EC2 instance. |
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Rackspace has started offering a "cloud" service (at rackspacecloud.com). Despite the confusing pricing (by the hour?) the service is essentially what slicehost offers at about half the cost for an equivalent level of resources (memory, specifically). Overall the service feels faster than slicehost, probably because of better hardware. I have no conclusive evidence of this, but the price has been good. |
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I can personally recommend Linode as excellent unmanaged VPS hosting providers, there control panel and API is top-notch. I hear similar success stories from Slicehost customers. For shared hosting WebFaction offer a flexible service. |
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Here is a screencast that gives you Six reasons to use Webbynode. If you want a more in-depth walkthrough, highlighting and explaining each separate unique features, check this one: http://webbynode.com/railsgithubrpm. |
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I've been using RimuHosting http://rimuhosting.com/ for years. Great support and VPS. |
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If cost is your biggest priority and you're keen to do all your own configuration and setup, prgmr.com seems like a pretty good option. They're like slicehost as far as being do-it-yourself, but cheaper and with even less support. |
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I'm another happy Dreamhost customer. They make deploying Rails apps insanely easy. |
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We are hosting several of our rails apps including scrumpad.com in Amazon cloud. I would suggest to go for this if you need absolute control over your environment. Also, there are features that may be useful if you have an uptime requirement. You can take one or more of the following features:- Elastic IP -> switch IP anytime, no need to wait for domain update. EC2 -> your host EBS -> backup your database S3 -> for storage SQS -> queuing |
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I've been using Bluebox to deploy a website for my company, and their support team is just amazing. It's a bit expensive though. |
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Slicehost are the best i've found... |
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Been using SuperbHosting for almost a year. Great service. |
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if you are an experienced system administrator get an account at OVH. they offer cheap dedicated hosting (starting at 20€/month). they mirror many well known open source projects/services (sourceforge, ubuntu...), so expect high speed/quality bandwidth (located on france, they are part of the biggest european internet "nodes"). http://www.ovh.com |
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I use http://mddhosting.com for non-RoR hosting but they do offer RoR if you ask. They're really small company so they respond quickly and like to make you happy. |
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I did fairly extensive research recently. My requirements were to be able to handle multiple domains, some rails, some PHP and be able to give my friends their own space. Also, customer service is important to me so I tried to find companies who were responsive in my questions. I think each of my final 3 would be good but I settled on the first choice.
I think you'll be fine at any of these 3 places but I ended up choosing a VPS plan with Rails Playground and have been very happy so far. |
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I've been using RailsPlayground for about 1.5 years now, and have been really happy with them. I found there support especially good and fast. Seems like there's someone always on the clock, several times they've installed a bunch of new rails gems for me in the middle of the night after a long coding binge Before finding RailsPlayground I tried out Dreamhost (slow) and Medi.aTemple Grid (really buggy, terrible support). |
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For virtual private server (VPS) solutions, Slicehost and Linode are very good choices. If your application is expected to get heavy traffic (or eventually does), Engine Yard and Joyent are very good, although Joyent sometimes neglects segments of its customers (the smaller VPS customers that joined when they were TextDrive) Once you decide to go for dedicated servers, RackSpace is still an excellent vendor. |
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You can also try Engine Yard and Rails Hosting. Stay away from Bluehost however, I asked their support how their hosting for Rails was and they replied HONESTLY: We don't offer support for Rails, and our staff are not experts with Rails. The icon you see in the CPanel is buggy. Thats the kiss of death right there...Give them 10 points for honesty. |
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If you're in the UK or Europe, you should consider Bytemark (http://www.bytemark.co.uk/) who offer virtual machines from £15 per month. Their service and support are excellent, and they are particularly expert with Debian linux. Many UK Rails developers can vouch for them. (e.g. check out the LRUG mailing list archive). |
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Slicehost rocks! I had been using them for over 2 years and they were excellent. Great support, always reliable, and no issues with downtime or migrations. I've even successfully "resized" slices without having any issues. Unfortunately with the economy the way it is, and Slicehost's bandwidth use billing, I've moved some of my Rails sites onto Dreamhost to test out their new Passenger setup. So far it has been fairly good and it is very affordable. The downside is that they are quite a bit slower, and you will definitely notice lag on higher traffic sites. |
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Try OCS Solutions. A small company with a good reputatioh. I've been there a year and am totally happy. |
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I have used Media Temple's Grid Service for the past two years (for my projects and for clients) and I really like it. Setting up a Rails application is very easy and support is really good too (24/7 and helpful/knowledgeable staff). In the beginning, hosting was a bit buggy, but things have been running well for quite some time now. I would take definitely take a look. |
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+1 for Slicehost. Been with them 2+ years and they've been amazing. |
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Definitely Linode: http://www.linode.com/ We sponsored the Rails Rumble, featuring 130 apps created in 48 hours. Check them out at http://railsrumble.com/ |
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I use heroku.com for deploying the Rails application. I host the application domain name through Google Apps/eNom, and use gmail (with my domain) for the email features of the Rails application. I get Google's domain registrar partner for my domain (eNom) to redirect the www subdomain to the heroku URL for my app instead of Google's pages for my domain. I'm not interested in learning how to configure Apache, ModRails, Phusion, Mongrel, Thin, MySQL, and whatever. With Heroku I don't worry. nginx is the web server, and PostgreSQL is the database. They have settled on Rails 2.1 for all new apps. Limited choices. Heroku is nice. I develop my application at home on Ubuntu, using the SQLite3 database built into Rails. Once I finish testing locally, I take the tarball of my application and upload it to my Heroku.com place for my application. Once uploaded, Heroku automatically deploys the application live. That is cool! They are free at the moment, but they will eventually go to a request-based pricing scheme, probably similar to that of Google App Engine. The nice thing about that is that you don't have to pay until you have lots of traffic (and probably ways to monetize that traffic). Heroku itself is based on Amazon EC2, so you can be sure that they will have very low pricing based on a-la-carte usage of processing, storage, and bandwidth. |
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I run a Redmine instance on A2Hosting.com. They offer SSH access, and seem to be responsive and reliable. Please note though, the site I run isn't really accessed by anyone so I am unsure of the performance of their Rails hosting. Also, they have page of coupons that you can use here. |
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The technical documentation for Slicehost can be found here: Slicehost Article Repository This is a great resource even if you chose some other alternative. |
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I use A Small Orange. They're good and really cheap. They also allow SSH and MySQL access. |
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