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I'm using webhost4life shared hosting right now. They have a 99.99% up-time guarantee, but it is definitely not.

Their support has been good when I do contact them, but it's just not stable. The site will just go down at random times for 5-10 minutes at a time.

I know I'm on shared hosting, but I was hoping it would be more stable than it is. My app isn't at the point where it would need dedicated hosting yet, if the shared was stable enough.

Any affordable hosting that you can vouch for (that supports ASP.NET MVC)?

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Expect it to be closed soon! This is not a programming related question and we have similar quesitons closed before. – Shoban Mar 12 at 6:32
aww, ok. I suppose it's true. – Chad Mar 12 at 6:51
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This is of interest to developers. Please don't close this question. See the faq, if you have a question as to whether or not this question belongs here. "As long as your question is of interest to at least one other programmer somewhere..." – Kyle Trauberman Mar 12 at 7:16
Agree with ktrauberman. Plus, I think asp.net mvc hosting is definitely "programming-related". – Buu Nguyen Mar 12 at 7:37
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What a formidable flypaper for spammers this question is ... – Joachim Sauer Sep 28 at 14:07
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10 Answers

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First of all, I believe as long as you have ASP.NET 2.0 and .NET Framework 3.5 - you can do ASP.NET MVC.

Assuming you will do your development locally with Visual Studio, the only MVC-specific stuff will be installed on your local machine.

I have used this host and I really like them: http://serverintellect.com/

  • Easy to contact for support 24/7
  • Everyone you reach is knowledgeable in .NET/Windows
  • They are very flexible - they try to setup what you need
  • Inexpensive (for shared hosting)
  • Pretty darn good uptime

Good Luck

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You can do it with .NET 3.5, but Life Is Better with .NET 3.5 SP1. – Craig Stuntz Mar 12 at 11:52
Good point THANKS. – James McFarland Mar 12 at 23:11
Just curious, when you say "Pretty darn good uptime", what do you mean? Do you actively monitor the status of your websites with them? If I didn't watch my host closely, I probably wouldn't even know there were micro downtimes. The serverintellect site looks very nice though. I'll look into them. – Chad Mar 16 at 23:30
I worded my answer that way because I am very happy with the uptime from ServerIntellect - but I don't have exact numbers - and when I do have a problem, I have been very happy with their service to make things right. I also have a monitoring service, let me know if you would like to discuss. – James McFarland Mar 19 at 16:36
I added an answer to this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/365304/… – James McFarland Mar 19 at 16:56
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You can host MVC apps on DiscountASP. I've found them to have excellent bang for the buck.

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Nice, how close to you watch your web apps with them? On mine, I have some processes that fire emails to my cell phone when problems occur. I have an outside app that checks my site every 5 minutes to see if it is online. With my current host, I'll have micro outtages for 10 minutes at a time. ;/ – Chad Mar 13 at 5:39
I did monitor it with Pingdom for a few months. There were a couple of ~1-2 minute reboot type outages during those months, but literally only a couple. Unfortunately, a reboot here and there is probably unavoidable on shared hosting. – Dave Ward Mar 13 at 12:30
I agree... I'll look into them more. Thank you. – Chad Mar 16 at 5:10
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How about getting a $20/month VPS Ubuntu box with Slicehost.com or linode.com and running asp.net MVC on mono. Has anymore done this? I have successfully configured asp.net MVC with Apache but I just am not sure how stable this would be.

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Interesting idea... not sure if I'd trust my MS tech based site to run on non-MS platform, but I suppose that's old school thinking in a new age. :D – Chad Nov 3 at 22:26
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The main issue with shared hosting is that other applications installed on the same server can affect your website.

This is even more evident if someone has a classic ASP application on the same server as you as it it much easier to fire off an infinite loop and consume a large chunk of CPU, rendering other pages slow or unavailable.

James is correct in stating that you just need a host that has 3.5 support as the MVC dll can be uploaded to your directory. MS are moving away from forcing installs on servers for their new projects - so you don't have to wait for the hosting company to catch up, like we had to with the ASP.NET AJAX extensions.

I won't recommend a hosting company as, although there are plenty of cheap hosting packages available, it's impossible for me to predict the uptime as I don't use shared hosting.

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Yea, I'm not at a point where I want to spend the extra $$ for dedicated hosting... yet. I estimate I'll probably need it in about a year, but possibly sooner if I can't find a stable shared host. ;/ – Chad Mar 13 at 1:04
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Did you consider Amazon's EC2? It's virtually a dedicated server that you get full admin remote desktop rights to, so it should definitely be possible to host your ASP.NET MVC application there.

John Sheehan made a screencast on how to get up and running with Windows Server 2003.

What is left is to simply configure your IIS - walkthroughs can be found all around, but Phil Haack has a nice one here.

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That looks very interesting. Pricing looks like it would hover around $100 a month, which is a little high for me right now. Being able to upscale on demand would be great though. – Chad Mar 13 at 1:16
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If you consider virtual hosts an option then as another alternative to EC2 you may wish to try GoGrid which we have used to deploy iis7 windows server 2008 images at low cost:

http://www.gogrid.com

As with Amazon S2 you have a very stable platform with resilience from clustered hardware.

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Thanks for the info, looks interesting. I'll look into it more. – Chad Mar 16 at 5:11
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www.dailyrazor.com is $5 a month and has very fast support from my experience. It also comes with unlimited subdomains, SQL Server databases and a lot of bandwidth and disk space. They support paypal subscriptions too which takes the pain out of having expired cards and so on.

You configure your site via Plesk, you will have to specifically ask for an IIS7 server however, unless you are happy with changing the default MVC settings for IIS6. I've found their IIS7 servers are a lot faster though.

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Yeah, my hosting is currently IIS6. Really need to get moved over to their IIS7 boxes, but they wanted a "moving fee" to do it - even though in my case it would be a simple copy'n paste (no SSL, no hard coded IPs, etc...). <sigh> – Chad Nov 3 at 22:28
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I using CryStone for hosting all my MVC solutions and I'm satisfied.

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Can't get to the site from my office (blocked), I'll check it out when I get home. Thanks for the link! – Chad Mar 16 at 5:23
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I would look into CrystalTech, I have used them for years. You pay a little more for an "intermediate" level account (about $13.95 / month), but when it comes to bang for your buck, its hard to pass off. Thier uptimes are awesome, and they are proactive about notifications of downtime for patches ect. Additionally their tech support is phenominal, and they are even willing to help/walk you through things such as migration of databases (I had to move a MySql 4 -> 5, and I was on the phone with them for about an hour and a half). I've been know to call them when stuck on a code issue too :-\ and they have been able to help.

Additionally they have a good product mix offering everything from Asp.net to coldfusion and PHP, along with MySQl and SQL server backends. I put most of my clients into their intermediat plan which offers gobs of bandwidth, database size, unlimited FTP accounts, and a boatload of email addresses (more than you would probably need).

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http://arvixe.com offer great hosting plans, plus a free domain name for as long as you host with them. Their "personal asp hosting" (http://www.arvixe.com/asp_net_web_hosting) has asp.net (and asp.net mvc) included, as well as LOTS of other goodies, definitely worth a look.

By the way, not affiliated with them in any way. Found out about them recently from a friend, and so far have had no problems with them.

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