MySQL & Load Stats
The MySQL & Load Stats will silently gather data while your website is working. Discover why it is important to check them out on a regular basis.
The CPU load depends on the time period a hosting server spends executing a script any time a visitor opens a webpage on a specific script-driven website. Static HTML websites use barely any CPU time, but it is not so with the considerably more sophisticated and functional scripts, that use a database and display dynamic content. The more clients open this kind of an Internet site, the more load shall be created on the web server and if the database is big, the MySQL server shall be loaded also. An example of what may cause high load is an Internet store with tens of thousands of products. If it's popular, a lot of people shall be browsing it all at once and if they search for items, the entire database containing all of the products shall also be constantly accessed by the script, which will result in high load. In this light, having CPU and MySQL load data can provide an idea of how the Internet site is doing, if it has to be optimized or if you simply just need a more efficient website hosting solution - if the Internet site is popular and the established setup can't deal with the load.
MySQL & Load Stats in Cloud Web Hosting
Using the Hepsia Control Panel, provided with all our cloud web hosting offers, you'll be able to see incredibly detailed statistics about the resources which your websites use. One of the sections will give you info on the CPU load, like how much processing time the web server spent, the span of time it took for your scripts to be executed and the amount of memory they used. Statistics are routinely produced every six hours and you can also see the different kinds of processes that produced the most load - PHP, Perl, and so forth. MySQL load data are listed inside an individual section where you are able to see all the queries on an hourly, daily, etcetera. basis. You could go back and compare data from different months to find out if some update has altered the resource usage if the number of website visitors has not changed much. In this way, you will see if your Internet site needs to be optimized, that'll lead to a better general performance and an improved user experience.