I think you would find that even 256 meg would be limiting - especially as your site grew or if you were using heavy weight products.
If your site is heavily cached, doesn't change much and is updated by only a small number of people - then you should be able to get away with it. If you could find a system that would give you more memory then you will be much better off. On 11/20/05, John Baker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I was wondering if anyone had used a Virtual Dedicated Server with a hosting > company for their plone sites or knew about them? This is where you get your > own > Linux instance on a system shared with other users, with its own root etc. > Companies like jumpline offer this type of arrangement using tools such as > Virtuozzo, Sphera, Xen or User Mode Linux (UML). > > Are there any gotchas with putting Plone into such an arrangement? We are > about > to move a sports club over to Plone and this looks like a good option compared > to shared hosting, but I am concerned about performance. > > What would be the memory requirements for the virtual instance running Plone, > given that its usually not light on memory use normally? Most systems will > offer > something like 128MB burstable to some level like 256MB when load is lighter. > > Any help would be very appreciated, > Thanks, > John > > _______________________________________________ > Setup mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.plone.org/mailman/listinfo/setup > _______________________________________________ Setup mailing list [email protected] http://lists.plone.org/mailman/listinfo/setup
