Posted by drow on the 22nd of May, 2007 at 3:54 pm under tech.    This post has no comments.

The machine (formerly) hosting this blog was a dedicated server. I’ve got nothing bad to say about the hosting company, but it had the usual pitfalls of dedicated hosting. It was very expensive, which is why I split the service with two friends. We underutilized it. They didn’t provide backup services, so I ran my own using rdiff-backup - I won’t tell you how long I ran it before I bothered to set that up, though. And when something went wrong it could take quite a while to get the machine fixed and running again. Fortunately that only happened twice in all the time we were there. Anyway, our contract with them was up in February, and we decided not to renew. Since all of us were insanely busy at the time we decided to pay the higher monthly rate for three months to give us some time to migrate off. Which of course I left to the last minute.

This blog is one of the first services I’ve moved to my new hosting at Slicehost. I don’t have a lot to say about these guys yet, since I haven’t had any trouble. The only downside was catching them at a somewhat turbulent and resource-starved time as they dealt with a wait list for orders, so it took a month for me to get one. They’re working on that problem, though. Towards the end I was checking every two days or so how long it said I’d have to wait. Note to everyone, progress bars that don’t progress are just infuriating. But I happened to check one day during the five minute window between when they sent me confirmation and when my mail client checked for new mail, and poof there it was.

This is virtual hosting - Etch on Xen - thus the “slice” naming. They’re a heavy on automation shop, which fits right in with my style. And there is something so viscerally awesome about entering your credit card number, clicking OK, having their software allocate and create a virtualized disk, bootstrapping Etch onto it, and showing you its IP and root password. It doesn’t get much better than that. So far I’m happy.

I took the opportunity to move to WordPress, away from my old hacked up Blosxom installation. WordPress imported entries easily, although I had to manually fudge the RSS file to prevent it from inserting a log of bogus <br> tags that I didn’t want in the middle of my paragraphs. I probably could have gotten comments imported too, but I didn’t bother - sorry folks, well, it’s not like there were a whole lot of them. The Debian WordPress packages work fine, although the configuration is a bit messy; my biggest complaints were the centralized upload and themes directories so that I had to mess around with symlinks in /usr to get everything going.

Maybe I’ll actually use it more :-) I hacked up the GUIDs a bit by hand, so this shouldn’t flood planet, but here’s hoping.

Next step: migrating email service to the new system. Always a joy.



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