They are all different because they do different things. For example, the database server is a quad core setup with 16GB of RAM, whereas the search cluster is a dual CPU, high-memory setup (40GB) because it holds everything in memory so results can be delivered quickly. The web server is dual CPU, with moderate RAM (8GB) and high storage to accommodate things like file attachments.
Hi, Do you actually use all that hardware just for this site? Or did you over build it? I'm wondering because I would have thought the whole thing could run on a run of the mill dual core 2gb system. Do you have extra stuff running besides the forum or something? Or is there a lot more traffic on here than I realize?
Frequent backups. I just find that it's way easier and practical to frequently backup and restore to a fresh setup than it is to constantly be managing (and paying for) a bunch of redundancy that you rarely, if ever, need. I mean, I love ET as we all do, but let's face it, what we do here isn't exactly "mission critical".What is your recovery plan if you lose the database server for any reason? Just curious because I encounter this question regularly when planning for high availability.


It's over built a little bit but we definitely use it all. It's the uploading of file attachments like charts and photos, and extensive searches that would bog down a dual core system like you described. Add some peak traffic to that scenario and the whole setup would come to a screeching halt pretty fast.Hi, Do you actually use all that hardware just for this site? Or did you over build it? I'm wondering because I would have thought the whole thing could run on a run of the mill dual core 2gb system. Do you have extra stuff running besides the forum or something? Or is there a lot more traffic on here than I realize?

The traffic buried us to say the least. And it went on like that for quite a while afterwards.But where do you get the fresh setup from on short notice? Do you keep a spare server on-hand?Frequent backups. I just find that it's way easier and practical to frequently backup and restore to a fresh setup ...