Hosting Your Site

To contribute to this documentation, please submit a pull request to our learn repository.

Nowadays, there is little reason not to use a VPS (virtual private server) for hosting your application. Prices have fallen considerably, to the point where they are as affordable as shared hosting.

It is true that a VPS requires a little more effort to set up than shared hosting. However, companies like DigitalOcean have gone to great effort to produce a huge collection of tutorials so that even someone with zero devops experience can set up a webserver on a VPS and deploy their application.

Why you should not use shared hosting

A few reasons that we suggest that you not use shared hosting:

  • Resource allocation. Shared hosting is literally shared, which means that your application will take a hit if another hosting customer's application locks up a lot of memory and/or processing power.
  • Security. Similiarly, if another application on the same server is improperly secured, and the hosting company has not taken steps to properly limit what their customers' applications can do on the host operating system, a malicious agent can gain unauthorized access to the server. This means that they could gain read-only access to your user directory!
  • Support tooling. Shared hosting tends to be well behind the curve in terms of the tools and strategies that modern developers use to make their workflow more efficient. Most shared hosting services don't provide command-line access, and even those that do won't let you install new software on the server. You're stuck with whatever they provide, and you can bet that tools like Composer and Node.js won't be on their radar.
  • Deployment options. Our recommended strategy for deploying small- and medium-sized projects is via git. In contrast, shared hosting providers often only support FTP for transferring files from development to production. This means that whenever you want to update your live site, you need to either try to figure out which files have changed, or delete your entire live codebase and reupload everything! By deploying with git, you can use a simple push command to automatically update your live codebase.

VPS hosting options

DigitalOcean

DigitalOcean is a popular VPS hosting service that offers a flat monthly rate. They call their virtual machines "Droplets", which are priced based on memory, processing power, disk storage, and bandwidth. Each Droplet is essentially a dedicated IP address and computer that you have root access to, and on which you can install whatever operating system and software you like.

Their cheapest option is a USD $5/mo server, which provides 512MB memory, 20GB storage, and 1TB bandwidth per month. This is more than enough to run a typical UserFrosting application - as a matter of fact, we host all of the documentation and the demo site for UserFrosting on a $5/month Droplet.

They also provide a convenient web-based control panel, which lets you perform some basic administrative tasks and monitor your Droplet's resource usage:

Droplet control panel

Promotions

DigitalOcean offers a number of discounts and promotions. If you are a student, you can get $50 in free credit when you register for the GitHub student pack (requires a .edu email address).

If you don't have a .edu address, you can get $10 free credit by using our referral link. This is also a great way to support UserFrosting - if you use this link, we'll also get $25 in credit for our own hosting once you've spent $25.