There are times we as web developers might make a mistake while working on our database and forget to make a backup of the database.
Don’t worry, Everleap has your back. Did you know you could retrieve a MS SQL database backup from our nightly backup?
As a follow-up to our Installing nopCommerce 4.10 on Everleap article, if the Framework dependent package was used to create a store, it can be converted to self-contained relatively easily. In this post I’ll show you how.
In this tutorial we’re going to be installing nopCommerce 4.10 in your Everleap hosting account using the self-contained no-source package.
I’m the Technical Support Manager here at Everleap, and I’d like to offer up my point of view today and get straight to the point of what Everleap is all about.
Everleap has two hosting plans: the Single site plan or Multi-site plan. You can compare the two plans on our website. When you sign up, just choose whichever plan fits your needs. Remember that you can always upgrade from the Single site plan to the Multi-site plan at a later time if you need to. So if you’re not sure what you need now, go with the Single site plan to start.
First, sign up for a site account.
Second thing you want to do is download your site from your current hosting provider:
1. Connect to your current site account via FTP
Ever wanted to try one of our Reserved Cloud Servers but weren’t sure how it would work with your site? Well, we’re allowing current Everleap customers to try out a Reserved Cloud Server for a few days to see how you like it.
What are Reserved Cloud Servers exactly?
All the power you want! Kinda.
Your site (or sites, if you’re on the Multi-Site Cloud plan) is placed in its own reserved instance. That means no one else is on the server, it’s just you. Some of the benefits are:
I have seen nopCommerce go from being a web application that just needed about 300 MB of RAM to being an application that requires a lot more memory just to be installed out of the box, much less run.
Doing a Google Search for “nopCommerce running slow” brings up a number of articles that show this problem to be widespread. Another issue people have is simply installing it and getting it to work on their current hosting service.
So how do we resolve these problems?