If you are moving an application which is production ready and hosting it in
dreamhost, then its no issue.

However, if you need to constantly tinker around with it, that is make
changes, add features etc, you will need to keep on starting FastCGI
processes, that gets killed by sys admins, during their routine work.

Any Django web site that needs constant maintenance will almost surely have
a problem if you are hosting @ dreamhost. Its been more than a year, but I
have not seen any move from Dreamhost to resolve or officially support
Django.

Ramdas



On Feb 11, 2008 1:23 AM, Alexey Moskvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Ramadas, I want to run my django website (it is not highload, about
> 1000 visitors per day) on Dreamhost. I have no problems with running
> up Django there, but now I moved all development to local machine
> (according to high latency when working with DH using ssh). But I want
> to move my app there, when it will be finished. What problems do you
> have with jango on Dreamhost?
>
> On Feb 10, 5:24 pm, "Ramdas S" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am sorry. You are probably right. But Dreamhost was a nightmare
> >
> > Ramdas
> >
> > On Feb 10, 2008 7:50 PM, Horst Gutmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > > Although Dreamhost's FastCGI setup is a little weird and quite
> > > restricted to begin with, so I wouldn't judge just based on Dreamhost
> > > that FastCGI is a bad deployment option :-)
> >
> > > - Horst
> >
> > > On Feb 10, 2008 3:15 PM, Ramdas S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > FastCGI support on a shared host is workable, but for a production
> site
> > > > which needs constant maintenance, it might be a bad idea. I've had
> very
> > > bad
> > > > experience with Dreamhost and so has a dozens of others users.
> >
> > > >  As Jeff suggested look at those web hosters who advertise for
> Django.
> > > Or
> > > > else, if you know a bit about Linux try a VPS hosting
> >
> > > > Ramdas
> >
> > > > On Feb 10, 2008 2:04 AM, Jeff Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> >
> > > > > Hello,
> >
> > > > > One way to tell is if they explicitly advertise supporting django.
> > > > > Any other web host that supports fastcgi should be able to do it,
> even
> > > > > if it takes a bit of tweaking on your end.
> >
> > > > > Jeff Anderson
> >
> > > > > Alfredo Alessandrini wrote:
> > > > > > Hi,
> >
> > > > > > I'm a beginner about django. I've a doubt.
> >
> > > > > > How I can verify if an hosting web can support django?
> >
> > > > > > If it support python is sure that django work?
> >
> > > > > > thanks,
> >
> > > > > > Alfredo
> >
>

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