• Hi, Pleskians! We are running a UX testing of our upcoming product intended for server management and monitoring.
    We would like to invite you to have a call with us and have some fun checking our prototype. The agenda is pretty simple - we bring new design and some scenarios that you need to walk through and succeed. We will be watching and taking insights for further development of the design.
    If you would like to participate, please use this link to book a meeting. We will sent the link to the clickable prototype at the meeting.
  • (Plesk for Windows):
    MySQL Connector/ODBC 3.51, 5.1, and 5.3 are no longer shipped with Plesk because they have reached end of life. MariaDB Connector/ODBC 64-bit 3.2.4 is now used instead.
  • The Horde webmail has been deprecated. Its complete removal is scheduled for April 2025. For details and recommended actions, see the Feature and Deprecation Plan.

Migrate Plesk 12.5 to AWS or DigitalOcean

William Hudson

New Pleskian
I've been running a small VPS using Plesk on hosted servers for some years, but providers are now charging a lot for a decent backup facility. Our previous provider let us do container backups using Virtuozzo for free, which worked fine. But our latest provider isn't using Virtuozzo and wants more than the cost of the VPS per month to provide a similar facility. They've rented us a chunk of local storage to do file copies to, but I have low confidence that we could restore our system directly from this in case of emergency.

So I'm thinking of taking up a cloud service like DigitalOcean or Amazon AWS and running Plesk on there. I gather I can migrate my existing Plesk 12.5 from Ubunto to CentOs if need be, so which would be the best way to go? I am already an AWS customer in a small way (some S3 and Route53 usage - a whole 30 cents a month:) and don't mind learning how to use EC2. But would this be gross overkill? Performance isn't a huge issue for us and we already have a relationship with Amazon (although I've never had to use their support services). On the other hand I've read good things about DigitalOcean. Both serve the UK so that doesn't appear to be an issue. However, I get the impression that Amazon might be better at dealing with large-scale problems like DDOS or data security issues. I like, for example, that AWS now has two-factor authentication for their console.

I'd be interested to hear from anyone with experience of both.
 
Back
Top