Hi everyone, we’ve had to reduce the duration of the Free Trial accounts. The 60 day trial were attracting too many fraud accounts. A high percentage of the Trial accounts being created were being used for sending spam emails or setting up Phishing sites or clone sites. We were spending way too much time investigating these accounts, and responding to investigative requests from the rightful owners of the cloned websites.
If you signup for a trial account and are not finished with your testing by the end of the 15 days contact sales and request an extension. We’ll be pretty lenient on these extensions as long as the accounts are being used legitimately.
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We have been making lost of changes to the site during the last few days. Most of the changes are on the support section of the site. This section has under gone a major remodel and we have been publishing knowledge base articles under various topics. We will continue to publish more articles in this section. If there is anything in particular you would like to see in this section let us know.
One other items that is now available in the Support area is our network monitoring statistics. As many of you know we have had some issues with one of the servers which we beleive we have now traced down to bad RAM. At any even we decided to publish our Network Monitoring Statistics we use internally to keep an eye on the network. We use the services of WebSitePulse.com to monitor our network.
The published statistics page includes realtime statistics information. Bookmark the link and you will always have the information handy.
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As many of you know we have been dealing with an issue for the last couple of weeks where one of our servers (cpanel1) has been crashing. We have been investigating the issue and have not come up with any definitive issues but today I cam across a graph that may have some clews to the issue. The attached graph shows the connection times from our monitoring software to cpanel1 for the last month. As you can see on 6/16/09 the connection times increased considerably.
The one thing that corresponds to that date is a memory upgrade that was performed on 6/16/09 on cPanel1. We just pulled out the memory suspecting that it may be bad memory. We will continue to monitor the server for the next few days to see if this was the root cause of the issues.
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This message is an outage report for server cpanel1.alurium.com.
The server went offline at 8:31PM PST on June 17, 2009 and came back online at 9:52PM PST on June 17, 2009.
Downtime: 1h 21min
This outage effected all accounts provisioned on cpanel1. If your account is provisioned on a different server your were not effected by this outage.
Cause: We are still investigating the root cause of the outage. The underlying cluster was operational, all host members of the cluster were operational, but the virtual machine (cpanel1) on the host member (AL03) was stuck in an unstable state. The virtual server could not be stopped, rebooted, or suspended. The guest OS was unresponsive and all attempts to gracefully shutdown the system complained of a running task. Eventually we had to force the host member of the cluster to reboot. We are investigating the root cause of this issue.
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Well a new update was just released for Railo and we wanted to upgrade right away. There was a lot of buzz on the various lists of how long it took people to apply the update using the built in features in the Server Administrator, so we decided to time it.
It took only 39.5 seconds to apply the update. That is just incredible. I’ve been using ColdFusion since version 1.5, in fact back then we called it Cold Fusion, and have used various CFML engines during the past decade. But this built it upgrade process is the smoothest I have experience from any vendor.
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We updated our Railo 3.1 build today to the latest release. You can read the release notes of this build to get more information about the changes implemented in this release.
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For those of you who have wanted to sign up for hosting but didn’t have a domain name to use, you know that we allow you to use a sub domain off our ALURIUM.NET domain name. A fully qualified domain name is required because our Railo integration requires that a fully qualified domain name be use to map the host header to the directory path of the account.
Well, up until now you had to ask us to set this up for you because there was no way to automatically test to see if a sub domain name was available for use. Today we released a module that allows you to test the availability of a subdomain in the order form and use an available sub domain and have it provision automatically.
To use a sub domain simply begin by selecting the hosting plan you wish to use. When adding a domain to the account use the ALURIUM.NET drop down from the TLD list and type in a sub name you would like to use.

After you have made entered the sub domain name you wish to use and selected ALURIUM.NET from the drop down menu, click on the check domain link to see if the name you have selected is available. If the sub domain name is already in use by another client you will see the following message.

Otherwise, if the sub domain name is available, you will see the following message with a button allowing you to add the domain to your hosting account.

That is all there is to it. When you submit your order your account will provision automatically and you will have full access to the hosting resources provided by the account level you selected.