Managing Traffic
This document discusses different types of
traffic and related issues:
- Summary Traffic
- Traffic Cycle
- What is traffic limit
and how do I change it?
- Throttle policy
Summary Traffic
Traffic is the data transferred to and
from your website by your visitors plus the data transferred to and from
your mailbox by incoming and outgoing mail. You can also have other types of
traffic that make up your Summary Traffic:
| Type of traffic |
Generated when... |
| FTP User |
... you upload your files
to your web account. If you have any FTP sub-accounts, their traffic
will be included here, too. |
| Virtual FTP |
... authorized or
anonymous internet users download, upload or view files in your virtual
FTP directories. If you administer your account through dedicated IP, it
will be also added to Virtual FTP Traffic. |
| Mail |
... e-mail messages are
sent or received. |
| HTTP |
... internet visitors
browse your web site(s). |
| Real Server FTP |
... internet users
download media files from your RealServer directory. |
| Real User FTP |
... you upload your media
files to your RealServer directory. |
* Control Panel navigation is
not included into the total traffic.
You can see what makes up your Summary
Traffic by clicking the Magnifying Glass icon next to Traffic Details
Traffic Cycle
Regardless of account's billing period,
traffic usage is calculated at the end of traffic cycle which is one month
or less if traffic cycle is forced to close with a traffic limit change or
other events, such as billing period closure, changing to another billing
period, or other plan. For example, if you sign up on March 7 for a billing
period of 6 months, traffic will be closed and reset on the 7th of each
month.
The traffic run up during the last day of
the traffic cycle is transferred to the next traffic cycle calculations.
What is Traffic Limit and
How Do I Change It?
The use of traffic cannot be physically
restricted. This means nothing happens if you exceed your traffic limit that
initially equals Free gigabytes allowed with your account: your
web-sites, mailboxes and virtual ftp accounts will continue to work. Each GB
beyond the limit, however, will be charged at the overlimit rate. To
prevent overlimit charges, you can reserve more traffic by changing your
traffic limit to the bandwidth level you are expecting to have. With traffic
limit increased, each traffic month you'll be accrued recurrent fee for the
whole booked amount, which is usually lower than the usage(overlimit)
charges.
To change traffic limit:
- Select Account Settings in the
Account Menu.
- Click the Change icon in the
Transfer Summary Traffic field.
- On the page, enter summary traffic you
expect to run up over the month.
When you are changing traffic limit, the
current traffic cycle closes, and the following calculations are performed:
- Traffic limit for a traffic cycle is
prorated to the period from the start of the traffic month to the day when
the traffic limit is changed.
- The resulting GBs are subtracted from
total traffic run up by this day.
* The traffic run up during the last day of the traffic cycle is
transferred to the next traffic cycle calculations.
- If the result is positive, it is accrued
usage fee.
- Traffic is reset.
- If at the begining of the billing period
you pre-paid for the traffic limit, you are refunded the recurrent fee
prorated to the time left to the end of the billing period.
- If new traffic limit is higher than free
GBs provided by the plan, you are accrued recurrent fee prorated to the
time left to the end of the billing period.
As the result of traffic cycle interruption
the billing period for traffic becomes different from the billing period for
the account.
For example, you are hosted with 0 free
units, the traffic limit is 6 GB, and the billing period of 6 months starts
1 January. By 15 January, you run up 3.5 GB of traffic and decide to
increase traffic limit.
- 6 GB of month traffic limit is prorated
to 15 days which makes 3 GB.
- Prorated traffic limit of 3 GB is
subtracted from 3.5 GB of traffic run up for 15 days which makes 0.5 GB.
- 0.5 GB of excess traffic is charged at a
usage fee.
- Traffic is reset.
- A new traffic month is open and since
then will close on the 15th of each month
- You are refunded recurrent fee for
pre-paid 6 GB traffic limit. The refund is prorated to five and a half
month left to the end of billing period.
- You are accrued recurrent fee for the
increased traffic limit. The fee is prorated to five and a half months
left to the end of billing period.
Throttle Policy
You can throttle the use of traffic in your
account by delaying or refusing requests to your sites.
To enable the Throttle module, do the
following:
- Select Domain info in the
Domain Settings menu.
- Click the Edit icon in the Web
Service field.
- Scroll the page to find the Throttle
Policy option and turn it on:

- Agree to charges, if any.
- Select the type of policy anc click
Submit:

- Complete the wizard.
- At the top of the Web Service
page, click the Apply link.
The eight throttling policies are:
- Concurrent - impose a limit on
the number of concurrent requests at any one time. The period specifies
how long data is accumulated before the counters are reset.
- Document - excluding requests for
HTML page elements such as images and style sheets, impose a limit on the
number of requests per period. When this limit is exceeded, all further
requests are refused, until the elapsed time exceeds the period length, at
which point the elapsed time and the counters are reset. Note that the
requests (hits) column of the throttle status display does not include the
requests for page elements.
- Idle - impose a mimimum idle time
between requests. When the miminum is not reached, the request incurs a
calculated delay penalty or is refused. First, whenever the elapsed time
exceeds the period length, then the counters are reset. Second, if the
idle time between requests exceeds the minimum, then the the request
proceeds without delay. Otherwise the request is delayed between one and
ThrottleMaxDelay seconds. If the delay would exceed ThrottleMaxDelay, then
the request is refused entirely to avoid occupying servers unnecessarily.
The delay is computed as the policy minimum less the idle time between
requests.
- Original - impose a limit on the
volume (kbytes sent) per period, which when exceeded the request incurs a
counter-based delay penalty or is refused. First, whenever the elapsed
time exceeds the period length, then the volume and elapsed time are
halved. Second, if the volume is below the limit, then the delay counter
is decreased by one second if it is not yet zero. Otherwise, when the
limit is exeeded, the delay counter is increased by one second. The delay
can be between zero and ThrottleMaxDelay seconds, after which the request
will be refused to avoid occupying servers unnecessarily.
- Random - randomly accept a
percentage (limit) of the requests. If the percentage is zero (0), then
every request is refused; if the percentage is 100, then all requests are
accepted. The period specifies how long data is accumulated before the
counters are reset.
- Request - impose a limit on the
number of requests per period. When this limit is exceeded all further
requests are refused until the elapsed time exceeds the period length, at
which point the elapsed time and counters are reset.
- Speed - impose a limit on the
volume (kbytes sent) per period, which when exceeded the request incurs a
calculated delay penalty or is refused. First, whenever the elapsed time
exceeds the period length, then the limit (allowance) is deducted from the
volume, which cannot be a negative result; also the period length is
deducted from the elapse time. Second, if the volume is below the limit,
in which case the request proceeds without delay. Otherwise the request is
delayed between one and ThrottleMaxDelay seconds. If the delay would
exceed ThrottleMaxDelay, you refuse the request entirely to avoid
occupying servers unnecessarily. The delay is computed as one plus the
integer result of the volume times 10 divided by the limit.
- Volume - impose a limit on the
volume (kbytes sent) per period. When this limit is exceeded all further
requests are refused, until the end of the period at which point the
elapsed time and counters are reset.
You can also set throttle policy to None
which imposes no restrictions on a request and used as a place holder to
allow monitoring. The limit currently serves no purpose. The period
specifies how long data is accumulated before the counters are reset.
Remember to apply the changes you have made. Press Apply in the
Web Service -> Server Configuration row. |