joao A
My feedback
3 results found
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631 votes
Repeatedly we're seeing questions on when http/3 will be implemented. http/3 is available in the experimental branch of Nginx, called "main line". This is not a branch that is "stable". Plesk only offers stable software versions for the utmost reliability you can get as reliability is much more important than speed. A fast website is of no use if its webserver crashes or the protocol doesn't work as expected in all cases. Plesk does not offer experimental features. The stable version of Nginx that supports http/3 is expected to become available in April 2024. This is when it makes sense for Plesk to also offer http/3.
From articles that foster the hype about http/3, it sounds as if it can increase a website's speed incredibly much. On average, on real website tests by several reknown sources, the acceleration has been seen at around 0.2 to 0.3 s/page, typically around 12…
joao A supported this idea · -
830 votes
Would you mind to try Nginx caching in Plesk Onyx 17.8 Preview?
This would be very helpful to get your experienced feedback here http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/4165754/Plesk-17-8-Preview
joao A supported this idea · -
591 votes
Since Plesk Onyx you will be able to install memcache as a Docker container and configure http(s) proxy rule for it to map to your web app.
Docker and proxy rules are available in Plesk Onyx Preview already, you can try it here https://talk.plesk.com/threads/plesk-onyx-preview-and-feedback.337172/
SE
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Plesk Staff Manual (Last Edition)
Chapter 22) Feature Suggestions
When a client comments about a suggestion not included in our database of what we are going to do anyway, perform the following steps below.
Step 0 - If it's something small and with nobody yet voting, just ignore the issue and move on.
In case it's something with some people bothering us already, publish the text you'll find below.
Step 1 - "Since Plesk Onyx you will be able to install (insert whatever the client is asking for here) as a Docker container and configure http(s) proxy rule for it to map to your web app."
Step 2 - Next.
Personally, I'm not interested in Memcached, but I can understand that some people are, and it's not like asking for something extraordinary, but rather, asking for you guys to do your job. The one for which we pay more every single year.
I stepped in because the things that I'm interested in, have the same answer.
Guys, wake up.
If we, as clients, vote for something, and not only we are ignored but suggested an alternative, in the long run, you're putting yourselves in a weird position.
Why would people pay for Plesk if we can just run everything we want from Docker? Because of Sitejet?