xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? With the Hosting Control Panel CDN, you can gain insights into the traffic and requests accessing your websites. Detailed data sets are collected and presented in charts for each of your sites, providing you with valuable information about their performance. To access the statistics for each site you host, log in to your Hosting Control Panel account and follow these steps: This will take you to the CDN Statistics overview, where you can switch to the Traffic Distribution view. Total Bandwidth - This refers to the amount of data (in bytes) sent through the Hosting Control Panel CDN to the client. It is divided between data served from the origin server (uncached bandwidth) and data served from the CDN nodes (cached bandwidth). Total Hits - This refers to the number of files and sessions that have been transferred using the CDN network. It is important to note that this number does not represent unique visitors. You can filter the statistics by a specific time period using the toggles located at the top-right of each section. Traffic Distribution The statistics also provide a geographic overview of incoming requests to your site, which can be toggled between Last Hour, Last Day, and Last Week. Hovering over a country will display the corresponding figures. This graph displays the number of requests that are encrypted via the HTTPS protocol versus the unencrypted HTTP protocol. It is recommended that you ensure as many requests to your sites as possible are made over HTTPS. This can typically be achieved through a 301 redirect, WordPress plugin, or ensuring the WordPress site and home URL utilize HTTPS. You will also need an SSL certificate to cover the site. Successful Requests - These requests are defined as all HTTP requests in the range of 200-399, such as '200 OK' requests or 301 Redirects. Error Requests - These are defined as HTTP requests ≥ 400, such as 404 Not Found requests or 503 Internal Server Errors. It is important to maximize the number of successful requests while minimizing error requests. If you are seeing a higher rate of error requests, you should consider checking the access and error logs for any data about requests.Accessing Site Statistics
Total Bandwidth
Total Hits
SSL Hits vs Non-SSL Hits
HTTP Successful Requests vs Error Requests
First, go to the package for which you wish to enable the CDN and locate the CDN section.
To enable the main Edge Caching feature of the CDN, choose Edge Caching from the options, and toggle the switch to activate it (Manage Hosting -> Manage -> Edge Caching).
That's all there is to it! Your website's static content will now be cached automatically and served from the closest CDN node to its location.
To clear the cache stored on the CDN node, go to the Edge Caching section and click on the Purge Everything button.
]]>For this reason, it's not necessary to use any additional caching plugins, such as W3 Total Cache or WP Super Cache.
Furthermore, we offer optimization services through our Website Acceleration Suite, which automatically implements web performance best practices to improve website load times. These practices include optimizing images, minifying JavaScript, and combining CSS to enhance website speed.
Therefore, you won't need other plugins like WP Smush, Lazy Loading, EWWW Image Optimizer, or Autoptimise.
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