On 22/01/13 22:06, Roger Munford wrote:
> In the early 90's, I wrote a programme which organised home deliveries 
> for a farmer friend of mind. It was optimised for the office staff to 
> take orders over the telephone, the customers being supplied with a 
> printed catalogue. It was written in Foxpro now sadly no longer with us.
>
> In 2005 I wrote a website using PHP and MySQL to enable customers to 
> order online however the main work is still being done by the original 
> programme which hasn't had to change because the business hasn't 
> changed (apart from a few extras like emailing PDF invoices etc).
>
> The delivery programme updated the websites product data and collected 
> orders via a direct connection to the MySQL database via an ODBC 
> connection.
>
> Since 2005 the website has been split on to two hosts, one part has 
> the day to day information stuff and is continually being reworked but 
> the original online ordering part has been left intact - until today.
>
> The hosting company which has been taken over twice since 2005, 
> shifted the website to another server pretty much without warning. 
> They claim to have sent an email to the farmer just before Christmas, 
> just when food retailers are having a quiet time. The probably did but 
> I am sure it was full of techno gobbledy gook justifying their very 
> steep price rise but nothing to alert the farmer that his website was 
> going to be smashed.
>
> It took the best part of the day to get things running again but the 
> killer problem is that they are no longer going to allow direct 
> connection to the database anymore. After a lot of pleading we got 7 
> days grace and a connection from the farm will be allowed.
>
> Clearly we have to go somewhere else. Can anybody recommend a hosting 
> company that will provide a direct connection to MySQL?
>
> The "support" told me that it was a wicked thing to do a huge security 
> risk. Not having been involved in software for several years, I am 
> willing to believe that it could have become a problem, but is it such 
> a risk that nobody will offer direct connections. If so what are the 
> the mechanisms that are unsafe? Also what alternative techniques are 
> available to transfer data between databases.
>
> If you are interested the site is www.sunnyfields.co.uk Click on 
> online ordering to step back to 2005. It is a bit long in the tooth by 
> today’s standards but it was just as fast over a modem and you didn't 
> have to spend a lot of time scrolling.
>
> Thanks for your attention.
>
> Roger
>
>
>
>
>
HI Roger
I not very up on SQL web hosting but have a word with TSOHost, very good 
service very reasonable rate. I got recommend to them several years ago 
by a post on this lug, not looked back since, they have a pre sales 
forum (
http://forums.tsohost.co.uk/) where you can ask questions and you 
will quite possibly get an answer at this time at night
Tim
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