How is it possible to be running a maintenance mode page since this disruption started - having relocated the site elsewhere - and still have problems?
Black box or no black box.
That’s what I mean about coming clean.
You’re a re-seller, you have no access to anything important hence the black box analogy.
A “maintenance mode page” doesn’t mean that the CPU consumption of the page is low. You could create a page which says the site is under maintenance and subsequently tries to mine bitcoins on the server. Content does not cause high CPU usage, code does. And your “maintenance page” is using WordPress, and WordPress can definitely use a lot of CPU power depending on how it’s configured.
I also checked your suspension history and it appears that your website was suspended for high entry process usage. Entry process usage is primarily affected by website traffic. So your website must be getting quite some traffic, especially to PHP pages, or you would not be hitting that limit.
So you’ve got a potentially substantial amount of traffic (for free hosting at least) with a potentially quite resource hungry software. And if that’s the case, it’s not exactly surprising that you’re hitting resource limits.
If your maintenance mode page is static HTML, then this would be cause for concern. But you’re using a big application to serve the page, so whether it’s a maintenance mode page, blog or information website doesn’t matter in the slightest.
As a hypothetical example of a script that generates high server load. It’s not an accusation. I haven’t looked at the contents of your website in detail.
If you could please read my previous message past the first two sentences, you would see that traffic doesn’t fully explain server load.
And I’m not sure what kind of statistics you’re looking to post, but remember that server access logs and analytics metrics can vary. Some visitors (esp. bots) may cause your PHP code to execute but not trigger your analytics code. So the server may record more traffic than your analytics. Analytics systems are useful tools to learn how people interact with your website. They do not tell you anything about server load.
My static, 0-traffic, non-wordpress site (which used like 6 html and a couple css files was also suspended. Any way to fix it and get it back up now that I read that some of the stuff is fixed or is it done and I have to move hosting?
Of course, the admin will fix all false-suspensions. I recommend making a new topic for it, to make sure the admin notices, and make sure to include your domain name.
I checked your account, and I don’t see any record of any suspensions having occurred on it. I don’t know what you can see that makes you believe that your account was suspended, but I can tell you that this information is not correct.
If you’re still having trouble with your account, can you please create a new topic and describe the issue there?
Before you call me, or people who believe me, a fool, would you actually be interested in having a civilized debate with me to figure out what’s causing this?
If you’re looking for somewhere to start, could you please re-read my last few replies and reply to their contents? If you can ask questions, provide reactions or provide evidence to the contrary, I would be happy take it into consideration and have a civilized discussion.
I do think it’s very brave to call people fools when your only “evidence” is a screenshot of Google Analytics, just after I specifically explained why analytics tools can’t measure server usage.
If you don’t want to debate with me, that’s fine. But then what is it you’re trying to achieve here? Are you trying to fish for free services? To defame me and my service? To just vent your anger? I really do want to help you, but I can’t do that if you just accuse me of lying and cheating, and simply ignoring any argument I make to the contrary.
Please state your intent so I can help you realize it to the best of my abilities. Because I have honestly no clue as to why you’re still bothering to write these messages.