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Roman Kozhevnikov2015-05-03 01:17:11
CMS
Roman Kozhevnikov, 2015-05-03 01:17:11

What is the speed of different CMS?

As far as I understand, the load on hosting can depend on the choice of CMS at times. At the same time, other characteristics of the CMS are of little interest to me: thanks to various plugins, you can adapt any CMS to your needs. Therefore, I am interested in the ratio of speed to simplicity. I need to understand how much savings on hosting I will get, and whether it is worth learning something new because of this (for example, frameworks or even MySQL). Of course, the speed depends not only on the CMS, but also on its use: a blog, an online store, a social network. I'm interested in specific numbers, or where they can be found. Something like "CMS1 is best for blogging, and 10 times faster than CMS2, but CMS3 is 4 times faster for an online store than CMS1 + e-commerce plugin", "In MySQL, you can write a procedure that will happen 500 times faster,

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5 answer(s)
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Sergey, 2015-05-03
Protko @Fesor

thanks to various plugins, you can adapt any CMS to your needs.

That is, plugins do not add load? I'll disappoint you, but even if you find the most lightweight CMS, load it with plugins, it will also cause a load.
Another question is that you can take the good old wordpress, put a cacher on top (there are a lot of plugins for this, even with Varnish integration) and enjoy life.

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Andrey Andreev, 2015-05-03
@b0nn1e

MODX is fast. Especially the EVO branch. A very flexible caching system, up to saving the page cache with various get parameters, and no database calls at all.

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Anton Yankovsky, 2015-05-03
@webpavilion

A universal CMS on which a blog, an IM and a social network can be assembled, by definition, cannot be "fast". Need speed, look for specialized platforms. You need versatility, put up with the shortcomings. I recommend that you take a closer look at drupal, if you prepare it correctly with a load of problems, there should be no problems.

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Pavel K, 2015-05-03
@PavelK

Slightly wrong question.
Out of the box, "bare" CMS almost all work quickly.
The main thing is just additions, and third-party developers write them, and manage to ruin any performance.
Personally, I am for WP, alas, but I cannot provide the facts.
But because of the simplicity, there are a lot of curve additions.
I use it exclusively as a developer for my own plugins or trusted others.
For a long time I was on Drupal, in terms of system load, version 6 and 7 are ahead of the rest.
What kind - specify what exactly you want to create.
Maybe you should use frameworks instead of ready-made CCMs?

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Online store without Php, 2016-03-29
@HEEG

You can use a CMS that does not use server scripts and databases at all. Accordingly, the load on the server will be zero, which means the maximum speed. for example, CMS HEEG.HTML has both a blog and an online store.

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