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AHosting Blog Home

  • Is WP-Cron Actually Slowing Your Site?

    TL;DR

    We measured before telling anyone to disable wp-cron. An empty WP-Cron check costs 18 ms, just 1.17% of an uncached page load. On 100% of the WordPress installs we audited, the default was fine.

    July 14, 2026

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  • WordPress Memory Limit Errors: Why Raising It in wp-config Often Fails (2026)

    TL;DR The WordPress memory limit error means one PHP request exceeded its per-request RAM ceiling. Raising WP_MEMORY_LIMIT in wp-config.php often fails because two separate ceilings govern shared hosting: the PHP memory_limit and, on CloudLinux, the LVE container cap (PMEM). On AHosting you raise the first yourself in cPanel’s PHP INI Editor with no ticket, while the second rises with your plan tier (512MB Bronze, 1024MB Silver, 2048MB Gold). PHP 8.4 already ships at 256MB, so most sites never hit the wall.
    June 22, 2026
    WordPress memory limit two-ceiling diagram showing PHP memory_limit and LVE PMEM container caps by AHosting plan — AHosting.
  • WordPress 503 Errors Explained: How Many WordPress PHP Workers Your Site Actually Needs (2026)

    TL;DR

    WordPress PHP workers set a hard ceiling on simultaneous dynamic requests, and a 503 error means that ceiling was hit. AHosting publishes its real counts: 15, 25, and 40 across Bronze, Silver, and Gold.

    June 18, 2026
    WordPress PHP workers and 503 errors guide showing Bronze 15, Silver 25, and Gold 40 worker allocation — AHosting.
  • WordPress Hosting for Elementor 2026: What the Page Builder Actually Needs From Your Server

    TL;DR

    WordPress hosting for Elementor requires PHP 8.2 or higher, at least 256 MB of memory (512 MB recommended for Pro builds), a persistent PHP execution model like LSAPI, and server-level caching — infrastructure gaps that oversold shared hosts routinely miss.

    June 17, 2026
    wordpress hosting elementor 2026 infrastructure requirements — AHosting
  • WordPress LiteSpeed Hosting 2026: Why Server-Level Caching Changes Everything

    TL;DR

    WordPress LiteSpeed hosting 2026 delivers a 16ms TTFB at AHosting before any cache plugin activates — 3x faster than Apache plus W3 Total Cache plus CDN — because LiteSpeed caches at the web server layer, not the PHP layer.

    June 16, 2026
    wordpress litespeed hosting 2026 server-level caching architecture diagram AHosting
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