Moz Q&A is closed.
After more than 13 years, and tens of thousands of questions, Moz Q&A closed on 12th December 2024. Whilst we’re not completely removing the content - many posts will still be possible to view - we have locked both new posts and new replies. More details here.
Anyone using CloudFlare on multiple sites?
-
We are considering using CloudFlare as a CDN for a large group of sites. The fees are $5 to $200 depending on many factors. We tried the free trial on one site and were impressed with the results. I am wondering if any of you have any longer term experience with this and performance metrics, etc.
-
Does anyone know how many domains you can have under the business plan? Is that just for one site?
-
Since im here im going to respond to this with a couple of things.
"While Cloudflare offers many optimization services and DDoS protection, many of them break Magento and Wordpress functionality."
I've not had any issue with this. Typically if something does break in WP or Magneto its pretty simple to fix. Personally, i dont run WP sites without cloudflare, its too much of a security issue.
" Implementing caching and Google PageSpeed with Nginx or Apache shows much better performance,"
You should do this anyway....
" Worse though, Cloudflare doesn't allow you to use your own SSL on any plan under $200/moth"
Sure it does, i run 40 + sites on standard Comodo SSL certs on Cloudflare pro without issue.
"If you're a Pagespeed/YSlow nut, they you'll really be upset to learn Cloudflare adds a security cookie to everything, so there is no way to have serve content on a cookie-free domain when using Cloudflare DNS"
Thats a fair point, though perhaps not such an issue in most situations.
"Customer service is also slow and mostly automated, so don't expect great service on unpaid plans."
Again i dont really find this. Most of my accounts are CF Pro but for those that arn't, i dont notice any difference in support level. I know Business and Enterprise plans get faster support but for $200 + a month, i'd expect that anyway.
-
Old post but wanted to add a little. Been with Cloudflare for years but want to switch, so I searched Moz to learn what might happen to site ranking. I'm now neutral about Cloudflare and actually turned off extra services just to use their DNS for a few sites. While Cloudflare offers many optimization services and DDoS protection, many of them break Magento and Wordpress functionality. Implementing caching and Google PageSpeed with Nginx or Apache shows much better performance, especially in Asia. Worse though, Cloudflare doesn't allow you to use your own SSL on any plan under $200/moth. So if you have your own EV SSL, plan on dishing out for this. If you're a Pagespeed/YSlow nut, they you'll really be upset to learn Cloudflare adds a security cookie to everything, so there is no way to have serve content on a cookie-free domain when using Cloudflare DNS. Customer service is also slow and mostly automated, so don't expect great service on unpaid plans.
-
I just looked and....Out of the top 100 pages by views, 90/100 have decreased load time by one half. Pretty serious stuff there. 10 have increases of like 10 to 30% but nothing alarming.
Best
-
Since this seems like this is a pretty active site, how is the GA pagespeed tab showing that things are doing since the switch?
As for as the threats blocked, they just blacklist ip addresses, they are not usually actual threats. Think about when you run a virus scan and it says it protected you from 125 threats and then you just see that it is talking about tracking cookies. Most of the threats are known TOR exit nodes. Which some people use them for things like that, but others use them because they can access content that is blocked in their country.
As far as the file requests, it does help shed file load, which is good. But that is what a CDN would do as well. Both of them do not cache page requests either, so they do not change the actual processing and page loading time of the site. They just change the asset loading time.
-
That sounds like a great plan. Furthermore, on the high-performance sites that you have the higher CF plan on, you'll also get Railgun. I've had a chance to utilize CF's railgun technology through a partnership with a hosting company, and i can say that its quite effective with even dynamic content (unlike most CDNs). Furthermore, it may decrease your overall technology budget by mitigating the need for a separate CDN. Visit https://www.cloudflare.com/railgun to read more about it.
Good luck!
-
Our intent is to subscribe to pro, go with the lower option $5 per month on less critical sites and the much higher options on critical high performance sites. I really appreciate the input and time, I am glad I had one last good answer to give.
All the best,Robert
-
I've been using Cloudflare for about 2 years now with 10+ sites (including 2-3 that receive 20k+ unique visitors monthly), and to be quite honest I have not found a DNS provider that provides the same level of optimization and security as them. I've tried some of the top companies in the DNS industry (including Dyn, which I still use for enterprise DNS redundancy & fail-over), however they all seem to be missing functionality that I regularly use within Cloudflare, which I ended up moving back within a week. Furthermore, performance-wise, I've yet to find a service that can match site load times accomplished with an optimized CF setup.
It does take some time & experimentation to dial in the optimization/security settings within Cloudflare for your particular site(s)/technology, however once dialed in, everything runs quite well. My favorite features are the DNS-based smart redirects (you can create URL patterns which will automatically redirect pages for you at the DNS-level.) along with their DNS-based firewall. The latter stops malicious attacks at the DNS level (it can cut off the hacker/spammer at the DNS level before it hits your serrver, as long as the user accesses your site using the protected domain), and has been quite effective for us for the past 2 years. Furthermore, Cloudflare reduces load times in various ways (caching at the DNS-level, JS/CSS minified, etc). They also allow you to integrate apps such as Google Analytics without having to directly add the JS code into your site.
In regards to Cloudflare optimization, after implementing the proper settings for one of my clients ecommerce sites, we've seen load times decrease by about 3 seconds on avg. Like I've said, it does take some time to get the optimal settings for your specific site, however I feel that its definitely worth it.
I'd recommend subscribing to CloudFlare Pro ($20/month for first site, and $5 for each one afterwards), as it comes with the WAP firewall at the DNS-level (which works almost TOO well. Sometimes detects actions on the backend as SQL injection due to the query patterns), along with SSL support (really cool, you can have SSL connected at the DNS-level). I believe you also get a LOT more slots for the smart redirects, which is invaluable to me. I know I probably sound like I work for CF, but to be quite honest I've experienced nothing but great service from them. The one time I had an issue, I contacted them on Twitter (which they actively check) and they replied/fixed the issue for me within a few minutes.
Hope this helps you make a more informative decision. Feel free to send me a private message if you have any other specific questions. I'll see what I can do to help out.
-
I forgot to post before I hit good answer and it wiped out my comments. Thanks for the detailed response. I will show our info to our head of dev.
Best -
jStrong,
Thanks for the info. I think responded to both you and Prestashop at once, sorry. I like the security features a lot given some client sites are fairly sensitive.
Best -
Thanks so much for the help here. That is the other piece that we liked about what we saw in the initial tests - security. Here is the data (sorry a bit redacted due to confidentiality needs) from our head of development. It is a reasonably large site with quite a bit of traffic over a short time interval ( a few days)
- 126k total pageviews
- 105k regular visitors
- 20k crawlers/bots
- 1.5k threats (which Cloudflare forces to jump through hoops to access the site, and if failed they are denied)
- 523k total requests for files and pages - 207k were handled by Cloudflare rather than having to be handled by our server
- 8.3 GB of bandwidth total - 2.0 GB of which were handled by CloudFlare, reducing our usage and allowing other sites to deliver faster.
I appreciate the info re cookies, I will have to look into that as there may be client concerns. Great help!
-
I personally do not like cloudflare. All is fine and well until a site on your DNS starts getting DDOS'd. Then it will affect your site as well. I tend to optimize a site how I want it and then use MaxCDN as a CDN network. Then you do not have to worry about compatibility issues either, like mentioned above. I do keep a cloudflare account however, I use it to move in front of sites that are actively being attacked.
One thing I don't care for is that cloudflare tracks your users and is basically building up a tracking database. If you look on your served resources there are a couple of cloudflare cookies for this purpose.
-
Hi Robert,
We use them on a couple client sites, more for security then CDN, but the service worked as advertised and their support was helpful when needed. Also, it did not conflict with any of the sites functionality. The client has been using the service since late last year and is satisfied as well.
-
Hi RobertFisher,
I've recently integrated Cloudflare Business into a large ecommerce site (top 50k Alexa). The site had several issues that impacted page load speed, our new visitors were experiencing very long load times in the 4-7 second range.
Cloudflare is amazing for the price. at $200/month it greatly reduced the amount of HTTP requests, minification reduced our page size, and it even saved a lot of bandwidth (which translates to server cost savings and/or more for your money).
Their support service has been consistent, however, I know their Business and Enterprise customers are priority.
Most other CDNs are going to cost far more than $200. It reduced our page load speed around 50%, before optimizing the other performance configurations they have available.
You do need to do some quality and assurance testing. With any CDN, when you deliver certain things differently, like javascript files, a new conflict could arise. For example, our sliders were having trouble rendering after integrating CF, so we had to adjust the settings to get them loading properly again.
Is there something more specific I could tell you about it?
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Do things like using labels on an element that is not a form input affect how google sees us in regards to accessibility?
Do things like using labels on an element that is not a form input affect how google sees us? It's an accessibility error that our devs have made - using a label element because it looks good, not because it's an actual label on a form field. Just wondering how that affects accessibility in Google's eyes.
Web Design | | GregLB0 -
Old site to new WordPress site - Client concerned about Yahoo Ranking
Hello, Back Story I have a client (law firm) who has a large .html website. He has been doing his own SEO for years and it shows. I think the only reason he reached out to a professional is because he got a huge penalty from Google last fall and fell very far down in rankings. Although, he still retains a #1 spot in Yahoo for his site for the keyword phrase he wants. I have been creating a new WordPress theme for the client and creating all new pages and updating the formatting/SEO. From the beginning I have told the client that when we delete the old site and install a new WordPress site (same domain name, but different page hierarchy) he will take a bump in the search engines until all the 301 redirects get sorted out. I told him I can't guarantee any time frame of how long the dip in SEO will last. Some sites bounce right back while others take longer. Last week, during a discussion, he tells me that if he loses his #1 ranking on Yahoo for any length of time he thinks he will go out of business. Needless to say I was a little taken back. When it comes to SEO I use best practice techniques, do my research, stay on top of trends but I never guarantee rankings when moving to a new site. I'm thinking of ways I can help elevate any type of huge SEO drop off and help the client. Here is what I was thinking of suggesting to the client and I would love some feedback. Main Question He has another domain he isn't doing anything with. It's pretty much his domain name with pc added. I was thinking about using that domain to create a simple 1-2 page WordPress website with brand new content (no duplicate content) aimed at attracting his keyword phrase. I would do as much SEO as I could with a 1-2 page site and give it a month or so to see if this smaller site can get into the top #10 in Yahoo, or higher. Then, when we move the site he will still have a website on the first page of Yahoo for his keyword phrase. I hope I explained it clearly 🙂 I would be open to any suggestions anyone may have. Thanks
Web Design | | Bill_K0 -
Can anyone recommend a tool that will identify unused and duplicate CSS across an entire site?
Hi all, So far I have found this one: http://unused-css.com/ It looks like it identifies unused, but perhaps not duplicates? It also has a 5,000 page limit and our site is 8,000+ pages....so we really need something that can handle a site larger than their limit. I do have Screaming Frog. Is there a way to use Screaming Frog to locate unused and duplicate CSS? Any recommendations and/or tips would be great. I am also aware of the Firefix extensions, but to my knowledge they will only do one page at a time? Thanks!
Web Design | | danatanseo0 -
How to bounce back after a new url & new site design?
About a month ago, my company changed domains (from the long-established www.imageworksstudio.com to the new www.imageworkscreative.com) and also did a complete overhaul of our site. We tried to do everything necessary to keep Google happy as we went through this change, but we've suffered a drastic loss of both rankings and traffic. I know that can happen as a result of a redesign AND as a result of a new domain, but I'm wondering how long you would expect it to take before we bounced back and also, what can we do in the meantime to improve?
Web Design | | ScottImageWorks0 -
What's the point of an EU site?
Buongiorno from 18 degrees C Wetherby UK 🙂 On this site http://www.milwaukeetool.eu/ the client wants to hold on to the EU site despite there being multiple standalone country sittes e.g. http://www.milwaukeetool.fr & http://www.milwaukeetool.co.uk Why would you ever need an EU site? I mean who ever searches for an EU site? If the client holds on to the eu site despite my position it's a waiste of time from a search perspective is the folowing the best appeasment? When a user enters the eu url or redirects to country the detected, eg I'm in Paris I enter www.milwaukeetool.eu it redirects to http://www.milwaukeetool.fr. My felling this would be the most pragmatic thing to do? Any ideas please,
Web Design | | Nightwing
Cioa,
David0 -
URL structure for multiple cities?
Hi, i am in the process of setting up a business directory site that will be used in a number of cities, though i am initially launching with only one city. My question is, what is the best URL structure to use for the site and should i start using this URL structure from day one? At the moment i am using www.mysite.com.au as my primary website where it contains all listings for the the one initial launch city. Though to plan for the future i was considering this URL structure: www.mysite.com.au/cityname so for example, if i launch in the city Sydney initially then all website traffic that goes to www.mysite.com.au would simply be redirected (302 temp redirect?) to www.mysite.com.au/sydney. When i expand to other cities www.mysite.com.au would simply be a "select your city" screen that then redirects to the city of choice (similar to www.groupon.com page). How would doing a 302 redirect from www.mysite.com.au to www.mysite.com.au/city impact on SEO for the initial launch? Or should i just place this on the root domain since no other cities exist at the moment?
Web Design | | adamkirk0 -
Should I use the google mod_pagespeed in my apache server?
Anyone already use it? There is some speed benefit? http://code.google.com/speed/page-speed/docs/module.html
Web Design | | Naghirniac0 -
Separate .mobi site or make .com site mobile friendly?
Our website now has enough mobile traffic to justify going mobile friendly, which it is not at this time. I am in favor of making a separate .mobi site designed specifically for mobile phones and smart phones for several reasons. It is cheaper, faster, and easier to accomplish. I think our mobile users will have a good experience though obviously not as much info as our full site. I would use ourdomain.mobi with link or a redirect for mobile users from from the main site. My top three choices for implementing that are http://allwebcodesign.com/setup/mobi-templates.htm#detailsarea
Web Design | | zharriet
Template that can be viewed by mobile or desktop. http://www.onbile.com/ http://www.networksolutions.com/mobile-website/index.jsp Does this seem like a good solution?1