Cloudflare WordPress APO and Pro
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My cycling website's hosting server is located in the US right now.
Most of the visitors come from the US, followed by UK and Canada.
But, a large number is also from Australia and the Philipines.
Based on my previous testing, hosting server location doesn't impact page-load speed by a lot.
However, while that holds true for most locations, Australia and southeastern Asia seem to be sort of cut-off. With notcieably longer, slower, average page-load times.
That, in addition to just stupid curiosity, was a reason for giving Cloudflare APO a try.
Unlike the free plan, APO allows Cloudflare to work as a real, proper CDN.
Taking care of cache invalidation, and caching even the dynamic WordPress WooCommerce pages, without any hiccups (mixing cart contents for different users etc.).
That works a lot more trouble-free compared to LiteSpeed.
I also gave Cloudflare Pro a try.
Some extra performance and security options.
This is my article, with step-by-step installation and configuration instructions, test results and comparison with LiteSpeed:
Cloudflare WordPress APO + Pro review
TL/DR - LiteSpeed Enterprise you get for free (included in the hosting price) with a decent shared/reseller hosting provider gets you 90% of the performance gains, so CF APO & Pro are nothing to write home about. But for websites making income, I think they can be a good choice.
I'd like to thank @Ympker for taking the time and helping out with the "visitor subjective feel" testing. Much appreciated.
- What's your take on the Cloudflare's paid plans?9 votes
- It's a waste of money22.22%
- Maybe, for some use-cases55.56%
- WordPress APO is good, $5 isn't that huge11.11%
- It's a must-have for most mid/large sized websites11.11%
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™
Comments
I meant to click on "Maybe for some use-cases". It's already too hot today lol. Anyway, I never felt the urge to use Cloudflare for my own sites, or my client sites. My website is catering to german clients and about 99% of people visiting it are from here, so I wouldn't profit much from a CDN since my website is hosted at Hetzner Germany (MyW) anyway. My clients are also mostly from Germany and their website visitors are usually also from Germany. I put them on Ionos Germany and everything works just fine. The few international clients I have usually have their site hosted on a server in their country but their visitors would also just be "locals" or people from the same country.
Tl;dr: didn't need CF (free/paid) so far, but it can probably help in some use cases (gameservers, internationally facing websites/projects, ddos protection...).
Ympker's Shared/Reseller Hosting Comparison Chart, Ympker's VPN LTD Comparison, Uptime.is, Ympker's GitHub.
You'd see even a bit slower load times on average, for most use cases.
I like CF for the ease of DNS change replication, extra security layer, and averaging page-load times across the globe (a bit slower for those near the server, a lot faster for those far away).
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™
For me the headache is that it is 5 bucks per site. Doesn't matter if it is a reasonable size, but for multiple smaller sites that adds up
Yup - it adds up pretty quickly.
Though, technically, it's per a domain.
I tested with 6 live and a few test-sites, all with just one subscription (subdomains).
But I don't think it makes sense if a website (at least one on the domain) isn't making money to cover the cost.
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™