The prevalence of servers and server programming languages ​​in Runet

    When crawling the Openstat crawler, while crawling Runet, Baynet, Uanet sites, as well as popular Russian-language sites from other domains, it collects monthly technometrics for 4.67 million active hosts (out of 6 136 378 respondents).
    The technologies used (Powered by) are the longest (in the sense of “Long Data”) data that it collects: the number of positions here significantly exceeds the other metrics - 12,400. It is inconvenient to work with them, and therefore for the purpose I will show only the initial rows of the original table for Those who want to know what are the most fashionable versions of PHP today.

    The prevalence of server-side programming languages, Openstat study, June 2014
    PoweredByAll.ru.su.rf.by.uaother
    PHP / 5.2.173815273153075596323779451130975699
    PHP / 5.3.28264135224961392423420566035562614
    PHP / 5.3.3-7 + squeeze17169218164226103017702311147814
    PHP / 5.3.3-7 + squeeze19165025157370122027744242302935
    PHP / 5.3.312720510956017319916116430721762
    ASP.NET718206301922486522  31
    PHP / 5.3.1368889586661724771372284430
    PHP / 5.3.2767434556009724304332821891041


    We get a more visual picture by combining the basic technologies used.



    Powered byTotalShare
    PHP 5.3926 25420.97%
    PHP 5.2693 53915.70%
    PHP 5.4162 4033.68%
    ASP.NET68 6011.55%
    PHP 4.430,1700.68%
    PHP 5.116,8790.38%
    PHP 5.59 6270.22%


    The percentage of all Russian-language sites, including non-traffic ones, is indicated.

    Forum engines

    It is interesting that among the subscribers of the hubs “CMS”, “Hosting” and “PHP” there is a very large intersection of the audience.



    Therefore, for readers of my two previous notes ( I , II ), another chapter is proposed related to both CMS and PHP.
    The same notes explain, and what kind of column is “Other”.

    The most common forum engines according to Openstat data at the end of 2013.



    Fresh data is more clearly studied in the form of a table.

    The prevalence of forum engines, Openstat research, June 2014

    Forum engineAll.ru.su.rf.by.uaotherLicense
    phpBB74225684188735100373342free
    IPB6309525919925843224326paid
    vBulletin5116416412229238196304paid
    SMF235618486215143138114free
    Xenforo964780335581474paid
    MyBB.ru64863042237free
    Punbb561523129296free
    Mybulletinboard1057811 817free
    Yabb736433111free
    Vanilla7052114 3 free
    iKonBoard6957 9 12free
    YetAnotherForumNET2417 2 23free
    exBB21fifteen13  2free
    WR-Forum105 2 21free
    Dleforum1010     free
    bbPress31    2free
    UseBB11     free


    What was popular with us was analyzed: for example, the code for defining the FlashBB, stokesit, and podium forums is now commented out, because such forums are not found in Runet.

    And since the language used is almost all of the forum engines mentioned, PHP, you can enrich the above table by pointing to the databases used.

    DbbbPress Mybb phpBB punBB SMF UseBB Vanilla vBulletin Yabb YetAnother
    MySQLYesYesYesYesYesYesYesYesNotNot
    PostgresNotYesYesYesYesNotNotNotNotNot
    OracleNotNotYesNotNotNotNotNotNotNot
    SqliteNotYesYesYesYesNotNotNotNotNot
    TextfilesNotNotNotNotNotNotNotNotYesNot
    Other  FireBird 2.0+, MSSQL 2000+Not MySQLi (4.1, 5.x)Not backup / restore system; YaBB 3Microsoft SQL Server


    Web server prevalence, Openstat data, June 2014. The

    second cumbersome technology report of the Openstat crawler is server coverage: 950 lines, of which the most significant are about leaders.

     All.ru.su.rf.by.uaother
    nginx2738947229808444,400268514394616143627052
    Apache10396498593301869392550138842642328769
    Microsoft IIS792206033215196549268721805953
    LiteSpeed60416530667535531242252572
    uServ5600941401727362728285561416
    QRATOR1240094653241654206619132
    lighttpd7851657223743041202369
    openresty2049160821412161
    Datapalm17091545341173 10
    Netnames1628121021204175414
    CommuniGatePro1282989581249984
    IdeaWebServer / v0.80115710731127748


    These and other reports demonstrate not only the superiority of one system over another, but also examples of “behavioral economics” when decisions can be made not from rational considerations, but from what is fashionable, accepted, studied, imposed ... in short, from a variety of motives, from noble to petty. When such reports are made by industry and market niche, they become more meaningful, but still this type of Internet statistics is still in search of itself.

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