Account
View your account details, change your password, understand your resource limits, and get support when you need it.
Overview
Your Havenoro CP account is your central identity on the server. Think of it like your membership profile at a gym — it holds your personal information, tracks what you have access to, and sets the boundaries for what you can do. Every website, database, email inbox, and file you manage is linked to this account. Understanding your account helps you stay in control and avoid surprises like hitting resource limits.
Account Details
When you log into Havenoro CP, the dashboard shows your key account information at a glance. Here is what you will see:
- Username — Your unique identifier on the server. This is the name you log in with and the prefix for your home directory (
/home/username). - Domain Limits — The number of websites (web domains) you are allowed to host. Your hosting package determines this number.
- Disk Usage — How much storage space your files, databases, emails, and backups are currently using, shown against your total allowance.
- Bandwidth — The amount of data transferred to and from your websites each month, measured against your plan limit.
- Package Name — The hosting plan assigned to your account, which defines all your resource limits.
- Email Accounts — How many mailboxes you have created out of your allowance.
- Database Count — The number of databases and database users you have created.
You can find all of this on the main dashboard page after logging in. It updates in real time, so you always know where you stand.
Understanding Account Limits
Your hosting package sets limits on several resources. Here is what each one means in plain language:
- Disk Space — Like the size of your storage closet. Every file on your account — website code, images, emails, database content, backups — takes up space. If you fill your closet, new uploads will fail until you free up room or upgrade your plan.
- Bandwidth (Traffic) — Think of this as your monthly data allowance, like a cell phone data plan. Every time a visitor loads your website, data is transferred. High-traffic sites consume bandwidth faster. Going over your limit may result in your site being temporarily suspended.
- Inodes (File Count) — An inode is essentially one file or folder. Even a tiny 1 KB file counts as one inode. Hosting plans limit inodes because having millions of tiny files strains the server. If you run out of inodes, you cannot create new files, even if you have free disk space.
- Domain / Subdomain / Database / Email Limits — These are straightforward counts of how many of each resource you can create. If you need more, you either delete unused ones or upgrade your package.
How To Manage Your Account
Changing Your Password
Keeping your password strong and unique is one of the most important security practices. To change it in Havenoro CP:
- Log in to your control panel.
- Click your username or avatar in the top-right corner to open the account menu.
- Select Change Password.
- Enter your current password, then your new password twice to confirm.
- Use a password manager to generate a strong, random password (at least 12 characters with mixed case, numbers, and symbols).
- Click Save or Update.
Your password is updated immediately. You will need to use the new password the next time you log in. If you use FTP or email clients, remember to update those passwords too — they are separate from your control panel password.
Viewing Your Resource Usage
Your dashboard displays usage bars for disk space, bandwidth, and inodes. These bars turn yellow when you are approaching your limit and red when you are near capacity. Check these regularly — especially disk usage — so you can plan ahead.
Contacting Support
If you ever need help, your Havenoro CP account page includes support contact information. Look for a Support link in the sidebar or the top navigation. You can also reach out via the Havenoro website or your hosting provider's support system. Have your username handy when contacting support.
Next Steps
Now that you understand your account, the next step is learning how to protect your data. Head over to the Backups guide to learn how to create backups and keep your files safe.