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    VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.

    IT Discussion
    vultr power outage power management power
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      1337 @1337
      last edited by 1337

      @Pete-S said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

      It looks like Vultr have their servers in colo at the QTS Piscataway NJ datacenter.
      https://www.qtsdatacenters.com/data-centers/piscataway

      The datacenter looks to be the real deal so "a partial power outage to a subset of servers" is probably just a rack PDU failure or possibly overloading of a rack so circuit breakers cut the power.

      Assuming enterprise gear all servers have dual power supplies and each rack has two PDUs. Every equipment draws power from both PDUs. So each PDU carries half the power of the rack.

      If one PDU breaks the other PDU has to carry all power. Now it will get twice the current and if that is too much (if you didn't pay attention to the power draw), the circuit breakers to the working PDU will cut the power to the entire rack and all servers goes down.

      One rack with about 40 servers will probably host a good amount of VPSs.

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      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @gjacobse
        last edited by

        @gjacobse said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

        I wasn’t affected, but I’d be curious to see how the system is designed - over all - and see what the break in redundancy was.

        It's cloud, redundancy is meant to come from you, not the DC.

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        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @gjacobse
          last edited by

          @gjacobse said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

          What do you do when the hosted service has a power failure which brings your instance down?

          Generally nothing. It's rare and generally just a few minutes, it almost never causes actual impact.

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          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @gjacobse
            last edited by

            @gjacobse said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

            Even on a on prem server will have down time from time to time.

            On prem typically as the most.

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            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @1337
              last edited by

              @Pete-S said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

              Since vultr is using consumer CPUs to bring the cost down I bet their infrastructure is at the same level.

              We see fewer unplanned outages than with AWS. How do you feel about Amazon based on that?

              ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                last edited by

                @JaredBusch said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

                Vultr is not a cloud provider, they are a VPS provider

                Vultr is absolutely cloud. Cloud presented with a VPN interface. It's still cloud in every way. Just like Digital Ocean or Linode or AWS (via Lightsail.)

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                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @1337
                  last edited by

                  @Pete-S said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

                  Since vultr is using consumer CPUs to bring the cost down I bet their infrastructure is at the same level.

                  Consumer CPUs would normally do the opposite, that's why enterprises use bigger processors, to get more bang for the buck in a smaller space.

                  But how did you determine that? I just looked at my servers and their specs only match server class Xeon processors (Skylake 16MB L3) so not sure how it is possible for them to be consumer.

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                  • ObsolesceO
                    Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

                    @Pete-S said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

                    Since vultr is using consumer CPUs to bring the cost down I bet their infrastructure is at the same level.

                    We see fewer unplanned outages than with AWS. How do you feel about Amazon based on that?

                    What do you have running in AWS for which you have outages?

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                    • 1
                      1337 @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by 1337

                      @scottalanmiller said in VULTR NJ location: Partial Power failure.:

                      But how did you determine that? I just looked at my servers and their specs only match server class Xeon processors (Skylake 16MB L3) so not sure how it is possible for them to be consumer.

                      I don't remember exactly. A couple of years ago you could determine that there was actually no xeon of that architecture that would fit with the GHz. Since they are obscuring the actual CPU in their linux kernel you can't read the model number outright. I going from memory here, but that was the gist of it.

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                      • V
                        VoIP_n00b @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

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