7 years of up time
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@gjacobse said in 7 years of up time:
My wife acts like that's how I drive, but I can assure you, there are a few less explosions.
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@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
It's been awhile. I rebooted a machine recently that had a 300+ day uptime and I thought that was crazy. This was Linux though, for Windows I still think that 300 day would be crazy.
While things have changed considerably since,... but I took a stance when I had a Windows 95 machine running to reload it about every six months. It seem really ridiculous that the system would get so bogged down with crud and such.
Of course it was pretty easy to rebuild from the self booting CD, including Office and such, and update from there, build a new CD and move forward...
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It's very quiet here around here today.
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This guy is as lucky as this kid...
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@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
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@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
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@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
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@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
Linux only relatively recently gained this ability (2 years since I found out about the capability, and ~1 year that it's be included in the kernel.) It's not a trivial process, and nobody outside of Microsoft has any idea if their kernel is even capable of replacing itself on a live system.
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@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
Normally people get fired before it goes that far.
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@aaronstuder said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said:
Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS?
No.
Some can. It's specific to the OS and sometimes hardware.
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@scottalanmiller said in 7 years of up time:
@aaronstuder said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said:
Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS?
No.
Some can. It's specific to the OS and sometimes hardware.
yeah, that's what I was thinking.
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@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
Linux only relatively recently gained this ability (2 years since I found out about the capability, and ~1 year that it's be included in the kernel.) It's not a trivial process, and nobody outside of Microsoft has any idea if their kernel is even capable of replacing itself on a live system.
It's been around at least five years but almost no one cared. So it was not pushed.
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@scottalanmiller said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
Linux only relatively recently gained this ability (2 years since I found out about the capability, and ~1 year that it's be included in the kernel.) It's not a trivial process, and nobody outside of Microsoft has any idea if their kernel is even capable of replacing itself on a live system.
It's been around at least five years but almost no one cared. So it was not pushed.
Ah, I must've just found out about it about the time they started rolling it into the kernel then.
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@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@scottalanmiller said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
Linux only relatively recently gained this ability (2 years since I found out about the capability, and ~1 year that it's be included in the kernel.) It's not a trivial process, and nobody outside of Microsoft has any idea if their kernel is even capable of replacing itself on a live system.
It's been around at least five years but almost no one cared. So it was not pushed.
Ah, I must've just found out about it about the time they started rolling it into the kernel then.
Yes, it was around long before it was rolled into the kernel. But it was mostly edge cases looking into it. Very few people were really that excited about it, which I found surprising even then. But it's true, even today, I don't care that much about it
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@scottalanmiller said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@scottalanmiller said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@travisdh1 said in 7 years of up time:
@Dashrender said in 7 years of up time:
@DustinB3403 said in 7 years of up time:
@aaron said in 7 years of up time:
To me that's negligence not impressive
Oh I agree, but the up time for a windows server ain't to bad...
I mean when was the last time you've ever heard of a server with that kind of up time?
is it impressive though? if you need to reboot to install updates/security fixes, then you need to reboot. That whole uptime thing is just a crock! Something Unix admins love to brag about. Can Unix really update the kernel without rebooting the OS? If yes, then why doesn't Windows do that too?
UNIX, not that I know of (been quite a while), Linux, yes, yes it can.
Then the same question applies, why can Linux do it and Windows can't?
Linux only relatively recently gained this ability (2 years since I found out about the capability, and ~1 year that it's be included in the kernel.) It's not a trivial process, and nobody outside of Microsoft has any idea if their kernel is even capable of replacing itself on a live system.
It's been around at least five years but almost no one cared. So it was not pushed.
Ah, I must've just found out about it about the time they started rolling it into the kernel then.
Yes, it was around long before it was rolled into the kernel. But it was mostly edge cases looking into it. Very few people were really that excited about it, which I found surprising even then. But it's true, even today, I don't care that much about it
At least converting me from the "It's annoying to reboot, the longer I can go between reboots the better" mindset was quicker and easier than RAID 5, even tho most of you never knew the process was taking place.