▲ | sgarland 6 days ago | |||||||
Yep. I know people will say, “it’s just a homelab,” but hear me out: I’ve ran positively ancient Dell R620s in a Proxmox cluster for years. At least five. Other than moving them from TX to NC, the cluster has had 100% uptime. When I’ve needed to do maintenance, I drop one at a time, and it maintains quorum, as expected. I’ll reiterate that this is on circa-2012 hardware. In all those years, I’ve had precisely one actual hardware failure: a PSU went out. They’re redundant, so nothing happened, and I replaced it. Servers are remarkably resilient. EDIT: 100% uptime modulo power failure. I have a rack UPS, and a generator, but once I discovered the hard way that the UPS batteries couldn’t hold a charge long enough to keep the rack up while I brought the generator online. | ||||||||
▲ | whartung 6 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Being as I love minor disaster anecdotes where doing all the "right things" seem to not make any difference :). We had a rack in data center, and we wanted to put local UPS on critical machines in the rack. But the data center went on and on about their awesome power grid (shared with a fire station, so no administrative power loss), on site generators, etc., and wouldn't let us. Sure enough, one day the entire rack went dark. It was the power strip on the data centers rack that failed. All the backups grids in the world can't get through a dead power strip. (FYI, family member lost their home due to a power strip, so, again, anecdotally, if you have any older power strips (5-7+ years) sitting under your desk at home, you may want to consider swapping it out for a new one.) | ||||||||
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