Yesterday, one of my clients decided to reboot the server because she couldn't print
to her local printer.  It's up time was just over 300 days.  She is the reason
servers shouldn't have reset buttons or power switches that users can get to.

Cory Petkovsek ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote*:
>
>> This is not a usual anniversary perhaps.  The slowest computer we have at
>> Petersen-Arne has been running for 365 days and 21 hours without being
>> rebooted!
>>
>> www:~$ uname -a; uptime
>> Linux www 2.2.17 #2 Mon Jan 22 15:37:02 PST 2001 i586 unknown
>>   1:12pm  up 365 days, 20:59,  1 user,  load average: 0.08, 0.04, 0.01
>>
>> This system is a Pentium 75Mhz with 48mb of memory.  It is running Debian
>> with the 2.2.17 Linux kernel.  It currently is our Webserver and email
>> filter.  The software has been upgraded many times without rebooting, an
>> unfortunate requirement for nearly all windows software.  The software
>> runs as fast as it did when it was installed, also unfortunately not true
>> with windows.
>>
>This is my first year uptime.  Perhaps no great feat for some systems.  What
>other live uptimes do we have out there right now?
>
>Cory
>
>
--
Bob Crandell
Assured Computing
When you need to be sure.
Cell 541-914-3985
FAX  240-371-7237
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.assuredcomp.com
Eugene, Or. 97402

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