On Fri, 4 Apr 2003, Darrell Landrum wrote:

> I once read an article in an IT publication (several years ago) in
> which the author stated that if you are still rebooting your Unix
> servers routinely, your Unix admins don't know what they're doing.
> Yes, the language was that harsh.
> I thought this was ludicrous for 2 reasons:
> 1) The author assumes no applications have memory leaks.  (Uh, yeah!)

Host boot should not be necessary to reclaim memory from an
application that leaks memory.  The process/processes that leak memory
just need to exit or be killed for that.

> 2) Users, developers, (even DBAs) make changes.  Imagine a change made
> which doesn't take affect until a shutdown.  Now, imagine the next
> shutdown 4 months later.  Now, imagine that change broke something. 
> Finding the cause could be a perilous exercise.

But that's not "routine," that's "as needed."  If you have to boot to
do something that you need to do, then booting is reasonable.  I think
the author must have been referring to routine reboots when nothing is
actually wrong, or when the solution to the problem can be achieven by
other means than shutting everything down.

--
Jeremiah Wilton
http://www.speakeasy.net/~jwilton

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Author: Jeremiah Wilton
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