On 12/19/08 13:09, Nate Duehr wrote:
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 08:42:15PM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
On 12/17/08 19:51, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
As far as I know, Debian doesn't have an installer feature like
OpenBSD's where you can boot the installer, set up the disk partitions,
and run restore right from there (from tape, presumably a raw drive
partition as well, I don't know).
That's one "large-systems" feature which Linux really misses.
Real large-systems aren't taken off-line or ever restored from that low
a level, usually.
If they are, it's because there was 8 feet of water in the server room,
Or an idiot plumber with a brazing torch sets off the sprinklers,
which dump thousands of gallons of water, which, naturally, flow
down to the sub-basement data center, dropping right down on top of
"my" SAN.
and even then, you probably failed over to your cold-site before it got
that bad.
Unless the gov't agency who's contracted with you is too cheap to
pay for a cold-site. (Of course, after the "rain shower", they
wised up and now pay for the cold site.)
If you just had a hardware failure, you're probably already running on
the warm/hot spare system by the time you look into it.
So... you might be thinking "mid-sized" PC-based systems. ;-)
No, these actually are large systems. A combination of Z/OS,
OpenVMS and HP-SUX all in a 24x364 DC. Lots and lots of tape silos
and twice daily visits from Iron Mountain couriers.
--
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA USA
How does being physically handicapped make me Differently-Abled?
What different abilities do I have?
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