Well, I don't think it's stressing the hardware all that much, when you 
consider our oldest server is 11 1/2 years old, with all its original hardware. 
 Our newest server is somewhere around 7 years old, without a hardware failure 
for at least five years.

I admit I'm not much of a system admin.  I've been forced into that role 
because there's nobody else here to do it. Our hosting provider situation is a 
similarly less than ideal situation, which we're working on.  Bosses kind of 
tend to get in the way of some of these things, too...

I have no idea about SPARC, or any of the real big server environments.  I 
can't even fathom working in an environment with thousands of servers, or why 
they would even need that many.  

And if you have the time and expertise to work through and find the problem so 
it can be resolved, that's obviously better.  But this archaic way of "dealing" 
with the problem actually works -- if a person can do it.  Like I said, it may 
not be practical for everyone's situation, though.  It's certainly not for big, 
professional admins.  For smaller environments, I believe it can be a 
reasonable option, though.

It's not being superstitious, or a victim.  It's simply trying take the easy 
way out, and if it takes care of the problem, then you don't have to deal with 
it any more.  Or at least not right now.  If it doesn't, well, then, you have 
to fight your way through it.  

I think setting up periodic reboots is better as a preventive maintenance 
measure, than as a way of addressing a known issue.  But if nothing else, it 
might just buy you some time until you can work on it more at your convenience.

Oh, and I didn't make this reboot procedure up.  From what I understand, it 
used to be fairly common practice.  I figured some of the professionals would 
take exception to it.  But sometimes, older things can still be better than 
new.  

Unless, of course, you like fighting and beating your head against the wall 
trying to figure out why your system hangs, or whatever, instead of having a 
stable network and spending your time on less pressing and / or more mundane 
things... 

[]:-)

Cheers.

fp



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