• madcat451@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Enterprise server use mainly, to minimize downtime, which is a huge deal there. On the consumer level it doesn’t have much purpose.

      • cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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        3 months ago

        I’m curious, does a 3 minutes power down to replace a RAM stick is that much of a deal in enterprise server that they need to invented a whole new technology just for that?

        • Maalus@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          First of all, yeah. In enterprise, 1000 transactions per second can be a requirement. Second, enterprise servers take longer to spool up than 3 minutes.

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          3 months ago

          Yes. Server boot times are long. Enterprise level NICs and hard drive controllers do a lot of checking at startup.

          Historically, there were Sun servers that could hot swap CPUs. X86 can’t do that, though.

        • JordanZ@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Buddy works in a data center. Ram upgrades on a few racks of servers took him weeks…

          Mind you this was with zero downtime. So spin up a server, move the traffic, shut down/swap ram, boot up server, swap traffic back, repeat until you want to cry.

          • kaboom36@ani.social
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            3 months ago

            The surplus enterprise hardware I have in my homelab takes 3 minutes to just get to BIOS