So what's your uptime Jow Forums?

So what's your uptime Jow Forums?

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On my home server:
14:50:56 up 40 days, 20:22, 2 users, load average: 0.00, 0.01, 0.05
I installed some new hardware back then, which is why I turned it off.

Servers doesn't count

>40 days update
>servers
Unfortunately I had a power outage three weeks ago, but prior to that I had roughly a year's uptime on my desktop.

If you want to talk about server:
02:54:26 up 1734 days, 19:39, 3 users, load average: 0.28, 0.29, 0.31

14:58:31 up 5:31, 1 user, load average: 0.70, 0.77, 1.11

I turn my computer off nightly.

I used to have 6 days uptime, but I realized that it was autistic to never turn off my pc, not to mention insecure

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hello my computer has been on for 11 days and 22 minutes ty

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>insecure to not turn your computer off

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Sensitive data on your RAM, S3 state makes any encrypted data sensitive. S4 state is OK.

Why would you keep any encrypted state out of locked memory and not make sure to clear it on process exit?

1 day and 15 minutes.

>Using arch

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>Kernel: 4.18.16-arch1-1-ARCH
>Uptime: 4 days, 21 hours, 59 mins

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>not using the best distro

> 08:33:33 up 58 min, 1 user, load average: 0,29, 0,39, 0,50
rate this please.

Like 5 minutes. My shit gets turned off.

>no UPS
Are you fucking insane?

>what are kernel patches

You realize the frog remains completely unharmed, right?

Four days, five hours.

>inb4 retarded fa/g/gots implying this is on a server
my highest uptime was the one before this, 192 days

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I always turn off. 0 minutes.

About two hours. You too will grow up one day and pay your own electricity bills.

even if he had one, the system would still shut down

So that's non of your business CIA.

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$ uptime
19:47:10 up 12 days, 20:18, 1 user, load average: 0.33, 0.40, 0.39

Debian stable masterrace reporting in.

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3 days on my server. Thanks for reminding me to do updates and reboot

>be archfag
>think that a week of uptime is impressive

This.

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Yes, sweaty

>512 mb ram
Are you living in the 90s

That's a router, numb nuts. Half a gig of RAM is like 8x what an embedded device like that actually needs.

My home server, I've turned it off to add some RAM, it would've been years otherwise

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Finally updated and had to reboot

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I used to have one, but in the end I've had more trouble with it than with the power grid. It seems to me that UPSes are designed to be used with redundant PSUs, so that they can go down for maintenance and testing without affecting the systems they're supposed to be protecting, and I don't have redundant PSUs.

Something that only requires a reboot a few times a year, not shutting down every day.

Furthermore, it's not like a UPS would have been able to keep my stuff running for the ten hours that the outage lasted.

I have to drive from Ohio to Pennsylvania every 30-40 hours because I can't keep the shit running .____.

>He doesn't use suspend to {ram, disk}

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The hell are you talking about? You just plug it in and small outages get laughed off.
I do not recall seeing this info before. Was it perhaps... never mentioned?

How you implement updates that wants you to restart system?

Currently only three days. Before that 18 days. I run a game server on W10, and I din't come home often, so it runs for weeks between reboots.

>You just plug it in and small outages get laughed off.
Until the batteries go bad and you have to shut it down to replace them.

14:25:47 up 193 days, 3:30, 3 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
and I had to restart recently my main server, it had been running for about eight months before:
17:27:19 up 7 days, 14:38, 2 users, load average: 0,00, 0,00, 0,00

Well, there aren't really many of them that affect me, quite simply. The vast majority of vulnerabilities that matter are in userspace components, so not a problem.

It's more power efficient to suspend it instead of turning it off completely if you turn it on every day.

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sigismund@sigismund-hrr:~$ uptime
23:12:58 up 15 days, 1:14, 1 user, load average: 1.39, 1.22, 1.15
sigismund@sigismund-hrr:~$

*****@MSI:~$ uptime
16:21:20 up 0 min, 0 users, load average: 0,52, 0,58, 0,59
*****@MSI:~$

[citation needed]

Ram is hot-swappable, honey.

I'm sure hot swapping RAM does wonders for uptime.

All the top datacenters do it, you ever notice Google never goes down? They add about 2-3 GB of RAM every day by just popping out the older smaller sticks and popping in new bigger ones.

That makes so much sense. It would be terrible if Google had to take their one server offline to add more RAM. I'm sure it's capable of hot swapping.

>bleeding edge distro
>old kernel

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If once every 5-10 years is too much for you, I would hate to see your reaction to car maintenance.