On Tue, 2007-02-13 at 12:06 +0100, D Ivago wrote:
Hi,
I was just wondering if I should reboot some servers that are running over 180 days?
They are still stable and have no problems, also top shows no zombie processes or such, but maybe it's better for the hardware (like ext3 disk checks f.e.) to reboot every six months...
I only reboot on kernel upgrades, that is usually more often than 6 months. But if you don't need to reboot for that reason, I would not reboot at all.
btw this uptime really confirms me how stable Centos 4.x really is and so I wonder how long some people's uptimes on the list are ;)
rmc
You should consider upgrading your kernels when security updates come out ... just to be safe. Especially for machines touching the internet.
I usually upgrade my kernels because I like to use LVM snapshots for backups and that has only really started working semi-well since 4.3 and even better in 4.4 ... so most of my machines get rebooted every new kernel, which is at least 2-3 times a year (sometimes more often).
That being said, I do have a non internet facing machine that has not been rebooted since it was installed with CentOS-4.0 on it one March 1, 2005. It is an internal router on my employer's infrastructure, and has been up for almost 2 years (and was installed on the day before CentOS-4 was officially released).
Thanks, Johnny Hughes