Stormy (Nov 22 2010) |
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Message boards : Technical News : Stormy (Nov 22 2010)
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I'll write today's message early as this week is a short holiday week so we're kinda busy. | |
| ID: 1050343 · | |
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Great and thanks for the info. | |
| ID: 1050347 · | |
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Thanks for the update Matt. Take your time, we will be here when your ready to turn it back on. Maybe soon these good news/bad news messages will turn into only good news for many long times to come. | |
| ID: 1050348 · | |
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Thanks for keeping us in the loop on what's happening, we appreciate this. | |
| ID: 1050349 · | |
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Thanks for the update. | |
| ID: 1050350 · | |
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Thanks for the update Matt. | |
| ID: 1050353 · | |
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If we don't hear back from any of you guys for the rest of the week, I want to wish everyone at the lab a happy Thanksgiving. | |
| ID: 1050364 · | |
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Have a good break, when it comes, and thanks for the update. | |
| ID: 1050366 · | |
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Thanks Matt for the update. Keep up the good work. | |
| ID: 1050389 · | |
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I agree that you guys are doing a superb job, Matt. Having fun with the new toys. :-) And thank you for the update. We are all patiently waiting for for the new systems to go live. I'll just continue chewing on Einstein and LHC w/u's here until then. | |
| ID: 1050394 · | |
It might be a good idea to acquire some backup power units rather than simple surge protectors. Modern ones will allow the the servers to gracefully shut down from battery power when the mains go out, and let the batteries take the hits from surges. Matt has described over the years that all of the servers are each on heavy-duty UPS backup systems. But any surge protectors are sacrificial as they age. | |
| ID: 1050446 · | |
It might be a good idea to acquire some backup power units rather than simple surge protectors. Modern ones will allow the the servers to gracefully shut down from battery power when the mains go out, and let the batteries take the hits from surges. True server grade online UPS systems can be thousands of dollars..... Not the $100.00 APS rigs that some might buy hoping to shore up their living room PC. I have a couple of 1500w units that, due to their age, are probably only still good at surge suppression and voltage regulation, because their battery packs are long past their prime. The lead-acid gel cells used in most backups have a standby life of about 5 years. If you don't replace them at that point, their capacity is much diminished. And they are not real cheap to replace. The best protection is a true online UPS..... They convert the AC mains to DC, keep the batteries charged, and continuously convert the DC back to AC to feed to the computers. The rigs never touch the mains. They are a bit less efficient to operate, due to conversion losses, but they are the best at protecting the connected equipment. And rather expensive. ____________ ****** "Ask not, what your kitty can do for you. Ask what you can do for your kitty." As it is kitten, so shall it be done. | |
| ID: 1050452 · | |
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So, what kind of time frame do you think until the project is back up? Another few weeks? Another few months? Just curious. | |
| ID: 1050462 · | |
So, what kind of time frame do you think until the project is back up? Another few weeks? Another few months? Just curious. From Matt's post in tech news....and my own intuition, I might venture another week and a half, given they are probably on holiday for two days this week. The kitties' best guess. I think they are as anxious to get the show back on the road as anybody else. ____________ ****** "Ask not, what your kitty can do for you. Ask what you can do for your kitty." As it is kitten, so shall it be done. | |
| ID: 1050464 · | |
...Of course, what's a weekend without an unexpected server crash or two? On Saturday afternoon a major lightning storm swept through the Bay Area. Other projects in the lab (located in the other building) had major power outages. Luckily we were spared a full outage, but apparently a couple of our servers got hung up around this time, perhaps due to some kind of non-zero power fluctuation. The servers were thumper and marvin - each located in different rooms, and on different breakers. It is funny that these two machines are our current two informix servers (thumper holds the SETI@home scientific data, and marvin holds Astropulse)... First Matt... thank you for taking time to issue these updates. You can't imagine how important they are to the community. Personally, I hardly ever respond, but believe me that's no indication of their value. What struck me about your post, was the closing supposition... One crash with a storm might be random, not two. Others here have observed that suppression is sometimes sacrificial. I have found this to be true. I don't know if you regularly do any EMC testing of suppression integrity there, but I encourage your group to do so. From your description, I'd begin with the facility grounding system. Good luck, and again.... Thank You. ____________ | |
| ID: 1050494 · | |
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I bought an UPS last summer to protect my SUN workstation from summer blackouts due to airconditioners for 79 euros and it worked well. I remember one summery day at Area Research Park in Trieste when the UPSs shut down because of poor air conditioning in their closet and all Area computers were stopped, including that of Nobelist Carlo Rubbia, who was building the Elettra synchrotron radiation machine. He was rather upset. | |
| ID: 1050506 · | |
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I have seen in the past that the throw time for a UPS combined with a power supply's hold-up time can be very close to being truly uninterrupted. Sometimes if the right conditions happen, you still end up with a brown-out on the DC side of the power supply. Most times the system will just shut off, but sometimes it will just freeze due to CPU/RAM/chipset forgetting what it was doing due to reduced power, albeit briefly. | |
| ID: 1050507 · | |
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Thanks KittyMan. Sometimes I find it frustrating wanting to help in their rebuild in a field that I have expertise in. I'm trying hard not to be an arm-chair quarterback since I do not know all the in's and out's of their current situation. However, when I saw the photos of their server rack I was more than a little shocked. It was hard to believe that they were supporting so many clients in the real world on that setup. I understand that there are financial limitations that make it hard for the seti guys to have the latest and greatest hardware, but a lot can be done with just some common sense and a shoe-string budget. | |
| ID: 1050510 · | |
I bet with a little work Seti could get the cage donated and their costs would be practically 0. I would think their highest MRC would be bandwidth charges. (Hell, if I was given the ability to speak as a duly authorized agent on their behalf, I could probably find them the co-location facility and get a cage donated.) Okay, let's assume that for $0, SETI could get space in a nice data center. They'll still need to pay for bandwidth between the servers (the data center) and the users. Then we have the "tapes" from Arecibo, which are shipped from Puerto Rico, and have to be mounted and copied to the servers to be split. That's bandwidth from Campus to the Data Center, probably equal to what they currently have (and have to pay for) -- and you need that bandwidth to bring the completed work back. Doubling the monthly bandwidth expense may not turn out to be "help" -- and that's why a data center may not be as good an idea as it might seem. | |
| ID: 1050517 · | |
...though I have heard on numerous occasions that discharging the batteries to at least 50% once per month can in some cases double the life of them. Nope. Heat tends to be the biggest killer of Lead Acid batteries. Here in Darwin, if you get 2 years out of a car battery, that's pretty good going. When i lived down south (much further down south) 10 years wasn't unusual. When a lead acid battery voltage drops to 10V, it's as good as dead. Deep cycle batteries can handle such a deep state of discharge, but not often or regularly. ____________ Grant Darwin NT. | |
| ID: 1050531 · | |
Message boards : Technical News : Stormy (Nov 22 2010)
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