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    Planned power outage: best practice

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IT Discussion
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    • coliverC
      coliver
      last edited by

      What UPS systems do you have. There are a number of them that will attach to either the ESXi host or to the vCenter VM and send the shutdown signal when it reaches a low power threshold.

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      • C
        Carnival Boy
        last edited by

        Shutting down is the main problem. Will a Proliant server autostart when power is returned if the UPS has shut it down cleanly? I'm guessing not.

        Shutting down is a bit of a problem, as I have no way of shutting down remotely as the firewall is a VM. But I also need to start up automatically.

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        • coliverC
          coliver @Carnival Boy
          last edited by coliver

          @Carnival-Boy said:

          Shutting down is the main problem. Will a Proliant server autostart when power is returned if the UPS has shut it down cleanly? I'm guessing not.

          Shutting down is a bit of a problem, as I have no way of shutting down remotely as the firewall is a VM. But I also need to start up automatically.

          Hmmm... we have an IBM server that does exactly that. Restarts as soon as power is restored. It has been tested fairly regularly as we don't have the best power infrastructure in upstate NY.

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • PSX_DefectorP
            PSX_Defector
            last edited by

            Why don't you have an out of band solution like DRAC or iLO? Keep necessary networking equipment on its own UPS, small ones could last for days, then remote in and fire up. I would buy one of those IP KVMs and have a workstation I could access at all times available. Then you can fix other problems as they come up.

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            • ?
              A Former User
              last edited by

              We have a whole building UPS for the DC and offices. We have separate plugs for the offices that just computers and monitors plug into. And in the DC all the power is through a 20kva UPS. in the DC it runs for 45min and will shutdown automatically before that if we do not turn on the generator (normally we will not due to unneeded costs of running it.). The desktops users have to shutdown manually.

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              • C
                Carnival Boy @PSX_Defector
                last edited by

                @PSX_Defector said:

                Why don't you have an out of band solution like DRAC or iLO? Keep necessary networking equipment on its own UPS, small ones could last for days, then remote in and fire up. I would buy one of those IP KVMs and have a workstation I could access at all times available. Then you can fix other problems as they come up.

                You mean do it properly instead of trying to get a away with a cheap and dirty solution? Yes, I probably need to do that. I won't have time to sort for this weekend though.

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                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  Because his firewall is a VM, once the server is down, he has no way to bring it back up. iDrac won't matter in this case. He's have to go back to an external firewall (external from that VM host).

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                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                    last edited by

                    @Carnival-Boy said:

                    Whilst this plan works, I'm concerned about the forced shutdown of ESXi and whether this gives a risk of corruption. But I have no other way of remotely restarting everything as the firewall is a VM.

                    A forced (e.g. power loss) power down always incurs risk. If you have flash or battery backed RAID controllers the risk is much lower but there is always risk that something will fail. As long as you have flash or a battery backed cache then the design is to survive a sudden loss of power. So since those are minimum specs for a business class server since the introduction of hardware RAID, you should be fine as long as your batteries are still healthy (flash backed effectively lasts forever, more or less.) The only major risk here, as long as you have that, is that you are allowing the system to depend on those for protection. Minor, but worth mentioning.

                    Just set the VMs to power themselves on - at least the one VM for the firewall. The others you can bring up manually.

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                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      Something else to keep in mind.... a UPS is designed to supply continuous, clean power under load. It is not designed to necessarily do so when failing - the idea being that a UPS is for temporary dips or loss of power and that either planned shutdown or generator power or full power restore happen before they fail. Failing a UPS means that you are doing battery damage to the UPS itself (this is lead acid still in this day and age) and potentially sending a surge or dip down the line to the unprotected servers at the time of failure. So even if your drives are safe you are stressing the servers potentially beyond what you might intend. Again, not major, but worth mentioning that the protection of the gear is being violated here so what might feel really safe may not be as safe as it feels.

                      No more dangerous than having no UPS and letting the power spikes, dips and drops from the main grid hit the servers.

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                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @coliver
                        last edited by

                        @coliver said:

                        Hmmm... we have an IBM server that does exactly that. Restarts as soon as power is restored. It has been tested fairly regularly as we don't have the best power infrastructure in upstate NY.

                        In central NY that is. Here in Frankfort where I am today the power is outstanding and in the Buffalo/Niagara grid it is really good. But outside of local generation pockets, the center of the state is the area where it is roughest.

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