On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 21:16:22 -0500, Josh Welch <tclug at joshwelch.com> wrote:
> FWIW, I've never had to reload a Windows server just because it had been
> running awhile, there are a couple I've had running for 2+ years that
> are still fairly solid, though they still like a weekly reboot. 12-18
> months for a Windows workstation is about the limit as I've seen before
> needing a reload, but its mostly because of the innstall/uninstall cylce
> your average workstations sees.

I can say the same.  Windows boxes that serve in "traditional" server
roles (file/print/etc) seem to be fairly stable if you just set 'em up
and don't touch them.  My windows servers at work usually have uptimes
of 4-5 months...and usually then they're rebooted not because they
need it, but because we're changing around UPS's or something else
that necessitates power shut-off.

On the other hand, windows boxes that have shoddy pieces of software
on them (older versions of exchange is an example) can get _very_
unstable...to the point Josh mentioned of them needing weekly reboots
to keep things happy.

My linux boxes at work (we're about half linux and half windows) are
very stable, as you may expect.  With these, reboots only happen if
there's a very long power outage or if a new kernel needs to be put in
place.

-Erik

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