I agree that the MTBF can be very misleading...

But put it this way:  My server ran 2.2.14 for over 400 days before I
rebooted it.  It was down for about 5 minutes while rebooting (probably
less).

My NT Server gets a nightly reboot.  I can't get it to run for more than a
week without it developing _some_ problem.

Mind you, on both of these systems, nobody is doing any development/kernel
hacking/anything.  They're just mail/www/ftp/dns/login (for linux) servers.
To a first order approximation, they're basically the same hardware, both
protected by a UPS.

Matt

On Fri, Sep 01, 2000 at 10:38:54PM +0200, Igmar Palsenberg wrote:
> On Fri, 1 Sep 2000, Jim Garlick wrote:
> 
> > Can someone point me to MTBF data for Linux?  I realize this is kind of
> > vague.  Ideally I would like MTBF for kernel 2.2.14 running on SMP Alpha,
> > but any data is better than nothing.  This is to help win an argument to 
> > put linux on a large cluster.  Thanks in advance.
> 
> MTBF is something that says shit. depends on hardware, what the machine
> does, if it has a UPS, etc, etc, etc, etc.
> 
> This machine is running 2 years without problems.
> 
> > Jim Garlick
> 
> 
>       Igmar
> 
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-- 
Matthew Dharm                              Home: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Maintainer, Linux USB Mass Storage Driver

M:  No, Windows doesn't have any nag screens.
C:  Then what are those blue and white screens I get every day?
                                        -- Mike and Cobb
User Friendly, 1/4/1999
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