aioe.org is running in casters-up mode...

P

Phil Hobbs

Guest
It was unresponsive earlier this morning, and now redirects to a parking
site. :(

Cheers

Phil Hobbs
 
Phil Hobbs wrote:
It was unresponsive earlier this morning, and now redirects to a parking
site. :(

May not be as bad as that--it was aioe.com that\'s parked.

nslookup finds www.aioe.org and its alias gioia.aioe.org at
46.165.242.91. That address returns a ping, but not http, https, or nntp.

It finds nntp.aioe.org at 46.165.242.75, which is findable by
traceroute, and hosted by leaseweb.de, but pinging comes back
\"Destination host unreachable\"

So it may just be wedged.

Cheers

Phil Hobbs
 
On a sunny day (Wed, 25 Jan 2023 10:51:35 -0500) it happened Phil Hobbs
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote in
<374b4156-6939-a908-6ef4-598d39b65cf0@electrooptical.net>:

Phil Hobbs wrote:
It was unresponsive earlier this morning, and now redirects to a parking
site. :(

May not be as bad as that--it was aioe.com that\'s parked.

nslookup finds www.aioe.org and its alias gioia.aioe.org at
46.165.242.91. That address returns a ping, but not http, https, or nntp.

It finds nntp.aioe.org at 46.165.242.75, which is findable by
traceroute, and hosted by leaseweb.de, but pinging comes back
\"Destination host unreachable\"

So it may just be wedged.
~ # host news.aioe.org
news.aioe.org has address 46.165.242.91

~# telnet news.aioe.org 119
Trying 46.165.242.91...
telnet: connect to address 46.165.242.91: Connection refused

So its down.
There was a lot in the news about Microsoft email outlook stuff not working today....
Seems they did some update... that did not work right.
Maybe messed up more than just Microsoft...

Traceroute from here to the last IP with a response gives
~ # ip_to_country -i 195.122.182.146
ip=195.122.182.146 (3279599250) \"GB\" \"UNITED KINGDOM\"

I recently (few days ago) changed newsserver to solani.org, as eternal september has irritating log delay times
and was 100% down too a few days back, then I emailed them, then it worked again...
still very slow..
solani so far is OK.
 
Does someone know some more about this? Did they discontinue the NG service?

--
For full context, visit https://www.electrondepot.com/electrodesign/aioe-org-is-running-in-casters-up-mode-3373946-.htm
 
Someone posted on the Thunderbird newsgroup (alt.comp.software.thunderbird):

\"The RAID controller failed and its failure damaged the
contents of the disks. Today or tomorrow they let me know
what can be recovered, if nothing the recovery times will
be long\"

--
For full context, visit https://www.electrondepot.com/electrodesign/aioe-org-is-running-in-casters-up-mode-3373946-.htm
 
On 29/01/23 07:15, RainerBielefeld wrote:
Someone posted on the Thunderbird newsgroup
(alt.comp.software.thunderbird):
\"The RAID controller failed...
Repeat after me: \"RAID is not a backup strategy\"
 
RAID 1 does mirror the drives, so that is effectively a backup strategy *for the failure of one drive*, but if the RAID controller goes wonky (as is apparently the case here), then it can corrupt data both drives, so you do need a totally separate backup that does not involve the RAID controller.

Of course, that separate backup is no use if the whole building burns down, so you also need a separate backup in a different location, preferably elsewhere in the world in case the entire city gets damaged by a natural disaster. (If the entire world gets damaged, then you\'ve probably got bigger problems to worry about. :) )

--
For full context, visit https://www.electrondepot.com/electrodesign/aioe-org-is-running-in-casters-up-mode-3373946-.htm
 
On 1/29/2023 4:45 PM, Charlie Brown wrote:
RAID 1 does mirror the drives, so that is effectively a backup strategy *for
the failure of one drive*, but if the RAID controller goes wonky (as is
apparently the case here), then it can corrupt data both drives, so you do need
a totally separate backup that does not involve the RAID controller.

How does having a RAID act as a backup if you DELETE THE FILE?

A *backup* lets you recover a file that you accidentally (or,
inappropriately) deleted. Or altered. RAID (any level) will
cheerfully delete (or alter) all signs of the file from all media
involved.

RAID just protects against drive failures. You can lose data for
any number of reasons (including the above) and RAID won\'t help
you at all. But, a BACKUP will!

Of course, that separate backup is no use if the whole building burns down, so
you also need a separate backup in a different location, preferably elsewhere
in the world in case the entire city gets damaged by a natural disaster. (If
the entire world gets damaged, then you\'ve probably got bigger problems to
worry about.  :) )
 
On Sun, 29 Jan 2023 10:52:35 +1100, Clifford Heath wrote:

Repeat after me: \"RAID is not a backup strategy\"

Raid 1 is a bandaid
Raid 5 is two bandaids crossed over
Raid 10 is surgical silver oxide gauge plaster
 
There you go being all logical and stuff. I suspect it\'s more of a \"we need to buy new (and expensive) hardware to run something that we don\'t make any money from\" problem.

--
For full context, visit https://www.electrondepot.com/electrodesign/aioe-org-is-running-in-casters-up-mode-3373946-.htm
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top