do people put there backbone switches on ups supply at moment we have server on there was thinking of adding at least router and one of switches on so that it can notify me when there is a problem etc...
russ
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do people put there backbone switches on ups supply at moment we have server on there was thinking of adding at least router and one of switches on so that it can notify me when there is a problem etc...
russ
Yup, but we did it to improve reliability - power round here goes down regularly.
Yes, I have all our core switches on UPS in case of power failure. This allows me to recieve an email/sms to tell me about the problem. We host websites/media for various people and I need to know if there's going to be any downtime!
by bye
how do you get ti to send sms
russ
Our sms supplier provides us with an email to sms gateway :D
git was hoping found some free way of doing it
:)
russ
thinking of getting a cheap ups for boxes etc what sort of pwoer does ups need for about 4 switches a router p;us few other bits
russ
Try the calculator on the APC site it does specific products or loads to tell you what UPS you need.
http://www.apc.com/tools/ups_selecto...UPS%20Selector
If you are feeling brave, check the power consumption of each unit (in Watts), add them all together. Then compare the result and the maximum running load of the UPS (usually quoted in VA).
VA is slightly different from W so a 1500VA UPS and you have to use power factor corrections (which differ from device to device) The industry standard however is around 60% i believe.
To safely spec a UPS, i would reccommend using the calculator above but if you must do it the hard way, multiply the wattage by 1.6 to give the size of the UPS required
Switches pull 25-50W each, routers and adsl modems (small ones) pull around 20W each, rackmount probably pull some more. From the hardware you mentioned i would put them on a 1000VA unit for decent coverage and some room for expansion.
Remeber if your using rackmounts + aircon you need some way of keeping the aircon going while the servers shut down. Due to the horrific power requirements of aircon that usually means a generator.
arcon whats that :)
russ
We have 4 beige SmartUPS 700s at the moment powering our main servers, which will soon be replaced with a huge rackmount UPS for all of them :) Then we will distribute the small UPSs around the switches.
When/If we get the money 8O
True, but for the short amount of time you want to keep the systems up for, it shouldnt be a problem(ie 5-10 mins).Quote:
Originally Posted by Geoff
Also i wouldnt rely on the UPS to keep the systems up for more than a minimal amount of time, id more look at them for power conditioning (ie brownout and overvolt protection) and to perform graceful shutdowns.
[topic moved to networks board - tarquel]
...and I have all servers UPS'ed [hehe] and have the main cur switch on a ups - admin switches will have UPS' on them as they will be POE ones and will have the ....*holds breath*....phone system on them.
Hopefully in time, the trend will carry on throughout all the switches - to protect the switches more than anything else lol :)
Nath.
Indeed. However a melted rack isn't something I'd personally want to risk.Quote:
Originally Posted by E1uSiV3
Indeed. Thats the point of a UPS. The rules change slightly if you have a diesel generator though becuase you need to keep everything up on UPS for long enough to get the diesel generator online.Quote:
Originally Posted by E1uSiV3