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Date:      Fri, 3 Jan 2003 09:14:35 +0100
From:      Gunnar Flygt <gunnar.flygt@sr.se>
To:        Dave Uhring <duhring@charter.net>
Cc:        FreeBSD Stable <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD Stability
Message-ID:  <20030103081435.GA5619@sr.se>
In-Reply-To: <200301021809.11132.duhring@charter.net>
References:  <200212170023.gBH0Nvlu000764@beast.csl.sri.com> <20030103000232.GA52181@blazingdot.com> <200301021809.11132.duhring@charter.net>

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On Thu, Jan 02, 2003 at 06:09:11PM -0600, Dave Uhring wrote:
> On Thursday 02 January 2003 06:02 pm, Marcus Reid wrote:
> > I like to point people in the direction of:
> >
> > http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/today/top.avg.html
> >
> > The list is dominated by FreeBSD machines with
> > uptimes of longer than 1000 days.
> >
> > Go FreeBSD.
> 
> You do realize, I hope, that Linux and Solaris roll over their uptimes 
> at something like 492 days.

Strange, I do not see this behaviour on one of our Solaris boxes:

Sun Microsystems Inc.   SunOS 5.5.1     Generic May 1996
bash-2.00# uptime
  9:05am  up 1102 day(s), 15:42,  1 user,  load average: 0.07, 0.02, 0.02

So it seems to me at least that Solaris does not roll over. Or should
I say Solaris 2.5.1
> 
> 
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-- 
Gunnar Flygt, Postmaster SR

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