[conspire] new computer?I
Rick Moen
rick at linuxmafia.com
Thu Nov 22 01:42:44 PST 2018
Quoting Ivan Sergio Borgonovo (mail at webthatworks.it):
[snip a lot]
> And a new UPS.
Rick's rant #327:
Why not a voltage regulator?
Buying a UPS puts about 70% of your purchase money into a huge lead-acid
battery that you'll need to replace about every five-six years, and
all it gets you is ability to bridge continuous operation across
relatively small power outages. Plus, with the right integration
software for your OS, you can get orderly shutdowns when the battery is
about to run out of power. Plus, there's a bit of voltage regulation
circuitry, but typically not as good as the circuitry in a dedicated
voltage regulator box.
So, wow, the battery's because... we don't yet have journaled
filesytems? I don't know about you, but for the past 15+ years, my
Linux systems have all had journaling, which means that when the power
goes down, sure, the system goes down, but when power's restored the
system comes back up undamaged.
Given that my systems have journaling, the threat model of concern isn't
so much blackouts as brownouts -- periods of low voltage and voltage
swings.
Which is what an outboard voltage regulator protects against.
People keep telling me I ought to have a big honkn' lead-acid battery,
i.e., a UPS, but they never seem to be able to tell me _why_ I should
want that. The cynic in me suspect this is because they really haven't
thought things through, and haven't considered perhaps that voltage
regulation without the big honkn' lead-acid battery might be what's
actually wanted.
More information about the conspire
mailing list