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cxzar20 wrote: » Most networking issues are not solved from a reboot, IOS doesn't work like Windows. A reboot only happens if there is a memory leak issue causing CPU to rise or something like that (which will later require an IOS upgrade). Nobody is going to touch my network infrastructure if they go around rebooting things. In the networking world there is almost always an RFC reason why something isn't working.
healthyboy wrote: » how come a lot of server and network issues r fixed with a reboot??
healthyboy wrote: » In your role when a network or a issue comes wats da percentage of them being fixed by a reboot in your role?
it_consultant wrote: » Windows won't let certain things happen without a reboot. Ever had to delete the "PendingFileRenameOperations" flag? Some of it is by design. You could mimic a reboot by restarting services, unloading and reloading DLLs etc - reboots, especially in a virtual guest, are easier and faster.
healthyboy wrote: » yeah, ofcourse reboot is my last restore but what do you do if you cannot access da server???? After i reboot i always check da logs to see what was up
like i said previously on my post, ofcourse a reboot is the last option but where i work sometimes... routers or switches just hang, meaning you cannot connect to them the only option is a reboot,
SteveLord wrote: » More like "some desktop issues." Once in a while, it is just easier to reboot as opposed to slaving over the issue. Unless of course...it happens again.
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