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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users emergency shutdown best practices. Post 302244746 by avronius on Wednesday 8th of October 2008 02:16:42 PM
Old 10-08-2008
If you have more than 15 minutes to plan for "emergency shut down" of your servers, I'd recommend:

1. All applications that are running have corresponding startup and shutdown scripts in rc.*
2. Identify the order that your hosts should be shutdown in - NIS or LDAP should shutdown last, NFS servers second last... NTP would go first...
3. Write scripts.
You need to send a wall to all users connected informing them of an impending outage.
You need to ensure that you send the right shutdown options to the right OS types.
You need to create for each command that you are sending - for audit and CYA purposes later.
4. Inform your business/clients/users that these are the "emergency shutdown" procedures. Get them to sign-off and buy into them. If they have special requirements, amend your policy to include those.

Ensure that you have adequate time to shutdown storage devices that may have a great deal of data in cache. Ensure that you have adequate time to shutdown tape storage systems, as the robotics may need more time to get to "home" than you might expect.

There is no shortage of things that you could do, but this should get you started.

Last edited by avronius; 10-08-2008 at 03:17 PM.. Reason: Grammer
 

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SHUTDOWN(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       SHUTDOWN(8)

NAME
shutdown - graciously close the system down SYNOPSIS
shutdown [-hrRmk] [-x code] [time-specification [message]] DESCRIPTION
Shutdown is a program which allows a system operator to close down the system in an nice way. Shutdown informs the users why and when the system is going down. This warning is issued 10 minutes before shutdown time and every minute in the last 5 minutes. At this time (5 min- utes), shutdown creates a file /etc/nologin to prevent new users from logging in. Shutdown keeps a logfile of shutdowns. Every shutdown is registered in /usr/adm/wtmp, if this file exists. After these actions, a call is done to reboot(2) which actually brings the system down. Time-specification may be something like 15:00, 15.00, +15, or now for a shutdown at 3pm (twice), 15 minutes from now, or immediately. The message may be used to describe why the system is going down, it may also be typed on standard input with the -m option. OPTIONS
-h This flag prevents the system from rebooting after the shutdown. The system can now be powered off. This is the default. -r This flag indicates that the system should reboot after shutting down. -R Reboot the system by resetting it. Normally the kernel will try to return to the Boot Monitor. With -R the system will receive a hardware reset. -x code Halt the system and let the Monitor execute the given code as if typed at the monitor prompt. You can for instance use -x 'boot hd0' as a very fast way to reboot "from the top." -m Allows the operator to type a shutdown message on standard input, that will be added to the messages displayed on all terminals. -k This option gives the possibility of terminating an already started shutdown. This is only possible if shutdown time has not yet arrived. -C Check if the system crashed. This option is not used at shutdown time, but at reboot time. It tells if the file systems should be checked by testing if the last entry in the wtmp file is a shutdown entry. (A crude replacement for a file system clean flag.) FILES
/usr/adm/wtmp, /etc/nologin, /usr/adm/authlog SEE ALSO
reboot(2), wall(1), halt(8), boot(8). AUTHOR
Edvard Tuinder (v892231@si.hhs.NL) SHUTDOWN(8)
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