The joys of cloud computing

Yesterday, my Scaleway hosted VPS was scheduled for migration to another physical server. According to Scaleway, the expected downtime was only a few minutes. The maintenance was scheduled to begin at 10:00 UTC, so I was expecting the server to be available when I tried to connect over SSH at 11:30 UTC. Unfortunately, there was no sign of life to be found.

Meanwhile in France

I quickly accessed the Scaleway dashboard to see if there were any reported issues and noticed that the server had been trying to shut itself down for the last hour.

Scaleway VPS shutdown failure

Scaleway VPS shutdown failure.

I proceeded to create a support ticket with Scaleway, asking them to take the server down forcefully. Scaleway responded within half an hour and resolved the issue. When all was said and done, I ended up with two and a half hours of downtime.

This morning, in the US of A

Fast forward to today, and I suddenly noticed that my Digital Ocean droplet had become unresponsive. After logging in and launching their console to access my troublesome droplet, I was slapped with the following message:

Ubuntu 18.04.3 kernel 4.15.0-60

Kernel panic with Ubuntu 18.04.3 (4.15.0-60-generic) on Digital Ocean.

The droplet was running Ubuntu 18.04.3 LTS with the 4.15.0-60-generic kernel. This is my second Ubuntu Bionic Beaver instance (different software stacks) experiencing kernel panic during the last few days. I guess Canonical has some “software engineering” to do here as this 4.15.0-60-generic kernel seems to be borked.

A potential solution arrives

Coincidentally, I just got my hands on a new Raspberry Pi 4. Perhaps it’s time to return to Raspberry Pi based hosting.

Roger Comply avatar
Roger Comply
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