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Wow! You are a LITERAL SUPERSTAR!
Oh.
Is this the first time your kernel has ever been upgraded?
Let me guess - you have your system configured to automatically update. Given the level of aptitude shown so far, you don't even know this is set up.
Your kernel was updated.
You're right. You acknowledge that the VPS works, and it was entirely a configuration error on the operating system that you chose to install on it.
The entire experience could have been avoided if you hadn't contacted support for help in managing an UNMANAGED service.
Or you could have used a braincell, and down all of the above actions without even raising a support ticket. If you buy an unmanaged server, you are expected to know how to use it.
Asking for support that shouldn't have been needed?
I thought you acknowledged that you had a low-priority support and it was user-error. I'm sure your tickets were deliberately ignored to deal with actual issues that required support.
And you still haven't learned how to admin a server in all those 10 years.
Probably. The machine was working fine, as you eventually confirmed.
Reminder of what? That it's an unmanaged service?
@ralf he already dead, no more shooting please.
I am late to the party, TL;DR someone?
Customer's unmanaged and promo-priced server broke during a software upgrade applied by the customer. Customer filed a support ticket. Support were slow because the issue was out of scope (and due to promo pricing = lower support priority), and customer is upset.
I have a few promo storage servers with them in LA, Chicago, and London.
Very occasionally, a server’s network just stops responding. Restarting the network service has always fixed it.
So I put together this script in case anyone else finds it useful. I run it as a cron job every minute.
So far, the script has restarted the network 5 times across 6 servers over the past year.
Wouldn't it be better to use ping? That will test both DNS lookups and reachability and is simpler than HTTPS.