English: Backside of a Power Mac G5 (left) and...
English: Backside of a Power Mac G5 (left) and a Mac Pro (right) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

We were out when the crash happened.

There was a brief power outage in our area while we’re away & saw the usual signs:  flashing timer lights in our oven, audio amplifier, coffee maker and the Mac Pro server was off.

The Power Macs had been hosting my website since 2004 as well as a Movable Type blog that I included in my “Kupitero’s Keep website (as an ‘offsite page’) in late 2004 (I started with MT version 3.121) .

I started hosting my website in 2004 using a Power Mac G4 (with OS X 10.3.x aka Panther) and upgraded to a Power Mac G5 (running OS X 10.5.x aka Leopard) in late 2006.

After I had saved enough money, in January 2010, I upgraded to a MacPro Dual Quad since the latest incarnation of OS X during those days – yes, until today – only supported Intel processors.  And, that was the server I was using when the power outage happened.

I powered the server back on – no problems with the hardware – but the OS just won’t load. Uh-oh, here comes the hard part.

I worked frantically the rest of the day & managed to load the OS from the Time Machine backup I had.  Great.

Everything seemed back to normal until I tried to make a new blog post in  Movable Type that fateful day in 2012.  There were errors here and there.  The Movable Type installation was busted and the related MySQL database & PHP scripts were all messed up.

I was able to restore the database and the Movable Type installation several weeks later but there was still a minor problem with one plug-in: Image::Magick.

And, that was the day I decided to do the following:

  • Buy a UPS (uninterruptible power supply)
  • Have a backup for the server – I got a Mac Mini (quad-core Intel Core i7)
  • Move my blog from Movable Type to WordPress
  • Revamp my website so that it will be more accessible to the latest and greatest browsers found on phones, tablets, and computers.

I accomplished all these until early December of this year with the exception of the 3rd one on the list above: porting my blog from MT to WordPress.

And, that will be my topic for my next post.


Comments

One response to “The Mac Pro Dual Quad Server Crash of 2012”

  1. Test only to check message posting

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