According to the Huawei HCIA-Cloud Computing curriculum and the FusionAccess Maintenance Guide, the statement is FALSE. While it is a recommended best practice to restart infrastructure virtual machines (VMs) approximately once every quarter to clear system cache, refresh memory resources, and ensure long-term stability, the method of execution described in the statement is incorrect and dangerous for production environments.
Infrastructure VMs in FusionAccess—such as theWI (Web Interface),HDC (Huawei Desktop Controller),ITA (IT Adapter), andGaussDB (Database)—are the "brains" of the desktop solution. Most of these components are deployed in active/standby or load-balancing pairs to ensure High Availability (HA). If an administrator were to run the reboot command on all Linux infrastructure VMs "at the same time," it would cause a complete service interruption. During this period, users would be unable to log in to their desktops, the management portal would be inaccessible, and active desktop sessions might lose their connection persistence.
The official Huawei documentation mandates astaggered restartapproach. For example, if there are two WI nodes, the administrator should restart the first node, verify it has returned to service, and only then proceed to restart the second node. This ensures that the "Service Plane" remains active at all times. Additionally, restarts should always be performed during off-peak hours to minimize the impact of the brief transition period between active and standby nodes. Therefore, while the frequency (quarterly) is correct, the instruction to restart them all simultaneously contradicts the fundamental principles of high-availability management within the Huawei ICT framework.
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