Essentially no one does "EPO drills" on their datacenters. Particularly in multi-tenant environments like commercial colocation centers. It's quite reasonable for your DR plan to involve a $200k+ cost per EPO pull or DR failover. Your business should have DR provisions, and you should test the DR plan, but it's probably not reasonable (or legal) to do a full test involving dumping agent, rapid power off, etc.
The fire suppression exists for two reasons. One, is to get code exemptions to be allowed to run wiring in ways which would otherwise require licensed electricians to do every wiring job, and prohibit people from being in the facility. Two is to detect small fires early, and to prevent their spread, as well as to protect facilities from catastrophic facility-wide fire.
Servers are just not that high a fire risk, particularly when de-energized. Generally inside a self-contained metal chassis, less than 100 pounds each, metal/plastic, etc. The power supply is the most likely component to start a fire, and contains a max of maybe 250g of capacitors and other components. The risk of one server catching on fire is low, and the risk of it rapidly spreading to anything else is low, so yes, I'd be comfortable pulling a single burning server out of a de-energized rack.
Also, in big or purpose-built facilities, those components most likely to be fire risks (batteries/power handlers, and generators) are in separate rooms, separated by firewalls from the datacenter. A fire in the battery room is going to be dealt with by sealing that room and powering it off, dumping suppression agent, and bringing out the FD immediately.
Life safety is much more important than business continuity, but a lot of people have jobs where they accept a non-zero risk of physical harm to do their jobs. It's certainly not reasonable to demand a datacenter tech go into a burning building to rescue a database server or something, but approximately zero datacenter staff I know would have a problem with assuming the level of risk I would to find problems. (it's probably a bigger deal for employers to actually discourage risk-taking by employees, particularly when it's risk-taking to save themselves effort, like single-person racking large UPSes or very large servers, etc.)
I think we are aiming at the same thing here. A proper, multi-tenant datacenter will have separate zones for generators, UPS, electrical, and climatisation. The actual chance of a fire starting and spreading in this type of configuration is low and this is the environment I prefer to work in. I've also worked in server rooms in 100+ year old buildings which did double duty as storage/broom closet. The original post was closer to this since they had racked UPSes next to their servers and network equipment. It apparently caused enough smoke to fill a server room and make the poster nauseous, which makes me wonder what air handling capacity they have. It's this type of "datacenter" where you have to worry about your life.
The fire suppression exists for two reasons. One, is to get code exemptions to be allowed to run wiring in ways which would otherwise require licensed electricians to do every wiring job, and prohibit people from being in the facility. Two is to detect small fires early, and to prevent their spread, as well as to protect facilities from catastrophic facility-wide fire.
Servers are just not that high a fire risk, particularly when de-energized. Generally inside a self-contained metal chassis, less than 100 pounds each, metal/plastic, etc. The power supply is the most likely component to start a fire, and contains a max of maybe 250g of capacitors and other components. The risk of one server catching on fire is low, and the risk of it rapidly spreading to anything else is low, so yes, I'd be comfortable pulling a single burning server out of a de-energized rack.
Also, in big or purpose-built facilities, those components most likely to be fire risks (batteries/power handlers, and generators) are in separate rooms, separated by firewalls from the datacenter. A fire in the battery room is going to be dealt with by sealing that room and powering it off, dumping suppression agent, and bringing out the FD immediately.
Life safety is much more important than business continuity, but a lot of people have jobs where they accept a non-zero risk of physical harm to do their jobs. It's certainly not reasonable to demand a datacenter tech go into a burning building to rescue a database server or something, but approximately zero datacenter staff I know would have a problem with assuming the level of risk I would to find problems. (it's probably a bigger deal for employers to actually discourage risk-taking by employees, particularly when it's risk-taking to save themselves effort, like single-person racking large UPSes or very large servers, etc.)