Exceptions tend to be white boxes built with desktop components, at which point, yea. The proverbial You asked for this problem
This wasn't just limited to Linux either. It was a common UNIX trick :)
This is a bit of a lost art these days though. iLo, IPMI have replaced the need for serial. Then virtualisation and, to a lesser extent, containerisation have lowered the bar even further plus also moving the industry towards more ephemeral systems that can be destroyed and rebuilt automatically rather than the old habits of nursing failed hosts back to health.
[1] https://duckduckgo.com/?q=9+pin+d-sub+plug&t=newext&atb=v316...
[2] https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.3/admin-guide/serial-cons... (a lot of distros at the time did ship a kernel with this support compiled in. I don't know how common it is now).
Most smaller teams usually don’t prioritize physical access — they usually only need it for one-off events. While this would be a one-off event, it would be one that affects many servers.
I'm not sure I've ever worked with any (2008-present) that don't in any case.
Oh well, I guess experiences differ.
it requires acces to the serial console or baseband management controller or whatever terms have emerged.
have never rented a physical server w/o this.