Ukraine and pro-Russian rebels have signed a ceasefire deal aimed at ending nearly five months of fighting in the country's east.
Besides reports of three explosions north of Donetsk just minutes after the truce went into effect on Friday evening, gunfire and shelling appeared to fall silent shortly after the appointed hour.
Ukraine's president, Petro Poroshenko, had ordered government forces to cease fire at 6pm (15:00 GMT) following an agreement signed at talks attended by representatives of Ukraine, Russia, the rebels and the OSCE in Minsk, Belarus.
"I am ordering the head of the general staff of the armed forces of Ukraine to halt fire starting at 6pm," Poroshenko said in a statement published on his official website.
Al Jazeera's Paul Brennan, reporting from Donetsk, said there would have to be serious rebuilding of trust between both sides to ensure a cessation of hostilities, and that the tension would not die down anytime soon.
The separatists were represented at the talks by leaders from the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic, including Alexander Zakharchenko, Donetsk's self-proclaimed prime minister.
The negotiations followed talks between Poroshenko and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Minsk last week.
NATO head Anders Fogh Rasmussen welcomed the agreement that sought to end to end fighting that has killed an estimated 2,600 people in the east of the country.
Rasmussen said the next "crucial step is to implement it in good faith ... but so far, so good," adding he hoped it "could be the start of a constructive political process".
The view was echoed by UN chief Ban Ki Moon, who urged a "comprehensive monitoring" of the situation for a successful truce.
The Ukrainian prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, had called for the US and the EU to act as guarantors to the ceasefire.
"It must be supported by the United States and the EU. We will not manage with Russia on our own... we need guarantees," Yatsenyuk told a cabinet meeting moments before rebels announced that a truce deal had been agreed.
Combat continued on the outskirts of the strategic Ukrainian port city of Mariupol on Friday, ahead of the truce announcement.
Mariupol became a major focus of concern for Ukraine after the rebels broke out of their main strongholds further north in late August.
The new offensive has raised concerns the rebels are aiming to seize Mariupol, a major port of about 500,000 people, and create a land corridor between Russia and Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula that Russia annexed in March.
(Al Jazeera)