The top-seeded defending champion got down to business against a Canadian ranked 35th, who was plagued by eight first-set double-faults and 49 unforced errors in the match as he faced the best in the world.
Sinner recovered smoothly from an early breakdown and had his hands full on his way into the fourth round, sending over an ace on match point after saving a set point in the tiebreaker.
Play was stopped briefly with Sinner leading 4-2 as the audio portion of the electronic line-calling system suddenly failed.
Earlier, both players had to deal with flickering LED screens directly behind them courtside.
The pair agreed to soldier on without the system, with the chair umpire temporarily relaying the algorithm's decisions - which he saw on his chair's tablet - to the players when necessary as a reboot was undertaken.
That minor malfunction came two hours after the chaos of a widespread power outage, which completely stopped play around the grounds for 75 minutes.
Five minutes later, with Sinner leading 1-0 in the second set after winning the first, the chaos continued with an alarm going off somewhere in the stadium and play was suspended for the third time.
Sinner and Diallo continued to carry on with the distraction blaring somewhat faintly in the background before it finally halted after another game.
Sinner polished off victory for his 23rd consecutive hardcourt win in under two hours.