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FYI Netflix is down
- Subject: FYI Netflix is down
- From: steve at pirk.com (steve pirk [egrep])
- Date: Sun, 1 Jul 2012 19:38:16 -0700
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <CAJEFqDeyaj9KZVNi0xA0+VHnh_BAzoJKZd_gs8b0Sxr9F9c=3g@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]>
On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 11:38 AM, Jay Ashworth <jra at baylink.com> wrote:
> Not entirely. Datacenters do go down, our best efforts to the contrary
> notwithstanding. Amazon doesn't guarantee you redundancy on EC2, only
> the tools to provide it yourself. 25% Amazon; 75% service provider
> clients;
> that's my appraisal of the blame.
>
>From a Wired article:
> That?s what was supposed to happen at Netflix Friday night. But it didn?t
> work out that way. According to Twitter messages from Netflix Director of
> Cloud Architecture Adrian Cockcroft and Instagram Engineer Rick Branson, it
> looks like an Amazon Elastic Load Balancing service, designed to spread
> Netflix?s processing loads across data centers, failed during the outage.
> Without that ELB service working properly, the Netflix and Pintrest
> services hosted by Amazon crashed.
http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2012/06/real-clouds-crush-amazon/
The GSLB fail-over that was supposed to take place for the affected
services (that had configured their applications to fail-over) failed.
I heard about this the day after Google announced the Compute Engine
addition to the App Engine product lines they have. The demo was awesome.
I imagine Google has GSLB down pat by now, so some companies might start
looking... ;-]
--steve