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Another Large Dark Cloud
9-24-2008 |
Following last month's much-discussed Amazon S3 outage, most of XCalibre's FlexiScale cloud went dark on Tuesday, and nearly two days later, the UK-based hosting outfit has yet to restore service. |
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According to XCalibre CEO Tony Lucas, the outage has affected "a vast majority"
of businesses relying on FlexiScale for on-demand storage, processing, and/or
network bandwidth. Lucas won't say how many cloud-happy outfits depend on
his cloud, which went live in October. But he expects some of them will be back
up and running this evening UK time. "And other customers will start coming back
online from there on," he says. "But we're not sure how long that will
take." As Lucas explained in an email to customers - posted to the Web by
CNet - the outage occurred when an XCalibre engineer accidentally deleted one of
FlexiScale's main storage volumes. "The problem was caused by human error,"
Lucas told us. "We've been having some capacity issues - FlexiScale has been
growing at about 30 per cent a month in terms of usage. We've been adding
capacity and adding capacity and we were in the process of adding even more,
when one of the engineers who was tidying things up on the disk architecture
made a mistake." XCalibre immediately took its entire disk structure
offline - in order to "preserve the integrity of the data on the system." And
with storage down, FlexiScale's processing and networking services are dark as
well. But the platform should be returned to normal, once engineers restore the
lost data to a brand new disk structure. "After consulting with our
storage vendor it was agreed the most sensible option would be to copy the
entire volume to a new disk structure (still maintaining it's integrity and
structure), from where we could re-mount it correctly," Lucas' email reads.
"Unfortunately, due to it's size, we didn't have spare capacity on the platform
to create a complete duplicate of it." To Lucas' credit, he makes no excuses
for outage - and hasn't tried to hide it. "This shouldn't have happened,
shouldn't have been allowed to happen, but it happened. We'll be putting things
into place that will prevent this from happening in the
future." Specifically, XCalibre will soon distribute its architecture
across multiple data centers. "So, if something like this were to happen again,
customers could fall over to an other data centers," Lucas says. But a second
data center isn't due to open until January. Yes, Lucas says, it would
have been nice to have a second data center in place back in October, but, well,
funds were tight. "We were a privately funded company," he says. "We were
resource constrained. We will complete another round of funding in the next few
weeks." And Lucas is confident that cloudy outfits like his will
eventually iron out all these issues. "One of my pet projects is
interoperability and portability between cloud computing devices - basically,
the ability to move from one to another if something goes wrong," he says. "But
I didn't think I'd make such a good example of why that's important." So,
XCalibre's problems could be solved if Google would just make "a more loving
cloud." Source: www.webhostdir.com | | | | |
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