Whoops! 2 hours to find routers w/o an IGP tsk tsk. Dear AT&T IP Services Customer, Please be advised of the following: Date: 8/28/02 Customer Care TT#: 1070909 Start of Impairment: 14:56 ET End of Impairment: 16:52 ET On behalf of AT&T, we would like to extend our apologies for any inconveniences to your business caused by the service impairment and delay in restoring your service. AT&T IP Services customers with traffic routed through our Chicago backbone routers may have been affected by this impairment. Our Network Engineers found that OSPF* network statements were missing from two backbone routers, causing the routing issues that customers were experiencing. AT&T Network Engineers manually reloaded the OSPF network statements and then proceeded to reboot the routers in order for the changes to take effect. The network statements were mistakenly deleted during a routine configuration update to our backbone routers. Management has been made aware of these findings and appropriate actions will be taken to ensure this situation does not re-occur. Prior reported information was leading the AT&T Network Engineers to believe that there were issues with the route reflectors being out of synch. However, this was only symptomatic of the problem stated above. In other words, due to the missing network statements, the route reflectors were not advertising certain networks; therefore traffic was not properly routed. It is AT&T’s goal to provide the highest level of service to our customers. We appreciate your business and look forward to continuing our relationship in the future. *Routing protocol (Open Shortest Path First) Depending on the particular IP access services to which you are subscribed you may also find additional information as it becomes available at: AT&T MIS: https://mis-att.bus.att.com/ AT&T VPNS: http://www.vpn.att.net If you require further information, please feel free to contact AT&T at: AT&T MIS: 1-888-613-6330 AT&T VPNS: 1-888-613-6501 Thank you for using AT&T. Sincerely, The AT&T Customer Care Team -----Original Message----- From: Matt Levine [mailto:matt@deliver3.com] Sent: Wed 8/28/2002 6:21 PM To: Mike Tancsa Cc: Wes Bachman; nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: AT&T NYC On Wednesday, August 28, 2002, at 04:17 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
route-server.ip.att.net is not currently reachable, but AS15290's router server is for those who want a view on things...
Interestingly enough, ATT is announcing 12.0.0.0/23 to BBN (and nobody else, including AS7018 internal)..
route-server.east.attcanada.com. and route-server.west.attcanada.com.
which come in handy :-)
---Mike
At 04:11 PM 28/08/2002 -0400, Mike Tancsa wrote:
I am seeing this as well. One of my upstreams (AT&T Canada- 15290) has connections with AT&T US (7018) in Chicago and Vancouver. Chicago seems to have disappeared for me and all traffic bound via that path is going via Vancouver now.
---Mike
At 02:52 PM 28/08/2002 -0500, Wes Bachman wrote:
Bryan,
There is a known AT&T outage in Chicago currently. Could this be effecting you in some way?
-Wes
On Wed, 2002-08-28 at 14:44, Bryan Heitman wrote:
Anyone seeing any problems with ATT in new york?
Best regards,
Bryan Heitman Interland, Inc.
-- Wes Bachman System & Network Administration, Software Development Leepfrog Technologies, Inc. wbachman@leepfrog.com
-- Matt Levine @Home: matt@deliver3.com @Work: matt@eldosales.com ICQ : 17080004 AIM : exile GPG : http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x6C0D04CF "The Trouble with doing anything right the first time is that nobody appreciates how difficult it was." -BIX