Greetings, Just to be clear I am only looking for a scope of the issue I am seeing, its not a direct assumption of fault or mis-configuration, more so a sanity check if you will. Thanks much for all of the feed back, as I see it its not just me. Thanks again -Joe Blanchard On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 8:27 PM, George Herbert <george.herbert@gmail.com>wrote:
On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 6:20 PM, Ryan Malayter <malayter@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mar 22, 7:47 pm, Jeff Kell <jeff-k...@utc.edu> wrote:
Now getting "We re sorry, the Netflix website and the ability to instantly watch movies are both temporarily unavailable." out of
Charter.
Campus getting same routed via 1239 209 2906.
Jeff
Guess that move to Amazon EC2 wasn't such a good idea. First reddit, now netflix.
http://techblog.netflix.com/2010/12/four-reasons-we-choose-amazons-cloud-as....
I suppose there's a reason you can't get an SLA with any teeth from Amazon...
You're assuming that the outage was somehow related to the quality of hosting (virtual server, instance management, etc).
In my experience with large website failures, some of mine and talking to others at conferences and elsewhere, I can't recall one where the servers HW performance / virtualization management were the root cause (and only one that was intrinsically hardware-based, which was a catastrophic storage failure and not server failure). Configuration management, inadequate testing of new software, systems management error, DBMS throughput capacity, emergent software / architecture failures are the usual culprits.
-- -george william herbert george.herbert@gmail.com
-- -Joe Blanchard (262)496-1732