Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile? Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides. Regards Marshall Eubanks
anyone tried ripe atlas to see effect :) Colin
On 17 Sep 2015, at 14:47, Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks@gmail.com> wrote:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 09:58:54AM -0400, Jared Mauch <jared@puck.nether.net> wrote a message of 11 lines which said:
If someone wants ripe ATLAS credits please send me a request off-list with your e-mail address registered for RIPE Atlas.
Even without credits, and an anonymous access, you can see that several probes are reachable in Chile: https://atlas.ripe.net/results/maps/network-coverage/ True, some are yellow (disconnected) but click on the yellow dot and check the date: they were down even before the earthquake. So, first conclusion: there is apparently no widespread Internet outage.
On 17/09/15 15:58, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Sep 17, 2015, at 9:55 AM, Colin Johnston <colinj@gt86car.org.uk> wrote:
anyone tried ripe atlas to see effect :)
I've not looked at RIPE Atlas data, but we do have a near-realtime monitor on BGP data in RIPEstat, where we map resources to a country: https://stat.ripe.net/CL That didn't show anything, so if folks got affected they seem not to have massive drops in number of prefixes visible, and no ASes that completely got disconnected. cheers, Emile
On 16:19 17/09, Emile Aben wrote:
On 17/09/15 15:58, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Sep 17, 2015, at 9:55 AM, Colin Johnston <colinj@gt86car.org.uk> wrote:
anyone tried ripe atlas to see effect :)
I've not looked at RIPE Atlas data, but we do have a near-realtime monitor on BGP data in RIPEstat, where we map resources to a country:
That didn't show anything, so if folks got affected they seem not to have massive drops in number of prefixes visible, and no ASes that completely got disconnected.
That's right. We didn't have any noticeable outage in Santiago, either local or international, and monitors for .CL gave no interruption for major cities. Hugo
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 9:55 AM, Colin Johnston <colinj@gt86car.org.uk> wrote:
anyone tried ripe atlas to see effect :)
The RIPE atlas https://atlas.ripe.net/results/maps/reachability/?id=1001&t=1442498340 shows green dots, but if you mouseover you see that the last connects are all old (pre-Earthquake). Regards Marshall
Colin
On 17 Sep 2015, at 14:47, Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks@gmail.com> wrote:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 10:00:46AM -0400, Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks@gmail.com> wrote a message of 34 lines which said:
shows green dots, but if you mouseover you see that the last connects are all old (pre-Earthquake).
You're right, I forgot to check that but the 17 RIPE Atlas probes connected in Chile all answer and can ping NANOG Web site: % python reachability+retrieve.py -v -r 500 --country CL 50.31.151.73 {'definitions': [{'description': 'Ping 50.31.151.73 from CL', 'af': 4, 'packets': 3, 'type': 'ping', 'is_oneoff': True, 'target': '50.31.151.73'}], 'probes': [{'requested': 500, 'type': 'country', 'value': 'CL'}]} Measurement #2427363 to 50.31.151.73 uses 17 probes 17 probes reported Test done at 2015-09-17T14:27:10Z Tests: 51 successful tests (100.0 %), 0 errors (0.0 %), 0 timeouts (0.0 %), average RTT: 182 ms https://atlas.ripe.net/measurements/2427363/
Maybe on the NAP site for Chile, but I can't find enough information about network status. http://pit.nap.cl/red.html 2015-09-17 8:47 GMT-05:00 Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks@gmail.com>:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
-- Cordialmente, Dorancé Martínez Cortés +57 320 6968121 Linux User Number 112632 Nagios Certified Administrator Certificación ITIL Fundation 2011 ed. Cali - Colombia dorancemc@gmail.com http://dorancemc.com http://dmci.co "Si piensas que la tecnología puede solucionar tus problemas de seguridad, está claro que ni entiendes los problemas ni entiendes la tecnología" Bruce Schneier
Hello, Our internal monitoring tools show that there was a momentary drop in traffic (~30 minutes) coinciding with the earthquake, but traffic quickly returned to normal, and is at normal levels today. We are serving Chile from Miami. Best Regards, -Phil
On Sep 17, 2015, at 9:47 AM, Marshall Eubanks <marshall.eubanks@gmail.com> wrote:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Phil Rosenthal <pr@isprime.com> wrote:
Hello,
Our internal monitoring tools show that there was a momentary drop in traffic (~30 minutes) coinciding with the earthquake, but traffic quickly returned to normal, and is at normal levels today. We are serving Chile from Miami.
Excellent, thank you. I am sure there will be many local outages in affected areas, but that presumably means the country itself is still on the net. Regards Marshall
Best Regards, -Phil
On Sep 17, 2015, at 9:47 AM, Marshall Eubanks < marshall.eubanks@gmail.com> wrote:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
Hi, The academic network was fully operational during and after the strong earthquake, including to the observatories (ESO, ALMA, AURA, LSST, CTIO, SLOOH). Regards, El 17-09-2015 a las 10:47, Marshall Eubanks escribió:
Given the huge (7.9 - 8.3) Earthquake last night, does anyone have any information about the status of the Internet in Chile, and in particular about the status of the undersea fiber links that go down off the West coast of South America to Chile?
Given that this was an offshore Earthquake, and its magnitude, I would expect those fiber links to be at risk to undersea landslides.
Regards Marshall Eubanks
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participants (9)
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Colin Johnston
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Dorance Martinez Cortes
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Emile Aben
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Hugo Salgado-Hernández
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Jared Mauch
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Juan Jose Arriagada
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Marshall Eubanks
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Phil Rosenthal
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Stephane Bortzmeyer