Another packed issue this week, thanks in no small part to the folks on hangops #incident_response. You all rock!
This week, I broke 200 email subscribers. Thank you all so much! At Charity Majors‘s suggestion, I’ve started a Twitter account, SREWeekly, where I’ll post a link to each week’s issue as it comes out. Feel free to unsubscribe via email and follow there instead, if you’d prefer.
Articles
The majority of organizations target their most serious incidents for immediate attention. Events that lead to severe and/or permanent injury or death are typically underscored in an effort to prevent them from ever happening again. But recurrent errors that have the potential to do harm must also be prioritized for attention and process improvement. After all, whether an incident ultimately results in a near miss or an event of harm leading to a patient’s death is frequently a matter of a provider’s thoughtful vigilance, the resilience of the human body in resisting catastrophic consequences from the event, or sheer luck.
Thanks to cheeseprocedure on hangops #incident_response for this one.
Ultimately, the secret of those mythical DevOps blameless cultures that hold the actionable postmortems we all crave is that they actively foster an environment that accepts the realities of the human brain and creates a space to acknowledge blame in a healthy way. Then they actively work to look beyond it.
Thanks to tobert on hangops #incident_response for this one.
Backing up your data once a day is no longer enough in this 24/7 ‘always on’ economy. Continuous data replication is needed, capturing every change, every second.
Outages
- Telstra
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This makes the third major outage (plus a minor one) this year. Customers are getting pretty mad.
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- Gliffy
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Gliffy suffered a heartbreaking 48-hour outage after an administrator mistakenly deleted the production db. They do have backups, but the backups take a long time to restore.
Thanks to gabinante on hangops #incident_response for this one.
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- The Division (game)
- DigitalOcean
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A day after the incident, DigitalOcean posted an excellent postmortem. I like that they clearly explained the technical details behind the incident. While they mentioned the DDoS attack, they didn’t use it to try to avoid taking responsibility for the downtime. Shortly after this was posted, it spurred a great conversation on hangops #incident_response that included the post’s author.
Thanks to rhoml on hangops #incident_response for this one.
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