A global technology outage grounded flights, knocked banks offline and media outlets off air in a massive disruption that affected companies and services around the world.
Article has been updated with the root cause - Crowdstrike. The reason is simple: Azure has tons of Windows systems that are protected with CrowdStrike Falcon. Crowdstrke released a bad version that is causing boot loops on Windows computers, including Windows VM servers.
Microsoft, Azure, and Crowdstrike have all stated the root cause at this point. Furthermore, this tells me most of the Falcon sensor installs are done bad, as we also use Crowdstrke and have ours set to “latest version - 1” to ensure this exact thing doesn’t happen.
There aren’t any backbone outages right now that are being discussed. Many servers that run MANY services are on Windows, using Crowdstrike. Flights, banks, entertainment (some Netflix, for example).
The overall result: it looks like a backbone outage, but isn’t.
Absolutely, we are entirely unsure of real root cause too (until microsoft releases an explanation).
We have pretty simple networking, but for a while internal vnet communication was really all over the place. That seems to have stabilised for us recently
Exactly! We made sure to contact everyone who would travel to an office to inform them its at least a half day off and to check in at lunch time. Email everyone WFH the same thing, SMS too just in case their computer is down.
But I (I assume you are in the same boat) was up much earlier to tackle this! Fun day.
I’ve got easy mode: On-call woke me up. We’re five techies and equity holders with one employee, an intern. We pushed a few buttons to effect plan B and enable plan C, and sent a medium priority notification by chat.
Then, we sent the intern to the office to watch the meters. If she fucks up it’s not a problem until about Tuesday. So, we’re waiting to see if she automates the task, uses the existing routing template to ensure she’s notified of wonkiness if she leaves the office, and asks permission. She’s recreating the wheel and can then compare to our work. I thought I’d give her a couple hours before checking in.
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Article has been updated with the root cause - Crowdstrike. The reason is simple: Azure has tons of Windows systems that are protected with CrowdStrike Falcon. Crowdstrke released a bad version that is causing boot loops on Windows computers, including Windows VM servers.
deleted by creator
Microsoft, Azure, and Crowdstrike have all stated the root cause at this point. Furthermore, this tells me most of the Falcon sensor installs are done bad, as we also use Crowdstrke and have ours set to “latest version - 1” to ensure this exact thing doesn’t happen.
deleted by creator
There aren’t any backbone outages right now that are being discussed. Many servers that run MANY services are on Windows, using Crowdstrike. Flights, banks, entertainment (some Netflix, for example).
The overall result: it looks like a backbone outage, but isn’t.
Thank you.
But, fuck. That means we screwed up primary design or someone broke the contract.
Gotta work today.
No idea why someone downvoted you for this!
Absolutely, we are entirely unsure of real root cause too (until microsoft releases an explanation).
We have pretty simple networking, but for a while internal vnet communication was really all over the place. That seems to have stabilised for us recently
(UK south / west regions)
deleted by creator
Exactly! We made sure to contact everyone who would travel to an office to inform them its at least a half day off and to check in at lunch time. Email everyone WFH the same thing, SMS too just in case their computer is down.
But I (I assume you are in the same boat) was up much earlier to tackle this! Fun day.
I’ve got easy mode: On-call woke me up. We’re five techies and equity holders with one employee, an intern. We pushed a few buttons to effect plan B and enable plan C, and sent a medium priority notification by chat.
Then, we sent the intern to the office to watch the meters. If she fucks up it’s not a problem until about Tuesday. So, we’re waiting to see if she automates the task, uses the existing routing template to ensure she’s notified of wonkiness if she leaves the office, and asks permission. She’s recreating the wheel and can then compare to our work. I thought I’d give her a couple hours before checking in.