Web hosting outage a teachable moment on backup power
The Web hosting company The Planet.com Internet Services Inc. tests its backup generators monthly and some employees ask if that's really necessary, said manager Urvish Vashi. The blackout in San Francisco Tuesday explains why.
Among the 40,000 customers affected by a nearly two-hour electrical blackout in San Francisco was 365 Main Inc., a Web hosting company whose clients include Sun.com, Yelp.com and Craigslist.com. Their Web sites were among several that were unavailable Tuesday when the local electric utility, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (PG&E), suffered an outage that cut power to the southern part of the city, including the South of Market area, or SOMA, which is home to several technology companies.
The outage served as a reminder of the importance of backup power systems to keep Web sites, and the businesses behind them, running.
More information was provided Wednesday by 365 Main about what happened. An electrical surge caused PG&E transmission breakers to open, interrupting power to the 227,000-foot data center. That event automatically signaled backup diesel generators to power up, but some didn't, the company said in a prepared statement.
"On-site facility engineers responded and manually started affected generators, allowing stable power to be restored ... across the entire facility," 365 Main stated. It was without power for about 45 minutes.
The company did not specify how many of the generators failed to start or why, but estimated that the interruption affected between 20 percent and 40 percent of its customers. It remained on generator power Wednesday, saying it first wanted assurances from PG&E that its power supply was stable.
One page on 365 Main's Web site contains video tours of its facility, which the company acquired from the Web hosting company AboveNet.com after its parent company, Metromedia Fiber Network Inc., went through financial reorganization in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in 2003.
Jean Paul Balajadia, vice president of operations, explains on the video that 365 Main operates ten 3,000-horsepower diesel generators that each feed a 12,000-pound flywheel that connects to a 2.1 megawatt electrical generator that powers the data center. "During a power outage. ... the diesel engine is called to fire up and starts up in about 2.1 seconds," Balajadia explains.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
- mburton325
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