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Amazon Outage Shows Limits of Failover 'Zones'

jbrodkin writes "For cloud customers willing to pony up a little extra cash, Amazon has an enticing proposition: Spread your application across multiple availability zones for a near-guarantee that it won't suffer from downtime. 'By launching instances in separate Availability Zones, you can protect your applications from failure of a single location,' Amazon says in pitching its Elastic Compute Cloud service. But the availability zones are close together and can fail at the same time, as we saw today. The outage and ongoing attempts to restore service call into question the effectiveness of the availability zones, and put a spotlight on Amazon's failure to provide load balancing between the east and west coasts."

5 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Let us learn from Xzibit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Amazon should put their cloud in a cloud, so the cloud will have the redundancy of the cloud.

  2. Cloud computing by stopacop · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not ready for the desktop ;-)

    --
    http://www.stopacop.so -- You have rights. How about standing up for them before they go away?
  3. have your own servers by Dan667 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    or use a completely different company for redundancy. I think that is the lesson here.

    1. Re:have your own servers by rudy_wayne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This incident illustrates once again why you need to put your stuff on your own servers and not someone else's. All computer systems will fail occasionally. There's no such thing as 100% uptime. However, when your own servers fail you can get your own people working on it right away and it's their number one priority. When your stuff is on someone else's servers, you're at their mercy. It will get fixed when they get around to it, and, they have more customers than just you, so you might not be first on the priority list. Or second. Or third. Or tenth.

    2. Re:have your own servers by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Informative

      So wait. The cloud sales pitch is "no more servers-save money-cut IT staff" but now its:

      1. Virtualized servers in zone 1
      2. Virtualized servers in zone 2
      3. Virtualized servers from a different company altogether.

      So I went from one solid server, good backups, maybe a hot backup, and talented staff running the show to outsourced to 3 different clouds with hour-long hold times with some Amazon support monkey? Genius.