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NYC Data Centers Struggle To Recover After Sandy

Nerval's Lobster writes "Problems in New York's data centers persisted through Wednesday morning, with hosting companies and other facilities racing against time to keep generators humming as water was pumped out of their facility basements. The fight now is to keep those generators fueled while pumps clear the basement areas, allowing the standard backup generators to begin operating. It's also unclear whether the critical elements of infrastructure (power and communications) will both be up and running in time to restore services. The following is a list of some of the data centers and services in the area, and how they're faring." I'm responsible for a few servers at Peer1, and their efforts are interesting: "Peer1’s operations at 75 Broad are operating on sheer manpower: a bucket brigade. According to a blog post from Fog Creek Software, one of the clients at the building, about 30 customers are lifting buckets (or cans) of diesel fuel up 18 flights of stairs."

2 of 231 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Poor Planning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because having large tanks of diesel fuel dozens of stories above ground isn't a good solution either? Lightning...wind...spills...leaks...fires... all probably more statistically relevant than major flooding, and the consequences of failure far more disastrous than simply losing power in a flood. Even storing the tanks underground and the generators above ground has 2 problems: 1) you need power to pump the fuel up to the generator, which kind of defeats the purpose, and 2) high pressure fuel lines running through a building isn't exactly safe or desirable either.

  2. Re:Add to that, NYI... by twisted_pare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Poor planning, plain and simple.

    I work for a major financial institution on the street. Various facilities were swamped, and we never missed a beat. What, were we just "lucky?" I don't think so.

    Starting a week ago we had disaster crisis centers setup.
    * Every few hours all East coast facilities reported in any issues
    * Inspection and testing of all critical systems ahead of time
    * Stockpiles of supplies on hand
    * Prefail over to DR where possible
    * All hands on deck to respond


    Sadly, if you want to be prepared, you can be. If tons of money is on the line, then the price of being prepared is well worth it. We test our systems continuously year round. We have disaster recovery drills at all facilities multiple times a year. Departments' rating depend on how well prepared they are for things like this.

    And don't throw that "1888," "worth storm ever" crap around. This is Wall Street. Manhattan. Terrorists have tried to blow it off the map multiple times. Several hurricanes have hit this spit of land that sits a mere few feet above sea level in the last decades. A hurricane hit and flooded parts last year even! If you did not prepare for this including flooding and sealed underground tanks and sandbag walls, it was your own fault.

    --
    HTFU