Update: Salesforce.com outage cuts users off
The company blamed 'an error in the database cluster' for the problem
December 21, 2005 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Salesforce.com Inc.'s "on-demand" customer relationship management system came up short in meeting demand yesterday, when some customers found the hosted software service unreachable for most of the day.
It was unclear how widespread the outage was -- while some customers reported no problems with the service, others saw their access cut off early yesterday morning and remain down through most of the afternoon. On the blog SalesForceWatch.com, a customer posted a screen capture of the error message he and other users saw for several hours.
The company today confirmed that there were interruptions in system availability between 9:30 a.m. and 12:41 p.m. Eastern time and 2 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. Eastern time on one of the company's four global nodes. "The root cause of the intermittent access was an error in the database cluster," Bruce Francis, vice president of corporate strategy, said in a statement. "Salesforce.com addressed the issue with the database vendor. By Tuesday afternoon, the system was running normally for all users."
The company would not identify the database vendor.
One affected customer, technology consultant and entrepreneur Jason Klemow, said it was the first time in the year he has been subscribing to Salesforce.com that the service crashed. He was finally able to log into Salesforce.com shortly before 5 p.m. Eastern time yesterday, after the service had been unreachable for at least five hours.
Klemow, who works in Gaithersburg, Md., had searched in vain for details from Salesforce.com on its outage. No status information was posted on Salesforce.com's Web site, and a customer service number offered only a recorded message advising that the company was experiencing technical difficulties, he said.
Klemow said he hopes Salesforce.com fills customers in on what happened. In the meantime, he will take steps to prepare for any future outages. "I'm going to do more synching with [Microsoft] Outlook to be sure I have my contacts when I'm off-line," he said.
Although Salesforce.com has made a point of branding itself as different, the incident proves that it's susceptible to the same problems that other high-tech companies experience, said Joshua Greenbaum an analyst at Enterprise Applications Consulting in Berkeley, Calif.
"They're supposed to be bulletproof and offer the end of [internally run] software, and they're showing how vulnerable they can be," he said. "You can't blame them. This is the price of being in the high-tech business. It's ironic because Salesforce.com was supposed to break the mold -- the outage confirmed some of the mold can't be broken."
Noting that some financial analysts have recently
Reprinted with permission from
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