Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Receive the latest technology news and information.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
Cloud Computing
View all newsletters




Privacy Policy
 

Verizon router glitch slams parts of U.S.

October 2, 2009 06:51 PM ET

Active Comments
Anonymous says: As if nothing ever goes wrong at the Cable companies... If my cable was down at least a half hour...
Anonymous says: I suffered the same outage at 3:15pm until 3:50pm, in north New Jersey area, Verizon FIOS. It's definitely not NYC...


IDG News Service - A Verizon router failure in the northeastern U.S. caused an outage that Internet engineers and Twitter users reported on Friday afternoon.

Verizon is still investigating the problem, but it apparently involved a card in a router in New York City that failed, according to Verizon spokesman John Bonomo. The problem occurred between about 3:15 p.m. and 3:50 p.m. Eastern time, according to Verizon.

The router was taken offline and traffic seems to have recovered, Bonomo said. Problems seem to have been concentrated around New York City, though they may have been broader, Bonomo said. Verizon had no estimate of the number of customers affected.

The problem seems to have affected users of DSL (digital subscriber line), leased lines and Verizon's FiOS fiber-to-the-premises service, according to comments on the North American Network Operators Group mailing list, as well as on Twitter.

Around 4:30 p.m. Eastern, Verizon Senior Vice President Eric Rabe posted on Verizon's Twitter feed that the carrier's engineers were aware of the problem and working on it. About 15 minutes later, Verizon said a peering router between its network and the Internet for the Northeast, which handled traffic for DSL and FiOS, had failed. The router has been restarted and is now handling traffic, Verizon said.

Because the router went into a hung state, it appeared to the rest of the network as if it didn't have a problem, Verizon's Rabe wrote in a blog post later on Friday. And because the router couldn't communicate its failed state, traffic from some customers kept flowing to the router but couldn't be processed, so they lost their access, he wrote.

The structure of the Internet and carrier data networks normally prevents such problems through the ability to route traffic around a failure in seconds. In addition, routers on critical paths are typically deployed in pairs for failover, said Burton Group analyst David Passmore.

"It's highly unusual that a single router could take down substantial portions of the network," Passmore said. Such failures are more often caused by "backhoe" incidents in which a work crew digs in the wrong place and cuts a cable used by several carriers, he said. Misconfigured routers or network settings, or software bugs that are distributed to multiple routers, can also cause routing problems that don't get resolved immediately, he said.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

Jump to comments

Verizon Communications

Additional Resources

WHITE PAPER
Approximately 60 percent of data migration projects overrun time or budget, while some fail completely. Download this white paper, "Enhancing Your Chance for Successful Data Migration," to learn the critical steps you need to take to execute a data migration project with minimum cost and risk to your business.
WHITE PAPER
Read the Gartner research note to learn why the TCO of a server-based computing deployment used to deliver all applications to users is around 50% lower than that of an unmanaged desktop deployment.
WHITE PAPER
Economic downturns have a tendency to accelerate emerging technologies, boost the adoption of effective solutions, and punish solutions that are not cost competitive or that are out of synch with industry trends. This IDC White Paper presents the results of an IDC survey of 330 companies in Western Europe, Asia/Pacific and the Americas that measures the receptiveness to Linux and takes into consideration changing views driven by the disruptive economic environment that businesses face today.

What People Are Saying