Google Gmail Disruption Caused By Network Load, Code Update
Those findings were included in a report that Google published on Friday detailing what happened during the service disruption on Thursday morning.
"After an internal investigation and review, the Engineering team has determined that the root cause of the Contacts issue was a high load on the service," the report says.
Between 7:00 AM and 9:50 AM Pacific Time last Thursday, users of Google Apps were unable to access Contacts through the Gmail interface. The report says that during this period, most customers couldn't access Google Talk or add users to their Google Apps accounts.
Until about 8:30 AM that morning, an undisclosed number users could not access Gmail, except through an IMAP client. Google last week characterized those affected as "a small subset of users."
In a statement last week, Google apologized for the inconvenience and said that the slowness and service degradation lasted about an hour. The company said that Gmail was fully operations for everyone by about 8:00 AM on Thursday, and that Contacts functionality was restored shortly after that.
The modest apology appears to correspond with Google's assessment the disruption as relatively minor.
A 100-minute Gmail outage at the beginning of the month was characterized by Google engineering VP and "Site Reliability Czar" Ben Treynor as a "big deal" in his apology.
In early May, a more significant outage brought an apology from someone even higher in the Google hierarchy, SVP of operations Urs Hoelzle. That incident caused a 5% drop in Internet traffic, according to Arbor Networks, and affected 14% of Google users worldwide, according to Hoelzle.
InformationWeek has published an in-depth report on the current state of IT salaries. Download the report here (registration required).
Cloud Connect
Don’t miss Cloud Connect, the first event to bring together business executives, IT pros, and developers to define the cloud and drive growth and innovation. See the latest technologies and learn from cloud computing’s thought leaders at Cloud Connect’s conference and expo. Save 30% on conference passes or register for a free Expo pass below.
March 15-18, 2010
Santa Clara Convention Center
Silicon Valley, CA
Subscribe to our free, weekly report exploring the business, strategy, and management issues of cloud computing.
Get the details on ‘infrastructure as a service’ from a dozen vendors, including data on prices, services, contracts, platforms supported, and more.
Cloud computing adds abstraction, interdependency, and uncertainty about where data goes and how it’s protected. Here’s how to evaluate performance, cost, and risk in the cloud.


