Author: admin

MFS’s fiber has been repaired.

Sun Feb 15 10:38:22 PST 1998 — MFS’s fiber has been repaired. An MFS contractor who was apparently digging to install additional capacity damaged a large number of circuits. During the outage, traffic on much of the west coast and parts of the rest of the world was running a bit slower than usual. -Dane

Fiber cut in San Jose.

Sat Feb 14 15:25:09 PST 1998 — Fiber cut in San Jose. About 10am this morning, some fiber optic runs in San Jose were damaged — since then, routing has been ‘less than optimal.’ Apparently repairs have been ‘hindered by weather,’ but WorldCom continues to repair the fiber. -Scott

The Sonoma County Independent is currently…

Sun Feb 8 19:10:51 PST 1998 — The Sonoma County Independent is currently polling for it’s annual reader’s choice awards. Be sure to pick up a copy at your local coffee shop or newsstand, and please do vote in the catagory ‘Best Internet Provider’. =) -Dane

Sonic now offers technical support on…

Sun Feb 8 19:09:02 PST 1998 — Sonic now offers technical support on weekends. Our new expanded support hours are 9am to 9pm, seven days a week. We hope that this makes the Internet even more useful for you. -Dane, Eli and the support staff

We’ve just added three new disks to our…

Sun Feb 8 19:06:31 PST 1998 — We’ve just added three new disks to our Network Appliance filer. Two of these are currently warm spares, and one has been added to the RAID array. Current storage in the filer is about 25 gigs, 76% full. Because of the NetApp’s hot swap capabilities, there was zero downtime during this upgrade. -Dane

New authentication server online.

Sat Feb 7 10:07:47 PST 1998 — New authentication server online. The authentication server checks passwords. In most cases, when someone (say, Ann) presents a password to one of our servers, that server doesn’t have any idea what Ann’s password looks like.

Instead, the server encrypts the password and passes it to our auth server. The auth server inspects the password and returns a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ response — if the response is ‘yes,’ Ann can retrieve her popmail (or log into her FrontPage web, or transfer files to the FTP server, or what have you.) We find this security model very attractive, because it means we can store passwords on specially protected hosts.

But there is a problem — as we load up our auth server with more and more authentication tasks, Ann discovers that it takes her longer and longer to retrieve her popmail, or log into the shell host, or connect to our network. Clearly, we need a very fast authentication server. Since June, Dane and I have been working on one — and that’s what we’ve deployed this morning: a very fast authentication server. If you’re interested in the details, please visit news:sonic.programmer. -Scott

I spent yesterday evening babysitting the…

Fri Feb 6 18:34:31 PST 1998 — I spent yesterday evening babysitting the hunt group in an effort to find out if we had bad equipment or bad phone lines which were causing fast busy signals. We worked with Pacific Bell to isolate an improperly configured line which was causing users to get an error recording or fast busy signal instead of getting online. We’ve fixed it, and things are looking great here. I hope that this signals the end of our string of telco and equipment problems. Here’s a brief summary: Bad PacBell switch setup of series completion hunting was limited to a small number of lines, so 92 ports were unavailable to customers. Fixed January 13th. Bad USR implimentation of DMS custom switch protocol caused caller-ID blocked originators to get a fast busy signal. Fixed February 4th. Bad PacBell switch setup of BRI to PRI hunt group bridging was not allowing users to reach all of our equipment. 92 new ports were unavailable to customers. Fixed February 6th.

Thanks for standing by us as we worked out these issues! We’re still working on ‘Unable to negotate a compatable set of network protocols’ with the Intelliserver gear, and with some intermittant problems with authentication. -Dane and everyone else!

Our air conditioning upgrade went very well.

Fri Feb 6 18:33:00 PST 1998 — Our air conditioning upgrade went very well. The new unit has more than enough capacity for our current heat load, and is working great. We’ve got some photos of the crane lift, and we’ll work on getting those online.

We’ve had a brief power outage here, and some

Thu Feb 5 11:53:44 PST 1998 — We’ve had a brief power outage here, and some users connections were terminated. We’re working on a new power plant, but until PG&E and the electrical folks are finished, we’ve got five terminal servers and some modems which are not on protected power. The new power plant upgrade gives us lots of room to grow, plus uninterruptable power for all facilities including air conditioning. Speaking of air conditioning, we are working today on an AC upgrade. We’re replacing an aging 3 ton Carrier unit with a new 5 ton Trane. A massive crane was here at 6AM putting it all on the roof, and they’re still working on hooking it all up. We’re keeping cool, so there’s no worries about overheating currently. This upgrade is what caused the power outage. A loose screw on the power panel bus under the new AC units new breaker caused a short circuit which tripped the facility’s main circuit breaker. To make things even more exciting, Trane shipped us a 3 ton unit instead of a 5 ton, and the installation folks didn’t realize this until it was already partially installed. We’ll have the big crane back here tommorow, and we’ll do the whole thing over again with another unit. It’s been an interesting morning. -Dane