People are bloody* wetware, surely.
* After the kicking.
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Reply to: NatWest Borked
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Previously on "NatWest Borked"
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Originally posted by Sysman View PostI read some of the comments about multiple redundancy with a chuckle.
Once you have seen a single UPS, which was just one of many, take out a whole building you see things with a bit more scepticism.
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostThis goes to show the incompetence of NatWest IT department. I set-up, support, design, etc. these type of systems (parallel sysplex, geographically dispersed parallel sysplex, pprc, etc.) and this has never happened in any of the systems I've worked on. I actually built the systems that IBM use to design and test this stuff and tested such errors, and worse, and a 24/7 operation works. As people have said, they probably made the mainframers redundant and invested in 'newer' technologies. Most IT departments are run by ******* idiots in the UK (and USA) anyway...
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Originally posted by doodab View Postare you the NAT in Natwest?
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostI was present at a meeting when the entire SAP system was bobbed. The failover of the db server to another server failed, because the failover monitor could see the db server at one level, but was waiting for a response at another, which it was never getting. The operations manager told the data centre, in India, to switch off the db server. Turn it off. That way the failover monitor would notice the db server was not there, and switch to the shadow db server.
Apparently "Switch the database server off" was too hard a concept for our offshore colleagues to understand, since they instead shut everything down; all the application servers. Rather than users experiencing a hanging system that then started working again, they lost connection and their work in progress.
On restart, the shadow server wouldn't come up. A network card had failed, which would require four hours to be replaced, despite spares being on hand, since no-one in the data centre had any technical knowledge or ability whatsoever. Eventually, a techy guy in the UK managed to talk to the shadow db server over on of its other network cards, persuaded it to ignore the failed card, and so the system was restored.
The announced cause of the outage: hardware failure.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostI was present at a meeting when the entire SAP system was bobbed. The failover of the db server to another server failed, because the failover monitor could see the db server at one level, but was waiting for a response at another, which it was never getting. The operations manager told the data centre, in India, to switch off the db server. Turn it off. That way the failover monitor would notice the db server was not there, and switch to the shadow db server.
Apparently "Switch the database server off" was too hard a concept for our offshore colleagues to understand, since they instead shut everything down; all the application servers. Rather than users experiencing a hanging system that then started working again, they lost connection and their work in progress.
On restart, the shadow server wouldn't come up. A network card had failed, which would require four hours to be replaced, despite spares being on hand, since no-one in the data centre had any technical knowledge or ability whatsoever. Eventually, a techy guy in the UK managed to talk to the shadow db server over on of its other network cards, persuaded it to ignore the failed card, and so the system was restored.
The announced cause of the outage: hardware failure.
Thanks for the clarifications, hope you didn't post the above from your workstation at work mate !
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This goes to show the incompetence of NatWest IT department. I set-up, support, design, etc. these type of systems (parallel sysplex, geographically dispersed parallel sysplex, pprc, etc.) and this has never happened in any of the systems I've worked on. I actually built the systems that IBM use to design and test this stuff and tested such errors, and worse, and a 24/7 operation works. As people have said, they probably made the mainframers redundant and invested in 'newer' technologies. Most IT departments are run by ******* idiots in the UK (and USA) anyway...
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostIt was "hardware failure" apparently: RBS Says Computer Failure Is Unrelated to Last Year
They really should tell the cleaner where it's safe to plug that vacuum cleaner in.
I was present at a meeting when the entire SAP system was bobbed. The failover of the db server to another server failed, because the failover monitor could see the db server at one level, but was waiting for a response at another, which it was never getting. The operations manager told the data centre, in India, to switch off the db server. Turn it off. That way the failover monitor would notice the db server was not there, and switch to the shadow db server.
Apparently "Switch the database server off" was too hard a concept for our offshore colleagues to understand, since they instead shut everything down; all the application servers. Rather than users experiencing a hanging system that then started working again, they lost connection and their work in progress.
On restart, the shadow server wouldn't come up. A network card had failed, which would require four hours to be replaced, despite spares being on hand, since no-one in the data centre had any technical knowledge or ability whatsoever. Eventually, a techy guy in the UK managed to talk to the shadow db server over on of its other network cards, persuaded it to ignore the failed card, and so the system was restored.
The announced cause of the outage: hardware failure.
Leave a comment:
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Once you have seen a single UPS, which was just one of many, take out a whole building you see things with a bit more scepticism.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostIt was "hardware failure" apparently: RBS Says Computer Failure Is Unrelated to Last Year
They really should tell the cleaner where it's safe to plug that vacuum cleaner in.
I think there were two cleaners with vacuum cleaners.
Leave a comment:
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